In her presentation, Clotilde Leguil develops Lacan's notion of 'vision,' that contains both the experience of 'seeing' and 'not seeing' at the same time, literally and metaphorically, and all its relevance for psychoanalysis and the clinic. Leguil adds that 'vision' gives rise to passions from which the subject suffers, illustrated by the example taken by Lacan from Saint Augustin. This imaginary modality of seeing oneself through the other, gives way in analysis to another experience, she remarks, "when the subject realizes that his being is situated elsewhere, at a point where a destiny he cannot decipher, determines his existence despite his efforts to escape it."