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Logic of Sense [Kietas viršelis]

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The Logic of Sense begins with an extended exegesis of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Considering stoicism, language, games, sexuality, schizophrenia, and literature, Deleuze determines the status of meaning and meaninglessness, and seeks the 'place' where sense and nonsense collide.

Recenzijos

"Perhaps one day, this century will be known as Deleuzian." -- Michel Foucault

Preface: From Lewis Carroll to the Stoics xiii
First Series of Paradoxes of Pure Becoming
1(3)
Platonic distinction between limited things and becoming-mad
Infinite identity
Alice's adventures or ``events''
Second Series of Paradoxes of Surface Effects
4(8)
Stoic distinction between bodies or states of affairs and incorporeal effects or events
Cleavage of the causal relation
Bringing to the surface
Discovery of the surface in the work of Lewis Carroll
Third Series of the Proposition
12(11)
Denotation, manifestation, signification: their relations and circularity
Does the proposition have a fourth dimension?
Sense, expression, and event
Double nature of sense: the ``expressible'' of the proposition and the attribute of the state of affairs, insistence, and extra-Being
Fourth Series of Dualities
23(5)
Bodies/language, to eat/to speak
Two kinds of words
Two dimensions of the proposition: denotations and expressions, consumptions and sense
The two series
Fifth Series of Sense
28(8)
Indefinite proliferation
Sterile splitting
Neutrality or the third state of the essence
Absurd and impossible objects
Sixth Series on Serialization
36(6)
Serial form and heterogeneous series
Their constitution
The point of convergence of the series
Lacan's paradox: the strange element (empty place or occupant without place)
The sheep's shop
Seventh Series of Esoteric Words
42(6)
Synthesis of contraction on one series (connection)
Synthesis of coordination of two series (conjunction)
Synthesis of disjunction or the ramification of series: the problem of portmanteau words
Eighth Series of Structure
48(4)
Levi-Strauss' paradox
Conditions of a structure
The role of singularities
Ninth Series of the Problematic
52(6)
Singularities and events
Problem and event
Recreative mathematics
Aleatory point and singular points
Tenth Series of the Ideal Game
58(8)
Rules of ordinary games
An extraordinary game
The two readings of time: Aion and Chronos
Mallarme
Eleventh Series of Nonsense
66(8)
Characteristics of the paradoxic element
What does it mean for it to be nonsense; the two figures of nonsense
The two forms of the absurd (without signification) which are derived from it
co-presence of sense and nonsense
Sense as ``effect''
Twelfth Series of the Paradox
74(8)
The nature of good sense and the paradox
The nature of common sense and the paradox
Nonsense, sense, and the organization of the so-called secondary language
Thirteenth Series of the Schizophrenic and the Little Girl
82(12)
Antonin Artaud and Lewis Carroll
To eat/to speak and schizophrenic language
Schizophrenia and failure of the surface
The word-passion and its exploded literal values, the word-action and its inarticulate tonic values
Distinction between the nonsense of depth and the nonsense of the surface, the primary order, and the secondary organization of language
Fourteenth Series of Double Causality
94(6)
Incorporeal events-effects, their cause and quasi-cause
Impassibility and genesis
Husserl's theory
The conditions of a real genesis: transcendental field without the I or a center of individuation
Fifteenth Series of Singularities
100(9)
The battle
The transcendental field cannot retain the form of consciousness
Impersonal and pre-individual singularities
Transcendental field and surface
Discourse of the individual, discourse of the person, discourse without ground: Is there a fourth discourse?
Sixteenth Series of the Static Ontological Genesis
109(9)
Genesis of the individual: Leibniz
Condition of the ``compossibility'' of a world or of the convergence of series (continuity)
Transformation of the event into predicate
From the individual to the person
Persons, properties, and classes
Seventeenth Series of the Static Logical Genesis
118(9)
Transition of the dimensions of the proposition
Sense and proposition
Neutrality of sense
Surface and lining
Eighteenth Series of the Three Images of Philosophers
127(7)
Philosophy and height
Philosophy and depth
A new type of philosopher: the Stoic
Hercules and the surfaces
Nineteenth Series of Humor
134(8)
From signification to designation
Stoicism and Zen
Classical discourse and the individual, romantic discourse and the person: irony
Groundless discourse
The discourse of singularities: humour or the ``fourth person singular''
Twentieth Series on the Moral Problem in Stoic Philosophy
142(6)
The two poles of morality: physical divination of things and logical use or representation
Representation, usage and expression
To understand, to will, and to represent the event
Twenty-First Series of the Event
148(6)
The eternal truth of the event
Actualization and counter-actualization: the actor
The two aspects of death as event
The meaning of ``to will the event''
Twenty-Second Series-Porcelain and Volcano
154(8)
The ``crack up'' (Fitzgerald)
The two processes and the problem of their distinction
Alcoholism and depressive mania
Homage to psychedelia
Twenty-Third Series of the Aion
162(7)
The characteristics of Chronos and its overthrow by the becoming of the depths
Aion and surface
The organization which is derived from Aion and its differences from Chronos
Twenty-Fourth Series of the Communication of Events
169(8)
Problem of alogical incompatibilities
Leibniz
Positive distance and affirmative synthesis of the disjunction
Eternal return, Aion, and straight line: a more terrible labyrinth
Twenty-Fifth Series of Univocity
177(4)
Individual and event
Continuation of the eternal return
The three significations of univocity
Twenty-Sixth Series of Language
181(5)
What makes language possible
Recapitulation of the organization of language
Verb and infinitive
Twenty-Seventh Series of Orality
186(10)
Problem of the dynamic genesis: from depth to surface
``Positions'' according to Melanie Klein
Schizophrenia and depression, depth and height, Simulacrum and Idol
First step: from noise to the voice
Twenty-Eighth Series of Sexuality
196(6)
The erogenous zones
Second step of the dynamic genesis: formation of surfaces and their coordination
Image
Nature of the oedipal complex, role of the genital zone
Twenty-Ninth Series-Good Intentions are Inevitably Punished
202(8)
The oedipal affair in its relation with the constitution of the surface
To restore and to bring back
Castration
Intention as a category
Third step of genesis: from the physical surface to the metaphysical surface (the double screen)
Thirtieth Series of the Phantasm
210(7)
Phantasm and event
Phantasm, ego, and singularities
Phantasm, verb, and language
Thirty-First Series of Thought
217(7)
Phantasm, passage, and beginning
The couple and thought
Metaphysical surface
Orientation in psychic life, the mouth, and the brain
Thirty-Second Series on the Different Kinds of Series
224(10)
Series and sexualities: connective series and erogenous zone, conjunctive series and coordination
Third form of sexual series, disjunction and divergence
Phantasm and resonance
Sexuality and language: the three types of series and the corresponding words
From voice to speech
Thirty-Third Series of Alice's Adventures
234(5)
Recalling the three kinds of esoteric words in Lewis Carroll
Compared summaries of Alice and Through the Looking-Glass
Psychoanalysis and literature, neurotic familial novel and novel-Work of art
Thirty-Fourth Series of Primary Order and Secondary Organization
239(12)
Pendular structure of the phantasm: resonance and forced movement
From speech to the verb
End of the dynamic genesis
Primary and secondary repression
Satirical, ironic, humorous
APPENDIXES 251(84)
I. The Simulacrum And Ancient Philosophy
253(27)
1. Plato and the Simulacrum
253(13)
Platonic dialectics: signification of division
The selection of the suitors
Copies and simulacra
Characteristics of the simulacra
History of representation
To reverse Platonism: the modern work of art and the revenge of the simulacra
Manifest and latent content of the eternal return (Nietzsche against Plato)
Eternal return and simulation
Modernity
2. Lucretius and the Simulacrum
266(14)
The diverse
Nature and nontotalizable sum
Critique of Being, One, and Whole
Different aspects of the principle of causality
The two figures of method
The swerve and the theory of time. True and false infinity
Disturbance of the soul
Emanations of the depth, simulacra of the surface, theological, oneiric, and erotic phantasms
Time and the unit of method
Origin of the false infinity and of the disturbance of the soul
Naturalism and the critique of myths
II. Phantasm And Modern Literature
280(55)
3. Klossowski or Bodies-Language
280(21)
The disjunctive syllogism from the point of view of the body and language
Pornograpjy and theology
Seeing and speaking
Reflections, resonances, and simulacra
Denunciation
Flexion of body and language
Exchange and repetition
Repetition and the simulacrum
Role of frozen scenes
The dilemma: bodies/language
God and Antichrist: the two realms
Kantian theory of the disjunctive syllogism
The role of God
Transformation of the theory in Klossowski
The order of the Antichrist
Intention: intensity and intentionality
The eternal return as phantasm
4. Michel Tournier and the World Without Others
301(20)
Robinson, elements, and ends
Problem of perversion
The effect of the Other upon perception
The Other as an a priori structure
The effect of the Other upon time
The absence of the Other
Doubles and elements
The three meanings of the loss of the Other
From the simulacrum to the phantasm
The Other and perversion
5. Zola and the Crack-Up
321(14)
Crack-up and heredity
Instincts and their objects
The two heredities
Death instinct and instincts
The human beast
The fantasized object
The tragic and the epic
Notes 335(34)
Index 369
Gilles Deleuze was Professor of Philosophy at the Universite de Paris VIII, Vincennes-St. Denis, until his retirement in 1987. His books include Nietzsche and Philosophy, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, and Difference and Repetition.Constantin V. Boundas is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Trent University in Ontario. He has translated Deleuze's Empiricism and Subjectivity and edited The Deleuze Reader, both for Columbia University Press.