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Este libro tiene dos textos breves de excepcional inters de dos grandes filsofos de nuestro tiempo, entre quienes se iba a desarrollar una amista capital para ambos, en palabras de Didier Eribon.El escrito de Michel Foucault se basa en el estudio de dos importantsimas obras de Deleuze, Lgica del sentido y Diferencia y repeticin: Dos libros, dice Foucault, que considero grandes entre los grandes. Y aade su clebre frase: Tal vez un da el siglo ser deleuziano. El texto de Gilles Deleuze es precisamente la introduccin a Diferencia y repeticin, en la cual, a modo de lectura, se sintetizan los motivos fundamentales del libro. Por esta razn, goza de una autonoma suficiente que justifica sobradamente su publicacin por separado.Ambos textos haban sido publicados tambin conjuntamente, en 1972, en la Serie de Filosofa, dirigida por Eugenio Tras, de los Cuadernos Anagrama.Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) ha sido uno de los pensadores fundamentales de nuestro tiempo. En esta coleccin se han publicado varios ttulos imprescindibles de su obra: Nietzsche y la filosofa, Proust y los signos, Qu es la filosofa'. escrita en colaboracin con Flix Gualtieri y Crtica y clnica.… (más)
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"It is these three syntheses which must be understood as constitutive of the unconscious. They correspond to the figures of repetition which appear in the work of a great novelist: the binding, the ever renewed fine cord; the ever displaced stain on the wall; the ever erased eraser. The repetition-binding, the repetition-stain, the repetition-eraser: the three beyonds of the pleasure principle. The first synthesis expresses the foundation of time upon the basis of a living present, a foundation which endows pleasure with its value as a general empirical principle to which is subject the content of the psychic life in the Id. The second synthesis expresses the manner in which time is grounded in a pure past, a ground which conditions the application of the pleasure principle to the contents of the Ego. The third synthesis, however, refers to the absence of ground into which we are precipitated by the ground itself: Thanatos appears in third place as this groundlessness, beyond the ground of Eros and the foundation of Habitus. He therefore has a disturbing kind of relation with the pleasure principle which is often expressed in the unfathomable paradoxes of a pleasure linked to pain (when in fact it is a question of something else altogether: the desexualisation which operates in this third synthesis, in so far as it inhibits the application of the pleasure principle as the prior directive idea in order then to proceed to a resexualisation in which pleasure is invested only in a pure, cold, apathetic and frozen thought, as we see in the cases of sadism and masochism). In one sense the third synthesis unites all the dimensions of time, past, present and future, and causes them to be played out in the pure form. In another sense it involves their reorganisation, since the past is treated in function of a totality of time as the condition by default which characterises the Id, while the present is defined by the metamorphosis of the agent in the ego ideal. In a third sense, finally, the ultimate synthesis concerns only the future, since it announces in the superego the destruction of the Id and the ego, of the past as well as the present, of the condition and the agent. At this extreme point the straight line of time forms a circle again, a singularly tortuous one; or alternatively, the death instinct reveals an unconditional truth hidden in its „other” face – namely, the eternal return in so far as this world which has rid itself of the default of the condition and the equality of the agent in order to affirm only the excessive and the unequal, the extreme formality. This is how the story of time ends: by undoing its too well centred natural or physical circle and forming a straight line which then, led by its own length, reconstitutes an eternally decentred circle." (140-1)
Este libro tiene dos textos breves de excepcional inters de dos grandes filsofos de nuestro tiempo, entre quienes se iba a desarrollar una amista capital para ambos, en palabras de Didier Eribon.El escrito de Michel Foucault se basa en el estudio de dos importantsimas obras de Deleuze, Lgica del sentido y Diferencia y repeticin: Dos libros, dice Foucault, que considero grandes entre los grandes. Y aade su clebre frase: Tal vez un da el siglo ser deleuziano. El texto de Gilles Deleuze es precisamente la introduccin a Diferencia y repeticin, en la cual, a modo de lectura, se sintetizan los motivos fundamentales del libro. Por esta razn, goza de una autonoma suficiente que justifica sobradamente su publicacin por separado.Ambos textos haban sido publicados tambin conjuntamente, en 1972, en la Serie de Filosofa, dirigida por Eugenio Tras, de los Cuadernos Anagrama.Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995) ha sido uno de los pensadores fundamentales de nuestro tiempo. En esta coleccin se han publicado varios ttulos imprescindibles de su obra: Nietzsche y la filosofa, Proust y los signos, Qu es la filosofa'. escrita en colaboracin con Flix Gualtieri y Crtica y clnica.