BergsonismZone Books, 1988 - 131 pagine What is needed for something new to appear? According to Gilles Deleuze, one of the most brilliant of contemporary philosophers, this question of “novelty” is the major problem posed by Bergson’s work. In Bergsonism, Deleuze demonstrates both the development and the range of three fundamental Bergsonian concepts: duration, memory, and the élan vital. |
Dall'interno del libro
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... interval ( écart ) , whether it divides up the received movement infinitely or prolongs it in a plurality of possible reactions . Even if recollections take advantage of this interval or , strictly speaking , " interpolate themselves ...
... interval , being embodied or actualized in the properly cerebral interval [ intervalle ] ) ; ( 5 ) contraction - subjectivity , the sec- ond aspect of memory ( the body being no more a punctiform instant in time than a mathematical ...
... interval between excitation and reaction ; nothing here goes beyond the physico - chemical properties of a particularly complicated type of matter . But , as we have seen , it is the whole of memory that descends into this interval ...
Sommario
Translators Introduction | 7 |
Intuition as Method | 13 |
Duration as Immediate Datum | 37 |
Copyright | |
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