File spoon-archives/deleuze-guattari.archive/deleuze-guattari_1999/deleuze-guattari.9901, message 439


Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1999 04:35:49 -0800 (PST)
From: Paul Bryant <levi_bryant-AT-yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: On other Hand


<quivering and oozing with delight>  Clifford, this was a wonderful
series of posts...  I'd love to see more stuff like this.

Paul



---yaya <cw_duff-AT-alcor.concordia.ca> wrote:
>
> 
> 
> 
> 	yet again and wonderfully so and in no relation of contradiction
> there are some interesting points and pages in What is Philosophy with
> reference to Hegel [and Heidegger] on 94-5. part of that discussion
> entails a consideration of the problem in Hegel and Heidegger of the
> concept and its relation to interiority as history. "Hegel and
Heidegger
> remain historicists inasmuch as they posit hisotry as a form of
> interiority in which the concept necessarily develops or unveils its
> destiny.The necessity rests on the abstraction of the historical 
element
> rendered circular. The unforeseeable creation of concepts is thus
poorly
> understood." (Whatis Philosophy Trans.) Now that is juicy stuff to me.
> Because it opens up a movement of deterritorialization at the
> "origins" of western thought ie. among the Greeks. But how does it
happen?
> Whereas with Hegel (according to D&G) it gets
> shut down, and the same thing happens with Heidegger. THis closing
down
> can be seen as the mental conceptual parallel to what the
> German State was doing on the political and civic sphere.
> 
> 
> 

_________________________________________________________
DO YOU YAHOO!?
Get your free -AT-yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com


   

Driftline Main Page

 

Display software: ArchTracker © Malgosia Askanas, 2000-2005