Essays on Deleuze

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Essays on Deleuze Page 83

by Daniel Smith


  liberalism, in politics, ref1

  libido, in Freud, ref1

  lies, and truth, ref1

  life, ref1; an abstract power, ref2; coextensive with death, ref3; as a concept, ref4; an ethical principle, ref5, ref6; imprisoned, ref7; a non-organic power, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13 ref14n6; an ontological principle, ref15; passage of, ref16, ref17; a plane of immanence, ref18; of pure immanence, ref19, ref20; versus the subject, ref21; and vitalism, ref22

  lightning, ref1; as difference in potential, ref2; in Nietzsche, ref3

  limit: in calculus, ref1; limit-concept, in mathematics, ref2; limitation, and possibility, ref3

  line: analysis of, ref1; in Klee, ref2; manual, ref3; in Pollock, ref4; straight, ref5, ref6

  line of flight, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; in Anglo-American literature, ref5; in Critique et clinique project, ref6; in painting, ref7; schizophrenic, ref8

  linguistics, geo-linguistics, ref1

  literature, ref1; Anglo-American, ref2, ref3; creates affects, ref4; as delirium, ref5; and the destruction of the world, ref6; and the dissolution of the subject, ref7; its schizophrenic vocation, ref8; and life, ref9; logic of, ref10; and the other arts, ref11; and politics, ref12; psychoanalytic interpretations of, ref13; and schizophrenia, ref14

  lived body, ref1

  lived experience, ref1, ref2, ref3; as abstract, ref4; eternal return as, ref5; and the intolerable, ref6

  Lloyd, Genevieve, on Spinoza, ref1

  Locke, John, on ideas, ref1

  logic: and aesthetics, in Kant, ref1; of the cinema, ref2, ref3; classical, ref4, ref5; and existence, ref6, ref7; formal versus transcendental, ref8, ref9; of literature, ref10; modal, ref11; of relations, ref12; of sensation, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18; symbolic, ref19; three principles of, ref20

  logos, ref1; and fragmentation, ref2; logocentrism, ref3

  Lorenz attractor, ref1; ref2, ref3

  Lou Gehrig's disease, ref1

  love: as the interception of flows, ref1; Proust's analysis of, ref2, ref3

  lover: as conceptual persona, ref1; jealous lover, as model of truth-seeking, ref2, ref3

  Lowry, Malcolm, ref1; on the novel, ref2n28

  Luca, Gherasim, and minor literature, ref1

  Lucifer, ref1, ref2

  Lucretius, ref1, ref2

  Luther, Martin, ref1; on religion, ref2

  Lyotard, Jean-François, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; on Capitalism and Schizophrenia, ref5; and the figural, ref6; and Husserl, ref7; on Kant, ref8; on the phantasm, ref9; on reflective judgment, ref10; on the sublime, ref11n14; on the unpresentable, ref12

  Mabo case (1992), ref1, ref2, ref3

  machine: artistic, ref1; internal variations of, ref2; literary, in Proust, ref3; metamorphosis, ref4; technical, ref5

  MacIntrye, Alasdair, ref1n7

  Maddy, Penelope, ref1

  madness, in Nietzsche, ref1; in Plato, ref2

  Maimon, Salomon, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17n17; Deleuze's use of, ref18; differentials of consciousness, ref19, ref20; Essay on Transcendental Philosophy, ref21, ref22; and genesis, ref23; interpretation of calculus, ref24; Kant's critique of, ref25n18, ref26n19; and perception, ref27

  Maine de Biran, François-Pierre-Gonthier, ref1

  majority, ref1; defined, ref2; major language, ref3; as “Nobody,” ref4; see also minor, minority

  Maldiney, Henri, ref1; and sensation, ref2

  Malebranche, Nicholas, ref1

  Mallarmé, Stephane, ref1

  man, as a concept, ref1

  Mandelbrot Set, ref1, ref2

  manifold, ref1; in Kant, ref2; in Riemann, ref3

  map, ref1; mapping, ref2

  Marcuse, Herbert, ref1

  marketing, ref1, ref2n15; literary market, ref3

  marriage, in primitive societies, ref1

  Martin, Jean-Clet, ref1n66

  Marx, Karl, ref1, ref2, ref3; and alienation, ref4; Capital, ref5, ref6; Deleuze and Guattari's critique of, ref7, ref8; Deleuze and Guattari as Marxists, ref9; and Freud, ref10, ref11; on time and money, ref12

  Mary, Virgin, ref1n22; as an Idea, ref2, ref3

  mask, ref1, ref2; Nietzsche's, ref3

  Masoch, ref1, ref2

  masochism, ref1, ref2, ref3; as perversion, ref4

  material-force relation, in art, ref1

  mathematics, ref1; algebra, ref2, ref3; arithmetic, ref4; and biology, in Deleuze, ref5; constructivism, ref6; contemporary, ref7; crisis in, ref8; Deleuze and Badiou on, ref9; and diagrams, ref10; foundations of, ref11; Greek, ref12; and Nature, ref13; topology, ref14

  mathesis universalis, ref1

  matter: becomes expressive in art, ref1; as flow, ref2; as force, ref3; and the new, ref4; in painting, ref5

  matters of fact, ref1, ref2

  Mayr, Ernst, on the status of biology, ref1

  McMahon, Melissa, ref1n6, ref2n32, ref3n38

  Meaning: a false question, ref1; as use, ref2

  measure: and Being, ref1; and the disparate, ref2; in Kant, ref3; and majority, ref4

  mediation, ref1, ref2

  medicine, ref1; history of, ref2n12; principles of, ref3; see also symptomatology

  medieval thought, ref1; art, ref2; and causality, ref3; and the concept of intensity, ref4; and creation, ref5; and literature, ref6; philosophy, ref7; theology, ref8

  Meegeren, Hans van, Vermeer forger, ref1

  Melville, Herman, ref1; Ahab and becoming, ref2; The Confidence Man, ref3; and literary enunciation, ref4; Moby-Dick, ref5, ref6; on the novel, ref7n10

  Memory: in Plato, ref1; pure, in Bergson, ref2

  Menaechmus, ref1

  Mendelssohn, Félix, ref1

  Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, ref1; Phenomenology of Perception, ref2; and sensation, ref3

  Messiaen, Olivier, ref1; rhythmic characters, ref2

  metamorphosis: of concepts, ref1; and Dionysus, ref2

  metaphor, ref1; Badiou on, ref2; in Lacan, ref3

  metaphysics: analytic metaphysics, ref1n15; and closure, ref2; Deleuze as a pure metaphysician, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7; of difference, ref8; and Heidegger, ref9; Kant's critique, ref10; overcoming, ref11, ref12; traditional, ref13

  metastability, ref1

  method, ref1; Cartesian, ref2; Deleuze's, ref3; of division, in Plato, ref4; of genesis versus conditioning, ref5, ref6; and truth, ref7

  metrics, ref1, ref2

  Meueke, Stephen, ref1n1

  Michaux, Henri, ref1

  Michelangelo, Last Judgment, ref1

  micro: microphysics, ref1n9; micropolitics, ref2

  middle, as principle, ref1, ref2

  migraines, ref1; in Nietzsche, ref2

  Miller, Henry, ref1; getting drunk on pure water, ref2; on schizophrenia, ref3

  Miller, Jacques-Alain, ref1, ref2

  Millet, Jean-Francois, on painting weight, ref1

  mimesis, ref1, ref2; versus deception, ref3n41; in Klossowski, ref4

  mind, less a guide for philosophy than the body, ref1

  minor, minority, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6n71; as a becoming, ref7; concept of, ref8; formed on lines of flight, ref9; geometry, ref10; minor language, ref11; minorization of politics, ref12

  minute: inclinations, in Leibniz, ref1; perceptions, in Leibniz, ref2, ref3

  mixtures, ref1, ref2, ref3; in Bergson, ref4; and the pure, ref5

  modality, of necessity (in Spinoza), ref1

  modernity, defined by the simulacrum, ref1, ref2

  modes of existence, ref1; analysis of, ref2; classification of, ref3; creation of, ref4; determination of, ref5; in ethics, ref6; evaluation of, ref7, ref8, ref9n4; immanent modes in existentialism, ref10; modes in Spinoza, ref11, ref12; sadism and masochism as, ref13; versus transcendental subject, ref14

  modulation, ref1; of chromatic nuances, ref2; and the diagram, in art, ref3; in Simondon, ref4; and style, ref5; versus molding, ref6

  molecular and molar, ref
1, ref2, ref3; in perception, ref4

  moments, privileged versus any-movement-whatever, ref1

  Mondrian, Piet, ref1, ref2; and abstraction, ref3

  Monet, Claude, ref1

  money, ref1; acquires a “body” in capitalism, ref2; begets money, ref3; and desire, in Keynes, ref4; destroys primitive economies, ref5; as flow, ref6; as a general equivalent, ref7; gold standard, ref8n14; as inscription, ref9; its dematerialization in capital, ref10; negative, ref11; supply, ref12; and taxation, ref13

  Monge, Gaspard, ref1; and descriptive geometry, ref2

  Mongol, in Rimbaud, ref1

  monism, and pluralism, ref1

  monologue, internal, ref1

  monotheism, and monoto-theism, in Nietzsche, ref1

  monument, art as, ref1

  moral law, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; in Kant, ref5

  morality, defined, ref1, ref2, ref3n4; genealogy of, ref4; geology of, ref5; impossible, in Klossowski, ref6; moral philosophy, ref7; as a ranking of drives, in Nietzsche, ref8; versus ethics, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14

  movement: aberrations of, and time, ref1; any-movement-whatever, ref2; in Aristotle, ref3; automatic, ref4; Bergson's three theses on, ref5; in Deleuze's thought, ref6; indivisible, ref7; Plato, ref8; and rest, ref9

  Mullarky, John, ref1n6, ref2n32

  multiplicity, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6; at least two, ref7; in Bergson, ref8; in Critique et clinique project, ref9; defined, ref10, ref11; Deleuze's texts as, ref12; Deleuze's theory of, ref13; in Deleuze and Badiou, ref14; denumerable and nondenumerable, ref15; and event, ref16; in Kant, ref17; and lines, ref18; logic of, ref19; must be made, ref20; nondenumerable, ref21; paintings as, ref22; physical, ref23; psychic, ref24; and singularity, ref25; in Spinoza, ref26, ref27; replaces substance, ref28; two types, ref29, ref30, ref31, ref32, ref33, ref34n9

  music, ref1; dissonance, in Leibniz, ref2; renders duration sonorous, ref3; and sound, ref4

  mutation, ref1; of concepts, ref2

  muteness, in Nietzsche's madness, ref1

  mysticism, ref1, ref2

  mystification, ref1, ref2; demystification, ref3

  myth, ref1, ref2, ref3; and colonization, ref4; of creation, ref5; in Greece, ref6; in Plato, ref7

  name: “all the names of history” (Nietzsche), ref1; of the father, ref2; naming, in Badiou, ref3; see also proper name

  narration: falsifying, ref1; in Joyce, ref2; in painting, ref3; and the power of the false, ref4

  naturalism, ref1n30; in Plato, ref2

  nature: laws of, ref1, ref2; mathematization of, ref3; as a system of ends, ref4

  Nazism, ref1

  necessity: and contingency, ref1; in God, ref2; in modes (Spinoza), ref3; and univocity, ref4

  need, versus desire, ref1

  negation, negative, ref1, ref2; absolute, in Sade, ref3; in Hegel, ref4, ref5; in theology, ref6; way of, ref7

  negative theology, and Derrida, ref1; in Klossowski, ref2

  Negri, Antonio, ref1n7, ref2n6

  neighborhood, ref1, ref2, ref3; in mathematics, ref4

  Neo-Platonism, ref1, ref2; Badiou on, ref3; on light, ref4; and negative eminence, ref5; and the One, ref6, ref7

  neurosis, ref1; versus psychosis, ref2

  New Deal, ref1

  new, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9; in biology, ref10; conditions of, ref11; versus judgment, ref12; in metaphysics, ref13; and normativity, ref14; the production of, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18; and recognition, ref19

  new philosophers, ref1n15

  Newton, Isaac: on color, ref1, ref2n18, ref3n36; and Goethe, ref4; and Leibniz, on calculus, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Nicolas of Cusa, ref1

  Nietzsche, Friedrich, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6; and affectivity, ref7; allegory of the cave, ref8; ascetic ideal, ascetic ideal, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12; bad conscience, ref13, ref14; Badiou on, ref15; birds of prey parable, ref16; on the Christian faith, ref17; critique of knowledge and morality, ref18; critique of transcendence, ref19; Daybreak, ref20; and the death of God, ref21; death of the self, ref22; his delirium, ref23; Dionysus, ref24, ref25; Ecce Homo, ref26, ref27; and ethics, ref28; forgetting, ref29; form of the question, ref30; Gay Science, ref31, ref32; Genealogy of Morals, ref33, ref34, ref35, ref36; and the “great health,” ref37; and the Greeks, ref38, ref39; illnesses, ref40; immanent ethics, ref41, ref42; inverted Platonism, ref43; and judgment, ref44; Klossowski's reading of, ref45; madness, ref46, ref47; migraines, ref48; the noble, ref49; perspectivism, ref50; philosophers as physicians, ref51, ref52, ref53; and the power of the false, ref54; on reason, ref55; ressentiment, ref56, ref57, ref58, ref59, ref60, ref61; self-overcoming, ref62; and Spinoza, ref63; theory of drives, ref64; on thinking, ref65; Thus Spoke Zarathustra, ref66, ref67; the true world becomes fable, ref68; will to power, ref69, ref70, ref71; and Zarathustra's “Grand Politics,” ref72

  Nijinsky, Vaslav, ref1

  Nixon, Richard, “We're all Keynesians now,” ref1

  noise, ref1, ref2; background, ref3; white noise, ref4

  nomadology, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5n72, ref6n13

  nominal definition, ref1, ref2

  non-contradiction, principle of, ref1, ref2

  normativity, ref1, ref2; defined, for Deleuze, ref3; in Deleuze, ref4, ref5; and deterritorialization, in Patton, ref6; normalization, in Foucault, ref7, ref8, ref9

  nothingness, ref1; in Augustine, ref2n24

  Novalis, ref1

  novels, ref1; their raison e'etre, ref2

  novelty, ref1; and Bergson, ref2

  number: aleph, ref1; and minorities, ref2; and perception, ref3; and time, ref4

  object = x, ref1, ref2, ref3; in Kant, ref4

  objet petit a, ref1

  obsession, and the phantasm, in Klossowski, ref1

  O'Connor, Flannery, ref1

  Oedipus complex, ref1, ref2

  One, ref1, ref2, ref3; in Badiou, ref4, ref5; in Badiou's critique of Deleuze, ref6; distinguished from univocity, ref7; in Neo-Platonism, ref8, ref9, ref10; and the One-All, ref11

  ontology, ref1; and existence, ref2; in Foucault, ref3; in Heidegger, ref4; immanence and transcendence in, ref5, ref6; and mathematics, in Badiou, ref7; onto-ethology, ref8; onto-theology, ref9, ref10; overthrown in Deleuze, ref11; pure, ref12; its relation to ethics, ref13; status of, in Badiou and Deleuze, ref14

  open: concept of, in Bergson, ref1; in metaphysics, ref2; as the whole, ref3, ref4

  operative, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6n2

  opinion, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; in Aristotle, ref5; in Plato, ref6

  opposition, ref1; binary, ref2, ref3

  orchid, and wasp, ref1

  ordinary points, ref1; “everything is ordinary,” ref2, ref3, ref4

  organism, ref1; limits of, ref2

  organs, anorganic functioning of, ref1

  Other, ref1; as a category of transcendence, ref2, ref3; in Derrida, ref4, ref5; in Lacan, ref6; in Levinas, ref7; and subjectivity, ref8

  outside, ref1

  Overbeck, Franz, ref1; on Nietzsche's madness, ref2

  overcoding, ref1, ref2

  Pabst, G. B., Pandora's Box, ref1

  painting, ref1; as line and color, ref2; oil painting, ref3; painting the scream, ref4; three aspects of, in Bacon, ref5

  pantheism, ref1; in Spinoza, ref2

  paradox, in philosophy, ref1

  paralogisms, in Kant, ref1, ref2

  paranoia: as a pole of delirium, ref1; as a type of political investment, ref2

  Parkes, Graham, ref1n9, ref2n6

  Parkinson's disease, ref1, ref2, ref3

  participation, ref1; in Plato, ref2

  Pascal, Blaise: and existentialism, ref1; wager, ref2

  passion: and ethics, ref1; in Nietzsche, ref2; struggle against, ref3, ref4; and truth, ref5

  passive ego, ref1

  passive synthesis, ref1, ref2, ref3n36

  patchwork, ref1

  pathology: bipolarity, ref1; concept of, ref2; and desi
re, ref3; in Kant, ref4; mania, ref5; pathos, in Nietzsche, ref6; pederasty, ref7; socio-economic complexes, ref8

  Patton, Paul, ref1n2; on the becoming of concepts, ref2; Deleuze and the Political, ref3, ref4, ref5; on Deleuze's political philosophy, ref6; on normativity, ref7

  Paul, Saint, and infinite debt, ref1

  payment, versus finance, ref1

  Peano, Giuseppe, ref1

  Péguy, Charles, ref1

  Peirce, Charles Sanders, on categories, ref1, ref2n43; Firstness, ref3; Secondness, ref4; semiotics, ref5

  people: already there, ref1; invention of, ref2; the people are missing, ref3, ref4

  Peppiatt, Michael, Francis Bacon: Anatomy of an Enigma, ref1

  percept, ref1, ref2, ref3; as becoming, ref4; relation to concepts, ref5

  perception: contrasted with sensation, ref1; genetic elements of, ref2; hallucinatory, ref3; in Leibniz and Maimon, ref4, ref5, ref6; minute, ref7; pure, in Bergson, ref8; pure form of, in Kant, ref9; unconscious, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13; virtual, ref14

  Perrault, Pierre, ref1

  Perronet, Jean-Rodolphe, ref1

  perspectivism, ref1, ref2, ref3n41; in Leibniz, ref4; in Nietzsche, ref5, ref6

  perversion, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; concept of, ref5

  Petrarch, ref1

  phallus, ref1, ref2, ref3; in Lacan, ref4

  phantasm, ref1; defined, in Klossowski, ref2n1; eternal return as, ref3; as incommunicable, ref4; Klossowski's concept of, ref5; in Plato, ref6

  phenomenology: and sensation, ref1; Deleuze on, ref2; in Kant, ref3; pathic moment in, ref4

  sentir, ref1

  Philo, ref1

  philosopher, as physician, in Nietzsche, ref1, ref2, ref3

  philosophy: an activity, not an attitude, ref1; and art and science, ref2; creates concepts, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7; definition of, ref8; as a developed question, ref9; as the love of wisdom, ref10; origin of term, ref11n13, ref12n16; political, ref13; relation to other domains, ref14; renunciation of representation, ref15

  physicalism, ref1

  physics, ref1; and biology, ref2; of intensive quantities, ref3

  physiognomy, in Nietzsche, ref1

  piano, prepared piano (John Cage), ref1

  plane: of composition, ref1, ref2; of consistency, ref3; of immanence, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14; of organization, ref15; of reference, ref16

  Plato, ref1, ref2, ref3; allegory of the cave, ref4, ref5; auto kath’ hauto, ref6; contraries, ref7; Demiurge, ref8; on desire, ref9; and Euclidean geometry, ref10, ref11; the Good, ref12, ref13, ref14; Kant on, ref15, ref16; on movement, ref17; Parmenides, ref18; participation, ref19; Phaedrus, ref20, ref21, ref22, ref23, ref24, ref25; Philebus, ref26; political philosophy, ref27; on provocatives, ref28; on recognition, ref29; Republic, ref30, ref31; Sophist, ref32, ref33, ref34; Statesman, ref35, ref36, ref37, ref38; Symposium, ref39; theorematic essences, ref40; theory of Ideas, ref41; Timaeus, ref42, ref43, ref44n49; and time, ref45; transcendence, ref46, ref47; true world and apparent world, ref48

 

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