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1 - Plato

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Gregory Flaxman
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina
Graham Jones
Affiliation:
Monash University
Jon Roffe
Affiliation:
Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy
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Summary

PART I

The guiding principle behind Gilles Deleuze's commentaries on other philosophers could be summed up with one phrase: ‘keep your friends close, but keep your enemies closer’. While Deleuze often treats his philosophical friends in an unexpected and occasionally mischievous manner, as if they were actually strangers (‘a philosophically clean shaven-Marx …’), he treats his enemies with an equally unexpected hospitality, proffering a kind of intimacy, immediacy, and even immanence that will make of them familiars and fellow-thinkers (DR xxi). The experience of dipping into Deleuze's commentaries always provokes a moment of astonishment, as if a queer kind of ventriloquism had been contrived. How is it possible, we ask ourselves, that this philosopher has been made to speak these words, which are his, but which sound as though he had never uttered them before? How is it possible that an enemy has become an intimate?

Perhaps we feel this sentiment most profoundly in the context of Deleuze's commentaries on Plato, especially given that this particular friendship begins with nothing less than a declaration of war. In Difference and Repetition and in the first appendix to The Logic of Sense, the very texts where he develops his most extensive analysis of Plato, Deleuze announces that modern philosophy has never had any other task than the overturning (renversement) of Platonism. Indeed, Deleuze's own philosophy takes its point of departure as, and its measure from, the repudiation of the enduring Platonic legacy, which he regards as responsible for imposing an overarching image of thought at the cost of real difference, of difference ‘in itself’.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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  • Plato
  • Edited by Graham Jones, Monash University, Jon Roffe, Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy
  • Book: Deleuze's Philosophical Lineage
  • Online publication: 12 September 2012
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  • Plato
  • Edited by Graham Jones, Monash University, Jon Roffe, Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy
  • Book: Deleuze's Philosophical Lineage
  • Online publication: 12 September 2012
Available formats
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  • Plato
  • Edited by Graham Jones, Monash University, Jon Roffe, Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy
  • Book: Deleuze's Philosophical Lineage
  • Online publication: 12 September 2012
Available formats
×