Expressionism in Philosophy: SpinozaZone Books, 1990 - 445 pagine In this remarkable work, Gilles Deleuze, the renowned French philosopher, reflects on one of the thinkers of the past who most influenced his own sweeping reconfiguration of the tasks of philosophy. For Deleuze, Spinoza, along with Nietzsche and Lucretius, conceived of philosophy as an enterprise of liberation and radical demystification. He locates in Spinoza “a set of affects, a kinetic determination, an impulse” and makes Spinoza into “an encounter, a passion.” |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 34
... Cartesian system . Descartes no doubt drew on the earlier efforts made by Suarez to bring order into this compli- cated area , but his own use of the three distinctions seems , in its very richness , to introduce many further ...
... Cartesian . The new status of real distinction is fundamental : as purely qualitative , quidditative or formal , real distinction ex- cludes any division . Yet isn't this just one of those apparently discredited Peripatetic distinctions ...
... Cartesian proofs . The Short Treatise contains no trace of the second Cartesian argu- ment ; but it preserves the first , in terms similar to those of Descartes7 : " If there is an idea of God , the cause of [ this idea ] must exist ...
Sommario
Contents | 5 |
The Role and Importance | 13 |
Numerical and Real Distinction | 27 |
Copyright | |
12 sezioni non visualizzate