Essays on Deleuze

Home > Other > Essays on Deleuze > Page 84
Essays on Deleuze Page 84

by Daniel Smith


  Platonism, ref1; completed, ref2; and fragmentation, ref3; inverted, four figures of, ref4; overturning of, ref5; struggle against the passions, ref6

  play, ideal, ref1

  pleasure: and desire, ref1; and “discharge,” ref2; and pain, in Kant, ref3

  Plotinus, ref1, ref2; and the gift, ref3; and intensity, ref4; and time, ref5

  pluralism, and monism, ref1

  Poincaré, Henri, ref1: and problematics, ref2; on problems, ref3; typology of singular points, ref4

  point of view, ref1; in Leibniz, ref2, ref3

  points: in geometry, ref1; of reference, ref2; saddle points, ref3, ref4, ref5; singular and ordinary, ref6

  pole, defined, ref1

  political philosophy, ref1; and capitalism, ref2

  politics, ref1; as art, ref2; as a category, in Deleuze, ref3; and literature, ref4; minorization of, ref5

  Pollock, Jackson, ref1, ref2

  polyphony, ref1

  polytheism: died of laughter, ref1; in Nietzsche, ref2

  Poncelet, Jean-Victor, ref1; and the principle of continuity, ref2

  Pop Art, and Platonism, ref1

  Porphyry's tree, ref1

  portmanteau words, in Carroll, ref1; in Joyce, ref2

  possibility: in Beckett, ref1; Deleuze's critique of, ref2; in Kant, ref3; of life, ref4; Peirce, ref5; possible experience, ref6; possible worlds, ref7

  post-Kantian philosophy, ref1, ref2; Deleuze's “minor” tradition, ref3

  potential, difference of see intensity

  Pound, Ezra, ref1

  power, ref1; active versus reactive, ref2; capacity to be affected, ref3; degree of power, ref4, ref5, ref6; as an ethical principle, ref7; in Nietzsche, ref8; nth degree, ref9; power of acting, ref10, ref11; power of existing, ref12; relations, ref13; in Spinoza, ref14, ref15,

  Prado, ref1, ref2

  pragmatism, ref1; in language, ref2

  predicates, ref1, ref2; in Aristotle, ref3; and existence, ref4; in Leibniz, ref5; primary, ref6; vague, ref7n4

  pre-established harmony, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; in Leibniz, ref5

  presence, metaphysics of, in Derrida, ref1

  present, history of, in Foucault, ref1

  pretension, in Plato, ref1

  priest, ref1; Nietzsche's analysis of, ref2

  primitive society, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5; economy, ref6

  principle: excluded middle, ref1; identity, ref2, ref3; identity of indiscernibles, ref4; multiplied in Leibniz, ref5; non-contradiction, ref6; principles of sufficient reason, ref7, ref8

  privatization, of social reproduction, ref1

  problem: defined by singularities, ref1; false, in Bergson, ref2; generates thought, ref3; have the solution they deserve, ref4; and “solvability,” ref5; versus theorems, ref6, ref7n19; without solution, ref8, ref9, ref10

  problematic, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10; and axiomatics, ref11, ref12; in dialectics, ref13; and encounter, ref14; in Foucault, ref15n40; and jealous lover, ref16; modal status of, ref17; lacking in Spinoza, ref18

  process, ref1; and human rights, ref2; immanent, ref3; of normalization, in Foucault, ref4; of Life, ref5; of objectivation, ref6; pre-subjective, ref7; of rationalization, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12; and schizophrenia, ref13; of stratification, ref14; of subjectivation, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19n1

  Proclus, Commentary on the First Book of Euclid's Elements, ref1; on theorems and problems, ref2

  production: desiring versus social, ref1; of the new, ref2; versus representation, ref3

  projection, ref1, ref2, ref3

  proletariat, in Russian revolution, ref1

  proper name, ref1, ref2; versus concepts, ref3; in Critique et clinique project, ref4; in Deleuze, ref5; as nonpersonal modes of individuation, ref6; see also name

  proportion, ref1; and analogy, ref2

  propositions: analytic, ref1; undecidable, ref2, ref3

  propria: and the divine attributes, ref1; three types, ref2

  Protevi, John, ref1n26, ref2n2

  Proust, Marcel, ref1; Albertine, ref2; on Combray, ref3; and Francis Bacon, ref4; a foreign language within language, ref5; hand-to-hand combat, ref6; In Search of Lost Time, ref7; involuntary memory in, ref8; making time visible, ref9; “proustism,” ref10; and sensation, ref11; unity of his work, ref12

  Pseudo-Dionysus, ref1, ref2

  psyche: human, ref1; psychiatry, ref2; psychic reality, denied, ref3, ref4, ref5

  psychoanalysis, ref1, ref2; auto-critique of, in Lacan, ref3, ref4; Deleuze break with, ref5; immanence and transcendence in, ref6; of literature, ref7; on psychosis, ref8

  psychologism, in Kant, ref1

  psychology: and economics, ref1; in Kant, ref2

  psychosis, ref1; in Deleuze, ref2; and symbolization, ref3

  pure: concepts as, in Bergson, ref1; memory, ref2; perception, ref3; variability, ref4

  Pythagoras, ref1; Pythagorean theorem, ref2

  quadrature, ref1; in calculus, ref2

  quality, in Plato, ref1; pure, ref2; sensible, ref3

  question, form of, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7; see also “What is…?” question

  quid facti, and quid juris, ref1

  race, in delirium, ref1

  ratio: cognoscendi, ref1; essendi, ref2; existendi, ref3; fiendi, ref4

  rational choice theory, ref1

  rationalism, ref1, ref2, ref3; Deleuze on, ref4; rational man, in Spinoza, ref5, ref6

  Rawls, John, A Theory of Justice, ref1, ref2; in Patton, ref3; use of social contract, ref4

  reactive, ref1, ref2, ref3; reactionary political investments, ref4

  real: category of, ref1; conditions of, ref2; defined, ref3; as desiring production, ref4; real distinction, ref5n29; and imaginary, ref6; in Lacan, ref7, ref8, ref9

  real experience, ref1; and calculus, ref2; five requirements of, ref3

  reality, detachment from, in schizophrenia, ref1

  reason: an exhausted concept, ref1; faculty of, ref2; interest of, in Kant, ref3; and the irrational, ref4; in Kant, ref5; new critique of, in Klossowski, ref6; in Nietzsche, ref7; practical, ref8; as a process of rationalization, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13; as a relation between drives, in Nietzsche, ref14; tied to the State, ref15, ref16; in the sublime, ref17

  reciprocity, ref1; and inclusion, ref2; reciprocal determination, ref3, ref4

  recognition, ref1, ref2, ref3; in Kant, ref4, ref5, ref6; and minorities, ref7; and the new, ref8

  recording, ref1; and accounting, ref2

  rectification, in geometry, ref1; in ethics, ref2n22

  reductionism, ref1, ref2; in Badiou, ref3

  Reformation, ref1, ref2; and time, ref3

  regime, difference in, ref1

  regular, and the singular, ref1

  Reich, Wilhelm, ref1

  Reinhold, K. L., ref1n19

  relation: and becoming, ref1; and Bergson, ref2; differential, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7n16; external to its terms, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12; fractional, ref13; in Hume, ref14; internal to its terms, ref15; in Leibniz, ref16; logic of, ref17; in Plato, ref18; pure, ref19

  relativism, and ethics, ref1

  religion, ref1; and fabulation, ref2; and repetition, ref3

  remarkable, ref1; and the interesting, as categories, ref2

  Renaissance, ref1; art, ref2; complication and explication, ref3

  repetition, ref1; as disguise and displacement, ref2; in Heidegger, ref3, ref4; in an inverted Platonism, ref5; in love, ref6; naked versus clothed, ref7; in Proust, ref8; in religion, ref9, ref10n20; as temporal synthesis, ref11

  representation, ref1, ref2; in Aristotle, ref3; in art, ref4; conditions of, ref5; finite and infinite, ref6; in Foucault, ref7; in Kant, ref8; in Lacan, ref9; in Leibniz, critiqued, ref10; in Plato, ref11; versus production, ref12

  reproduction: asexual versus sexual, ref1; in Kant, ref2, ref3

  resemblance, ref1; and association, ref2; and possibility, ref3; in simula
cra, ref4; of transcendental and empirical, ref5; versus semblance, ref6n33

  resistance, ref1, ref2; and colonization, ref3; in Foucault, ref4

  resonance, ref1, ref2; as a conjunctive synthesis, ref3

  responsibility: absolute, in Levinas, ref1; in Derrida, ref2

  ressentiment, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  revelation, in the Bible, ref1

  revolution: American, ref1; its betrayal, ref2; French, ref3, ref4; Russian, ref5; scientific, ref6

  rhizome, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4n19; and arborescence, ref5; Deleuze's texts as, ref6; as multiplicity, ref7

  rhythm, ref1; in Bacon, ref2; in Bacon's paintings, ref3; and the body, ref4; as the ground of the arts, ref5; in Kant, ref6; in painting, ref7

  Ricardo, David, ref1

  Ricoeur, Paul, and Husserl, ref1

  Riefenstahl, Leni, Triumph of the Will, ref1

  Riegl, Alois, ref1, ref2

  Riemann, Bernhard, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; and manifolds, ref5, ref6, ref7; concept of multiplicity, ref8; problematics, ref9; Riemannian geometry, ref10

  rights, ref1; as axioms, ref2; Deleuze on, ref3; humanism, ref4; a matter of jurisprudence, not justice, ref5; and minorities, ref6

  rigor, ref1, ref2; in calculus, ref3; defined, ref4; in mathematics, ref5

  Rimbaud, Arthur, ref1; “I is another,” ref2; season in hell, ref3

  rival: as conceptual persona, ref1; rivalry in Plato, ref2

  Robbe-Grillet, Alain, ref1, ref2

  Robinson, Abraham, ref1; and non-standard analysis, ref2

  Rocha, Glauber, Black God and White Devil, ref1

  Romanticism, ref1

  Rorty, Richard, ref1n31

  Rosen, Stanley, critique of Deleuze, ref1n33

  Rouch, Jean, ref1

  Roudinesco, Elisabeth, ref1n11

  Roussel, Raymond, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4n40, ref5n41; La Doublure, ref6, ref7; Impressions of Africa, ref8, ref9

  rules: and morality, ref1; facilitative, defined, ref2n5, ref3n8

  rupture, ref1, ref2; as a type of transcendence, ref3

  Russell, Bertrand, ref1, ref2, ref3; anti-Hegelianism of, ref4; and modern logic, ref5; on relations, ref6, ref7; and set theory, ref8

  Russell, John, Francis Bacon, ref1

  Sade, Marquis de, ref1, ref2, ref3; and Klossowski, ref4; as perversion, ref5

  sadism, ref1, ref2, ref3,

  sadness, ref1, ref2; in Spinoza, ref3

  sadomasochism, Deleuze's critique of, ref1

  salary, as a coded flow, ref1

  Salomé, Lou, ref1

  Sambar, Elie, ref1, ref2n6

  same, contrasted with the identical, ref1; in Klossowski, ref2; as concept, in Plato, ref3; as model, in Plato, ref4

  sans-fond, ref1; see also ungrounded

  Sartre, Jean-Paul, bad faith, ref1; on choice, ref2; and existentialism, ref3; Transcendence of the Ego, ref4

  Satan, ref1; same as God, ref2

  Schelling, ref1, ref2, ref3; and “superior empiricism,” ref4

  schematism, ref1; its dynamics, ref2; in Kant and Heidegger, ref3, ref4, ref5n23; perceptual, ref6

  schizoanalysis, ref1, ref2, ref3; schiz, ref4

  schizophrenia, ref1, ref2; in Anglo-American literature, ref3; concept of, ref4; a “discordant syndrome,” ref5; history of the concept, ref6n22; and language, ref7; a pole of delirium, ref8; a power of humanity and nature, ref9; as process, ref10; and the real, ref11

  schizophrenization, as a process, ref1, ref2n44

  Schmitt, Bernard, ref1n15

  Schreber, Judge, ref1

  Schumann, Robert, ref1

  Schürmann, Reiner, ref1n10

  science, ref1, ref2; ambulant, ref3, ref4; in Bergson, ref5; creates functions, ref6; danger of “applying” scientific concepts elsewhere, ref7, ref8; Deleuze on, ref9, ref10n20; in Kant, ref11; minor, ref12, ref13; nomadic, ref14 and philosophy, ref15, ref16; scientific revolution, ref17, ref18, ref19; of stereotypes, in Klossowski, ref20

  scream: as force, ref1; in Francis Bacon, ref2; painting the scream, ref3

  sculpture, ref1, ref2n40

  sea, in perception, ref1, ref2

  Secombe, Linnell, ref1n1

  sedimentation, ref1, ref2

  selection, ref1; in biology, ref2; in Plato, ref3, ref4; scrambled, ref5, ref6; and Spinoza and Nietzsche, ref7

  Self, ref1; decomposition of, ref2; as Idea, ref3; self-affectivity, ref4; see also Self, World, and God

  Self, World, and God, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10; new status of, in Deleuze, ref11

  Sellers, Wilfred, ref1n5

  sensation: block of, ref1; in the body, not the air (critique of impressionism), ref2; can only be felt, ref3; “coagulated,” ref4; coloring sensation, ref5; contrasted with perception, ref6; logic of, ref7; “paint the sensation,” ref8, ref9; and painting, ref10; as pre-rational, ref11; pure form of, in Kant, ref12; real rather than representative, ref13; versus the “sensational,” ref14; two types, ref15; and vibration, ref16; and violence, ref17

  sense, Žižek's interpretation of, ref1

  sensibility, ref1; and differences of intensity, ref2, ref3, ref4; differential relations in, ref5; limit of, ref6; as a transcendental domain, ref7

  series, ref1, ref2, ref3; construction of, ref4; divergence and convergence, ref5

  Serres, Michel, ref1, ref2, ref3n9, ref4n30, ref5n48

  servitude: as desired, ref1; and the State, ref2; voluntary, ref3

  set theory, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6; and aleph numbers, ref7; and Badiou, ref8; Deleuze on, ref9n36; denumerable and nondenumerable sets, ref10n71infinite set, ref11; and the whole, ref12

  sex: and minorities, ref1; sexuality, concept of, ref2

  shot, in film, panoramic versus tracking, ref1

  Sider, Ted, ref1n15

  sign: in accounting, ref1; defined, ref2n22; of desire, ref3, ref4; as intensity, ref5; in Klossowski, ref6; as the limit of sensibility, ref7; as non-signifying, ref8, ref9; objectivist temptation and subjectivist compensation, ref10; produced by works of art, ref11; in Proust, ref12; and sensation, ref13; two characteristics of, ref14; versus recognition, ref15, ref16

  signatures, in art and philosophy, ref1

  signifying chains, in Lacan, ref1

  Simondon, Gilbert: and hylomorphism, ref1; on modulation, ref2

  simulacrum, ref1; defined, in Klossowski, ref2, ref3n1; disappears from Deleuze's writings, ref4; expresses a phantasm, in Klossowski, ref5; as a false claimant, in Plato, ref6; as the fundamental problem of Platonism, ref7; history of the concept, ref8, ref9; replaced by the concept of the assemblage, ref10; versus symbol, ref11; three components of, ref12

  sin, ref1, ref2; sinner, as an event, ref3

  singularities, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10; and concepts, ref11; defines problems, ref12, ref13; and desire, ref14; “Everything is singular!”, ref15, ref16; and fragmentation, ref17; as genetic elements, ref18; in Klossowski, ref19; as knots, ref20; law as a prolongation of, ref21; law as a prolongation of, ref22; in literature, ref23; in matter, ref24; and multiplicity, ref25; in perception, ref26; rendered ordinary, ref27; that which escapes the rule, ref28; theory of, in Leibniz, ref29; and universals, ref30

  sleep: in Bacon, ref1; its flattening force, ref2

  Smith, Adam, ref1, ref2

  Smith, Daniel W., ref1n14, ref2n3, ref3n5

  smooth space, ref1, ref2; and law, ref3

  social contract, in Hobbes and Locke, ref1, ref2; Patton's analysis of, ref3, ref4n8

  social imaginary, ref1

  social reproduction, becomes privatized, ref1

  social security, ref1

  socius, ref1, ref2

  Socrates, ref1, ref2; and the “What is…?” question, ref3; and Zeno, ref4

  solutions, particular versus general, ref1

  something, rather than nothing, ref1

  sophists, ref1, ref2; as conceptual persona, ref3

  Sorbonne, ref1, ref2r />
  sorites paradoxes, ref1n4

  soul, ref1; ref2: economy of, in Klossowski, ref3, ref4; immortality of, ref5; and judgment, ref6; and time, ref7; its tonality, ref8

  sound, ref1; Idea of, ref2

  Soviet Union, ref1, ref2

  space, ref1, ref2; in cinema, ref3; disconnected, ref4; as divisible, ref5; haptic, ref6, ref7; as intensive, ref8; in Kant, ref9, ref10, ref11; manual, ref12; metastable, ref13; optical, in painting, ref14; as pure intuition (Cohen), ref15; Riemannian, ref16; smooth, ref17, ref18; tactile-optical, ref19

  space-time: as a priori forms (Kant), ref1; derived from differential relations, ref2; in Leibniz and Kant, ref3

  speech act, ref1; as genetic element, ref2; pure, ref3

  Spinoza, Baruch, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5; Adam's sin, ref6n30, ref7n5; affectivity, ref8; Badiou on, ref9; on the Bible, ref10; Deleuze on, ref11; Deleuze critique of, ref12; Deleuze's becoming-Spinoza, ref13; ethical question in, ref14n17; Ethics, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19; ethics and univocity, ref20; flow of thought, ref21; his frail health, ref22; and God, ref23; and Godard, ref24; good and evil, ref25, ref26; human bondage, ref27, ref28; immanent ethics, ref29, ref30; minus substance, ref31; natura naturans vs. natura naturata, ref32; and Nietzsche, ref33; power of existing, ref34; on relations, ref35; Short Treatise, ref36; spiritual automaton, ref37, ref38, ref39n27, ref40n55; substance, ref41; three figures of univocity in, ref42; Tractatus Theologico-Politicus, ref43

  Stalinism, ref1, ref2

  State, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; and the Greek polis, ref5; immanent to the capitalist axiomatic, ref6; mechanisms to ward off, ref7; and minorities, ref8; in Plato, ref9; and servitude, ref10; and taxation, ref11; universal, ref12

  statements, production of, ref1

  stereotype: Klossowski's concept of, ref1; science of, ref2

 

‹ Prev