Deleuze 1990

From Whiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Deleuze, Gilles. Logic of Sense. Trans. by Mark Lester with Charles Stivale. Ed. by Constantin V. Boundas. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1990.

First Series of Paradoxes of Pure Becoming

five paragraphs:

1) introduces peculiarity to paradoxes

  • any phrase of becoming is pointing in two directions at once:

to say that Alice becomes larger is to say that she is becoming smaller than she will be

  • it IS just a verbal game, but a verbal game we can't think around
  • we don't have any capability of thinking of the world OUTSIDE this game
"SENSE" --> wants to connect to a directionality; we talk about things as having "sense" when they point in one direction for comparison or change

-- "Good sense affirms that in all things there is a determinable sense or direction (sens); but paradox is the affirmation of both sense or directions at the same time."

2) connects this to Plato, who helps us see these events of becoming

  • Plato and Socrates as founding a defense of the life of the mind, "philosophy" as a discipline
  • quotes from Philebus and Parmenides, aporetic dialogues (dialogues in which paradoxes presented are not resolved) --> Plato acknowledges problems but doesn't deal with them

3) suggests Plato was aware that strange events of becoming have connection to language

  • paradoxes resist theory of Forms; is there a Form for hotter, colder? verbs? -- hotter is something that an individual JUDGES; how does that match the theory of Forms?
  • see Sophist 235-6
  • see pg 256 in Deleuze
  • perhaps act as two languages; or two dimensions in language in general, only one of which Plato focused on
  • true proportions of the object, but don't correspond to what we see
  • Plato distinguishing betwee true objects and claimants, false reproductions (philosopher vs. sophist)

4) Lewis Carroll helps us see these paradoxes

  • paradox of pure becoming goes in two directions at once;
  • Deleuze wants to call this paradox of infinite identity: identity as sameness, but infinite in that it continues/persists in sameness
  • Sorites paradox: when does a pile of pebbles become a heap? --> a heap is a LINGUISTIC thing, at which language assigns limits;
  • but language also transcends limits "and restores them to the infinite equivalence of an unlimited becoming" (3)
  • "infinite equivalence" -- "hotter" & "colder" are equivalent in some sense, but at the same time cannot be

5) undercuts common sense

  • "infinite identity" vs. "personal identity"
  • infinitives vs. substantives

Second Series of Paradoxes of Surface Effects

Third Series of the Proposition

Fourth Series of Dualities

Fifth Series of Sense

Sixth Series on Serialization

Seventh Series of Esoteric Words

Eight Series of Structure

Ninth Series of the Problematic

Tenth Series of the Ideal Game