Results for 'Deleuze, virtual, individuation, Difference and repetition, philosophy of nature, though, ontogenesis'

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  1.  4
    De la philosophie de la nature à la philosophie de l’esprit. À propos d’une formule deleuzienne sur le virtuel.Igor Krtolica - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28).
    By unfolding the meaning of a Deleuzian formula from Difference and Repetition —“the virtual possesses the reality of a task to be performed, or a problem to be solved”— we attempt to show that the Deleuzian concept of the virtual implies the three main features of a philosophy of nature: a theory of ontogenesis, a theory of regimes of individuation and an ontological foundation of ethics. After demonstrating that the virtual-actual pair makes it possible to form a (...)
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  2.  34
    Deleuze's Infernal Book: Reflections on Difference and Repetition.Levi R. Bryant - 2020 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (1):5-24.
    Deleuze's Difference and Repetition is a notoriously difficult work of philosophy. Moreover, it is a work of philosophy that has led to quite divergent interpretations. How are we to account for this phenomenon of generating such distinct interpretations and appropriations? In this article, I apply Deleuze's theory of problems, questions and individuation to Deleuze's text as a way of understanding the stylistic strategy of his writing. Given Deleuze's critique of identity and representation, he would fall into a (...)
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  3.  19
    ¿Héroe estructuralista O anomalía post-estructuralista? Deleuze como pensador de la individuación*a.Alberto Toscano & Juan Fernando Mejía Mosquera - 2020 - Universitas Philosophica 37 (74):17-35.
    This article traces the link between Deleuze’s philosophy of individuation, developed in such works as Difference and Repetition and Logic of Sense, and the notion of structure, that articulated a good part of the epistemological and ontological discussions in French philosophy and science in the 1960s. Besides pointing out the originality of Deleuze’s take on the term ‘structure’—as it ceases to correspond to a formal constant that is opposed or indifferent to the genesis of singular individuals, and (...)
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  4. Différence et répétition ou la poursuite de Ainsi parlait Zarathoustra par d'autres moyens.Paolo Vignola - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):149-164.
    The paper aims to show how the tragic and dramatic elements of Thus Spoke Zarathustra become essential components of the transcendental empiricism in Difference and Repetition, by actualising a virtuality that was inherent in the Nietzchean book but not made explicit by its author. If the meaning of the eternal return is hidden in the four books of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and if the Deleuzian reading does not aim to interpret and express the interiority of a text, but to (...)
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  5. Difference and Repetition.Gilles Deleuze & Paul Patton - 1994 - London: Athlone.
    This brilliant exposition of the critique of identity is a classic in contemporary philosophy and one of Deleuze's most important works. Of fundamental importance to literary critics and philosophers,Difference and Repetition develops two central concepts—pure difference and complex repetition&mdasha;and shows how the two concepts are related. While difference implies divergence and decentering, repetition is associated with displacement and disguising. Central in initiating the shift in French thought away from Hegel and Marx toward Nietzsche and Freud, _Difference (...)
  6.  1
    Totalité et différence dans le chapitre IV de Différence et répétition.Tomotaro Hasegawa - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):111-127.
    This article examines how Gilles Deleuze develops the notion of totality within the framework of the ontology of difference. For Deleuze, totality is not synonymous with identity, but is constructed through the interconnection of differences. His ontology aims to integrate difference into a non-identitarian totality. Inspired by Bergson, Deleuze first presents three aspects of virtuality that connect totality and difference. Then, by relying on structuralist works, he describes a dual movement of differentiation and differenciation that forms totality (...)
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  7.  40
    Deleuze's Difference and Repetition: An Edinburgh Philosophical Guide.Henry Somers-Hall - 2012 - Edinburgh University Press.
    When students read Difference and Repetition for the first time, they face two main hurdles: the wide range of sources that Deleuze draws upon and his dense writing style. This Edinburgh Philosophical Guide helps students to negotiate these hurdles, taking them through the text step by step. It situates Deleuze within Continental philosophy more broadly and explains why he develops his philosophy in his unique way. Seasoned Deleuzians will also be interested in Somers-Hall's novel interpretation of (...) and Repetition. (shrink)
  8.  29
    Flux qua gap: The Hegelian Deleuze.Xuelian He - 2020 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 14 (1).
    This essay aims to answer the question: how does Žižek reconcile Hegel’s immanence of gap with Deleuze’s immanence of flux? The contrast between the Deleuzian flux and the Hegelian gap is positivity versus negativity, externality versus internality, and virtuality versus actuality. Via Lacanian not-all, Žižek inserts Hegelian negativity into the absolute positivity of the Deleuzian univocity. In keeping up with Hegelian immanence without externality, Žižek encloses Deleuzian externality by regarding anti-Oedipus as the inner transgression of desire via the shift of (...)
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  9.  3
    Sur l’écriture de Différence et Répétition comme pensée de l’avenir – « Le temps approche où il ne sera plus possible d’écrire un livre de philosophie comme on en fait depuis si longtemps ».Aline Wiame - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):15-32.
    This article tackles the statement made in the preface to Difference and Repetition according to which the search for new means of philosophical expression is to be pursued in relation to the renewal of certain other arts. Its main interlocutors are Beckett, Artaud, and Proust, and it examines themes such as the theatre of real movement, the dramatization of Ideas, and Deleuze’s singular takes on detective novel and science fiction. Through the whole of this inquiry, I argue that (...) and Reptition’s writing style cannot be separated from its ontology, and seeks to reach the “dramatic” or “phantastical” time of thought’s future, when it is finally freed from its functions of representation and recognition. (shrink)
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  10.  95
    (1 other version)The Fetish is Always Actual, Revolution is Always Virtual: From Noology to Noopolitics.Jason Read - 2009 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 3 (Suppl):78-101.
    By most accounts Deleuze's engagement with Marx begins with the two volumes of Capitalism and Schizophrenia he co-authored with Félix Guattari. However, Deleuze's Difference and Repetition alludes to a connection between Deleuze's critique of common sense and Marx's theory of fetishism, suggesting a connection between the critique of the image of thought and the critique of capital. By tracing this connection from its emergence in the early texts on noology, or the image of thought, to the development in the (...)
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  11.  26
    Gilles Deleuze's Difference and Repetition: A Critical Introduction and Guide.James Williams - 2013 - Edinburgh University Press.
    A revised, expanded and fully up-to-date critical introduction to Deleuze's most important work of philosophyBy critically analysing Deleuze's methods, principles and arguments, James Williams helps readers to engage with the revolutionary core of Deleuze's philosophy and take up positions for or against its most innovative and controversial ideas.
  12.  15
    Le Même et l'autre. Quarante-cinque ans de philosophie Français (1933-1978). [REVIEW]R. F. T. - 1979 - Review of Metaphysics 33 (2):420-421.
    This analytic survey should soon appear in English translation with Cambridge University Press in its new series, "Modern European Philosophy," edited by Alan Montefiore. As the title suggests, its leitmotif is the dialectic of same and other, first stated by Kojève in its explicit Hegelian mode of identity and contradiction and transposed during the sixties into that of difference and repetition. Descombes’s book is an account of how the generation of the three H’s was supplanted by that of (...)
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  13. Gilles Deleuze.Daniel Smith - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Gilles Deleuze (January 18, 1925–November 4, 1995) was one of the most influential and prolific French philosophers of the second half of the twentieth century. Deleuze conceived of philosophy as the production of concepts, and he characterized himself as a “pure metaphysician.” In his magnum opus Difference and Repetition , he tries to develop a metaphysics adequate to contemporary mathematics and science—a metaphysics in which the concept of multiplicity replaces that of substance, event replaces essence and virtuality replaces (...)
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  14. The Deleuzian Revolution: Ten Innovations in Difference and Repetition.Daniel W. Smith - 2020 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 14 (1):34-49.
    Difference and Repetition might be said to have brought about a Deleuzian Revolution in philosophy comparable to Kant’s Copernican Revolution. Kant had denounced the three great terminal points of traditional metaphysics – self, world and God – as transcendent illusions, and Deleuze pushes Kant’s revolution to its limit by positing a transcendental field that excludes the coherence of the self, world and God in favour of an immanent and differential plane of impersonal individuations and pre-individual singularities. In the (...)
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  15.  2
    Un narcissisme de la différence.Philippe Roy - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):73-91.
    This article aims to present Gilles Deleuze's conception of narcissism. To the narcissism of the “same”, which is self-love, on which Freud remains dependent, Deleuze intends to oppose a narcissism of difference, which participates in the constitution of the self (and its dissolution…). Its reason is found in the temporal repetition-syntheses of Difference and Repetition, which are also claimed by the syntheses of the unconscious. Although Deleuze draws on Freudian narcissism, he diverges from it on certain points due (...)
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  16. Het spatium: Leibniz en Deleuze over ruimte en uitgebreidheid.Florian Vermeiren - forthcoming - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 81 (1):3-27.
    This paper aims to show that Deleuze’s ideas on space and extension are heavily in debt to Leibniz. The focus is on chapter five, ‘the Asymmetrical Synthesis of the Sensible’, of Difference and Repetition. Concepts such as ‘intensive magnitude’, ‘distance’, ‘order’ and most importantly ‘spatium’ are shown to have their origin in Leibniz’s philosophy. In order to do so, the article starts with Leibniz’s critique on Cartesian mechanics and how this leads Leibniz to a conception of space that (...)
     
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  17.  92
    Difference and repetition in both sitting duet.Valerie A. Briginshaw - 2004 - Topoi 24 (1):15-28.
    In this paper I identify and explore resonances between a contemporary dance piece – Jonathan Burrowss and Matteo Fargions Both Sitting Duet (2003) – and some theories from Gilles Deleuzes Difference and Repetition (1994). The duet consists of rhythmic, repetitive patterns of mainly hand movements performed by two men, for the most part, sitting on chairs. My argument, with Deleuze, is that the repetitions in the dance are productive rather than reductive. They are never repetitions of the same. The (...)
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  18.  92
    Breve storia dell'etica.Sergio Cremaschi - 2012 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    The book reconstructs the history of Western ethics. The approach chosen focuses the endless dialectic of moral codes, or different kinds of ethos, moral doctrines that are preached in order to bring about a reform of existing ethos, and ethical theories that have taken shape in the context of controversies about the ethos and moral doctrines as means of justifying or reforming moral doctrines. Such dialectic is what is meant here by the phrase ‘moral traditions’, taken as a name for (...)
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  19.  24
    Restaurar a diferença na sensibilidade: Deleuze crítico de Kant.Leandro Lelis Matos - 2022 - Griot : Revista de Filosofia 22 (2):168-186.
    From the book Difference and Repetition, I intend to discuss the extent to which Deleuze's proposal to restore difference in sensibility, preventing difference from being confused with the diverse, as proposed by Kant, in order to remove difference from submission to representation in the ambit of sensibility. This sets up a new perspective to think about the issue of difference in sensitivity, reformulating notions of transcendental thinking and ontology, through an unusual alliance between science and (...)
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  20.  21
    Dalla letteratura alla filosofia. Il Proust di Deleuze.Daniela Angelucci - 2019 - Rivista di Estetica 70:19-30.
    The present paper traces some of the main articulations of the book Marcel Proust and the signs (1964), in which the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze affirms the superiority of literature on classical rationalist philosophy in the search for truth. Proust’s work rivals the philosophy itself, since it brings into play the involuntary nature of memory and intelligence – a condition which lies at the beginning of every thought – which can grasp the truth only solicited and forced by (...)
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  21.  10
    Verschil en gewoonte: Deleuzes anti-Hegeliaanse kritiek van het bewustzijn.Julie Van der Wielen - 2022 - Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 114 (3):259-280.
    Difference and Habit: Deleuze anti-Hegelian critique of consciousness Since Antiquity, habit has been understood as a second nature, as something that we develop in a conscious or unconscious way, and which directs and structures both our cognitive and practical lives – our consciousness and our actions. For Hegel, habit effectuates the transition from nature to spirit or consciousness, thus forming the basis of morality. Habit thus constitutes an essential stage in the development of the mind and a crucial aspect (...)
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  22.  3
    Bergson, Philosopher of Difference or Philosopher of Repetition? - Focusing on Deleuze’s Interpretation in His Early Writings -. 변예은 - 2024 - Cheolhak-Korean Journal of Philosophy 161:121-147.
    본고는 질 들뢰즈(Gilles Deleuze)의 앙리 베르그손(Henri Bergson) 독해에서 한 가지 문제를 이끌어내는 것에서 출발한다. 그것은 1956년의 두 논문, 그 중에서도 대표적으로 「베르그손 철학에서 차이의 개념」에서 들뢰즈가 베르그손 독해를 통해 무엇보다 차이의 개념화를 이끌어냈던 것과 달리, 1968년 출간된 『차이와 반복』에서는 베르그손이 왜인지 차이의 철학의 전경에는 배치되지 못하고 있다는 것이다. 가장 상징적으로 베르그손은 시간의 세 가지 종합과 함께 구분되는 세 가지 반복의 형태 중, ‘물질적 반복’에 해당하는 첫 번째 종합을 설명하고, 그리고 무엇보다 아직 차이의 역량에 해당하는 ‘발산’과 ‘탈중심화’와 만나지 못한 단조로운 ‘정신적 (...)
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  23.  19
    Francis Bacon: The Logic of Sensation.Gilles Deleuze - 2003 - Minneapolis: Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Translated and with an Introduction by Daniel W. Smith Afterword by Tom Conley Gilles Deleuze had several paintings by Francis Bacon hanging in his Paris apartment, and the painter’s method and style as well as his motifs of seriality, difference, and repetition influenced Deleuze’s work. This first English translation shows us one of the most original and important French philosophers of the twentieth century in intimate confrontation with one of that century’s most original and important painters. In considering Bacon, (...)
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  24.  43
    Organismic Temporality.Tano Posteraro - 2015 - Symposium 19 (2):187-211.
    The topic of this paper is a theory of the organism as subject. It is an ascription of subjectivity to organic bodies. I restrict my analysis, in this presentation, to the question of temporality; particularly, to the way individual bodies produce out of their own metabolic activity the temporal field with which they interact. I structure this discussion by way of an elucidation of Gilles Deleuze’s concept of the larval subject as it emerges out of his Difference and Repetition. (...)
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  25. Meillassoux’s Virtual Future.Graham Harman - 2011 - Continent 1 (2):78-91.
    continent. 1.2 (2011): 78-91. This article consists of three parts. First, I will review the major themes of Quentin Meillassoux’s After Finitude . Since some of my readers will have read this book and others not, I will try to strike a balance between clear summary and fresh critique. Second, I discuss an unpublished book by Meillassoux unfamiliar to all readers of this article, except those scant few that may have gone digging in the microfilm archives of the École normale (...)
     
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  26.  31
    Kojève y Deleuze: antropología y ontología en el absoluto hegeliano.Julián Ferreyra - 2016 - Contrastes: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 16 (1-2):153-172.
    RESUMENEl artículo se propone estudiar el rol de la apropiación de Hegel en la filosofía política francesa del siglo XX. Analizaremos de qué manera el énfasis de Kojève en la antropología, de Hyppolite en la ontología y de Weil en la teoría del Estado, implican diferentes visiones de la relación entre metafísica, naturaleza humana y organización política. y a partir de allí, intentaremos proponer una nueva lectura de Hegel, recurriendo a la matriz interpretativa de Deleuze (a pesar su habitual encuadre (...)
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  27.  20
    Gilles Deleuze From a to Z.Gilles Deleuze & Claire Parnet - 2011 - Semiotext(E).
    A playful, personal, and profound interview with Gilles Deleuze, covering topics from “Animal” to “Zigzag.” Although Gilles Deleuze never wanted a film to be made about him, he agreed to Claire Parnet's proposal to film a series of conversations in which each letter of the alphabet would evoke a word: From A to Z. These DVDs, elegantly transtlated and subtitled in English, make these conversations available for English-speaking audiences? for the first time. In dialogue with Parnet, the philosopher exhibited the (...)
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  28. Gilles Deleuze's Non-Ontological Philosophy.Kyle Novak - 2021 - Dissertation, University of Guelph
    The aim of this dissertation is to develop an account of Gilles Deleuze’s philosophical project as a departure from ontology and ontological thinking. Ontology can be broadly understood as the study of being or the study of the meaning of being. Traditional ontology examines the nature of being while more contemporary philosophy often understands being itself as becoming or a process. In this respect, Deleuze has often been interpreted as a process or differential ontologist. This project departs from that (...)
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  29.  20
    Comentário “Deleuze e a perversão”.Zamara Araujo - 2020 - Trans/Form/Ação 43 (spe):93-98.
    Resumo Ainda que de modo introdutório, dizemos que existe um sujeito, o perverso, no interior da filosofia de Deleuze. Mais, que é tornando-se esse sujeito, fazendo do perverso um filósofo, que Deleuze dá início à sua filosofia, em Diferença e repetição e na Lógica do sentido. Ou seja, que existindo um devir-perverso do próprio Deleuze, esse devir condiciona uma abordagem à relação do seu pensamento com o tema da perversão, e isto por ser justamente a criação desse heterónimo, o perverso, (...)
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  30.  65
    Tradizioni morali. Greci, ebrei, cristiani, islamici.Sergio Cremaschi - 2015 - Roma, Italy: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.
    Ex interiore ipso exeas. Preface. This book reconstructs the history of a still open dialectics between several ethoi, that is, shared codes of unwritten rules, moral traditions, or self-aware attempts at reforming such codes, and ethical theories discussing the nature and justification of such codes and doctrines. Its main claim is that this history neither amounts to a triumphal march of reason dispelling the mist of myth and bigotry nor to some other one-way process heading to some pre-established goal, but (...)
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  31.  18
    Philosophie als Literatur bei Nietzsche, Deleuze und Borges.Breuer Irene - 2018 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 6 (1):255-288.
    The interweavement of philosophy and literature allows to gain a new sense from the own, lived experiences and to express them through narrations, as the paradigmatic works of Nietzsche, Deleuze and Borges show. They all deal with the inexorability of time and the fact of being at the mercy of the unwanted aspects of Being-in-the-world, the detailed reading of which allows us to assert that the event of the emergence of a new sense lies in the experience of the (...)
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  32.  45
    The Deleuze Reader.Gilles Deleuze & Constantin V. Boundas (eds.) - 1993 - Columbia University Press.
    Looks at the philosophies of Deleuze, who lived from 1925-1995, on issues such as becoming, ethics and morality, individuation, desire, and politics.
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  33.  25
    Time travels: feminism, nature, power.Elizabeth Grosz - 2005 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    Darwin and feminism: preliminary investigations into a possible alliance -- Darwin and the ontology of life -- The Nature of culture -- Law, justice, and the future -- The Time of violence: Derrida, deconstruction, and value -- Drucilla Cornell, identity, and the "Evolution" of Politics -- Philosophy, knowledge, and the future -- Deleuze, Bergson, and the virtual -- Merleau-Ponty, Bergson, and the question of ontology -- The thing -- Prosthetic objects -- Identity, sexual difference, and the future -- (...)
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  34.  1
    « Image de la pensée » et « pensée sans image » chez Gilles Deleuze.Camille Chamois - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):93-110.
    This article introduces the notion of the “image of thought” that gives its title to the third chapter of Difference and Repetition. The discussion is divided into four parts. In the first part, we present the motif of the “image of thought” as developed in Nietzsche and Philosophy and Proust and Signs. In the second part, we summarize the eight postulates of the “dogmatic image of thought” presented in Difference and Repetition. In the third part, we recall (...)
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  35.  66
    Genealogy, Virtuality, War (1651/1976).R. D. Crano - 2011 - Foucault Studies 11:156-178.
    This article recounts Foucault’s critical reevaluation of Thomas Hobbes in his 1975-76 lecture course, published as Society Must Be Defended (2003). In probing Hobbes’ pivotal role in the foundation of the modern nation-state, Foucault delineates the ”philosophico-juridical” discourse of Leviathan from the ”historico-political” discourses of the English insurrectionists whose uncompromising demands were ultimately paved over by the more conventional seventeenth century debate between royalists and parliamentarians. In his most sustained engagement with political philosophy proper, Foucault effectively severs the two (...)
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  36.  47
    Deleuze.Reidar Due - 2007 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    This book provides a clear and concise introduction to the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze. It analyses his key theoretical concepts, such as difference and the body without organs, and covers all the different areas of his thought, including metaphysics, the history of philosophy, psychoanalysis, political theory, the philosophy of the social sciences and aesthetics. As the first book to offer a comprehensive analysis of Deleuze's writings, it reveals both the internal coherence of his philosophy and (...)
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  37.  92
    Différence et répétition de Gabriel Tarde.Éric Alliez - 2001 - Multitudes 4 (4):171-176.
    If we begin to sense that Deleuze will have been the first to recognize Gabriel Tarde as a kind of «precursor » which he explored in his most untimely actuality, the constitutive character of Tarde’s inspiration for Deleuze has not been closely studied. It seems, however, as if Deleuze’s critique and overcoming of structuralist thought depends upon this reactualisation of Tarde’s work. This will allow us to better understand the extended »forgetting » of’ Tarde, buried for so long under the (...)
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  38.  26
    Capitalisme et schizophrénie.Gilles Deleuze - 1972
    "Mille Plateaux (Paris, Éditions de Minuit, 1980) est le second des deux volumes ayant pour sous-titre Capitalisme et schizophrénie issu de la collaboration entre le philosophe Gilles Deleuze et le philosophe et psychanalyste Félix Guattari. Cet ouvrage continue à explorer par des voies inédites - en s'attaquant notamment à une série d'erreurs afférentes selon les auteurs à l'arborescence, à l'État, au langage... - la question déjà avancée dans L'Anti-Œdipe (premier volume) d'une ontologie révolutionnaire des devenirs ("presque imperceptibles") qui ne cessent (...)
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  39.  30
    Philosophy in Turbulent Times: Canguilhem, Sartre, Foucault, Althusser, Deleuze, Derrida.Elisabeth Roudinesco - 2008 - Columbia University Press.
    For Elisabeth Roudinesco, a historian of psychoanalysis and one of France's leading intellectuals, Canguilhem, Sartre, Foucault, Althusser, Deleuze, and Derrida represent a "great generation" of French philosophers who accomplished remarkable work and lived incredible lives. These troubled and innovative thinkers endured World War II and the cultural and political revolution of the 1960s, and their cultural horizon was dominated by Marxism and psychoanalysis, though they were by no means strict adherents to the doctrines of Marx and Freud. Roudinesco knew many (...)
  40.  23
    Philosophy in Turbulent Times: Canguilhem, Sartre, Foucault, Althusser, Deleuze, Derrida.William McCuaig (ed.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    For Elisabeth Roudinesco, a historian of psychoanalysis and one of France's leading intellectuals, Canguilhem, Sartre, Foucault, Althusser, Deleuze, and Derrida represent a "great generation" of French philosophers who accomplished remarkable work and lived incredible lives. These troubled and innovative thinkers endured World War II and the cultural and political revolution of the 1960s, and their cultural horizon was dominated by Marxism and psychoanalysis, though they were by no means strict adherents to the doctrines of Marx and Freud. Roudinesco knew many (...)
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  41. Gilles Deleuze, Difference and Repetition. [REVIEW]James Williams - 1995 - Philosophy in Review 15:233-235.
     
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  42.  2
    Différence et analogie. Le projet deleuzien d’une philosophie de la différence.Michaël Crevoisier - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):33-52.
    Deleuze places the general project of Difference and Repetition within the history of “philosophies of difference”. Our aim is to follow this history, which he analyzes in particular in the second chapter, focusing on his reading of Aristotle. In these pages, the challenge is to distinguish between difference and analogy, in order to note in the theory of categories the ontological moment when the possibility of a purely differential conception of being is reduced to an analogical understanding. (...)
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  43.  19
    Gilles Deleuze's Difference and Repetition: A Critical Introduction and Guide, by James Williams.Isabella Palin - 2004 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (3):334-336.
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  44. La répétition et l’inconscient. De la métapsychologie à la métaphysique.Marion Farge - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):53-71.
    In the second chapter of Difference and Repetition, Deleuze explores the relationship of the unconscious to the three syntheses of time that he previously outlined, in order to conceive of an unconscious that is no longer representational but rather "differential and iterative, serial, problematic, and questioning." This article examines the implications of this refoundation of the unconscious with respect to psychoanalysis. I particularly emphasize the topical, dynamic, and energetic consequences of this undertaking, through which Deleuze seeks to replace Freudian (...)
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  45. Intensité, individuation, évolution. Commentaire du chapitre V : « Synthèse asymétrique du sensible ».David Bastidas-Bolaños - 2025 - Philosophique 28 (28):129-147.
    Deleuze's most general project is to establish an immanent genesis of real experience. In Difference and Repetition, this ambition involves not only the discovery and development of a double genetic circuit — a static genesis of being and a dynamic genesis of thought —, but also the action of a so-called “transcendental” principle. In the fifth chapter of the book, this principle refers to the concept of intensity and to the realm of an “asymmetrical synthesis of the sensible”. What (...)
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  46.  54
    A Criminal Intrigue: An Interview with Jean-Clet Martin.Constantin V. Boundas - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (Suppl):116-147.
    With Jean-Clet Martin's book, Une intrigue criminelle de la philosophie: lire la Phénoménologie de l'Esprit de Hegel, the latter emerges as a philosopher of (negative) difference and (infinite) repetition, one of the first to inject Being with becoming, in other words, as the brother-enemy that Deleuze had been waiting for and with whom he did establish complex relationships that cannot be conveniently summarized in his Nietzschean moment. In view of his novel and striking reading of Hegel, Martin is invited (...)
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  47. Differences in Becoming. Gilbert Simondon and Gilles Deleuze on Individuation.Emmanuel Alloa & Judith Michalet - 2017 - Philosophy Today.
    For a long time, Gilbert Simondon’s work was known only as either a philosophy restricted to the problem of technology or as an inspirational source for Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy of difference. As Simondon’s thinking is now finally in the process of being recognized in its own right as one of the most original philosophies of the twentieth century, this also entails that some critical work needs to be done to disentangle it from an all too hasty identification (...)
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  48.  54
    Gilles Deleuze's "Difference and Repetition": A Critical Introduction and Guide (review). [REVIEW]Rebecca Bamford - 2006 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 31 (1):61-62.
  49. Explaining individual differences.Zina B. Ward - 2023 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 101 (C):61-70.
    Most psychological research aims to uncover generalizations about the mind that hold across subjects. Philosophical discussions of scientific explanation have focused on such generalizations, but in doing so, have often overlooked an important phenomenon: variation. Variation is ubiquitous in psychology and many other domains, and an important target of explanation in its own right. Here I characterize explananda that concern individual differences and formulate an account of what it takes to explain them. I argue that the notion of actual (...) making, the only causal concept in the literature that explicitly addresses variation, cannot be used to ground such an account. Instead, I propose a view on which explaining individual differences involves identifying causes that could be intervened on to reduce the variability in the population. This account provides criteria of success for explaining variation and deepens our understanding of causal explanation. (shrink)
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  50. Adding Deleuze to the mix.John Protevi - 2010 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 9 (3):417-436.
    In this article I will suggest ways in which adding the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze to the mix can complement and extend the 4EA approach to cognitive science. In the first part of the paper, I will show how the Deleuzean tripartite ontological difference (virtual/intensive/actual) can provide an explicit ontology for dynamical systems theory. The second part will take these ontological notions and apply them to three areas of concern to the 4EA approaches: (a) the Deleuzean concept of the (...)
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