Preface: From Lewis Carroll to the Stoics |
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xiii | |
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First Series of Paradoxes of Pure Becoming |
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1 | (3) |
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Platonic distinction between limited things and becoming-mad |
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Alice's adventures or ``events'' |
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Second Series of Paradoxes of Surface Effects |
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4 | (8) |
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Stoic distinction between bodies or states of affairs and incorporeal effects or events |
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Cleavage of the causal relation |
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Discovery of the surface in the work of Lewis Carroll |
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Third Series of the Proposition |
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12 | (11) |
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Denotation, manifestation, signification: their relations and circularity |
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Does the proposition have a fourth dimension? |
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Sense, expression, and event |
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Double nature of sense: the ``expressible'' of the proposition and the attribute of the state of affairs, insistence, and extra-Being |
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Fourth Series of Dualities |
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23 | (5) |
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Bodies/language, to eat/to speak |
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Two dimensions of the proposition: denotations and expressions, consumptions and sense |
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28 | (8) |
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Neutrality or the third state of the essence |
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Absurd and impossible objects |
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Sixth Series on Serialization |
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36 | (6) |
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Serial form and heterogeneous series |
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The point of convergence of the series |
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Lacan's paradox: the strange element (empty place or occupant without place) |
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Seventh Series of Esoteric Words |
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42 | (6) |
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Synthesis of contraction on one series (connection) |
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Synthesis of coordination of two series (conjunction) |
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Synthesis of disjunction or the ramification of series: the problem of portmanteau words |
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Eighth Series of Structure |
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48 | (4) |
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Conditions of a structure |
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The role of singularities |
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Ninth Series of the Problematic |
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52 | (6) |
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Aleatory point and singular points |
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Tenth Series of the Ideal Game |
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58 | (8) |
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The two readings of time: Aion and Chronos |
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Eleventh Series of Nonsense |
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66 | (8) |
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Characteristics of the paradoxic element |
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What does it mean for it to be nonsense; the two figures of nonsense |
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The two forms of the absurd (without signification) which are derived from it |
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co-presence of sense and nonsense |
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Twelfth Series of the Paradox |
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74 | (8) |
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The nature of good sense and the paradox |
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The nature of common sense and the paradox |
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Nonsense, sense, and the organization of the so-called secondary language |
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Thirteenth Series of the Schizophrenic and the Little Girl |
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82 | (12) |
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Antonin Artaud and Lewis Carroll |
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To eat/to speak and schizophrenic language |
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Schizophrenia and failure of the surface |
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The word-passion and its exploded literal values, the word-action and its inarticulate tonic values |
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Distinction between the nonsense of depth and the nonsense of the surface, the primary order, and the secondary organization of language |
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Fourteenth Series of Double Causality |
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94 | (6) |
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Incorporeal events-effects, their cause and quasi-cause |
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Impassibility and genesis |
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The conditions of a real genesis: transcendental field without the I or a center of individuation |
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Fifteenth Series of Singularities |
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100 | (9) |
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The transcendental field cannot retain the form of consciousness |
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Impersonal and pre-individual singularities |
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Transcendental field and surface |
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Discourse of the individual, discourse of the person, discourse without ground: Is there a fourth discourse? |
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Sixteenth Series of the Static Ontological Genesis |
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109 | (9) |
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Genesis of the individual: Leibniz |
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Condition of the ``compossibility'' of a world or of the convergence of series (continuity) |
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Transformation of the event into predicate |
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From the individual to the person |
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Persons, properties, and classes |
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Seventeenth Series of the Static Logical Genesis |
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118 | (9) |
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Transition of the dimensions of the proposition |
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Eighteenth Series of the Three Images of Philosophers |
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127 | (7) |
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A new type of philosopher: the Stoic |
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Hercules and the surfaces |
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Nineteenth Series of Humor |
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134 | (8) |
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From signification to designation |
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Classical discourse and the individual, romantic discourse and the person: irony |
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The discourse of singularities: humour or the ``fourth person singular'' |
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Twentieth Series on the Moral Problem in Stoic Philosophy |
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142 | (6) |
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The two poles of morality: physical divination of things and logical use or representation |
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Representation, usage and expression |
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To understand, to will, and to represent the event |
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Twenty-First Series of the Event |
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148 | (6) |
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The eternal truth of the event |
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Actualization and counter-actualization: the actor |
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The two aspects of death as event |
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The meaning of ``to will the event'' |
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Twenty-Second Series-Porcelain and Volcano |
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154 | (8) |
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The ``crack up'' (Fitzgerald) |
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The two processes and the problem of their distinction |
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Alcoholism and depressive mania |
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Twenty-Third Series of the Aion |
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162 | (7) |
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The characteristics of Chronos and its overthrow by the becoming of the depths |
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The organization which is derived from Aion and its differences from Chronos |
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Twenty-Fourth Series of the Communication of Events |
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169 | (8) |
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Problem of alogical incompatibilities |
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Positive distance and affirmative synthesis of the disjunction |
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Eternal return, Aion, and straight line: a more terrible labyrinth |
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Twenty-Fifth Series of Univocity |
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177 | (4) |
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Continuation of the eternal return |
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The three significations of univocity |
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Twenty-Sixth Series of Language |
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181 | (5) |
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What makes language possible |
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Recapitulation of the organization of language |
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Twenty-Seventh Series of Orality |
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186 | (10) |
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Problem of the dynamic genesis: from depth to surface |
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``Positions'' according to Melanie Klein |
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Schizophrenia and depression, depth and height, Simulacrum and Idol |
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First step: from noise to the voice |
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Twenty-Eighth Series of Sexuality |
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196 | (6) |
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Second step of the dynamic genesis: formation of surfaces and their coordination |
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Nature of the oedipal complex, role of the genital zone |
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Twenty-Ninth Series-Good Intentions are Inevitably Punished |
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202 | (8) |
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The oedipal affair in its relation with the constitution of the surface |
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To restore and to bring back |
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Third step of genesis: from the physical surface to the metaphysical surface (the double screen) |
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Thirtieth Series of the Phantasm |
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210 | (7) |
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Phantasm, ego, and singularities |
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Phantasm, verb, and language |
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Thirty-First Series of Thought |
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217 | (7) |
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Phantasm, passage, and beginning |
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Orientation in psychic life, the mouth, and the brain |
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Thirty-Second Series on the Different Kinds of Series |
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224 | (10) |
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Series and sexualities: connective series and erogenous zone, conjunctive series and coordination |
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Third form of sexual series, disjunction and divergence |
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Sexuality and language: the three types of series and the corresponding words |
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Thirty-Third Series of Alice's Adventures |
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234 | (5) |
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Recalling the three kinds of esoteric words in Lewis Carroll |
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Compared summaries of Alice and Through the Looking-Glass |
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Psychoanalysis and literature, neurotic familial novel and novel-Work of art |
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Thirty-Fourth Series of Primary Order and Secondary Organization |
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239 | (12) |
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Pendular structure of the phantasm: resonance and forced movement |
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End of the dynamic genesis |
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Primary and secondary repression |
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Satirical, ironic, humorous |
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APPENDIXES |
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251 | (84) |
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I. The Simulacrum And Ancient Philosophy |
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253 | (27) |
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1. Plato and the Simulacrum |
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253 | (13) |
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Platonic dialectics: signification of division |
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The selection of the suitors |
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Characteristics of the simulacra |
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History of representation |
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To reverse Platonism: the modern work of art and the revenge of the simulacra |
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Manifest and latent content of the eternal return (Nietzsche against Plato) |
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Eternal return and simulation |
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2. Lucretius and the Simulacrum |
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266 | (14) |
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Nature and nontotalizable sum |
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Critique of Being, One, and Whole |
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Different aspects of the principle of causality |
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The two figures of method |
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The swerve and the theory of time. True and false infinity |
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Emanations of the depth, simulacra of the surface, theological, oneiric, and erotic phantasms |
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Time and the unit of method |
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Origin of the false infinity and of the disturbance of the soul |
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Naturalism and the critique of myths |
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II. Phantasm And Modern Literature |
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280 | (55) |
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3. Klossowski or Bodies-Language |
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280 | (21) |
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The disjunctive syllogism from the point of view of the body and language |
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Reflections, resonances, and simulacra |
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Flexion of body and language |
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Repetition and the simulacrum |
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The dilemma: bodies/language |
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God and Antichrist: the two realms |
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Kantian theory of the disjunctive syllogism |
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Transformation of the theory in Klossowski |
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The order of the Antichrist |
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Intention: intensity and intentionality |
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The eternal return as phantasm |
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4. Michel Tournier and the World Without Others |
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301 | (20) |
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Robinson, elements, and ends |
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The effect of the Other upon perception |
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The Other as an a priori structure |
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The effect of the Other upon time |
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The three meanings of the loss of the Other |
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From the simulacrum to the phantasm |
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321 | (14) |
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Instincts and their objects |
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Death instinct and instincts |
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Notes |
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335 | (34) |
Index |
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