Tag Archive for 'deleuze'

Faith Problems, 4

After looking at Kierkegaard’s concept of faith and Nietzsche’s introduction to semiotics, we now turn to the primary philosopher of , Gilles . He’s a bit unknown, even in philosophy circles. In Deleuzian terms, Kierkegaard’s Knight of Faith embodies difference. He is unrepeatable, paradoxical, and contradictory. He is a multiplicity. Here, I want to outline what difference is and why this is an integral part of Kierkegaard’s Knight of Faith. Our primary text is Deleuze’s Difference and Repetition.

Determining Difference
Deleuze writes that “difference is the state in which one can speak of determinations as such” (D&R, 28). It is this as such that is important for Deleuze. Difference is not a constant process but an immediate event. His example is lightning distinguishing itself from the undifferentiated, from the void of indifference. Difference occurs between the undifferentiated like a “struggle against an elusive adversary, in which the distinguished opposes something which cannot distinguish itself from it but continues to espouse that which divorces it” (D&R, 28).

It is common to perceive difference in terms of the of extremes or contraries (e.g., black vs. white), but this only scrapes the surface of difference. When these two extremes are taken to infinity, it becomes clear that they are simply opposite forces of the same quality. In other words, they are repetitions of the indifferent. To think of difference, one must deny the indifferent in order to make the different. Difference must be pushed to its limit, “the ground which is no less its return or its reproduction than its annihilation” (D&R, 45).

Being Different
It was who has made the only ontological proposition: “ is univocal” (D&R, 35). This has always been the only and it is what is echoed in all ontology before and after, from Parmenides to Heidegger. At the limits of infinity, we can see that difference does not presuppose some sort of identity, as Hegel had concluded, but rather that identity, through the opposition of identities, presupposes difference and even distorts it. It is not enough to say that “difference in itself is not ‘already’ ” but also that difference cannot be reduced to contradiction (D&R 51). Difference is the mirror which inverts the surface of identity, Lewis Carroll’s looking glass.

It was Nietzsche who first saw this concept and it is his philosophy of contradictions that really sought out difference. Reading Nietzsche’s concepts such as “beyond good and evil” as a simple rejection of morality is faulty because it still follows the conflict which Nietzsche rejects: “Thus Nietzsche reproaches all those selection procedures based upon opposition or conflict with working to the advantage of the average forms and operation to the benefit of the ‘large number’” (D&R, 54). Through Nietzsche’s , univocal Being is dissolved and “the superior form of everything that is” is uncovered. Eternal return itself “makes the difference” and displays the “univocity of the different” (D&R, 55).

Learning Difference
The activity of learning may be the most profound insight into difference. Being corresponds to the problem or question as though “there was an ‘opening’, a ‘gap’, an ontological ‘fold’ which relates being and the question to one another” (D&R, 64). Being, here, is difference as well as . This non-being should be understood as the negation of being but rather the “being of problem and question” (D&R, 64). Non-being is also difference. In this sense, non-being “should rather be written (non)-being or, better still, ?-being” (D&R, 64). By confusing this (non)-being with negation, contradiction is brought into being and the sight of difference is lost to it.

Faith Problems, 2

In the last post (link), I introduced what calls a “teleological suspension of the ethical.” This is something strictly from the point of view of mankind because ethics is for man. The primary thrust of this suspension was the notion of an absolute duty toward God in that this absolute duty has the authority to suspend ordinary ethics. This suspension, if it is possible, would have the superficial look of a tragedy but would more closely resemble a passion. A tragedy remains planted in the ethical; this duty supersedes it. Kierkegaard contends that the ethical comes from one’s relation to the absolute (i.e. God) and not vice versa. If this is the case, then there is such a thing as an absolute duty towards God that overrides the ethical. This is the paradox of faith. Kierkegaard also suggests that “[i]f such is not the case, then faith has no proper place in existence, then faith is a temptation, and is lost, since he gave into it” (Fear and Tembling, 60).
For Kierkegaard, faith must be something wholly other from the universal/ethical. Faith is the unintelligible paradox, infinitely personal and subjective. Confusing it with the immediate (as early phenomenology was doing at the time) is a travesty. One knight of faith cannot help another. Here we can see Kierkegaard taking a radical rejection of Aristotle’s Virtue-Happiness link, something that Kant began to reject in his categorical imperative. Because of this radical difference in faith, one’s duty is done out of duty towards the absolute, not because the duty is ethical or because the result may be happiness. Duty is done regardless of its consequences or ethical nature. Unlike the tragic hero who renounces himself for the universal, the knight of faith “renounces the universal in order to become the individual” (F&T, 65). The knight of faith embraces difference absolutely. The true knight of faith cannot be repeated in ceremony, ritual, or practice. The true knight of faith stands alone and absolutely different from mankind.


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