Deleuze, Philosophy and the Creation of Concepts
One feature of Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy is its effort to establish connections with other disciplines and to appeal to non-philosophers. However, Deleuze never establishes these connections without a constant and unconditional reaffirmation of the uniqueness of philosophy. How does he conceive of philosophy? What are its elements? What are its methods? How is philosophy connected to other fields of knowledge and other activities? Axel Cherniavsky provides an answer to these questions by analysing the definition of philosophy Deleuze gives throughout his entire oeuvre: creation of concepts. Through this analysis, you will discover a reconstruction of a creative methodology, a detailed theory of the philosophical concept, a reflection on interdisciplinarity and altogether one of the most precise and systematic conceptions that philosophy has ever given of itself.

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Deleuze, Philosophy and the Creation of Concepts
One feature of Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy is its effort to establish connections with other disciplines and to appeal to non-philosophers. However, Deleuze never establishes these connections without a constant and unconditional reaffirmation of the uniqueness of philosophy. How does he conceive of philosophy? What are its elements? What are its methods? How is philosophy connected to other fields of knowledge and other activities? Axel Cherniavsky provides an answer to these questions by analysing the definition of philosophy Deleuze gives throughout his entire oeuvre: creation of concepts. Through this analysis, you will discover a reconstruction of a creative methodology, a detailed theory of the philosophical concept, a reflection on interdisciplinarity and altogether one of the most precise and systematic conceptions that philosophy has ever given of itself.

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Deleuze, Philosophy and the Creation of Concepts

Deleuze, Philosophy and the Creation of Concepts

Deleuze, Philosophy and the Creation of Concepts

Deleuze, Philosophy and the Creation of Concepts

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Overview

One feature of Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy is its effort to establish connections with other disciplines and to appeal to non-philosophers. However, Deleuze never establishes these connections without a constant and unconditional reaffirmation of the uniqueness of philosophy. How does he conceive of philosophy? What are its elements? What are its methods? How is philosophy connected to other fields of knowledge and other activities? Axel Cherniavsky provides an answer to these questions by analysing the definition of philosophy Deleuze gives throughout his entire oeuvre: creation of concepts. Through this analysis, you will discover a reconstruction of a creative methodology, a detailed theory of the philosophical concept, a reflection on interdisciplinarity and altogether one of the most precise and systematic conceptions that philosophy has ever given of itself.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474489133
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 05/31/2026
Series: Plateaus - New Directions in Deleuze Studies
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Axel Cherniavsky is a Researcher at the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research, Argentina, and Professor of Contemporary Philosophy at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Taylor Adkins is a translator of French philosophy including works by François Laruelle, Quentin Meillassoux, Michel Serres, Félix Guattari and Gilbert Simondon.

Table of Contents

Translator’s Foreword
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Preface

Introduction: The Problems of Deleuzian Conception of Philosophy

Part I: Theory of Elements
1. Theory of the Concept
2. The Plane of Immanence
3. Conceptual Personae

Part II: Theory of Creation
4. Theory of Method
5. The History of Philosophy
6. Philosophical Discourse

Part III: The Philosophical Image of Thought
Introduction
7. The Dogmatic Image and the New Image of Thought
8. Philosophical Thought

Conclusion: The Identity of Philosophy faced with the Singularity of Philosophies

Bibliography

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