GILLES DELEUZE BY PHILP GOODCHILD

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Пікірлер: 110

  • @abulkhairyerlan5170
    @abulkhairyerlan51703 жыл бұрын

    It should be a crime to not mention Difference and Repetition when discussing Deleuze's major works.

  • @jobebrian

    @jobebrian

    3 жыл бұрын

    Egg zackly

  • @dr.danzigm.d.6845

    @dr.danzigm.d.6845

    2 жыл бұрын

    What would be an appropriate punishment?

  • @alexanderthedude5474

    @alexanderthedude5474

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dr.danzigm.d.6845 having sun beams come out of your ass

  • @michaelcarrig627

    @michaelcarrig627

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dr.danzigm.d.6845 perpetual consciousness of the basic problematic stupidity that undergirds even your most well developed concepts.

  • @ibrahimakgul9449

    @ibrahimakgul9449

    6 ай бұрын

    And Logic of Sense…

  • @feartheway5111
    @feartheway51118 жыл бұрын

    incredible, especially the wave bit... fantastic thank you

  • @OscarWrightZenTANGO
    @OscarWrightZenTANGO8 жыл бұрын

    Outstanding commentary....well put...excellent

  • @MargaretHillsdeZ
    @MargaretHillsdeZ4 жыл бұрын

    Very good commentary...thank you.

  • @kirandas9041
    @kirandas90413 жыл бұрын

    Excellent explanation.

  • @user-yk8ro9rf4r
    @user-yk8ro9rf4r3 жыл бұрын

    THANKs to p.GOODchild, TECHNIQUE, pragmatic Gilles DEREUZE. affected us......TueM.

  • @elrogigor
    @elrogigor5 жыл бұрын

    thank you!

  • @petermorris3312
    @petermorris33122 жыл бұрын

    Or the two books on Cinema which remain the greatest of all works on cinema..

  • @pygmalion8952
    @pygmalion89524 жыл бұрын

    Full video please

  • @nawfalAbdullah
    @nawfalAbdullah3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @Spike-ee6om
    @Spike-ee6om2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Doc

  • @SN-xk2rl
    @SN-xk2rl2 жыл бұрын

    Nice video on Kant, what was Delueze up to philosophically?

  • @albertoarce820
    @albertoarce8208 жыл бұрын

    excellent

  • @crawls1524
    @crawls15247 жыл бұрын

    Yes yes.

  • @kilgoretrout413
    @kilgoretrout413 Жыл бұрын

    Deleuze was an unlikely hero of English soccer hooligans in the 1980s and concrete terraces all over the country often reverberated to chants and songs summarising some of his more obtuse theories

  • @tomemery7890

    @tomemery7890

    9 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @newyork1401
    @newyork14014 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful video. One correction, emphysema is not necessarily cancer, it is pulmonary and can coincide but not codependent. Great presentation, Deleuze is hard to get at but this is part of his importance and attraction to those selectively meant to get closer - imho

  • @dimitrisbk800
    @dimitrisbk8003 жыл бұрын

    so good

  • @lugus9261
    @lugus92616 жыл бұрын

    12:30 is that similar to how Wittgensteins Tractatus is self destructive? And collapses in on itself?

  • @solosulla9648

    @solosulla9648

    4 жыл бұрын

    He kicked the ladder back down after using it to climb up. At least, that's what Wittgenstein said.

  • @qme7
    @qme79 жыл бұрын

    To Matthew D: respectfully, I don't think that Philp Godchild has bungled immanence at all. Widcatrj is right in his explanation of immanence. For Deleuze, yes, immanence is what Wildcatrj says. But it is more than that and it is this 'more' that Philp Goodchild manages to point out. I think his notion of surfing, which he uses at the end of his talk, is very eloquent here. It means that, no, we cannot create concepts that allow us to view the world as though from some kind of a high tower. If one is high up in a tower, you may be the feeling that what you see below (the world) can now finally be pictured, i.e. you can have a representation or image of the world that allows you to see it as a whole and thus to dominate intellectually: you see all its parts and how one part fits in with all the others, etc. But Deleuze would probably say that the view from a high tower is impossible or rather that it is an illusion. Since we are always IMMERSED in the world, then all you can do is to surf on the forces that buffet this world. That is what the notion of immanent plane (without the possible of a transcendant stance) forces us to do: surf.

  • @derrickmullins348

    @derrickmullins348

    8 жыл бұрын

    Not only that, but Deleuze's general disposition is to struggle against any fascist rigidity. This includes philosophical conceptual thought that attempts to dictate notions of total meaning and complete representation. The example of the tower is nice, but I would also add that for Deleuze, the "tower" here is also inadequate because it can not take into account various active processes that deviate from the structural norms of the "tower". Deleuze believes life is inherently creative and in perpetual movement, thus philosophy is an engagement of experiemental genesis that while necessarily be viewed as aberrant from the hierarchical "tower" of institutional thought.

  • @defuse56

    @defuse56

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Robert Richard Agreed. The surfing analogy is especially good because it nicely intersects D's concepts of flow and de-territorialization. Each ride on the wave ifs different; the surfer creates a line of flight from the mass and force of the wave, thus de-territorializing the molar wave force involved and sweeping it away into a multiplicity of possible rides. Surfing is not a state of being (or mind); it's an act of becoming. (I'm an antiquated surfer myself, so I've always enjoyed this aspect of D's thought). :-)

  • @4455matthew

    @4455matthew

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Derrick Mullins really, is that so? was that also a major concern for Deleuze, against ridgity and absolutism? because I keep seeing that as a major problem in thinking, and really liked how that was also a major concern of Rorty's.

  • @christin7744
    @christin77445 жыл бұрын

    Speed up to 1.25. Thank me later.

  • @tiely13

    @tiely13

    5 жыл бұрын

    or sooner

  • @theraulproductions

    @theraulproductions

    5 жыл бұрын

    1.75 here

  • @reneperez2126

    @reneperez2126

    5 жыл бұрын

    no, im not an english speaker so it works for me, thanks anyway

  • @nownezz

    @nownezz

    4 жыл бұрын

    i will wait until tomorrow to thank you

  • @balgrantango460

    @balgrantango460

    4 жыл бұрын

    hilarious! Thank you. I was not fussy about the subject matter though...what a million white men think about things.

  • @wildcatrj
    @wildcatrj9 жыл бұрын

    Immanence can be explained in a much easier way. Immanence is opposed to transcendency. If you believe in God, than your world is transcendent. God is outside the world, since he is not subjected to the laws of the physical world (he can perform miracles, for example). If you agree to Spinoza's philosophy, then your god is immanent. God is Substance, and subjected to the physical laws of the universe. That's immanence.

  • @4455matthew

    @4455matthew

    9 жыл бұрын

    Nice, very nice.

  • @defuse56

    @defuse56

    8 жыл бұрын

    +wildcatrj I agree, except that I think we ought to be able to find a way to describe immanence that doesn't depend on a binary opposition. Would it be reasonable to suggest that immanence is the result of the collapse of the opposition transcendent/nihilist? Or something along those lines?

  • @calabiyou

    @calabiyou

    8 жыл бұрын

    +wildcatrj Like Harry Potter.

  • @parispeter2

    @parispeter2

    6 жыл бұрын

    I agree with wildcatrj, I thought it was a curious way to introduce the concept of immanence. A good first intro to Deleuze nevertheless.

  • @lostintime519

    @lostintime519

    6 жыл бұрын

    like Pantheism? never read Deleuze or Spinoza:(

  • @gabrieltoledano5560
    @gabrieltoledano55603 жыл бұрын

    2:29 I fear you are forgetting one: Salamon Maimon.

  • @vsavage9913
    @vsavage99134 жыл бұрын

    “To read any section of it you have to understand the concepts that have been introduced and developed in any other section of it , so it doesn’t have a linear structure .. “ uhm maybe mean to say it is ,philosophy ??😐

  • @HS-bh9dz

    @HS-bh9dz

    4 жыл бұрын

    It structure is wild even for a philosophy book

  • @climatebabes
    @climatebabes3 жыл бұрын

    auto die dact?

  • @vidividivicious
    @vidividivicious6 жыл бұрын

    Concepts? Is this like the lacanian signifier?

  • @construct3

    @construct3

    2 жыл бұрын

    No.

  • @bogdanh635
    @bogdanh6354 жыл бұрын

    Good child.

  • @waxkevorkian7884
    @waxkevorkian78845 жыл бұрын

    It seems to me all the best philosophers had some sort of sickness.

  • @blade5308

    @blade5308

    3 жыл бұрын

    Awareness of mortality and human fickleness really elevates prespective

  • @heartache5742

    @heartache5742

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Why does one write? Because it is not a case of writing. It may be that the writer has delicate health, a weak constitution. He is none the less the opposite of the neurotic: a sort of great Alive (in the manner of Spinoza, Nietzsche or Lawrence) in so far as he is only too weak for the life which runs in him or for the affects which pass in him. He does not ask 'What is writing?' , because he has all its necessity, the impossibility of another choice which indeed makes writing." from deleuze's essay "on the superiority of anglo-american literature"

  • @murat6018
    @murat60184 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Deleuze was one of those weird dudes I've been scared for so long and I always felt the need of him (and don't get me even started with how cool is to name your book [book series?] "Capitalism & Schizophrenia") due to their relationship to Semiotics. Anyway, Mr. Goodchild is a tremendous lecturer. He gave me a couple of mini heart attacks.

  • @demit189

    @demit189

    4 жыл бұрын

    Deleuze has some of the coolest book names; a thousand plateaus sounds so awesome haha

  • @colinclarke7307
    @colinclarke73075 жыл бұрын

    No seriously, it does

  • @vsavage9913
    @vsavage99134 жыл бұрын

    (one way of understanding immanence) “Thought is a kind of environment that we enter into and already are in ..” ermm say what again ? 🧐 😶🔫 (another) “Thought is part of reality .” Well that should settle it 👨‍⚖️ .

  • @5thdisciple940

    @5thdisciple940

    4 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps the opposite is the case. Is not reality, the plane upon which we understand relations, constituted by a preexisting substance, is reality, not just a recoil that represents & expresses the state of human understanding? I'd posit that reality is a euphemism of what is real.

  • @construct3

    @construct3

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@5thdisciple940 Yes, Deleuzean imminence is more like Spinoza and not much like Kant. Another foundational concept derived from Spinoza (though it was not original with him) is the univocity of being. This undergirds his rejecting the classical image of thought in order to develop a philosophy of "Difference and Repetition." If one is going to read only one book by Deleuze, that's the one to read. I'm surprised that this video made no mention of it.

  • @5thdisciple940

    @5thdisciple940

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@construct3 Yeah man, any line of thinking that dips its roots in the concepts of Spinoza, more often than not, makes great & very awe-inspiring theory.

  • @ROGERWDARCY
    @ROGERWDARCY7 жыл бұрын

    Does Deluze grasp schizophrenia?

  • @construct3

    @construct3

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not in the way it is described in the DSM. He and Guattari use the word to mean something else entirely.

  • @maximskyway499
    @maximskyway4993 жыл бұрын

    Talking for 20 minutes saying nothing about the philosophy of Deleuze

  • @spinophrenic3775
    @spinophrenic37755 жыл бұрын

    Deleuze was from a right-wing bourgeois family.

  • @danielfineman2851
    @danielfineman28518 жыл бұрын

    The first half of this presentation is a very nice if brief and selective biographic summary. So far, this is fine. The second part that attempts to summarize his philosophy is, to me, not so successful. Goodchild -- again and again -- falls into representation -- little narratives of ideation -- and this was, as much as anything - Deleuze'a antagonist. The immanent for D is not circumscribed by thought, but is that concurrent differencing of the milieuthat forces thought not upon us but into the extant and then not as a representable relation between subject and object (man and wave) but as the problematic intensity of transcendental empiricism, as the output which is non-resembling -- closer to the seismograph to the earthquake than the wave and rider but even that analogy is faulty if it is taken as two things related rather than a dynamic and differential relation without object or subject.

  • @moxenrider

    @moxenrider

    7 жыл бұрын

    Could you clarify. I'm a little put off by his interpretations of D, but I don't know why?

  • @danielfineman2851

    @danielfineman2851

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ideas for D are in the virtual -- the same dynamic multiplicity as everything else -- this narrates his thought as fixed actualizations -- the exact opposirte of his central thought.

  • @thedream-workdoesnotthink4512

    @thedream-workdoesnotthink4512

    6 жыл бұрын

    This is an introduction. Had the presenter gone with word-salad, as you have, he would have got nowhere. In any case, insofar as ideas are representations, they are not in the virtual. The virtual is non-representational. It is becoming and not what has become.

  • @sphinx333

    @sphinx333

    5 жыл бұрын

    Totally agree. I saw your comment after posting mine. This presentation is everything Gilles was not.

  • @TheLeksilijum
    @TheLeksilijum3 жыл бұрын

    Adults that lean out too far while grasping air kind of know what they are doing. Maybe they lean out as much as they can wanting to become air itself. Because that's what they are lacking. And it's by falling through it that they end up not lacking it anymore.

  • @balgrantango460
    @balgrantango4604 жыл бұрын

    Men talking about what lots of other men think...dear me...what I think is that men aren't the only ones who think :)

  • @paulvallance4970
    @paulvallance49704 жыл бұрын

    funny how all the pseudo intellectuals here take the post-modernist observations of subjective experience as facts... Go read Neitzche again,,, think you missed something.....

  • @lostintime519
    @lostintime5196 жыл бұрын

    ""...from Darwin to Derrida..." can the second be even mentioned in the same sentence with Darwin???" - people like Stephen Hicks and Jordan Peterson. Holy fck its a war.

  • @jimraynor2313
    @jimraynor23134 ай бұрын

    Worst video about Deleuze. He is making sense of Deleuze in theological fashion which Deleuze strongly denies

  • @jamesbarlow6423
    @jamesbarlow64232 жыл бұрын

    Useless

  • @sphinx333
    @sphinx3335 жыл бұрын

    no offence, but what a dry ponce, everything Gilles was not. The style and language of this presentation collide with the philosophy it's attempting to describe. I would also argue that this presentation captures the way in which Deleuze has been generally treated/analysed within Anglophone scholarship, i.e. literal application, obsession with translating and applying his every word in a petty way. This, I believe, has to do with the poor English translations of Deleuze's work that fail to transfer that lyricism in his philosophy and sense of whole that is so distinctive of Deleuze's writing. Anyone into Deleuze who can read French or Italian, I urge you to read his works in either one of those languages: you will discover the real Gille Deleuze.

  • @EmmaYaBasta

    @EmmaYaBasta

    5 жыл бұрын

    What a ponce-like response!