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3 - Philosophical Times and Spaces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2020

Hanjo Berressem
Affiliation:
The University of Cologne
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Summary

… the present is an invisible electron.

Annie Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (79)

All consciousness is a matter of thresholds.

Gilles Deleuze, The Fold (88)

The pure is the impure and the obscure is the clear. We live and think within the mix.

Michel Serres, Genesis (132)

horizontal weather

Gilles Deleuze, The Logic of Sense (11)

Philosophical Times (Strobe and)

Difference and Repetition (1968), The Logic of Sense (1969)

THERE ARE TWO theories of time in Deleuze, or three, if one counts the one that Deleuze develops in Cinema 1 and Cinema 2. The most elaborate of these concerns the three syntheses of time in Difference and Repetition. First synthesis: the time of perception as the synthesis of ‘the lived, or living, present’ (DR: 70). Second synthesis: the time of memory as the synthesis of the present and the past. Third synthesis: the time of consciousness as the synthesis of the present, the past and the future. (On time, see also James Williams’ indispensable Gilles Deleuze's Philosophy of Time (2011).) The first synthesis is a passive synthesis that defines and makes up the lived and living present. Its time, which ‘contracts … successive independent instants into one another’ (70), lies outside of both memory and consciousness. Deleuze relates this time to the ‘spontaneous imagination’ (77) which contracts, in the same way in which the first synthesis contracts singular temporal points into clusters, heterogeneous instants into the temporal surface of the present.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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