The title was revived in 2006 to distribute preparatory texts for the congresses of the World Association of Psychoanalysis and is now published in both French and Spanish.
In Lacan's introduction to Scilicet issue 1 he writes, "This journal is one of the means by which I expect to overcome in my École, which is distinct in its principle from the [existing] Societies, the obstacle that resisted me elsewhere".
[2] The Latin word wikt:scilicet, a frequent term in the writings of Lucretius, literally means "thou mayst know" or "it is permitted thee to know", and the cover of the journal bore the inscription: Tu peux savoir ce qu'en pense l'École freudienne de Paris (thou mayst know what the École freudienne de Paris thinks about it).
[3] Established at a time of considerable institutional invention, Scilicet adopted the editorial strategy of the Bourbaki group, publishing unsigned articles in an attempt to "overcome the narcissism of small differences" and to open the doors to analysts from outside the EFP whose institutional affiliations might otherwise discourage them from contributing.
A second volume, for the sixth congress in Buenos Aires, appeared in print as "The Objects a in the Psychoanalytic Experience", published by the Collection rue Huysmans (2008).