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Merleau-Ponty : cinquante ans après sa mort ; Merleau-Ponty - Deleuze : dissonances et résonances : avec un inédit de Gilles Deleuze
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9788857507613 9782711643738 8857507610 2711643735 Year: 2012 Volume: 13 13 13 Publisher: Paris: Vrin,

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Dans son cours du Collège de France sur « L’Institution », Merleau-Ponty avait rappelé, pour l’appliquer précisement à l’institution comme telle, la définition du génie proposée par Goethe : une « productivité posthume ». Or, si en 2011, il y a désormais cinquante ans que la voix du philosophe français s’est tue, jamais sans doute la productivité de son œuvre et de sa pensée n’a été aussi manifeste. De ce point de vue, il n’y a donc pas à se plaindre de ce que Merleau-Ponty est devenu, à sa (belle) manière, un philosophe « institutionnel » : c’est le trait le plus clair de son génie.

Pure immanence : essays on a life
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 1890951250 9781890951252 Year: 2012 Publisher: New York Cambridge, Mass. London Zone Books Distributed by MIT Press

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"Pure Immanence collects the essays of Gilles Deleuze on a complex theme at the heart of his philosophy. In his last piece of writing, included here, Deleuze gives a simple name to this problem: "a life." Newly translated and gathered in one volume for the first time, the essays in Pure Immanence capture Deleuze's persistent search throughout his philosophical work for a new and superior form of empiricism that rethinks the relation of thought to life. "I," writes Deleuze, "have always felt that I am an empiricist, that is, a pluralist." "Announced in his very first book on Hume, then pursued in his early studies of Nietzsche and Bergson and in his later "clinical" essays, the issue of an "empiricist conversion" was central to Deleuze's thinking, in particular to his aesthetics and his conception of the art of cinema. For Deleuze such a conversion, such an empiricism, such a new art and will-to-art was, in fact, what was most needed in the new regime of communication and information-machines. The last seemingly minor question of "a life" is thus inseparable from Deleuze's striking image of philosophy not as a wisdom we already possess, but as a pure immanence of what is yet come. Pure Immanence exposes the new and urgent problems such a philosophy confronts today, one whose most difficult task, the invention of "a life," has yet to be achieved."--Jacket.

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