Essays on Deleuze

Home > Other > Essays on Deleuze > Page 82
Essays on Deleuze Page 82

by Daniel Smith


  Griss, G. F. C., ref1

  ground: and the ungrounded, ref1; versus foundation, ref2

  group theory, ref1; and multiplicities, ref2

  Gualandi, Alberto, ref1n30, ref2n17, ref3n23

  Guattari, Félix, ref1, ref2; and Anti-Oedipus, ref3; coauthorship, ref4; effect on Deleuze, ref5, ref6; as intercessor, ref7; preferred diagrams to concepts, ref8n3; understood concepts differently, ref9; see also Deleuze, Gilles

  Guéroult, Martial, ref1, ref2n17; on Maimon, ref3

  Gulliver, ref1

  H, the three H's: Hegel, Husserl, Heidegger, ref1

  Habermas, Jürgen: on Foucault, ref1; on Kant, ref2; and political philosophy, ref3

  habit, ref1; in Leibniz, ref2

  hacceity, ref1; an hour of the day, ref2

  Hacking, Ian, ref1n6, ref2n25; on Leibniz, ref3; “making up people,” ref4

  Hadot, Pierre, ref1n31; and ethics, ref2

  Hägglund, Martin, ref1n28

  hallucination, ref1; and perception, ref2

  Hallward, Peter, ref1n1

  Halwachs, Pierre, ref1

  Hamiltonian number, ref1, ref2

  haptic space, ref1, ref2

  Hardt, Michael, ref1n6

  health, ref1; as a criteria of the drives, ref2; in Nietzsche, ref3

  Hegel, ref1, ref2, ref3; and alienation, ref4; an analogical ontology, ref5; on contradiction, ref6; Deleuze's interpretation of, ref7; on desire, ref8; and the dialectic, ref9; on essence and appearance, ref10; extends contradiction to existence, ref11; and Goethe, ref12; and Ideas, ref13; Logic, ref14; and the infinitely large, ref15; and perception, ref16; as a philosophy of the categories, ref17; and the State, ref18; and totality, ref19; and the unconscious, ref20; in Žižek, ref21

  Hegelianism, ref1; and fragmentation, ref2; on the State, ref3

  Heidegger, Martin, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; Being and Time, ref5, ref6; on the categories, ref7; and the concept of difference, ref8; and the concept of “world,” ref9; Deleuze on, ref10n11, ref11n7; and Derrida, ref12n7; and Duns Scotus, ref13; and the everyday, ref14; and the form of the question, ref15; and French philosophy, ref16; on the gift, ref17; and the Greeks, ref18, ref19; on Greek and German language, ref20; and history of philosophy, ref21; idle talk, ref22; on Kant, ref23; and metaphysics, ref24; and Nazism, ref25; and ontological difference, ref26, ref27; and onto-theology, ref28; overcoming metaphysics, ref29; on Platonism, ref30; and the renaissance of ontology, ref31, ref32; and Spinoza, ref33; thinkers think one thought, ref34; and thinking, ref35; on time, ref36n35; Time and Being, ref37; transformation of concepts in, ref38; and univocity, ref39; “we are not yet thinking,” ref40

  Heilbroner, Robert, The Worldly Philosophers, ref1

  Henry of Ghent, and univocity, ref1

  herd, ref1, ref2; in Nietzsche, ref3

  heresy, ref1; as confusion of God and creatures, ref2

  hermeneutics, ref1

  Hersh, Reuben, ref1

  Herz, Marcus, ref1

  heterogenesis, xiii, ref1, ref2n13

  Heyting, Arend, ref1

  hierarchy, ref1; in the concept of Being, ref2; in Plato, ref3

  Hilbert, David, ref1; and formalization, ref2; as politician, ref3

  Hippias, ref1

  history: “all the names of” (Nietzsche), ref1, ref2; and becoming, ref3, ref4; natural, ref5; natural, in Aristotle, ref6; retrospective reading of, in Marx, ref7, ref8; universal, ref9

  history of philosophy, ref1, ref2; as an agent of power, ref3; Deleuze's relationship to, ref4; listing new concepts, ref5

  Hitchcock, Alfred, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, ref1

  Hitler, Adolf, and cinema, ref1

  Hobbes, Thomas, ref1; and political philosophy, ref2

  Holland, Eugene, ref1n25, ref2n2, ref3n7

  Homer, Odyssey, ref1

  homosexuality, ref1

  horse, racehorse versus workhorse, ref1

  Hoüel, Jules, ref1n23

  Hughes, Joe, ref1n36, ref2n16

  Huillet, Danièle, ref1

  Hume, David, ref1, ref2, ref3; critique of theology, ref4; critique of transcendence, ref5; Deleuze on, ref6; on ideas, ref7; and relations, ref8; Treatise on Human Nature, ref9

  humor, ref1

  Husserl, Edmund, ref1, ref2n20; Cartesian Meditations, ref3; and immanence, ref4; on vague essences in mathematics, ref5

  hyle, ref1, ref2

  hylomorphism: and hydraulic model, ref1n49; and painting, ref2

  Hyppolite, Jean, ref1, ref2; Logic and Existence, ref3

  I feel, ref1

  I think, ref1, ref2; in Kant, ref3

  icon: in mathematics, ref1; in Plato, ref2; iconology, ref3

  id, in Freud, ref1, ref2

  Idea, ref1, ref2, ref3; adequate, in Spinoza, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7n11; components of, in Deleuze, ref8; as a criterion of selection in Plato, ref9; defined, ref10; as difference, ref11; and essence, ref12; and Euclidean geometry, ref13; as focal points or horizons, ref14, ref15; genetic role of, ref16; of God, ref17; of innocence, ref18; in Kant's three critiques, ref19, ref20; Kant versus Deleuze, ref21, ref22; legitimate and illegitimate employment, ref23; and mathematics, ref24; and movement, ref25; and perception, ref26; Platonic, ref27n21; and practical reason, in Kant, ref28; as problematic, ref29; as regulative, ref30; in Sade, ref31; of sensibility, ref32; in sensible nature, ref33; in the sublime, ref34; three components of, in Kant, ref35; vital, in Michaux, ref36; and the “What is…?” question, ref37

  identity of nature: and difference in regime, ref1

  identity: analytic versus synthetic, ref1, ref2; in Aristotle, ref3; in art, ref4; and becoming, ref5; in Descartes, ref6; in Hegel, ref7; identity, opposition, analogy, resemblance, ref8, ref9; in Plato, ref10; principle of, ref11, ref12; contrasted with the Same, ref13

  ideology, in Marx, ref1

  idols: in Plato, ref1; twilight of, ref2

  illusion, ref1; cinematographic, in Bergson, ref2; of consciousness, ref3; in Kant, ref4, ref5; in Spinoza, ref6n25

  image, ref1; affection-image, ref2; as the medium of film, ref3; in Plato, ref4; without resemblance, ref5

  image of thought, ref1, ref2, ref3; defined, ref4; dogmatic, ref5, ref6, ref7; in Plato, Descartes, and Kant, ref8

  imaginary, ref1; Bourdieu on, ref2n25; in Heidegger, ref3; in Kant, ref4; in mathematics, ref5; Patton on, ref6; and perception, ref7; as productive, in Kant, ref8; social contract, ref9; in Spinoza, ref10

  imitation, as deception, versus mimesis, ref1

  immanence, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; and Badiou, ref5; and causality, ref6; criteria of, ref7; Derrida on, ref8n15; in the “divine names” tradition, ref9; and ethics, ref10; gap within, in Žižek, ref11; in Greek thought, ref12; in Kant, ref13, ref14, ref15n21; Maimon on Kant, ref16; plane of, ref17, ref18, ref19, ref20; in Plato, ref21; in psychoanalysis, ref22; pure, ref23; speculative versus practical, ref24; three questions of, ref25; and transcendence, ref26, ref27, ref28, ref29n21; and univocity, ref30

  immigration: in America, ref1; as flow, ref2

  important, as a category, ref1

  impossible: as condition of the possible, in Derrida, ref1; and creation, ref2; in Leibniz, ref3; experience of, ref4

  impressionism: Cézanne's critiques of, ref1; and color, ref2

  impulses: incoherence of, ref1; Klossowski's concept of, ref2; at the origin of truth, ref3

  inclusion, and reciprocity, ref1

  incompossibility, in Leibniz, ref1, ref2, ref3

  indefinite, ref1

  indexicals, ref1

  India, ref1, ref2

  indiscernibility, ref1; as the reciprocal of sufficient reason, ref2

  individual, as multiplicity, ref1

  individuation: in Aristotle, ref1; and degree of power, ref2; impersonal, ref3; in Leibniz, ref4; of a life, ref5; non-personal mode, ref6; and proper names, ref7; real definition of, ref8; in Spinoza, ref9

  industrialization, ref1

  infinite, ref1; actual, ref2n27; analysis, ref3; debt, ref4; and finite, ref5,
ref6; infinitely small, ref7; Leibniz, ref8

  infinitesimals, ref1, ref2, ref3n44; in calculus, ref4; and differentials, ref5; in non-standard analysis, ref6

  information, ref1, ref2, ref3; and media, ref4

  infrastructure, and drives, ref1, ref2

  innovation, ref1; conceptual, ref2

  inscription, ref1; and accounting, ref2

  integration, ref1, ref2, ref3

  intellect: divine, ref1; in Nietzsche, ref2, ref3

  intensity, intensities, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6; as the being of the sensible, ref7; and body without organs, ref8; cancelled in extensity, ref9; and capital, ref10; converted into intention, ref11; in Deleuze's Spinoza interpretation, ref12n41; as difference of potential, ref13, ref14, ref15; and ethics, ref16; and the face, ref17; history of the concept, ref18; and impulses, in Klossowski, ref19; intensive forces in Bacon's paintings, ref20; intensive magnitudes, ref21, ref22; in literature, ref23; and matter, ref24; in perception, ref25; sufficient reason of the sensible, ref26, ref27, ref28; without intention, in Nietzsche, ref29

  intention: authorial, ref1; derived from intensity, in Klossowski, ref2, ref3; led back to intensity, ref4; intentionality in phenomenology, ref5

  interest: versus desire, ref1; interest rate, ref2; in Marx, ref3, ref4

  interesting, as a category, ref1, ref2

  interpretation: “What does it mean?”, ref1, ref2; versus experimentation, ref3, ref4

  interstice, ref1, ref2

  interval, ref1; in Bergson, ref2

  intolerable, as a lived experience, ref1

  introjection, ref1, ref2, ref3

  intuition, ref1; in Bergson, ref2; and space-time, in Kant, ref3; in Leibniz, ref4; in mathematics, ref5, ref6

  invention, ref1; of new space-times, ref2

  irony, ref1

  irrationality, ref1

  isonomia, in Greece, ref1

  Jacobi, F. H., on Kant, ref1

  James, Henry, ref1

  James, Ian, ref1n30

  James, William, ref1n11; pure flux of consciousness, ref2; stream of thought, ref3n54

  Jarry, Alfred, ref1, ref2

  Joan of Arc, ref1

  Job, in Kierkegaard, ref1

  Johns, Jasper, ref1

  Jones, Alfred Ernest, ref1

  Jones, Graham, ref1n4

  jouissance, ref1

  joy, in Spinoza, ref1, ref2

  Joyce, James, ref1; epiphanies, ref2; Finnegans Wake, ref3, ref4; Ulysses, ref5

  judgment, ref1, ref2, ref3; aesthetic, ref4, ref5; versus affect, ref6; analytic versus synthetic, ref7; of attribution, ref8, ref9; and Being, ref10; and decision, ref11; deferred to infinity, ref12; defying, ref13; and desire, ref14; determinate versus reflective, ref15; doctrine of, in Plato, ref16; hypothetical, in Descartes, ref17; in morality, ref18, ref19; Patton on, ref20; perverted, in Plato, ref21, ref22, ref23; power of, ref24; prevents the new, ref25; reflective, ref26; of relation, ref27; system of, ref28, ref29, ref30, ref31, ref32; theory of, ref33; and truth, ref34; types of, in Kant, ref35, ref36, ref37; “to have done with judgment,” ref38, ref39, ref40; versus evaluation, ref41, ref42, ref43, ref44, ref45, ref46n86

  jurisprudence, ref1

  justice, ref1; ref2; in Derrida, ref3, ref4; as fairness, in Rawls, ref5

  Kafka, Franz, ref1, ref2; apparent acquittal, ref3; bureaucracy, ref4; and literary enunciation, ref5; “kafkaism,” ref6; Metamorphosis, ref7; and minor literature, ref8; The Trial, ref9; unlimited atonement, ref10

  Kandinsky, Wassily, ref1; and abstraction, ref2

  Kant, Immanuel, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4n10; an analogical ontology, ref5; and Anti-Oedipus, ref6n8; anticipations of perception, ref7; Badiou on, ref8; on the categories, ref9, ref10; on concepts and intuitions, ref11, ref12; on conceptual blockage, ref13, ref14; The Contest of the Faculties, ref15; critique of Descartes, ref16; Critique of Judgment, ref17, ref18, ref19, ref20, ref21; Critique of Practical Reason, ref22, ref23, ref24, ref25, ref26, ref27; Critique of Pure Reason, ref28, ref29, ref30, ref31, ref32, ref33, ref34, ref35, ref36; critique of theology, ref37; Deleuze on, ref38, ref39, ref40, ref41n15; on desire, ref42, ref43, ref44, ref45; disjunct use of the faculties, ref46; on essence and appearance, ref47; ethical philosophy, ref48; a fantastic subjective tribunal, ref49; form of the question, ref50; and Foucault, ref51; and fragmentation, ref52; on genius, ref53; Heidegger's interpretation of, ref54; on Ideas, ref55, ref56, ref57; the immanence and transcendence, ref58, ref59, ref60; and intensity, ref61, ref62; and Jean-Luc Godard, ref63; on judgment, ref64; kingdom of ends, ref65; on the Law, ref66; on Maimon, ref67, ref68n18, ref69n19; and moral law, ref70; on the ontological argument, ref71; and synthetic judgments, ref72; theory of perception, ref73; compared with Plato, ref74, ref75; political philosophy, ref76, ref77; on space and time, ref78; on time, ref79, ref80; transcendental aesthetic, ref81; transcendental dialectic, ref82, ref83, ref84, ref85, ref86; and the unconscious, ref87; unity of apperception, ref88

  Kelvin effect, ref1, ref2

  Kerouac, Jack, ref1; On the Road, ref2; on schizophrenia, ref3

  Kesey, Ken, ref1

  Keynes, John Maynard, ref1, ref2; The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, ref3; and regulation, ref4

  Kierkegaard, Søren, ref1, ref2; and existentialism, ref3; on the interesting or the important, ref4; on interiority, ref5; knight of faith, ref6, ref7; on the Law, ref8

  kinship, ref1

  Klee, Paul, ref1, ref2; and force, ref3; forces of the cosmos, ref4, ref5; On Modern Art, ref6; on painting, ref7; the people are missing, ref8; rendering visible, ref9, ref10; on rhythm in art, ref11; “we can do no more,” ref12

  Klein, Félix, ref1

  Kleist, Heinrich von, and Goethe, ref1; Penthesilea, ref2

  Klossowski, Pierre, ref1, ref2, ref3; apophaticism, ref4; The Baphomet, ref5; on the death of god, ref6; death of the self, ref7; Diana at Her Bath, ref8, ref9; on God as a principle of identity, ref10; gregariousness, ref11; idiosyncracy, ref12; The Laws of Hospitality, ref13; Living Currency (La Monnaie vivante), ref14; Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle, ref15, ref16, ref17; reading of Nietzsche, ref18; Roberte ce soir, ref19; and simulacra, ref20, ref21; Le Souffler, ref22; and suppôt, ref23

  knight: of faith, ref1, ref2; in literature, ref3

  knots, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  knowledge: and problems, ref1; versus thought, ref2, ref3

  Kojève, Alexandre, ref1, ref2n1, ref3n22

  Koyré, Alexandre, ref1, ref2

  Kraepelin, Emil, on schizophrenia, ref1

  Krafft-Ebing, Richard von, ref1

  labor, ref1; and capital, ref2

  Labov, William, ref1

  labyrinth, in Borges, ref1

  Lacan, Jacques, ref1, ref2; Deleuze's encounter with, ref3; Deleuze's fidelity to, ref4, ref5; on desire, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9; “Kant with Sade,” ref10; and lack-of-being, ref11; metonymy in, ref12; movement toward immanence, ref13; objet petit a, ref14; reaction to Anti-Oedipus, ref15; on the real, ref16; and repetition, ref17; seminar on The Purloined Letter, ref18n60; seminar XI (1964), ref19; signifying chains, ref20; on symbolic, imaginary, and real, ref21

  lack, ref1; and desire, ref2; in Lacan, ref3; lack-of-being, ref4; see also desire

  Lagrange, Jean-Louis, ref1; interpretation of calculus, ref2

  Lalande, Jérôme, ref1

  landscape, ref1; versus geography, ref2

  language: competence, ref1; and denotation, ref2; in disequilibrium, ref3, ref4; extracting constants, ref5; four types, in Gobard, ref6; “ghetto,” ref7; in Lewis Carroll, ref8; its limit, ref9; major and minor uses of, ref10, ref11; and micro-politics, ref12; and minorities, ref13; multilingualism, ref14; performatives, ref15; of power, ref16; and stuttering, ref17; two treatments of, ref18; use of, in literature, ref19; uses of, in Sade and Masoch, ref20

  Laplace, Pierre-Simon, Laplaces's demon, ref1

  Lapoujade, David, ref1n19

  laughter, ref1

  Lautman, Albert, ref1, ref2, ref3n34,
ref4n55, ref5n66; on axiomatization, ref6; Essay on the Notion of structure and Existence in Mathematics, ref7; and Leibniz, ref8

  Lautréamont, on mathematics, ref1

  law: as an axiomatic system, ref1; of continuity, in Leibniz, ref2; divine, ref3; in Kant, ref4, ref5; moral law, ref6, ref7, ref8; of nature, ref9, ref10; Nietzsche's critique of, ref11n16; spirit of, in Montesquieu, ref12; in Plato, ref13

  Lawlor, Leonard, ref1n3, ref2n1

  Lawrence, D. H., ref1; critical of French literature, ref2; Fantasia of the Unconscious, ref3; his hemoptysis, ref4; on schizophrenia, ref5

  Lawrence, T. E., ref1; Seven Pillars of Wisdom, ref2

  Le Bot, Marc, and Francis Bacon, ref1

  Le Doeuff, Michele, ref1, ref2n7; The Philosophical Imaginary, ref3

  Le Verrier, Urbain, ref1

  Lecercle, Jean-Jacques, ref1n1

  legitimation, ref1, ref2

  Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm, ref1, ref2, ref3; apperception, ref4; Badiou on, ref5; Baroque reconstruction in philosophy, ref6; and Bergson, ref7; and calculus, ref8; compossibility and incompossibility, ref9, ref10, ref11; criterion of the Best, ref12, ref13; critique of Descartes, ref14; Deleuze's becoming-Leibniz, ref15; discontinuity, ref16; expression, ref17; extends identity to existence, ref18; on freedom, ref19; and genesis, ref20; on God, ref21, ref22; minus God, ref23; and immanent ethics, ref24; and infinitely small, ref25; and judgment, ref26; “Justification of the Infinitesimal Calculus,” ref27, ref28; Lautman on, ref29; and Maimon, ref30; on matter, ref31; monad, compared to cogito, ref32, ref33; New Essays Concerning Human Understanding, ref34; and Newton, on the calculus, ref35, ref36; perspectivism, ref37; as a post-Kantian, ref38; on relations, ref39; and singularities, ref40; spiritual automaton, ref41; sufficient reason, ref42; Theodicy, ref43, ref44; theory of perception, ref45; and time, ref46; and transcendental philosophy, ref47, ref48; unconscious in, versus Freud, ref49

  Leiris, Michel, and Francis Bacon, ref1

  Leonardo da Vinci, ref1; Mona Lisa, ref2

  Lesseps, Ferdinand de, ref1, ref2

  Levinas, Emmanuel, ref1, ref2, ref3; and alterity, ref4; and Derrida, ref5; and ethics, ref6, ref7; and Husserl, ref8; lived experience, ref9; and the Other, ref10; and transcendence, ref11

  Lévi-Strauss, Claude, ref1n26; two types of propositions, ref2

 

‹ Prev