Expressionism in Philosophy
Gilles Deleuze
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Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Philosophie
Beschreibung
In this remarkable work, Gilles Deleuze, the renowned French philosopher, reflects on one of the thinkers of the past who most influenced his own sweeping reconfiguration of the tasks of philosophy. For Deleuze, Spinoza, along with Nietzsche and Lucretius, conceived of philosophy as an enterprise of liberation and radical demystification. He locates in Spinoza “a set of affects, a kinetic determination, an impulse” and makes Spinoza into “an encounter, a passion.”
Expressionism in Philosophy was the culmination of a series of monographic studies by Deleuze (on Hume, Bergson, Nietzsche, Proust, Kant, and Sacher-Masoch) and prepared the transition from these abstract treatments of historical schemes of experience to the nomadology of Capitalism and Schizophrenia (Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus, co-authored with Félix Guattari). Thus, Expressionism in Philosophy is both a pivotal reading of Spinoza’s work and a crucial text within the development of Deleuze’s thought.
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Determination, Neoplatonism, Axiom, Contradiction, Baruch Spinoza, Concept, Rationalism, Ontology, Principle, Existence, Pantheism, A priori and a posteriori, Feeling, Theory, Ambiguity, Privation, Equivocation, Affection, Existence of God, Polemic, Suffering, Logic, Explanation, Good and evil, Philosophy, Univocity of being, Duns Scotus, Plotinus, Hypothesis, Absurdity, Aristotelianism, Potentiality and actuality, Suggestion, Four causes, Reality, Phenomenon, Syllogism, Ontological argument, Reason, Conatus, Immanence, Inference, Moral absolutism, Cartesianism, Materialism, Essence, Requirement, God, Sub specie aeternitatis, Contingency (philosophy), Metaphor, Consciousness, Omnipotence, Omniscience, Treatise, State of nature, Ethics, Theory of Forms, Apophatic theology, Individuation, Formal distinction, Natural and legal rights, Explication, Quantity, Sadness, Thought, Analogy, Problem of evil, Spinozism, Understanding