156:. An object is not simply within a larger system, but folds from that very same system, functioning and operating consistently upon it, with it and through it, immanently mapping its environment, discovering its own dynamic powers and kinetic relations, as well as the relative limits of those powers and relations. Thus, without a theoretical reliance on transcendent principles, categories or real divisions producing relative breaks or screens of atomistic enclosure, the concept of the plane of immanence may replace nicely any benefits of a philosophical transcendentalism: "Absolute immanence is in itself: it is not in something,
111:), a plane of immanence will eliminate problems of preeminent forms, transcendental subjects, original genesis and real structures: "Here, there are no longer any forms or developments of forms; nor are there subjects or the formation of subjects. There is no structure, any more than there is genesis." In this sense,
164:
Finally, Deleuze offers that pure immanence and life will suppose one another unconditionally: "We will say of pure immanence that it is A LIFE, and nothing else. ... A life is the immanence of immanence, absolute immanence: it is complete power, complete bliss." This is not some abstract, mystical
100:
The plane of immanence thus is often called a plane of consistency accordingly. As a geometric plane, it is in no way bound to a mental design but rather an abstract or virtual design; which for
Deleuze, is the metaphysical or ontological itself: a formless, univocal, self-organizing process which
119:
through a material history becomes irreconcilable with pure immanence as it depends precisely on a pre-established form or order, namely Spirit itself. Rather, on the plane of immanence there are only complex networks of forces, particles, connections, relations, affects and becomings: "There are
160:
something; it does not depend on an object or belong to a subject. ... When the subject or the object falling outside the plane of immanence is taken as a universal subject or as any object to which immanence is attributed, ... immanence is distorted, for it then finds itself enclosed in the
127:
The plane of immanence necessitates an immanent philosophy. Concepts and representations may no longer be considered vacuous forms awaiting content (concept of x, representation of y) but become active productions in themselves, constantly affecting and being affected by other concepts,
124:, affects, subjectless individuations that constitute collective assemblages. ... We call this plane, which knows only longitudes and latitudes, speeds and haecceities, the plane of consistency or composition (as opposed to a plan(e) of organization or development)."
49:, that which extends beyond or outside. Deleuze "refuses to see deviations, redundancies, destructions, cruelties or contingency as accidents that befall or lie outside life; life and death aspects of desire or the plane of immanence." This plane is a
180:
An ethics of immanence will disavow its reference to judgments of good and evil, right and wrong, as according to a transcendent model, rule or law. Rather the diversity of living things and particularity of events will demand the concrete methods of
93:. Mind may no longer be conceived as a self-contained field, substantially differentiated from body (dualism), nor as the primary condition of unilateral subjective mediation of external objects or events (idealism). Thus, all
120:
only relations of movement and rest, speed and slowness between unformed elements, or at least between elements that are relatively unformed, molecules, and particles of all kinds. There are only
97:(mind and body, God and matter, interiority and exteriority, etc.) are collapsed or flattened into an even consistency or plane, namely immanence itself, that is, immanence without opposition.
57:, Cartesian or otherwise. Pure immanence is thus often referred to as a pure plane, an infinite field or smooth space without substantial or constitutive division. In his final essay entitled
85:
substance, that is, immanent to itself. Pure immanence therefore will have consequences not only for the validity of a philosophical reliance on transcendence, but simultaneously for
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life is subjectless, neutral, and preceding all individuation and stratification, is present in all things, and thus always immanent to itself. "
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61:, Deleuze wrote: "It is only when immanence is no longer immanence to anything other than itself that we can speak of a plane of immanence."
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life is everywhere ...: an immanent life carrying with it the events and singularities that are merely actualized in subjects and objects."
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life, a specific yet impersonal, indefinite life discovered in the real singularity of events and virtuality of moments.
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The
Intellectuals and Power: A Discussion Between Gilles Deleuze and Michel Foucault
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A New
Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity
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representations, images, bodies etc. In their final work together,
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The plane of immanence is metaphysically consistent with
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always qualitatively differentiates from itself. So in
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Périclès et Verdi: La philosophie de
Francois Châtelet
136:, the foundation on which it creates its concepts."
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77:) in the sense that immanence is not immanent
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811:Desert Islands and Other Texts 1953-1974
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797:Bartleby, la formula della creazione
699:Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza
81:substance but rather that immanence
249:Deleuze: A Guide for the Perplexed
140:Pure immanence as lived philosophy
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769:The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque
361:. Paris: Les Editions de Minuit.
804:Pure Immanence: Essays on a Life
604:Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature
906:Cartographies schizoanalytiques
864:L’intervention institutionnelle
685:Masochism: Coldness and Cruelty
357:. 2 vols. 1972-1980. Trans. of
27:) is a founding concept in the
966:L'Abécédaire de Gilles Deleuze
892:Molecular Revolution in Brazil
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713:Spinoza: Practical Philosophy
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618:Nomadology: The War Machine
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65:Immanence as a pure plane
755:Cinema 2: The Time-Image
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818:Two Regimes of Madness
35:of French philosopher
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432:Concepts and theories
73:’s single substance (
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948:Chaos and Complexity
843:Molecular Revolution
539:Societies of control
524:Reterritorialization
464:Deterritorialization
385:"Plane of Immanence"
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344:A Thousand Plateaus
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469:Difference
449:Assemblage
236:References
220:Nonduality
920:Chaosophy
913:Chaosmose
727:Dialogues
671:Nietzsche
484:Haecceity
347:. Trans.
318:Deleuze,
309:, pp.26-7
305:Deleuze,
263:Deleuze,
117:dialectic
43:Immanence
1005:Ontology
762:Foucault
504:Minority
341:. 1980.
189:See also
91:idealism
33:ontology
611:Rhizome
564:Virtual
529:Rhizome
474:Erewhon
329:Sources
283:, p.266
210:Husserl
87:dualism
71:Spinoza
544:Socius
439:Affect
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322:, p.29
296:, p.41
267:, p.27
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113:Hegel
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