Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 214
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-78661-466-7 • Hardback • July 2020 • $152.00 • (£117.00)
978-1-5381-4974-4 • Paperback • May 2022 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-78661-467-4 • eBook • July 2020 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Dorothea E. Olkowski is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Colorado.
Julián Ferreyra is researcher at the Argentine Scientific Agency (CONICET).
Introduction by Dorothea Olkowski
Chapter 1. The Logic of the Notion as a Logic of Sense, by Julián Ferreyra
Chapter 2. Empirical Degradation and Transcendental Repetition. On Selme’s Critique of Entropy and Deleuze’s Theory of Intensity, by Rafael Mc Namara
Chapter 3. Subject and Passivity in Husserl and Deleuze, by Andrés Osswald
Chapter 4. Gustave Guillaume’s “Reverse Causation”: An Invocation to Deleuze from Linguistics, by Matías Soich
Chapter 5. Time and Representation. Husserlian Echoes in the Development of the Temporal Synthesis, by Verónica Kretschel
Chapter 6. Resonances of the Voice of Being. Analogy and Univocity in Deleuze and Kant, by Pablo Pachilla
Chapter 7. Double Death and Intensity in Difference and Repetition, by Solange Heffesse
Chapter 8. Series, Singularity, Differential: Mathematics as a Source of Transcendental Empiricism, by Gonzalo Santaya
Chapter 9. Indirect Discourse and Ideology: Bakhtine in A Thousand Plateaus, by Santiago Lo Vuolo
Chapter 10. For reading History: The Structural Logic of Difference in the Social Idea, by Anabella Schoenle
Chapter 11. An Embryological Approach to the “Order of Reasons”, by Sebastián Amarilla
Index
With an unprecedented ability to reconstruct the singularity of the sources of Deleuzian philosophy, this collection of essays opens a unique chance to make visible other corners where his thought lives with an insistent strength. At the End of the World, elsewhere in the Cosmos where enormous forces are actualized giving new directions and shapes to a renewed virtual Deleuze.
— Cristóbal Durán, associate professor of philosophy, Andrés Bello National University
Deleuze’s concept of ‘geophilosophy’ is brilliantly exemplified in Olkowski and Ferreyra’s volume. Written by an impressive array of Argentinian scholars, these essays make it clear that Argentina has become a global center not only for Deleuze scholarship but, even more so, for highly original and rigorous philosophical work that remains deeply informed by its Latin American context.
— Daniel W. Smith, professor of philosophy, Purdue University
Focused largely but not exclusively on Difference and Repetition, the essays collected here shed new light on some of the better known pathways of Deleuze’s relations to the history of philosophy as well as some of his lesser known relations to mathematics, physics, biology and linguistics. They are a wonderful addition to the secondary literature on the sources of Deleuze’s philosophy.
— Paul Patton, author of Deleuzian Concepts: Philosophy, Colonization, Politics and translator of Gilles Deleuze's Difference and Repetition, Wuhan University and Flinders University
“Intensity” and “Idea” are concepts that dominate this book as interpretive keys. For a philosopher like Gilles Deleuze –who thinks of philosophy as a theory of multiplicities– it is essential to approach its constructive concepts: transcendental repetition, differential singularity, structural logic, in an immanent critical perspective that supposes an impersonal vitalistic investigation of the organism, a problematization of the doctrine of the imagination, a construction of temporal syntheses and an approach to the uses of language.
— Adrián Cangi, professor and researcher, University of Buenos Aires