ALSO AVAILABLE FROM BLOOMSBURY
Being and Event, Alain Badiou
Future Christ, François Laruelle
Logics of Worlds, Alain Badiou
Philosophies ofDijJ'erence, François Laruelle
Principles of Non- Philosophy, François Laruelle
Abbreviations vi
PreJàce vii
Introduction xviii
1
A brief synoptic parallel 1
2
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy 19
3
Old and new relations between science and
philosophy 57
4
Matrices and principles 81
5
Subtraction and superposition 111
6
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror 147
7
Ontology and materiality 177
8
Philo-fiction 197
Notes 234
Index 238
pp
Forces of Production
K
Kant
p
Fichte
NP
Non-Philosophy
OV
Ontology of the Void
PSM
Principle of Sufficient Mathematics
PSP
Principle of Sufficient Philosophy
RP
Relations of Production
Re-educating philosophy through
mathematics: Purification and terror
Why Badiou? He represents the introduction of Maoism into
philosophy, as undertaken by a "great" philosopher-that is to
say, a philosopher entirely apart-with all the inherent riskofthis
will and this greatness. He is an apogee of the modern tradition of
philosophy, of its very essence brandished like a standard in the
face of mathematics and with its aid. But, beneath this objective
appearance, other stakes can be discerned. It would render
Badiou banal to describe him merely as a master of "Western"
modernity. His project is more profound: his intention is to
"re-educate" philosophy. Beyond the various proclamations and
summations-which we shall not rely on to prove our point at
the level of the most obvious principles-he pursues the project
of the re-education of philosophy through mathematics, and not
at all that of the constitution of a mathematically based science of
philosophy (supposing such a thing were possible). This enterprise
has no equivalent in the history of philosophy (except perhaps
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viii
Plato); but it does have a politieal model, in the recent history of
communism. Badiou would have it that "modernity" is a fusion
of Platonist mathematicism and Maoism, thus demonstrating
his astonishing plasticity, his ability to fuse with liberalism on
one hand, mathematicism on the other. From this point of
view, mathematieism is the condition of communism, with
the authoritarian Platonist model finding a new lease of life in
Maoism.
Although at first glance the characteristieally conservative
aspect of aIl philosophy prevails in Badiou, in fact he cedes
nothing to the dominant tradition of philosophy, above aIl
"continental" and "modern" philosophy. He practices mathematies to teach and to teach himself, at best to illustrate the
concept; a matter of apprentieeship, of the deciphering of a
constituted science about whieh and through which philosophy
can educate itself. But to the best of our knowledge, it is not
a matter of actual mathematical production, as in Plato and a
few rare so-called "modern" classics. Here, the philosopher of
mathematics remains a philosopher, and not a mathematician.
That is to say that, if there is no chance here of producing a real
breakthrough "in mathematics" (something that, of course, we
do not expect of him), there is also no chance of exceeding the
limits of philosophy. With Badiou, philosophy remains weIl
within the bounds of its traditional relations-French rather
th an Anglo-Saxon -and those of its history. Even the mathematies and logie that he introduces as conditions for philosophy,
he considers under the authority of history, referring to them
principally as historie al formations. Whence his obsession with
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lx
the "modern' -which, far from delivering itself from history,
enchains and immobilizes itself within history. He dedicates
himself once more to the reading of texts-in this case the
mathematical text, but only insofar as it belongs to a reaàymade history. After the reading of philosophical texts (Derrida),
of Marxist texts on history (Althusser), of Freud (Lacan) and
then of the Human Sciences (Foucault), the interpretation of
great mathematical texts is invited to take up the baton. It is
decidedly the case that here, philosophy (and in particular,
French philosophy) faIls back into its habituaI, pusillanimous
mistakes, refusing to experiment with philosophy itself in its
being, rather than just its objects, languages and intra-philosophical becomings. This philosophical immobilization by way
ofhistory (as obligatory as ever, if often denied) is consummated,
paradoxically, in a philosophy "without history" (Althusser and
Badiou). A philosophy that ends up as a lazy queen, who hitches
her carriage up to a pack of scientists, and can only get going by
riding in the wake of the history of sciences. Accepting the need
to reform itself: without making any attempt to reinvent itself: it
essentially re-acts to the sciences without acting, properly speaking,
upon them-any more than it acts upon itselJ What Little action it
has is limited to a reaction, to varying its style and changing one
or another of its forms, without abandoning its most traditional
objectives, which are those of a superior authority, sometimes
legislative, always imperial.
But onto this traditional manner, Badiou grafts another
intention which is his own proper mark, neither a mere hermeneutic nor a true invention: the re-education of philosophy-a
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Preface
concept that, for Badiou, has a globally political destiny.
Education and self-education take place through philosophy;
but re-education is a politieal action carried out upon philosophy
itself. And it is carried out in the form of a pure mathematical
rectification [redressement], not to say a breaking-in [re-dressage].
For here, the Cultural Revolution is no "circumstantial" topie for
intellectual debate, but a theoretieal model that can be read transparently even in Badiou's most theoretieal pro gram. Up until
Badiou, philosophy was educative and pedagogieal; with him,
it is re-educated by mathematics. And rather than an invention,
re-education is a partieular type of repetition; one that seeks
to modify everything while conserving for it the destination
and the ends of philosophy. Here is the secret and the justification of the initial (if exorbitant) eut between ontology and
philosophy-a cultural "matricide" with whieh Badiou-thought
begins. Is this not a new, Maoist, avatar of universal Aujhebung,
a manner of conserving philosophy through its re-education by
means of dismemberment, redistribution and subtraction? The
old duality surpassing/ conserving is now relayed by conservation/re-education. Philosophy will be forced out of itself, will
be forced to send its intellectuals to the narrowest and harshest
of schools. But this is still a way of conserving, in all essential
respects, its privileges.
This mathematical (and more secretly, political and "cultural")
program is of the greatest interest to what we call "non-philosophy:' Non-philosophy, which seeks a way of depotentializing
philosophy and making another use of it, but via other, more
positive and less authoritarian procedures-formerly on the
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"non-Euclidean" model, and at present through a scientific
(physical) experimentation and performation of philosophynot at aIl through a scholarly and "cultural" breaking-in. There
are certain philosophers who dream of a new school, a new
discipline, whether it be that of phenomenological description
(Husserl), applied physical rationalism (Bachelard), the logical
analysis of ordinary language (Analytic philosophy) ... and now,
that of the forced re-education of new inteIlectual cadres, who
will govern through mathematics. These new cadres directing
thought can only be philosophers-as we might have expected,
ever since Plato. The re-education of philosophy conserves of
the latter only its formaI authority of doctrine and direction,
its most authoritarian and most perennial aspect. It makes use
of mathematics, and then logic, only as pedagogical disciplines
safeguarding the correct image of thought -a project that sorne
would not hesitate to caIl a bootcamp. We oppose to it a "non-"
philosophy that conserves philosophy only qua "non-standard;'
in its effective methods and in the maIleability of its materiality, entrusting new tasks-this time of invention-to the
co-operation of physics and philosophy, rather than to the
mathematical razor.
Whether it constitutes a new relation to philosophy or not,
we must keep in mind this manner of treating the subject, in
order to comprehend how non-philosophy-which, for its part,
does not contemplate philosophy, but practices it otherwise,
within a new, more experimental thought -can be interested
in, but at the same time very much opposed to, a project like
Badiou's. This project is bound to seem to it a half-solution,
xii
Preface
with aH the drawbacks of every half-solution that hesitates
to liquidate philosophieal sufficiency, and is content merely
to introduce a deviation into its classieal objects-a kind of
mathematieal, rather than textual, deconstruction. Badiou
ultimately re-normalizes that whieh, in his program, could
have been "revolutionary:' in the sense of Marx's oxymoronic
"revolutionary science:' He contents himself once more with a
"revolutionary philosophy:' a "cultural" revolution within the
limits of philosophy, rather than a scientific and non-philosophieal revolution in philosophy.
He achieves this at the priee of what can only be called a
pitiless purification and a philosophieal voiding, neither of
which are limited to his political declarations alone. Both as
a result of the technical mathematieal means and for political
ends, he conflates the science of philosophy with the purification of philosophy. We shall discover the theoretical apparatus
of this conflation in a total planification 1 that takes place as in
a mirror, and through a certain torsion-specularity being the
only means by whieh the void may act. An attempt to re-establish
the supposedly original purity of philosophy, its correctness or
its "line:' after so many postmodern contortions, it is also a vast
operation of the purification of philosophy, wherein the latter
is reduced to its two major Platonic knowledges, convoked
for a specular confrontation. We shaH not be content here
with aHuding to Badiou's eulogy to emancipatory terror (or
any number of other violent enunciations), so as to berate or
make fun of them shallow-mindedly-with each philosopher
accusing the other, banally, of terrorism. For he alone has
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xiii
had the courage to openly advocate it, to have assertively and
consciously combined the conceptuality of Western philosophy
with Maoism. The entire system, in its "metaphysical" depths,
in its ultimate axioms, can be read as a manifesto of terror or
of "cultural revolution" in philosophy. A terror with a twofold
effect, consisting firstly in the putting-to-work of ontology,
the major occupation of most "philosophers:' which is now to
be torn from the authority of philosophy and re-educated by
mathematics; and subsequently in the return of philosophy
as official Doctrine of Truth. Such a project can exercise a
profound seduction over dogmatic minds, those exhausted by
the apparent superficiality of the postmoderns, or those cynically
celebratory of the excesses to which such a re-education might
lead-we speak of this seduction "in full knowledge of the
facts:' But once this seduction has passed, are we obliged to
return, head bowed, to the old humanist nostalgias, to liberal
modernity-which, let us recognize, occasions a certain disgust
not just for Badiou, but for every thinker who is not entirely
corrupt? Badiou, also, has reacted to what is intolerable-but
too fast and too harshly, with an appeal to the void, and with
his own brand of nostalgia. From this misadventure we draw
a cautionary principle that we calI non-philosophy, but which
does not exhaust the latter as science. Can one re-act without
ce ding too much to the nostalgia of the void? Is the void not
the best argument for simply renouncing aIl action? It would
be pleasingly paradoxical to make of Badiou's philosophy-so
weH-informed, so well-documented, so hardworking-a lazy
philosophy. Of course, we shaH not go that far. But it is worth
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Preface
emphasizing that in Badiou we find the old conjunction of three
cults: that of personality (a philosopher of stellar rarity) , that
of the labor of the masses (as intellectual workers), and that of
militant struggle (in the name of truth). That here the cult of
personality becomes the cult of master-philosophers, the labor
of the masses becomes that of intellectuals, and anti-capitalist
militants con front "pétaino-parliamentarianism" -these transferences matter little. Yes, Maoism is a style that makes itself
at home in the French context, donning the new clothes of
"Badiolism:' But we shall seek elsewhere, in the very principles
of this doctrine, that which makes it so menacing. We must
rethink non-acting [non-agir] in so far as, without re-acting to
a conjuncture that demands nothing of us other than to re-act,
and for this reason can lead to the void, only non-acting can act
upon it.
A purification is always disquieting when we think of what
it may have in store for humans. And Badiou's is so absolute
that it is difficult not to feel threatened, despite his abstraction
and his irreality. We must change arms, change strategy, oppose
him with something other than those objections against "grand"
systematic philosophy that were, in their time, Hamann's "metacritique of the purism of reason" (against Kant), Jacobi's apology
for faith and the immediate (against Fichte), the individual and
the instant in Kierkegaard, and real or generic man in Feuerbach
and the young Marx (against Hegel). Nonetheless, these objections, each in their time, provided extraordinary armaments
for the struggle against adversaries such as rationalism and
the dialectic. There is no point in saying that we need a new
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"philosophy;' unless we furnish it ourselves; but we must do
so by taking the problem from another angle th an that of such
(often spontaneous and religious) protestations. We firstly need
to defend ourselves against philosophical sufficiency by means
of a new thought that would not be entirely of the philosophical
genre, but without abandoning the philosophical arsenal
altogether. A new critique that would not be just one more
philosophical "critique" of philosophy, but an entirely other
usage of the latter, opposed to its narcissistic auto-glorification
and its dominant use of thought. With or without mathematics,
in Badiou it is not a question simply of a philosophy of force
but of a political practice of philosophy (Lenin) conjugated
with the mathematical void, a praetice of the force of the void
in al! domains of thought, in the name of philosophy. Logies of
Worlds 2 tried to correct this impression, whose danger Badiou
sensed-but the correction was carried out by way of exactly the
same procedure: by purifying this time the intermediary stage
of transcendental Logic, which he adjoins to the edifice whose
completion (like a well-ordered table of contents), he believes,
will suffice to attenuate the violence.
On the theoretical plane, we must resolve the fairly simple
paradox that, in Badiou, the exceeding of classically "philosophical" means by science, art and politics extinguishes the
philosophy it exalts; that the permanent defense of philosophy
supposes that he purifies it, banalizes it and renders it decidedly
meager. And on the more contentious plane of a generic ethics
of philosophy, we must invent a defensive strategy that exerts
the "force" of an ultimatum, but without violence. How is
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an ultimatum possible that is, in a certain sense, weak-a
non-victorious force? Non-standard Philosophy,3 which this essay
accompanies, as the analysis of an at once limited and especially
typ ic al example of that which we refuse, proposes a more
profound solution to this paradox. How can we oppose Badiou
without entering into a mere "relation of forces;' setting against
him a force of the same nature as his own? AlI of these terms
(purification, ultimatum, defense) obviously require further
precision in order to avoid insoluble misunderstandings. To
speak of a defensive ultimatum is strange if one thinks "relations
of force" according to the French context (Nietzsche, Foucault,
Derrida). But we have learnt to distinguish, on the model of
physics (albeit in a very different way) between a "strong force"
(that which Badiou intends to introduce into thought) and a
"weak force" that we also calI "generic" - that is to say, a force
proper to humans rather th an to Being. In reality, this generic
force is not so much itself weak as it is a weakening of the strong
force. There are ultimata, possibilities of defense or last things in
other ways of thinking, and in particular (this is our solution)
in a renewed "non-philosophY:' More concretely: to protect
philosophy against itself, must we purify it through the entirely
specular mediation of mathematics, making of it a superior
politico-cultural doxa that exalts mathematics as force of the
void (like a kind of philosophical brainwashing)? Or should
we rather aim for a scientific-type knowledge of philosophy, a
knowledge that would no doubt be contingent, but which, this
time, would truly escape such doxa? The spontaneous usage of
philosophy involves an exaltation of force, of combat and of war
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xvii
that stems from certain of its origins, its axioms even, and which
it appears to us impossible to reduce to a deviancy, whether this
deviancy be a fascizing objective appearance as in Nietzsche,
explicitly Nazifying as it has very precisely been shown to be
in Heidegger, or Maoizing-all three of these consummated
always in the condemnation of "democracy:' 1he introduction
of Maoism into philosophy cannot be a conjunctural accident,
even if it is also a matter of a certain conjuncture; this would be
to underestimate Badiou as a philosopher. No, it is an essential
possibility of philosophy, one that philosophy makes available
alongside others; a possibility first actualized by Plato, but one
that is profoundly inscribed in the very axioms of philosophical
decision, albeit more or less inert or apparently inactive at any
given time. We require further details as to the new version of
non-philosophy, and as to the analytic means that will allow us
to detect in Badiou the indestructible residue of philosophy, and
its conservation -reeducation by Cantor and Mao under the sign
of Plato.
What is it to «Badiolise"?
Prologue on the centre-stage
l thus propose to exhibit a tautology, to explore its hidden
fûlds along with its manifest self-evidence: Badiou is (still, more
than ever) a philosopher! Here, aH the badiolisers of Paris and
beyond burst out laughing: What a great discovery! Badiou, a
philosopher? Isn't that what he never stops proclaiming and
demanding of his readers-to recognize and contemplate
(without making any particular effort other than that of reading)
the validity of his doctrine? And it is true: for once, here is an
authentic philosopher, aIl such predicates are welcome; but
what renders the formula interesting or problematic is that he
is a philo-rigid type in a discipline which, itself, is not particulady rigid. Maybe he will hesitate to read me since, after aIl, l
demonstrate, with a certain doggedness that will be deemed
futile, that he deserves more than full marks, that he wins the
philosopher's grand prize (but does one award a grand prize to
a Master?). He may even thank me (and send me on my way)
Introduction
xix
for having attempted a work of synthetic elucidation of the
principles of his work and of his philosophical personality. But
aIl of these signs remain ambiguous. One of the principles of
non-philosophy is that it does not at aIl suffice to calI oneself
a philosopher, in a more or less well-argued (but always sufficient) manner. This daim must be verified from without by a
science for philosophy that will unmask not so mu ch the vague
and doxic daim of philosophy to be a science, as its narcissistic
and specular pretention to be, precisely, a philosophy-and the
right one. This will not, then, be a mediocre, critical and sokalien
scrutiny-he is obviously beyond such things; but rather a quasipsychoanalysis, making use of means other than the traditional
hesitations and ambiguities of the concept of "philosophy" from
which he fails to escape. If aIl my efforts only go to prove that
Badiou is "still a philosopher:' it is only insofar as he is not as
much of a philosopher as he wishes to be ... and that he is, more
than he fears. It is thus not simply a matter of announcing what
he himself never stops daiming, Philosophy-in-person, the Idea
of the Master of thought surrounded by mediocre thinkers. An
''Anti-Badiou'' may seem to be an act of anti-philosophy, but
that would be an overhasty condusion-it would be to condude
from the paradigm to the essence. It must be agreed that, while
non-philosophy has overtones of anti-philosophy, it cannot
recognize itself in current anti -philosophy, whose origins are
predominantly philosophical, and only secondarily scientific, or
are scientific in too positivist a manner.
Take one of Heidegger's tautologies: the nothing nothings,
speech speaks, the world worlds ... Badiou badiolizes? A not entirely
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xx
tautological formula, any more than the proposaI that Hegel
hegelianizes, or that Bergson bergsonizes. Its true radical extent
is brought out by the following observation: non-philosophy does
not philosophize within philosophy, but only by using it, and this is
what allows it to treat apparently self-evident philosophical truths
as symptoms. There are many ways of understanding and anatomizing this formula, Badiou badiolizes: according to journalistic
accounts, media glorification, finally a great philosopher and
militant has descended, in person, into the "political" arena.
Precisely this point is a crucial question for non-philosophy and
for its evaluation of the role of philosophers in their becomingintellectual. But it seemed of more urgent and broader importance
to write an Anti-Badiou than an Anti-Sarkozy-even if the first
obviously implies the second. The "Badiou case" is certainly not
a merely technical problem. It belongs to a betrayal specifie to
certain philosophers who, Ülscinated by the unexpected tandem
Plato-Mao, and nourished on the largely justified hatred ofliberal
humanism, without further ado draw the conclusion that thought
must be purified of every destination-I would say, at my own
risk and peril (and being on guard against the right even more
than the left), of every properly human "pre-" destination. Are we
destined for history, for philosophy, for the world, have we been
sent, probably from further afield th an from our individuality, to
wage a war in their name?
As one might expect, "Philosophy" [la philosophie] is a highly
ambiguous expression, as often multiple as it is one. If Badiou
is "still" a philosopher, and if this needs to be proved contrary
to certain appearances, it is only insofar as we understand it in
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xxi
a sense that he does not wholly expect. And if he still belongs
to this category, then we have at our disposaI another concept
wider than "philosophy" that allows us to exhibit the traditional
and transcendent presuppositions that limit (perhaps necessarily) his usage of the concept of the pure multiple. As certain
other philosophers have revealed with respect to language,
being, the moral law, the a priori, etc., he intends to reveal
that the pure or Cantorian multiple, not multiplicities, can and
must be the condition, rather th an the object, of "PhilosophY:'
If only by virtue of this, his work is of great merit, and surely
inscribes him into the history of philosophy insofar as the
latter is made of singularities and interesting points. But his
paradox consists in his being the greatest affirmer, advocate and
celebrant of philosophy, while risking that he should end up
without philosophy, without substantial thought-with nothing
but a philosophy dismembered in its materiality and, what is
more, purified in its Idea; consisting of nothing but proclamations, appeals to Ideas and to Masses, nothing but a few proper
names (happy the rare, stellar elect that he recognizes, happy
the rare truths that he certifies ... ). No philosopher has ever
expended so much talent, energy and knowledge in celebrating
the void purified of aIl things, except perhaps Socrates-does he
not deserve an Aristophanes? And even then, Socrates began,
pedagogically, by emptying things out to make the void; Badiou
ends with the void, the void of Mathematics, of the Subject,
of Truth, of Philosophy. Badiolism is an affirmation, a style, a
posture, a statue that forms around it the type of circular void to
which young badiolisers will gravitate.
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Introduction
Non-philosophy as democracy
within theory
Thus, the situation is clear: on the one hand, a purification that
is, in its own way, an "ethnie cleansing" (exclusively Greek) in
philosophy; and on the other, what we shaH calI a "defensive
ultimatum" against philosophieal sufficiency's hold over
humans. A new duality? Certainly, there is always a structure
of paradoxieal duality in any philosophieal-type thought. But
we suggest that what is or would be self~contradiction within a
philosophical position (which Badiou's position, like any other,
is) can be reduced to the status of a simple duality, to a unilateral
or non-dialectical paradox-and it is this that what we calI
non-philosophy aims to achieve. This simple duality signifies
that weakness, as excess of force over aIl force, far from opposing
itself to the latter, head to head, subtracts a part of its force
from it, depotentializes it. Non-philosophieal utopia has never
been about creating a new philosophy, and even less about
unrestrainedly exalting "philosophy" through a flattening
(whether intensive or topologieal) of its instances, of science,
logie, subject, philosophy. Instead, it creates a new genre or
generie practiee, whieh might be called "philo-fiction:' How
to simultaneously amplify and weaken philosophy? It pursues
these two apparently contrary aims through the invention of
a deviee at once experimental and theoretieal, physieal and
philosophieal (at the same time modifying aIl of these terms).
1he old directive slogan of philosophy-to constitute itself into
a "science of philosophy" whieh, without being positive, would
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xxiii
make use of science and, without being transcendental, would
make use of philosophy, so as to constitute itself from within
and without itself-became possible and operative as soon as its
model became quantum physics; and when, moreover, it found
a type of combination caIled "unilateral:' operating from within
(philosophy) and without (the quantum model), that would not
be philosophical but "generic." This combination is established
experimentally in a matrix-an apparatus that treats dualities
in a unilateral manner distinct from aIl philosophical dialectic.
The solution lies in a new arrangement, unilateral and complementary rather than dialectical, of these dualities.
It is a matter of dis-dosing philosophy without recourse to
a theology such as Deconstruction, but instead by way of an
ultimatum with a twofold function: to limit its daims, and to
open it up as philo-fiction. Philo-fiction is something other
than a new miscegenation of knowledges supposedly at once
strangers to each other and given in themselves. It is a conjugation of disciplines outside their disciplinary incarceration as
terms in themselves. These disciplines instead become parameters that will define a new space for thought. If there is an
invention of new philosophical effects here, it is at the service of
a usage other than that of a superior doxa; it is an unprecedented
theoretical genre obtained by the quantum superposition of art,
religion, technology, etc. with, each time, philosophy.
Non-philosophy has ceased to be a discourse of sense
that could seem to be directly opposed head -to-head with
philosophy; it has become what it always aimed to be-a generic
science of philosophy. It was only able to do so by firstly availing
xxiv
Introduction
itself of the means of a science capable of corresponding best
to philosophy-a physics rather than a mathematics-and its
kernel of quantum thought. But it still needed to find the type
of organization that could legitimate the project of a quantum
theory of philosophy. This came in the shape of what we caH the
"generic matrix" -a machine or experimental chamber wherein
we bring philosophy and quantum logic, as simple variables,
into a radical immanence that immediately operates as a critique
of Badiou's "ontology of the void" - not through yet another
criticism or deconstruction, but through a transformation of its
apparatus and of the finalities that it upholds. Non-philosophy
has become a machine that associates, in the form of variables,
a philosophical invariant (reduced with regard to its sufficiency,
of course), and a second invariant, that of quantum physics
(also reduced with regard to its positive and encompassing
mathematical apparatus). Here, we caH that machine "generic;'
associating the philosophical-without-transcendental and the
quantum-without-calculation, where the transcendental and
calculation are no longer anything but means without proper
ends. It can only be called "immanentaI:' It has an aspect of
materiality and an aspect of syntax, but intricated one with the
other to form a machine of immanence. In a non -immanental
machine like the computer, one juxtaposes the hard and the
soft, matter and software, but not here. To mark that difference,
we shaH slightly modify the expressions of this duality, with
the conceptual mate rial or rather "mate riel" [materialP on
one hand, and, on the other, not a software [logiciel] based
in logic and mathematics, but a "quantware" [quantielJ, so
Introduction
xxv
called since it is drawn from the form of reasoning proper to
quantum theory. Under the name of quantware, we extract from
positive quantum thought its rational kernel of non-positive
thought, in the form of two fundamental principles of this
physics: the principle of superposition and the principle of
non -commutativity. Quantware participates in the materiel,
and the materiel is organized according to quantware. This
"economy" or functioning of materiel and quantware is one of
what we previously spoke of as unilateral duality, something that
makes sense only in terms of the functioning of the machine,
not as a mere logical nor even philosophical syntax. Unilateral
duality is not denumerable or formaI. Thus, we can also say
that the count-as-one does not apply to it, and the multiple of
multiples even less SOi it draws its resources from neither Cantor
nor Cohen, but in ste ad from the quantum model, underdetennined generically and no longer required to be a positive
physics. The old non-philosophy is integrally conserved within
this new machine, but is effectuated and completed, "fulfilled" in
a certain way, by the borrowing from quantum physics of these,
its fundamental principles. The immanence of the One-in-One
that we previously spoke of prefigured the superposition that
would give it its meaning and its possibility; and un ilate rality announced non-commutativity-simply, we had not yet
discovered that the solution to the coherence of non-philosophy
and the means of its legitimation already existe d, in another
form, elsewhere.
We could say (no doubt simplifying hugely) that Badiou's
ontology of the void is philosophy as context or vision of the world
xxvi
Introduction
for mathematics, logic and finaIly information technology-but
that non-philosophy is the context or the "vision of the world"
for philosophy itself and the disciplines that are ordered by it.
The former is a new philosophy of sciences, whereas the latter is
a science of philosophy-but not through a simple inversion of
the formula.
Philosophy as insufficient analysis of itself
The first thing that we question in aIl philosophy, and therefore
in Badiou, is a self-analysis that is by definition insufficient,
and which pays for this with a self-sufficiency. This is why,
when philosophers look at non-philosophy, they see only a new
philosophy that conceals itself or refuses to recognize itself as
such. For they are happy to make a summary analysis of their own
discipline, a spontaneous reading, without getting to the bottom
of the mechanism of this thought. What justifies the existence
of non-philosophy is first of aIl its new analysis of philosophy as
a system of specular doublets-as a thought operating through
double transcendence, even when it speaks of immanence.
This is what is called the Principle of Sufficient Philosophy
(PSP)-its self-encompassing character, among other things.
Since philosophers see in philosophy only an indistinct mass
contained within one unique encompassing whole, a milieu that
is in itself homogeneous, and thus sufficient, within which they
distinguish only secondarily regions, domains, objects, diverse
frontiers, they lack a sensitivity for that permanent doubling
Introduction
xxvii
(insensible or invisible since specular). They do sometimes
grasp it, but only ever locally. If non -philosophy has made but
one discovery, it would be that of the universality of this doublet
structure. AlI the rest fûllows from this. Vve can continue to do
philosophy, but it is an hallucination, a permanent doubling that
does not know itself as such.
Phenomenology, indeed, did try to put thinking into direct
contact with the thing or object-but not completely, since it
kept the horizon of the world as ground. As did Wittgenstein,
no doubt; and also Deleuze, although he simplified philosophical transcendence only to preserve it, after aIl, as specular
torsion. The problem is that thought and the real must be
"identified" by superposition, not by the Parmenidean Same
that conserves their unity, identification or transcendence.
As if the non-philosophical wave were kept enclosed and
stationary by philosophical dams-the shores or banks of
the river being, in reality, these dams in whose shelter one
tries to survive. The Parmenidean Same is the mediatized
mediate, the auto-mediation that substitutes itself for what we
calI the mediate-without -mediation that is generic man. In
philosophy, contraries are reflected one in the other, rather than
prosecuting, at least, a close combat (Heidegger). Even those
who have seen the problem have grasped it locally, in this or
that particular structure. Heidegger, Husserl, and aIl contemporary philosophers insofar as they have a certain relation to
phenomenology, have done phenomenology as a limited form of
non-philosophy. Philosophy has a twofold basis-it is a double
cavern or double backworld. Deleuze makes the ground rise
xxviii
Introduction
to the surface (simplification) only to molecularize it into a
thousand surfaces; rather than the One-in-One, he privileges
the metaphysical Multiple and the One of the old immanence
as One-AIL Whence the force of Badiou's argument against
Deleuze qua philosopher of the One. But Badiou also remains
in a prior philosophical position. lt is not that the One-ail must
be molecularized, but that the One-Multiple must be quantumsuperposed-something that results immediately in a change of
terrain toward the undulatory. 1he ground, for philosophers, is
a double ground, either directly so in classical philosophers, or
indirectly so through the conservation of a positing either of the
molecular multiple or of the materialist multiple. The ground
conserves itself, and continues to constitute and to ensure the
endurance of philosophical encompassing. In other words, with
philosophers there is always at least a philosophical positing,
either as Multiple or as One or as One-aIl, that conserves philosophical authority-and, in the end, we rediscover the Moebius
band.
Doublets or doublings-it is aIl one, with minor nuances
one way or the other. Philosophers have indeed initiated or
re-doubled this doubling, molecularized it, torn or twisted it
(Badiou). Derrida, for example, gave us the means to identify
this problem: but in finaIly immediatizing the signifier and the
absolute of alterity as affect, he still combines the Jew and the
Greek, and makes the doublings quite manifest by multiplying
them. But then why do es he seek Levinas's most transcendent
One, at the risk of thus tipping the balance in favor of the
Greek influence? Is the half-Greek half-Jew ultimately a Jew?
Introduction
xxix
Or ultimately a Greek as "same"? He is difJérance, of course. But
since difj'érance is the same or equilibrium, which still responds
to the same ideal as Deleuze's reversibility, but simply in a
distended or distanced form, it seems impossible to rid oneself
of aIl trace of equilibrium as end, as implicit teleology. Only
the Greeks and Levinas would be rigorous or coherent in their
opposition.
To reaIly place philosophy in question (even if we are obliged
to make use of philosophical procedures), we must invalidate it
in one blow and without remainder. We must presuppose every
conceptual term to be already divested of aIl power. We must
presuppose that the generic matrix is already given in the virtual
state, and thus that philosophical objects are already reduced to
the status of symptoms or mere occasions. This is only possible
through a matrix that does not an nul aIl philosophy. It should
rather be the case that the encompassed that is philosophy is
reaIly simple, is a milieu deprived of its doublet-that it should
be recognized at its very origin, from the outset, as a doubling
of itself, and simplified.
This rnatrix must function in asymmetric but complementary
manner, on immanence and transcendence at once. But on a
superposed, not redoubled, immanence; and on a transcendence
at first doubled, but then simplified or f'aIlen into-immanence.
This functioning, along with its effects, is, quantum -theoreticaIly
speaking, that of the undulatory and of its superposition on one
hand, and that of the particulate freed from corpuscular doubletranscendence on the other. The corpuscular is transcendence
in the philosophical state, as doublet, with immanence playing
xxx:
Introduction
a minor or secondary role, whereas the immanent undulatory
is also a transcending, but a simple one (an ascending), superposable and become under-deterrnining. Why do we now speak
of the Real as undulatory and particulate, that is to say as
quantum, rather th an as metaphysical? Qua simple terms or
symbols, philosophy must become a quantum system of particulate superposition, functioning in the Real. The Real cannot be
produced by a simple combination of symbols that run the risk
of giving rise to doublets. Thus, the Real and the symbol-that is
to say, thought-must be the "same" thing, but in a non-Parmenidean sense this time: precisely not identical, but superposed,
in a milieu of interference and not of identification, a milieu
rendered possible by the algebraic property of idempotence, of
the fusion of terms. The Real par excellence is the undulatoryin-person as symbolic-and-lived [vécu] (the lived = the matter
of the real), capable of including the ideal reality of the symbol
qua noematic or immanent real at the same time as rejecting it
qua in -itself or linguistic symbol.
This entire operation is what we caH the under-determination of reality in itself, or "macroscopic" reality, by the Real.
We shaH also caH it unilateral transfer. It consists in resuming
[relancerJ2 immanence through a new superposition, and at
the same time in subtracting it from the macroscopic-type
transcendence of reality that creates the illusion of reality in
itself. Thus, it consists in subtracting a simplified transcending
or aH of immanence from double- transcendence and its
doublets. The Real is and remains the immanence of a simple
transcending, even in the reality that adds to it something
Introduction
xxxi
different. This "different" is only different when the whole is
seen from the side of this latter reality; the simple transcending
of immanence does not itself see the faH or the front of the
wave and thus the bilaterality of reality in itself (compatible
with the Real sin ce, from the outset, the Real or immanence
commences as a transcending). There is no plane or plateauonly a semi-dualism or a unilateral duality, just a simple
transcending or, again, an "ascending:'
What is a defensive ultimatum?
There are at least two traditions of the "anti -:' One is recentreligious anti-philosophy against the Enlightenment in the
eighteenth century, or inversely anti-religion, which attacks a
global thought or ideology; and then the contemporary antiphilosophy that emerges from the margins of psychoanalysis
and which is a relatively structured thought. The other is named
or individuated-a genre punctuated by The Anti(ante)-Christ,
Anti-Düring, Anti-Kautsky. For, to be able to say "anti-;' it is
best to have a proper name as spokesperson of the ideology one
opposes. Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus is located at the
midpoint between these two traditions. As is the present book,
which attacks a philosophical personality recognized as very
significant. It is thus indeed an Anti- Badiou, and critiques "à'
philosophy through an individual in perfect concord with it. But
Anti-Badiou prepares only a non-philosophy, and certainly not
an anti-philosophy. The point that may attract most attention is
xxxii
Introduction
not the main objective-which is, more broadly, a dismantling
of the facilities, procedures and paradoxes of every philosophy,
through the treatment of one particularly brilliant example. The
rules of the "anti-» genre are not firmly established: there is the
critique, the polemic even, but this is not a specifically philosophical genre-its rules are perhaps religious in essence, always
a little ad hominem. And non-philosophy is precisely, if one
might say so, ad hominos-it is an act of defense, not of intolerance; the defense of a certain hum an universality against an
individual spokesperson of a tradition that is believed to place it
in danger. This combining of the address and that to which it is
addressed is the first aspect of an ultimatum of defense.
Qua critique of an individual, the "anti -» is a malicious genre
with a certain caricatural aspect, and thus always a little unjust.
It is important to mock the adversary, to make him ridiculous
given the opportunity, and one thereby achieves various all-tooeasy effects. If Badiou is really a "great philosopher;' he bears
overly apparent traces of it. The contrast between the academic
master and the stellar celebrity, the mandarin and the emperor,
produces a comical effect that Platonizing philosophers have
never been keen on. Since everything is obviously stacked
against us, the style as much as the basis of the thought, the
writing as mu ch as the relation to the real and to philosophy, the
militant type, his posture of mastery, his intellectual becoming,
his obsession with greatness (great art, great philosophy, great
politics, etc.), it is difficult not to see oneselt: faced with this
Goliath, in the position of David -difficult not to imagine
one of those antique philosopher clichés, crushingly dignified:
Introduction
xxxiii
impeccably trained, draped like those statues sculpted in eternity
that Nietzsche evokes in relation to Heraclitus and Parmenides,
and whose theatre Heidegger tried to rebuild for us. He wears
aIl the signs of this greatness of manner-a little showy, in his
"gaullian" -style proclamations, his grandiloquent and grandiose
interventions, his masterful poise, his authoritarian style (and
not only in his philosophy), his way of making a statue of his
stature.
But the lampoon, as inevitable as it may be, is a poor weapon
here, and very much secondary, since it will always be turned
against whoever uses it. The adversary must be taken seriously,
treated as exceptional. One does not write this type of work
against any old inconsistent pop-philosopher, or against an
essayist of very little philosophy one wasted an ho ur reading.
The adversary must, in his pers on and in his consistent works,
deserve one's addressing him with a certain type of "ultimatum:'
We should not believe, above aIl, that the character Badiou is
the true object of the critique, nor even that we contest "his"
philosophy-an absurd project when we know that a philosopher belongs only to himself and to his tradition. We blame
the "philosopher" for nothing. Badiou, insofar as he strives to
succeed Derrida and Deleuze, on the contrary, we blame him
right down to his philosopher-sufficient essence-the essence,
and not at aIl the way in which he puts it to work. He is the fine st
keeper of the flame and one of the most significant examples of
what unbridled philosophy, and not just "unbridled Platonism"
(Heidegger on Nietzsche), aims to be and can be; in his genre
he is a paradigm, and a privileged object of study. Whence
xxxiv
Introduction
the other aspect of this text: an analysis of the ultimate basis
of the "ontology of the void" (OV), and its confrontation with
the non-philosophy (NP) that will serve us as a "microscope"
with which to study it. This is the second aspect of this type of
ultimatum: It must be argue d, and cannot be established as a
simple primary relation of force-above aIl when we are dealing
with an author who is so "invested;' and so consciously, in his
work.
AlI the same, l do not intend to launch an interminable
controversy, a dispute in the ether of the Idea and of the truthin-itself~ nor to "open up a dialogue:' Because such a seasoned
philosopher (and God knows, he is) will always rebuff any
argument whatsoever. Philosophy is tailor-made for developing
this pedagogy of the conceptual duel, even if it becomes a little
more complicated with the postmoderns of the Judaic school.
If he is a philosopher, he is sufficiently aware of the pointless
nature of such dialogues, in which, however, he himself seems to
delight more and more, in that fatal becoming-inteIlectual that
sometimes lurks in wait for even the purest thought. The Anti- is
not a dialogue. l oppose him to read in him-and this from the
very outset-some axioms entirely difierent from his own and
whose type of weakness can no longer be measured against the
force of his-this paradox must be understood. But why cause
such an affront to philosophers, with this refusaI to dispute
with them, equal to equal (or more exactly, unequal to unequal)
if not to make of it a declaration of war? In the name of this
non-philosophical thesis, that alone can justify such a refusaI:
Philosophical dialogue is founded on an ignorance of the doublet
Introduction
xxxv
structure of philosophy among philosophers themselves, who
limit themselves to the objective appearance of their conceptual
argumentation. This argumentation goes always to the "absolu te,"
but never to the "radical" of th ought. Ii contents itselfwith stirring
up the sea of opinions, of which it makes a superior doxa. Now,
the sea of opinions is a sea before being a sea of opinions;
philosophers stir up its surface without grasping the law of this
agitation, reducing it at best to a marshy state-even, perhaps,
the sharpest of analytics who do not fear the disorganization of
their distinctions. If the philosophical dialogue is without any
great pertinence for truth-each holding to his axioms and,
above aIl, considering the element of philosophy as a "natural"
milieu ultimately in harmony with aIl, a sort of superior sensus
communis-then it is useful only for that which belongs to
objective appearance: for explication, clarification and teaching,
but that is aIl. And here is the third aspect of such an ultimatum:
it is not a question of dialogue, of making theoretical compromises. Especially in conducting a defense case, we are not
obliged to negotiate with those who make forcible use of every
means at their disposaI, and who know full weIl how to co ne en trate aIl of philosophy into a "Principle of Sufficient Philosophy:'
But to know that aH philosophy is discussable at worst,
disputable at best (even the famous "absolute"), and endlessly
invertible (apart from the stiff-necked opinion that can do
nothing but oppose itself confrontationally to another) is an
insufficient defense. We still need a principle of the defensive
ultimatum that would "found" aH of our axioms, or give them that
type of weak force that hinders the strong force. This principle is
xxxvi
Introduction
simply that we have no other me ans of struggle at our disposaI,
the adversary having already used the whole arsenal, cornering
us in retrenchments that, as far as we know, may be "our» last.
With this tabula rasa of the ontology of the void, he helps us
involuntarily to find "ourselves» and to support ourselves upon
sorne other force that is no longer that of a weapon; a force that
we are without knowing it, but which needed to be recognized.
Perhaps he leaves us something like an "energy of despair» to
fly or seek a problematic emergency exit, a sort of prior-to-first
passivity. Since he makes of aIl the means-science, art, love,
politics-an affair of force, placing them in the service of the
militant Idea of philosophy, we also are condemned to consider
that he has nothing but means; that the finest ends upon which
history prides itself must re-enter into the rank of means. Means
that it faIls to us, the n, to invent a new use for. This is not a
nihilism, but what we shaIl calI a generic (rather than philosophical) skepticism-the doubt permitted to humans as such,
with regard to the highest ends that are proposed to them or
imposed upon them. Since he manages to divest us of aIl our
predicates and reduce us-word to the wise, take note-to the
state of a proletariat at the service of a mathematico-philosophical
dictatorship that he places in a position to exploit human forces,
we admit this divestiture by ta king it at the face value of its
possibility, and ask humans thus abandoned to recognize that
they maintain the last line of real defense, what remains of the
incompressible or inexploitable once philosophy is gone. We calI
"Last Instance» this force that is non-commutable with the
mathematico-philosophical complex. It negates of the latter only
Introduction
xxxvii
what can be negated-its all-encompassing double sufficiency
(the Principles of Sufficient Philosophy and Mathematics). And
it is this ultimatum or last thing that we put forward as generic
science or non-philosophy, against the "Platonic" purification in
which one would be wrong to see anything but one philosophical
position among others, one more doctrine, even if everything in
it is perfect and coherent, even if its author advances armed like
the Hilbert of philosophy. We do not know whether, in Badiou,
we see the future of philosophy already outlined; but we are sure,
at least, that we see all of its past returning in a pitiless form-it
is this that we must learn to identify in him.
There will be no cogito, no revolution, to allow us to pass
from the absolute skepticism or nihilism of material force to
the generic certainty that we-the-humans are the Last Instance
against which even philosophies must measure themselves
-at least no philosophical-type cogito, no transvaluation or
revolution. The ultimatum thus has a last aspect, that of a wager:
the wager of a simultaneous discovery and invention, upon the
basis of a divestiture and of a wholly other use of these means.
The philosopher wanted to monopolize them, but he offers
them to us, without knowing it, qua disarmed. Badiou supplies
a super-armament to philosophy-a re-armament, in truth, for
militants; but his work, grasped otherwise, is also and at the
same time a disarmament of philosophy. In it we find philosophy
delivered entirely naked, divested of its finalities, clothed in only
its narcissism and its materialist anti-humanism. Here is the last
adversary, and here is the defensive weapon, the ultimatum that
is humans taken as generic body. For a wager also, one must be
xxxviii
Introduction
a skeptic-but not necessarily a nihilist, as philosophers believe.
The human genre cannot be nihilist-only the philosopher cano
Others will critique Badiou's works in the name of another
philosophy sharing the same axioms (those of philosophical
Decision), reinscribing them in a tradition, debating their
political, mathematical and artistic statements. For our part,
we make a parallel between them and "non-philosophy" as
"generic science" or "non-standard philosophY:' The latter is
another practice of philosophy outside the norms recognized
and accepted by those diverse traditions. We shall confront
the most fündamental axioms of the two doctrines, with the
twofûld aim of demonstrating the profûundly conservative
character of Badiou's thought, beneath its clothing (of such a
"modern" cut), and of better understanding our own project.
Unlike philosophical doctrines, non-philosophy conjugates the
greatest admiration and the greatest resistance in its a priori
defense of humans against true philos op hic al enterprises, such
as that which it recognizes in Badiou's thought. After the era
of the deconstructors (Derrida and aH the others), that of the
constructors (Deleuze)-and now, with Badiou, the era of the
planifiers anticipated by Heidegger, and their master after Plato.
Badiou is, of"current" philosophers, the sharpest intelligence, the
fullest, the most ambitious and the most self-conscious. He has
been able to make coincide, in his own way, philosophy's point
of greatest exaltation and its point of maximum extenuation-a
kind of auto-contradiction of its essence. Examining insistently
philosophical Decisions excesses of sufficiency, in the past and
to the present day, we never imagined we would find ourselves
Introduction
xxxix
one day faced with a new Master of this decision, and what
we consider his inhumanity-faced with a pure philosophical
reaction on a grand sc ale, and aiming to save this thought with
one last conceptual explosion, a greater than ever fire ... work. His
work might be read as a reaction, a long time coming, against the
attempts to renew the philosophical gesture itself in its foundations, rather th an merely reinforcing and buttressing it, as he
continues to do for his part. And if this is not a dialogue, it is
thus an ultimatum, but emitted this time from an acknowledged
position of weakness, in an encounter with a position of acknowledged force. Despite aIl appearances, we are more comfortable
conducting an a priori defense against the traditional assaults of
philosophy than on the attack. An ultimatum signifies that we are
not the mirror of the other. Very precisely, Badiou is a means for
non -philosophy, not at aIlleft to himself or to the force of transcendent finalities. Thus, this book is, ab ove aIl, finally-and one
must take it as such-a book in which non-philosophy explains
itself to itself: but with the aid of a counter-model that it faIls to
us to transform. For, moreover, we need only consider Badiou in
himself to see that he is a technically irreproachable philosopher,
and an intelligence in excess of us in every way.
Organization of the book
This book is based upon a set of notes originally taken
when Being and Event3 was published, and on various other
texts, reworked according to our own recent advances in
xl
Introduction
non-philosophy. We have hardly taken account of Logies of
Worlds, which extends Badiou's thought toward logic rather
th an a renewal of foundations. The chips were already down
in a problematic that, in this second stage, aims only to
extend its reading of, and its stranglehold on, different areas
of knowledge. Despite its grandiose (if rather congested)
deployment, it seemed to us less useful th an the Manifestos4
for our object, which was Badiou's philosophical prejudices, the
bases of his materialism, and his conjunction of mathematics
and philosophy. Working on the principles rather than on
the surfaces, as a miner rather th an a surveyor, we limited
ourselves to what made up the substance of his problematic.
Ultimately more interested in the problems th an in the texts,
we believe that it is a professor's business, not so much a
philosopher's, to lose oneself in complete works-something
that would prohibit one, moreover, from writing. To grasp
the fundamental statements or ideals of a doctrine, it is even
sometimes indicated to stop reading an author one admires
too much-it is a question of freedom, of keeping a sharp eye,
and of the possibility of working. What is more, many critical
elements opposed to this type of philosophy were already
present, but in a dispersed state, in Non-Standard Philosophy,
the principal work that the present book accompanies, and
which amplifies non-philosophy. These two essays were written
more or less in parallel. In them we utilize a theoretical device
that conjoins quantum-theoretical and philosophical principles
both reduced to a strict minimum. To achieve a prior understanding of this technical device of non-philosophy, one is
Introduction
xli
referred in particular to the introductions and the glossary of
Non-Standard Philosophy.
The first chapter is preparatory, and presents sorne essential
concepts. lt is a brief thematic and descriptive parallel of
the relation between the ontology of the void (aV) and
non-philosophy (NP) for those unfamiliar with them.lt reprises
a text initially published un der a pseudonym S and reworked
here, and puts in place the most notable and central notions
of these doctrines. lt is a sort of compact memento that can be
provisionally left aside.
Chapters 2 and 3, on the other hand, are polemical. They take
up again the exposition of Badiou's philosophical personality,
already evoked above, in relation to his decision understood
as a "taking the side of the modern in philosophy:' and his
relation to science. His figure as a philosopher is significant,
in concordance with his philosophical problematic, and merits
one's interest in it.
Chapters 4 and 5 represent the "hard" theoretical kernel of
this essay. They get down to the principles and the matrices
from which av and NP spring, and try to clarify the problem of
subtraction. Chapter 6 describes the relation between philosophy
and mathematics, each in the mirror of the other, and the effects
of sterility and authority that emanate from this specularity.
Chapter 7 examines or recalls the quantum and ontological
kernel of NP on the basis of the problem of materiality.
Finally, Chapter 8 draws out sorne consequences concerning
"philo-fiction" as the only possible "documentation" of the
Stranger, and concerning the generic ethics of philosophy.
1
parallel
av and NP seem opposed on every point
One takes as its basis the equation mathematical set-theory =
ontology; the other takes as its scientific model the non -Euclidean
theme, and later quantum physics. This opposition can be
identified on four levels:
1
The governing scientific theme: on the one hand, a
philosophy of the absolute Multiple and on the other, a
non-philosophy of the radical One. It would be difficult,
at least on an immediate reading, to imagine two ways of
thinking more extreme, more opposed in the way they
go about their common research into anti-contemporary
radicality (philosophies of difference, Nietzsche,
Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Deleuze, Derrida).
Anti-Badiou
2
2 The object of thought: on the one hand Being, a
set -theoretical and Cantorian recasting of the concept
of "being" as primary, an other-than-fundamental
ontology, a true ontological basis or condition for
philosophy; and on the other, a relegation of Being
to a secondary status, as instance of a wholly relative
autonomy, in favour of the One as radical immanence
or One-in-One, a radically non-objective instance of
the Real; a decided, global refusaI to understand the real
as Being and consequently as the essence of thought, if
not thought itself qua ontology (whether an ontology of
"presence" or not).
3 The way of thinking itself: on the one hand, the
militant advocacy of philosophy against the ideology
of its "death" or its "end" (in which OV tries to
include NP), with the caveat of an anti-Heideggerian
dissociation of ontology and philosophy itseIt: a
partition internaI to philosophy (which reacts with
the backlash of "meta -ontology") but whose origin is
external (scientific); and on the other, a distinction
that is external, yet immanent, between philosophy
and non-philosophy; a distinction itself founded in
an anti-philosophical or generic real. On the one
hand, a philosopher-hero who inscribes himself in the
Cartesian, Nietzschean and Mallarméan tradition of
the heroic thinker; and on the other, a reduction of
philosophical sufficiency (as double transcendence) to
A briefsynoptic paraUel
3
the status of a material or an object of a generic science
of the "ordinary man" or the "human genre:' Plato and
Rousseau? Plato and Kant? Plato and Marx?
4 The conjuncture and the project: on the one hand,
the question is how to succeed Heidegger by reprising
the foundational Platonic gesture, how to avoid the
Heideggerian extinction of ontology (in the form of
the ontology of "presence:' with aIl of its "postmodern"
consequences); and on the other, how to elaborate an
outside-philosophy thought, but one that relates itself
to every possible philosophy, modern and postmodern,
indifferently, as its material, rather th an relating itself to
a particular philosophical decision. On the one hand,
in what way does the fidelity to ontology necessitate a
new ontology, a Platonico-modern ontology; and on the
other, how to deliver thought from ontico-ontological
primacy, and more generally from aIl philosophical
sufficiency, by elaborating a new thought adequate to a
generic experience of the One-in-One-an experiment
foreclosed to philosophy, but formulated using its
symbols.
In any case, this antinomy, although real, must be nuanced and
differentiated. Must we recall the trivial fact that, by definition,
philosophers are not necessarily speaking about quite the same
things when they use the same words? And that it cannot
therefore be a question of fabricating a simplistic opposition
that takes these two ways of thinking "to the letter" without a
Anti-Badiou
4
minimum of textual hermeneutics, as is always necessary when
it is a matter of the historical emergence of doctrines? If there
are oppositions, then they belong to the fundamental axioms of
each doctrine; and even the very axioms themselves, if we are
talking about language, are not of the same nature in the two
cases: OV utilizes axioms that express the ontologico-formaI
decision of the Idea, whereas NP uses what it caIls "oraxioms;'
which express the lived decisions of the generic subject operating
the science of philosophy.
If OV and NP, at first sight, are opposed just as mu ch as
the Multiple and the One, it is precisely not a question of the
Multiple and the One, in their interlacing and co-belonging,
as in the metaphysics of presence or in Greek ontology before
the more radical decisions of Plato, and as is once more the
case after Plato and Descartes. OV frees the Multiple from aIl
unity through the void and the empty set; multiple-of-multiples
to infinity, Being contains only the multiple without unity.
NP frees the One from the Multiple, from Unity and from
their mélange; whence a One-in-One (we shaIl compare the
formulae "multiple-of-multiples" and "One-in -One" later) or a
real as immanence through and through or without-unity-an
immanence radical-(to)-self rather than to the unity-form. The
radicality of these positions at once hardens and softens their
antinomy-an antinomy that cannot be thought according to
the schemas (at least not the traditional ones) of philosophical
antithetics. For example, both agree in assuming the "death of
the Greek god of the One;' even if they do not interpret this
formula in the same way, the first reducing every possible One
A briefsynoptic parallel
5
to the One of the metaphysics of presence and to its operatory
content, the One of calculation, the second distinguishing from
these bastardized or empirico-metaphysical forms a One-in-One
that remains absolutely unthought by, or fareclosed to, aU
philosophy (including OV).
The four essential principles of
non -philosophy
1
Immanence is radical and not absolute. It is produced
by quantum superposition (the One-in-One) and
not by philos op hic al identification, and is thus
without philosophical division or decision. Unlike
transcendence, it cannot sustain any amphiboly.
2 Radical inlmanence acts as uni-Iaterality or as
Last Instance, non-commutable with any farm of
philosophical transcendence.
3 The analysis of the philosophical milieu as doublet or as
diversely specular double-transcendence is fundamentaL
It is perceived in one way or another by philosophies
as an appearance of simplicity, but can be perceived or
becomes identifiable as doublet only un der the principle
of radical immanence or superposition. A complete
analysis of the apparent simplicity and unicity of the
philosophical milieu permits us not to reduce everything
to the absolute, which is the myth that this appearance
Anti-Badiou
6
of simplicity secretes; to refuse immanence as absolute,
as do (in very different ways) Hegel and Spinoza, Husserl
and Henry.
4 It is essential to eliminate the mélanges that are formed
under a superior or transcendental unity. Every
transcendental unity doubles itself in transcendence
either as positive constituent (Deleuze) or as negative
condition eliminated from the outset (Henry). The
radical, for its part, does not eliminate the absolute, but
allows for a genealogy of the absolute as irnmanental
appearance.
Non-philosophy is the radical simplification of transcendence.
Two authors have sensed this problem from different directions,
and have approached this non-philosophical simplification:
Deleuze via the plane of immanence without mélange, that is
to say reduced to the specularity of a torsion; and Henry via a
suppression of the unity of amphiboly and a return to a simple
duality. These two positions present an oscillation between
transcendental immanence as plane of torsion or body without
organs, and immanence as transcendental ego.
Non-philosophy's solution is as füllows: (1) To maintain the
amphiboly of immanence/transcendence, but as a philosophical
symptom to be analyzed; (2) To conceive radical immanence as
materially itself a simple transcending; (3) But one that must be
resurned and superposed with itself-and not as a concrete and
autonomous instance, as in Henry; (4) To accord to immanence
a quasi-subjective but generic function as non-egological Last
A brie! synoptic parallel
7
Instance, thus without making of it a superior and total unity,
the body without organs, as divergence of a convergence, but
instead as superposition. In their respective solutions, Deleuze
and Henry still presuppose philosophy as constitutive, that is
to say as transcendent al triangulation. Deleuze makes of this a
positive condition, Henry a negative condition. Non-philosophy
avails itself of a scientific me ans to attack the doublets of
philosophy or of its triangulation, via superposition and the
quantum model. It thus possesses an external model, whereas
Deleuze and Henry put philosophy to work upon itself-an
auto-transformation or auto-interpretation.
Fundamental concepts
The objective of this first sketch of relations was to "scramble"
first appearances, to complicate judgment. We can now take up
these indications in more detail, to complete them.
1
The real is grasped either (OV) as Being, that is to say
radical exteriority, not in relation to something else
but in itself (qua multiple-of-multiples), or in a certain
way as the immanence of pure transcendence, and thus
freed from itself and absolutely autonomous; or (NP)
as One-in-One, that is to say as radical immanence
which is not immanence to an exteriority in itself,
but immanence-(to)-selfby way of interference or
superposition of a quantum -undulatory type rather than
8
Anti-Badiou
an in-itself type. 1he common adversary is transcendent
unity-synthesis in general, difference in particular. But
in the name of pure Being as multiple in itself: on the
one hand, and of One-in-One as superposition on the
other. In reality, the refusaI of this common enemy bears
to varying degrees upon metaphysical autoposition in
the name of a certain identity (or non -difference) of the
pure Multiple or, indeed, of immanence.
2 Either Being is primary, and enjoys a primacy over
the rejected One, in the secondary and operatory
strata of calculation or of the count necessary to the
representation of the multiple; or the One is prior-to-
first, but has no primacy or hierarchy over Being, which
will from now on be "secondary:' even if it is always
primary and necessary for the distinct thought of
representation. OV conserves the hierarchy but inverts
it, "repressing" and displacing the One with the Multiple
(but this inversion is also a real displacement). NP
invalidates the hierarchy from the outset, in the name
of the prior-to-priority or the subordinacy of order to
the real, and thus distinguishes priority from prior-topriority, metaphysical causality (first philosophy) from
determination -in -the-Iast -instance.
3 OV and NP both refer to the composition of the Being
of a certain multiple: either the Multiple-of-multiples as
set -theoretical inhabitant of the void, or the microscopic
Particulate as noematic correlate of the undulatory lived.
A brie! synoptic parallel
9
But whereas the Multiple and the void are primary, the
Particulate is secondary and is posited in-One, or under
condition of the One-in-One. OV proposes a concept
of the Multiple of multiples that is numerical and th en
quantitative. Its empirical origin is the set, but the
empty set, which "represses" or "prohibits" the set -form
and thus conserves it, probably "truncated" or barred,
in the immanence of the pure Multiple. NP manifests
a Multiple that is not pure or absolute, but radical, or
conditioned by algebra (the imaginary or complex
number), without denying the set-form or the repressed
unity (whose absence or presence is not the problem
here). The essence of this Multiple lies in the immanence
of superposition, its simple transcending such that it
faIls into-immanence. It no longer has a transcendental
identity, mu ch less the transcendent identity of the
repressed set -form.
4
Under the name of "ontologY:' OV defines a new
form of materialism, by substituting for the old
"empiricist" vocabulary of metaphysical materialism
the post -Heideggerian transcendental vocabulary- in
particular the terms of Being, the One and the Multipleand sometimes the Sartrian terminology of the "in itself'
This is a "materialism" insofar as it is a question of the
identity "in itself" of pure transcendence, or the Multiple
"in itself;' of Being outside aIl "ontological difference:' NP
defines a thought that, as immanental and not using only
Anti-Badiou
10
transcendentals, refuses aIl philos op hic al (idealist and/or
materialist) decision, and roots itself in the sole real-One,
while remaining in a relation that is unilateral or without
relation to ... philosophy in general, to any philosophical
decision whatsoever or to the world.
The first turns Platonic idealism into a materialist position; the
second dissolves transcendental realism into a lived materiality,
a duality of the real-One and of the unilateral thought that flows
from the One.
The non -epistemological relation to science
OV and NP do not think philosophy without also thinking
its relation in principle to science-even if they posit different
relations between themselves and science. Epistemology in aIl
its different forms, aIl differential to varying degrees (idealist,
positivist, rationalist-applied, critical, etc.), is deprogrammed
and eliminated as a sterile or fetishizing combination of
philosophy and science. They oppose to it a certain "fusion" of
science and philosophy, rather than a difference: either (OV)
an identity with science which (by way of a meta-ontology)
separates ontology from the rest of philosophy; or (NP) a
radical fusion (in a Last Instance) of science and philosophy-a
fusion "under-determined" by science, and which guarantees
the undivided immanence of philosophy and permits a generic
genealogy of the latter.
The suspension of the "epistemological" combining of
philosophy and science supposes new relations between the
A brie! syn op tic parallel
11
two: OV detaches ontology from philosophy proper. But it
treats ontology as a secondment of philosophy to science, or
better, as an identity of philosophy and science. It is a matter,
as far as science is concerned, of a particular but supposedly
paradigmatic science (mathematics-and, within mathematics,
axiomatized set theory); and as far as philosophy is concerned,
of a new distinction imported into it through its identification
with science: the distinction between philosophy and metaontology-as if science, dividing up the philosophical tradition
into ontology and philosophy proper, had to redivide the
latter into "meta-ontology" and philosophy. These refüldings
represent a residue of the doublet and of autoposition, not yet
radically eliminated. NP takes philosophy globally as ontology
and with ontology, without separating them, and treats them
in relation to a scientific thought grasped in its essential
operations (the axiomatization of hypotheses, induction and
deduction). But it has passed through two distinct positions
as to their relations. Philosophy III supposes an affinity of the
vision-in-One and scientific thought rather than philosophy,
and thus attributes a certain primacy (later called "prior-topriority") to science over philosophy. Later works (Philosophy
III, including Théorie des Étrangers)2 give further nuance to
this preferential bond, which was still close to OV's solution.
The vision-in-One is as indifferent to science as it is to
philosophy, but it always determines a non-philosophy that
is equally a non-science (thus we refuse Deleuze's objection).
Non-philosophy, a thinking adequate to the real-One, takes as
object-material the different philosophical relations between
12
Anti-Badiou
science and philosophy (of which epistemology is one), and
elaborates on their basis a "unified Theory" (unified, but not
unitary = philosophical) of thought as identically philosophy
and science, removing their autopositional character, or its
residual form present in Ov.
To the four "truth procedures" (of which science is one)
that sustain philosophy proper (OV), NP opposes an open
multiplicity of "unified theories;' each of which takes as objectmaterial the relations between the fundamental and the regional
(philosophy + a determinate region of experience: philosophy
and politics, philosophy and psychoanalysis, philosophy and
ethics, philosophy and art, philosophy and technology, etc.).
Science has no exclusive privilege in non-philosophy, except
for that which flows from its privileging within the philosophical material (which, precisely, is no more than a material).
Positivism and scientism, which are both philosophical possibilities, are suspended as far as possible. Finally, where OV makes
use, in traditional philosophical manner, of a determinate scientific theory (Cantor, Cohen), NP instead requisitions scientific
styles (non-Euclidean axiomatics and various other models:
fractal, Godelian, etc.). ln its most recent stage (Philosophy V),
it also mobilizes a determinate science, quantum physics.
The relation to Marxism
OV refashions set the ory into a quasi-dialectics, Platonic
rather than Hegelian-a dialectics for a quasi-matter or "in
itself" of the Multiple, a dialectics that recuses empiricist
A brie! synoptic parallel
13
and sensiblist materialism. It refuses in general the difference
between materialism and the dialectic, positing instead
their identity, which supposes the identity of the Multiple
and the Void-a mathematical materialism transcendent
to the "subject" it determines. Such is the materialist
Dialectic. NP, on the contrary, reactivates and transforms the
themes of historical Materialism: (1) 1he real as immanence,
immanence as radical or unilateral "indivi-duality"; (2)
Thought defetishized as the force- (of) -thought [force (de)
pensée] (cf. "labor-power" [force de travail])3 that (3) effectuates the real-One as determination-in-the-Iast-instance;
(4) A "science" ("unified theory") of the superstructure
(philosophy, in its complete concept, not qua "ideology").
Both OV and NP convoke and partially take upon themselves
a Marxist heritage that they do not wish to leave dormant,
but in doing so, refuse all "neo-Marxism:'
Both therefore maintain a relation to Marxism that is privileged but dosed to different degrees with the latter's death and
survival. OV announces the death of Marxism, and privileges
instead the materialist Dialectic and a Maoism transformed both
on their materialist side (Being or the multiple in itself) and on
their dialectical side (set-theoretical multiplidty). NP instead
maintains a relation with historical Materialism, transformed
on its materialist side (the real as materiel), on its historical side
(philosophy as encompassing horizon or universal of human
practices), and finally in its syntax, which is no longer dialectical-ideal via over·-determination, but unilateral duality via
under-determination.
14
Anti-Badiou
The relation to philosophy
OV daims philosophieal sufficiency, but on condition of relieving
philosophy of ontology, whieh is now operated via mathematies.
On one hand, philosophy is reduced, in its relation to mathematies, to a meta -ontology; on the other, it is reduced, in its
relation to the four "truth procedures;' to a simple "inventory"··
function-that is, to the function of a widened synthesis or
weakened (weakly encydopedic) system, whereby the antique
function of the One exduded from ontology returns. Thus,
there is here a basis for philosophy that is "non-philosophieal;'
in the sense that it is "merely mathematieaI:' It is also a
"non-philosophieal" basis of philosophy in the sense that the
latter can identify itself in it, in the form of its meta-ontologieal
relation. So that the non-philosophie al is not thematized as
such, but operated as a subtractive, or even "negative;' critique
of presence. NP speaks of aH of philosophy, without parts,
but speaks of it as mere material, without validity over the
real-One but validated as object of a non-philosophical usage.
OV still maintains a philosophieal relation to philosophy via the
subtraction of science, whereas NP maintains from the outset
a non-philosophieal but positive relation to philosophy. In one
case, "non-philosophy;' determined as mathematieal ontology,
is still governed by philosophy qua meta-ontology, but in a
relation of identity rather than of difference. In the other, the
non-philosophieal use of philosophy amounts to universalizing thought beyond philosophy, and correlatively to finally
generalizing the latter, generalizing any philosophie al decision
A brie! syn op tic parallel
15
whatsoever, to all of experience, as an a priori. Either philosophy
must be supposed to be globally pertinent, as per its traditional
daims, or else we must consider this a matter of a mere daim that
must be limited (as to the real) and legitimated (by restricting
it to experience). Either there is something "not philosophical"
(rather than a non-philosophy) that remains partial, external
(and) internaI (without difterence) to philosophy and divides
the latter-this is OV's solution and, in another way, Deleuze's
solution as to "non-philosophy"; or else non-philosophy is
global (in the exact sense that, via its identity, it is valid for and
applies to every philosophy and all of philosophy), external
and heteronomous (and) immanent-thus preserving, or rather
necessitating, the identity of philosophy.
TIle relation to philosophy no longer has the simplicity
that certain slogans or appearances might suggest. OV does
not maintain entirely or without distinction a homogeneous
relation of affirmation to philosophy that NP would call "sufficiency:' of the "all-philosophy" type (despite its "manifestos for
philosophy"). In Ov, this relation of philosophy to itself is internally divided or split by science (mathematics), as philosophy
identifies itself with science by depriving itself in sorne way of
its traditional ontological he art, whose function is now assumed
by mathematics. Ontology then becomes a special form of
"non-philosophy" in the very interior of philosophy. NP does
not maintain, as certain appearances might suggest, a relation of
negation to philosophy, but a positive relation of generic usage,
and one of suspension in regard to its pretended sufficiency for
the real. In OV, the distinction passes by way of two "parts" of
Anti-Badiou
16
philosophy, which globally conserve its authority along with a
prohibitive or truncated form of its sufficiency. In NP it passes
by way of the "all-philosophy"-that is to say the "Principle
of Sufficient Philosophy" and the identity of philosophy as
mere material or occasion. One opens from the interior of
philosophy onto the exteriority of mathematics; the other opens
up philosophy from outside to a thought that is nonetheless
immanent (only the radical immanence of the One-in-One can
be heteronomous to philosophy and nevertheless "act" on it).
OV affirms philosophy while sacrificing ontology to science,
whereas NP neither affirms nor denies philosophy, but sacrifices its global sufficiency to a quantum-type "superposition;' a
superposition via the radical, albeit heteronomous, immanence
of science and philosophy.
Both doctrines pose the problem: how to conserve philosophy,
what sense to give it after the "death" and the "end" of philosophy?
OV responds by reaffirming the ontological daim that was
philosophy's, but making philosophy assume it, this time,
through mathematics, and by confining the tradition al activities
of philosophy to the constrained function of the "inventory"
and "arrangement" of truths produced elsewhere. NP responds
by globally diminishing, across the whole extent of philosophy,
the latter's daims, but by limiting them to the sole experience
of constituted knowledges, assures them a certain legitimacy,
like a transcendental ("immanental") deduction of philosophy
(of the identity of philosophy). OV refuses philosophy this
identity and amputates it from its essential part. So that in
reality, it is above all OV that poses the problem of conserving
A briefsynoptic pat'alleZ
17
philosophy, responding by amputating its sickly member (the
philosophical ontology of "presence") and issuing it with a
mathematical prosthesis; whereas NP seeks to assure it of its
integral life by suspending that which bars its "real" daim or
stance, renouncing this process of self-amputation that already
constituted the whole traditionallife of philosophy in any case.
OV begins by cutting into philosophy, between two of its parts
or functions, and daims thereby to have saved it, whereas NP
refuses to decide (to philosophize), and on the contrary necessitates its identity-only distinguishing, in view of the latter,
between philosophy and its tendency to daim over the real. One
is a hero who cornes to the rescue of an imperiled philosophy
that he himself continually menaces; the other a redeemer who,
since he thinks it a priori "saved;' sometimes appears to forsake
or refuse it. Philosophy was already saved, but we did not know
it because we were in philosophy, and philosophy hid its true
face from us ...
2
•
1
the ''Modern'' in
The ('Modern"
The birth of a new and great philosophy that would be in the
spirit of rnodernity-that is to say, a purge "for our times" and
its errors-was bound to appear unexpected to an epoch that
would see itself as postrnodern. Being and Event offers the whole
panoply of the reasoning of the "Moderns": a certain description
of the unsatisfactory conjuncture and a departure from it; the
observation that "our tirnes" are lacking in true philosophy,
along with the vague and ide al thesis that a philosophy is a
philosophy "for this time"; the twofold appeal to that which
founds rnodernity: rnathernatics in the forrn of the Cantorian
creation, and the theory of the subject in the forrn of the
20
Anti-Badiou
Lacanian creation; the exaggerated spirit ofaxiomatic decision
and the equation to think = to decide, in relation to the pathos
of the conjuncture; and finally, all the values or means of the
contemporary, but re-inserted into the "modern" discourse
(the signifier and the symbolic, the impossible real, foreclosure,
structure, the multiple, the event, etc.). And then, adding to
the clarity and neatness of these positions, the systematic and
coherent development of theses, the breadth of vision, and (to
repeat what so many others have said) the courage of thought.
This book "arrives" in timely fashion, and is in many respects
a miraculous book, just like any great work. And like all "true"
works of philosophy, it begins its "faIl" or completion [chute]
weIl; it seeks to negotiate it and to create its own conjuncture.
Those who had imagined a linear development of thought, a
definitive solving of problems or an obsolescence of philosophy,
were surprised by certain regressive and, aIl in aIl, conservative
aspects--not at aIl "modern" in a more common, that is to say
more contemporary, sense. Badiou sets himself to proving,
brilliantly, that Heidegger's poetico-Aristotelian reactivation of
philosophy can be succeeded by a mathematico-Platonic reactivation, and of proclaiming at the same time a definitive ruling
on ontology. Such is the contradictory law of every philosophical
"return:' and of this one in particular; of that Platonic and
Cartesian sentiment of re-inaugurating philosophy once, finaIly,
and for aIl time-a procedure that another modern, Husserl,
made his own. In reality, Badiou maintains a complicated
relation to philosophy. On the one hand he is not "interested"
in it in any intimate manner; he is interested in literature,
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
21
politics, mathematics and love. But he saw in philosophy a way
ofbringing together and planifying this disparate set of activities
and talents. And maybe he is justified in this-philosophy has
always been more or less a catchall, a corral for scientific statements, for virtuous and political slogans found along the road
of tradition, all the while being also that "bone-bag" (Plato)
that collects up the cadavers of humans. But if Philosophy is
nothing but this, then why ceaselessly overburden us with it,
why make a slogan of it? Especially as what really motivates
him are the three or four "truth procedures:' About philosophy
he has, fundamentally, nothing very precise to say, no more
than he has to say about the Emperor. He has something to say
about its logic, its truth and its subjectivation-and always to
celebrate the Truth, the Idea and the Void. His principle is to
avoid speaking of philosophy itself until it is no longer possible
to do otherwise-but with what vigour he does so then ... He
practices it in extremis; it is a bunker or a wall that he guards
like a flag. On the other hand, his combat for philosophy is
strategie: it is a matter of struggling against his times and what
they herald. There is something chivalrous in this combat-he
defends a distant, evanescent philosophy with a sort of courtly
love; he has placed his faith in it, seeing off with the back of his
hand everything that daims to approach it from afar or even
from nearby, through default or through excess, through lack
or repletion. As soon as the conjuncture seems to present the
opportunity, he writes a new manifesto to defend the outraged
dignity of philosophy. His need to "explain" himself to the most
paltry of media intellectuals becomes a little disquieting and
22
Anti-Badiou
confirms the old ideal of the philosopher, no longer counselor
of the Prince at best or global intellectuai counselor to the
State at worst, but (is this so different, however modern it
may be?) master of militancy and of taking sides. Even his
"reconciliations;' with Deleuze and Derrida, for example, are
dubious, since they are often posthumous. 1 put this amiability
down to the benefit of wisdom, or of age, now that he has
succeeded them on the stele of philosophy. Having seen how he
treats Deleuze, countermanding the complexity, simplifying the
duplicity of his position, 1 ask myself what fate he has reserved
for his contemporaries in his "portable pantheon:' In fact, here
is a triply mischievous formula: the "pan" or the aIl, the "theos"
or embalming death, and the "portability" of the worst kinds of
doxa-things he quite rightly detests.
Modern, but not contemporary
To be declared or recognized as a "great philosopher;' one
necessary condition, among others, is to be a counter-current
against the contemporary. Although he wishes himself a bloc of
eternity, the risk for Badiou then becomes that of still measuring
himself against the immobile ground of the current itself: or
of resisting traditional criteria too weakly. This would make
precisely for a "modern philosopher;' in many senses of the
word. Contemporary he is not, except insofar as he introduces
new means clothed in an old skin. For it is always means that
make for contemporaneity, just as ends make for modernity
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
23
or antiquity-for tradition, in any case. So long as one finds
the fruitful generie finality proper to these means, rather than
the tradition al one that he imposes upon them as texts to read
or decipher one more time. What purpose do Cantor and
Cohen serve, then? To modify the cartography of philosophieal
thought, to be the object of a new "hermeneutie" -type activity,
to conserve the old philosophie al finality but merely in a limited
form; not at aH to actively transform philosophy and its own
finalities. There are so many impressive means to explore (or to
make one read) that he does not think of changing the classieal
destination-that of a text to read, that of philosophieal sense.
This outer shell he conserves like a wineskin, and he drinks this
philosophieal cup to the dregs of the Idea. An authoritarian
militant, nostalgie "for our times" but not at all our contemporary, he cornes decidedly from afar, he is in spirit entirely
outside our times.
1 do not define the contemporary by way of any finality
whatsoever, any teleology found and repeated, even a "modern"
one. Badiou is "finalized-modern"; he revives the prescriptions of a certain teleology, whieh we shaH reveal to be circular
and transcendent. The modern is an affair of philosophical
finality and thus of return. The contemporary is almost without
finality-it is an affair of means, of means offered by the
conjuncture-a question of usage and of comportment. It is
defined by an intra -temporal order that supposes the arrow
of worldly time oriented from the future toward the past
across the present. The productive future, or rather that whieh
non-philosophy caUs futurality, without being a mere orientation
24
Anti-Badiou
or an "occidentation;' would be a certain break in the circlemore complex than modern "priority;' because it would be that
of a prior-to-priority or of the Last Instance. The future is only
(if one might use such a bizarre expression--it will be justified
by the imaginary number used by quantum theory in the wave
function) the quarter (of the circle) of eternity and of finality; at
best half of it, but certainly not its totality, with the inversions
of sense that such a totality would contain. It concerns only
the usage of means in view of the invention of existence. As
the category of the contemporary and of its futurality, the Last
Instance is that dimension that does not bring to presence or one
of its deconstructed modes, but puts into unilateral complementarity, knowledges deprived of aIl external or internaI finality
and transformed into mere means-means that must contribute
to creating a new generic end with which, this time, they are not
commutable. The two greatest thinkers of the contemporary are
not moderns, but Marx and Freud, who knew how to conjugate
contraries, and not diaiectically-so it is natural that they have
become unbearable for most of "our contemporaries:'
Thus, knowing nothing of the category of the "contemporary;' which is opposed directly to the tradition and to
its multiplicity, including the modern, Badiou is one of the
most conservative and regressive philosophers that could be,
dressed in the deceptive habits of modernity. We aIl know that
Modernity, even in the guise of "Platonism;' is a tradition, just
like Aristoteleanism or Phenomenology. Whereas the contemporary is the generic primacy of means over every primary
finality, and consequently their indirect combination (between
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
25
means). Ultimately it is a de-Iocalization and de-ternporalization of their effects of residual finality and subjectivity (an
enterprise that we name, for our part, "quantum:' in the new
context of NP). What point is there in affirming the multiple, if
one does so only to extend its materialist destination to the void,
or to limit the use of philosophy to the void of truth-in either
case, to a dessicating abstraction? The multiple is a multiple
of means. Once more, we must find a thinking of the multiple
that does not make it back into an empirico-transcendental or
mathematico-materialist thesis. A change is called for in the
usage of traditional mathematical and geometrical means that
are too attached to an authoritarian and harassing philosophy, in
favor of the suppleness and the plasticity of a lighter apparatusfor example an algebra, as used in quantum thinking.
Badiou wishes to start over, and thus to turn back. But not
too far-not to the very basis of the tradition like Heidegger;
he refuses the pre-Platonic style of Deleuze's physiologism or
organicism. But why seek to return only to Plato, and only to
set out once more in a direction neither entirely parallel nor
wholly opposed to his? Because Plato named "philosophy"? Or
rather because he is the first genius of planification? Because for
Badiou, the means, or the use to which they are put, is univers al
planification. Plato is already a latecomer, like every modern.
Precisely a modern from after myth, and a mathematician from
after physics, he possesses the art of ordering and hierarchizing
the riches of the past-in a less scholarly way th an Aristotle,
that is the only difference. Planification is the Moderns' form
of memory, a profligate deployment of spaces and plans so as
BM0682782
26
Anti-Badiou
to save, conserve, or raise up the past. Which is only one more
finality and the vehicle of aIl finalities, rather than something
that could draw out new inventions from them. If philosophy as
double transcendence is imaginary in the specular sense, then
non-philosophy opposes to it the algebraic imaginary and its
quantum superposition. This is what the vision-in-One would
say, and has always sought to say; vision-in-One as a method
that struggles systematicaIly against doublets, that separates
philosophy from its double (the world) and simplifies it. This is
the vision-in-One of philosophy.
The defense of philosophy
as desire for memory
In a sense, there is no interest in defending philosophy out
of duty, or even out of a desire for memory, if one produces
nothing more th an new readings of the tradition, judging or
deciding what is good or bad according to highly ideal criteria;
if one understands nothing of what il is (Deleuze and Derrida
were more attentive in this respect); if, rereading the past on the
basis of a "new" decision, one lirnits oneself to housekeeping,
and to instituting oneself as a Platonic tribunal. In that case,
the interest lies only in a purification that .looks toward the
past. Badiou continuaIly risks being confused with the worst
defenders of philosophy, or even, more subtly, with its persecutors. Certain ofhis readers ask whether this prodigious alI-out
deployment of means only goes to arm one more Don Quixote.
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
27
In aIl domains, except for literature and polities, but certainly
in mathematies, the generic procedures, and philosophy, he
is a militant of theory, who has perhaps stifled the proper
concreteness of philosophy by dint of cultivating innumerable
theoretical means that he employs precipitately, to take the
place of concrete philosophies. As to positing the principle that
the philosophical domain must retreat, ce ding its place to the
generie, we are entirely in agreement. But why such a violent
purification, in whieh the generic functions as a weapon of mass
destruction? Perhaps it is not possible to avoid going aIl the way
to the extenuated end of the Idea, but in that case why oppress us
with this philosophy that he wears like a bandolier? One would
almost think he was apologizing, or at least protecting himself
in extremis against himself.
He caIls for the defense of philosophy in every possible case.
A necessity that is contestable with regard to the materiality
of what he has to defend, and with regard to the finality of
the simple means that it also is. Is the emancipation of the
philosopher worth anything if it is not directed, at least "in the
last instance;' toward that of humans (who are not limited, need
it be said, to self-declared militants)? It faIls still to a (non-)
philosophy to "disentangle" aIl of this so as not to reconstitute a
worn-out finality. Too often, in NP, these two defenses have been
understood as operating in opposite directions, in a misinterpretation of the polemie that NP carries out against philosophie al
sufficiency. But it is a question both of freeing philosophy from
its self-reference and from its magieal confinement in its own
circle. Its liberation from itself is the occasional condition for
28
Anti-Badiou
the liberation of humans, but the liberation of humans is the
under-determining condition of that of philosophy. The interpretation of these relations as the circle of a unique divided
condition, set against itself by means of sorne torsion, is a
transcendental-type appearance. What seems to be a circle is
in reality broken, opened up (rather than distended) between
a cause in -the-Iast -instance and an occasional cause (between
a prior-to-first cause and a first cause). More than distende d,
as a topological and plastic body would be; in ste ad, open as a
"unilateral duality" whose identity is inalienable in duality, or
whose prior-to-first term is immanence through and through,
and transits every transcendence with radical immanence. This
distribution is not just another case of the transcendental; we
shaH caH it "immanentaI:' It is a transcendence f'aHen intoimmanence, where immanence is not reciprocaHy alienated in
the unilaterality that it determines.
Whence we can identify between us a series of differences
that are not at aH symmetrical: to the planification that, in
Badiou, replaces the old dialectic, l "oppose" unilateral duality;
to the exception of the Idea that is the complementary idealist
part of materialism, the prior-to-first exception of the human
in the world; to the materialist position, lived materiality; to
the "circumstance" the conjuncture; to corpuscular Being, the
undulatory One-in-One; to the Cantorian multiple, the particulate multiple; to the stellar brilliance of philosophy, a quantulll
of the flash of the Logos; to mathematical formalism, a generic
and materiel formalism with no residual bond to real arithmetic; to the mathematical Idea that one would contemplate
Taking the side of the "Modem" in philosophy
29
to save oneself: the humans who alone will save themselves; to
topological torsion, the "quarter turn" and the vector; to Plato
(a gnostic who betrayed the gnosis of which he was capable,
in favor of Pythagoras and transcendent philosophy, as Badiou
does in favor of Cantor), 1 oppose the figure of the philosopher as demi-god, inexperienced and precipitate. It remains to
discover who to oppose to the world, to the rather botched work
of a God who is mischievous and (himself also) inexperienced.
A master of planification
If NP is an ongoing process, in the form of a series of oceanic
swells, OV is, if not a system, at least a long-planned and
organized state of thought. Badiou is a great planifier-this is
his way of legislating. His ambition begins with literature, with,
in the background, the school of mathematics. One of those
he admires, Sartre, turned toward the human sciences and
psychology, whereas he engages in the hardest and the most
technical sciences, drawing secondary benefits from them (a
certain distance, a seriousness, an authority, an elitist obsession
with rarity) which he does not hesitate to demonstrate. On
this basis, he deploys the spectrum of talents that make for
the type of master-thinker that French intellectuals fantasize
about. And this time it is indeed a matter of an authentic master
and thinker-and, at last, a French one. Just as he managed
his interests and talents as a writer, a dramatist, a militant, a
mathematician and finally a judge dispensing honors or "truths;'
30
Anti-Badiou
with a certain paternalism, in the form of various proper names,
so he has been able to draw out the best part of academic, media
and above aIl publishing institutions, placing himself at certain
of their central points, at the crossroads that would assure him
security and sovereignty. In a sense, Badiou's entire thought
seems tailor-made to dress the statue and validate the stature of
sufficient philosophy, not to dedicate itself to any object (such
is the poverty of his conception of philosophy). His purism of
Ideas, of the subject and of stellar events, his judgments of rarity
seemingly difficult to square with a communist doxa to which he
prefers the communist Idea ... Erecting a lofty image (somewhat
narcissistic and specular) ofhimself, does he not dream ofbeing
to Plato what Lacan was to Freud? His theoretical planification
is just as impressive. But in any case, we would not have evoked
his personality in this somewhat acerbic manner did it not
find its perfect continuation, with the greatest coherence, in
his theoretical oeuvre, which is a mirror for it. It is this oeuvre
alone that really interests us, and despite ourselves, we cannot
begrudge him our admiration for it. But this only makes aIl
the more total the contrast of contexts with NP, aIl the more
crushing the comparison with the solitude of the latter, its
hesitations, the institutional and editorial censure it has suffered
since its birth and still suffers today. In contrast to Badiou, NP .
is but a sum of margins (religious, economic, social, geographic,
institutional). Even if it succeeds in changing the object of
experience according to the theoretical conjuncture, its style is
less that of the planification of strata of knowledge and power,
between the figures of Hegel and Deleuze's thousand plateaus,
Tciking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
31
than the radicalization of the desperate situation of man in the
world-a globally "religious" inspiration, if you insist, between
mysticism, gnosis and Christianity. How could we not put
ourselves on the line, against Greek purification and "grèat
philosophy;' through recourse (once more, it will be said) to a
certain Christianity? In any case, as we elaborate in The Future
Christ: A Lesson in Heresy, l ours will not be the Christianity of
that other great purifier, Saint Paul.
By virtue of this abstraction and planification, which
condition one another, philosophy believes itself able to resolve
certain ethical difficulties. On the one hand, the abstraction
of too narrow a conception of the generic that makes it hold
in too high an esteem the solitude of a "set" of individuals,
Strangers; or again, the Idea of the Immigrant, parallel to the
Idea of Communism, rather th an that of humans as they exist
in-generic-body or -stance. The question of what is concretely
generic is one of the fundamental points of the OV/NP
conflict: is it the old philosophical individual in the position of
transcendent subject as "humanity function;' or instead individuality as existence in-generic-body or -stance? On the other
hand, OV's planification renders sublime the most problematic
philosophical acts if they took place in the sphere of doxa, and
permits philosophy to save itself from more "base" attacks.
Nor does Badiou escape the benefits that planification and its
"absolute" radicality procure-the benefits of a good conscience.
But why would a Greek purification in philosophy be more
acceptable than such a purification in the sphere of the City or
in history? We do not believe in this way of sheltering its dignity,
32
Anti-Badiou
distinguishing so easily between planes of heterogeneous ethical
behavior, where what is deplorable in one is not, is less so, or
is even necessary, in another. Religions, Platonism in part, and
even Marxism, with its partitioning of "instances:' have long
practiced this dubious principle of hierarchieal tolerance-a
Jesuitism of the ory (for example, Catholicism and its essentialist hierarchy of "material" ethical essences). NP replaces
these hierarchies with a defense, in every case, of humans,
and not of philosophy-of hum ans taken "in-body" in their
generic materiality and not "in -function" in their mathematieal
abstraction. Complementarily, it associates with this principle
of the universal defense of humans qua generic subjects, a
principle of minimizing the inevitable harm done to philosophy
and to the modes of thought that are subordinate to it.
The empty-surface modern manifesto
The mathematieal etiquette that authorizes our entry into the
aristocratie society of scientists was at first geometrical (Plato).
It is now, as aIl philosophers will tell you, principally topologieal.
Badiou reprises the ideal of philosophieal planification, hoping
thereby to break with the efiects of circularity. But he combines
it with another ideal, that of torsion, which reunites or efiects a
passage from one plane of knowledge to another. What wisdom
from this Platonizing philosopher who spends his time organizing, segmenting and ordering the past-that is to say, what
we already know! Always this terrible memory of philosophy,
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
33
this culture of the tradition that covets knowledge produced by
others.1t is rape and plunder, surplus-value and profit. Like Plato,
but with less poetry and ambiguity, more unflinching than him,
Badiou is a man of planes or levels of reality, differences and gaps,
autonomous strata or "layers" one might say more abstractly or
topologically, places and emplacements, just as Deleuze is a
man of surfaces. Certainly, the planifier limits himself to three
planes as opposed to the schizoanalyst's thousand, but this
difference matters little, at most making for squabbles between
disciples. It is a "modern" ideal, that of the surface in painting,
of topology and the empty set, of the stratification of instances,
of the trenchant nakedness of the manifesto as militant weapon.
There is the Cartesian planification of "meditations" (to which
Badiou sometimes has recourse), the Leibnizian planification
of "mirrors;' the multiplication of surfaces in Deleuze-it is a
philosophical and hierarchieal image of reality that agrees with
the corpuscular spirit of every philosophy that cleaves to the
"macroscopic" spirit. The ideal of ontological planification, such
as Heidegger perceives it in the Moderns up to Nietzsche and
his will to power, undergoes an inflection with the Hegelian and
Marxist heritage of "instances" and "spheres:' This modern ideal
inscribes thought upon immobile ground, gives it a foundation,
an architecture and a proof of its power. Ultimately, even in
Nietzsche and Deleuze, it is a matter of thinking in "corpuscles;'
and of confusing the microscopies proper to philosophy (microphilosophy) with the authentic quantum-theoretical inspiration
and its undulatory aspect (which is oceanic rather th an architectural). Badiou knows only the modern etiquette of mathematics,
34
Anti-Badiou
that is to say the void and the surface. In the same manner as the
artistic "Supports/Surfaces" movement, we can imagine a philosophical "Void/Surface" movement. Needless to say, the affect
of av and that of NP are very much opposed: in one we have
the desert and aridity, in the other, an overdetermined baroque
of styles, interfering fluxes, and the swarming of conceptual
particles.
Planifying and counting, Plato and Mao
We aIl know Badiou's mania for counting events of every
order on the fingers of a single hand. He who celebrates
the Cantorian multiple of multiples, begins modestly (often
for others) with rarity and with a smaIl number of philosophers, of revolutionary historical sequences, of poetic truths,
of generic procedures. The two manifestos (and we await
more, at the convenience of the philosophical conjuncture), the
three degrees or stages of his construction, the two founders
of Christianity, Jesus and Paul. But of course! Aside from the
Platonic planification, this is the other secret of Badiouism:
the Taoist enumeration, the three joys, the seven perfumes, the
ten immortals, etc.-everything that could occupy a place (if a
little forced) in Plato's transcendental arithmetic. The Badiouic
universe is deployed verticaIly, through a staged superposition
of scales, as in Chinese paintings: first, the good materialist
of the mathematical earth, then men rebaptized as "subjects;'
and finaIly the skies of philosophy, the celestial hierarchy. This
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
35
staging is what remains of the Marxist topography of instances,
taken to pieces, and the Platonic edifice of philosophy, in whieh
he rediscovers a sense for the hierarchieal construction of
regions of objects-the aH, surveyed from afar, but nostalgieally,
by a Chinese encyclopedist.
Why only four truth procedures?-a frequent objection.
To whieh we shaH add: is a procedure generie from the start,
or does every discipline have to become so? This extremely
restrictive limitation and this rarity of actuality are indeed
in the anti-democratic, even aristocratie, style. Of course,
throughout, at every level (lower, middling, higher) there are
exceptions, the elect of the Idea. A rarefied atmosphere, the
atmosphere of the ascetic void. Even revolutionary history
is rare; only the blissful multiple is inconsistent and cannot
be enumerated. We find ourselves in a desert that we tramp
through without surveying it, without flowing over it like
Deleuze's desire; an arid country where it is difficult to breathe.
Just as aristocratic communism declares itself against parliamentiarism-pétainism-truly a very narrow adversary given
what is at stake, a disproportionate dualism between Maoism
and pétainism. 1his is what explains the Nietzschean style of
greatness, of great politics, of the great Heideggerian thinker,
an epoch of greatness that philosophers fantasize about, and
which here cornes back onto the scene.
To pass from one stage of the edifice to the other, one needs
an ascensional "line;' whieh Plato formalized geometricaHy. As
for Badiou, he develops a "meta-ontological" escalator-the
famous "torsion" that permits an elevation that is smooth,
36
Anti-Badiou
but is also a leap. Which opposes him aIl the more to NP,
with its baroque-style collision of philosophical and scientific
instances, aIl thrown into a collider or a matrix as practices
of a non-standard philosophy. Straight-up vertical, and thus
"celestial;' planification constitutes the major, properly philosophical activity of Badiou, the greatest planifier since Plato.
The latter brought order to and between knowledges, arranging
in strata and in "lineages" aIl anterior, pre-philosophical,
religious, mathematical, physical, sociological knowledge.
Badiou also limits philosophical action to the arrangement
(one upon another, beside yet others) of the knowledges of
his time, according to a topological hierarchy. Plato revisited
via Dao and Mao rather th an Aristotle, a combination at once
conservative and mandarin in spirit. 'The Great Helmsman of
philosophy leads an empty yoke ("chariot") that allows him to
cross the famous "pass" so as to avoid "philosophical disasters:'
Needless to say, NP refuses the notion that philosophy should
be a relatively formaI, empty and sterile activity of the
encyclopedic ordering and mastering of knowledges acquired
from elsewhere outside of philosophy. If av borrows its
planification not from Marxism but from essentially statist
cornmunism, with its re-education and its necessary organizational violence, NP borrows its idea from the Marxist practice
of the transformation of the situation of humans in the world.
This alone suffices to explain many incompatibilities. Not to
mention the differences in theoretical technology (which we
shaH detail below) in a corpus that is extremely limited but
sufficient.
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
37
"Declaring" atheism: A precipitate usage
of Platonism
In Badiou, Platonism, whieh already had a certain vocation
to the ordering of reality, has clearly become planification. It
has thus become what it was: authoritarian, a Platonism of the
axiomatie "declaration" made on the basis of historical and
cultural facts; facts whieh are then, moreover, deemed to be
"fables;' and put in parenthesis. The materialist decision, with
no foundation other than that of declaring the Christ -event a
fable-does this, for example, suffice for we-the-humans? Are
we to satisfy ourselves with a "declaration;' and a universal
politieal program made for the new global intellectual, of
the Saint Paul type-or are we faithful-in-the-Iast-instance
to the kerygma or to the oraxioms that this supposed fable
contains? Unless the christie "fable" is a kind of modelization,
this amounts to once more returning religion to the realm of
illusion, rather than treating it experimentally and for a new
thought. One of the consequences of the primacy of philosophy
over aIl knowledge is the elimination of the "presence" of other
non-subtractive "philosophies;' and, in general, of religiosity,
however necessary it is to philosophie al transcendence. A
dramatic and theoretically simplistic decision that refuses to
treat the religious, at minimum, as material or symptom; a
decidedly devastating philosophy. To vanquish the religious,
one must take it a little more seriously than a fable, or risk
a truly vulgar atheism. Rather than the traditional unitary
division between religion and/or philosophy, between fable
38
Anti-Badiou
and truth, there is a unilateral duality that inverts the terms of
the division, and that must be rethought afresh.
Is not the theory of truth as "event)) too voluntarist, lacking
any real foundation? How does a mere "declaration)) (even that
of a "confession of faith))) suffice, without a less formal-that
is to say an a priori and material-axiom (an oraxiom)? We
need the a priori of faith as the human power that receives
and gives the fable, and thus the access to religion as symptom
and then as mode!, if we are to succeed in destroying the
beliefs that encompass faith. Faith-that is to say, fidelityis doubtless confessed through declarations, but cannot be
resolved entirely into them (an ideology of the priest); nor does
it come "afterwards)) (a theory of rnastery). Always the aftermath
of the declaration, of nomination, of decision-is not this the
philosophy of the Master, the effect or the causality of decision?
The problem is that of knowledge, or indeed the fable, and how
they could serve as a support, or a springboard; but here they
are too brutally suspended or invalidated, when they could
have served as material and as symptom to transform with a
less absolute but no less radical organon. Religion-fiction, this
is what we can best do, in parallel reducing the religion of the
Church to being its modelization.
Moreover, in the present context, the subject seems less
an organon than a passive subject, so that the only master is
Badiou himself, who has precipitately suspended knowledge and
proclaimed his truth. In any case, he is a militant and contemplative, rather than a practica!, materialist. Is truth a hole or a void
(which so recalls the philosophical circle), or a process? The hole
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
39
is the contemplative object par excellence, that into which we faH,
but then the Idea that it reflects raises us up through subtractionalways the philosophical balance. The process is not that of the
subject, but that of the material and the subject together-it is a
practical and materiallabor, not just a labor that is subjective and
transformative of the subject. There is a worldly or philosophical
materiality of the subject, and it is this that is transformed, not
only the subject's declarations and perseverance.
The elevator of the idea as intellectual
descender
Complaining about the situation of philosophy, as aH the most
creative philosophers do, ends up engendering its own lassitude.
It is we ourselves who have ceded too much to an anti-media
obsession, one that should have brought into effect a science of
philosophy, rather than, as in Badiou, a philosophical reaction
that ends up profiting the media. We must take a more nuanced
approach if do not wish to share the same mediocrity that we
accuse the situation of In a sense, it may be that philosophy
only gets what it deserves and what it is capable of From the
point of view of production, our time, like any other, do es not
lack talents-even, to count on one hand à la Badiou, two or
three philosophical geniuses. From the point of view of the
distribution of philosophy to the greatest number and of its
consumption, on the other hand, the situation is more complex.
One can justifiably complain of the use made of philosophy in
40
Al1ti-Badiou
the mediatico-democratic regime. Antique philosophy and its
wisdom, for example, is become the new opium of the people. Is
not this a form of detestation of the people, an anti-theoretical
regression taking itself for the mission of the inteIlectual? So
mu ch so that the intellectual demi-monde, which always used to
include a certain number of philosophers on the margins of the
ideological cyclone, has itself dissolved bit by bit into this cyclone.
From now on it will be professional philosophers alone who, for
reasons of academic normalization and media audience, form
this demi-monde. At its highest extremity, it touches the "world"
or philosophy, determined currently by thinkers like Badiou or
Marion. At its other extremity, it touches the third -world that is
henceforth that of intellectuals, the media fourth-world, even.
And both put their admittedly real talents at the service of public
and private money. ShaIl we also "planify;' then-establishing a
hierarchy of orders of philosophical greatness? A planification,
let us say, that parodies Plato's and Badiou's, but that brings to
light the fact that the motor that drives planification hooks up
the philosophical elevator of the Idea to the intellectual descender
of the media. Just so we understand: to rise and to faIl is almost
the same thing for aIl philosophers ... Thus, they also live in the
undulatory, but most of them try not to think about it.
Philosophy cut in two or delayed
Philosophy "under condition" -not the conditions of possibility
for philosophy, but more exactly the condition of its exercise
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
41
and its validity. For it is presupposed that there is philosophy,
that its nature is known once and for aIl, but that its functioning
is not totaIly free or spontaneous; that it is either badly normed
or badly organized, and that, consequently, it must be limited
by or filled with truths that it itself do es not pro duce. Is this
enough to avoid a positivism in the usage of science? Must we
not posit aIl the same, at least in a Platonic form, the question
of the right of and perhaps the right ta philosophy, as Derrida
does? Otherwise, the risk (among others) is that we see return
the duality of ontological substance, and an empty formalism
proper to philosophical ends. Philosophy no longer acts, it
forfeits aIl action in the world apart from the guardianship of
active or militant instances; it is a flag that we wave in the void.
Badiou the writer, mathematician and militant recalls-at the
last mOlTlent-that philosophy exists, and that it may weIl be
necessary to assure him his position as ideal exception and as
master of master-thinkers. To make it retreat as far as possible
before the generic truths, and then before the transcendent al
of the world, to the point of a rupture where every necessity
is ready to abandon it - here is an ethic of the guardian of
the lighthouse or the watchtower. The whole "Aristotelian"
substance of philosophy drains away, it is emptied, and aIl
that remains is an envelope, a holey, despoiled sack used as a
makeshift banner. Badiou brings philosophy to its last breath,
threatening it with complete extinction, only to save it at the
last moment by virtue of his proclamation. He creates a new
formalism proper to philosophy, being the companion of a
materialism that cannot totaIly break with it. Since philosophy
Anti-Badiou
42
is a question of pulsation, of periodic oscillation, it periodically tends towards zero-substance after periods of repletion,
as if it had to digest its excesses of eating and drinking. There
was the Socratic void, and now there is the Badiouic void.
What is defined here as materialism does not go aIl the way to
materiality, but limits it with a residual idealism: it is precisely a
"dialectical" materialism.
Another distribution is possible between non -positional
materiality and
non-dialectical
(or
in ste ad,
"algebraic")
formalism. To extend materiality to an of philosophy, one must
consider that its putting under condition is underdetermining,
or touches precisely on its intimate materiality, but does not
condemn it to a formaI void. And since it is a matter of avoiding
a positive determination, NP limits determination to an underdetermination through the generic Last Instance.
Materialism is a philosophy at once anticipated qua materialism and delayed qua idealism. It is typical of av (we will
attend to the specular problems of doubling and scission that
ensue) to delay explicit philosophy for as long as possible (in a
manner other than that of de construction, through the void),
aIl the while anticipating it, in dissimulated manner, as a basis
or fundamental thesis. At first one admires its radicality, but
it must be recognized that, by definition, founding itself only
on the "transcending" that it isolates-on mathematics as
pure decision-it presents itself (at least) as the most absolute,
the most apparently consequential ontology in the history of
philosophy. Its ambition is to escape from the hesitations of
philosophy through the ontology of science (mathematical
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
43
and then logical) alone. But (this is our whole thesis) this
radicality is a dissimulated usage of the virtues of philosophy,
from which Badiou deduces a trait that he ends up honoring
in extremis and at the lowest possible cost. The ruse of materi-
alist reason lies in this anticipated decision, whose idealist
aspect is ferociously deferred, and which conceals itself in the
attempt to excise ontology from philosophy and to make of the
former an absolute knowledge. It fails to provide the scientific
determination of philosophy that NP seeks, for its part, for
aH domains of the latter. av reserves this determination for
ontology alone-a half-solution that does justice neither to
science nor to philosophy. However, we do not wish to say that
the enterprise is lost-on the contrary, it is wholly successflll
qua philosophical. It is one more philosophy... and thus one
more conservation. From our point of view, it remains within
the molar usage of mathematical, logical and philosophical
thought, with aH the traditional finalities that each implies and
that each prides itself on, seeking to irnpose it upon the others.
But it does not succeed in making use of the means, beginning
with suspending their own finalities. As always, the philosopher
would be Nietzschean, would practice aH genres as ideal knowledges (writer, artist, priest, mathematician, etc.), rather th an
dedicating himself to one that he would invent. He brushes
up against them philosophicaHy, rather than treating them as
mere models with which to finally invent something else. And
then he resorts to a torsion that he charges with resolving aIl
problems. Doubtless one has need of a sort of universal means.
NP also has its "fundamental" means or productive force-it is
Anti-Badiou
44
quantum superposition in its generic usage. But precisely, here is
the means to finally exit from philosophy as self-encompassing
(PSP), by trying to create a new genre. The most complex
duality is not that between mathematics and philosophy, nor
even that (already less specular) between quantum thought and
philosophy. Even the latter must be oriented toward that of the
generic and the philosophical, which succeeds in bringing these
dualities to the state of a "unilateral complementarity" -none
other th an NP.
Thus, a suspension and reappraisal of the old narcissistic
disciplines, necessitating the invention of an apparatus ofgeneric
thought-that is to say, a thought that is non-scientific and
non-philosophical, in the sense that it makes use of science and
philosophy only as means-quantum means without quantum
finality, philosophical means without philosophical finality. Let
us understand that a philosophy split in two by the immixture
of mathematics, but by the same token merely delayed in its
return to glory, is not our affair. A means-without-end is not
a delayed finality, but, to be exact, one reconstructed with the
means as mere model. It is true that, since Kant, the probleIn
of philosophers has been to delay the coming of philosophy,
which they thus suppose to be already present; to work at
differing or distending it from itself: from its unity with itself.
Deconstructions are certainly no exception to this treatment,
but neither is Badiou, any more than one should prematurely
oppose him to these practices, when in fact he consummates
the separation of science from philosophy, purifying the latter
from aIl mixture. Certainly, as weIl as differences in context
Taking the side of the "Modem" in philosophy
45
(mathematical versus language), in technique (planification
versus dissemination, purification against contamination), and
in politics (the Stranger excluded by the State versus the diasporic
Stranger), he adds a materialist and atheist, rather than Judaic,
deconstruction. These differences suffice for philosophers with
a propensity toward becoming-intellectual, but scarcely more
th an that. NP is a practice of philosophy, not a philosophical
taking of sides and thus inside philosophy.
What remains of philosophy?
Amputated from ontology, itself identified with mathematics,
what remains of philosophy, if not that vague and academic
definition of a thinking that maintains with the events of its
times "a relation of thought such that this relation is universalizable"? This minimal and trivial program belongs effectively to
every philosophy, and suggests an impoverished and reduced
reflexivity, somehow deprived of the principal object that it has
always been recognized for: Being, and thus also beings, either
Presence or the supposed correlation of ontological Difference.
This decision, which truncates the body of philosophy, has no
meaning, however, except under three conditions that limit its
signification:
1 That ontology should be safeguarded, albeit outside of
philosophy and by virtue of science. A few words on
what fulfills or realizes this ontology: Badiou reprises
Platonism only to modify or modulate it with two or
Anti-Badiou
46
three other traditions. These indude: (a) the Cantorian
auto-reflection of mathematics, which he substitutes
for "reflection;' for "consciousness" and for "difference;'
and which is the type of thinking proper to a scientific
knowledge which he daims satisfies ontology (if
not philosophy itself, which will think with its own
categorial reflexivity), and which must suffice for the
logos of mathematical Being. Traditional philosophical
self-reflection is thus amputated and relayed by this
quasi-thing-oriented [quasi-chosal] knowledge. In
NP, the distribution is made otherwise: no longer
the foredosure of self-reflection by mathematical
knowledge, with, beyond it, a return to reflection, but
the vision-in-One or force-(of)-thought as non-reflective
superposition-(of)-self, with reflection serving only as
material; (b) The residue of the (not Marxist but Maoist)
primacy of the dialectic over materialism. Set the ory
constitutes an ontologico-scientific quasi-genesis; it
supposes a fund-of-multiple for the theory of the event
and the undecidable. The primacy (hierarchical, or
through domination) of the dialectic over materialism
is given here as primacy of transcendence over
immanence. In NP, this type of problem would le ad
instead to the "primacy" -to the prior-to-priority
without-hierarchy-of materialism over the dialectic,
that is to say of the real-One-of-the-last-instance
over thought as superposed identity of science and
philosophy.
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
47
2 That ontology, better still, should be at once
independent of philosophy and yet also simply detached
from philosophy by a Cantorian eut, as the subtracted
or separated part of the old pre-modern image of
philosophy ("presence"). This scientific eut into the
Aristotelian body of philosophy takes the form of a
Cantorian rather than a Galilean revolution. But the
philosophical, from our point of view, is always barred
or affected by the scientific-except, to be exact, for a
subject who would be a pure "practical" mathematician.
Thus, it maintains a fundamentally ambiguous status,
being outside-philosophy only because it continues
to be immediately retained by the latter. In general,
Badiou refuses to theorize this type of conditioning
or passage, whereas for NP it is obligatory to examine
it, under the name of "unilateral complementaritY:' in
which one must include subtraction and its supposed
independence. Moreover, the refusaI to take into
account (even in the smallest way) acts and not only
states, is doubtless a relic of the severing of thought
from aIl language. Under the name of "ontology:' the
immediate identity of mathematics and philosophy is
equivalent to a no less immediate detachment of the
ontological itself; and here the problem becomes still
more crucial. Philosophy, already deprived of this and
that being (regional ontologies), now sees fundamental
ontology subtracted from it as well-a subtraction,
however, that continues to suppose the omnivalidity and
Anti-Badiou
48
presence of the philosophical, by way of a topological
torsion. We do not think that philosophy can escape
abstraction by advocating the difference between
topological distinctions and predicative distinctions.
Like aIl recent "contemporary" thinkers, but in the
modern mode of the unique scientific eut (from this
point of view, he represents a classical regression in
relation to Marx, who overdetermined the eut) and no
longer in the postmodern mode of the multiple eut
(Foucault), Badiou pursues the deadening and ascetic
work of subtraction, the ascetic Ideal of transcendence
which sub-tracts itself and sur-treats or sur-tracts itself
in its doublets.
3 That the philosophical itself: better still, should return
from the beyond of the Cantorian eut, first of an, under
the mask of the theory of the undecidable Event and
of decision. As practice, and in its most comprehensive
invariant, the philos op hic al seems to us to be defined
precisely by the couple or the dyad of the undecidable
and decision. The real ("Being"), itself undecidable,
contains adumbrated, latent, virtual decisions, at the
edge of Being or of the undecidable, which can only be
actualized and realized through the supplement of a
decision. In the implicit state, the decision is detained in
the undecidable, and only a supplementary decision can
extract it from that state of undecidability and reverse
it, tip it over into a second state of the undecidable-or
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
49
inscribe it in this state. Now, this philosophical
invariant undoubtedly finds its context reversed here
(the real is decision and not undecidable, and the
event is undecidable). But it is limited as soon as it is
attributed to the event alone, when in fact it conditions
philosophical ontology, that is to say "ontological
Difference" or "presence;' from within. The immediate
identity of the mathematical and the ontological cannot
but leave the philosophical thinned-out, in "plan(e)
view;' one might say, in the form of the theory of the
Event-as if the philosophical had been, un der the
pretext of modernity, cut in two, split between Being and
Event. We thus understand that objectivism-its affect
of the "in itself" -having been exercised a first time in
regard to Being, is exercised a second time in regard to
the Event, and that the latter must in turn be detached
from the philosophical body.
What else could remain to philosophy, thus deprived of torso
and limbs, other th an the head-reflection with no proper
content, the contemplation of categorial "compossibility"
deprived even of the ideal of totalization or of the encyclopedic?
The reception and inventory of generic truths- this really is
a minimal pro gram. And what reception? If it is passive, and
transforms neither philosophy nor truths, then what is the
point? The true classical work of philosophy will have an
been done previously, before it entered onto the scene and
into its glory; philosophy itself would now remain as a mere
Anti-Badiou
50
rnirror, or an ernpty tornb. Ultimately the "return" is the only
true concrete activity of philosophy (as always, no doubt);
but philosophers generally at least put it to sorne trouble,
making it pay the priee for its return. Subsequently Badiou
will daim to have filled the hiatus between ontology and
philosophy with the transcendental logic of worlds, but in
fact this only deepens and confirms it, by way of exactly the
same procedure.
We now understand why a "philosophy" so impoverished and dismembered (but dismembered otherwise than
was Dionysus) needs to be defended and celebrated by
"manifestos':.. Measured aga in st this slaughterhouse logic, it
is non-philosophy that is the true defender of philosophy. It
is true that Badiou began his first "manifesto" with the puerile
operation of an enumeration on one hand of "current philosophies:' Just to reassure him, we will not eut off his fingers, for
how would he do arithmetic then? lndeed, he has taken one
more step in rnodernity, that is to say in philosophy. But if
modernity is still a matter of philosophy, then he also took
one less step in the philosophy of our conjuncture. A step that
is also not a retreat, a "step back:' Retreating only as far as
Plato, he did not retreat to that whieh preceded Plato's mathematical planification-the physis of the first pre-philosophers,
who were physicists. But this is hardly the problem; when
will we finally, rather than a hundred idle steps in the lobby
of philosophy, take one step on philosophy as upon a new
continent-or a new wave?
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
51
What remains to man as subject?
Let us admit the well-foundedness of mathematical ontology
(we shall elaborate its genealogy in the next chapter). What
consequences can be drawn from this? It seems to us that OV
here meets with the same difficulty as deconstruction: their
inspiration is, despite everything, still religious, for reasons
of hyper-philosophical transcendence, even if Badiou fiercely
denies this. This is nothing serious; what is a serious matter
is the refusaI to recognize it through a sufficient analysis of aIl
philosophy. How could a thinking (of) the absolute Othereither as Idea and Good à la Plato, or as affect of the Absolute à
la Judaism for Derrida-be possible without appeal to an ontotheo-logical Other? Plato and Levinas, the two inspirations,
obviously knew nothing of these modern negations, which
testify to a rather miserable atheism that confuses its personal
beliefs with the objective conditions of philosophy (conditions
which, themselves, do not forgive, and only wait to betray the
thinker). Decidedly, vulgar atheism is a secondary position of
thought, fit only for badly reformed believers and "bad-very-bad"
faith. A divine inspiration is, however, accorded to the atheistyet -Platonist materialist who plays at atheist boasting; just as
Judaic inspiration is accorded to the deconstructor who believes,
sometimes naively, that it is enough for him to "deconstruct"
his philosophical beliefs in order to distance himself from or to
marginalize faith. OV supposes, as one might expect, the dissolution of the One or of man as individual, replacing it with the
subject as determined by the (here ontologico-mathematical)
52
Anti-Badiou
Other that condemns the subject to an evental dispersion or
to a transitory identity. One may weIl ask, moreover, whether
OV remains in the neighborhood of Levinas-whether this
Other-(of the)-void is not wholly intelligible here (can there
perhaps be no Jewish mathematician in the way in which there
can be a Jewish philosopher?) The mathematical decision, the
void itself-are they not, then, causa sui and auto-nominated?
But here again, how can the pure transcending affect itself, and
what would there be to affect? On the one han d, man is definitively lacking, or is but a mode of the void, which is possible
onlyon condition of re-introducing him surreptitiously by way
of philosophy-by way of the philosopher-mathematician, who
risks (effacing himself in this very gesture, as we have said) the
mathèmatical decision. And consequently it would be better,
it seems to us, rather than this unrecognized division of man
into a (rare) subject and an shamefaced hybrid philosophermathematician, to extract the essence of man from his avatars
and from these games of transcendence, identifying it with the
radical generic (not absolute) immanence that alone can "found"
transcendence. The philosopher-mathematician or militant
must come to pass in the place where man is, rather than the
other way around. On the other hand, it is difficult to see how
the ontologico-mathematical void can affect Presence (even if
only to exclude it) if not precisely by supposing this problem lo
be resolved-that is to say, by supposing the void, after aIl, to
be correlated and relative to Presence, which is the solution of
unitary appearance, that of an forms of transcendence.
To these problems is attached another: who subtracts? The
Taking the side of the "Modern" in philosophy
53
philosopher, who returns to us one more time, at once identical
without mediation to the scientist (if not to the auto-effacing
mediation of the decision) and distinct from him. Science is no
longer the support nor the springboard of decision. Decision is
now identified as a sort of flattening {)f itself onto already -constituted scientific knowledge, so that we believe that we discover,
immediately legible and visible in constituted knowledge itself,
ontological rationality or the laws of being. But once more,
according to an antique schema, only a meta-ontologist (the
descendant of the philosopher) can perceive the meaning of
what happens in this ontology blind to itself: in this logos as
mute as calculation. The silent ontology that is mathematics has
need of the most traditional supplement, that of the philosopher
as deus ex machina.
The generic man-subject and the
particulate ego
The true "subject" of NP as generic science, who cannot be
discovered as philosophical, is thus discoverable (but not identifiable properly speaking) as subject transformed into generic man,
rather than as mathematics-dependent "humanity function"
(Badiou). The generic is quantum-theoretically complexified in
relation to a simple "materialist" séparation from philosophy. It
is an undulatory, superposed or interfering lived, which accompanies particles of egological origin. Again, this definition is
too simplified in aU respects. The man-subject ofphilosophy is
54
Anti-Badiou
reversed into the generic subject-man; this is the displacement
into-prior-to-priority of man as generic, implying immanently
the displacement of the transcendent ego, which is no longer
at the heart of the lived but on its margins. It must be admitted
that generic man is not deprived of aIl subjectivity, at least qua
lived. But one is obliged to separate the generic neutralized
lived from the subject proper (subject-existent-Stranger), who
is unilateralized, particulate or unifacialized. The proletariat is a
concept of the subject of history; but in order to be transformed
as bound variable of (quantum) science and of philosophy of
history, he becomes objective-generic (but not, for aIl that,
philosophical). He is humanized but desubjectivized, in the
sense that he loses his principal predicates of consciousness and
reflection. A prior-to-first passivity.
Similarly, psychoanalysis would have had to have introduced quantum algebra rather than the pure mathematics of
the "letter" (Lacan) into the philosophy of the imaginary in
order to have become a generic science. The "subject" of the
psychoanalytic act is divided up transcendently between the
analyst and the "analysand" (a still-idealist lapsus in which
media psychoanalysis remains engulfed, that present participle attesting to the transcendent tendency to the act or the
decision of the subject). The old Cartesian subject has been
transformed with the help of the analyst, who submits it to the
alterity of the signifier, a structuralist equivalent of quantum
theory-the "subject of science" (Lacan) still too close to the
transcendental cogito. Psychologico-mathematical psychoanalysis is overdetermination through alterity, as the science
Taking the side of the ''Modern'' in philosophy
55
of the imaginary of the "analysand" subject; it remains a still
imaginary-objective science.
The notion of generic psychoanalysis as unified the ory of
Judaism and individual psychology is obtained, this tÏIne,
through their superposition; by producing a generic subject that
complexifies the analysand subject with the analyst, who thus
form together a generic subject for psychoanalysis, a unilateral
complementarity. Thus is transformed the concept of auto-
analysis, which came down to refitting spontaneous psychology
or philosophy, the Cartesian cogito included. We ob tain what
should have been the scientific but not formaI concept of
analysis-which is, in fact, generic analysis or dualysis. In transcendent psychoanalysis, alterity was thought as hole or lack in
transcendence, and thus as a doubled hole or a doublet of lack,
distributed between two individuals, the analyst advocating the
immanence of the cure as act. Now, he can "only be authorized
by himself" on condition that he should thus be, in another
sense, the analysand, or that he should be the indiscernible unity
defined by a unique state vector-the unified analyst being the
generic man who cannot be distributed between two individuals
with heterogeneous functions. Analyst and analyzed both
participate in the generic analysis that is distributed according to
the law of unilateral duality. The two heterogeneous functions
must be superposed or added together, their wave function
distributed according to the principle of unilateral complementarity. If the analyst introduces immanence by superposition of
the analytic process rather th an that of the "act;' it is qua priorto-priority-the two parts or the two knowledges representing,
56
Anti-Badiou
in their duality, the imaginary to be transformed. There is no
analysand, nothing but the analyzed-without-analysis who is
the Last Instance or the generic subject-man, a function of
knowledges to be added together. The generic analyst or the
non -analyst is a bound variable, a function of the psychological
imaginary complicated with the function of the variable, let us
say the Judaic variable, put into quantum position.
3
between science and
iloso hy
Philosophy placed under figorous invention
If there is philosophy, alongside many other things, it is its affirmation or daim, left to itself and unbridled, in Badiou's work
in particular, that characterizes today's intellectual conjuncture.
The present conjuncture of NP is not what Badiou says it
is-its excess after its death-by-media; Badiou himself also
thinks within the couplet media philosophy/pure philosophy.
He belongs to the same configuration of an evaluation of
philosophy as superior doxa. He knows only how to oscillate
between its death and its survival, its excess and its rarity, its
plural and its singularity, its de construction and its absolutization-as if it could only exist, and only exist as daimant, in
58
Anti-Badiou
the enclosed compound of its harassing dualities. Precisely, the
rare new propositions that appear, Badiou's included, are still
partly repetitions and defenses of doctrinal positions, reprises
of tradition or "returns:' Just as the discourse of the Church
constitutes a "development of dogma" through which it survives,
so the variations ofphilosophical discourse constitute the development of a tradition upon which it supports itself. But if the
dogma is the "cumulative" treasury, the philosophical tradition
is an academic treasury that is largely sterile, where almost
everything is lost (or is conserved only by the university), or is
destined for reproduction. And it is this basic sterility, which
Badiou would celebrate and glorify, that for us poses a new
problem.
In this context, his excellent formula "putting philosophy
under condition" must be taken up, but in a profoundly modified
form. Its apparent modesty in fact signifies an exacerbation of
philosophy by the very means of its subtraction from knowledge.
From the negative that it becomes through subtraction, to the
presence of this condition that only serves to delay the return of
philosophy, we transform it positively but against all positivism,
placing it under a condition that is determining-in-the-lastinstance. Once Truth is posited, Badiou is interested only in the
modalities of philosophy. And there are either too many or not
enough secondary modalities-but hardly any (or none at aU)
that attain the global status of the philosophizing whose kernel
he admits, in reducing it to the minimum still thinkable. This is
a restoration in relation to Heidegger, and a good many other
thinkers who were interested in its mechanism (for it does have
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
59
a mechanism). There is nothing here that could really change
the course or the practice of thought. To liberal and general
reaction responds this purified communist reaction. Difficult
to find, once this similarity is unmasked, any more interest or
possibility of invention in one th an in the other.
In a direct address to planification and the foundational spirit,
Badiou suggests that Deleuze retreated before an objection to
which he did not respond-namely, that set theory is more
powerful and more fundamental th an the logic of inclusive
disjunction. Maybe he is right, but from our point of view, this
type of objection condemns him to confess his philosophical
desire for foundation or, at the limit, for auto-foundation. It
truly takes a philosopher to seek supposedly the most powerful
mathematics, the most foundational, as if traditional philosophy
had lost its true aim. Whereas Deleuze was just an engineer, a
philosopher of bricolage, and one who brought it to an unequalled
point-unfortunately also bequeathing to certain ofhis disciples
the ide al of a pop-philosophy that is indeed one of the low water
marks of philosophical activity. Philosophies are often collections ofbric-a-brac, encumbered with a little of everything, but
it took the genius of Deleuze to render his own acceptable, even
desirable. Badiou, on the contrary, makes us breath the keen
and Cartesian air of scarcely inhabited heights. He immediately
proceeds with his "decluttering;' separating himself from aIl
cumbrous and useless things. His topological planification de aIs
with the old conceptual furniture even worse than did the "plane
of immanence" (Deleuze). But here again it is the effect of a
"modern" cut, this time artificial, that rejects philosophical work
60
Anti-Badiou
on and with authors, in texts curiously dubbed "meditations:'
The Cartesian spiritual unity of demonstration and meditation
is broken up by a planification, an enumeration of planes.
But even if they are artisanal montages, bricolages even,
philosophies an possess a transcendental core, in various forms.
The he art of philosophy lies in the transcendental, which in
reality is a double doublet (empirico-transcendental, transcendental-real). This ternary, almost quadripartite division is the
pivot of the non -philosophical critique of sufficiency. To separate
the two doublets is without doubt to conserve the lesser, in the
form of a materialist transcendental; but it is also to absolutize
the second and to deprive it of a transcendental, to make it
into an inert superstructure. It is a great temptation to refer the
transcendental to the logical, or else to history, and to reserve
for philosophy the rational, architectonic higher-Ievel functions.
No doubt Badiou treats admirably each of these levels, clearing
passageways or corridors from one to the other by way of his
topological torsion. But this dismembering of philosophy into
three instances, like so many autonomous planes of realityontological, logico-transcendental, philosophical-belongs to
a "separatism" that is ancient, and which has become largely
unintelligible or unusable for contemporaries who, when they
invent, prefer multiple variables or parameters, their matrixial
and complex combination, either quantum or generic, to the
ancient rigid practice of planification. This separatisrn is for
Badiou the essential activity of the philosopher, who has in some
way lost his substance or his grand possessions, and has become
a refugee in a passably haughty solitude.
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
61
NP risks another ambition, declaring it in füll awareness of the
difficulty of its realization: to place philosophy under the complex
condition of the science that under-determines it generically as
rigorous invention. Here again we require, for the deregulations,
fictions and utopias to which we aspire, necessary principles of
order, scientific models, a new conception of creation and the
displacement of parameters. Under the proliferation of the titles
of non-philosophy, anti-philosophy, post-philosophy, withoutphilosophy, even pop-philosophy, certain negative conditions
of our project have already been fulfilled by others, certain of
its codes identified. It remains to whoever wishes to do so, to
propose new decisions. It is not necessarily a matter of new
"great philosophies" with a hegemonic vision, but at least of texts
that could be called, globally, "non-standard:' By definition, we
do not entirely know what to expect of ourselves.
This essay might be read as a project of the exercise of philofiction on Badiou; it would allow us to verify the operatory
character of NP on what presents itself as a defense of standard
philosophy. We would have to imagine for an instant a quantumtheorist rather than a mathematician Badiou, a contemporary
rather than a modern Badiou, one in the lineage of Bohr and
Heisenberg rather th an Plato. This would be an exercise in
"quantification" understood in the non -logical sense of quantum
practice or dualysis: a quantification that is not quantitative, but
which conserves, as Non-Standard Philosophy demonstrates,
an ultimate link with physics by way of a quantum of generic
action. His thought would be, for us, a body or a part of nature,
a new philosophical object upon which we would carry out
62
Anti-Badiou
an experiment or provoke a reaction. The matrix of NP thus
receives a new version or a new formula that generalizes and
neutralizes this philosophy generically. It would be a matter
of making Badiou's thought pass from the primacy of the
mathematical and the void to the primacy of physics, by taking
account of the philosophical gesture intricated in and with this
primacy. Badiou as philosopher means the subtraction of the
Multiple or of the void of Being, from presence as One. But
our formula would be (using his own language) subtraction of
the One-in-One as radical immanence obtained by quantum
superposition, from presence as Being. Which is not to say the
overdetermination of the Multiple by the count -as-one or by
the metaphysical One (precisely what Badiou disallowed for
his count), but the quantum superposition of the One-in-One
and the Multiple. The major statement of set-theoretical materialism would then be the object of a philo-fiction, supposing a
major transformation of the content of its terms through their
insertion and forcing into a generic matrix of immanence-the
abandonment of transcendent planification. The true reduction
of the One is not achieved via Cantorian mathematical means
with the help of an ontology, but via its fusion or its superposition in-One with the Multiple, which then rejects the
count-as-one in a corpuscular state. The change of context
is radical from the mathematical to the physical context: we
pass from a set -theoretical logos to an algebraic "logos" which
leaves behind a certain dogmatism, and which, always mathematical in a sense, leaves behind, thanks to its generic form,
the authoritarian materialist position, just as mathematics left
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
63
behind its encompassing character. Materiality is substituted
for materialism, the algebraic syntaxes of idempotence and of
the imaginary number for set-theoretical syntax. The whole
operation is a transformation, via generic formalization, of
Badiou's philosophical statement mathematics = ontology. The
old Cantorian multiple would then be irreflexive, a lived wave
without torsional unity; and the count-as-one a particulate
object. For this to take place, the Multiple must no longer be
defined mathematically, in an immediate identity with Being,
but must belong to an algebraically defined ontology. Thus,
the One and the Multiple alike change their mathematical and
above all their "ontological" sense, as they are brought together
under the custody of the One-in-One or immanence. There
must, of course, be new axioms to invent on the basis of the
Badiou-symptom and its material, symptoms which are his
philosophy.
Science: Critical purification or
transformation of philosophy?
There is an apparent similarity, a deceptive proximity, between
truth and transcendental illusion. Kant (K) and Fichte (F)
both denounce it, but nevertheless do so using the means
of philosophy. They seek a science of philosophy, but at the
same time step back into the philos op hic al circle. Badiou also
denounces it, separating in trenchant manner philosophy =
ontology from presence and mathematics = the void, but still
Anti-Badiou
64
has to register the return of philosophy. NP seeks in a science
and its (immanental) "ontology" the dissolution of illusion,
this time philosophical or dialectical illusion in the form of
doublets of immanent al origin-an illusion that is therefore
more than merely "transcendental:' Seen globally, and in a first
approximation, both undertake the same combat against error,
presence and representation, the same delimitation through the
usage of truth or truths. We begin both within truth (which is
the "negative" cause of illusion) and within error (which, then,
is its positive cause), an error that we denounce progressively.
In any case, we must limit the religio-philosophical ch"de, and
for this reason take aid from science. Even the elementary logic
of identity is necessary (F), albeit of limited import. In still
very global terms, this is a struggle undertaken by a "sciencesubject:' But given this global basis, many differences can be
identified.
Badiou believes himself protected frOIn the return of
philosophy in its Aristotelian and Heideggerian configuration
(the principal adversary) by mathematics = the void; the void
reassures with its apparent absoluteness. If ontology is that of the
logic of the principle of identity, the result is more ambiguous;
thus, KIF must extricate themselves dialectically from presence.
The problem is therefore a question of means, and at this point
science enters onto the scene, but a "science-subject" that proves
that science can affect or initiate philosophy because, inversely,
philosophy believes that it masters the science-subject through
its position as subject. Ihe science-subject (in general) is either
the critical-negative factor of transcendental dialectical illusion
ald and new relations between science and philosophy
65
(KIF), or the critical-positive factor of philosophical appearance
(OV and NP).
Do we begin in the mixture of illusion and truth, like Kant,
Fichte and Descartes? No doubt, but what type of mixture?
In av, it is uncertain whether the mixture has any reality or
consistency. For KIF, it is an appearance or an amphiboly of
which the AH (the identification of the phenomenon and the
thing in itself) is the cause and the beneficiary. For NP (as for
aV), the appearance is not without reality, but neither is it
total, and destructible only for theological reasons (KIF), or is
only so via a unilateral identification-for the algebraic identification of subject with science, or rather their superposition,
is at the same time that which has already saved us (virtually,
but not yet actuaHy or effectively) from confusion. We begin
with amphiboly, but it is unilateral: the means of salvation are
apparently the same as those of the 10ss; the kernel of truth is
immediately pre-empted over the aH or torn from philosophy.
We do not fight against the total illusion of philosophy on the
basis of the latter, but under the determining condition of the
science-subject.
NP avails itself from the outset of the kernel of truth encompassed by appearance, paying no mind to the philosophical
objections that inevitably present themselves. The scientific
stance is from the outset constructible axiomaticaHy, at the
very heart of philosophical appearance, contrary to Fichte and
Descartes but like Kant, for whom the logic of truth cornes
before that of transcendental appearance (to think otherwise
would be to suppose that one still takes the philosophie al AU as
66
Anti-Badiou
starting point). The science-subject as kernel of truth permits
one to combat and transform the appearance, in which it is the
negative cause that do es nothing.
The purification of philosophy by mathematics is not its
science but just a struggle against presence, against the negative
aspect of appearance, decided and rejected in one go as error or
"disaster:' rather than vanquished stage by stage (K, F, and NP).
How does Badiou show that void mathematics has an effect on
philosophy? Not only is mathematics the text of ontology, it
is the meta-ontology that takes the place of the subject in the
science-subject. But meta-ontology testifies to the primacy of
philosophy in its work on itself-it takes science in hand and
places it in its service; whereas in NP, it is science that appropriatès the subject that philosophy believes belongs to it alone.
Science is not merely at the service of the critique of philosophy,
but also, and first of aIl, at the service of the science of philosophy.
Either science is at the service of philosophy's critique of
itself-thus Badiou's conservatism, which sees itself as a conservation; or philosophy is at the service of science (the science of
philosophy), and has immanent critical effects. Thus, the denundation of illusion, of the very existence of illusion, is ambiguous:
KIF and Badiou place it at the ultimate service of philosophy,
so that illusion is still perceived through philosophy itself, as if it
were to be its mistress one last time-in this case, we get materialism. They cannot accept that the illusion is total, since they
"are" philosophers; whereas for NP it is the whole of philosophy
that must be denounced, and precisely not as philosophy, but
as positive immanental illusion that could be or could become
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
67
the object of a science-a very different position. In NP, philosophical illusion is denounced and perceived prior-to-priority
(and thus not exclusively) by the science-subject that initiates
the appearance of philosophy and limits it. As in Derridàs
Judaism, there is a positivity here that is not philosophical:
the science that conceals the divine or monotheism, and that
initiates philosophy extra-territorially. NP therefore rediscovers
a certain exteriority of deconstruction, but rediscovers it as the
transformation of philosophy. Badiou is the conservator for an
epoch of intellectual recession that he consequently fights aIl the
more strongly and violently, bracing himself against the fortress
"philosophy:' NP denounces illusion in immanent exteriority or
through the exteriority ofreal immanence, whereas OV continues
to pledge itself to philosophy.
But if the science-subject is "ontology" torn from philosophy,
how can it constitute itself without a meta-ontology? The
new quantum partition passes between micro- and macro-;
a displacement that annuls the power of general logic and
the logic of identity/contradiction. We pass from the traditional couplet logic/philosophy to the couplet transcendence/
immanence, from void atomism to undulatory immanence. The
notion of transcendental illusion has no purchase here; it is an
immanental appearance. Transcendental dialectic and the theme
of presence would now be ill- fitting in any case: presence is
linked to the primacy of transcendence, whence the importance
of the theory of elements as immanence and transcendence to
exit this problematic. Modern science, not reified in a theory,
avoids speaking of representation in general, or of presence,
68
Anti-Badiou
and characterizes the problem or the stakes otherwise-for
example, with the distinction between classical logic (which
is atomist) and quantum logic. It displaces the mechanism of
illusion. The latter is no longer transcendental, but immanental,
a confusion of philosophy with real immanence. Modern science
and ifs contemporary usage force us to think otherwise, rather
than re-confirming one more time our love for eternal, perennial
or stellar philosophy. Badiou's whole labor in the history of
philosophy consists in rediscovering his positions give or take
minor deviations, and it is a most weak transformation of
philosophy. This is just the classical labor of philosophy-to
find oneself in it for better or for worse, rather than considering
it with respect and neutrality as an object to be penetrated, as
aIl scIence do es, and transformed. Strictly speaking, he accomplishes the philosophical side of the work, that is to say the
work of transforming systems by "leftwinging" [gauchissant]
or twisting them in a partisan manner (see his Deleuze); but
he explains nothing scientifically with regard to these systems.
He determines nothing, contenting himself with placing them
under condition (that is to say, under the subtraction or purification of philosophy) without axiomatising, deducing and
experimenting with a new knowledge of them as (for example)
non-epistemological universals. For him, something is always
lacking, something that philosophers have not done, that they
forgot to do or did badly. It is true that his philosophy, rather
distinctively, reserves the possibility of failure in the midst of an
exalted heroism, but from this to speak of "disaster': .. Always the
falling of stars, the falling of the Philosophical Star...
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
69
AlI of these problems stem from the fact that philosophy
imposes itself dogmatically as the inevitable starting point. But
why would a scientific procedure not be a good possible starting
point, on condition that an individual or a collective agree on
it and identify with it or take the scientific stance, that of the
science-subject? As humans, we allaw aurselves ta be subjecti-
vated by science. Certainly, it is miraculaus, like the discavery afa
new principle, but this permits us ta free aurselves fram a certain
philasaphical yake. Ulere are two types of human or two human
"becomings": those that identify themselves with the AIl under
various irnaginary forms, and those that identify themselves
with a scientific procedure and think according to it. Thus, there
are two subjects, the All-subject or the philosopher-religious
type, and the Procedure-subject or the philosopher-scientific
type. Any subject whatsoever can be identified in these two
ways, and is transformed by this insertion. Ulis is to recognize
the specificity of the (at least virtual) scientific stance for and
among humans, not only that of the current philosophical
stance as the ideal image of man. We need not be definitively
and eternally confronted with the objection of the philosophical
and/ or epistemological circle; this problem can be dealt with
through the series of operations permitted by the generic
science-subject. On condition that we recognize in the scientist
a subject implicated by the procedure, and not just an exterior
agent manipulating procedures, there is a virtual or generic
scientific stance. Science is not a rupture in relation to or within
philosophy; there is a duality of stances. Science is indeed radical
autonomy, and has no need of being epistemologically reduced,
70
Anti-Badiou
and yet it necessitates the aid of philosophy if one wishes to
adjoin thought to it-and one always does adjoin thought to it,
for it is at least philosophizable. The only problem is, inversely,
that the AlI then monopolizes the science-subject or the generic
hum an lived that is prior-to-first. Philosophy and the sciencesubject (without being yet the science of philosophy) thus
form an amphibological appearance from philosophy's point of
view: it posits their unity as amphiboly or appearance of unity
of the lived. In a sense, the problem is not very weIl posed, or
can be misunderstood, if one says that the subject cornes from
philosophy or is furnished by the latter, that there is a redistribution of the supposedly total sphere of the lived-as if one
admitted the starting point in the philosophical an, which is
but an immanental unilateral appearance. It is thus, precisely, a
solution that is still too close to that of KIF and that of Badiou.
The dogmatism of anti-philosophy
The originary epistemo-Iogical difterence between sciences and
philosophies is never a simple difference. It is intrinsically
specular, and is wrought of the doubled fabric of transcendence.
Even Deleuze does not arrive at a simple radical, but remains, in
spite of everything, with a full body as Moebian self-doubling.
Badiou begins, like every philosopher, with Parmenides, and
with mathematical entities and ontology. They are no longer
simply "epistemological" since they are voided of their reciprocal
reflection that would reconstitute a superior transcendental
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
71
instance. AIl the same, the identity of ontology and mathematics
is inscribed in a pre-existing materialist position that is the sign
that philosophy is present. NP's solution is different: we also
believe that it is necessary to know what is philosophy and what
is science; but we begin from a generic stance, with its dose of
skepticism, not a dogmatic one. We do not support ourselves on
a dogmatic unilateral eut between two terms, philosophy and
ontology, as if science could break its alliance with philosophy
with one swing of the axe, aIl the while identifying science with
its ontological part, and making this duality appear after the
fact. Instead, our stance is subtended by a prior-to-first duality
or unilateral eomplementarity which reserves an ambiguity of
relations between the second term and the first. This is the
difference between the unitary eut, where unity remains in the
background and returns to science in the constitutive form of
a meta-ontology, and unilateral duality, where philosophy does
not return in constitutive manner.
For the materialist reading of mathematics and its axioms
supposes an a priori eut: Badiou slices into the body ofphilosophy
with a materialist decision, which means that mathematics is
not really autonomous, since then it would have no need in
principle of materialism and ontology. A science given and
posited as absolute paradigm (a philosophical gesture), cutting
itself off from philosophy, obviously lays itself open to being
taken up again by the latter as constitutive of the real-which
is why the quantum physïcs we utilize is not a new philosophieal
paradigm, but a de-finalized means in the service of the transformation ofphilosophy. NP allows the algebraic element its specifie
72
Anti-Badiou
reality, reeognizes its operativity, but recognizes explicitly that
this is possible on condition of thinking science as implying
a certain overthrowing of philosophy as ultimate reference,
and at the same time acquiring a quasi -transcendental but
irreflexive nature or funetion. Bacliou apparently has no need to
posit science as overthrowing of philosophy; he posits science
directly against philosophy, which it divides unilaterally, in
exteriority and not in interiority. Now, this refusaI of philosophy
flattens out the One and the Multiple from the start, by using
a particular positive scientific body of knowledge, making of
it a "foundation:' He is then obliged, if he wishes to surpass
this limited positivity of set theory, to reread (with the help of
meta -ontology) aH of the mathematics he was deprived of by the
materialist cut. He metaphorizes ontologically a particular body
of knowledge, and transforms it directly into essence, according
it the status of an essence, eombining positive particularity and
meta-ontological generality on the basis of this materialist eut.
He proceeds with a displacement onto a terrain other than
the transcendentallinguistic and auto-encompassing transcendental One. A displacement through the attribution of Being
to the cut or of the real to materialist scission rather th an to
the transcendental One. But even in this case, there must be a
displacement here, in the farm of the materialist presupposition
admitted against the style of the presupposition. As soon as
an irreducible presupposition is admitted, one changes terrain
purely and simply in relation to philosophizability-which does
not take long to return, in semi -unconscious manner, since it
was not recognized.
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
73
The formaI theory of philosophy as
preparation for its science
A theory that we shaIl calI the formai theory of philosophy is
nevertheless necessary as preparation of the object for its generic
science. It must pass from the daim or from the phenomenon
to being, being constituted in its corpuscular object-being in view
of its transformation into its particle-being. If we suppose that
philosophy can be a scientific object, equaIly we admit that it is
enveloped in appearances and in lures. It is therefore necessary
to have at our disposaI a criteria of identification for that object,
even for the "greatest" of authors. Doubtless, it has become
a sophistic discourse, aIl-purpose, vulgar, aIl over the media,
most often among babbling inteIlectuals. Badiou brings together
the most extreme daim to philosophical authenticity and its
demonstration through the most brilliant oeuvre, and yet one
hesitates to say that he gives rise to "a philosophy:'
Quantum thinking gives rise internaIly and externaIly to
innumerable philosophical interpretations. There was an affinity
in principle between it and philosophy that was to favor its
transcendental interpretation. Quantum thought has many
midwives, but only one birth, in many phases. Quantum thought
allows itself on first appearances to be interpreted according to
a transcendental schema, three sources being necessary for this:
(1) Most importantly, the quantum of action that corresponds
to the transcendental operator that traces and determines the
limits of the objects of quantum thinking, and makes it possible
as science; (2) The dassical corpuscular physics that corresponds
74
Anti-Badiou
to the empirical do main to be described and normed (predicted),
and which presents itself as symptom; (3) The elevation of the
wave function or the state vector to the function of a priori
legislation of the empirical domain. Quantum thought finds its
theoretical basis with the association, admitted as necessary, of
two paradigms more or less indifferent to each other (wave and
particle) in a new figure, that of indivisible complementarity, if
not quantum correlation, and which is also emitted in "packets:'
It is remarkable that the wave should already be in itself a
transcendental movement, the gesture of a surpassing of itself in
itself, and of auto-delimitation (the transcendental wave creates
an appearance-that of its horizontal displacernent), and that to
better describe (not mathematize) this undulatory intuition, it
should suffice to see emerge the future transcendental interpretations of quantum thought, in parallel with a philosophy of the
wave or the vibration (Nietzsche and Deleuze) which, obviously,
does not manage to do full justice to it.
Strictly speaking, the "quantum of action" plays a quasitranscendental role: it differentiates and unites two phenomena
by fixing the minimal but necessary measure that is exchanged
between them. And from this point of view, it does not legislate
over classical physics, but is the principle that allows the
submission of this empirical domain of the classical to the a
priori or undulatory domain. ln a certain sense, quantum the ory
is the physics of the Newtonian world, itself too imprecise and
general (and partly of the world of relativity, too)-just as NP
would be the science of the transcendental, the science of the
world constituted by philosophy. For in the transcendental
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
75
interpretation, specular doublings and redoublings are inevitable. Whence the task of NP: to explain and to limit through
explanation, to transform the transcendental, to pass into the
sphere of the immanental. We no longer work on things or on
in-itselfs, on metaphysical semanticism, but on already-scientific
representations. They are points of view, perspectives and interpretations, languages also, which turn around unknowns=X and
which are our ordinary; aH that serves to embed and locate that
which we conserve of the mathematical apparatus.
The philosopher living in the milieu of the "foundational"
ideal and absorbed by it can only rid himself of philosophical
foundation ifhe places it and finds it elsewhere-for example, in
the mathematics and set theory to which he attributes this power
offounding, or that he solicits with this hope. But the non-philosopher renounces whoHy aH foundation, renouncing it not only
for philosophy but also for science. He accepts that he works on
a science that is contingent, in the sense that it reduces as far as
possible the foundational pertinence of science. TIle essential
point is that it should be a knowledge that cannot be furnished
by philosophy. Not only must we abandon the foundational
function of philosophy; we must abandon foundation everywhere as an ancient ideal of thought. But this does not mean to
say that we abandon only an ontical foundation, and conserve
the eidetic absolute. However, rather th an auto-presenting itself
as philosophy or as sufficient practice without theoretically
elucidating its essence, NP as science supposes a formaI theory
of philosophy that identifies its invariant and varied transcendental essence. Rather than a formaI mathematics, in NP we
76
Anti-Badiou
have a formaI the ory of philosophy, of its essence independently
of every object or aim or given of the world, but which is not yet
its science as object. 1his is why it is important to verify whether
a theory is or is not philosophical (that is to say, transcendental)
in essence, beneath its philosophical appearance and its external
aims. What is more, this identification is not a description of
appearances, but falls already under the determining condition
of the principles of a generic science. It is important to identify
a philosopher expressly despite his auto-sufficiency, his autonominations or his masks. This is not to force an open door, or
to say the same thing as him, since this preparatory theory of
the object or the phenomenon, its preparation as macroscopic
object, depends upon the science of that object itself The formaI
theory of philosophy as transcendental is necessarily a simple
half-inductive half-deductive theory. It seems precisely to be an
auto-theory of philosophy-unless NP intervenes as negative
condition of this theory, which will then no longer be sufficient,
but will be placed under condition.
Non-philosophy is not a meta-philosophy
NP is not a met a -theory. It is a non -theoreticist theory- which,
obviously, is not the negation of theory. In its early texts, it still
retains aspects of meta-theOl-Y, since those texts remained in
the grip of philosophical authority. But NP precisely reduces
meta -human statements in general. This error often crops up,
because philosophers think that the ory is simply given, and that
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
77
one can then pass to the second degree, Whereas exactly the
inverse is the case: philosophy is a complex object or a doubling,
already a second degree and thus already a meta-philosophy.
Every philosophy is the meta-philosophy of another, or of itself~
because it functions as that which supplies its own rules, to
a greater or lesser extent. It is a matter of a specular doublet,
whether one considers it on the plane of a concept, of a
problematic, or globaIly. NP, on the contrary, is a simplified
state of philosophy, a non-metaphilosophy, an effort at reducing
reduplication. But obviously, attaining the simple takes a lot of
work, and necessitates the deployment of a complex thought.
This poses a general problem of repetition-of its contestation, of the weakening of its philosophical omnipotence or
its sufficiency. It is no longer a matter of philosophy's famons
surpassing of itself, a gesture that farms the explicit motor of
almost aIl nineteenth-century thought and a good deal of what
remains of speculation in twentieth-century thought.
Neither is NP itself a formaI theory of philosophy seeking
to defend the latter without caring for its object-being, or
contenting itself with confirming it and defending it rather than
defending subjects against it. NP has always had a consistent
philosophical object, and has never dreamt of a pure the ory of
philosophy that would make of it that flattest of things, a formaI
truth. What distinguishes us from formaI set-theoreticism is a
physical semi-formalism. Mathematics in OV affixes its status to
other procedures, and this approach results in a formaI devastation: philosophy leaves behind it a scorched earth, as it retreats
after its defeat in the face of the Real rather than in the face of
78
Anti-Badiou
reality. It engenders only more formaI theories without object,
including a philosophy emptied yet a little more of its substance.
That philosophy should lose progressively its non-specific
objects to the sciences is inevitable, and perhaps desirable;
but it does not lose its so-caIled "fundamental" or traditional
objects, the transcendent aIs and the categories, and above aIl
the syntax of its transcendent al gesture. AlI of that endures,
however much it may stale into the worst kind of doxa. It is these
objects that we need a science of. In seeking to eliminate them
from philosophy in favor of an empty category of truth and
even of logic, in seeking to eliminate them from the science of
philosophy, one supposes that mathematics has a direct efFect on
philosophy, as if rnathematics projected itself into philosophy.
A mirror effect, as if philosophy were very nearly the image
of mathematics, or its twin. One can never rnake a science of
philosophy with mathematics alone, even if one empties it of aIl
substance. One ends up with nothing more th an a materialist
formalism of empty axiomatic writing-an exercise in writing,
the novel of set theory. This philosophy is not only a philosophy
"of" the void, it is reaIly at the limit of void as Being without
object or "reality;' and as a result is aIl the more reduced to
an activity of pure proclamation. Badiou's purism replaces the
object of theory with the representation of presentation. But the
object is not necessarily (as he implicitly supposes) that which
gives phenomenological or ecstatic distance; it can be given
immanently, indirectly and semi -ecstaticaIly. This is the whole
interest of the wave function, in which the object is not given in
the ontologico-Aristotelian mode, nor in the Platonic mode of
Old and new relations between science and philosophy
79
the Idea. To take as the basis of existence a theory (set the ory)
or a knowledge that is formaI and without object, is to flatten
existence onto the void. Even art, politics and ethics become
rarefied when they are forced into this Procrustean bed of an
inhuman multiple. It is not "crude" materialism, here less than
ever-it is very sophisticated, intellectually respectable, even.
But it is fIat and bereft of interest-the mirror-image of philosophico-transcendent al idealism, which is also a formaI theory
of auto-exposition. In both cases, the formaI theory interprets
the world, but does not transform it. Thus, even set-theoreticism
faIls prey to Marx's condemnation. The generic can no longer
be philosophical, but must be practical, in the sense of a real
(not contemplative or formaI) transformation of events. This is
the principle of a real, marxisant critique of the contemplative
exaltation of the materialist void. It exalts only its own formaI
intelligence, at the risk of an authoritarian sterility... And of
boredom ...
4
principles
A deduction of the set-theoretical thesis
The foundational thesis mathematics =ontology is not itself scientific, but makes use of science and of philosophy. It was intended
to be scientific, but it remains merely a materialist thesis. This
would only be possible, only rigorous (or undogmatic, in any
case) if it were deduced as a theorem, and thus under conditions
more complex than those of set-theoretical ontology, conditions
that engaged with thought as a quasi-physics of philosophy. As
things stand, it is in fact a decision or an "axiom" -a materialist
the sis wherein materialism tries to think itself, a thesis that
therefore seeks not only to be "ontological" but also daims to
absorb the totality of ontology and to deprive philosophy of itwhence its violent character of slicing and tearing away. A thesis
or an axiom cannot stand alone, or daim to found itself. It must
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Anti-Badiou
be aided, if not mediated, by another, by a philosophy. Certainly,
philosophy do es indeed intervene here, or is requisitioned
under the auspices of its tradition al ontological bedrock; but
the element capable of generating Badiou's major thesis must be
more and otherwise complex than the thesis itself. For what can
the bloc of set-theoreticism (sets + ontology) achieve, of itself?
Either it is an "intricated" unity, philosophically self-intricated,
that daims to found itself and to operate the act of subtractionan act that conceals another, more pure, philosophical-style
auto-foundation, but which do es not know itself as such or is
not announced explicitly; or else it requires a relatively detached
meta-ontological act of being-posited, an explicit intervention
of positing. Badiou as materialist tries to flatten one onto the
other the object posited and the idealist act of positing. The
difference in the two cases is the difference between the implicit
and the explicit, but that makes no difference to the decisionist
or arbitrary structure at work here.
From our point of view, to leave behind this arbitrariness, one
must deduce the thesis or the equation on the basis of a more
"powerful" machine than it (no longer conflating the power
of the philosophical absolute and the power of the non-philosophical radical, which is the power of a certain weakness). This
other machine is necessary to avoid the tautology, the vicious
cirde, that is at work in every philosophy, and must be of the
following type, at once generic and quantum-style-what we
caH the generic matrix: in it, the fusion or unity of the Set and of
Being is not ph ilosophically overdetermined by Being, but underdetermined by the Set; if is thus not at al! determined in the form
Matrices and principles
83
of an (explicit or implicit) auto-foundation. Grasped at a certain
level of generality, the matrix is the same, but is specified into
two versions, the philosophical and the generic. Consequently,
it reorganizes otherwise Badiou's distribution; another partition
is necessary that would not be that of the philosophie al division
(that is, of the meta-ontological subject itself), but that of the
generic sharing-out or distribution of the subject (as we have
seen, between subject as Last Instance and subject-Stranger
operator or clone of the philosophical subject). In other words,
this fusion is underdetermined by the generic Subject, and
occasionally determined by the clone-subject or Stranger. Under
this condition, set-theoretical ontology is a theorem, rather
than a thesis. Set theory and ontology being transformed at the
same time, the Set gives rise to a generic theory that transforms
set the ory profoundly, and the real of Being gives rise to the
immanence of the One through quantum superposition.
Types of the generic: By hybridization,
selection, and matrix
The generic by hybridization is its weakest and most abstract
form: it designates a median generality obtained by a certain
leveling. Badiou's generic marks the distinction, we might say,
between Aristotelian disciplines and Platonizing procedures,
which have an ontological vocation or are intermediaries,
mediations "toward" philosophy. Entirely according to his
transcendent set -theoretical technique, he makes it a factor of
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Anti-Badiou
aristocratie selection and planification. This factor, whieh Plato
puts to work in the sciences, is transposed into the form of the
four generie truths. Whence, in the contemporary epoch of the
interdisciplinarity (indiscipline, even) of knowledge, a strange
scent of nostalgia. FinaIly, against unthought and empirieal
hybridization, non-conceptualized hybridization, against the
aristocratie selection directly opposed to democratie hybridization (both corpuscular in spirit), NP is another concept that
is realized by me ans of the quantum matrix, superposition
and non-commutativity. It is a matrixial and generie (and thus
non-dialectical) conception of knowledges thrown into this
collider to produce new knowledges.
It is urgent that we avail ourselves of the generic stance
as the becoming of aIl knowledges, as "good hybridization:'
NP sets itself in another relation of generic becoming in
relation to a certain, more expanded, range of disciplinesscience, politics, art, erotics no doubt, but also technology,
religion, and philosophy itself. The classical knowledges have
to become generic, but we shaH continue to address them using
their classical names. We caH generic matrix this chamber of
immanent transformation, this collider of knowledges forced
to exit from the orbit of philosophy by themselves, with the
recognized aid of philosophy (explicitly assumed, but reduced
in its turn). Certain disciplines are not necessarily and from the
st art "generic" rather than ontologico-empirical; but are susceptible to producing generic knowledge. This generic knowledge
is not given a priori. How to address, from the point of view of
their universality, love, art, politics, religion or technics, which
Matrices and princip les
85
are not knowledges in the rigorous sense? "Truth procedures"
is Badiou's formulation, a fine formulation indeed. But rather
th an the couplet of the generic, or truths, and the philosophical,
NP uses "stances of truth;' which is less technical, more human
and perhaps broader, and which, above aIl, can a/50 encompass
philosophy, since the problem is that of their aIl arriving at the
generic, a trait that is not given them from the start. Whence a
new partition, a redistribution between philosophy's supposing
of itself in itself (PSP), and the generic becoming that can
encompass even philosophy, as non-philosophy, and perhaps
even mathernatics. They are stances of knowing that are capable
of generic truth, and of distinguishing themselves from the
couplet of positive sciences and spontaneous (transcendental)
philosophy that they cut up according to another type of
division.
The principles of OV and NP
To clarify the problem, we shaH refer to two versions of the
matrix, that of OV and that of NP, exhibiting firstly their
two or three "principles" (variables, ultimately), science and
philosophy, which are both contained in each of the matrices.
More th an ever, we are at the heart of decision.
The matrix used by Badiou rests upon two principles, which
are thus not immediately visible as objects or themes: the
principle of planification and the principle of torsion. Their unity
implies a third principle still less visible and more secondary,
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Anti-Badiou
that of repetition at the limit of presence. The two first principles
are comparable to the two principles of quantum thought that
we use in the new or "non -standard" form of NP: the principle
of superposition and the principle of non-commutativity. The
princip les of OV are predominantly philosophical, but are
effectuated with regard to and in science (set theory). Those
of NP are predominantly scientific, but are effectuated within
philosophy. Judging from immediate appearances, OV seems
more "scientific" than NP because it speaks of scarcely anything
else but science, and NP speaks of scarcely anything else but
philosophy. In the real relation, the inverse is the case: NP is
more fundamentally scientific, because it begins with a certain
primacy (prior-to-priority) of quantum thought over its philosophical object, to which are attributed only "hermeneutic"
functions. OV places science in the service of philosophy; NP
places philosophy in the service of a thinking-science. This
clarifies a certain ambiguity with regard to the two theories.
Planification is the philosophical form corresponding to
quantum superposition. They are two principles of "identity" in
the rough sense of the word-identification not of objects, but
of knowledges or disciplines. Planification is a veritable identification in the sense that it depends on its objects, which are
of a corpuscular type, albeit intellectual corpuscles or particles
belonging to a classical logic of identity. Superposition, on the
other hand, is an identification in an apparent sense, since it
does not apply to corpuscular objects but to those undulatory
phenomena that science and philosophy will necessarily be.
"Quantification" (in the broad sense of the quantum-theoretical
Matrices and principles
87
operation) also obliges one to consider apparently given
phenomena as macroscopic objects, as undulatory phenomenawhich is to say, simultaneously, as particulate phenomena.
Torsion is the topological principle that "corresponds" to the
quantum non -commutativity of the inverse products of two
variables (here, the two disciplines). Moebian torsion is, at best,
the non -commutativity of two directions of the plane. These
directions, treated as variables brought into the matrix, give
rise to equal inverse products, thus contradicting Heisenberg's
Uncertainty Principle. It is thus a simply formaI non-commutativity, which leaves as is the contents of variables (that is,
of disciplines). On the other hand, the algebraic or quantum
non-commutativity of inverse products of variables in the matrix
has a material and not merely a formaI sense. This principle is
more individuating than topological torsion: it defines the
uncertainty that (according to Heisenberg) makes it so that the
two properties under consideration are not attributable to the
same object but to two distinct objects.
We now see the profound opposition between OV and NP,
between a topology of concepts and a physics of concepts. It
remains to render more precisely the fact that each of these
matrices has two principles, accompanied by a dimension of
unilaterality, but which are in OV ultimately reversible and
mechanical, and in NP ultimately or in-the-Iast-instance
irreversible, submitted solely to a complementarity or a duality
that can correctly be called "unilateral:' Take Badiou's key
formula: to put philosophy under the scientific condition; and
take the key formula of non-philosophy: to put philosophy under
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Anti-Badiou
the scientific condition that is determining-in-the-Iast-instance.
The resemblance between the formulae is only apparent. The
first defends philosophy in its essence, limiting only its bad
usage or ils ontological overambition; the second takes aim at
the essence of philosophy, and sees in its overambition and its
travesties only inessential conjunctural phenomena that are
permitted in principle by the structure of the philosophical
act. TIle first believes that the present existence of philosophy
is essential and suffices; the second is not satisfied with this
existence, along with aIl the various benefits that it procures for
its glorifiers.
The backlash of the condition
Finally, a third principle that Badiou considers as secondary
but which we shalliater give its proper status by showing how
OV tries to dissimulate it. The two matrices establish a backlash
or a repetition of the condition, a backlash of philosophy on
science or "inversely" of science on philosophy or on a still more
complex instance (that of their conjugation). This backlash
signifies that philosophy, or indeed quantum theory, always
returns a second time-for this is a theoretical machine, a matrix
with three places: the two variables of science and philosophy
that one supposes canonically conjugable, and a third which
is the return as factor of one or the other of these variables. As
Kierkegaard says of the paradox, for it to be intelligible and
complete, its "condition" must be given. For our part, we say
Matrices and principles
89
that it must either be given as the philosophy that completes av
by closing it, or operated as the quantum the ory that completes
NP (without closing it, this time). Here we find a whole den of
nuances and appearances that will be explicated little by little.
The matrix of av is predominantly philosophical, that of
NP predominantly scientific, but this is still very general. av
posits a meta-ontological relation to science, a bacldash or
return of philosophy as "first instance;' one might say. NP posits
a bacldash or return of science as "prior-to-first" instance, or as
last instance for philosophy. av marches forth one more time
for philosophy, as if it had to protest or "manifest" for philosophy,
which is already every possible manifestation; as if the actuality
of existence had to be repeated, like a weakness that does not
allow itself to be recognized. NP defends science by showing the
transformation that it inflicts upon philosophy, but does not take
up arrns on science's behalf, since science knows its weakness
and must, if not repeat itseŒ at least strike back or be "resumed:'
The condition, which is thus always that of "repetition;' is in the
first case implicit or invisible: it is a prejudice of philosophy to
imagine itself so self-evident that it would never dream of interrogating its deepest mechanism. It has already returned, and
the bacldash is natural and uninterrogated. In the other case,
it is explicit, the bacldash of science being nothing less than
evident, and demanding to be operated.Whence a paradox: av
does not seem to repeat philosophy or dissimulate its repetition,
whereas NP explicitly repeats the scientific condition. Now,
it will be shown that the inapparent revival of philosophy in
av is a true repetition, because its principle is a transcendent
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Anti-Badiou
decision; whereas the apparent repetition of science in NP is
rather what we shaH caH a resumption, because of its principle,
the undulatory superposition of immanence.
The two matrices and their variables
1 The initial kernel of OV; to put it very schematically, is
an "identification" of science and philosophy, but neither
of them in their totality: it is an identification of the
mathematical part of science or the axiomatized -settheoretical part of mathematics, and philosophy-but
a philosophy eut or divided up, reduced to ontology.
We must take seriously the equation that renders
inseparable set the ory and ontology, because this
initial "identification" of disciplinary variables is
fundamental for understanding the matrix of OV and
planification. Marx gave its general formulation: the
fusion of the forces of production and the relations of
production, FP and RP (under RP). There is a fusion
of the Set as FP and of Being as RP. This flattening is
a simple identification and an ontological translation
of set -theoreticism, and here we see at work the
flatness of materialist equalities. On the contrary, the
quantum version of this equation posits its members
as superposable and as non-commutative, but not as
planes. NP substitutes for the mathematical equation
mathematics = ontology their fusion or superposition.
Matrices and principles
2
91
But this equation taken as is, is particularly inert,
and supposes an agent capable of deciphering and
activating it-meta-ontology as compromise between
the materialist set-theoretical position and the necessity
of a philosophical-type intervention. This is possible
given that the doxa "philosophy" has been eut off from
its properly philosophical part, which remains unused,
kept in reserve, but can therefore be employed for more
operatory purposes. The ensuing labor must consist in
decomposing meta -ontology itself: and fin ding within
it with a new strata-Iogic and its quasi-transcendental
character. Therefore, there cannot but be a return or a
repetition of the philosophy that has been suspended,
even if Badiou's strategy consists in repressing it for as
long as possible and emphasizing the maximal force of
mathematics upon the tradition al terrains of philosophy.
The mathematician gives himself the right to enter into
the depths of philosophy's hunting grounds-that is to
say, those of the subject. But nothing has fundamentally
changed in the global matrix-the initial equation is
valid only insofar as it is completed by a functioning that
returns upon it and determines it. However necessary a
part of it remains, philosophy is exsanguinated or purified.
One might ask oneself whether Badiou, in playing this
game, does not lose on both tables: he stifles philosophy,
voiding it of aIl substance-brings it to the edge of its own
void and requires it only (albeit noisily) as a witness or
stance (even probably after Lagies afWarlds). And what
Anti-Badiou
92
is more, he always has need of it, as his matrix implies,
and thus conjugates idealism with materialism. He gives
himself philosophy only to plan( e) it, like a sort of matter
or passive condition, within a formaI horizon that he must
admit at the end ofhis enterprise. Everything seems to be
ultimately determined by mathematics, but this is only
an appearance; in fact, everything is overdetermined by
the generality of Being, or better still by the category of
Truth. He respects the most general matrix, but gives it
an ultimate philosophical sense. Doubtless a purified or
threadbare idealism, gnawed at from within and without
by mathematics and logic, but still absolutely necessary
and formally encompassing the all-a kind of shamefaced
philosophism.
His matrix therefore only functions with what we must in the first
instance and very imperfectly caU an "identity:' a "repetition" and
an "overdetermination:' Supposing (1) an immediate identification
of the two members, whence a forgotten and floating remainder of
ontologico-linguistic concepts linked to the aspect (passed over
in silence) of their "translation'; (2) an aspect from which is
surreptitiously pared off the meta-ontological act; (3) and which
is animated from beyond by philosophy and its transcendence.
Obviously these planes are meticulously cut out, purified of
language, not inserted into their linguistic conditions of existence
(which are absolutely refused); but they are linked mathematicaUy
by the principle of torsion that is the keystone of them aU (in
NP this keystone is unilateral complementarity). Whatever the
Matrices and principles
93
modalities of the solution may be, the category of Truth that makes
for philosophy must have had a certain hold upon mathematics,
or a relation to it. It is not a matter of a Marxian-Althusserian
overdetermination, which remains conceptual and is modelled
on mechanics, but that of a topological and processual means or
des cent, honoring Plato more th an Marx.
Badiou is an idealist-materialist like Marx, but without giving
himself the means to think in the Last Instance. For this requires
another means capable of operating the generic. It requires
quantum theory-physics, not mathematics. Gnly quantum
theory and its principles can think a Last Instance that would be
the superposition of mathematics and philosophy rather than
their identification, and that would be non-commutable with
their product (philosophy of quantum theory versus quantum
theory of philosophy). FinaIly, Badiou reduces the philosophical
to a simple kernel of mathematico-topological properties; and
as to what remains, it becomes a harmless ornamental border
of fictions. Even in this form it is difficult to accept this wager,
the risk being that of suggesting that the whole edifice is itself
a fiction -or a great myth? - which would, after aIl, be an
honorable solution.
The materialist thesis and the generic
chamber; closure and access
The materialist thesis plays the same role in philosophy as the
experimental chamber, the theoretical chamber that we calI
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Anti-Badiou
generic: that of a closed or semi -closed site or framework within
which one handles variables. We must interpret in this way the
"problematic" in Marx and Althusser, and in particular the
definition of the Last Instance as fusion of FP and RP under RP.
Badiou posits as content of the materialist thesis the immediate
identity of the Set and of Being, through a unilaterally oriented
reading. He do es not posit the problem of variables to be multiplied one by the other (philosophy or the concept cannot be
interpreted as a mere set-or at least, this problem is not posed),
but that of their immediate identity with a "final" primacy of
the Set, and a meta-ontological remainder that will be necessary
in its future role as a certain stratum of overdetermination.
Ontology is reduced transparently to set -theoretical structures,
and the thickness of Being vanishes but returns as metaontology or meta-materialism. Unilaterality is simple and goes
from one term to the other: it passes between two terms. Badiou
is unilaterally and mechanically a set -theorist in ontology: he
does not return immediately from the latter to the former, but
keeps meta-ontology in reserve and represses it until the last
possible moment. Abstract mechanical unilaterality and metaontology go hand-in -hand.
In NP and its generic matrix, there is an inversion of the
products of variables, but this takes place always in view of
their non-commutativity. Unilaterality does not pass between
two simple terms, but between four terms (or four occurrences,
with an inversion of products). Meta-ontology would itself be
that which interprets science, for quantum theory is necessarily in its turn a variable to be interpreted (contra Badiou's
Matrices and princip les
95
positivism)-so this is an inverted double reading. But then,
does the reversed unilaterality disappear in favor of infinite
reversibility? No, because unilaterality is reaffirmed, this time
definitively, but in a camplex and no longer mechanical manner,
by quantum theory-and yet this is not scientism or positivism.
This is the whole difference between scientistic, mechanical or
philosophical unilaterality (which are aH the same thing from
our point of view) and the quantum unilaterality that destroys
mechanistic materialism. For the quantum interpretation of
philosophy-of-quantum-theory is itself a last unilateralization
that confirms the prior-to-priority of quantum theory over
philosophy. It is the same ide a as that of the distinction between
simple unilateral machines like Deleuze's and complex unilateral
machines like generic matrices. We must no longer oppose
unilateral machines to molecular machines, for the latter are
also unilateral, but are mechanical or internaI to philosophy.
This is the general problem of molecular and materialist theses
qua theses or philosophical framework-spaces of a macroscopic
nature. The generic point of view makes use of philosophy
without being detained in it, but by definitively unilateralizing it,
completing it without dosing it. It makes use of non-commutativity for variables within the chamber or the thesis, and makes
use of superposition outside the thesis or the chamber. That is
to say, it unilateralizes it and the subjective genericaHy through
its very interpretation. There is thus a great difference between a
thinker of materiality and a materialist thinker.
In relation to these fundamental problems, we will distinguish between the Husserlian clause of the axiomatic dosure of
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Anti-Badiou
scientificity and our own clause of completion without closure;
between the necessity of a scientific chamber that is complete
but not closed and the nomological ideal of Husserl, who speaks
of a theory as an "ideally closed totality" of formallaws unifying
a "domain" of formaI objects. The disjunction between a mathematicism universalizing its do main formally and the physicist
experimentation upon philosophy without formally closing it,
leaving it the function of a "hermeneutic" variable to interpret
quantum theory, is here consummated in the generic conception.
The latter reduces aIl science and perhaps mathematics itself;
in any case, this type of generic chamber, in the neighborhood
of man as generic subject, in view of procuring for this latter an
access to sciences and to philosophy. It may be that the problem
of the (non-psychological) access of humans to science and to
philosophy proves ultimately to be more decisive for the latter
than their sufficient and all-encompassing developrnent. Badiou
gives no quarter in his argumentation, and "forces" set -theoretical
ontology and logic, differing beyond aIl de construction the return
of philosophy, as if he also (but otherwise th an Husserl, as the
inverted materialist image of the latter's mathematical idealism)
was fascinated by mathematicizing auto-formalization.
Repetition and resumption of
prior-to-first passivity
The generic immanental and the materialist transcendental, how
do they resemble each other, sometimes to the point of fooling
Matrices and principles
97
one into confusing them with each other? In fact, science returns
twice in Badiou, once as mathematics and then again as logic.
But in both cases to fulfill the same function, that of a non -transformed object or fixed plane, not that of a theoretical mearts.
These returns constitute a progression in the complexity of the
staged construction (the planification), but not a return of science
as subject, of the science-subject or the Last Instance; they do not
arrive at the subject prior-to-priority; the return is instead that
of the remainder of the philosophical subject as logico-transcendental. The logical transcendental gesture comes to be lodged
in the initial gap left between philosophy and mathematics.
Philosophy is not at first seen according to science, suspended
by it or reduced to the state of a syrnptom; it anticipates itself as
real, something that is possible with mathematics but not with
quantum physics, since the latter marks the end of the primacy
of mathematics at the moment when it is most intensively
employed. This specular chorismos is conducive to doublings. To
admit philosophy as a milieu is to rnake of it an absolute, a priori
position, not a merely material symptom. In which case, it is not
worth defending it, since one has already posited it absolutelyaIl efforts to defend it from th en on are intra-philosophical,
and demonstrate only that one has not understood what is in
question, namely this very positing. On the contrary, we posit
it from the outset as a syrnptom that is non -sufficient (without
double transcendence). The more that philosophy is posited as
actual and pertinent, the more its defense is of a warlike order.
The more it is posited as symptorn and not as in - itself~ the more
its defense is of the order of transformation and invention.
Anti-Badiou
98
Badiou thinks in gaps that are too wide-between the empty
category of Truth and set -theoretical practice, between the Idea
of philosophy and the empirical and conjunctural modalities
of its existence, between the communist Idea and pétainoparliamentarism. This want of schematism or mediation, or of
tools, at least, is conducive to excess and to deviations, to the
impossibility of adjusting thought to reality. He does not retain
Althusser's concern for correctness and adjustment. This is an
effect of the planification that stratifies, cuts and slices excessively the planes of reality. The Platonic chorismos and its effects
can be seen in the struggle between the Aristotelian initiatives of
mediation. Philosophy is doubtless obliged to oscillate between
chorismos and suture. But the question is whether another
solution might not be possible, beyond these two and their
eternal conflict.
Before Logics of Worlds, Badiou recognized the want of
"mediation" in the dualism of Being and Event, of Sky and
Earth (to indulge in a little chinoiserie), and tried to correct
this, but by using exactly the same procedure. To generalize
the problem, it is that of experimentation on two interacting
bodies, mathematics and philosophy-upon which plane, at
what level of generality, does it take place? Let us look again at
the matrices. The philosophical mechanism puts into play two
variables, and a fun ct ion that repeats one of the variables. The
absolute position that is philosophy, admitted from the outset
as pertinent, is in reality a double transcendence, a doublet
(either empirico- or logico-transcendental). But it is interpreted
or decided by Badiou as having to be a materialist position that
Matrices and principles
99
thus knows nothing of its deepest mechanism, the doublet,
but that, by virtue of this doublet, closes itself upon itself. He
therefore installs himself (this is his specifie maneuver) in
the space of the gap philosophy-without-ontology/set-theoryas-ontology; and then, since the gap is still too wide, he later
inserts into it the transcendental schema of logic. Everything
thus takes place in-between mathematics and philosophical
transcendence. On one hand, they are identified in terms of
the inseparability of the empty Set and Being. But on the
other, philosophy, motivated by its residual or remaining part
(ontology and transcendentallogic having been removed) has
not abandoned its absolute position, which has not been put in
question, and thus returns upon the whole set of planes, empty
and breathless. It is an extenuated phantom, an emptied -out and
abstract body that cornes back to remind those who do not have
the ears to hear-science, art, politics and love-of the promise
of ancient nuptials. The doublet is forgotten in this mechanism,
and it is this forgetting that drives it, that prompts philosophy to
widen the gap by making it believe that, in this way, it can close
it. What best to do? Void philosophy of its entire substance, tear
it out by tearing out the best of its objects, so as to keep more
pure the disincarnated philosophical ideal? Or void it of its sufficiency, keeping its proper materiality without further conflating
it with the objects that have been unduly attributed to it?
NP prepares an interaction between quantum theory and
philosophy that must replace the hierarchical, idealist or materialist transcendental device. Quantum theory as superposition
of passivity has the power of "resuming" itself~ if not repeating
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Anti-Badiou
itselt or of determining philosophy as symptom. It determines
it not immediately but in-the-Iast-instance, which saves, despite
its status as symptom, the reality otherwise in itself of the object
"philosophi' This is not an idealist suspension that annihilates
reality, but nor is this ultimate determination of the symptom
a "disaster:' Because of this resumption of immanence, science
is in a quasi-transcendental position, and differentiates the
two sides of quantum the ory and philosophy. But precisely it
is not a doubling of and in transcendence, as in philosophy
(which is, therefore, spontaneously transcendental), but a
twisting-without-torsion, immanent and without chorismos. NP
is immanent al, philosophy is transcendental. The immanental
has traits in common with philosophy, but it is a resumption of
science, not of philosophy. One can engender philosophy and
generic NP on the basis of that basic structure that is the most
general triangulation, tri-phase or tripod, of which NP gives the
immanental example, philosophy the transcendental-partially
generic and scientific in Badiou, idealist elsewhere.
In the generic matrix
The materiality of disciplinary variables
We shall no longer treat knowledges as sufficient essences,
conceptualizable or idealized, as do es epistemology. But neither
shall we treat them as generic truths in themselves, as does
Badiou. This would be to suppose that the generic is attached in
privileged manner to certain empirical knowledges, and above
Matrices and princip les
101
aIl, it would be to overly rarefy interesting knowledges. lhe NP
matrix presupposes in its functioning a generic treatment that
is, if not already in operation, at least virtual, and which must
be actualized. Disciplines here are considered as means for a
knowledge to be produced, like variables of a system that will
obey quantum principles under the generic. This is to reconstruct aIl knowledge as material production, as weIl as the theory
of the means-of-knowing, which will no longer be a matter of
faculties, but of developed knowledges; a better analysis of the
material means as non-subsumable under philosophical finalities, but as capable of a minor or immanent finality that is their
operativity and that is also a part of their materiality.
Each of these knowledges is reduced to its invariants under
its own responsibility. In themselves, according to the quasiphysical model of NP, they are material particles that must be
treated by quantum, algebraic means, not arithmetico-philosophical means; by me ans of matrices, not analysis and synthesis.
This method of treatment of the multiplicities of knowledge
replaces hybridization, which is a philosophical-style biunivocal
combination. What is more, the quantum principles and the
resumption of superposition are applied to complex objects
irreducible to the forms of analysis and composition that are
judgment and cognition (in Kant, for example). To perceive them
as corpuscular, we must obviously be in the unilateral betweentwo of the corpuscular and the undulatory. If we consider the
philosophical style according to criteria other than the labels it
has made for itself, from the point of view of quantum theory,
the notion of radical immanence has many models. There is a
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Anti-Badiou
corpuscular model, whether it be immanent and transcendental,
dosed, individual, full of affectivity, in a finite and stationary
circuit. And another mode!, undulatory but also complex, open,
incomplete, transfinite or trans-stationary, or (as we say) oceanostationary (as opposed to the state or the system in the quantum
sense and to its own model of the terrestrial universe). 1hese two
models of thought are ordinarily mixed together in philosophy
in inverse proportions, with the corpuscular dominating in the
dassical style. NP is thus a horizontal redistribution, rather than
an inversion, of the relation of these two models, with a priorto-priority of the undulatory over the corpuscular. Philosophy
is not uniquely corpuscular, and non-philosophy is not uniquely
undulatory, but there is an Undulatory or Quantum Turn "in"
philosophy here-both in the ultimate substance of thought,
which is the lived rather th an affectivity, and in the way it is
formulated, whether conceptual and rigid or fluid and flowing.
Knowledges close us in, harass us as cosmos or logos. An
ethics of de-specialization against the excess of "specialization"
do es not, however, signify the ide al of ignorance, nor even the
(Socratic) ideal of the recognition of one's own ignorance. It is a
matter of subordinating knowledges that are already too corpuscular, and whose finality is institutional (here also lies their being
founded in the world, which Husserl quite rightly rejected) to
another, generic relation. Beyond merely shaking up their usage,
we mean to introduce into it the unexpected, uncertainty-a true
indetermination. We shall treat knowledges validated within
their order as elementary givens, received in aleatory manner
and treatable in quantum terms; as philosophical-type means
Matrices and principles
103
combined with means that are otherwise scientific or complex,
that is to say generic-destined to become equal entities, floating,
indeterminate philosophical variables, in which one can store
philosophy. The latter is also, once more, taken to the level of
a knowledge that receives a generic universality of presence
without being universally powerful or sufficient. This statute of
knowledges and of philosophy obliges us to seek a new type of
order, against philos op hic al hierarchies-a necessary general
de-suturing of knowledges and of philosophy, itself treatable as
a particular knowledge that accompanies al! others (in memory
of ifs ancient function) but that has the same status as them qua
generic knowledge. It must be admitted that there is an immanent
finality of philosophy, one which is not transcendent doubling,
and which can be combined with the immanent ends of other
knowledges. Philosophy, also, is a variable in a matrix.
We cannot decide that there are generic knowledges on one
side and then, on the other, a philosophy of the generic but
which itself is not generic-a distinction that allows Badiou
to safeguard philosophy and its privileges. In Badiou, the
generic depends upon the privileging of the classical couplet
mathematics/philosophy, which pro duces a set-theoretical
generic. We oppose to this a generic matrix that has need of
quantum physics and of philosophical reflexivity, but only as
mere Iueans. We propose another distribution: knowledgesincluding philosophy-must aIl become equal in the generic,
while conserving their diflerence in disciplinary technique and
materiality. But we do not know in advance why and if they will
be as Badiou supposes and decides; we have to render them
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Anti-Badiou
equal by way of a matrix, a matrixial chamber that transforms
them into generic means. Our task is to pro duce these truths
as SllCh-they are not spontaneously given. This is the unified
theory founded on the univocity of the generic, whereas Badiou's
minimalist thesis admits a certain equivocity of the generic.
As to the privilege we seem to accord to quantum physics in
our superposition or immanence, it is the symmetrical term of
philosophical universality-as-means or variable. In both cases, it
is a matter of reducing disciplines to the state of means-withoutphilosophical-finality, but, in doing so, of conceiving the
specificity of their own operation that belongs to their materiality. Quantum the ory is not the same as the generic, which
we do not attribute either to any privileged knowledge nor to
any one science; the generic is effectuated by quantum-andphilosophical means, but is a phenomenon that belongs only to
humans, and draws from them its origin and its real possibility.
Quantware: The torsion of the imaginary
number
Alongside the materiality of the generic matrix there is its
quantware, the indivisible package of its syntax or of its way
of thinking. Let us approach it from afar, starting with the
relation between intellectuals and philosophers. The complaints
of creators about the lack of philosophy in their times bears
witness to a malaise whose broadest formula or whose a priori
framework, we postulate, was given by Marx under the title
"fusion of the ory with the masses:' To give it its full pertinence,
Matrices and princip les
105
it must be compared straight away with Parmenides' formula,
which can be rephrased "fusion of Being and Thinking in the
Same:' They are homologous, and give rise to appearances
certain of which affect Badiou's oeuvre. But in reality they are
very different once one tries to realize them, since unilateral
duaHty differs from the philosophical or transcendental triad.
Marx's formula is, we might say, "ambiguous" like a unilateral
duality, and gives a margin of play greater th an Parmenides',
owing to the fact that in not mentioning Thinking or perceptio
(as Heidegger says), it does not evoke the third term of empirical
reality as constitutive of the unilateral structure. Marx's formula
can be read as two or as three terms, depending on the perspective
one takes upon it, depending on whether it is interpreted according
to the fusion itself as radical immanence, or according to that
supposed reality of the world, of ph ilosop hy and the masses in
philosophy. lt is thus susceptible to a twofold interpretation:
on one hand a philosophical ("ideological") or sufficient interpretation (one that destroys the originality of NP); and on the
other an interpretation according to that immanence or Last
Instance that endows philosophy with another status, no longer
constitutive but occasional. Parmenides' formula is always read
as having three terms-this is philosophy, which also dreams of
this fusion but does not give itself the means or the right formula,
giving it instead in the form of a pedagogy and a history wherein
intellectuals find their role of mediation between the Masses
and Theory, and philosophers end up as intellectuals devoting
themselves also to the history and the explication of their "ideas:'
On the contrary, Marx's formula can be read as a possible generic
106
Anti-Badiou
formula that reduces mediation, without suppressing it pure and
simple in favor of an immediate knowing. This is what NP caIls
the mediate-without-mediation or the mediatum: the participation of philosophical transcendence in radical immanence
(with which, however, it is not to be conflated).
We can now explain why media inteIlectuals represent what
we have caIled, for certain reasons, the "underclass" [quart-
monde] of thought, that is to say the fourth [quatrième] world,
which remains a world, but a deficient one. NP-of which they
are the complete inversion, or the macroscopic or common
sense-is organized according to a genetic element, radical
immanence, which is also a quarter [quart]-but the quarter
(-turn or -cirde) becomes autonomous as imaginary or complex
number (square root of -1), that is to say as vector, rather than
the quarter-world [quart-monde], which still forms a world or
aspires to be bathed in immanental appearance. And the quarterworld is like the inverted image of the quarter (-of-world). There
is sorne kind of un intelligible attraction, a sort of fascination (but
a unilateral one) between non-philosophy and this fourth figure
that is, far more th an its opposite, its abyssal image. The notion
of a quarter-world only makes sense for a non-philosopher
who, far from aIl Platonico-philosophical synthesis, avoids this
antinomy via the quarter-turn as genetic element of theory and
its fusion with subjects. One must therefore go right back to the
"imaginary" root, to the quantware or the "logic" of the generic
matrix, to perceive a procession other th an that of Plato, one
that Badiou attempts (in the "Second Manifesto"): a procession
of truth or of the Idea in bodies. For it is a question of a recession
Matrices and princip les
107
of non -philosophy within philosophy. This is why intellectuals
recount imaginary and specular conflicts without making works
of philo-fiction; and why we can no longer define the task of
thinking in terms of the struggle against the media alone. In the
media or out of it, philosophy remains what it is.
How does Badiou situate himselfin relation to this problematic?
The planifier of hierarchies cannot allow himself this type of
evaluation, this non-planification, he who seems to wish to
and need to appropriate the intellectual descender (but who is
threatened by it because ofhis ideal ofpurity), so as to conjugate
it (as does every philosopher at this point) with the ascender of
the Idea. In a certain way, he combines the two directive formulae,
the long ofParmenides (who remains dominant) and the short of
Marx (which in a certain way he destroys, as has been suggested,
by combining it with Parmenides')-a contradiction that is
resolved by the topological operator of torsion as both ascender
and descender. His thought is a bow strung between two poles
functioning together, philosophically: the Idea of Philosophy
whose status he defends with his "manifestos;' and, at the other
end, the Idea of Communism. They are indissociable, and both
refer from afar to mathematics as Platonic and materialist ideal
of truth. This alliance for a common combat is explained in
Badiou by reasons of taste and personal practice, rather than
historical conjuncture. It is effectuated in traditional manner,
but it must be admitted that this fusion of Communism and
Truth, of People and Philosophy, relaying the Marxist fusion of
masses and theory, is highly inspired, reinvigorating and far from
mediocre-with purity, one has the advantage of being precise,
108
Anti-Badiou
at last, about what one is demanding... For our part, we caH
"gnostic" this great "revolutionary" ideal that buys into "strong
thought" as a residual symptom of philosophical sufficiency, even
if in its positing and in its realization this ideal remains abstracto
Perhaps there is sorne sense here in bringing together Gnosticism
and the generic against the aIl-philosophical, which Badiou also
combats as aIl, to the point of making it difficult to know whether
or not he develops a philosophy, whether it is not instead a great
philosophy-without-philosophy. He has no "philosophy" except
in the most banal sense-he is above aH possessed by philosophy.
Since Kant and Fichte, excluding and through Hegel, Nietzsche
and Deleuze, "philosophers" are not so much "detached" theorists
or thinkers of philosophy as believers, who naively invest their
faith in their object. From this point of view, Badiou gives himself
in philosophy a partial and very limited object, which is encompassing only in its formalism; but he puts aH his faith in it. We
shaH turn against him his formula of philosophy as "disaster":
Through an excess of me ans (not reduced, and delivered over to a
general philosophical finality), he courts "intellectual disaster:'
Non-philosophy as quarter-of-philosophy
Badiou begins by slicing into the philosophical tradition as into
a particle or a closed world, between Plato and Aristotle-two
halves of philosophy supposedly in either case complete. This
is a traditional division that de fines the philosopher, and which
Badiou assumes, eliminating, for his part, Aristotle and beings
Matrices and principles
109
(which are recuperated Iater, but always under condition of
mathematics). He will in turn come under the objection of
Iogicism, against a too-mathematicai Plato-it is always the
old problem of mathematics and/or biology, a duality that
more or Iess short-circuits physics and that consequently
appears to us neither pertinent nor effective. NP proceeds
otherwise: certainly it also cuts into the aIl of philosophy-not
as a closed world, but as symptom, and according to another
type of non-philosophical or non-thematic cutting-without
passing once again into the domains of being and of objects.
This partitioning follows firstly the geometrical and physical
(and thus scientific) model of quantum theory that it borrows,
by half-circle and then by quarter-circle, so as to arrive at the
minimal syntax that is vectorial. It must be thus always and in
every way that NP has traversed at least in appearance the entire
circle of the real. But what do es it mean to say that philosophy
has traversed its own circle? Badiou precisely gives himself
philosophy as a closed corpuscle grasped from outside, which
he cuts according to the philosophical hierarchy and its three
orders (One, Being, beings), with each time a principal instance
(even if three instances are convoked and two of them marginalized in favor of the remaining term). NP does not consider
philosophy as such a corpuscle internaI or external to itself; it
begins by freeing itself from this amphiboly, treating it as an
unlocalisable particle or an already -quantum symptom. This is
what there is of the real in "PhilosophY:' its full circle being but
an appearance that fools the philosopher, who installs himself
there in good f~lÎth. NP therefore does not allow itself to be
110
Anti-Badiou
guided by the intra-philosophical hierarchy that inhabits this
supposedly dosed world. If one leaves philosophy to itself~ it
demands that one make a choice from this hierarchy-and, as
absolute as this choice may be, it always presents itself as philosophically limited, as limited in scope, as is the case in Badiou.
The philosopher is a philosopher of Being, of the One, and of
beings in any case-each cultivates his own doublet, the third
instance being marginalized. Badiou, like others, and despite
his trenchant style, ceaselessly makes and remakes the full
circle of philosophy, but does so in following this circle from
the outside or from its margins, or else from inside its material
contents or strata. Only a quantum theorist, and not a philosopher of philosophy, can take as a whole and without hierarchy,
without totalization, the three instances whose totality is an
appearance. Here again, the principle of non-commutativity
is decisive: philosophy can no longer be its means and its end
simultaneously, give or take a detail; that which in philosophy
is a means cannot be convertible with that which, in it, can be
submitted to an end. The ülmous initialline of demarcation that
Deleuze identified so acutely, and with which aIl philosophers
begin, is an intra-philosophical artifact destined to maintain
philosophy in its rights and its daims. It constitutes itself at
once proprietor and victim of the illusions of the proprietor, by
positing an external or internallimit, saying "this is mine, this
is my domain and the field over which l legislate:' Philosophy
is not "first" for nothing; it is that which declares itself first and
possessor, forgetting the Prior-to-first of the underdetermining
Condition.
5
From ontological difference to the
superposition of the One
There can be no philosophy worthy of succeeding that of
Heidegger and Deconstruction without a radical critique of
ontological Difference, a critique of the thematic of difference
in general in the name of a certain "identity:' whether this
difference be finite (Heidegger) or infinite (Deleuze). Here and
there in contemporary philosophy, the problem is posed of the
dissolution of philosophy's amphibolies or mixtures, whose
typical form is given by "ontological Difference:' whereas other
philosophers (Deleuze, Derrida) daim to work within these
mixtures, contenting themselves with loosening and retying
otherwise the knots of thought. In aIl cases of dissolution,
112
Anti-Badiou
the recourse to an identity that is to be redefined is obviously
fundamental. A new experience of identity and of the multiple
is a means of invalidating the play of Difference from the outset,
without having to meditate interminably on it as Heidegger
does. But there are many heterogeneous experiences of identity,
depending upon the ontological level at which one operates.
It can be approached as the One-in-One according ultimately
to itself: but the "in-the-Iast-instance;' so as to avoid a vicious
circle-it is in this way that NP mobilizes superposition rather
than identification. Or else it can be approached according to
and under the conditions of Being, which is what OV does. OV
supposes a dialectical identity flattened onto itself: and which
receives an immediate real status. NP "begins" by thinking
identity itself: letting this identity be given as superposed and
subtracted from its logical form through axioms. Thus it gives
a real signification to the axiomatic, which itself unfûlds from
this test of identity. Immediate set-theoretical ontology-just
like the ontology of life and of affectivity (Henry)-uses it
only on condition of Being-without-beings. Only NP begins
with the One-in-One or the One-without-Being and a fortiori
without-beings, as undulatory superposition. Which do es not
at aIl exclude (on the contrary) a recourse to the contingency of
transcendence (of philosophy, of sciences, of language, etc.) It
can then give a status, albeit in-the-Iast-instance, to this purely
phenomenal Same of idempotence in the manifold, for instance,
of Being and beings, without supposing the constitutive role of
one or the other reflected in itself and conditioning it.
Every other solution (even Henry's) comes back to conserving
Subtraction and superposition
113
the amphibological farm, albeit reduced to an immediate identity,
as universal element or essence of thought. In these conditions
which exclude the One-in-One, Being is not really subtracted
from beings, if it is merely "subtracted" or "subtractive;' but
only from certain of their transcendent forms (perception,
presence), so that it remains ordered by them. Only the One via
superposition can subtract Being from beings themselves, just
because it does not simply deny the latter as one once denied
certain forms of beings, but consigns them to being secondary
functions of the specification of Being (particulate materiality).
In the same way, the transcendental ego (Henry) cannot really
subtract Being from beings, because it still belongs to an autosubtraction, and because the amphibological farm, rather th an
being totally excluded from identity, subsists in it as repressed
essence, or continues to co-determine the real. In Badiou, just
as in Henry, thought is always exercised in the amphibological
form as primary (this could even be said to be the philosophical
and non-scientific "chamber" of these ways of thinking), even
when it is a matter of identity-because the latter has not been,
from the outset, of itself, acquired-as-given independently of
that amphiboly-form that owes everything to logical identity.
lhese attempts inevitably refer back surreptitiously to philosophical errors that they have never abandoned; not, doubtless,
to a frank autoposition or difference, but to an autoposition that
is merely truncated or inhibited. Insofar as identity will not be
the object of a simple axiomatic (and real) "positing" but one
understood as superposition (rather th an the object of a philosophical auto-position that one confines one self to initiating
114
Anti-Badiou
or limiting), it will not be able to free the amphiboly as such,
or ontological Difference, and to treat it in positive manner, in
terms of a relative autonomy of matter, but will find itself obliged
to deny it, and to submit an the more to its incessant "returns:'
Can one nevertheless, without doing anything more (that is
to say without the return of the repressed) evacuate ontological
Difference through me ans that themselves remain ontological?
On its Platonic side, ontology is constructed around the One
and the Multiple-it is a transcendental arithmetic, Pythagore an
in origin. On its Aristotelian side, it is constructed rather around
Being and beings-it is an onto-theology. But philosophy, in its
real breadth and its concreteness, is the intrication of these two
dyads. It is the quadripartite that tolerates a certain convertibility that was present from the origins of the One and of Being,
and which has been overdetermined and interpreted according
to these two contexts.
If: by modernity, one understands the
isolation of the One-Multiple from the other correlation, this is
done with the aim of withdrawing from it aU trace of the latter,
understood as "presence;' and devoting it to an objectivism
which, measured according to con crete ontological Difference,
amounts to a sort of flattening of the latter, to an immediate
identity of Being and beings in the avowed favour of Being.
But the thematic of Difference is then merely repressed, and
risks returning from its mathematico-modern repression. Being
and Event supposes a certain affect of Being as Being "in-itself;'
grasped outside aU subjective immanence, as absolute, quasithing-oriented, substantial and inert (albeit multiple) objectivity.
This is an immediate identity of the object and objectivation:
Subtraction and superposition
115
Being thus appears to have abolished beings, but it is also just as
much beings that triumph over Being. Such is the ambiguity of
an ontology that postulates the merely philosophical destruction
of ontological Difference as difference: it do es not say what it is,
and it is not what it says; it calls itself an ontology, but is realized
as an ontical experience and thought, or even as a determinate
knowledge produced by the sciences.
How,
moreover-through
what
experience,
what
knowledge-is this affect of the "in-itself" realized? Arithmetic
immediately receives a usage that is ontological and (let us say
it clearly) supposedly real. The One itself cannot be deposed
and ejected from Being, to become once more the one of calculation, without also being the equivalent of the one of language,
of dosure, of the limit, of transcendent determination, of the
unity of a predicate, of a quality, of a property, of the unit of
an operation, etc. Again, it is a question, despite everything,
of a transcendental count, but a truncated one. In general, OV
"slims down" Pythagorean and Platonic mixtures of arithmetic
and metaphysics, reducing their metaphysical side, whereas for
Being as transcendental entity, it substitutes the void and the
infinite. All the same, these mixtures remain abstract modes,
through the partition implied by the "ontology of Presence"
that is to say the Difference between Presence and the Present,
between Being and beings. Here they are simply "flattened;'
without distance or difference, into an immediate identity-the
"materialist dialectic:' In this way, set-theoretical arithmetic
remains held fast immediately in a transcendental usage, and
receives a real or ontological signification.
116
Anti-Badiou
We admit aIl the same that to demonstrate that Badiou utilizes
the classical schema of philosophy, more hermeneutic than
axiomatic, is by no means a simple task. We may sometimes give
the impression of subjecting him to an un fair trial. His axiomatic
style allows the positing of affirmations or theses with a tranquil
assurance and a self-evidence, with apodictic and finite effects
that can only intimidate and leave the reader with no recourse.
Even philosophy, which is only possible, without being expected,
arrives in parousia, as if it fell to us from the stars, when it is
already too late and the chips are down. We must identify the
subtle dissimulations that allow him to leap from plane to plane
and to go back down naturally to the most materialist planes of
philosophy-the mechanism of topological torsion in particular.
Doubtless one of the causes of his enterprise is that modern
arithmetic ceases to be reflected by a preconstituted ontology
and, in Cantor, "reflects" on itself; so that this metaphysics now
exceeds set -theoretical immanence and can safely be evacuated
as obsolete. But Cantorian mathematical "auto-reflection" takes
over from Difference; a mixture in the tarm of presence is replaced
by another mixture in the form of immediate (albeit unilaterai)
identity. Beings themselves are not completely suspended-only
their effectuation as transcendent One-Multiple is suspended,
as quasi-perceptual and ontical Unity and Particularity. The
particularity of beings has indeed been abolished, but only their
''Aristotelian'' particularity; it has been replaced by that which
is procured no longer by perception but by a knowledge (here,
mathematical knowledge), and through the particular spedalism
ofthat knowledge, the Multiple. Ontological Difference, evidently,
Subtractiorl and superposition
117
was but the idealization and interiorization of the model of
perception. It suffices to resort to mathematics, to the identity of
the concept and the mathematical object, to posit that of Being
and of beings, and to believe thereby to have reaIly surpassed
ontological Difference. In fact, here there is only an empirical
surpassing of Difference, not at aIl its real critique. The substitution of immediate mathematical auto- reflection for perceptual
auto-reflection is an intra-ontic transformation whose effect is to
dissimulate ontological Difference rather th an to really invalidate
it. The subtraction of arithmetic from perception, of Beingbeings from ontological Differellce, supposes an immediate
identity of "contraries" -a sort of condensation or crystaIlization
of ontological Difference, but not at aIl its suppression, as we are
asked to believe. Truncated, inhibited Difference; a Difference
whose absence is compensated for by this immediate autoposition, under the auspices of Cantorian "reflection:' of which
mathematics is capable, and which is now the autoposition of the
void.
Taking the problem from another angle, Being is not only
nothingness, non-being; it is, so it seems, the void. And yet this
void, devoid of aIl transcendent determination, despite everything remains a nothingness: determined not by any particular
being but by beings. For Being is here the ultimate or foundational point of view of philosophy; and if there is an identity in
question here, it is a surreptitious and denied one, an ineffective
identity. How to obtain a Being really void of aIl beings and even
of any ultimate and secret reference to beings? For this we need
the One: Being is thus (not-) One, and it is on this condition
118
Allti-Badiou
that it is really void of beings, and not merely nothingness. The
One-in-the-Iast-instance, the absolutely non-mixed, radicalizes
the void of Being, delivers it from the ultimate ontical-formaI
closure (without for all that negating or denying the latter). It is
radical immanence, or immanence through superposition.
Radical immanence via
idempotent addition
Materialist immanence belongs to procedures of division
and position, and consequently to the double transcendence
that forms the essence of philosophy. Let us therefore take a
detbur via the various manners in which radical immanence is
philosophically said or formulated, taking them in and transforming thern into undulatory or superposable form, obtained
by idempotent addition and no longer by division. They will be
as follows: (1) A metaphysical contribution: statements on the
One or the Indivisible (Plato) or the All (Levinas), but "axiomatised" generically, or deprived of their philosophical sense, of
their doublet-form or of duplicity. Radical immanence is then
that which is "resumed" rather than that which "repeats"this operation exists but is immediately effaced. It does not
double itself across a division, but resumes itself. It is a radical
Undivided that therefore can never be an All, a Same if yon
like; that will never return on itself and will not be adjoined
synthetically to itself to make a Two and thereby an AIL No
point in trying to imagine it-you will not find it-it is the
Subtraction and superposition
119
Real-in-person; (2) A phenomenological contribution, equally
metaphysical: the Same as object or thing, the transcendent
identity of a multiplicity of adumbrations (the metaphysical
principle of Aristotle, Leibniz, Frege, Husserl, Quine, etc.:
geometrical invariants, imaginary variations, or eidetic essences
as invariants), but an identity or invariant from here on
deprived of its multiplicity, of the transcendent form of this
identity. More subtly, identity here risks losing the possibility of
repetition that it must have, if it has no multiple; but one can
suppose that philosophy has in general protected itself against
this problem present in Parmenides and in atomism, or again
in the Platonic Idea, separated and lifeIess, quasi-atomic (before
the Sophist), or before the de construction of ideality that brings
out its repetitious nature. Here again, we can posit as the beforefirst term a Same in which co-exist the resumption and the
particulate effacement of the corpuscular Two of repetitionwhat NP calls the resumption of immanence, to distinguish it
from the usual repetition; (3) A religious contribution-gnostic,
in fact: gnosis or the knowledge that we are without knowing
it. This is to daim to know reflexively or through a doubled
transcendence this first knowledge that perturbs and destroys it,
unless one finds that this knowledge is already virtually one of
superposition, and is thus the object of a knowledge via superposition that does not perturb it, leaves it constant, but on the
other hand changes its usage by transforming it into a variable
or a means. This generic knowing is without direct object or
reference, since it is immanence. Such a generic gnosis is now
deprived of its religious (still transcendent) sense (an atheist
120
Anti-Badiou
gnosis), and we must find for it another, non-religious "content";
we must transform gnosis in parallel with metaphysics and
phenomenology; (4) Fichte's 1 = l, the cause of both truth and
transcendental illusion, but to be interpreted as a superposition
of 1 with itself and with the non -1.
Hermeneutic of quantum axioms
(oraxioms)
What happens in the generic matrix? NP appeals to the
formalism of algebra, to the property of idempotence, in order
to understand the principle of superposition. lt is thus not a
mere means of calculation, it is also to be read in the matrix
according to a "silent;' non-thematic philosophy. This sort
of silent "meta-philosophy" (in reality, a non-philosophy) of
science is registered and justified in the matrix through the
existence of an inclusive or generic lived, itself extracted from
the philosophical subject, so that the autonomy of philosophy
will be but an appearance-contrary to the meta-ontological
point of view on mathematies. In the latter, the necessity of
philosophy's intervention is resolved in a Moebian manner,
whereas in NP it is distributed in a silent or lived usage as
wave function, and in a unifacial linguistic particle (or noematic
subject) that can be apparently or objectively given aIso, as
in-itsel}: Unlike the quantum theory of matter, which supposes
a macroscopie world in-itself and runs up against antinomies or
exclusions once it broaches the microscopie (antinomies that it
Subtraction and superposition
121
resolves through mathematical deduction), the quantum theory
of philosophy supposes that the world in-itself of philosophy is
posited as symptom or objective appearance.
For one must necessarily give oneself philosophy as a symptorh
that can always become an in -itself fabricated in appearance. If
one gives it to oneself naively, as a true in-itself: by practicing
philosophy spontaneously, then it becomes impossible to escape
this appearance, which is then taken not only objectively, but as the
sole absolute reality. The point of view of the quantum stance or of
lived immanence that gives access to philosophy as simply objective
appearance is capable of falling under science, which is what we
have elsewhere called the immanent identity of or for philosophy.
Naive philosophy is the absolute, but the radical that is valid only for
lived immanence makes of the absolute a well-founded appearance.
The other consequence is that NP's axiomatic includes a
moment of invention or interpretation no longer at the formaI
algebraic level ofaxioms, but in their incarnated or linguistic,
hylomorphic or "unilational" part, that part favorable to a
hermeneutics. Axiomatisation ~ interpretation is also partitioned
by a unilateral complementarity that reproduces the duality of
the lived wave function and the particular form-subject that is
unilateral, and succeeds in constituting the generic constant. The
unilational axiom is now understood as immanent wave function
or as amplitude, and moreover as conceptual particle, oriented as
unilateral and unifacial. This helps us better grasp the duality of
the unilational axiom: axioms in general are linguistic, or refer to
the reality of language or of logic, but not to the radical Real; they
are multiple and empty although they must be under-determined
122
Anfi-Badiou
or immanent and radical. We shall ca Il oraxiom the superposition of
axiomatic decision and philosophical decision, the quantum superposition that transforms concepts and their effects. This structure of
NP necessitates its being practiced in such a way that one invents
NP itself with the aid of its object, since it is from this object (an
interfering object) that is extracted the lived-without-subject that
is pre-empted by the purely scientific apparatus. We do not read
the text of an axiomatic science formulated already elsewhere, and
laid out upon the empty mirror ofBeing. This sage and conservative
meta-ontologyas an image is not at aIl appropriate to the necessity
of inventing, on a minimal basis, axioms incarnated according
to their object. There is a hermeneutic aspect of the apparatus
that is susceptible, as subject-noema, to formulations also drawn
from the object. This is an entirely different science in itself, but
one whose axiomatic apparatus is capable of multiple formulations or fictional and superposed enunciations, depending on the
object. Aigebraic formalism finds its unilateral complement in
a quasi -hermeneutics in the form of a "probabilist" fiction. This
interpretation ofaxioms means that philosophy is not merely a
material, but a sort of model for NP. Reciprocally, philo-fiction
has a determinate hermeneutic aspect, but one that is determinate
in-the-Iast-instance or under-determined by quantum theory.
If NP, from the outset, introduces the subject in scientific
conditions, and thus resolves the problem of the agent -operator
or that of the no longer external observer, then the interpretation
(but also the possibility in principle) of macroscopic reduction/
destruction are integrated a priori into the apparatus. TIlere is
a fusion in-the-Iast-instance ("unified theory") of science and
Subtraction and superposition
123
of philosophy, but under the conditions of science, not those of
philosophy. This is the Marxist schema of the fusion of the ory
and the masses that makes possible a proletarian science, but
without the external proletarian predicate. It imposes the unity
ofaxioms and of their interpretation according to the philosophical symptoms, but under the conditions of the axiomatic.
There is thus no need to distinguish transcendently the
axiomatic from meta-ontology; their unity is effectuated in
the axiomatic, but such that algebra (which is not a science of the
object) is no longer detained here in a transparent head-to-head
with its meta-ontological interpretation. Axioms are no longer
read in meta-ontological or topological distance, but posited
as a priori fusion of the axiomatic matrix (unilateral duality as
function of the lived) and of their interpretation-the unity of
science and of the subject, in global terms. Meta -ontology and the
logical transcendent al are only stitched-together philosophical
juxtapositions of given sciences, mathematics and the logic of
categories-they are the work of a reading and a rearrangement
of sciences, of their external combination in philosophical space,
and not that of the invention of a generic science.
The science-subject as generically
unified theory (GUT)
Can one suppose, under these new generic conditions, that every
science (even the most positive and objective) can be transformed
to contain a subject of science, like psychoanalysis-or better still,
124
Anti-Badiou
would be a mode of a science that is the generic science par excel-
lence, that of humans, and would be in reality a science-subject
conveying a subjective but generic determination that belongs to
its object? In this case, the sciences would be neither regional
nor universal in the philosophical mode, but instead genericsomething that would permit them to rejoin art, love and politics,
which have a more obvious relation to the lived included in their
procedures, but which, for their part, must acquire a dimension of
objective knowledge. This would be a more radical understanding
of the "subject of science" - neither science of the subject nor the
philosophical subject of science, but a science-subject that would
permit us to put aIl knowledge under condition of the human in
the Last Instance. Even those positive sciences that seem to know
nothing of the subject or of the lived would "symptomatize" on the
basis of the science of humans as immanent mode! of aIl science.
This hypothesis is appropriate, moreover, to an ethics that makes
of man not the last end, but the last line of defense that must bring
together aIl the disciplines that are human only in ultimate manner
(this last caveat saving also the positivity of the sciences).
This solution of a genericaIly unified theory amounts to
treating knowledges as means one in relation to the other.
We make them into variables whose inverse multiplications
are inequalities. To treat them as variables is to make of them
reciprocal means of generic "translation" with re-quantification
or resumption. We establish a principle of non-commutativity
of means, insofar as they are not any means whatsoever but
are philosophical and scientific in origin. The principle of the
non -commutativity of me ans destroys them in their broad
Subtraction and superposition
125
philosophical specularity, and is the ultimate way to deliver
them to the generic or to make a generic usage of them. We
oppose this theoretical ethics to Badiou, who slices and cuts (but
not 10ngitudinaIly) strata that are still disciplinary, tracing the
traditional philosophical edifice according to the hierarchy of
great instances, rather th an taking it as the concrete totality of a
new object within which a human science must impose its own
system of partition. The philosopher can be recognized through
his accepting philosophy such as it presents itself: as already
reflected in itself. This, of course, becomes a repetitive exercise
that turns endlessly in its own space; but there are laws of this
circular space of philosophy which should be sought out, and
which involve accepting the circle as circular, but seeing it also
as the object of a unilateral or fractured science. Philosophy as
tradition is this game of musical chairs between great instances,
a combinatorial that is still rather impoverished, like musical
"tonality;' and which must be unfettered. NP's initial project was
to serialize the standard tanality ofthe philasaphicaZ scale- to treat
aIl of its pitches equally, as parameters or variables, so as to make
heard a music other th an the classical-this initiative proceeding
from a personal imaginary that is, no doubt, more musical than
pictorial (unlike that of the French phenomenologists).
Recalling of the global generic effect
NP as generic science, supposing a certain usage of the principles
of quantum theory, cannot be confused with procedures drawn
126
Anti-Badiou
from philosophy and simply varied or differenced. Certainly, its
procedures are complicated and may lead to a true, ultimately
mathematical, formalism. But if the complexity of its objects
provide the means for this, the generic effect is another thing
altogether. Recall that it is produced by two principles foreign
to philosophy: superposition understood as resumption of
radical immanence, and non -commutativity understood as
determination-in-the-Iast-instance. NP is only the placingunder-condition (to which Badiou limits himself), but an
under-determining one, of the opinion or of the representation
organized by philosophy. These two principles express what it
caIls the Real, which is not especiaIly Being nor the One nor
the Multiple (these are metaphysical contents). The affinity
of science and the One-in-One is made explicit by these two
principles. It provides at once the Real and syntax, immanence
and order as prior-to-priority or non-commutativity.
It is necessary to reconsider the theme of Cartesian doubt,
Fichtean doubt, and above aIl the phenomenological neutralization that Husserl qua mathematician thought to be the
science-effect. Husserl gave it a transcendental and thus
subjective form, dominant and determinative of the reai-a
littie like Kant, but more ambiguous, in truth. We must reverse
Husserl's position: it is immanentai science-as-subject that
determines the object as a function of the Real. This reversaI
signifies the passage from a transcendental idealism (which
opposes essentially mathematicai objective ideality to psychoIogicai subjectivity) to a generic science (which opposes indirect
and quantum objectivity to direct mathematicai objectivity).
Subtraction and superposition
127
Whence the suspension of analysis and synthesis-operations
more philosophical than scientific, even if their bedrock is
found in logico-mathematical properties. Already the transcendental was understood as that which determines, through and
as ideality, the empirical object. NP opposes to ideality not an
empirical and still philosophical real, but the immanental Real
that is determined by two principles capable of generating an
indirect objectivity. It is not a transcendental, but an immanental
quantum-theoreticism, that, in this sense, neutralizes ideality
itself-that is to say, the Platonism of the true Idea-by reducing
it to a simple or particulate transcendence.
Real, logic, and algebra: Kant's objection
Kant's objection as to the use of general logic, which creates
transcendental appearances, does not make a great deal of
sense against the introduction of algebra in NP. On the one
hand, it is impossible to avoid the encounter of logic and/or
mathematics with the real; this is a general constraint that, in a
sense, is imposed by any philosophical-type thought that cannot
be reduced to a simple conceptual reflection. On the other
hand, the non-philosophical context is neither transcendentalsynthetic nor logico-analytic, which excludes transcendental
illusion. It is tighter or narrower, algebraic .and immanental,
at once analytic and synthetic in a new proportion (unilateral
duality) which excludes the transcendental without denying its
virtues.
128
Anti-Badiou
The most general form of the governing equation is algebraic
idempotence = real or radical immanence. It is comparable, from
afar, to mathematics = ontology, lived idempotence playing a
role similar to that of the empty set, and precisely founding
unilaterality as what we calI in Non-Standard Philosophy the
analytic-strong and the synthetic-weak. This equation supposes
the reduction of logic to the idempotent connective alone (just
as, respectively, mathematics is reduced to set-theory); and
the reduction of the real to immanence alone (just as the real
is reduced to being, and being to the inconsistent multiple).
Because with simply analytic identity, immanence would remain
like a critiçal margin of philosophy-we see this in Kant, who
constructs the synthetic in the borders of the analytic (inaugurating thereby aIl of contemporary marginalism); and according
to Fichte (logic understood as identity of 1 = 1), real immanence
would then be simply avowed to transcendental illusion. We
may wonder whether the identification of mathematics and
ontology, eut off from philosophy (which thereby conserves
something of the function that metaphysics plays in Kant), does
not repeat the confusion of generallogic with the philosophical
real, in favor this time of a materialist metaphysics (many things
having changed in the meantime, mathematics replacing logic
with another status). But in the case under consideration, the
style of identification remains globally under the authority of
a philosophical decision, even though mathematics daims an
autonomy apparently inaccessible to logic. As for NP, it also
(even more so) could give rise, with its own equation, to the
same objection of the Kantian transcendental dialectic to the
Subtraction and superposition
129
confusion of general logic with the real. Everything depends
then on the degree or the type of autonomy of logic or of
mathematics, the type of "hole" that they make in philosophy
(presence, representation, the logos) supposed as given. We
must compare the power of the empty set with that of idempotence with regard to Being: the power of the Void that subtracts,
with the Last Instance that virtualizes.
AH the same, if a "decision" is impossible in the supposed
context of a transcendental dialectic, since the two positions are
equivalent in being prey to this confusion, such a decision would
become possible were philosophy not unwarrantedly supposed
given as in the first case, but as in principle given precisely with
and by the real instance of idempotence that makes the "hole" in
its identity or, in any case, in its authority. For non-philosophy,
far from proceeding under the initial and final authority of
philosophy, supposing it given without proof and defending it
aH the more violently, frees itself from philosophy as authority,
but not as material or occasion, in the sense that it gives itself
philosophy under the condition of science insofar as it has an
access in principle to it, an access that is not questioned in the
materialist equation. The major, general problem with philo-
sophical decisions-their arbitrariness-stems from giving oneself
access in principle to philosophy in the form ofa contingent) factual
access, or a traditional access that has not been problematized.
The real of NP is not that which transcendental dialectic
targets-a transcendent and metaphysical real destined to
give rise to antitheses (Kant). Nor, beyond mathematics, the
being that would be the object of logic (Badiou). Instead, it
130
Anti-Badiou
is an immanent al logic that, through a pre-empting of the
live d, "draws the conclusion" of the real from the property
of idempotence. Immanental logic-this is what NP is in its
"foundation" in-the-Iast-instance. Idempotence is a property
become, through its lived tenor, an operator that has as its real,
at least, its proper neutralized form and the lived. Its tenor is
not an oriental-type absolute void, neither is it a set-theoretical
void, an inconsistent multiple. Materialist ontology goes from
the inconsistent multiple to the void, that of idempotence goes
from the operatory manifold to the Same of Idem-; but both, and
perhaps above all the latter, avoid the arithmetical positivism of
set theory. We must follow to their ultimate effects the empty set
and algebraic idempotence. They operate at the same functional
level, but idempotence is not the void, and refuses to install
thought in the void of truth, installing it instead in the neutrality
or sterility of a Logos become silent and clandestine-the
Stranger. Where the philosopher reads, in mathematics, an
ontology of the void and of the subtractive act in relation to the
world, the non-philosopher reads in this algebraic property a
sub-ontology, an onto( -logy) (simplified or without doublet) of
addition or of superposition, but not of the full-an ontology of
the neutralization and sterilization ofphilosophical surplus-value.
An "ontology" of sterilization or of non-capitalist transformation, rather than one of subtractive and anti-capitalist truth.
The problem is that of the ultimate referent or the measure
of the real. Is the transcendental zero as mathematical being,
void of world? Or is it the minimal of world, the minimum of
world necessary for the algebra that can neutralize or sterilize
Subtraction and superposition
l31
it? We must choose between the void of the world (in truth,
preciselya dialectical appearance) and the minimum of world,
between the void and evil as the residue of transcendence left by
the generic neutralization. This minimum of evil-world is Ilot
denied, in materialist manner, in the name of the mathematical
void, but maintained in reality in the torm of philosophy and
in the torm of an integrism of philosophy that ceaselessly
returns like a repressed evil. It is, in this case, the minimum
X of transcendence that resists immanence itself, because it
is attached to the transcendental despite its passage or its faIl
into immanence. A remainder of transcendence is attached to
immanence, just as the set -torm is attached to zero or to the
void. The whole difference between the two theories, NP and
av, resides in the qualitative dosage of transcendence and
immanence. There is always this mélange if one measures them
reciprocaIly-but less so (perhaps not at aIl) in the first, which
reasons in terms of minimal evil, than in the second, which
denies pure and simple its principal existence, evil being und erstood not ontologicaIly but onticaIly, as a degradation of void
philosophy into beings. NP instaIls itself in the world without
re-cognizing itself in it, and for this reason can transform it-it
makes an ethical practice possible. Whereas av is Platonic,
acosmic, and thinks the subject as eternal and immortal, at the
risk, through an excess of theoreticism, of not understanding the
degradation or the faIl that it fears. It has no ethics, apart from
an ethics as magical practice of the Verb and as political augury.
We oppose the immanental generic lived to quasi -transcendental mathematicism, symbols without ontic content but with
132
Anti-Badiou
a lived content to objects in the void of set theory. If one takes
as one's endpoint philosophy as transcendental, then algebra
is the last possible point of retreat, the starting point -not as
identity and contradiction, but instead as idempotence and superposition. But if one takes philosophy reduced to materialism
as a measure, the true limit of possible retreat is mathematics,
if not logic. The whole problem is therefore that of knowing
whether logic itself is measured by the principle of identity or
by idempotence. 1he latter is analytic, with a synthetic tendency
or disposition-two non-mixed aspects, both of which are
mixed in any case in philosophy, which is at once analytic and
synthetic.
Finally, a last objection against NP: is not the idea of the
(logical) connective contemporary with beings (or with the Ones
that it connects or binds), whereas the inconsistent multiple of
mathematics and the zero of the empty set would be contemporary with Being rather than with the One? But the set-form
remains a transcendental form, like Being itself~ and is ultimately
contaminated by that of Being-a transcendence whose double
form is our principal adversary; whereas the idempotence-form
remains ontologico-scientific and not ontologico-philosophical,
since it does not reenter the frameworks of a classical ontology.
The idempotence-form manipulates the One, but not the One
of metaphysics nor the arithmetical One or the unit -of-count,
not beings. Idempotence is not itself the One as added or as
multiplied unit-of-count; it is a Same: One + One = One. There
would be surplus-value or a different result only if the One of
idempotence, the Same, were reduced to the ideal identity of
Subtraction and superposition
133
the beings·-ones that are but its terms or givens, and cannot
be conflated with the Idempotent, which is neither beings nor
Being.
Subtraction and the problem of
schematism
The problem is that of the thinking of the Real qua subtracted
from the concept and from the law, not only from sophism
and from certain forms of representation; as subtracted from
the authorities that are collected by Badiou under the term of
the One. It is thus the disjunction One/Multiple that governs
subtraction on different levels. Badiou chooses to take as
reference not the rock of representation, but specifie theorems
or axioms that come to be lodged in the "difference" One/
Multiple or One/Void. It is not a difference that would be a
mixture; it is the philosophically materialist immanence that
detaches itself from the One or subtracts itself from the One of
presence, supporting itself upon axioms or theorems.
Mathematics itself does not determine philosophy, but simply,
like the infinite, subtracts it from its concept. Meta-ontologieal
decision is the custodian of subtraction from the concept,
knowledge or count, from the poem, from amorous fusion;
that whieh operates ils auto-subtraction with the aid of mathematies or another generie procedure. This is to suppose that
philosophy is valid as authority and as giver of ultimate sense,
as the measure of subtraction. It is to conceive the generie in the
134
Anti-Badiou
wide sense as an alterity in relation to the law of evaluation, the
mark of difference, the finite, and ultimately in relation to the
proper name or to nomination -a way of classifying the types
of alterity according to that from which they are subtracted,
specifying the lack, the default, the void. Thus, no kind of new
materiality is gained by this operation. Finally, the type of
alterity or of real in relation to that from which it is subtracted, is
not a difierence: the void or the infinite is an exteriority without
difierence-here is the real novelty, but what novelty? These
subtractions are each time supported by mathematical theorems
(the non-denumerable, the generic, etc.). Or else these theorems
suffice to themselves, and the subtractive as empty category is
a contemplative and Platonist guardian (above aH if it is void
and must remain so) of being qua being. Or else the theorems
do not suffice, of themselves, to excavate the void, and they
must themselves also be aided by a philosophical act. It seems
that here, precisely, we find a strange relation, a non-relation,
exercised mathematically by the positivity of a theorem, which
in itself has no especial philosophical significance but which
must be philosophically or categorially contemplated. Badiou
wishes to avoid the Kantian schematism, which is, for him,
obscure-for he does not know the transcendental, or the
transcendental apperception with which he confuses it. His is
a contemplative theoreticism. Perhaps with the transcendental
One we have a fun ct ion of schematization, but this latter is
the problem of the acute duality concept/ space, and thus is
a function of the transcendent al imagination that fiHs the
One, at least on the plane of efiectivity. Badiou eliminates the
Subtraction and superposition
135
transcendental One and schematization-he returns to Plato. So
what does he place between the ernpty category of subtractive
truth and the rnathernatics that they require? A pre-established
harmony, a harmony once more between the philosophical
categoriality that is legislative for rnathernatics and generic
truths, and mathernatics in its positive autonomy-which in
itself has no idea or will to grasp itself as ontology or as thought
of being qua being. It seerns that the effective possibility of
subtraction would be assured principally by rnathematics, and
th en philosophically endowed with a void categorial meaning.
The subtractive, or that form of alterity, seems a mystery, which
is not so rnuch différe/ance, since Derrida presupposes the
symptorn as rnélange of identity and spontaneous alterity that is
then aggravated, and that one thus gives to oneself rather th an
deciding. Badiou rernains within philosophy, and exerts a new
decision that is regressive in relation to Derrida: he suppresses
from the outset the problem of mélanges and of contamination.
The stellar aspirant having, for his part, rejected presence and
the whole inferior part of Platonism as null and void, rnakes
his as cent uniquely in the superior part of Platonisrn, from the
mathematical plane established as sufficient toward the philosophical Good. We might wonder whether it is really possible
to operate a genealogy of the disasters of philosophy that he
rejects, without according them, for example, the same relative
sufficiency as do Heidegger and Derrida (who at least take the
trouble of carrying out a certain genealogy without simply
reducing them to that catch -aIl procedure of the "confusion" of
planes). This is the problem of the "Kantiari' schematism, and of
Anti-Badiou
136
what remains of it in aIl philosophers insofar as they ceaselessly
live between earth and sky, seeking the optimal conciliation of
the two.
The non-theological solution to the
schematism: From transcendental
imagination to imaginary number
We know that the schematism is essentially religious or at least
that, qua "schematization;' it supports a Christian interpretation. It is not surprising that it returns to haunt aH systems of
double transcendence. In its Kantian and Heideggerian form,
the most weH-known form, it is charged with regulating the
old problem of the unit y of contraries of the concept and the
empirical; in Hegel, more broadly, that of the rational and the
real; and in Badiou that of mathernatics and being (the equation
mathematics = ontology)--a problem for which he apparently
finds a new, topological, solution. In NP, the problem of the
combination of algebraic (quantum) givens and philosophical
lived givens, their reciprocal interpretation, so to speak, is
a neighbouring problem, and one that is liable to evoke il.
But we seek another approach than that of the schematism
(which supposes an hierarchical, empirico-rational, decidedly
too simplistic dualism) and its solution via the transcendental
imagination, which can only faH on one of two sides, thus only
accentuating the hierarchy (the opposed solutions of Hermann
Cohen and Heidegger), or its solution through topology, which
Subtraction and superposition
137
also leaves subsisting the philosophical doublets as another
hierarchical organization (planification). This other (quantum)
solution does not posit an immediate identity of contraries. It
consists in multiplying one by the other the two variables in
question, in considering their products and, in a second stage,
in adding them through superposition rather than through
unification. Hegel is on the way to this with the dialectic of the
understanding, but (apart from the fact that he proceeds via
negation) he allows himself to be absorbed ultimately by the
doubling of transcendence or by the rational. Now, NP's solution
is essentially quantum-theoretical, scientific, rather than dialectical or philosophical. It supposes that the multiplication one
by the other of the (algebraic and philosophical) variables
is possible and necessary, because of a certain closure of the
milieu of experience in which they are engage d, rather than
their being left in the unlimited or ill-structured fuzziness of the
philosophical space where everything is possible. The matrix is
a chamber that is not totally closed or enclosed-we shall say
"completed but not closed" -a matrix that prevents the variables
frorn dispersing, along with their effects, and constrains them to
be combined (compare the transcendental imagination, closed
upon itself in a repeatable circle, and such an experimental
chamber as collider, not closed upon itself). In short, we take
account not only of variables as particles, but also take the space
where they function as a quantum phenomenon or as state
vectors. We must then take account of the products of contraries
(here, quantum givens and philosophical givens) and be able to
add them as symbols to obtain one state vector or wave function.
138
Anti-Badiou
Now, why should this chamber not be closed, doublelocked, absolutely closed? That would be a perfect circle.
Half-closed, half-open, then? That would be a too quantitative
and transcendent determination. WeIl then, not closed upon
itself in the manner of a circle that repeats to the infinite, and
thus prevented from closing or stopping mid-course? That
would still be a positive version of quantum theory and of the
undulatory. Stopped, rather, at the point of the subtraction of
the first quarter of the circle; opened by its first quarter turn,
but no more. It is the hole as quarter that makes the imaginary
(in the sense of the imaginary or complex number) in the
diverse, conceptual or intuitive arithmetical or representative
closures. It is the imaginary that opens or exceeds transcendental
imagination itself as philosophica! c!osure, and which is specifie
to the state vector or to quantum phenomena. The quantum
chamber is open a quarter-hole, no more-otherwise it would
be once more measurable as a transcendent phenomenon and
thus once more philosophizable. Auto-philosophical critiques,
where science answers to philosophy, have no value. They
remain of the order of the psycho-transcendental imaginary
that is reflected in itself, and attains no heteronomy from the
mathematical imaginary.
One last pass: this "quartial" (not exactly "partial") opening,
which has no equivalent in philosophical transcendence, is
essentiaIly algebraic, not transcendental. It is, however,
ambiguous-for it could be, as far as we know at this point,
of the order of a physical and positive phenomenon. It must
therefore itself be reduced and brought back down within the
Subtraction and superposition
139
limits of radical immanence, of a chamber that alone can pare
down or efface what remains of double transcendence in it. But
this immanence must remain essentially a quantum immanence,
operated by a science and thus as rigorous as possible. The
solution consists in substituting quantum superposition for the
unity of imagination. Finally, the chamber we evoked above
could be called a generic apparatus for the production ofknowledges, of the "collider" type. The schematism that is content to
"regulate" a problem, to bring to it a solution even if a rather
tautological one, is now surpassed by a production of knowledges that is assured by the passage from a limited concept to
a rigorous concept of the imaginaIT or of philo-fiction. The
philosophical givens are no longer alone in programming a
"theological" solution; from now on, it will be invented with the
aid of other knowledges.
The real non-act and its action through
potentialization
OV and NP seem to begin in the same way-with a certain
passivity linked now to materialism, now to real immanence.
Through a non-decisional decision-(of)-self or a non-positional
positing-(of)-selfin the former, through a state of non-positional
superposition-(of)-self in the latter. But we must distinguish the
philosophical decision that is suspended or suspends itself, is
simply delayed or put into waiting, from the state of superposition or resumption that affects philosophy from the outset.
140
Anti-Badiou
Badiou qualifies his operation of thinking as subtraction and
as subtractive, probably because it is for him a materialist way
to possess philosophy provisionally to any initiative, particularIy a transcendental or conditioning or possibilizing initiative.
How, then, is subtraction "possible;' if the problem can still be
posed? The identity of the empty Set and Being, as unequal as
it might be, is the absolute condition of set-theoretical ontology,
and suffices to assure the subtractive aspect of the mathematical
side. But this identification is a decision that then vanishes into
itself or into its eflect, an axiomatic decision, a condition that
subtracts itself from conditioning, and that stands in a priority
over mathematical practice. But what is it to Being? Why would
Being accept to be subtracted from presence, why would it
consent to this? It must be admitted that mathematics pre-empts
it over the philosophical aIl, something that Badiou cannot
admit-this is the operation that he does not seem to have
prepared, on one si de or the other. So it seems likely that the
basis of materialist ontology remains suspended, as subtraction,
at the eminently philosophical convenience of meta-ontological
transcendence. The identification of the (empty) set and Being
seems problematic because of the resistance of philosophy to its
subtraction from presence.
As for NP, how does it (if it does indeed succeed in doing
so) go to the end of the philosophical decision, a decision that
does not even have any longer to consent to its subtraction or its
mathematical annulation? Given that it daims explicitly a duality
of the quantum theoretical and the philosophical decision, the
afl'air seems to be off to a bad start. NP seems to affect with
Subtraction and superposition
141
negation aIl the positive terms, the possible becoming the
impossible, the visible becoming invisible, etc. N ow, this is not
a negation (either dialectical or immediate) of attributes taken
from the world or from philosophy either by itself (cataphatic
philosophy) or by the Real. For the Real via immanence cannot
deny anything of the world; it is a non-acting that is foreclosed
or indifferent to it, and which, from this point of view, entertains an affinity with materialism-but only an apparent one,
for it is a lived materiality and not a materialist position. The
"non" is therefore not an all-powerful negation. It has a status
or function only at a level that is no longer dialectical, no longer
at the level of signifier and sense, but that of usage; it is a "non"
that affects the usage of terms, a lived that transforms them.
But it is acquired not through a presupposed identification or a
dialectical autoposition, but by superposition, which supposes
the quantum theoretical and non-philosophico-corpuscular
milieu. As the radical immanence of the Real is in its essence a
non-acting, it must be that it makes itself an act or organon qua
immanent, an a priori that is an action through neutralization
of double transcendence, but certainly not a mechanical effect.
Superposition subtracts simple particulate transcendence from
its form-doublet, and it is a depotentialization; but evidently
there is no "subtraction in itself;' only a subtracted-without-
subtraction that is the superposed state of immanence, and,
moreover, a subtraction as act that is ol'iginally c01puscular, and
then particulate. We shall oppose the (superpositional) state([ of] -self) to the decision of the thesis, but at the same time
we shaH recognize as necessary a certain intervention of the
142
Anti-Badiou
philosophical act qua symptom or resumption of non-acting.
Rather than posit a dogmatic decision fallen from the stars,
and then seem to deny it, it is precisely the duality of the initial
decision of the fusion of the Set and Being that will permit us
far more dearly to say what is being done, and to do what we
say, in their distinction or in their unilateral duality-rather
th an to stun subjects with the violence of the decision of the
void that is nothing less th an void of decision. The non- is the
One as non-(Being), but such that non-Being is one subtracted
from the duplicitous Being of presence, a simplification of
Being as doublet, and as become a generic a priori. Subjects
must consent dearly to this act, implicating themselves in the
situation and ceasing to contemplate it. Against the passive and
flattening materialist position, subjects must consent actively to
the materiality of their lived. These terms transformed by NP
are not "immediate negations" (Heruy). Even where originally
positive, they become immediate liveds, or are unfolded. Not
absence or lack, for exarnple, to name the Real, but the "lived(of)-absence" or the "lived-(of)-lack;' which thus suppose, in
order to be legitimated, a work that is in fact non -Lacanian.
The (of) in parentheses indicates an immediation or
an immanence of the Real for that which pertains to its
transcending as partide, that is to say the undulatory a priori
of the Other-than ... by which this immanence of the Real sets
itself to transcending (ascending) and fulfills the role of an
organon. Now, philosophy, which also counts on a moment of
immediation, does so too fast, or only does so for an organon
separated as an instrument, tool or mediation. Why? Because
Subtraction and superposition
143
in philosophy immediation is doubled or duplicitous, whereas
it must be mobilized only once, to manifest it as organon or
a priori. The Logos therefore no longer constitutes a world in
itself, but is transformed "from within;' simplified or unfûlded
according to the dimension of immanence and its superposition, not according to a transversal or diagonal (which would
obviously le ad back to the space of the Moebius band). NP
transforms the statements of the Logos by inserting them into
a generic plane (an immanence that transcends once each time).
It deploys and unfûlds according to a generic plane the folded
or duplicitous statements of philosophy. AU this work is done
on the level of the subject, completed with the subject. It is a
work of the production of first names or of an unfolding on the
generic plane (the oraxioms). It is in this way that philo-fiction
creates not (once again) a linguistic fiction of another world yet
to be described, but a universe-of-Ianguage, a universe-language
each time, on the basis of the philo-world.
The subtracted-without-subtraction
and subtraction
NP interprets "subtraction" by means of what it caUs elsewhere
"abasement" or depotentialization: the faU or "simplification"
of transcendence, rather than the Hegelian "sublation" that
continues to inspire Badiou, for whom "sublation" operates as
"subtraction:' To subtract in NP, aU the same, is not a positive
action of subtraction, or is more complex than that. The Real
144
Anti-Badiou
is both subtracted and subtraction, according to a "relation"
of unilateral duality. To subtract without withdrawing into
oneself and without exiting (from oneself) to go capture a prey,
but instead to subtract by superposing-this is the non-acting
which, thus, does not act, but does however subtract from the
symbolic the means of future action upon the latter. The Real
unilateralizes philosophical duplicity and its division according
to a duality that is not a division operated by that philosophical
duplicity. The subtraction of the Real itself is already done
(and is to be redone or resumed); it is already subtracted and
resumed qua subtracted, but is not itself the object of an explicit
operation of subtraction. On the other hand, it is philosophy
that is subtracted already for "half" of itself (transcendence is
subtracted from its own doublet) because of its des ire for the
Real.
To subtract transcendence from its own doublet so as to
replace it in immanence is not an action or a passion. It
obviously has no subject or object at its extremities, just the
Real of immanence and the world of transcendence. It is the
non-acting of radical immanence, that which manifests the
means-to any acting that would be valid for and in all possible
worlds. Here, philosophy falls with one blow-in its haste, it
had forgotten to ''produce'' or to "manifest" according to the Real
the means of al! action or passion (the "me ans of existence" as
Marx says), to "engender" the mediate-without-mediation or
the organon of immanence. A more fatal forgetting than that of
Being, one which again drowns the Real in the world's circuit
of exchanges, conflates the transformation of the world with
Subtractiol1 and superposition
145
the idealist regime of actions and passions, is complacent in its
circles, totalities and encyclopedias, folds back on itself, its texts
and its villageoise conservative mores. Thus begins that interminable drift, agony or survival called philosophy.
But if the Real does not act but nevertheless makes philosophy
fall out of itself, there is subtraction at and from the point of
view of philosophy in itself and for itself Obviously, in this
operation, philosophy, from its own point of view, far from
seizing or capturing the Real (what, in reality, it wants to do)
feels itself rather to be captured by it, possibly fascinated by and
drawn toward it. But the correct "conversion" is to place oneself
in the Real or in immanence via superposition or revival, and to
uni-vert philosophy, to make philosophy fall. There are no other
operations to carry out under the banner of a subtraction that is
already virtually operative; it is simply a matter, on the basis of
the philosophical occasion, of taking the road towards the Real
according to the Real. Everything that is said here, for example,
with regard to subtraction and NP, can always be read from
within philosophical sufficiency, but it is aIl already operated
virtually, not a first time but in prior-to-priority, and only necessitates the "second" stage of a resumption or of a superposition,
rather than a repetition.
6
1
mathematics in the
•
1
Philosophy and mathematics: A
non-apparent specular couple
What is philosophy, what has it become and what should it
be? The response made implicitly to this question through the
sole fact of posing it, is precisely what we cali philosophy. We live
under this sometimes oppressive law of imaginary repetition
without really having at our disposaI any more rigorous notion
of this fate. The most lucid thinkers of the preceding century,
particularly those who addressed the historical mechanisms
of this thought, only deepened them by repeating them more
subtly or by displacing them. We are apparently very far from all
doxa, but its "intellectual" (that is to say cultural) mediatization
148
Anti-Badiou
and globalization are once again a revelation of its anarchie
nature-that is to say, its affinity with capitalism. Once, it was
torn from doxa and laboriously distinguished from sophistry;
must there be a second Platonie effort so as to raise it up again?
To put it once more on an entirely mathematieal terrain (not
its original terrain, which was instead physieal) is to prolong a
glorious servitude. Badiou's additional step backwards, despite
its brilliant realization, is not an objective observation of the
success of philosophy, but a way of endorsing its failures. It
would be better to stop treating philosophy philosophieally
in the spirit or in imitation of a mathematics superior to the
transcendental itself: and sufficient; to stop thinking every
thing as philosophizable and learn to know it-that is to say,
to "materialize" once and for all (not even to rematerialize) its
formalist and sufficient mechanisms and procedures.
Mathematies and Philosophy are twin sisters. The exaltation
of one do es not destroy the other, but stimulates it. Consequently
(but this is obvious) it is impossible to contest in any way
whatever the philosophy that draws assurance and sufficiency
from seeing itself mirrored in mathematics. One can circle
around the latter as around an Idea, it even can be considered
as an Idea, but it is impossible to really penetrate into it - it is
possible only to deprive it of its ontological part. Which may be
to say either that philosophy is under mathematical condition,
or that mathematics arrogates to itself a part of the work of
philosophy--but in any case, they have a community of existence.
We dare not say a common root, but at least a cornrnon mirror.
The two sides are mirrored one in the other. We conclude that
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
149
specularity is never simple or thing-oriented [chosal] , but always
bilateral, doubly specular, which initiates aIl consistency. This
is the whole problem with the type of consistency of the set
mathematics + logic + philosophy, along with the subject that is
situated between each of these terms, if one does not rediscover
the ancient tripartite logic/physics/ ethics. This differentiated
chorismos, this juxtaposition, has only an irreal consistency,
a consistency through reciprocal reflections. What can hold
them together, if not the mirror that is the Moebian torsion and
its infinite doublets? Specifically, the coalition of a materialist
position as philosophically absolute, and the installation within
this space of a transcendental apparatus. Instead of being at the
service of an absolute idealism, as in Hegel, it is placed in the
service of materialism, and thus circulates between sciences, to
the point of a quasi-procession of the Idea across this transcendental apparatus. "Materialist dialectic" -a materialist position
as frame and a transcendental apparatus in the guise of a
descendent dialectic.
The efforts to repress the One decidedly further, to as marginal
a position as possible (as always, after having proclaimed its
assassination, it is re-established) have sorne technical merit.
And indeed, as to the One that accompanies Being as its twin,
it was useful and fruitful to get rid of it, to distribute otherwise
all these doublets. But OV only distends them, placing specular
relations between them--even if it means recuperating in one
way or another aIl these fragments of a chance partition,
separated in advance. In place of these mathematico-imaginary
relations, NP certainly has at its disposaI what will be called (a
150
Anti-Badiou
little too simply) the One, to struggle against Heidegger and his
primacy of Being; and then the One-in-One, to signify that it is
a problem of immanence and not of "logical identitY:' But it was
not a question of saying that radical immanence is a subjectum, a
"total" or all-encompassing element, an undifterentiated "il y a;'
the grey or black indifterentiation that philosophers have made
the preserve of bovines. To really allow these elements to "take;'
tearing them from philosophy and making them enter into the
human kingdom of the generic, what is needed is the "precipitation" operated by the thought comprised within quantum
physics.
In general, one can say that philosophy and mathematics are
Siamese twins; that they must be separated and their mixing
prevented (this mixing is called the transcendental, conjugating
Plato, Kant and Heidegger), but that one of them can do nothing
for the other except for prolonging their concord and their vast
complicity, which is still exercised or tested by Badiou. Their
whole is sterile and specular. One must seek reasons for the
affinity between the axioms of infinity and pure philosophy as
systematic compossibility. Philosophy still saves the traditional
setting, despite this set -theoretical materialism. Affirming its
void existence is all that remains to it; that is aIl it can still
manage-just a sterile existence as guardian or superego of
generic knowledges. The affirmation of the pure void and stellar
transcendence replaces a too-present God. Classical physics
introduces a beginning of the critique of philosophy (Kant), but
it needed quantum theory to go further, for the physical grip on
philosophy to attain its full potency.
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
151
The supposed mirror and the placing of
philosophy into the matrix
Philosophy is a thought which, classically, is carried out with the
help of a mediation-classically, the mirror of sense or of the
signified, for the postmoderns the mirror of language and the
signifier, and finally in the moderns the mirror of a science, logic,
and then recently mathematics. In the mirror, accompanying it
like a machine, is thus an image reflected in another element or
organon which is most times logico-linguistic, thought more
or less scientifically, and through which it entertains a specular
relation of reflection with itself. It is thus a thought that we
suppose to be "one" but which is divided with itself by that
instrument of the mirror, and condemned to return to itself, to
re-identify with itself or with its image, gaining by this identification with science a supplement of consistency. This is the
mirror stage, but generalized beyond individual psychology,
since it includes in the "subject" science, along with language,
insofar as they identify with themselves in the mirror. Now, it is
capital to grasp that the mirror is already a machine, a knowing
machine, even; a machine of knowledge essential for philosophy
and not Just an instrument of its frivolity. The mirror is a lying
science par excellence because it touches closest to the truth.
Doubtless a simple and sterile technology, an intention of void
knowing and knowing to be voided, and which perhaps transforms the perceiving subject but not the thing perceived, it gives
an interpretation of the world or an image of philosophy, but it is
not its transformation. To break the image of thought qua image
152
Anti-Badiou
requires means entirely other than the philosophical, perhaps
even mathematical means; for if the mirror is a knowledge or
plays the part of a knowledge, it indeed takes the place of science
in philosophy, giving it this possibility of speculation; but it is
a usurped, or in any case premature, science. What have we
done? Put philosophy in the matrix, deployed it in a form that
takes seriously the clandestine function of the mirror and makes
appear the customary dualities, the dualities of intervention,
of science and of itself. Philosophy and science each intervene
twice: the first time as object in discourse, and the second time
as means or intention of a knowing.
Non-philosophy cannot be a reflection on a reflection,
like a metaphysics of metaphysics. In that case one would
get nowhere; in fact, one would lose everything. It has to use
another principle-a scientific, not specular, mediation-even if
it must still apparently intervene twiee in the matrix, albeit in a
non -specular manner. Now, the matrix in its OV version supposes
that science (mathematies) intervenes as a mirror capturing
ontology. We must thus change our means into functions of the
scientific organon or the organon of mediation, not into those
of the objects treated (we must not change one logie for another,
one language for another). We must abandon it for an organon of
another type, active and productive of knowledges-the mathematies whose genius is, as mirror, already to be partIy linked with
the linguistie context in the hands of philosophy, and, moreover,
to be able to simulate science. What to do?
The non-philosophieal version of the matrix will still utilize
language and science, but will no longer reflect itself in them.
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
153
Since at least one productive science is necessary, we substitute
another organon for the mirror, a full and non-specular science
that will be able to extract philosophy from its narcissistic irnages
of itself (PSP). But which science? Mathematics seems impossible to us, precisely because it maintains only specular relations
with philosophy, their being like twin sisters who reinforce
each other as sufficient, but without really transforming each
other at aIl. Thus we will exclu de it, and with it the Principle of
Sufficient Mathematics (PSM). Philosophy do es not transf()fm
mathematics but only the lived of mathematics; mathematics
does not transform philosophy in its transcendental essence but
only in its most external pretentions. Let us test another model
of a possible organon: physics, and in particular, quantum
physics. Physics because there is a materiality of immaterial
concepts, of sense and even of the signified (and not only of
the signifier); a body or a thickness of philosophy, innumerable
geometric "metaphors;' effects that, without being "material" in
the sense of classical physics, have a materiality. This materiality
resides in its effects, but is unperceived in the logico-linguistic
mirror that de construction began to aim at, even as it limited
itself to its textual and ultimately linguistic materiality. This will
not therefore be a textual de construction left to the initiative of
linguistics combined with the effect of Judaic transcendence.
If the secret of philosophy resides in this duality, this double
requisition that the matrix brings out, then on this basis there
are two solutions, not inverse but asymmetrical. Both contain
the kernel of these two variables, language and science, and
their relations, but also a doubling of one of them as factor,
154
Anti-Badiou
which puts their relations under condition. (We must remark
that this matrixial posing of the problem will certainly not solve
in the same way the problem that Quine posed in a too-classical
and limited manner, the problem of the indetermination or the
underdetermination of theory by experience. Augmenting and
complexifying the variables, we cannot be content with saying
that "experience" is insufficient to fully determine theory.)
A first solution will be proposed, then, as the fusion of
language and science under language, as linguistic determination
of their relations. 1his doubling of language, which returns on
itself or closes itself, is philosophy itself as the most complete
classical stance of thought. It could possibly be philosophy of
science (nothing prevents this) but the latter, placing science
in the servitude of the unity of philosophy, dominates it and
transforms it into a mere mirror of philosophy-even the most
well-armed science ends up being a mirror for philosophy.
Language's self-relation is mediatized by a void mirror. Our
thesis is thus that there must always be a mediation between
philosophy and itself: and that the mirror plays this role, a
mirror more or less full of one or many concrete scientific
images.
The second solution is NP as unity of fusion of language
and science, this time under science: it puts the relation of
variables under a new type of condition that affects language
in particular (but not exclusively). What does science become
then? It is still partially, but secondarily, a mirror of philosophy;
but it conserves its materiality intact, so that this materiality
under-determines as such, in dominant manner, the fusion of
Philosophy and mathematics in the min'or
155
variables. As far as mathematics is concerned, its materiality
is too weak, and it becomes reabsorbed into the functions of
the dominant mirror and of non-determination. In the case of
physics, however-whose materiality is strong, and exceeds the
specular-it underdetermines the füsion of variables.
If this matrix is in general valid, up to the permutation of
factors, for philosophy and non-philosophy, then how do things
stand with OV? OV is a mixed solution, where science is indeed
a condition or factor, but as mathematical mirror; and it is
philosophy, ultimately, that brings it in. The mathematical mirror
is indeed an intention of science that has no need of quantum
superposition, but which uses reflection as a philosophical-type
"superposition;' substituting this for its quantum form. It is a
mixed solution that associates the philosophical with the mathematical part of quantum theory. We have found it necessary to
limit the function and pertinence of mathematics to make room
for quantum theory. The combination philosophy/science is the
universal law, in any case, whether philosophy obeys a matrix
but with the mirror of the mathematical, or not (transcendental
unity, philosophy of science), and indeed whether or not the
matrix is underdetermined by physics.
In OV, the scientific condition is not determinant, since
it is, in fact, a matter of a mirror, albeit that of mathematics;
and a mirror, let us repeat, is only valid for the subject that is
reflected in it. Whence OV's characteristic sterility-indeed, its
whole rigor consists in the bitter pursuit of that sterility. This is
what opposes void (albeit generic) materialism, a philosophicogeneric mixture, to the generic materiality without materialism
156
Anti-Badiou
to which NP reduces philosophy or into which it transforms
it-what we caU the "material formalism:' Must we conclude
that mathematical ontology is a deceptive ontology, since it
is founded on a mirror [miroir] and a dazzling [mirobolante]
practice? If the mirror is the science of Master philosophers, aU
that remains to them is to look good in it and to demonstrate
their true mastery-a technical mastery. Badiou does not fail to
do so, and rather twice than just one time.
It is the whole materialist theory of reflection, of knowledge
as reflection and its ambiguity, that must be explored by placing
it into the matrix. It says that it works through reflection,
but that it is ultimately (in the last instance?) a reflection of
matter. This is already an advanced materialist thesis, but
for NP knowledge is material in itself; it is only partiaUy a
reflection in the mirror of philosophy, but not yet that of
matter. It is instead philosophy that would be a "decoherent"
(as quantum physics says) reflection in-the-last-instance of
non-philosophical materiality. The idealist or ideal conception
of knowledge and its rationalism cannot be projected onto the
materialist thesis, as if a materialist thesis could philosophicaUy engender this rationalism. Perhaps one could say that
ideal knowledge or, rationalism is a form of decoherence of
materiality or of material formalism; one would in this way
understand that quantum mechanics is the science of classical
physics, that the latter is its true object (a thesis we have always
maintained); just as generic quantum theory would be the
science of classical rationalism, as illustrated by the philosophy
of empirical sciences.
Philosophy and mathematics in the 11lirror
157
Getting out of the mirror: The hypothesis
of a generie mathematies-fiction
Philo-fiction, because of the epistemological material that is
our Old Testament, and because of the function that mathematies plays in it by way of quantum theory, must also be able
to be a mathematies-fiction. At least, we could propose this
hypothesis without knowing wh ether it is possible to make
it happen or whether it is an excessive and unviable fiction.
This is the meaning of a return from a supposedly divine
mathematics to a hum an or generie mathematics, from the
matheme to ante-mathematical mathesis, a prior-to-priority
that must itself also be a disenchanted messianism reducible to
discovery and invention. More exactly, NP puts into play, if not
a correlation, at least a unilateral complementarity, mathesismatheme, that can be understood as a "quantum machine"-a
concept that makes little or no sense in terms of quantum
physies, but only in terms of a quantum the ory of philosophy,
or NP. Tt is important to decompose into a unilateral duality
the unitary mass of mathematies, constructed on the positivist
and doubly transcendent privilege of the matheme, and whieh
Badiou, among other philosophers, systematieally exploits.
No return here to the philosophie al subject-mathesis is
strietly speaking generie subject and undulatory-lived in the
Last Instance. As to the partieulate matheme, it would be
the mathematieal statement included in the immanence of
mathesis) and would obviously see its power diminish-it
would be depotentialized. Unilateral complementarities of this
158
Anti-Badiou
type are capable of a certain form of non-unitary uni-fication,
of a human-and-mathetic "en-semblism" [CCen-semblisme"],l
not articulated in tenIlS of exchanges, convertibilities, equivalerlCes, etc. We shalI calI "en-sembles" masses or aggregates of
unilateral complementarities or matheses-mathemes-unilations that are fabricated only from their extremities, insofar
as they touch the world and draw from the physical world
their occasional material. The mathetic root as "radical origin
of things" is strictly unilateral, and exhibits a messianity that
captures constituted mathematics. ln reality, mathematics is
human, and not at aIl divine-or it is divine only in man, not
in God. But what is proper to philosophy is to conflate the
root of the Last Instance with unity or foundation, to disperse
it little by little or to ramify it into branches and leaves. lt
is in thus plunging toward the world that generic humans
bind themselves, chain themselves, find themselves within
an inextricable and harassing fabric, society or history, the
Principle of Sufficient Philosophy (PSP) or sufficient or encompassing mathematics (PSM).
To speak of the "en-semble;' of a unique immanence or state
vector valid for aIl empirical (induding mathematical) "sets;' is
to play with the genius of ordinary (that is to say, philosophized
or philosophizable) scientific language, which one thus takes
as an object of dualysis, interpreting it non-mathematicaIly via
the procedure of superposition or generic "re-quantification:'
The science of Man thinks it as an indivisible or infrangible but
duel partide. The en-semble here is a material partide, but one
with theoretical or "conceptual" content. En-semblist theoretical
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
159
machines are partides as frontal or unifacial alterities. Doubtless
they are two-headed, like desiring machines (Deleuze), but one
head is a virtual flux of uni-rectional and indiscernible flux, the
other a front or a frontal but immanent transcendence-the
way in which radical immanence can "face" the world. On
the contrary, a philosophical machine is made of at least two
elements, but supposes always a third, which is the homo ex
machina-he who takes the machine in hand and gives it its
transcendent(al) human finality. This instance of mediation is
more or less visible-hidden, and renders the other two visible.
In the particulate or quantum machine, there are only two terms
(it is radical), because the fundamental "term" or immanence is
Man, who is that infrangible and invisible power of the partide
in its trajectory. This is the unilateral en-semble, the one that is
written with only one parenthesis, One (Two, and not with two
parentheses as in unitary set-theoreticism (the transfinite). The
en-semblist partide is an identity-without-unity, armed with
a kinetic moment that speaks in terms of the half~ or even the
quarter, or the square root of -1 (the imaginary or complex
number). En-semblism is more than dis-objectivating (and thus
more th an dis-alienating), because in reality it under-determines or unijectivates the set. A phenomenology of unilateral
complementarities thus emits a whole ante-Platonic mathesis.
Philo-fiction will take the path of a mathematics-fiction creative
of unilateral or uni-jective complementarities and of their priorto-priority over surobjectivated idealities. As always, that which
is emitted by dualysis as ante-Platonic will be revealed to be the
effect of a human non-acting. A thought of the semblant is thus
Anti-Badiou
160
possible, but it will be that of the En-semblant or the One-inOne-(of the)-Semblant. The fundamental concept of set is thus
recast and reemployed in the "fictional" style of a non-mathe-
matical en-semblism, an en-semblism without calculation. It is
an hypothesis.
Genealogy of the ontologicalmathematical decision
The two elementary forms of philosophical space, immanence
and transcendence, are apparently symmetrical, and equally
abstract, in the sense that one cannot be isolated from the other.
But the problem is that of the balance or the possible exchange
between the two idioms. It is impossible to autonomize a pure
immanence ("radical immanence" is not "pure") outside of aH
relation, at least aH unilateralizing relation to the transcendence
of Being; to distinguish it absolutely from the world that
would then be a simple irreal. We will thus distinguish the
absolute immanence that forms a mixture with transcendence
and the bearer of appearance, from the radical immanence
that can always contain "sorne" transcendence, or configure a
particular moment without forming a mixture with it (but only
a "unilateral complementarity"). As to the transcendence of
decision, there is a pure or absolute transcending of decision that
is its law and its Ideal, an operation in the form of a doubling
or repetition, a doublet, a constitutive tendency of philosophy
and one that tries to contaminate immanence in turn. But there
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
161
is no repetition or doublet of immanence-its superposition,
its "resumption;' will be something entirely other. On the other
hand, for transcendence, there is necessarily a repetition. The
two elements of philosophy do not play at the same game and
do not have the same "destiny" (Kant).
Given the mixed structure of this space of philosophyimmanence and transcendence, but also identity and difference,
the internaI and alterity-two extreme and apparently symmetrical solutions can be made, which attempt to dismember
or to break this mixture through another organization that
makes use of unilaterality. One consists in reducing the Real to
immanence alone, and thus to the One-of-the-Iast-instance, but
on condition of transforming its concept and of describing a
non-decisional and non-positional, but instead superpositional,
immanence-(of)-self This solution is NP; it is the generic, not
merely philosophical or epistemological, thinking of science.
The other solution consists, on the contrary, of reducing the
Real to transcendence alone, and thus to Being, on condition
here again of modifying its concept, of rende ring it absolute, or
of thinking it as multiple and then as the void which, in a certain
way, posits and names itself--this is av.
Transcending remains (this is an essentiallaw) relative to that
which it surpasses, even when it is carried to the absolute or to
the void, and even when it knows nothing of its origin, except
perhaps to reduce it to a void philosophy of the Void. Now, this
relative transcending is precisely none other than philosophical
decision itself Which explains why av necessarily continues, or
is duplicated in, a philosophy un der the new name, which rather
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Anti-Badiou
betrays this continuity, of "meta-ontoIogy"; and in the traditionai form of an affinity (or a privilege) between a partieular
science and the philosophie al (here baptized "ontoIogieaI"). We
have eisewhere isolated un der the name of the "idealist triad"
the classieai schema of the idealist appropriation of science by
philosophy. Here it is played out again: (1) A partieular science,
or even a partieular theory, is extracted from the continuum
of constituted knowledge and abstracted from its pro cess of
production (here, axiomatized set theory); (2) It is identified with
a science universalized as the very essence of science ("mathematies" as paradigm); (3) FinaIly, the latter, through a simple
supplement of universalization, is identified with ontologieal
knowledge, the most essential of aIl knowledges, that of being
itself qua being. That the knowledge that constitutes, so to
speak, the basis of philosophy, should be of a nature other th an
philosophie al, and that Being curiously escapes the legislation of
the philosopher-here is an objective appearance that must be
penetrated in order to render to philosophy and to science their
respective dues, and to abandon these attempts at their absolute
de-suturation and their relative suture. AlI such attempts are
founded on the middle-term of a partieular science and on the
operation of its philosophical appropriation-even when, as is
the case here, the philosophieal intervention discovers a way to
render itself imperceptible.
This miraculous vanishing is possible thanks to that which
philosophy and mathematics have in common: transcending,
decision, which permits this amphiboly of the foundational
equation mathematics = ontology. From our point of view,
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
163
this is to say that a really pure and absolute transcending is
not possible, or is only an appearance; that it is always fulfilled
and co-determined by a relative decision; but that transcending
is par excellence that which, belonging at once to science (to
mathematics, to its idealities) and to philosophy, can be interpreted ambiguously and can give the appearance, in particular,
that it is really and only absolute. This appearance is born of
the conjunction of the always initially relative decision of the
philosophical and the ideal decision of mathematics: their intersection pro duces the objective appearance of a really absolute
(that is to say, real or ontological) decision; but as if it were
purely ontological and entirely disburdened of the finitude of
philosophical decision. The equation mathematics = ontology is
thus nothing but an auto-negation of decision. Whence also the
general style of the miracle, of the conjuncture achieved without
any real work, that belongs to this contemplative thought.
On the one hand, the modern pathos of the operation in
general is not present only for the one (the operatory transparency of the count-for-one); but also for being (subtraction,
presentation). It blossoms with the concepts of structure and
law, of meta-structure and the operation of operation; of the
formalized axiomatic. The operatory style-that of deductive
effectiveness-is substituted for that of the phenomenon in
ontology. Phenomenological metaphysics is inverted/ displaced,
or referred back to an axiomatic practice of number or of
calculation. In any case, the operatory style is but a half of the
essential relation; there is also the side of being and of the void.
But these two sides-the void and the operatory transparency of
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Anti-Badiou
the count-have in common, as we have said, that they are both
modes of transcending. The operation, the count, the operation
of the count-the calculation that, in this ontology, is supposed
to replace philosophical decision-touches the void through the
transparency of its inessentiality. To calculate before philosophizing, and so as to be able to philosophize, is possible only if
calculation-the symbolic manipulation of the letter-is, after
aIl, "in direct contact" with being, which in turn is possible only
if being is a void or a pure transcending. Calculation represents
the transcendence of ideality, being the pure transcending that
is the void of denumerable idealities; but the transcendence
of mathematical ideality is already no longer relative to the
empirical.
The most important part of our problem is that amphiboly
implied by the concept of "transcendence:' or, more exactly,
every form of thought that makes use of it in a "first" or philosophical manner. It is this amphiboly that must be elucidated as
to its ultimate root. This is only possible if we already possess
two radically heterogeneous concepts of transcendence, and
if, on this basis, we can discern how they are confused in a
unitary appearance, the appearance that is at the basis of this
mathematical materialism. It is one (one only, but a fundamental one) of the objects of NP to distinguish these two
concepts as crucially as possible; which it does by dissociating
or "dualysing:' on the basis of the One understood as visionin-One: (1) a transcendence free of aIl decision, a priori real
of the latter, what we have elsewhere calIed "non-decisional
or non-thetic Transcendence (NTT):' and which we now calI,
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
165
in the new quantum context, "particulate transcendence" or
"f'allen into-immanence"; (2) the philosophical form or forms
of transcendence or of alterity-the latter serving as mere
"occasion" for the former. The mechanism of objective unitary
appearance is simple and, without itself being miraculous (it is
a doubling or a doublet), it produces the miraculous appearance
of an always already operated unity (it is thus after the fact,
after dualysis, that its miraculous nature appears) of these
two concepts; a unity that is aIl of philosophy itself: its proper
mysticism and fetishism, its theological quibbling (Marx). A
genesis, in truth, that is solely ideal rather than real-it is
not a question of really engendering the mixture of philosophical decision that is already given "pre-arranged;' given as a
symptom of the world.
This mechanism is as follows: in a sense, the non-thetic
Transcending (contained as particulate noema in immanence,
and which is radical or simple in its order) and the mixed
transcending (always relative at the same time as absolute) of
decision have nothing in common-apart from the unity of
fact between the two, which is the point of view of philosophy
itself. This two itself draws its ultimate essence from what we
caU unilateral duality (One-in-One + any other term whatsoever
= X, for example a decision, a term that is contingent by and
for the One). Now, it is enough that they should be two (for
philosophy) for the transcendings to be confused, in its eyes,
and for there to be a unity between them, for them to participate in a medium and representative generality. We see here
that philosophy is inseparable from the linguistic and textual
166
Anti-Badiou
generalities that smooth over heterogeneity and which are
unitary by definition-and that it tries to think the real through
them. In the present case, even if these two experiences of
transcending have nothing essential in common, philosophy
cannot but seek their unity, their identity even. It does so with
the sole me ans at its disposaI, by going to the shortest or the
lowest-this is its empiricism: it is the perceptive-linguistic form,
the most general and the most unitary form of transcendence,
that serves as a corn mon measure or stock for the two forms of
decision. A fortiori it serves as a median element for philosophy
and ontologico-mathematics. Whence (for reasons that thus
belong to philosophical-type thought itself, which is spontaneously amphibological) the amphiboly of those forms of
transcendence that still nourish av and its declarations of
"purity:' The purism of Badiou's neo-Maoism is nourished, as
always, on dissimulated mixtures. To understand the special
type of amphibology that belongs to aV-and, beyond this,
the amphibological style of aIl philosophy-we shaIl turn our
attention to those philosophico-linguistic generalities that fuel
its discourse and that, above aIl, surreptitiously make possible
its articulations or decisions-precisely decisions that tend to
efface themselves in their very effectuation. For example, to the
relation between being and presentation, responds the relation
of the pure multiple to the count-for-one-they are probably at
once the same relation and two distinct relations, one passing
between being and its thought, the other between thought and
itself. That is to say, the necessary amphiboly of the concept of
"inconsistent multiplicity" or of "presentation in general;' which
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
167
assures the passage from being as void to consistent multiplicity.
It points at once toward being as foreclosed to presentation
and toward the presentation available to the count-for-one.
It is the third term, or that which remains of it, that assures
the unity (that is to say, the very existence) of the "relation"
of being and knowledge, of the multiple and the one, etc. This
concept is a sort of vanishing median term reduced to the bar
of foreclosure insofar as it represses and unites. It is perhaps not
only this double/unique function that still endows the relation
multiple/one with its nature as undivided relation. The eviction
of mediation or of the one-that -is does not leave two lonesome
terrns in pure indifferent juxtaposition; it leaves in place the
residue of the very function of foreclosure (with the residual
form of unity that belongs to it), and the term that fulfills this
function in reality: that of "inconsistent multiplicity:'
The philosophico-linguistic generalities of unitary function,
which are freighted with reciprocity, needed to be limited
"radically;' along with their paradigm: the One-that-is. But they
left a residue-for there is still, after aH, something of the One;
there is always more than we would like, and what is more it is
the worst One, in the form ofthose mixed or intermediary beings
that are charged with reconciling the spirit of non -reciprocity or
unilaterality through the philosophical necessity of maintaining
the primacy of relations (inconsistent multiplicity, metaontology, the "non-defined term"). Meta-ontology, in particular,
makes a line or a passage between ontology and philosophy. It
must (if not, what would philosophy be?) still be called (meta-)
"ontology;' and the abyss between mathematics and philosophy
Anti-Badiou
168
must be bridged somewhere. Meta-ontology is the foreclosure
of (mathematieal) ontology by philosophy, we might say, at the
same time as its philosophieal "expressibility" after aIl.
Without this continuity, whieh would have it that decision
auto-anticipates itself under and in the form of mathematieal
ontology, it is hard to see how (if not through sorne additional
miracle) philosophy could welcome ontologieo-mathematies,
and the other generie procedures; how it could be aftected by the
latter and organize their compossibility. That is to say, the rigor
of OV in the positing of the multiple is, as always, more heroie
th an real. For these philosophico-linguistic generalities, in their
turn, dissolve the virulence of the multiple. "Presentation in
general" or "inconsistency" (between consistency and the void)
strongly risks once more crushing the pure multiplicities that it
is charged with speaking. Naturallanguage, in its philosophieal
usage, already overly pervades mathematical ontology (qua
ontology not qua mathematies). And it is aIl of philosophy, aIl
of the reciprocity of the One and of Being, that re-turns in this
way-the return of the One ...
The extent to which OV remains within decision is confirmed
by the fact that ontology reverses (Being and Event tells us it is
"a reversaI") the initial state of the being of consistency and
inconsistency:
their primitive consistency is prohibited by the axiom
system, which is to say it is ontologieally inconsistent, whilst
their inconsistency (their pure presentative multiplicity) is
authorized as ontologieally consistent. [ ... ]
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
169
Ontology, axiom system of the particular inconsistency
of multiplicities, seizes the in-itself of the multiple by
forming into consisteney aIl inconsisteney and forming into
ineonsistency aIl eonsistency. It thereby deeonstructs any
one-eflect; it is faithful to the non-being of the one, so as to
unfold, without explicit nomination, the regulated game of
the multiple sueh that it is none other th an the absolute form
of presentation, thus the mode in which being proposes itself
to anyaecess. 2
What does it mean to say that the absolute transcending includes
surreptitiously within it a decision that sus tains its existence?
TIlat the pure decision that makes the void (of) being qua being
is impregnated with a decision every bit as relative as that with
whieh tradition al philosophy begins? This necessary connection
of absolute or mathematical ontology and the philosophical is
the symptom of another relation, yet more essential: that of aIl
transcendence (even supposedly pure or void) to immanence,
which always conveys decision; the necessary referenee of Being
to the One, even as presence, and the force of their mixture.
The equation mathematics = ontology is obviously of a piece
with the axiom "the One is not:' We must eut down (or believe
that we have eut down) the One, that of metaphysics or that
of philosophy, to thus free or believe ourselves to have freed
transeending or Being (that of ontology). If philosophy has
always been an intrication of Being and the One (according
to variable proportions and relations, aIl of which however
respect this invariant), and if a decision in the last resort
Anti-Badiou
170
supports absolute mathematical being, then immanence in
the last resort supports this apparently absolute transcending.
Hence the axiom: "the one is not" (understood in the sense that
OV takes it, for it remains ambiguous, and many philosophies
or mysticisms assume its literaI truth), which is necessary
so that Being can be, or be absolute, remains surreptitiously
conditioned by the One-that is to say, by the One-that -is of
presence or of metaphysics-by what we caH decision. The vain
rage to eut everywhere, to partition so as to better organize, to
put in battle order-such is the ethos and the pathos of Badiou
the Maoist.
The empty set and the transcendental
Badiou wanted to save definitively the oid onticai materialism,
by transforming it into ontological materialism; by putting
ontological intelligibility into mathematics, or vice versa. This
"ontoIogy" of the void signifies a materialism without matter,
a materialism possessing its own proper intelligibility which is
ultimately philosophical.
In what way is materialism in general subtractive in relation
to idealist presence? It is in general subtractive in relation to the
doubled One or the divided One of idealism-it is its impoverishment or its slimming-down-but it still supposes it in this
reduced form, or at least affects to be able to deny it with the
same facility that it denies the unit -of-the-count. So what is
the status of the empty set? Is this One not conserved as One,
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
171
obviously no longer that of calculation but that of the set-form
as such, in the empty set which is always, however empty, at least
full of its form? And how could form-even void form-not
be a tributary of the most idealist One? Badiou has certainly
examined this problem. Will not the identification of the void
and the One be the substrate or the condition of that of the void
and of Being?
Against the idealist auto-projection of the One, NP for its part
argues for the One-in-One or non-projective, non-ecstatic or
semi-ecstatic immanence. As for Ov, it argues for the supposedly
non-projective transcendence of the One as simple unit-of-the
count. It refuses, rightly, the doubling and the projection of the
One, and makes a non-projective but "fIat" and mathematical
ontology, rather than one centered on immanence via quantum
superposition, as NP does. But matter (the multiple) must be able
to have or to receive the form of the simple One, the set -form;
and what is more it must be able to contain the possibility of the
subtractive, which is thus the empty set, the form-One as void
or the One that is subtracted from the doubled One. The paradox
or the wager of OV lies in this syntagm of the "empty set" that
appears contradictory on the ontological plane. The materialist knowledge of the multiple will contain its own principle,
which is the void and its subtractive power, with the duplicity
of presence. The risk, if there is one, is that of a transcendental
fIattened onto itself. Does Badiou not presuppose a simplified
transcendental as organon vested in the matter of the mathematical multiple? The empty set is the universal denuded of aIl
qualities, a hyperstructural transcendental-Badiou supposing,
172
Anti-Badiou
moreover, that what is called "the transcendental" is the same
thing as Idealism, whereas it is in no way anything more than
that part of ideality necessary to every philosophy or ontology,
even a materialist one. Whence its necessary future "return" to
center stage.
Materialism seems however to have need of a philosophy
to double mathematical ontology and to draw out the truths
of generic ontology. An explicit, evacuated doubling returns
here: in entrusting ontology to mathematical science, materialism obliges itself to require a meta-ontologist philosopher,
the philosopher benefitting from a last power which is that
of rnetalanguage as structural or constitutive. Whereas NP
deconstructs the duplicity of transcendence or the projection
of the One-so that there will no longer be a philosopher ex
machina to once again double, after aIl, the form-One-of-theset. More exactly, so that, if there is always a certain subject ex
machina, it should at least be clearly recognized as such, and
Ilot dissimulated, as philosophers often do through their own
actions. The enterprise that goes by the name of physics and
above aIl of quantum duality, which admits clearly a subject or
an experimenting agent, is from this point of view less contradictory or duplicitous th an the enterprise put un der the tut el age
of mathematics, which, as we see, once again ceaselessly mirrors
itself in philosophy. Having wished to annul the mirror of the
transcendental as auto-projection by flattening itself upon itself~
it rediscovers it later on, and is incapable of truly escaping it.
And this is the basic dilemma of the empty set as ontology: its
existence only multiplies the specular effects and extends them
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
173
into the whole edifice. Logie of Worlds, from this point of view, is
a supplementary level added to this fortress and its battlements
so as to consolidate it.
The purism of mathematicoontological decision
The outcome of Badiou's problematic is particularly meager:
on the mathematical side, we have the empty set; on the philosophical side, the equally empty category of truth; and between
the two, the subject, on the edge of the void. Nothing is left,
just traces of footsteps in a desert. It could be that, rather than
harboring mirages, it is the desert itself that is a mirage drawing
Badiou onward. But no matter. The true content of his oeuvre
is that of a mathematician and a writer, but one of no great
philosophical flesh or sensibility. It is not surprising that the
transcendental reappears once more in extremis. Platonism
is the sphere of the mathemata qua knowledge that one is
taught but that one already possessed a priori, in the hands of a
transcendental will that is philosophy. This articulation does not
appear in the form of the Kantian subject but in the form of a
meta-ontology that has the transcendental as its destination in
any case, which will be confirmed in what follows. The classical
transcendental as synthesis is leveled by the materialism of
the void, for it cannot fail to reappear owing to the very fact
of the twin-ness of mathematics and philosophy within the
mathemata. Badiou holds at a distance the two disciplines, while
174
Anti-Badiou
widening their hiatus, and even that between generic truths and
void philosophy, whereas on this point, Plato is the first to mix
them and to run into "dis aster:' Ultimately, there is a transcen-
dental void that enables communication between the generic
and philosophy (which, in itself: is no longer transcendental).
To submit philosophy to science, OV and NP both begin
with a scientific form, but one that is ontologically and/or philosophically interpreted. In one case, Pythagoreanism unifies the
Platonic Idea and the mathematical set; in the other, generic
quantum theory unifies the One-in-One and the algebraic
form of idempotence (radical immanence as strong-analytic
and weak-synthetic). OV posits that the set-fûrm is emptied of
beings by subtraction, but not empty of Being. NP begins with
algebraic idempotence, which is void of Being and beings, of
ontological Difference itseH: because it is full of immanence by
superposition, full of the One-in-One. We have either Being
as the empty set, or the same as idempotence. The latter
can be deduced from set -theoretical properties, no doubt (as
Badiou objects to Deleuze, the fûld, disjunction, flux etc., are aIl
reducible to set theory). But this is to suppose that set theory is
decided upon as foundational the ory of mathematics, which is
already a problematic decision; and what is more, that ontology
is fundamental (not in Heidegger's sense)-a philosophical, not
mathematical, thesis. A double game, playing on the deductive
capacity of set the ory and on its "genealogical" capacity, which
assures the authority of this initial position. In reality, these
decisions are contingent, or belong to tradition. Where does this
privilege of the set -form come from, if not from an interpretation
Philosophy and mathematics in the mirror
175
of set theory-one that is already secretly philosophical, and
thus vicious. Is this the source of the ontological identity of the
set itselj; which is rnaintained even in the case of the ernpty set?
Badiou seems to forget about this, because, as a materialist and
positivist in his own way, it is the matter of the void or of zero that
interests him for all reality. In short, the equation "mathematics
= ontology" is one of those miraculous encounters to which
philosophy holds the secret. Which is no big deal-it is enough
to recognize it, and not to become stubbornly dogmatic about
it. What is important is that, to present the double PlatonicoAristotelian dimension of philosophy as science and as doxa,
requires a complex formula that conjugates (but very prudently,
not spontaneously) sorne science and sorne philosophy. Science
must be the under-determining (but in the last instance) and not
merely the subtractive condition here; not merely the condition
that is content to void philosophy of its myths and its beings.
Science must penetrate into philosophy, under-determine it,
no doubt, and to this end fuse with it or be superposed with it.
Mathematics with the empty set keeps too much of a distance
from philosophy, and is content to void it of its content without
changing or transforming it. The purism of the mathematical
foundation, albeit subtractive, has no real hold over philosophy.
The beginning itself must be mathematico-Iogical, PlatonicoAristotelian, that is to say endowed with the universal force
of algebra, capable of taking on philosophy in its entirety, and
not merely purifying the ancient myth within/ of it. av is ideal
philosophy, or more precisely the Ideal ofphilosophy, that forgets
the ideal philosophies that are constituted in it and against
176
Anti-Badiou
which it struggles, in the void. Could we not imagine instead
a politics that would be rather less ascetic but more widely
combative against the philosophy-all? Marx, with his breadth of
vision and horizon, is betrayed by Badiou, who brings together
a mathematicizing materialism and an empty philosophy that
is but the purified dogmatism of the militant. The science of
philosophy would better begin as an algebra of philosophy, and
be realized as a quantum theory of its materiality.
7
materiality
The undulatory turn and
philosophical materiality
The question of conceptual style generally cornes down to
the critique of representation or of presence, which are far
from having come to an end. How to be able to conceive of
them in terms of the primacy of mathematics as void? We
should have to accept the passage to a physics of philosophical
bodies. As scientific models to introduce into thought, we
oppose globally the philos op hic al and the generic, but also
set-theoreticism and particle physics, topological torsion and
the undulatory turn, the macroscopic and classical style of
Badiou and the quantum-undulatory style, set-theoreticism
[ensemblisme] and en-semblism, with its dash that separates
only to unify through superposition or through the "in-One"
178
Anti-Badiou
the semblant of philosophy. In physics there was an undulatory
turn, which was decisive for the quantum conception, and
whose effects have not yet been felt within philosophy. Badiou
ceaselessly planifies, classes and orders, hierarchizes to the
point of establishing a kind of materialist procession of the
Idea, incarnated in a truth-body. The operations, instances,
functions, strata or dualities are of a corpuscular rather th an
particulate style. Mathematics as model is directed predominantIy by forms, and induces a quasi-mathematical form or
formalism of philosophy qua macroscopic. The Idea of Plato
and Pythagoras is a bifurcation or a possible solution, but there
is another, which consists of upholding the specifie materiality
of philosophy or that of which it speaks. Geometrical and arithmetical formalism, more topological th an algebraic, outlines a
formaI image: eidos and figure, idea as figure- here is true
"presence;' it is operatory and not solely thematic. To avoid
formalism within philosophy and to return it to its materiality, the approach via the quantum of action is fundamental.
Philosophical materiality consists in its effects upon science
and those of science upon it, not only "effective philosophy;'
which remains largely auto-referential and under PSP. Certain
Marxists evoke a materiality of ideology, a productive force
of the idea-this is not a matter of a sensible materiality of
concepts or of intuition accessible to sense, but of a materiality
of effects emitted or regulated by a quantum or a minimum
packet. The effects may be conceptual or may operate on
the ideological level, but one must treat them as materials in
themselves, sensible or intuitive materials. It is a matter of a
Ontology and materiality
179
wave function, but one of a neutralized lived that serves as
law or rule for the effects. Perhaps one could speak also of
quanta of affect or of action. Philosophy mobilizes algebra and
topology, doubtless, but an algebra simply grasped within its
own theory, outside any physical application or translation.
To be exact, philosophical-style formalism is algebraic or
operatory, but also topological, a formalism of placement. This
is the mathematical and structuralist inspiration of Badiou,
from Theory of the Subject 1 on. He projects philosophy, and
even the Idea and Truth, onto calculations and spaces, rather
than incarnating it immediately in a body. AlI de constructions
of presence, including the set -theoretical one, are enterprises
of philosophy upon itself, and have no scientific status except
a presupposed one.
Set-theoretical ontology-a new
Schrodinger's cat
As to the conflictual status of the Multiple between Deleuze
and Badiou, between Difference and the Cantorian multiple,
we have seen that the quantum and generic point of view of
the particulate multiple alIows us to detect the presupposition
of a decisional and differential transcendent conception, of the
identity that is hidden in particularly subtle manner in Ov.
The immediate identity of Being and the Set, albeit
unilateral in the favor of the latter, is a particularly dogmatic
thesis to the eyes of the philosophies of Difference, which
180
Anti-Badiou
go on to object (Deleuze) that the authentic Multiple is not
that which is posited by subtractive opposition to the One,
but the becoming that passes from one multiple to another,
"between" two multiples. But equaIly, from NP's point of
view, mathematical ontology is a dogmatic, quasi-scientistic
thesis. Of course, it is inevitable that one allows oneself to
be given the real or that which holds its place, but the real of
this identity results from a simple abstraction-subtraction that
flattens Difference onto itself, leaving it flecked with unanalyzed and always active Presence-and, behind it, let us add,
the unimpaired authority of philosophy. This surtraction and
autotraction of transcendence is a magical thought par excel-
lence, an unprecedented voluntarism (Badiou: "we are greater
th an aIl gods;' etc.)
If we wish to renounce the means of Difference without
returning to a dogmatism of transcendent construction, and
even less to the pseudo-thinking interiority of reflection,
there is no other solution than to let-be-given what we have
called the "vision-in-One;' that is to say the affect-(of)-One or
(of) -radical immanence. This lived -(of) -identity "in" identity
is spoken of in quantum terms as "superposition;' and not as
a simple "equation" mathematics = ontology. Strictly speaking,
this equation could be understood as a superposition no longer
operated in quantum terms. However, from the quantum point
of view, a superposition whose terms remain transcendent and
macroscopic would be of the same type as Schrodinger's livingand-dead cat. Identity, yes, but via immanence rather th an via
a transcendence that admits it to the dialectic. NP has never
Ontology and materiality
181
opposed directly, under penalty of a return to the procedures
of philosophy, the mathematical Multiple and the One itself in
its transcendence. In reality, what we oppose to it (indirectly, on
the basis of the One-in -the-last -instance) is radical immanence
via the undulatory superposition of philosophy and science,
with particulate becomings for each of them. There is a decisive
difference between the identity of Being and of beings insofar as
it is posited on the empirical basis of the latter or of their content
(whence its precritical dogmatism and its merely truncated
autopositional form, and complementarily, the negation of aIl
identity that supports it and that it leaves unthought); or else on
the basis of the One-in -the-last -instance-whence the critical
sense of this "identity" and its non -autopositional form via the
positive absence of aIl autoposition rather than via truncated
autoposition.
We thus ask OV whence it draws this surreptitious identity
that still conditions its concept of the multiple-as-void, and
which it leaves unthought, limiting in the same stroke the
non-consistency of this multiple "of" multiples, limiting it
mathematically with a supposedly constitutive transcendent
knowledge, when it would have been possible to free it by relating
it to the Last Instance, which alone could explode the ultimate
dosures of the ontological or transcendent One.1t is not because
the ontology of the void daims the Multiple as Being that it frees
its concept. It daims it too empirically or too immediately, it still
founds its experience of Being upon a supposedly constitutive
prior positive knowledge (mathematics), and faIls back into the
cirde of empirical idealism.
182
Anti-Badiou
A quantum or non-Cantorian ontology
With the vision-in-One, superposition or Last Instance,
it becomes possible, far from "reducing" the Multiple to the
metaphysical One, to free it in undulatory manner from its
particulate and physical autonomy, into a universality more
generic th an its simple immediate and primary autoposition,
which dissociates it between singularity on one hand and One-All
or materialist thesis on the other. On the one hand, the One-inthe-Iast-instance renders intelligible as "interference" the form
of identity still presupposed in any case by the Multiple, in sorne
way clarifying its opacity from within, without suppressing it,
without returning to a sterile and specular reflection. And on
the other hand, it renders to the Multiple its relative or quantumparticulate autonorny that its primary or premature positing
had restricted. It is obviously tough to tell the philosopher-hero
for whom to think is to emerge from the he ad straight into
the stars, to the un-bridled Platonist, that this hubris is not a
liberation, that auto-decision or primary decision is not his
greatest possible liberation but his self-confinement and his selfconstraint; that only the quantum determination of the Multiple
by the One-of-presence as generic superposition can liberate
him from his ultimate mathematical or Cantorian closure, which
is a mirror for philosophy. The refusaI of the transcendent determinations of the Multiple or of the One-of-presence must be
extended in the name of the Real via immanence, and no longer
in the name of the real by excess or transcendence, to the point
of its set -theoretical and Cantorian closure.
Ontology and materiality
183
Let us not confuse the auto-destruction, the auto-inhibition of
transcendence by itself or by militant excess, with its true liberation through a radical immanence that no longer confuses itself
with this transcendence (it is no longer the system of Difference)
any more th an it reduces it. The great adversary, unsuspected by
philosophers who seek thought in the excess of transcendence
over itself and its putting into doublet, is the autoposition of the
latter, and precisely in the excess of the "decision" that takes two
symmetrical forms, the doublet or the flattened form, the ideal
of planification. Nietzschean superposition was already a subtle
mode of autoposition, a first reduction of the transcendent
into transcendence. Excess as universal de-position manages to
purify transcendence of its ontical determinations, to liberate
Being from the particularity of beings, but it still does so only to
confide it to Beings as their unsurpassable negative condition.
Whence the blindness that produces an excess of stellar light,
with no more "interiority" or "intimacy" than the unconscious;
and its incapacity to find in this intimate experience-(of) -theinvisible the secret of the lived.
It may seem rather facile to announce, like Badiou, the death of
the "god of the One:' The means utilized, as we have seen, belong
to a transcendent practice of thought that operates via arbitrary
decision and abstraction. As for the (ultimately derisory) idea
of the One that is proposed to us as the unit -of-the-count, this
denigration is more ancient that one imagines, and has a sense
other than that which he gives it. It is congenital to the philosophical stance, which cannot but repress the real-One and
give it a now overly lofty, now too-diminutive image. Here, the
184
Anti-Badiou
One is confused with an arithmetico-transcendental mixture.
There is no deconstruction of a supposed reign of the One,
there is but a short-sighted vision of the effect of the multiple.
The reign of the One would suppose the government of Being,
and it is this philosophical set that must be deconstructed. The
convertibility of the One and Being, despite the the sis that "the
One is not:' remains undefeated by the new modern cut. The
One-in-One itself, in Being, is undeconstructible via any philosophical operation. Instead, it permits a new usage of the eut,
set-theoretical or otherwise, and of unilateral de construction
as transformation. The One is not, this is true-but it alone can
under-determine its knowing, without creating it from scratch.
The Deleuze case
With Deleuze's multiplicities, it is a matter neither of the
Cantorian Multiple nor of its simple equalization with the One;
there is no equation, no equality Multiple = One, nor, above aIl,
ultimately any thesis on the One, as Badiou suggests there is. It
is a matter of the One-AIl, or, strictly speaking, of the correlation
of two theses: that of the molecular Multiple and that of the One.
Despite this correlation, we cannot conclude that Deleuze is
still a philosopher of the One in the heavily metaphysical sense
in which Badiou intends the term. He denounces the One of
multiplicities, despite the great simplification of transcendence
to which Deleuze commits, with his plane of immanence. And he
does it in the name of the Cantorian multiple of multiples. At first
Ontology and materiality
185
surprising, this interpretation has a certain justice, if only partial.
The Deleuzian thesis of the One-AU is accompanied by the adverse
thesis on the Multiple. 1heyare inseparable and must be thought
together, but is there not a certain asymmetry between them, and
a final privileging of the One-AlI, so that Badiou would finaUy
have been right? But ifhe is right, and the objection to a generality
and a cause certainly weighs above aIl against Deleuze, it weighs
also against Badiou himself Owing to an insufficiently profound
analysis of double transcendence, and a naive and quasi-positive
conception of philosophy, he posits this Cantorian multiple and
then the void in a last reference to a One that is operatory in the
matrix (as we have seen above), but which remains thematicaIly
unperceived by him. lt cannot at aIl be confused with the unityof-the-count with which he believes himself able easily to govern
its count (as if it were possible to slice into a concept with the
blade of the axiomatic axe) except, obviously, if one proceeds
in quantum manner, by bringing the set of variables back into
the materiality of the undulatory lived. Under the apparently
non -consistent multiple, he conserves the absolute axiomatic act
that he transfers to philosophy. We recognize in his multiple the
inverted philosophical gesture, materialism. Badiou's multiple,
once we examine the philosophy in its materiality and not as
a simple positional materialism, is a return of the corpuscular
One in the form of the void or specular zero, and in the form
of the various holes with which he sprinkles his construction.
Thus, we must refuse Deleuze and Badiou together, as decisions
that are symmetricaIly opposed, but both whoIly philosophicalreplacing them with unilateral complementarity.
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Anti-Badiou
nlis said, Deleuze's problem perhaps lies in a type of fusion
of the Multiple and the One, which remains a classical doubling
via the body without organs. He did indeed try to simplify the
doublet of transcendence into a "plane of immanence" that is
less naive th an the materialist thesis, but only by delivering it to
a last, Moebian transcendence, an internaI transcendence. It is
hard to say whether the One must return a second time even for
a Moebius band to secure and re-close the AlI. From our point
of view, the "insufficiency" of his position would then lie in the
transcendental type of fusion that the molecular and the logic of
disjunction suppose. This is why, when it cornes to this fusion,
we in ste ad use the quantum superposition of immanence proper
to machines that we calI "unilateral complementarity:' and of
which the generic matrix is the typical example.
Mathematics and ontology:
From mirror to collision
If philosophy is put under mathematical condition, that is to
say deprived of its ontology, without a calculative set-theoretical
transcription being made of philosophy or even of the ontology
that one cannot set-theorize, it would be very surprising if
mathematics itselfwere not place d, at least, "under the influence"
if not "under condition" of philosophy-that is to say, ultimately
conceptualized or plunged into the mirror of language and
sense. There is necessarily a dissymmetry from the outset
between the two variables: a quasi-hermeneutics of set theory or
Ontology and materiality
187
of its axioms is possible, but there is no calculus of philosophical
concepts. Thus, even if one admits the absolute autonomy of
mathematical production, one must still recagnize it with a metaontological decision that already exceeds the simple axiomatic
of the infinite, so that the recognition of mathematics is in fact
a veritable co-constitution. The clarification of these relations
shows that philosophy is already operative within mathematical
ontology, that philosophy is not only that structure of reception
that awaits beyond ontology, but that it is engaged in the
decision mathematics = ontology; that what we find here is only
apparently an absolute given, and that this absolute thesis in fact
dissimulates one relative decision among others, a decision that
is contingent and thus not at aIl definitive. It is the valuntarist
style, that is ta say the style af the miracle, that Badiou, with these
absolute theses, intends to introduce into philosophy-which
obviously was ready to receive it. We must not let this type of
dogmatic decision intimidate us (for that is what it is about).
The actual infinite and mathematics require an act of positing,
but one that effaces itself in the positing. When it is realized
in the effectivity of an ontological thought, the actual infinite
mutates into an absolute or in -doublet transcending, a philosophical Ideal, and must necessarily be affected by a decisional,
and presently transcendental, limitation of this absoluteness.
The attempt to distribute otherwise ontology and philosophy
belongs to that constellation of the more-than-decision that
founds thought upon the transcending of a pure void. Like
every philosopher, Badiou makes adverse terms enter into
duality, into an amphibological "collision" -one that is precisely
188
Anti-Badiou
not rethought as quantum collision-that is to say, one that
proceeds without examination of the possibility of a product
of a science by philosophy, or of a relative homogeneity of the
genres of reality and materiality. If he had posed in quantum
terms the problem of the superposition of mathematics and
philosophy, he would then have been able to transfer the set of
variables into a homogeneous materiality, that of the lived as
the materiality of the generic subject or of the Last Instance. The
philosophical collision is always of the order of the amphiboly
or of the "bad fusion" of contraries, primary and "savage;' rather
than that of a quantum collision, for which the opposites would
have been prepared and not thrown brutally into the imaginary
collider of philosophy-that is to say, into the mirror. It is in
fact always identity and the logic of identification that reigns,
instead of superposition. In NP, the supposed contraries are
prepared, in the state of symptoms, and can then be treated in a
true experiment, not in a specular game of things-in-themselves.
111e brute collision (in fact entirely imaginary) of opposites in
an identity is not their true collision - it is a dialectics and thus
a sophistics, not a physics. The "dialectic" does not seem to us
to be saved any more by materialism th an by idealism, no more
th an is materiality. The paradox of NP as conceptual quantum
theory is perhaps that it begins by multiplying reciprocally one
by the other science and philosophy, seenlÏng to abandon the
rule of unilaterality; but it is a matter of rendering relatively
homogeneous two factors that are otherwise incommensurable,
except through the arbitrary or impossible leap of philosophy.
And in any case this rule it is only partly sur rende red-for
Ontology and materiality
189
we rediscover afterwards and "finally" the unilaterality that
"inclines" the two inverted products toward the undulatory
immanence of the Last Instance. Precisely, philosophy in its
operations is ready to accept unilaterality as, for example,
Difference, but in a precipitate manner that does not give it its
full, extended domain of action.
TIle mechanism ofamphiboly is still a compromise, a solution
designed to dissimulate decision aIl the better to reproduce it,
dissimulating it in mathematics and in the axiomatic that is
supposedly capable of wresting ontology from philosophy, and
rejecting the latter into its unitary and conjunctural functions,
which only save it by amputating it from what was traditionally
its principal part. One seems thereby to reduce philosophy but,
in secreting this part of it within a science, one in fact saves
philosophy, communicating to it indirectly this solidity or this
would-be "definitive" solution to its problems. The absolute,
more than-decisional partitioning of philosophy between that
which is de ad (Presence, to be absolutely interrupted) and
that which is living or thinking (mathematics)-and this at
the level of a prioris that structure and produce philosophical
cognition-aims to withdraw decision from philosophy (it
is sent back to mathematics, where it is effaced, at least
as philosophical-type decision) and to leave it to its tasks
(conservative tasks, moreover) of inventory and synthesis. The
result is a half-solution: it diminishes the import of philosophy
and its anti -scientific idealism; it holds up science as the
absolute "basis" of philosophy; it associates in a second mirror
the two adversaries that it believes thereby to rem ove from
190
Anti-Badiou
their perpetuaI war. It is a useful step, but it is still philosophy
that advances here, masked by its identification/reabsorption
into mathematics = ontology. A Marxist-inspired solution,
no doubt, where science is introduced of itself, so it seems,
into the aged edifice of philosophy, and occupies a defined
place there. But this place ages too, precisely because what is
specifie to philosophy is, in any case, transcendence-relative
and absolute, but primarily relative. That here it should be
absolute, whilst still integrating the relative and semi-irreversibility-this solution does not destroy the usual relation of
sufficient philosophy to science, it just "reverses" it once more.
For suppose that science-on its mathematical side-develops
in the void or in pure transcending, which is the true content
of mathematic "ideality"; the operation of philosophy then
traditionally consists in extracting this ideality and imprinting
the decision -form on it; in folding/ refolding it in the form of a
transcendental and auto-positional factum, the Idea. Here we
find traces of that operation, but in a more subtle form. For it is
the Transcending of the pure Void which is thus refolded upon
itself and which becomes the factum that founds the absolute
theses. Only the fold is no longer seen-it is as if reabsorbed
and effaced in itself precisely because the material of decision
(that with which it is primitively identified) consisted of pure
mathematics or of the void, rather than mathematico-sensible
or empirico-ideal correlations such as those of physics. There
is indeed a fold, but so perfectly realized, so Httle unfolded
and rendered visible from the sensible and perceived exterior,
that it is imperceptible from there; truly, this is the blind
Ontology and materiality
191
confidence of the philosopher-mathematician. Thus decision
discovers the procedure, in mathematics, to erase its own
footprints, its finitude, to efface itself and to render itself
insensible; so that, thanks to this rare miracle, mathematics
sets itself to speaking aIl at once and with an absolute clarity
the logos that previous philosophers had only stammered out;
and philosophy, finaIly, can now clothe itself with an air of
innocence and receive science with a welcome to which its
sufficiency and its traditionally hegemonic comportment had
not habituated us.
If philosophy thus persists at the heart of mathematical
ontology, what is left of it now? What can it do as philosophy,
deprived of its most important working part? The equation
mathematics = ontology, through its immediate identification
of ideality or transcending with mathematical being, takes
philosophy by surprise; philosophy, meanwhile, if it cannot
but be wounded, cannot be too surprised either. For there is
no philosophy that do es not begin by identifying itself like
this with a sequence of constituted knowledge that it chooses
and that it decides upon. The relation between ontology and
mathematics has here merely changed its structure, and is no
longer the same as the traditional relation which, dominated by
the one-that-is, allowed for a reciprocity of the philosophical
and the mathematical. Henceforth (to venture an excessively
analogical but nonetheless indicative formulation) the philosophical is that which forecloses rnathematics, even while
speaking it in the ontology through which it abandons itself to
mathematics.
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Anti-Badiou
Undulatory void and corpuscular void
The problem is thus not that of making of philosophy this zone
of reception and inventory of knowledges and truths-which is
what it has always wanted to be anyway-but that of inventing
an experimental "chamber" that would receive philosophy so as
to transform it. This beginning, by which we assure ourselves
as widely as possible of philosophy, consists in including it in a
non-philosophical void without which it would be absolute, like
Cartesian, psychological, epistemological doubt, finally added
together and founded theologically; or absolute like far-eastern
nothingness. Logic supposes terms, or a certain ontic content,
mathematics being and its empty set, metaphysics theological
doubt; but algebra and in particular idempotence imply yet an
entirely other type of void. This void imposed by idempotence
is no longer definable in ontico-ontological terms or according
to a reversible philos op hic al syntax for which the One and the
void, Being and the void are convertible. This void, which is
neither that of the One nor that of Being, is that which tolerates
radical immanence and must be thought not as simple or
correlated term, but instead as undulation and interference. Its
essence is undulatory, and no longer corpuscular. Aigebra in
turn voids the content of terms such as the empty set, but in a
broader manner, reserving the rights of a certain indeterminate
or under-determined immanence, of a neutralization of corpuscular determinations. 'Thus disencurnbered of its contents, such
as nothingness opposed to being, it allows to appear the real
of immanence whose form is given by algebra as idempotence.
Ontology and materiality
193
This radical and generic void is nevertheless articulated, however
weakly; there is a form of the void, as Badiou and Descartes have
recognized-the former in a way perhaps too trenchant and,
frankly, corpuscular, the second in a way more acceptable to us
and more indeterminate, like the lived. Science neither destroys
nor pro duces its object; it imprints upon it various types of
neutralization of double transcendence, a transformation that is
its global effect. It does not introduce into the world an absolute
void peppered with sparse events. Instead, the philosophical
object is flush with the neutral-this is what distinguishes
the mathematical voiding of philosophy and its neutralization
through quantification. It also describes what there is of the
non-vulgar in phenomenology, which, certainly, remains with
beings and does not pass over to philosophy as object. Badiou
is the Tao of mathematics or the absolute void concluded from
mathematics. NP is the radical void obtained through neutralization or under-determination.
With algebra, there are no longer anything but "empty"
symbols in this latter, non·-formal sense. But it is not these
symbols qua void that permit "idempotence" to be thought.
What the algebraic void permits is to fill them universally
with any content whatsoever of the lived or wave type, of
the amplitude type. This is neither the inconsistent multiple
nor sorne other matter like desiring-flux. Neither being nor
beings exhaust materiality; idempotence manifests yet another
materiality, a more "subjective" materiality, the undulatory lived
of which philosophy speaks only allusively, without thematizing it explicitly. Idempotence is univocity itself~ its very
194
Anti-Badiou
definition, which is not attached to any being or to Being or to a
qualified lived experience (that becomes or undergoes qua same
or univocal). TIle univocity of the same has a power of spealdng
itself of ... a power to transit or to conquer; it is the universal
as generic that replaces the aU, that is not the aIl and that, what
is more, can transit it. This power is that of the Mid( -point)
[Mi( -lieu)], of what we caH the strong analytic as weak synthetic,
which prepares the immanental under-going. 2 It is thus a void
that is not absolute, but radical, via a suspension of its operation.
It is the same via resumption, but such that this repetition is
suspended. It is thus the same that is indifferent to its operations. And thus, it becomes the principle of superposition.
Generic immanence is not a point-One, it is the same-of-theOne. Idempotence is the univocity of thought that is not said
in a single sense of every being or of the aH, and which must
afterward confront the equivocity of the division or partitioning
of regions. It is not linked to the One, to the Multiple, to the AIL
It is messianic univocity for that which is not univocal.
The object-being of philosophy is given by the ultimate
laws or laws of the Last Instance that are those of thought,
not by laws of the object such as mathematics or even those
logics constituted by disciplines in the form of completedand-closed theories. Here, the laws of thought are those of
the lived. They are grasped by algebra, that is to say by logicomathematics, as necessary, but maximally devoid of aH doubly
transcendent content. Mathematics and logic together are the
laws of transcendent thought; algebra aIlows us to reduce them
without purifying them. The laws of thought act weIl before the
Ontology and materiality
195
completed theories that serve as substitutes for metaphysical
foundations or come to fill them, whereas one must determine
laws that are valid for the quantum science of philosophy.
It is not certain that we have a true Idea-this would be
dogmatism. We have instead the means, or one principal means,
which is mathematics, but precisely a simple means and not a
heap of finalities. Dogmatism is mathematics raised to the state
of a finality or a measure of aIl things. We have only an Ariadne's
thread to enter into the labyrinth that we ourselves weave from
this thread, and it is algebra, not molar logic nor set-theoretical
mathematics posited from the outset as a rotating cornerstone
that would propel us immediately to the heart of the labyrinth.
It is true that we must hold fast to the end of this thread, for the
further we progress through the shadows of the labyrinth, the
more this thread slips from our hands. Many difierent doors
open, like so many temptations, to the point of revealing to us a
prior-to-first unknowing. Logic assures us that there is a thread,
its algebraization consigns it to a certain clandestinity; it is made
for the subterranean labyrinth of the world and the win ding
walls of the cosmic, not at aIl for the open sky of the Greeks. It
is this void, a radical void, what we have called a collider that
is completed but not closed, that will permit us to enter into
the science of the world. It is not a principle or a foundation;
we have no ground. The subjects that we are, are mobilized by
a void, an unknown attractor. This void may weIl be that of a
generic messianity. This Ariadne's thread allows us to penetrate
into the cavern of philosophy without having been in advance
dazzled by the sun, and perhaps by philosophy itself.
8
rrransforming the Parmenidean equation
Philosophy (or at least its transcendental organon) is delimited
by Parmenides' axiom-formula. This formula is its minimal
kernel-it allows one to know of what one speaks, and to
reject from its definition any objectives imposed from outside
philosophy (theology, science, art, etc.). Having admitted this
kernel (the "Same"), we have discovered that it was susceptible
to a variation-transformation of its syntax and semantics. It
passes from the Same as reciprocity or auto-reflexivity, to the real
One-in-One or to the Same as non·-reciprocity, but on condition
of exceeding the Parmenidean bloc, and Being in particular. The
problem is that of the Real, of its effects upon philosophy when
it cornes from outside the formula, or more precisely when it
under-goes it. NP no longer responds to Parmenides' formula,
except in "simplifying" it by including it in immanence. They
are "identical-in -the-Iast -instance;' but philosophy is then no
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Anti-Badiou
longer anything but a material included, in the exteriority of
a symptom, in the a priori real. For this to be the case, Being,
as Real-One, must not be "separated" from itself by thought,
writing, or any other form of alterity. NP is the exposition of
a possibility of the last-instance of the canonical formula in
the regime of the non-separation of the Real-One, whereas
philosophy is its reflected, unique and abusive interpretationand thus an interpretation divided or repeated from the origin.
NP is the effect of the introduction of a scientific method into
Parmenides. In it, the axiom is combined and subordinated to
the deployment of a Real that brings its formula to an impasse,
exceeding its philosophical auto-reflection. Take Parmenides'
formula: by virtue of what do we know that it is philosophical?
Doubtiess, by virtue of the tradition that has always interpreted
it as auto-reflective. We cannot not introduce it, it is already
present there; but we can examine its axiom -form, and this
in two ways: either classically, by abstracting on the basis of
mathematical objects and procedures, whereby we can obtain,
at best, the materialist formula that posits Being as identical
to a Same that thus divides and subtracts itself from itself. Or
we can exit from this formula, on the basis of quantum theory,
in the direction of (but beyond) materialism itself. We must
admit that Being is autonomous as One, but also that qua matter
it does not separate from itself or subtract itselffrom itselJ We
therefore "push" materialism beyond itself by using the Real or
the One-in-One instead of Being, which is thus brought to an
irnpasse.We refuse idealist auto-interpretation, and even what
remains of it in the materialism of the formula.
Philo-fiction
199
Philosophy is thus place d, not "under mathematical
condition:' but first of aH un der real prior-to-priority. The
Parmenidean formula, which is auto-interpreted as a foundational axiom of philosophy, is revealed in fact to be but a
theorem or a model, and not at aH an axiom in the modern sense.
For the mathematical axiom -form is distinct from the ancient
philosophical (intuitive and ontologico-intellectual) axiom. The
latter can be placed under the mathematical occasion, but it is
"impossibilized" by the Real that doubtless subtracts it from
the mathematics that it under-goes. Here, the Real is not the
empty set. But in that case, NP is also no longer a variation
on the canonical formula, except as regards its occasional
material alone. It is suspended from the Real, and thus it
becomes possible to transform philosophy, Parmenides' formula,
into a mere symptom of the Real, and then into the material of
philo-fiction, and moreover into a model of philo-fiction. This is
a new form for philosophy, which has had others, aH deriving
from the primacy of thought if not that of consciousness (even
in Marx, it do es not find a truly new form, having only the
thesis-form, which Marx proposed as the basis of historicoeconomic determinations). AH the same, we understand that
it is not a matter of imposing on the Logos, which would not
tolerate it, any basis whatever from outside; philosophy must be
able, qua philosophy, to become meta-language, symptom and
model and, in doing so, to become immanent or simply a priori
Logos. Philosophy remains at least a norm for the materiality
of discourse, but it is also preposed as symptom and material.
The radical is on the edge of the Logos, but as its edge; it is the
200
Anti-Badiou
Logos reduced to the state of the edge of the Real. This is the
distinction between marginality and messianity. Philo-fiction is
this edge of the Real that accompanies it without speaking it, as
non-Logos or Verb of the generic subject.
Against the mathematical contemplation
of philosophy
It cannot be said that knowledge that is generic or (in its own
way) gnostic is a unitary science, fully delimited, in the classical
sense, bya do main of objects and a theory. It is a multiplicity (if
not a coalition) of scientific knowledges, not a theory axiomatically closed onto itself by a principle of identity. There is sorne
mathematics, sorne logic, sorne topology, various fragments
of science-not one single science with a completed domain
that would faIl back on its object, philosophy, from within or
without, but one unique lived wave function or state vector,
making these knowledges interfere with philosophy. A science
of philosophy must superpose many scientific instances, using,
for example, algebra and logic or the laws of pure thought.
And only quantum the ory, which has a certain vocation to
be an epistemology of philosophy, can effectuate these laws
(the prior-to-first ante-placement or ante-version, idempotence,
unilaterality, unifaciality or unilateral complementarity). To
act upon philosophy, rather than to contemplate it one more
time-this is our imperative, and quantum theory is of the
order of the means of man as Last Instance; it is not the
Philo-fiction
201
mirror in which philosophy admires itself again and always.
It is not philosophy that must be sterile-it always has been,
in its own way, a way other than that of the unconscious that
knows no (philosophical) contradiction (Freud). Certain recent
attempts, including Badiou's, have reached the limit of ascetic
saturation, exclusively mathematicizing at the risk of no longer
being capable of the experimental practice of their object that
quanturn theory retains. The unconscious might, for example,
content itself with combinatory mathematics and topology
(Lacan), at the risk of giving rise to a formaI and contemplative
psychoanalysis that connects, in uncertain manner, a formalism
to an empiricism of the imaginary; or else a mathematicizing
materialism as simple identity between a formaI philosophy and
a sufficient and "demonstrative" mathematics. But the science of
philosophy necessitates (given the complexity of its object) that
the pilot-science should be quantum theory-physics, rather
than mathematics alone. A conceptual formalism, as abstract
as it may he, conducts the experimental work on its object. The
inconsistent multiple gives way to a molar materialism of the
void, a subtle form of conceptual atomism that destroys the
superposition of knowledges and reestablishes the old Platonic
style of philosophy-as if humans, the beings who practice the
middle way [la voie du mi( -lieu)] and its indiscernible paths,
had to practice it as a space strung between two molar limits,
between divine or superhuman inspiration and the body of
mathematics, one being unbreathable, the other breathtaking,
in both cases because one sought to impose them as necessary
and sufficient trajectories of existence. To liberate ourselves
Anti-Badiou
202
from the Platonic hypothecation of philosophy to mathematics,
which makes philosophy closed to the non-mathematician, let
us try another hypothesis: the quantum theory of the lived that
is simply foreclosed to the philosopher.
From the philosophical tale
to the science of philosophy
Science is foreclosed to philosophy, let us accept this hypothesisbut foreclosed unilaterally and for itself alone. Because, in
contrast, philosophy is sutured to science. We make the appar-
ent/y inverse hypothesis to Badiou's, for whom philosophy must
not be sutured to science. We dualyze the concept of suture:
philosophy is a unilateral complement to science, and it will be
used as a hermeneutic at the service of the latter. It thus rediscovers a materiality and a utility that withdraw it into a proud,
stellar solitude. For what could philosophy be good for, apart
from affirming that one is a philosopher; this we know already
by hearsay, it is an aGt of self-affirmation. Philosophy is a spontaneity that is practiced and that proclaims itself without knowing
itself (like gnosis-but philosophy is an anti-gnosis or a gnosis
of transcendence).
What would it mean to de-suture science and philosophy?
To de-suture poem and philosophy? Certainly not to le ad
philosophy into "disaster" (Badiou), but simply to conserve a
relative autonomy for it. But there is too much equivocity in
this formula. Either this formula of de-suturation understood
Philo-fiction
203
in the absolute signifies a planification of corpuscular instances,
their separation through a bilateral gesture dedicated to the
absolute, that re-introduces, on the sly, the specular relations
concealed in the absolute, so that apparently there is no longer
any place for a suture or a minimum of relation. At best one
admits that there subsists a suture between opposites, but then
it is essentially philosophical, and depends upon a background
materialist position, and thus on a science understood classically as objectivation. Or else we embark upon a new adventure,
a paradoxical combination, that of the (non numerical-quantitative) "quantification" of philosophy. A "quantification" which,
without believing that it destroys every suture or gives a stillphilosophical materialist version of it, is content to unilateralize
it. As an adjoint quantification of instances-phases, it is materiel
but not materialist, and is still not understood necessarily as
objectivating. Radical unilateralization transfûrms simultaneously materiality (preventing it from turning into materialism)
and the suture (preventing it from turning into bilateral or
absolute relation). There will always be a certain relation, but
a "simplified" one. At one end or "side" (but one that remains
virtual) it is a non-relation, One via radical immanence; and on
the "other" side, a semi -relation, that is to say a "contribution'
(unilation) that exists the former as front, the true and only side
possible.
This contribution can then be grasped in twofûld manner: as
live d, on the side of the science-subject, who is not especially
objectivation, and as perceived, from the point of view of the
contribution itself, as duality of a relation. The contribution is
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Anti-Badiou
in itself conveyed by immanence or superposition, and is thus
unilateral as act. But what is contributed, causes this act to be
seen as bilateral-the philosophical appearance of the in-itself.
Unilateral duality--this is what is proper to non-philosophy;
but not without the context of the generic, that is to say, a
certain quantum resumption via superposition. It is obviously
a cutting weapon, but one that is less weightless th an dialectics;
a duaHty that "forces)) aIl metaphysical dualities or amphibolies,
such as that of form/matter, and in particular positions of the
Multiple and the One-aIl ternary or triadic syntaxes such as the
transcendental, on whose basis philos op hic al assemblages can
be composed. As soon as there is a positing of philosophy taken
as self-evident, th en the rupture supposedly operated by the
generic procedures can never be consummated. To oppose the
matheme to the poem does not truly affect philosophy, or has
few effects upon it -effects that remain marginal or positional
(sheltering the materialist who would remain a philosopher).
The oid mythoIogicai narrative persists in the form of the Very
Grand Narrative of the materialist whose announced rupture
with the poem as determining condition is not consummated.
The absolute or spontaneous materialist position is so uncertain
ofitselfthat it needs to repeat itseIf, the repetition of"manifestos))
in the modern manner. To these forms of doubt and thus
of dogmatic proposition and compensatory re-affirmation, we
shaIl oppose the frank decision of the wager and of invention,
the resumption of immanence, so as to relieve ourseives of
spontaneous self-belief and philosophicai narcissism.
For example, philosophers are obliged to treat philosophy as
Philo-fiction
205
an object in itself, but they go no further, and continue to opt
arbitrarily for one or another variant of idealism or materialism.
They thus proceed cynically, without going to the end of the
reduction of their presupposition. Non-philosophy also presupposes the in-itself: but complicates it, for at the same time it treats
it as a symptom under radical immanence or "under (quantum)
science:' as objective appearance-which enables it to escape
the naive materialist position. Badiou must treat mathematical
objectivity as an equivalent form of symptom, but this time
"under philosophy:' His meta-ontology does not escape the
philosophical position of materialism, and the presupposition
is not at aIl the same. For the philosopher, philosophy is an
object in itself, an object he does not examine qua symptom of
the scientific type or qua deprived of its materialist positing, but
at best as a philosophical given. This is why, insofar as he does
not really pass into philosophy deployed as scientific symptom,
he simply tells a philosophical tale about a positive science-he
repeats the mythological style, whereas the Greek physiologists
(rather than Plato) inaugurated a scientific vision of the object
"philosophy:'
N'on-standard epistemology, rather than
the auto-modelization of epistemology
We must seek very deeply, in the most intimate mechanism of
epistemology, the monotony of the criteria that it intends to affix
to science. Philosophy and epistemology are simple, bi-univocal
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Anti-Badiou
relations, with a certain twist, between a philosophy and a
science. Merely posing the problem obliges us to imagine that
one unique epistemology exists in principle, and is varied only
by systems and disciplines, that is to say externaIly and contingently. Another consequence is that this mono-epistemology
posits the unicity of the relation: it defines what a philosophy is,
but above aIl, what a science is. It is a discipline now descriptive
of scientific practice, now normative, setting the criteria of the
scientific and thus of that which is least or not at aIl scientific;
and then, ultimately, it becomes a foundational discipline as
soon as it cano Philosophy, above aIl that of Platonic inspiration,
is auto-modelizing and thus unique in principle; but at the same
time, it obliges science, a determined science, and not only
mechanics, also to be auto-normative. The auto-modelization
of philosophy postulates the auto-modelization of a determined
science, and of science in general, for itself. And this is the origin
of epistemological stereotypes and of their lack of inventiveness.
The new problem is as foIlows: how to render epistemology and
the philosophy of sciences themselves inventive, how to have done
with auto-epistemology.
Non-standard philosophy is thus made to struggle against
this classical or auto-modelizing epistemology. It is never an
example for itself, but finds its models elsewhere, so that a
determinate epistemology cannot be an example for another
but, at the most, a model for another. To achieve this, we
must renounce the tradition al confrontation of two in -itselfs
(a confrontation Badiou still partiaIly stages), of a determinate
science and a determinate philosophical position, in this case
Philo-fiction
207
materialism. It is possible to posit an immanent fusion or superposition of a science and an ontology, a fusion that avoids a
dispersion of knowledges or a multiplication of cuts (Foucault)
just as it avoids an authoritarian planification. Now, Badiou
realizes the need to combat epistemological power, to "fuse" the
Set and Being from the outset. But he does not go to the end of
the operation of the destruction of the Principle of Sufficient
Philosophy. He keeps in reserve the materialist position, which
remains there, overlooking everything, in waiting to take control
of the procedure philosophicaHy. As to the aH of philosophy, it
is converted into a function of reception and compossibility. We
cannot content ourselves with cutting into the aH of philosophy,
fusing a part of it with mathematics, and preserving another
material part as a control agency. The fusion must be carried
out on the whole of the materiality of philosophy, leaving out of
this fusion only its formaI sufficiency, which is "our" concept of
the "representation" that philosophers like to criticize. Badiou
does indeed borrow this matrix, which we also caH "generic:' but
he interprets it with philosophy as function and as dominant,
whereas we interpret it with a science, quantum theory, as
generic factor of immanence, which permits us to no longer
have to make a choice within philosophy. In other words, he
superimposes upon the fusion philosophical Decision, whose
authority he conserves, and which divides philosophy into
two parts, whereas we under-determine the fusion though
quantU111 thought, and separate without division the material aH
of philosophy, and its supposedly sufficient status. Decisionism,
like activism, is a constant of the philosophical tradition, and of
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Anti-Badiou
primers of the gesture of generalized deconstruction (Derrida).
They go hand-in-hand with the ideal of the unity of the philosophical aH, and reproduce the latter. We understand that, with
such mechanisms, it is impossible to go to the end of philosophical sufficiency, which is thus condemned to be reproduced
once again.
From materialism to philo-fiction
It is true that philosophy does not produce truths; there is
something sterile about it, a sterility either by excess (but th en
one would have to create a replacement meta-ontology that
knew and spoke truth) or by default and transcendental illusion
(but it is NP that does this work of the "non-" truth-which is not
truth's contrary as absolute non-truth). Materialism works with
a precise, local science, interpreting and contemplating it, but
cio es not transform it, any more th an idealism does, and stilliess
their epistemological complex; it contemplates truths produced
elsewhere. Mathematicizing materialism is a division oflabor. Its
two sides would have to have come from the same Last Instance,
and not have formed a hierarchy or a duality inside of a torsion
or a duplicity, thus inside a still-imaginary AIL In any case, what
is called for is an organization founded on a "without -relation"
even in the relations that we give ourselves as materiaL The Real
is this true without-relation, but one that under-goes the relation
that it contributes. Materialism gives itself this "without -relation"
in the form of the identity of mathematics and Being (withdrawn
Philo-fiction
209
from philosophy), an enigmatic and flattened identity accompanied by meta-ontology, the remainder of philosophy. In
Ov, mathematics is the materialist base supposed by a metaontology still in the grip of philosophy, so that the cooperation
of Being is required to give it a hand. In NP, the Real-One is a
base already in the grip of philosophy, but we require a work of
under-going and thus of superposition, with a subtractive effect
of the a priori, to establish good order and to reduce philosophy
to the state of philo-fiction. In materialism, one needs a philosophical decision to separate itself as ontology-a decision that
needs to be justified or founded externally by mathematics.
Thought is requisitioned as Being and meta -ontology, a thought
in excess over mathematics; and is then rejected and doubled
as philosophy. The philosophical AH, doubtless imaginary,
amputates itself from Being and from ontology, and at the same
time is rejected as a philosophical margin. For NP, the AH of
philosophy is not shared-out/partitioned, but reduced without
division, so that it is identity by superposition of the Real and
of the Logos determined as a priori, and in-the-Iast-instance
unilateral margin. From our point of view, materialism (not to
mention idealism) is made possible by an insufficient analysis
of philosophical duplicity. Spontaneous philosophism believes
in the simplicity of the philosophical gesture and moves within
it, refusing to realize that it is already encompassed by the philosophical decision that anticipates itself.
NP is a scenario of the future as that which under-goes. The
scenario is the emergence of the unilateral a priori, of a space or
a base whose law is unilaterality. It is the quarter-scene, where
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Anti-Badiou
the cirde of representation is flattened and has only one side.
We must de-theatricalize the scenarios of the imagination. It
is not a matter of a foundation of possible scenarios, but of the
real scenario fabricated in the under-going, that real scenario
of which aIl philosophical scenarios are but models. Philosophy
is fundamentally a theatre that denies itself as such, that cannot
recognize itself as final duplicity, as a tragedy and a comedy of selfrepetition. A deus ex machina: the philosopher seems to disappear
into philosophy, but in reality projects himself specularly, like
a curious god contemplating this game. Materialism begins to
simplify the theatre: the philosopher is still necessary-no longer
as a god, but in the wings, where he hides himself so as to pull
the strings of matter and thought, of Being and consciousness.
In materialism, the double or duplicitous philosopher still partitions himself out into two roles; or divides himself (rather than
dualysing himself). He is a determinate thought that receives
truths without being able to create them, but he is also this metaontologue of mathematical Being, this weakened philosopher at
the service of mathematical matter, who helps to produce truths.
From idealist materialism to NP, we pass from philosophy as
a still somewhat determining thought -without -truth of Truth,
to philo-fiction, which is no longer determining at aIl, or only
qua symptom. Philo-fiction is a supplementary freeing of the
Logos, even if a last link of virtuality between Real and Logos
is inscribed in the latter, that is to say, in the material or the
symptom. Philosophy is freed from its subjection to the Real
at the extreme possible limit, where the only residual link is
occasional. Materialisrn unbinds matter, but also thought or
Philo-fiction
211
the autonomy of philosophy, or else enchains a half of itself;
but NP frees it as a fiction, which no longer has anything but
one last link with philosophical sufficiency. Delivering it from
the substantial or humanist burdens of the Real, it negates only
that part of it that can be negated-its sufficiency; it lightens
philosophy in preparation for its radical under-going.
Philosophy as model of philo-fiction
That the Real should not be first, that is to say not counted or
named as One, Two or Three (the Three of philosophy), is an
important trait that brings the Real dose to Being as multiple
of multiples. But it is no longer decisive in this context, which
is no longer numerical or even quantitative, and which intends
not to measure the Real with coupled attributes (which are mere
variables, even if they are obtained by subtraction) but to posit a
unilateral complementarity for aIl couplets of properties.
A capital feature of NP is the substitution of the modelization, through philosophy, of the radically immanent Real,
for the philosophical reduction or interpretation of the latter.
Philosophy is spontaneously a reduction of the Real and thus
its division; it intends to transform it within certain limits but
in NP it loses this constitutive and destructive function, and
acquires another function, that of the simple modelization of
the Real and of philo-fiction. It is philosophical sufficiency that
is reduced, not the Real. NP thus implies an inversion between
the Real and philosophy: the latter ceases to be the object of the
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Anfi-Badiou
former, the former ceases to be the subject that decides the latter.
In this way, modelization replaces reduction, withdrawal and
subtraction, aIl of which are still philosophical operations. We
must accept that philosophy changes its function globally, not
just its form or its modality; that it is in reality a modelization
of another thought, philo-fiction. To formalize philosophy, it is
necessary to submit it to the Real, to make of philo-fiction the
science of the Real. Whence a new conception of the Real, extricated from philosophy and science alike; must we invoke the
religious to formulate such a conception? Our problem is not
that of whether to follow religion or science or philosophy, but
that of treating philosophy, and thus also its religious extremity,
as a modelization of the Real; that of inventing a philo-fictional
formàlism of which science, philosophy and religion will be
modelizations. The problem is no longer that of the death or the
end of philosophy, of its gathering into itself, of its repetition
or its recommencement. The project is less than this, but at the
same time more ambitious: the problem is of that of its global
mutation, of the loss of its sufficiency, that of fin ding a philofictional, and religious-fictional (and also science-fictional)
formalism that explains these phenomena. We abandon the
old usage of thought, always referred back to itself; it passes a
threshold of materiality and of forrnalism. The obsession with
the death of philosophy has given way to that of its sufficiency,
which includes its excess and its decline. In consequence, we
have to renounce the characteristic, celebrated and foundational
gestures, which will henceforth be but local means (founding,
reducing, subtracting, withdrawing, suspecting, critiquing,
Philo-fiction
213
anticipating/retarding, overthrowing, meditating, elucidating,
analyzing, synthetizing, deconstructing and constructing, etc.).
Obviously this is, in a sense, to justify wholly the philosophical
act in its material effectivity, to pronounce not its death but its
transformation, and simultaneously its constitution as a model.
We eliminate the theoreticist Real qua Greek contracted
and divine self-contemplation, which supposes an external
philosophy using its authority and the PSP, and which do es not
achieve immanence, but conserves the religious background.
A fortiori Badiou is a great director and manipulator of knowl-
edges. It will be a matter (again, otherwise) of knowing if one
philosophizes with Saint Paul-an authoritarian and a volunteer
keen to become the Master of Christians (or, respectively, of the
philosophical Church) or if one philosophizes with Christ; with
the copy or with the original, we might say, in Platonic terms that
are not quite apt here; with the apostle or with the Christ? Despite
the immanence of contemplation, or self-contemplation, there
is a doubling between the philosopher and the soul. Precisely,
on one hand, a specular doubling between auto-contracted or
intellectual identity, and on the other a philosopher ex machina.
Whereas in NP, there is a unilateral duality between generic Man
and the subject who assumes philosophicallabor.
Non-Marxism or "non-standard Marxism"
We can become obsessed with Marxist man and the Marxist
subject, but there is no point in obsessing about the term
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Anti-Badiou
"Marxism;' which must be conserved because Marx is inseparable from the complex, multiple, symptomatic tradition
to which he gave birth, and because the term Marxism is
fortunately generic, unlike "Marxian;' which reflects a transcendental ego (Henry and others) or an individual, the supposed
individu al Marx. It is indeed the terrn "Marxism" that must be
complexified through science, so as to extricate it from philosophical antinomies and their harassing "universalitY:'
OV and NP both seek a form of Marx's Revolutionary
Science, a form that would be at once theoretically acceptable,
and most able to realize certain of the promises of the latter.
For us, the heart of Marxism lies in a new science, for which
philosophy is also required. Its global scientific model is
mechanics, with algebraic and Darwinian fringes; its philosophical model is a certain overturning of Hegel; its object is
history and societies in history. One might imagine that there is
an apparent partitioning between the scientific aspect (Historical
Materialism-HM) that NP assumes, and the philosophical
aspect (Dialectical Materialism-DM) that OV assumes, and
transforms into Materialist Dialectic (MD). Whilst not exactly
false, this distinction is perhaps too simple. Because philosophy
intervenes in NP or in generic science; and because science
is invested in the Materialist Dialectic, but under a philosophical reversaI. Materialism arrives as an empty position of
principle without concrete materiality, as if mathematics did
not penetrate matter, and remained in its self-contemplation
in the mirror of philosophy. Despite this, there is indeed a
tendency for OV to proceed through DM inverted into MD,
Philo-fiction
215
and for NP to operate in ste ad through HM. HM is profoundly
transformed in NP; DM is simply rejected, abandoned because
of the dialectic (the latter is replaced by unilaterality, which is
not a sub-dialectic despite its duality), and because its materialism is replaced by materiality (which is not a watered -down
materialist thesis). From HM we retain (transformed within
NP) science, the Last Instance, the "generic" comprehension
of history as world and capital, the fusion of theory and the
masses (not the fusion of mathematics and ontology but that of
quantum theory and the lived of the subject); and finally, the
duality of infrastructure and superstructure, in the form of the
wave/particle model. It is a transformation of Marxism through
the contribution of quantum theory, or again, Marxism put
under condition of quantum theory, rather than that of Hegel's
philosophical science (whether overturned or not).
Let us try to interpret the duel structure of these postMarxisms, through the generic matrix that serves as our guide.
Firstly, OV or MD: D and M are possible variables, whose fusion
or product is made either under M, or under D-that is, under
materialism (matter) or under dialectic (philosophy). But these
two solutions come to almost the same thing, for matter is here
materialism-still a philosophy. The maximal withdrawal or
distancing of science that Badiou carries out, on the basis of the
maximal place of science, is not at aIl a weakening of philosophical
sufficiency (which retains, on the contrary, its entitlement to
glory, being voided only of its concrete substance) any more
than it is a reinforcement of science, which stilliabors under that
distant imperial domination. We might even ask whether the
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Anti-Badiou
unity of science would not be cut in two with this planified return
or reversaI that maintains the primacy of philosophy.
The formula M+ D under M might signify, strictly speaking, a
superposition of matter or of the science of matter with itselfwhich would not be a philosophical doubling or a repetition, but
a quantum or undulatory operation. Read in this way, the duel
formula of Marxism signifies a "requantification" of materiality, but
without the materialist thesis that is a dialectical eflect or doubling;
an idealization that is philosophical, not scientific. A unified the ory
of science and of philosophy must be realized in the conjoint
modes of scientific discovery and philosophical invention.
As for NP, two conditions, not just one, are necessary in
order to obtain a truly unified the ory of science and philosophy
or a "generic science" (another, more precise name for NP): (1)
To posit the primacy of the prior-to-priority of immanence via
superposition, or to do more than invert philosophical duality.
(2) To fulfill and assure this prior-to-priority of immanence
through the schema of the imaginary or complex number. AlI
alone this schema yields quantum physics, which is a positive
science in a relation of reciprocal exteriority with philosophy.
These two operations permit the eflectuation of the science of
an object that always holds, directly or indirectly, to philosophy
as material or symptom without sufficiency. This is why NP
as science of philosophy is the greatest amplitude of thought,
capable of transforming these disciplines. These operations
together introduce a concept of the complex or implicated
function into the variables, like the complex numbers used in
quantum theory. To transform the old ideal of the foundation
Philo-fiction
217
into a bound variable or into a generic constant of knowledges
whose vectors are superposed, is to vanquish philosophy, but
also the eclecticism that lurks in its mélanges and that cornes out
in its practices.
It is also to extract the Marxist kernel from philosophy, and
not only from idealist dialectics; to understand that .IVlarxism
is oriented by the Idea of a generically unified theory of science
and philosophy. Its structuralist interpretation was a first step
toward this type of solution, but it is possible to interpret it as a
lived via superposition-not as ego or organic transcendental
force (Michel Henry) but as organic immanent al force. If we
interpret quantum theory as the condition for obtaining a Last
Instance, it is possible, inversely, to understand the material basis
of HM as superposition, but also the impotence of ideology to
represent the Last Instance as a logic of superposed forces. To
extract Marx from mechanism and conceptual atomism, and this
without passing through a transcendental subject, but instead
through an immanental instance adding together science and
philosophy-this is what is at stake. The science of history is
not obtained through a coalition or synthesis of the "bourgeois"
science of history and a materialist philosophy inherited from
Hegel, but through their quantum superposition. It is necessary
to oppose this generic displacement/inversion on the terrain of
immanence to the Feuerbachian genericity that inverts the tenus,
but transcendently, without giving a primacy to immanence-a
necessary condition in order to obtain generic superposition.
Marxism and psychoanalysis, moreover, function according
to a certain usage or a certain interpretation of the principle of
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Anti-Badiou
superposition, but are inverted epistemologies of them, on the
way to unilateralization, operating under the guidance of science,
or even of a coalition of sciences, as psychoanalysis has demonstrated and as Marxism has attempted, in the form polemically
called "imaginary;' coalescing politics, economics, philosophyremaking a mélange in transcendence for a "science of history"
and "of society" to which it would at the same time limit HM. Marx
is returned to the mélanges, in the absence of any real means corresponding to his concept-the badly named (that is to say named
in bourgeois fashion) HM-materialism being the reversaI of the
Hegelian Idea, and history being the limited object that occupies
the place of philosophy. Equally, psychoanalysis can hardly
extract itself from the infantile mélanges of physical, biological,
mathematical, cultural sciences, "imaginary" or just "infantile
psychoanalyses:' Because they have given rise to formations that
are still transcendent, Marx and Freud await their immanent
transformation that will allow the introduction of a real scientific
advance, like quantum theory, in these disciplines. Theyannounce
the transformation of these disciplines-a non-hermeneutic
transformation, contrary to Foucault's interpretation. Foucault's
residual hermeneuticism corresponds to an imaginary-objective
science, insofar as immanence has not, ultimately, been thought;
and to think immanence is firstly to put it, as superposition, in the
position of an ultimation that is first or of the Last Instance.
These sciences that tend toward the generic refusaI to make of
man a Greek foundation, so as to make of him the fllnction of an
immanent knowledge, represent a certain gnostic tradition that
it becomes possible to reevaluate, and in which it would be more
Philo-fiction
219
interesting to include them th an in Hegelian philosophy or (even
more sadly) in a reflexive tradition. Neither Freud nor Marx lacked
adversaries that abominated in them the spirit of gnosis and of a
certain heresy. Why not see in them, pushing the spirit of perspectivist interpretations as far as possible, "Jewish histories;' ifthis fits;
or even "Jewish heresies;' so as to put a final point on the hesitations
and attain the point of provocation on whose basis the Adversary
is discovered (in defense, one distinguishes a priori between the
point of indignation and the point of provocation). Obviously,
this fragmented tradition of gnostic knowledge as non -eclectic
integration of knowledges is confirmed and re- utilized after the
fact by the quantum-generic spirit rather th an by a too-unitary
mechanism. The first ultimation cornes down, in this broadened
interpretation of gnosis, to positing gnosis as knowledge of-thelast-instance, a knowledge that defines man as a prior-to-priority
that will never be a foundation or a beginning, except in the Greek
appearance of priority and fundamentality. NP is a function of
the addition of a scientific discovery, here resumed, and a philosophical invention. Without foundations, without theses even,
non-philosophy has only, and still, "principles:'
The non-act and its action; un der and
over-potentialization
We have already distinguished the non-act from immanence
and its proper action. We must give a little more detail, and
not confuse the radical or immanent Real with the supposedly
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Anti-Badiou
absolute Real, as a substantial or spiritual thing for example.
Their modes of action are extremely different, like an underpotentialization and an over-potentialization. The radical Real
is "impossible" as soon as put into unilateral complementarity
with the possible. Radical rather th an absolute, it has no relation
or interface, no common face that it would idealize and conserve
with the world or with the symbolic; it has only a uniface "with"
the world or drawn occasionally from the world. The symbolic
would seize the Real that cannot seize it reciprocally, that can
neither act nor react in the mechanical and reciprocal sense.
There is no solution other than to subtract from the double
transcendence of the symbolic (and ofmathematics) a now simple
transcending, to "attract" or to "draw" to it the corpuscle so as to
make of it a particle, in the sole mode of unilateral transfer that
the symbolic did not expect; to render it immanent in turn, but
only on one face or one "side" of itself. Nothing of the symbolic
can be rendered immanent except that which the Real tolerates
in virtue of its immanence of superposition. Head-on capture is
excluded, as is flight, exteriorization along with retreat; its being
is the prior-to-first superposition. The Real is not at aIl that
of transcendence as doublet, neither exvagination nor invagination, neither convexity nor concavity. Nonetheless, as Last
Instance, it affects the symbolic, itself become in-immanence
according to its own mode. Here is the process of quasitransfer that we sought, instead of the instance of the Other,
to explain that the Real in its essence as superposition should
be a non-acting capable of "acting" non-mechanically in the
form of a simple under-potentialization or under-determination
Philo-fiction
221
of transcendence. The superposition proper to immanence is
the final "positivity" that can explain the effect of subtraction
from simple, noematic or particulate transcendence, from the
transcendence that from the outset is always in doublet. Badiou
explains subtraction via the void, that is to say in an absolutely
passive manner, whereas NP explains it as a radicalIy passive
(that is to say, non-contemplative) efFect, generated or resumed
by an occasional cause or a unilateral complementarity. Badiou
holds to a contemplative materialism, as Marx would say,
even while being obliged to suppose that it has an abstract or
quasi-transcendental operativity flattened onto it. This is again
the risk of an intermediary instance or a mediation, this time
necessitated by the mathematical void which itself is too inert,
and which thus has need of a transcendent but hidden organon.
The choice is between a mathematicism that is spontaneously
consonant with the materialist void, and a physics of superposition that, from the outset, makes of real immanence as last
instance a minimal practical human organon. The means or
the mediation adds nothing real to the Real that is continued in
it, only to the reality that takes place as occasional. The generic
Subject as Last Instance is immediately an immanent force of
means-this is what we calI the mediate-without-mediation or
the mediatum.
Now, on the side of reduced transcendence, if one supposes
it isolated from its pulsion, reality is added to the Real (but
"under" the Real)-a sterile addition with regard to the Real,
just as idempotence would have it, but one that unleashes the
particulate becoming. From this angle, the Real that includes
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Anti-Badiou
and configures the particle, and which itself is unifacial, seems
this time to act as a bifacial Other-than ... acting precisely upon
the world, like a new instance of radical alterity (not absolute
alterity, as, for example, in Levinas). The under-potentialization
to which the non-act leads is manifested in the least-act that it
then exerts as Other-than or Stranger-subject upon the double
transcendence of the world that it simplifies. It is manifested
on first appearance as an acting of the world upon the world,
but one affected by an alterity that philosophers confuse with
under-potentialization-whereas this phenomenon is but a
modelization of the least-act by worldy acting. Qua a priori,
the particle is the manifestation of the suspended world, of
halted sufficiency, and is found charged with the tasks of the a
priori, those of the transformation of the philo-world into philofiction. Immanent non -acting underdetermines the weak act or
the least-act of that transformation which is the only possibility
left to man.
If philosophy brings together an aspects of the possible, the
radical Real via superposition cannot, inversely, be possibilized
by logic or philosophy, to which it is foreclosed. It is rather
that this Real impossibilizes them, transforms them by underdetermining them through the a priori of the Impossible. To be
subtracted, itself, from the particulate a priori (non-commutativity) is the essence of the sole cause (the Last Instance or the
generic Subject) that can act through its non-acting. But there
subsists a "bond" of a priori unilaterality between generic Man
and the world qua occasional; this unilaterallink is the equivalent
of "being-for" the world, it is their unilateral complementarity.
Philo-fiction
223
Qua separated, and because it is separated, the generic Subject
is nevertheless destined a priori for the world, but this is not
a com-portment, it is the real possibility-(of)-impossibility, a
contribution of the world rather than a com-portment with it.
The Real "contributes" the world by impossibilizing it as world
but leaving it as world.
The Real, thanks to the Other-than ... in the figure of which
it announces itself to the world, and that it is, insofar as
occasionally it can speak itself (a speaking whose daims it has
already suspended) can act, finaIly, upon the possible, without
being its opposite, without acting directIy upon it, but by
suspending its sufficiency. TIIe Real as a priori is impossiblefor '" logical contradiction, but it is in this way that it gives
or makes visible originarily (that is to say, transforms) logical
contradiction, and aIl those princip les that AristotIe charged
philosophy and the real with, as Being and Thought. Alongside
the truths of fact and the logical truths that are the funds
of philosophical commerce, transforming them by "impossibilizing" them, the Real manifests necessary and impossible
truths, truths whose impossibility is necessary. The Real is
impossible when it acts as Other-th an particulate or a priori; it
is the a priori of impossibility necessary to under-determine or
to transform the given world or the possible world, suspending
the sufficiency of logical possibility, illegalizing legality without
destroying it, putting into eftect everywhere an impossibilization of functionings without annihilating them. The Real of
immanence, by virtue of the partide that it configures, is the
non-dialectical solution to contradiction and to antinomies.
224
Anfi-Badiou
It impossibilizes logic and the ory without destroying them,
instead simplifying them into their materiality, reducing them
to the state of fiction-but a logic-fiction or philo-fiction. It
gives to deployed theory, to a11 of fiction al materiality, its force
of "formalism;' for which reality, the empirical, and ideality are
a11 of fictional materiality, but without constitutive efTect upon it.
From metaphor to unilateral
complementarity
To admit this mutation, which imposes upon philosophy a
physical rather than a linguistic model, to dissociate thinldng and
logos, .we must admit that the physical level does not annul the
linguistic surface of philosophy, but that its quantum (undulatory
and particulate) materiality and its quantware syntax (rather th an
logical syntax) are immanent to this linguistic surface, and imply its
quantum treatment or transform it. Just as the most mathematical
physics also speaks in natural and common language (albeit
not unproblematica11y), so the quantum theory of philosophy is
spoken in naturallanguage-a situation rather more convenient
th an that of physics, since the two have a natural language in
common. We must reconsider the status of metaphor, and avoid
saying, as Deleuze does, that there is no such thing; we must take
up this problem, which is that of the confrontation of mathematical language and the natural language of life in the world.
The solution consists in treating naturallanguage itself as a metalanguage of that quantum theory of philosophy, and as being also
Philo-fiction
225
a phenomenon intelligible in quantum-theoretical terms-that is
to say, a particulate phenomenon. And on the other hand, for its
part, the quantum physics required here must be transformed by
naturallanguage, through its translation into a quantum or quantial
thought, as the generic matrix demands. In order to do so, must we
invoke the indirect language of quantum physicists, and the whole
problem of the natural interpretation of quantum theory? Why
would the world be a metaphor of mathematics, except, perhaps,
from their point of view-and in any case, Gôdel prohibits this
absolutizing of mathematics. It itself has need of a natural metalanguage, and thus the situation of a double tension is unavoidable.
Unilateral duality precisely can resolve this problem in the form
of a unilateral complementarity of quantum theory and metalanguage, which is the true Bohr complementarity ofmathematics
(algebra) and language, not just that of wave and particle. We
must extend and transform Bohr's special complementarity in the
direction of a more general complementarity of the micro- and
macroscopic, applied to philosophy and quantum theory together.
Is not this generic cornplementarity the real content of what we caIl
metaphor in the case of philosophy, and indirect language in the
case of science? Is it not a means to resolve the question of indirect
languages? We must pursue as far as possible a "quantification"
of natural and philosophicallanguage, so as to be able to deduce
the latter as particulate. General complementarity as a product
of extremes, but resumed genericaIly, is perhaps the solution that
was there from the start, and was not therefore dependent on
philosophy and quantum theory as disciplines in exteriority one
in relation to the other. The problem is from the outset regulated
226
Anti-Badiou
in-the-Iast-instance as, already, providing its own solution: there
is not philosophy on one side and quantum the ory on the other,
each delivered to the PSP and PSM that signify their reciprocal
exteriority, that is to say their sufficiency. We have posited a priori
the conditions for the disciplines no longer being sufficient except
in appearance, and for their admitting their generic or inverse
(but precisely not equal) translations from the outset. This is to
treat already according to Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle the
problem of translations, which, moreover, do not reform a reciprocal interiority, any more th an an exteriority, no more a substance
th an an atomism. It is precisely the radical indetermination in
principle of these translations (not entirely in Quine's sense) that
the unilateral complementarity of mathematics and philosophy
registers. Moreover, mathematics itself is translated philosophically once the product is inscribed in parentheses-this is the
phenomenon we calI the rational quantum kernel, or quantware.
Quantware cornes in the form of the philosophical translation
of quantum theory; it constitutes, already, a denumerization and
a deconceptualization that prepare their unilateral complementarity. Unilateral duality has no sense except in the parentheses
of inverse products, and thus as non-readable, non-decipherable
philosophicaIly, and, equaIly, non-readable in purely quantumtheoretical manner. Unilateral duality is a quantware concept,
not a software concept. To interpret it, we must use concepts and
quantum the ory in a relation of wave-particle correlation, thus in
the generic form of complementarity.
The entire elaboration of the generic matrix is such an
operation of complementarity, or resolution of metaphor.
Philo-fiction
227
It is not that metaphor does not exist; but it certainly does not
regulate the problem sufficiently. In the same way, the quantification of concepts is not sufficient quantum theory, but its use as
a means. Thus, in the generic complementarity assured by radical
immanence, everything that is used is used as means and not as
sufficient finality. This is what settles the question of metaphor, in
the sense that the excess of meta-phor is that of a transcendence
that doubles itself, and that unilateral complementarity makes
the correlation of dialectical opposites redescend to the plane
of generic immanence; the Real under-determines or underpotentializes metaphor. Our generic matrix is an experimental
chamber of the transformation of knowledges and of their philosophical relations as metaphors. It is truly the fusion of quantum
theory and philosophy, whose unity in the form of their inverted
products is under-determined by quantum theory, no longer
positive or mathematicized, but already philosophized, or at least
reduced, by generic complementarity. We must treat metaphor
generically, and not leave it either to internaI relations or external
relations; the correlation, or rather unilation, of unilateral
complementarity is neither substantial nor atomic.
In what sense is the st ranger
"undocumented"?1 Toward a generic
ethics of philosophy
We have treated generically, not philosophically, the philosopher-Adversary, discussed his method of thinking without
228
Anti-Badiou
negating its materiality, but only its PSP and its PSM, the two
pillars of his formaI and authoritarian sufficiency. We now
no longer work under a thesis, axiom or principle, within a
discursivity, but in an experimental matrix -strictly speaking,
un der variables and parameters, in conformity with the ethics
of means. Under condition of their withdrawal, we can always
consider those remnants, philosophy's hypotheses and theses
of every sort, as variables conjugated but under-determined
by the generic hypothesis of radicality or of the One-in -One
obtained via superposition. We can make ourselves an "idea" of
non-philosophy as ethics of philosophy put under condition of
humans understood not as individual subjects, but as generic
subjects who only possess an individual subject qua margin of
transcendence.
We can transform another of Badiou's gui ding threads into an
Ariadne's thread to explore our matrix: philosophers willingly
put forward the hypothesis of an absolute or hyperbolic poverty.
Badiou does so too, with the figure of the undocumented
Stranger, who is a sort of Archimedean point, a figure or concentrate of his philosophy, and also a margin of contemporary
philosophy. 1his St ranger is stripped of everything, but not of
the hope of obtaining, aIl the same, the documents to authorize
his residency; hope as the last predicate still equivalent to the
AlI, or outlining its image. The Stranger is an absolute limit, a
limit capable of reversing itself dialectically into its opposite, as
is the rule with the idealism of modern philosophers, a rule of
AlI to AIl. For philosophical hypotheses are made to reverse into
their opposite, whether the Idea of communism or the Reign of
Philo-fiction
229
ends. Even Lacan, as Derrida has shown, and Badiou, as we have
tried to do, do not escape the pointillized AH, the transparency
or the mirror that accompanies the typicaHy philosophicallittle
ruse of the famous "not-al!:' The philosophical individual is
always aIl-document, whether he has documents or not-t~
think otherwise would be to abusively limit the problem, like
philosophers who intra-philosophicaHy partition their object.
Absolute poverty allows a reversaI, for example, of nihilism into
counter-nihilism; it is the form of Cartesian or absolute doubt
that the proletariat deprived of "aIl" in Marx's sense (denuded
of aH predicates but perhaps not yet of AH) can also assume.
What is ultimately proper to the philosopher is to be denuded
of an, to the point of his death, except his death, inclusive of
which he cannot un do or be undone. Even Badiou's materialism,
which leads his specular image from torsion to torsion, cannot
disburden him of it. Philosophy is not the scientific or generic
test that could succeed in delivering him from his mirror-image.
It is thus no longer possible for us to think via hypotheses,
even hyperbolic hypotheses. The hypothesis must be a means,
but how do means re-enter into the matrix, if not as variables
to conjugate with others and with philosophy in particular?
Even the void, the catastrophe, disorder, chaos, are means that
await a generic end. Where Badiou thinks too absolutely within
a philosophical position or Idea, rather than thinking genericany and via a matrix, we posit the fusion of the variables of
absolute or ph ilosoph ical poverty (its Idea or that of Communism)
and the radical or immanent poverty of scientific stripping-bare,
as unity under-determined by the latter. Communism, but of
230
Anti-Badiou
course-there has never been any other solution worthy of
Humans and sought by them; but a generic or non-standard
communism rather th an a supposedly "true" authoritarian Idea
of it. If these are the variables, there is no more spontaneous
practice of philosophy that would ceaselessly presuppose itselfthe philosopher as subscriber to the vicious circle-here it is no
more than a "first" means alongside others. We avoid contenting
ourselves with formulas that are too general, and with their
bipolar reversaI, "poverty, therefore communism;' or formulae
of the military and authoritarian type ("those who have nothing
have only their discipline"). For even the most naked or the
most absurd discipline demands me ans or weapons-even the
mere human body, which is the a priori form of every weapon,
rather than a weapon to be incorporated or taken in hand. We
shaH oppose to Badiou-the-Disciplinary another slogan: the
only weapon of the poor, stripped not only of aIl but once and
for ail of the Al! itselJ is invention. It will be a matter of passing
from absolute poverty (the philosophicalloss of philosophy) to
radical poverty as non-philosophicalloss of philosophy.
Let us pose a last question worthy to attract the mockery of
philosophical opinion: how can we recognize a "poor man;' and
what do es "pauperized" -or in more statist manner, "undocumented", reaHy mean? For philosophy, it is almost self-evident,
give or take a few definitions: the poor man is recognized or can
be identified by subtraction, by the suspension or privation of
certain predicates, but without this touching on the sufficiency
of philosophy, always ready to return because it is in reality
that which assures this recognition, and furnishes the means
Philo-fiction
231
for it-just like our favorite philosopher, who distributes his
rare truths and, what is more, the proper names that go with
them. The true Idea of an "authentic" poor man, as we come to
understand, is that of the philosopher himself, who incarnates
it as a paradigmatic character: the riche st man, not necessarily
yet actual or actualized, but endowed with a capital of potentialities that enables him to wait for history to reach its end, or
who himself cornes to his end. But for the non-philosopher, the
poor man is not so easily identifiable, once the sufficiency and
authority of these super-predicates of the AH and of Position
are in turn suspended and processed. From the poor man of
philosophy, who always hopes for a minimum of documentation, we must distinguish the radical Stranger-very different,
neither with nor without documentation, neither with nor
without identity, but who works at transforming, with the aid of
the world, the definitions of himself that he has received. What
does "undocumented" mean, exactly? It is a matter of a wholIy
negative subtraction by the philosopher who, himselt can then
return with aH the positivity of the Good Samaritan. But if this
subtraction is radical rather than a vicious circle, it must be
without return: no Samaritan cornes to the help of the undocumented. Or if a "subject" can come to the aid of the St ranger, it
will be the generic subject, that is to say the humans of-the-Iastinstance rather than the philosopher who, in fact, in ste ad plays
the role of the Bad Shepherd.
Let us set out again from the in-One, from superposition
as radical immanence. What is the Stranger-subject, the
old individual philosophical subject who we might calI the
232
Anti-Badiou
Two-in-One, when it is no longer given in-AlI, but as relative
exteriority of a radical transcendence-in-immanence? On the
margin of the One or of immanence, the Two of the Stranger
is contributed or announced as unifacial image-(of)-the-One,
an image once and for aIl. The Two cannot reflect the everirreflexive One, which would thereby become Two; it is one
image each time, not two, then three, four images. Thus the
image-(of)-the-One (or, if you like, the individual Stranger
as marginal image of the Last Instance) is not a double of the
One, or an image in any sense whatsoever. Apart from the State,
and what remains of it in Badiou's authoritarian philosophism,
no one could recognize the One by intuiting its image-Ïi is
an affect of the unique image, and one that prohibits seeing
the One itself as separated. Man-in-person or the generic Last
Instance is he whose "person" as Stranger prohibits me from
recognizing him in himself or from identifying him through
given predicates, and who is the object of an obscure or secret
praxis that we have called the lived -without-life. ClassicaIly,
the image is first, but it presupposes the prior-to-priority of the
One without giving it one more time. For example, the "One" of
philosophy itself is precisely this image that we must relate, or
"contribute" as each time unique, to the radical One and not to
absolute Being. The radical One is that of a stance, and is given
as a lived-without-life or is feIt through and through in the
image where, however, it is never projected, as in a first image
that would precede it. As to this image itself that is the Strangersubject or, in origin, the old individual ego become marginal, we
know that it is of double-aspect, double interpretation, that it is a
Philo-fiction
233
Two. The One being this time unifacial, there can be, according
to the perspectives of the world, a thousand different images in
which it is incarnated as stance, but only one each time-even
if this unifacial image is also, ambiguously, as we say elsewhere,
the (non- )One (the one and only document of the Stranger),
and the non-(One) (his thousand documents), through which
we have the sole access possible to the One. 1he One itself is not
an external access to the world, but something immanent that
goes or under-goes or that transcends, without itself giving rise
to a double transcendence. The One advances incognito before
its image, or traverses it.
Preface
1 [Translator's note-Planification: Laruelle intends this word to
cover a variety of meanings induding: (1) What he will describe
as a materialist stratification and quasi-reductionism in Badiou's
thought; (2) The distinctions between the planes [plans J of Being
and appearance, and also the various planes of philosophy,
meta-philosophy, etc.; (3) An allusion to the four-year plans of the
communist economies; (4) The modern ideal of planning found
in Leibniz, and in capitalism, or in Heidegger's account of modern
exploitation; (5) Plato's philosophy as an ordering into planes of
anterior knowledges-myth and mysteries, physis, sophistics, the
polis. This key term, which l thus preserve as a neologism, brings
with it a planned/planar conception of philosophy to which Laruelle
will oppose a thinking of waves and fluxes-and of bodies, but not
Deleuzian surfaces or the Badiousian planes of an "order-structure"
(see A. Badiou, Second Manifesta For Philosophy, tr. L. Burchill
(Cambridge: Polity, 20 Il) J.
2 A. Badiou, Logies of Worlds, tr. A. Toscano (London/NY: Continuum,
2009).
3 F. Laruelle, Philosophie non-standard (Paris: Kimé, 2010).
Notes
235
Introduction
1 [Translator's note: Laruelle opposes the "matter" [matière] of
philosophical materialism to the "mate riel" [material-a neologism
in French] which is that of the "lived" [vécu]. This is to be
distinguished, at least provisionally, from the "mate rials" [matériau] of
non-philosophy (which include, of course, philosophy).]
2 [Translator's note: relancer-to resume, reinitiate, extend or continue,
in the sense that a vector, in physics, can be extended or continued
through addition of another vector.]
3 A. Badiou, Being and Event, tr. O. Feltham (New York: Continuum,
2005).
4 A. Badiou, Manifesta for Philosophy, tr. N. Madarasz (Albany: SUNY
Press, 1999); A. Badiou, Second Manifesto For Philosophy, tr. L.
Burchill (Cambridge: Polity, 2011).
5 T. Aguilar, "Badiou et non-philosophie: un parallele': in
Non-Philosophie, le Collectif, La non-philosophie des contemporains
(Paris: Kimé, 1995).
Chapter 1
1 [Translator's note: Not without a certain deadpan humor, Laruelle
articulates his work into (so far) five clearly-delineated stages,
Philosophie I- V, which he characterizes as renewed efforts toward
an identical aim, with each new wave propelled by the force of new
means and resources. In Philosophie l (1971-81) Laruelle carried
out his apprenticeship within, and his heretical separation from,
phenomenology, critique and deconstruction. In Philosophie II
(1981-95) "non-philosophy" emerged explicitly, and was developed
and reworked throughout Philosophie III (1995-2000) and Philosophie
IV (2002-7), which, very broadly speaking, direct special attention
to the relation between non-philosophy and, respectively, science
and religion. Laruelle now asserts (see the Preface, above) that
non-philosophy has entered into a new period, Philosophie V
236
Notes
(2007 -present), characterized by the use of the quantum concepts
of superposition and non-commutativity disc:ussed throughout the
present work, in which he now speaks of his work as "Non-Standard
Philosophy:' For a list of works belonging to each period (excluding
Philosophie V), see the bibliography included in
R. Brassier, ''Axiomatic Heresy;' in Radical Philosophy 121
(September-October 2003). See also A. P. Smith, "Thinking From the
One: Science and the Ancient Figure of the One;' in J. Mullarkey, A.
P. Smith (eds), Lamelle and Non-Philosophy (Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press, 2012), 19-41: 27-30]
2 F. Laruelle, Théorie des Étrangers (Paris: Kimé, 1998).
3 [Translator's note: Devices of the form x (de) y are used regularly by
Laruelle, and should be understood as carrying a multiple meaning:
force (de) pensée, as the author indicates here, signifies a "thoughtforce;' to be understood on the model of Marx's "labor-power" (force
de travail]; but also a "force that belongs to thought;' and ultimately
the coalescence and the identity (or superposition) of the two terms.
A formulation such as immanence (à) soi invites the reader to elide
the genitive, and can be read as indicating that "immanence to self"
refers ultimately to an identity of "self-immanence:' Owing to the
syntactical differences between English and French it is difficult to
render this ambiguity entirely consistently and preserve the various
senses. Different translators of Laruelle's work have opted for different
solutions here. vVe have maintained the x (of) y structure (therefore
preserving the allusion to precedents such as Derrida's "force (00
law") but added hyphenation so as to suggest that each such formula
should be read as a semantic unit, with the inherent possibility
of contrac:ting their three terms into one (hyphenated) terrrlo
Unfortunately, in a case such as "force-(oO-thought" this leaves to the
reader the translator's task of reversing noun and adjective so as to
yield the allusive "thought -force:']
Chapter 2
1 François Laruelle, tr. A. P. Smith (London/NY: Continuum, 2010).
Notes
237
Chapter 6
1 [Translator's note: Laruelle's neologism en-semblisme is a
"portmanteau" word in which he intends to converge semblance
("seeming") and ensemblisme ("set-theoreticism") by way of an en("in-") that refers to immanence by recalling the One-in-One. It is
thus a kind of (untranslatable) non-philosophical deconstruction of
set-theoreticism as mathematic:al theOl-Y.]
2 A. Badiou, Being and Event, tr. O. Feltharn (New York: Continuum,
2005),30.
Chapter 7
1 A. Badiou, 1heory of the Subject, tr. B. Bosteels (New York:
Continuum, 2009).
2 [Translator's note: sous-venue-to be understood as cognate with
"under-determination:' "under-going" refers to a becoming that does
not take place at the level of representation but at a deeper (quantum)
level.]
Chapter 8
1 [Translator's Note: Undocumented-Sans-Papiers: lit. "without
papers" -those immigrants to France who do not have official
permission for their residency or employment in the country-and
whose cause Badiou has taken up both politically and philosophically
in various works.]
Index
and event, in Badiou 49,98
and the generic xvi
and identity 112
mathematical 46
as multiple 4, 8, 9, 13, 63
as (not-) One 117
in NP 82-3
as object of OV 2
and the one 8
in Parmenides 105
and the real 126, 130
as Real-One 198
and set, in Badiou 90, 94, 99,
179
as traditional object of
philosophy 45, 109, 110
and truth, in Badiou 92
and the undecidable 48
as void 117,78
Bohr, Niels 225
Brassier, Ray 236
calculation 164
Cantor, Georg xvii, xxi, xxv,
2,12,19,23,29,46,47,
62,63,116,117,179,182
capitalism
anti- vs non-capitalism 130
christianity 31,34,213
Cohen, Hermann 136
Cohen, Paul xxv, 12,23
communism 30, 31, 36,98,107,
229-30
consistency 149, 168-9
contemporary 84
and modern 23-5
corpuscular
239
and undulatory xxix-xxx, 33
Darwin, Charles 214
decision xxxviii, 20, 37-8, 48-9,
129, 139, 160, 169
deconstruction xxiii, Ill, 179, 208
Deleuze, Gilles xxvii-xxviii, xxix,
xxxiii, xxxviii, l, 6-7, Il,
15,22,25,26,30,70,74,
95,108, 110, 111, 179-80,
184-6, 224,234n. 1
"body without organs" 7
"desiring machines" 159
and Guattari, Félix:
Anti-Oedipus xxxi
on metaphor 224
and planification 33
and set theory; dispute with
Badiou 59
democracy xxii, 35,46
Derrida, Jacques ix, xvi, xxviii,
xxxiii, xxxviii, 1, 22, 26, 41,
51, Ill, 135,22~236IL3
Descartes, René 4, 20, 65
Cartesian doubt 126, 192,229
and planification 33
dialectic 12,46, 188
materialist dialectic 13, 115,
149,214-15
transcendental, in Kant 128,
129
difference 1, 111-12, 114-17,135,
179-80
différance xxix, 135
ontologicalll1, 114, 116
dogmatism 62, 70, 176, 180, 195
dualysis 55, 61, 158, 159, 164-5
242
Index
136, 162, 163, 169, 175,
180, 187, 190-1
and ontological difference 117
and ontology 66
in OV 77-8, 93
and philosophy 47,97, 148-50,
163,178,202
in Badiou 107,205
and physics 96, 221
Principle of Sufficient
Mathematics (PSM) 158,
226
and the real127
mediate-without -mediation 106
metaphysics 120, 170
Badiou's 115, 116
in Kant 128
militancy xxxvi, 27
modelization, models 212
Parmenidean formula as
model199
philosophy as auto-modelizing
206
philosophy as model122, 211,
213
of radical immanence 101-2
of real, in NP 211
of thought: physics vs
mathematics 177-8
modernity, the "modern" ix, 19-26
Moebius band 120, 143, 149
in Deleuze xxvii, 70
in Deleuze and Badiou 179
inconsistent 128
Multiple
and One 4,8,62, 72, 116, 133,
180
in OV and NP 8-9, 63
and vision-in-One 182
Nietzsche, Friedrich xvi, xvii, l,
43, 74, 108, 183
The Anti-Christ xxxi
and planification 33
nihilism xxxviii
non-acting xiv, 139, 141, 142,
219-20
non-commutativity xxv, 84, 86,
87,90,94,110,124,126
non-philosophy (NP) x-xi, xvi,
xxiii, xxiv, xxvi-xxvii, xli,
1-5,61,76-8,84,152
affect of 34
Badiou on 57
as defense ofhumans 32
essential principles 5-7
history and development of 29,
30, 125, 235-6n. 1
and liberation of humans
27-8,36
and marxism 12-13
and music 125
phenomenology as limited
form of xxvii
primacy of undulatory in 102
relation to mathematics 46
relation to philosophy xx,
14-17, 71, 86, 109-10,
129
and religion 31
and science 11-12, 86, 89
as utopia xxii
non-standard philosophy 36,61,
206, 235-6n. 1
Index
One 4-5, 183-4,232-3
and Being 114,115,169,170
"is not" 170
and materialism 170
and Multiple 4,8,62, 72, 132
and NP 149-50
repression of 149
One-in-One 2,3,4,7, 16,62,63,
112, 126, 150, 171, 198,
228
One-without-Being 112
ontology 2, 3,46-8, 114
dissociation from philosophy
in OV 2, 11, 15,45-7,90,
172
materialist 130
mathematical14, 51, 156, 168,
169, 171, 180, 187, 191
meta-ontology (Badiou) 2, 10,
Il, 14,66, 67, 71, 72, 91,
94,123,140,167-8,173,
205,209
and philosophy, in NP Il
of presence 3, 17, 115
and set the ory (Badiou) 94, 128
Ontology of the Void (OV) xxxiv,
rli, 1-5,7-10,85-8
affect of 34
and communism 36
and marxism 12-13
as non-philosophical14
radicality of 42-3
relation to philosophy 14-17,
45-50,86,89
return of the One in 14, 168
and science 10-12, 43, 86
specularity of 149-50, 152
243
and the subject 51-2
other, alterity 51-2, 134, 222
Parmenides xxxiii, 70, 105, 107,
197-9
and the Same xxvii, xxx
"pétaino-parliamentarianism" xiv,
35,98
phenomenology 24, 119, 120, 125,
163, 193
as limited form of NP xxvii
philosophy 14-17, 40-2, 145,
147-8, 151
after OV 45-50, 191
Badiou's defense of 27 -8, 61,
107
and belief 108
cataphatic 141
and dialogue xxxiv-xxxv
as "disaster" (Badiou) 36, 66,
68,100,108,174,202
"end" of 16, 104-5
materiality of xi, 176, 178, 185,
207
and mathematics 78, 148-50
and the media 39-40, 106
and memory 32-3
and opinion xxxiv-xxxv
philosophers and intellectllals
104-6
placed "under condition"
40-1,58,87-8,148,186,
199
as Platonico-Aristotelian
108-9,114,175
Principle of Sufficient
Philosophy (PSP) xxvi,
Index
in OV and NP 10-12
of philosophy see philosophy,
science of
proletarian 123
relation to philosophy 69-70,
175
revolutionary (Marx) xii,
214
and subject, in NP 124
set theory, sets 1, 2, Il, 59, 62, 72,
77,78,81-3,86,90,94,96,
130,132,174,175
empty set 9, 129, 130, 132, 140,
170-2,174
and the One 171
Socrates xxi, 102
specularity xii, 97, 125, 149-53,
156
of empty set 172
Spinoza, Baruch 6
Stranger 54, 83, 130, 231-3
in Badiou 31, 45, 228
subject 39, 142
c:lone-subject or St ranger 83,
222
materiality of 39
in NP, 'science-subject' 53-4,
64-6,69,70,122,123-4
in OV 51,131
subtraction 52-3, 68, 133-4,
140-1,163,221,230
245
and subtraction 144
terror xii-xiii
topology 32,93,116,136,179,201
of concepts, in OV 87
torsion xii, 32, 35, 43, 48, 60, 85,
92, 116,229
and non-commutativity 87
transcendence xxx, 5, 6, 28, 46,
52,58,67,144,173
amphiboly of 164-6
corpuscular xxix
of decision 160
in Deleuze xxvii, 184
multiple as (OV) 9
in NP xxix, 6, 127
in av and NP 131
particulate 165
philosophical xxvi, 2, 5, 26,
3~ 51, 70,92,98-100,106,
118, 119
and psychoanalysis 55
contingency of 112
double-transcendence 97,
136, 137, 233
real as (OV) 7
of the set-form 132
transcendental xxiv, 7, 9, 16,28,
50,67,68,72,73,74-5,76,
78,85,91,99-100,134,
150, 171
Badiou on 172
as heart of philosophy 60
vs modelization 212
as understood by NP 143-4
superposition xxv, xxx, 5, 16,44,
truth, truths xiii, xiv, xxi, xxxiv,
62,83,86,89,93,101,104,
112, 113, 119-20, 126, 141,
155, 182
16,21,25,29,41,49,58,
78,84-5,92,93,98,107,
173, 210, 223
246
in bodies (Badiou) 106
as event (Badiou) 38
and transcendental illusion
63-6
truth procedures 12, 14,35, 85
undulatory
and corpuscular xxix-xxx, 33,
101-2
and particulate 87
unilaterality xv, 94-5, 189,209
Index
in OV and NP 87
vision-in-One 11,26, 180, 182
void xv, xxi, xxv, 13, 64, 78, 129,
150, 163-4
Being as 117
and idempotence 130, 192
and surface 33-4
voluntarism 38, 187
Wittgenstein, Ludwig xxvii, 1