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To read in the book club
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This book aims to understand the underlying principles of Deleuze’s various thoughts.
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Introduction
- “Deleuze’s philosophy” is a very ambiguous concept.
- Whether Deleuze is political or not, the discussion on page 6.
- There were many books on Deleuze that were more like explanations and interpretations of other philosophies.
- It’s also wrong to call those books Deleuze’s philosophy.
- Therefore, we should think about where Deleuze’s philosophy can be found.
- “Deleuze’s philosophy” is a very ambiguous concept.
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Chapter 1
- 1.
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About Deleuze writing his own philosophy under the guise of explaining other people’s thoughts.
- Why does he do that? (blu3mo)
- If Deleuze is saying something important that we should accept, then I guess we should accept it. (blu3mo)
- Why does he do that? (blu3mo)
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The point of using the free indirect discourse.
- It’s neither direct speech nor indirect speech.
- Wait, isn’t free indirect discourse just unclear writing by the speaker? (blu3mo)
- Based on this, the author claims that Deleuze is not applying his principles to specific events, but rather thinking about the events themselves.
- Because the method of free indirect discourse cannot be generalized and naturally appears in each specific case.
- In other words, by quoting and reporting specific events, it is natural to make the events themselves the subject of thought.
- ??? (blu3mo)(blu3mo)(blu3mo)
- I feel like I understood the logical structure, but I don’t know what they’re talking about.
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Well, this itako-like attitude is a vision that Deleuze desperately came up with, so is free indirect discourse a means to express it in an exaggerated way?
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But the itako is just step 1, and then…
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Why is this kind of discourse necessary in the first place?
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Deleuze’s opinion on what philosophers should do in philosophical research:
- Discover the concepts and questions that exist behind their thoughts, even if the philosophers themselves are not consciously aware of them.
- This part, the nested structure of speakers like “Deleuze “Bergson “Hume ”~~""", is depicted precisely by free indirect discourse.
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He calls this underlying aspect the image of thought.
- He considers this when exposing implicit assumptions in verbalizing thoughts.
- In approaching this, the distinction between what is discussed and what is being discussed becomes ambiguous.
- The person discussing describes what they believe to be present in the thought of the object being discussed.
- So, it becomes free indirect discourse, according to the explanation.
- I see, if the image of thought that the person discussing has found is correct(?), then there is no problem with using free indirect discourse.
- It doesn’t seem like a reason why it wouldn’t work with other discourse types though. (blu3mo)(blu3mo)
- Deleuze can assimilate himself with the object being discussed in his thinking if he wants. Just when explaining it to others, use direct or indirect speech, is the feeling. (blu3mo)
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- Immanent plane
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Concepts are defined only by the relationships between concepts and are not defined by causes outside of those relationships, i.e., beyond that plane.
- I don’t quite grasp the meaning of “concepts are defined”. (blu3mo)
- Concepts have meaning only in relation to other concepts, like that? (blu3mo)
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Concepts are both relative and absolute.- The concept of “inherent planes” is a collection of concepts that are not discussed in the context of synthesis of elements.
- Immanent plane
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When different assumptions are established, different inherent planes are created.
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By criticizing existing planes and the questions that arise from them, new planes and questions are established.
- This is the perspective of philosophical research.
- Criticizing questions is the only way to establish questions.
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Chapter 2
- Kant criticizes Hume’s empiricism and develops transcendentalism.
- That’s good, but transcendentalism does not address the issue of the origin of the subject.
- The existence of the subject and the self is assumed.
- Kant is saying that concepts such as a priori and pure reason, which are brought up to avoid empirical skepticism, need to be discussed in terms of how they are generated.
- Therefore, Deleuze proposes transcendental empiricism.
- While it is good to search for something transcendent in transcendentalism, Kant has not been able to do so.
- If you want to do it properly, don’t make the self and reason transcendent (i.e., do not explain the process of their generation), but thoroughly examine the processes of their generation.
- The deserted island example:
- Objects cannot be objects without others, including the self.
- Hume referred to the belief in the objectivity (existence) of invisible objects as “belief,” but Deleuze explains the process of its generation through others.
- Based on that, “events” are presented as something transcendent that cannot be explained by the process of generation.
- As a practical application, psychoanalysis is mentioned.
- Freud, for example, depicted the process of generation without assuming the self or the superego.
- That’s good, but transcendentalism does not address the issue of the origin of the subject.
- Kant criticizes Hume’s empiricism and develops transcendentalism.