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Hegel and Deleuze: Immanence and Otherness
by
Christopher Groves
A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in
Philosophy
University of Warwick, Department of Philosophy
September 1999
Contents
Acknowledgernents and Declaration
III
Abstract
IN"
Abbreviations
v
Ch. I
Introduction:
Ch. 2
Kant, Fichte and Schelling: The Trauma of Reason
16
Ch. 3
Deleuze-. Philos-ophy as Practice
79
Ch. 4
Deleuze and the Absolute
109
Ch. 5
Hegel's Critique of Representational Consciousnesss
140
Ch. 6
Hegel's Account of Absolute Knowing: Logic and Being
176
Ch. 7
Hegel's Concept as an Antifoundationalist
Principle
218
Critical Assessment
258
Ch. 8
Philosophy,, Immanence and Otherness
Conclusion: Regel and Dkeleuze-A
I
275
Bibliography
11
Ac know ledgements
I would Re to thank my supervisor,, Professor Stephen Houlgate, for all his
during
Thanks
due
the
this
thesis.
to the
writing of
are also
advice and support
HmnairutiesResearchBoard of the British Academy, who provided me with a three-year
ResearchStudentship; to the Deutscher Akadernischer Austauschdienst.whose provision
in
1998
Hegelthe
to
three
spend
at
of a short-term research grant enabled me
months
Archiv, based at the Ruhr-UniversitAt, Bochum, Germany. and to DT Wolfgwig
Bonslepen, for his invaluable assistanceand readiness to discuss my work during my
Bochum.
stay in
Declaration
Some material from chapters 3 and 4 of this thesis has been published in another
form as 'Ecstasy of Reason, Cnsis of Reason: Schelling and Absolute Difference', in
PLI-The Wanvick Journal qfPhilosopk-y, 8 (.1999), pp. 25-45.
All matefial in this tbesis is my own woTk and has not been submitted
for
degree
at another university.
previously
a
iii
Abstract
The thesis critically analyses the dominant foundationalist tendency of modern
foundational]
to
the
with
special
reference
philosophy,
sophisticated anti
st critiques of
foundationalism,formulated bv G.W. F. Herzeland Gilles Deleuze.
It begins by outlining a general methodological aspect of foundationalism.
regarding the necessity of radical self-critique in philosophy, which directly connects
Cartesianism,
thought
with
contemporary
via classical German philosophy.
In the philosophies of Kant, Fichte and Schelling, this self-chtical project is
transformed: they undertake to show that reason can, by examining itself gpi an
give
is
that
account of expenence
systematic, or consistent with itself However, each of
these thinkers fails to accomplish this, and indeect the commitment to a priori
foundations is itself undermined in Schelling's work, where a philosophical crisis of
meaning (a 'trauma of reason', philosophical nibilism) emerges.
Deleuze and Hegel's contrasting critiques of foundationalism, and their positive
reconstructions of the standpoint of philosophy, are then interpreted as nonfoundationalist attempts to overcome this intemal cnsis of foundationalist thought as
by
Schelbrig. Both Cnticise certain subJective presuppositions
inadvertently exposed
foundationalist
dogmatic
to
they
common
philosophies, which
consider constitute a
,image' of philosophy, a kind of transcendentalillusion that is the guiding force behind
foundationalism. Both also aim to replace this with a genuinely philosophical image.
The thesis provides an original historical contextuali sation of Deleuze's thought
in relation to Gen-nan Idealism, and Schelling in particular, with whom., it is argued,
Deleuzehas much in common. Deleuze's conception of pure difference is treated in this
kind
knowledge'.
i
This
'absolute
contextual sation also allows the
regard as a
of
between
be
Hegel
Deleuze
to
sometimes crudely understood antipathy
and
addressedin
fashion,
have
in
in
thev
that
terms of
more
common
a more penetrating
which shows
their critical orientation than is usually supposed.
The thesis concludes with a cntical companson of these thinkers, which argues
thaý although both succeed in their own tenns, in relation to a critenon of selfconsistency, Hegel's philosophy offers a more satisfactory treatment of the ontological
and historical conditions of philosophical activity.
IV
Abbreviadons
Standard AfB format is used for references to Kant's Crifique of
Pure Reason. Other references are to the onginal text and the English
translation as per the following abbreviations and the Bibliography. and
form:
in
the
aregiven
WS 178/168
In caseswhere no English version was available, translations are my own.
Deleuze.AA
naývsede Logique et existencepar Jean Hyppolite
AO
LAnlj-Oedipe, Antl-Oedipus
B
Le bergsonisme,'Bergsonism
CD
La conceplion de dýffijrence chez Bergson
DialQguesDialogues
DR
Diffirence el rjpehljon, ýDifferenceand Repetition
ECC
EssaysCritical and Clinical
IL
L'immanence: une vie /Immanence: A Life
...
KP
La philosophie crilique de Kant, Kant's Cnti cal Philosophy
LS
La IQgjqueA sens.1be Logic of Sense
N
Pourparlers/Negotiations
Cý
NP
Nietzsche ei la phi/osophieNietzsche and Philosophy
SP
Spinozzaet le proWme tie /expression, Expressionism in Philosophy
Spmoza
V
SQ
Sur quaires formules poiliques qui pourraient risupier la philosophie
kanlienne
TP
Milles Plateaux.A Thousand Plateaus
WP
Ou'est-ce que la philosophie, ý What is Philosophy?
Fichte:
cc
(ýber den Begrýffder [Vi.vsen.
the Concept of
vchaftslehrelConcerninL,,
the Wissenschaftslehre
DSL
Ober den Unterschied des Geisies und des Buchstabens in der
PhilosophielCancernIng, the Difference between the Spirit and the
Letter within Philosophy
RA
Rezensiondes Aenesidemus/Review of Aenesidemus
WL
Grundlage der gesamten WissenschaftslehrelFoundationsof the Entire
Wissenschaftslehre
WLrun
Wissenschafislehrenow methodo,Wissenschaftslehrenova methodo
iw
Erster und
--weiter
Einleitungen zur Wissenschafi,glehre/Introduct*
ions
to the Wissenschaftslehre
Hegel:
DS
Differen.-
ties
Fichteschen
und
Schellingschen
ývstem der
PhilosophielThe Difference between Ficbte's and ScbellMg's System
Philosophy
of
EL
Enzyklopddie
der
philosophischen
Wi.ý,ýenschqfien
Enter
Ted Encyclopaedia Logic
FK
Wauben und Wissen/Faithand Knowledge
PR
Gnindlinien der PhilosophiedesRechisElementsof the Philosoph-Y
of
Right
vi
Ps
Phdnomenologie des Geistes/Pbenomenol ogy of Spirit
SL
Wissenschaftder LoVk/Science of Logic
Kant:
ci
Kritik der (IrteilskrajiCritique
CPrR
Krifik der praldischen Vernunfit,Critique of Practical Reason
CPuR
Kritik der reinen VernutýftCnÜque of Pure Reason
GMM
GrundleguW
zur
of Judgement
Melaphysik
der
SjuenG-rou-ndwoTk of
the
Metaphysics of Morals
p
Prolegomena.,'Prolegomena
Schelfing:
des philosophischen Empirismus
DPE
Dantellung
EE
Einleitung zu seinem erster 1,ntwurfeines SysIemýder Nalurphilosophie
WN
Ideen zur einer Philosophie der NaturlIdeas for a Philosophy of Nature
LMP
Vorlesungen über die Geschichte der neueren PhilosophielLectures on
the History of Modem Philosophy
PO
Philosophie der Ofjýnbarung
SPL
Stuttgart Pri-tat-vorlesun-aenIStuttgartSenunars
STI
System des transzendentalen IdealismusISystem of Transcendental
Idealism
THF
(ýber das Wesender menschhchenFreiheill7reati se on Hurnan Freedom
WA
Die WellallerrMe
WS
Svstemder Philosophie überhaupilSvstem of Philosophy in General
Ages of the World
('Wiirzburg System')
11,11
Chapter One
Introduction:
i)
Philosophy,
Inimanence and Otherness
Preliminaries
Thus, becauseour sensessometimes deceive us,
I decided to suppose that nothing was such as they led
imagine.
because
And
to
there are people who make
us
mistakes in reasoning, committing logical fallacies
concermimgeven the simplest questions in geometry, and
just
I
I
that
as judged
was
as prone to error as anyone
else, I rejected as unsound all the arguments I had
'
demonstrative
previously taken as
proofs.
With these lines from the Discourse on Method, Descartes announced the
Reformation of Scholastic philosophy and a decisive redefinition of philosophy's
conception of itself The modemity of Cartesianismties in its confidence in the ability of
the individual reasoning subject to determine the truth about being, and further, in its
in
individual
it
the
the
to
that
confidence
ability of
prove
possessesthis truth. It is this
latter assurance that represents a direct assault on medievalism, for it confers final
faculty
from
it
hegemony
the
the
thus
authority on
of reason, and
removes
of tradition
and its institutions, the ultimate sources of all Scbolastic arguments previously accepted
as 'demonstrative proofs'.
At the close of the twentieth century, such confidence seems to be at once an
feature
familiar
of the way we imagine ourselves. and yet somehow outdated.
intimately
to be spoken of With ironic, even cynical detachment. Over two hundred years of
1 Descartes, 1966, p. 59.
from
American
the
relentless criticism of traditional accretions of authority. stretching
and French Revolutions, and taking in the nse of mass industrial societies and the social
and political convulsions of the twentieth century, have seen Cartesian confidence
long-farniliar
by
listens
the
the
the
to
and accepts
replaced
riven stanceof
individual who
believing
claims of reason, without ever genuinely
in them, seeing reason instead as
simply another traditional authority to be criticised, without knowing where the resources
for such a cntique are to be found. This condition, which Nietzsche referred to as
'modern nihilism', finds a particularly suitable home in the twentieth century, the time of
by
bureaucratic
that
carried
out
regimes
genocide
employed
reason exclusively in the
service of their 'passions'.
How does this situation make itself felt in Western philosophy? One definition
of its violently altered self-image is given by the British philosopher Gillian Rose.
Commentating on a selection of modern Jewish thinkers within the pantheons of
from
Martin BubeT to
theory
existentialism, critical
and post-structuralism, ranging
JacquesDerrida, Rose wrote that 'their different ways of severing existential eros from
1
logos
The
itsef
to
trauma
meaning of such a
amount
a
reason
philosophical
wilhin
.2
immediately
its
Trauma
statement is not
apparent.
in
usual meaning refers to the
experiencing of a violent physiological or psychological shock that induces a
pathological condition within the orgamc or the psychic system. What can it mean to say
that reason expenencessuch a shock and is confined by such a condition?
One thing is clear from Rose's remarks, however. This trauma cannot be reduced
to an effect of conditions external to the activity of philosophy. Philosophy, in some
little,
To
the
anticipate a
sense,inflicts
wound on itself
we can say that the trawna of
because
the
modem
age
of the nature of the vocation that philosophy
reason appears in
Cartesian
for
the
itself namely,
epistemological prOject. whose goal is the
assumes
discovei-v of incomgible criteria for objective knowledge, and along with this, the
I
Rose, 1994, p. I-
2
firstly
The
to outline a
thesis
is
justification of the autonomy of pure reason.
goal of my
convincing definition of the philosopbical provenance of the trauma of reason, and then,
in the main part of the thesis, to assessthe work of two of the most trenchant critics of
the modem Cartesian project, G. W. F. Hegel and Gilles Deleuze, considered as ways of
4working through' this condition that provide resourcesfor reconceiving the vocation of
pbilosopby.
ii) The Ambition of Philosophy: Immanence
Our first object of enquiry has to be the Cartesian revolution itself, with the aim
deeper
into
little
of penetrating a
its meaning as a philosophical event. The sceptical
is
metbod
a way of redefining pbilosopby according to Plato's question in the
Theaeletus: 'what is knowledgeT. Descartes' vision thus still affirins philosophy as the
highest discipline of human knowledge, that is, as the knoWing of the meaning qj
knowledge. Critical epistemology, despite its modernity, remains knotted to the longest
threads of Westem thought. A constitutive element of its definition is the distinction
between philosophy, which deals with knowledge as such, and specific sciencesthat deal
knowing:
natural science, psychology, political science,
with particular modes of
economics and so on. Behind this privilege accorded to philosophy is still the complex
Greek notion of 1090s, the 'gathering' of being that inforrns Plato's conception of
dialectic and Aristotle's view of metaphysics as first philosophy. Philosophy remains the
discipline whose eros for being is pure, and which consequently possessesthe logos
for
being
knowledge
absolutely, gathering
without presupposing anything specific about
the nature of being. This is what divides philosophy from, for example, the natural
for
be
their
the
purposes
existence
of
assume
a
matter
nature
can
sciences,which
whose
describedmathematicallyor empirically.
The Aristotelian and Platonic legacy to philosophy is this faith in the essential
in
discovers
the
of
and
universality
what
it.
when unhindered,
purity of reason,
of being.
0
There is an affinity between reason and being. Reason is the most direct form of access
to being, a purer mode of seeing. Being is a medium within which reason moves without
hindrance. That which actually exists, the world that enfolds everyday life and constantly
upsets our plans and evadesour predictions, possessesan essential, internal order which
because
it
reason can reveal precisely
corresponds to the internal structure of reason
itself
the discursive interconnection of
orderly
entailments, of
grounds and
language,
being.
Reason,
Platonic
It is
to
the
true
consequences.
is
suitor of
use more
in
being.
In relation to reason, our other
immanent
in
always already
union with, is
faculties through which we become aware of the world, such as our senses,our memory
judged
found
be
being.
'seeing
Tbrough
on,
must
and
and so
wanting as modes of
into'
them, the world is necessarily distorted, for being resists them. This does not simply
be
that
occasionally we may
mean
rmstaken about the world, but more radically, that the
itself
appearsthrough our sensesand memory as shiffing, provisional, elusive world
in short, without certainty. Through our other faculties, the unity of reason with being is
lost, and we become aware of the world as an opaque honzon of awareness; we
is
before
however,
Reassurance,
through
provided
reason,
recognise it in its otherness.
being
belonged
because
This,
to
always already
which othernessrecedes.
we are sure, is
reason anyway. It is reason, for example, that allows us to correct the mistakes we make
through relying too much on our senses.
The idea of philosophy as an activity intimately bound up With the internal order
do
being,
therefore
without presuppositions about specific modes of
of
and which can
being, already constitutes an attack on such particular presuppositions. From Parmenides
in
despite
their
the subordinate sciences,
that,
the
necessity
onward,
implication is
being
the
essenceor meaning of
cannot ultimately result in
specific assumptions about
knowledge.
distortion
The
than
of
pure
a
role of philosophy is therefore a
anything more
for
In
in
6-science,
to
the
other
sciences.
claiming
itself
role of arch
sceptical one relation
from
disciplines
the possibility of
withholds
subordinate
philosophy simultaneously
4
justifying their own claim
about knowledge. Each 'inferior'
science is linked to a
specific region of being, which is cut out of the whole, as it were, through the acceptance
of axiomatic presuppositions.
In relation to the fundamental philosophical faith in reason, Scholasticism
for
Descartesa negative development. Scholastic philosophy, frorn his point
represented
of view, did not allow itself to be guided solely by the reason of the individual, but was
instead assured of its status by Church dogma, a corpus of traditional beliefs whose
authority was simply assumed.Consequently, the idea of the purity of the philosophical
for
being
takes on an active, ascetic aspect in the Cartesian sceptical method. The
eros
certainty of reason's immanence in being cannot be secured sIM-Plythrough traditional
doctrine and belief It has to be demonstrated, and this can only occur through a ftee
is
beliefs,
that
process of reasonmg
sceptical about all accepted
and which results in the
discovery of an ob,9.ective foundation of the unity of reason and being. Unless this
certainty is secured in this way, then it will itself remain a belief, a matter of faith. If this
is the case,then the Cartesian view of philosophy as arch ofLscienceis no different from
that which it cnticises. The need to prove that indiVldualsý siMPly becausethey reason,
have a priori knowledge without the need to rely on tradition, thus addressestwo issues:
belief
be
b)
tradition,
taken
and
a) whether a critical viewpoint can
and
upon accepted
legitimacy
it
has
the
the
this
issue of
of common
raised
whether
viewpomt can, once
the
beingjustify
its
of
of
reason
and
own assumption
unity
assumptions,
Importantly, this unity is interpreted by Descartes as the correspondenceof the
(sensory,
)
the
conceptual
of
mnemonic,
etc.
world
With a
subject's own representations
knowledge
is
All
the
to
than
that
subject.
of the world, of
reality
really external or o1her
the soul or of God necessarily implies the presenceof subjective representationalcontent
it
from
foundation
forrn
Thus
be
this
that
is
content
a
or another.
must
extracted.
of one
No specific content (do-va)can be assumedto be such a firm foundation until it has been
5
subjected to a test, designed to expose any content whose correspondence with reality
could be conditional or accidental.
It is Descartes' third methodological hypothesis. the excessive gesture which
(temporarily) transfonns God (the theological guaranteeof correspondence)into an evil,
deceiving demon, that makes the question of conditional knowledge decisive: anything
that objectively (in all casesof its occurrence as an opinion or doxa) presupposeseither
pre-given conceptual knowledge, as in the case of a proposition like 'man is a rational
3
anima ', or the intervention of faculties
other than thought, as with all opinions that rely
be
be
doubffuRy
Such
to
sensory
evidence,
upon
can
considered
only
opinions are
valid-
dependent
for
their validity upon conditions, and as long as this is the case,
objectively
know
that we know thern to be true, for the possibility of deception is held
we cannot
open as long as there remains a difference between an opinion and the criteria of its truth.
This problem of cerlainty requires its solution to be in the form of uncondifional
knowledge, foundational knowledge that we immediately know to be true without further
cnteria- The Cartesian cogito is supposed to serve as such mitnediate knowledge by
both
its
virtue of
content and its form- the proposition 'I am thinking' Ue pense) together
immediacy
the
of the self-reflection that constitutes this thought is indubitable proof
with
know
When
'I
I
I
the
thinking'
this without
of my existence.
entertain
proposition
am
referenceto criteria that may be doubted, indeed, to doubt the truth of this proposition is
to produce a contradiction. Thought and the nature of an existent here correspond
for
temporarily,
the immediate certainty that guarantees the cogno,
perfectly, if only
because
it
is
be
direct
that
to
constituted
in
an
act
of
attending
is
supposed
precisely
a
long
the
as this attending is maintainedseeing into
soul, only enduresso
It is thus necessaryto go fin-ther. The cogilo grants fon-nal certainty, for it gives
for
the objective correspondenceof representationand reality, narnely 'clanty'
us criteria
by
different
'distinctness',
are
possessed
which
classesof representation in various
and
3 Descartes, 1996, p. 17.
6
degrees,with the highest degree belonging to concepts. The move from the cogilo to the
for
by
God
is
the
the
proof of
thus motivated
needs of method,
in addition
existence of
to formal criteria of certainty, it is necessaryto establish the necessaryexistence of an
objective ground of the necessarycorrespondencebetween all clear and distinct ideas and
4
reality. Again, this can only be achieved through the exarnination of subjective
however,
it
Now,
representations.
is possible to go directly to the subject's store of
conceplual representations, for these possess the reqwred degree of clarity and
distinctness.The notion of God, Descartesreports, is unique among these concepts, for it
being.
Through the notorious 'ontological proof
alone represents a perfect
,
Descartes
connects the idea of the infinite perfection that necessarily belongs to the idea of God
idea
be
God
he
the
to
thought
then
of
necessaryexistence: if
with
were
as non-existent,
be
imperfect
be
God. Given that this premise produces a
and would not
would
contradiction, God necessarilyexists, as a real ground of the objective correspondenceof
our clear and distinct representationswith reality.
Descartes believes that this result is a justification of the unity of subjective
by
ftdl
the
this
restriction of
senseto
representation and reality, qualified
unity in its
it
is
Cartesian
If
this
then
so,
reason proves its autonomy: will
representationsof reason.
have demonstratedthat it possessesgenuine knowledge of being (of the res cogiians and
God), Without requiring specific presuppositions about being M order to do so. The
have
have
been
been
in
being
and
otherness
proven,
will
will
immanence of reason
domesticatedThe charge made against Descartes' rationalism by those who brought a parallel
fi-uifion,
form
thought
to
of
namely empincism,
and also characteristically modem
however, is that his critical method is not critical enough- Despite beginning correctly,
fails
the
to adequately addressthe question of its
the
of
subject,
it
representations
within
begin
for
does,
Descartes
to
order
in
as
it is necessaryabove all to
own presuppositions,
SeeCottingham, 1995, ppý 64,70-1.
7
maintain a faith in the autonomy of reason in order to eventually demonstrate it. This
faith is not simply a temporary postulate, but is, in the fonn of Descartes' reliance on
innate ideas as tools of method, actually an assumption that goes acknowledged. The
ideas of the res cogitans and the infinitely perfect God are held to have a natural, a priori
being
becauseof their content, for the content of either, when doubted,
to
relation
produces a contradiction. However, the idea that such concepts, because of their
representative content thereby possess a special ontological status, is placed under
5
suspicion by the emphicists, and above aUby Locke and Hw-ne.
This idea is itself, for the empiricists, an unwarranted assumption about the
indicating
nature of reason,
a residual and reassuring faith in the immanence of a priori
reason that remains unquestioned,which means that effectively Descartesalready knows
the answerto his enquiry when he setsout upon it. Pure reason only graspsbeing because
being has already been gathered by reason, via an unacknowledged presupposition, and
the boldness of the reason that makes God into a devil is simply sbow. Against this
background assumption of the immanence of reason in being, the empiricist method
The
the
of
concerns
genesis of representations,and
concepts in particular.
question of
how representations come to be present in the mind at all is privileged as more
fundamental than the problem of how it is possible that these representations could
knowledge.
bemg,
be
adequatelyrepresent
and a source of objective
Tbrough his account of the origin of ideas in sensibility, the passions, and the
laws
that
of the mind, Hume above all others
act as natural
associative principles
beliefill
basis
the
concerned
only
of
reason
as
with
a notion
constructs on an empirical
knowledge
to
objective
of the
regularity of our subjective experience, as opposed
heteronomous,
being.
Reason
therefore
the
a
order of external
is
uniformity of
function
'gathering',
its
instead
subspeciesof passion, an eros without any overtones of
being to support those beliefs about experience that are based upon good e-vidence
As when Hume (1990, Bk 1, pt 3, §1) disting"I ishes matters of fact from relations of ideas.
I
8
(constant conjunctions of impressions). Ile
longer
the correspondence of
no
issue is
representationswith what exists outside the subject. For Hume. the meaning of the idea
of necessaryconnection is not dependent upon its reference to, say, a causal power that
inheres in substances.Instead, its meaning comes from the relations that exist between
ideas imprinted in the memory by constantly repeated instancesof pairs of impressions.
The only relation of representationexists between unpressions and the ideas that literally
re-present them .6 Hence reason confronts mental contents that retain f or it a certain
opaqueness or otherness, for they are somehow given to it, and are indeed its own
idea
The
that it can overcome this opaqueness is the result of a
wellspring.
misapplication of reason beyond the bounds to which it is limited by its confingent,
merely given origin.
The empincist critique of Descartes' defence of the immanence of reason in
being is important for our tbeme of the trauma of reason. For Hume, reason is dependent
on an empirical contingency that it cannot itself account for. The possibility of there
being a regularity that is internal to the source of impressions, whatever it may be, cannot
be thought without abstracting from the contents of the mind. The othernessof external
is
here
itself,
for
the
reality
seen as
genetic condition of reason
it somehow provides an
opaque stimulus that gives nse to the habit of reasorung.
With Kant, the validity of a priori reasoning is defended in a way that cedes
but
then goes on to undermine it. The methodological
to
the
empiricist critique,
ground
in
itself
is
longer
Descartes'
to
takes
sceptical
no
sense,where
stancereason
respect
with
has
to nd oneself of the conditionally certain m order to ascend without
one only
difficulty to the unconditional. Krilik as method signifies that the very capacity of reason
for knowledge must itself be examined and criticised. Kant agrees widi the empiricists
that pure ideas alone cannot provide an adequate measure of what constitutes genuine
knowledge of objects. Sensibility has to have a role, and so if reason is to be
Hume, 1979, §2, §4,1990, Bk. 1, Pt 1,
& Pt 3, §§2-8.
9
autonomously capable of providing a priori knowledge, it must itself be the condition of
possibility fOTmaking judgements about the exte-mal woTId to whicb sensibility gives
access.Hence Kant, in agreeing with the empincists, simultaneously turns against them.
For Kant, it is the spontaneous and discursive-rational structure of the representing
subject's consciousnessthat makes possible the kind of discriminating power that enables
Hurne's subject to even tell the difference between two impressions. For Kant,
transcendental subjectivity is necessary in order to make subjective presentations
possible, without which the thought of real extemality and of re-presentationswould be
impossible.
For Descartes,the immanence of reason in being (the autonomy of philosophical
had
be
demonstrated
to
reason)
with reference to the content of our representationsof
is.
This provoked the empiricist response. Kant, however, understands the
what
demonstration of the immanence of reason in being, of the right of reason to deten-nine
in
fon-nal
a
what is,
sense. Our very consciousnessof external objects, and even of
impressions,
is only made possible by the structure of our reason. If we can
individual
determine this conditioning structure, we will have proof of the autonomy of reason. The
capacity of reason to determine 'what is' is thus conditioned by its capacity to deten-nine
be
itself
In this way, Kant sees reason as having the power to
to
to
itself !I
immanent
recognise its own limits as immanent to it -
as necessitatedby its own structure, rather
than being forced upon it from outside, as in Hume's account. Reasonhas the right to a
because
it
has
legislate
forms
knowledge
.
the
to
the
also
power
of possible
ph ori
be
forms
Knowledge
these
thus
alone
objects
can
presented.
of
experience, under which
knowledge
Once
has
been
this
of experience.
right
constitutes objective a priori
proved,
have,
demonstrated
it
through
that
consistent
a
Critical
epistemology,
pure reason will
being.
has
truth-claims
to
the
about
assess
right
alone
Reason is thus, for Kant, immanent to our experience of objects, and this is
demonstrated by an immanent self-examination on the part of reason. But this
10
deten-ninationof 'what is' is our experience, our presentationsof objects: an element of
is
Ding-an-sich,
thing-in-itself,
the
externality or othernessremains, in the
ýNhich never
an object of expenence, only a limit on the extension of objective knowledge and the
source of sensation, the material of experience.7 Nevertheless, this limit is immanent to
reason's own structure, for it establishesthe boundaries of objective knowledge. While
has
(de
limit,
it
jure),
this
reason
proper
autonomous or immanent
neverthelesstends to
transgress it and mire itself not in error, but in transcendenial illusion, by claiming
knowledge of the nature of the thing-in-itself, as in the modem rationalist tradition from
Descartesto Wolff. However, reason is sovereign within its own limits, and must defend
its domain (ditio) (CJ 174/13) by showing how it is possible to determine concrete a
knowledge
both
(what
is and what
theoretical
priori
of
and practical or moral matters
be,
finite
freedom)
limits,
dernonstrating
to
these
thus
ought
necessity and infinite
within
that both natural scienceand ethical life can be accountedfor by self-critical reason.
Kant's defence of a priori knowledge develops as a response to the Gennan
Enlightenment (A ujkldrung), by taking a stand against the resurgence of an unprincipled
fi7ith in reason. As such it is coeval with a more direct and negative reaction against the
Enlightenment, beginning with Hamaim and Herder. Nevertheless, Kant remains allied
independent,
Aujkldrer,
the
the
protestant reason against all
standard of
raising
with
traditional forms of authority, whether Church, State or academy. The struggle for the
dimension
implicit
light
brings
the
to
to
of the
political
right
use one's own reason
before
themselves
to
tradition:
must
present
authority
all claims
modem epistemological
the tribunal of reason and be judged. But first, as Kant acknowledges,reason has first to
be
by
its
to
claims
can
illegitimate
which
own excesses,in order provide criteria
criticise
This
tribunal.
the
the
to
is
central
of
own
authority
its
justify
order
and
in
exposed,
import of our presentation dius far.
See P §9.
Despite Kant's restrictions on reason's right to detennine 'what is', however, the
problem of presuppositions returns, concerning the self-consi steincy of the cntical
method. If Critical reason alone is to determine the validity of its claim to a priori
knowledge, then a question arises: bow is reason's right to criticise jiselfjustified. 1Chief
among the tenets of critical reason is that everything can be criticised, except the
immanent relafion of reason to itself that defines the very concept of criticism. 8 This
relation seemsto testify to a residue of otherness, for reason's right to examine itself is
acceptedas given. The immanence of reason to itself has not been demonstrated,and so
has
the right of reasonto determine 'what is', even within certain limits.
neither
Massing behind the vanguard of the direct reaction against the Enlightenment
and its supporter Kant, and appalled at the political and theological consequencesof
unrestrained critique, opponents of the critical turn gave a different forni to the sceptical
question: they raised doubts about the supposedly singular right of reason to question
One
everything else.
such thinker, F. H. Jacobi, gave a name to a pathological condition
by
defined
by
Kantian
thought,
philosophy and
a need always to
of modem
exemphfied
9
for
beliefs:
The
to
major symptom
nihilism.
provide
sufficient
reasons
validate values,
from
justifications,
is
infinite
the attempt to
this
which results
regressof
of
condition an
locate a first prmciple capable of grounding knowledge. Reason's right to critique must
be established, and then the right of reason to establish the right of critique, and so on.
This impossible labour creates an abyss of meaninglessnessinto which all beliefs and
10
disappear.
values
At this point, the question of a trauma of reason that is truly might say -a
immanently, one
be
'Me
modem epistemological tradition.
raised.
pathology of reason can
by allying itself at a fundamental level with scepticism, has courted this condition in
8 Beiser, 1987, pp. 1-2; Cutrefello, 1994, pp. 1-5.
Beiser, op. cit., pp. 81ff.
10Ibid., pp. 30-1.
I')
various partial forms. We have still not yet arrived, in this account, at the point where it
insinuates itself into reason itself, perhaps finallY SeN'ering,in Rose's words, eros ftom
logos. We have, however, seen reason driven back into itself, from an initially assumed
position of confidence, forced to become ever more wary of its own pretensions, until,
with the reaction against the mlightenment, the political and philosophical desire for
freedom from illegitimate autho-ritybecomes paralysed by the self-defeating attempts of
justify
itself
to
reason
as a universally competent judge, capable of stopping the desire
for freedom from becoming arbitrary and mired in violence and cynicism.
Nevertheless, a further step remains to be taken in this narrative. Almost a
century after the sftuggle between Kant and his opponents reached its height, Nietzsche,
described
'modem
thernatising
the
the
nihilism' as
most pressing problem of
age,
it as
in
between
two tendencies-'not
an antagonism
to esteemwhat we know, and not to be
allowed any longer to esteem the lies we should like to tell ourselves', a 'process of
dissolution'. II The philosopher finds herself faced with a fabricated world to which she
has 'absolutely no right' sIMPly by virtue of her reason,12and must confront it through
the medium of a force that is Ike a surging 'odierness' at the heart of reason itself,
how
Western
The
the
of
give
an
account
next chapter will
namely
will-to-power.
height
by
how
faced
by
be
the
this
to
reason,
at
of
showing
situation,
philosophy comes
its
deepest
As
German
Idealism,
to
this
pathology.
own
we
subjects itself
its ambition in
will
foundational
Schelling's
Fichte
to
provide
attempts
and
see, the result of
discovery
itself
in
for
the
to
the
of an
result
examine
right of reason
justifications
irrational 'remainder' that is not simply other than reason, but is an otherness that is
'inside' reason, and indeed is its own condition- This will threaten reason with the
be
that
immanent even to itself.
it cannol
possibility
" Nietzsche, 1968, §5.
12
Aid., § 122
-
13
Before we take this step, a word about the choice of Hegel and Deleuze as
mediator-, between otirselves and tbe trauma of reason. The sIgnIficance of this choice
can only ultimately be proven by the rest of the thesis. However. a few preliminary
remarks about the general approacb I am taking in relation to these figures are in order.
Given that my presentation of the trauma of reason is completed with an examination of
Schelling, with whom the development of the trauma is consummated, the penod of
historical time in which the trauma could be said to be the central if not always
acknowledged problem in Western thouglit is one in wbicb Hegel and Deleuze stand at
opposite ends, and also one in which Hegel's influence has, up to the present, been
largely decisive.
Deleuze's desire, to break radically with the Hegelian tradition is, I dunk,
difficulties
faces
the
that
thought
particularly suggestiveof
philosophical
M the wake of
Schelling's critique of a priori reason, for the redefimtion of critique that Deleuze
directly
is,
in
(as
I
shall show),
method, execution and result
related to the
undertakes
in
Chapters
Four
Deleuze's
Schelling's
I
Three
that
and
of
critique.
shall
argue
results
its
legacy)
(and
Kantianism
turn
in general
phenomenological
against
ontological
Fichte.
My
Schelling's
turn
to
against
ontological
perforrns a similar philosophical role
from
'historical'
be
Deleuze's
thought,
the
the
early
on
continuity of
emphasis will
is
in
it
What
Philosophy?,
the
is
to
an attempt at a
way which
more specifically,
writings
fully rigorous meditation on the role of the Absolute in philosophy. This stress on
is
Absolute,
foregrounding
the
the
in my opinion absolutely necessary
of
continuity, and
in
French
Deleuze's
philosophy as
the
post-war
position
uniquenessof
in order to grasp
difference.
For
this
concentration on
given
thinker
of
space,
reasons
of
an ontological
had
have
the
I
to
of
specific
extended
investigation
omit
any
unfortunately
continuity,
Schizophrenia,
Caphialisni
the
two
and
volumes of
social-theoretical concems of
doing
Deleuze's
believe,
to
I
multifaceted oeuvre, in so
excessive
any
violence
without,
far as its developmentis concerned.
14
The relationship between Hegel and Deleuze has often been viewed, by both
13
Hegelian and Deleuzean commentators, as one of utter incommensurability. Ho%N
ever.
by reading their work together in the context of a common thematic territory, I hope to
dispel inaccuracies, or rather, illusions emanating from both camps. The notion that
Deleuze is simply a bad reader of Hegel, and the opposed idea that Deleuze gets Hegel
absolutely right and can thus dispense with him, both evince equally Oedipal attitudes
(widi a conservative and a radical inflection, respectively). Deleuze's own remarks on the
him
Hegelianism
(D 21-3/12-15) should alert us to the
aesthetic effect of
upon
his
'creative
Spinoza
Nietzsche
that
possibility
misreadings' of philosophers such as
and
might stand alongside an equally strategic treatment of Hegel. This means that, in rereading Hegel, it is necessaryto point out how Deleuze distorts his work, but this does
for
ne
immediately
justification
discarding
Deleuze.
oveffiding issue will
not
serve as a
be the trauma of reason, and how this crisis which, as I suggestedat the outset, has
become intimately familiar to Western philosophers, might be overcome. Hence the
in
be
Deleuze
Hegel
themselves
relation to this
and
must
understoodfor
philosophies of
issue, before they can be assessedin relatiol.n.to ench other.
" See in particular Williams, 1997 (Hegelian), and Hardt, 1993 (Deleuzean).
15
Chapter Two
Kant, Fichte and Schelling: the Trauma of Reason
Introduelkin
For Kant, the emphasis placed by the Enlightenment upon the entitlements of pure,
disinterestedreasonrequiresthat theseentitlementsbe proven. Hume's accountof the empirical
origin of ideas, and his distinction between mere relations of ideas and matters of fact
compromiseany rationalist faith in pure reasonand mea-nthat a justification of the valldity of a
judgements
priori
is neededbefore the Enlightenment'sall-encompassingcritique of tradition
can claim any degree of success. I'he political content of this Critique has been welldocumented: a revolution directed against 'superstition' by a freethinking 61ite in the tiaine of
the powersof universalreason.But in order not to contradictits own aims,the political CrItique
requires an epistemology founded upon an objective foundation of reason's authority in
disputes concerning legitimacy. This project of justification drives Kant's mature thought...
throughout the three Critiques and beyond. By outlining Kant's crItical project, and the ways in
which Fichte and Schellingaddressissuesarising out of this project,this chapterwill determine
A-
has
been
'trauma
to
the
meaning
of
already
referred
what
as
of reason'.
the
ii)
-
Kant's Cri4me of Knowledge
Kant's famous remark that it was the philosophy of Hume that first causedhirn to awake
from the 'dogmatic slumber' into wbicb Wolffian rationalismbad cast bim gives us a starting
denial
judgement,
for
Hwne"s
to
of
objective
a
priori
rm-,
our
enquii-y.
validity
and
nt
Výi
keystone,,
both
(in
the
the
to
of
or
of
pTinciple
causality
sufficient
reason
rationalist
particularly
its "strong' md "weak' senses)exemphfiesfor Kant the dangerradical scepticismposesto its
1 On the 'weak' sense (every event has a cause), see Hume, ) 983, §§ 4-5,7, on the 'strong' sense (similar
Hume,
111.
Pt.
1990,
have
see
similar causes),
events
16
parent, philosophy: an 'anarchy' (CPuR Aix) of the kind he himself was subsequently accused
of creating, wbere,no sure foundations of knowledge exist.
With Hume, psychology becomesa sceptical weapon: reason's functions are constituted
according to habit and the rationally unaccountable and contingent passions. An adequate
responseto Hume must show that knowledge through reason alone does necessarily or de.jure
possess objective validity. Thus Kant's 'subjective turn' entails an examination of reason
conductedby reasonitself in order to, following Locke, 'examineour own powers,and seeto
'
ddngs
fare]
they
what
adapted'. The first move is to distingwish between this preliminary task-
immmient
of
critique and real knowledge (metaphysics)itself the possibility of objective a
priori knowledge must be established by enumerating all the principles without which such
knowledge would be impossible, a negative canon of principles as opposed to a positive
organon of actual knowledge (CPuR A 12/B25-6; A62-3/B87-8).
or example, Hume argues that the principle of causality cannot be objectively valid
independentof empirical experience,given that it is only through recurring expenencesof
conjunction that we become conscious of it in the first place. This principle is thus only an
idea.,
the means by which consciousnessrepresentsto itself a feeling connectedwith the
abstract
character of its experiences, and is thus only contingently valid. Kant questions the
Buine's
by
'feeling'
the
presuppositionsof
genetic account of
ofTeason,
asking how it is
itself
be
that
possible
consciousexperienceshould
of sucha characteras to containsuchthings
as conjoined representations. The empiricist labula rasa brackets out the question of the
formal
favour
in
that
constituents,
of the question
possibility of experience,
is, of its necessary
for
Kant,
Leibniz,
For
its
the tabula rasa must itself already
as
origins.
of
actual, contingent
if
it
is
be
to
capable of representationalconsciousness,i.e.,
possessa certain structure
fact
'niis
be
by
presupposed
real
externality.
structure
in
would
any enquiry
consciousnessof
like Hume's.
Locke, 1990, Introduction, §7.
17
Kant entities this deep structure the irameentlental region of subjectivity, through
which the deten-ninationof the empincal, ConscioussubjeM the object of psychology. is itself
made possible. The miciples
that govem transcendental subjectiN
are the necessaiy
conditions of any expenence of real existence. whether that of an independent object or that of
) and
the subject itself If these principles can be completely enw-nerated(CPuR Al'-,')fl3217.
proven to be necessary formal constituents of experience, then reason"s nght to a priori
knowledge, and hence its autonomy, will have been iustified.
Important to both the Lejbnizian and empiricist lines of post-Cartesiandescentis the
distinction between knowledge of matters of fact and knowledge of relations of ideas- The
former
in
the
problem of objective validity only arises
case,,as relations of ideas mere]), iinply
anaývfic relations of entailment, whereas synihefic propositions about matters of fact have a
bea-fing on the actual content of expenence, wbich is given io the subject it) some sense,and
Hume
be
be
to
therefore
assumed
in particular emphatically points out, cannot
which, as
formal,
determine
in
discursive
the
that
conscious reasoning.
structured accordanceWith
rules
Kant's responseis that the very Presentation(Darstellung) of the content of experience
itself is only made possible by formal transcendentalprinciples or structures. 'Mese structures
knowledge
knowledge
thus
of objects and
our
of
are necessaryconditions of all actual empirical
them constitutes foundational knowledge of the nature of all possible expenrience.Our
knowledge of them will be both ývnlhetic, in that the structures that are its object purport to
describe the inner structure of the given., and yet o priori, in that these structures are the
knowledge
knowledge.
If
through
oblective
necessaryconditions of all empirical experience and
formal
discursive
had,
be
these
then
the
or rational components of
pure reason alone can
be
the necessat),conditions of the possibility of the non-discursive
structui-esmust ultimately
formal components. While Kant affirms the traditional diebotom), of reason and intuition, via
his methodological distinction between spontaneousand receptive faculties (CPuR A5 I/B75),
he also affinns the inseparability of their respective funefions in relation to kno-odedgeunder the
dominance
of reason.
overall
is
This is not the limit of Kant's project. if reason must determme what it can know about
real entities, and thereby lin-ýt itself it must also establish its own freedom, by shoNNingthat it
can prescribeforms of principled action beyond the limits imposed on human beings by the
present.This practicaldimensionis both moral and political, for it implies both regulationof an
individual's own actions,and the possibility of criticising prevailing institutional constraintson
individual agency.Humanbeing hastwo major aspects,the powersof cognition and desire(C.1
167/3-4), each related through reason to a different object: the theoretical object, which is given
to the subject as actually existikp- and the practical object or end, that wbieb ought Io be, wbicb
the subject produces(CPuR Bix-x). Reasonthus has a theoreticaland a practical fonn, and
Kant's project must be to determine two sets of conditions, for cognitive and for moral
full
justification
A
in
both cases, the conditions under
that,
experience.
of reason must show
whieb an object can be objectively known are themselves uncondjfionalýy knowable tbTougb
pure reason alone, an aim that Kant sometimes describes as the discovery of the ultimate unity
forms
final
its
CPuR
A326/B382-3,
(e.
A3333these
two
of reason.,a proof of
autonomy g.
of
4/B390-1).
a) Theoretical Knowledge
The ultimate conditions of theorefical knowledge are those discursive forms which
Objective
(darstellen)
in
to
subjectivity
general.
in
an object as existiAg relation
alone present
for
determined
knowledge
is
knowledge
the subject under
thus
theorefical
of objects as
only
these forms. To represent(vorslellen) an object as it is in iiselj'is not at all conhwlictory.
However, preciselybecausethis representsthe object without relating it to the discursiveand
it
Kant
knowledge,
to
the
the
status
of
purely
assigns
of
real
objective
conditions
non-discursive
ihinkable., that which accords with the rules of
formal logic but not with those of the
(CPIuR
A50logic
dental
the
the
that
of
experience
of
possibility
conditions
governs
iranscen,
19
7/B74-82). Nevertheless,Kant does not entirely follow Hume's injunction to commit such ideas
3
DVnes,,
to the
aswe shall see.
Rationalistmetaphysicsassumesthat reasonis immanentin being-aswe saw in Chapter
One with respectto the doctrine of 'innate ideas'. The ontological proof is the capstoneof this
assurance- metaphysics, down to Kant's own day, is satisfied that its objective validity is
ultimately analyfic. It believes it can have objective and a priori knowledge of a thing-in-itself,
because,above all, the ontological proof demonstratesthat reasonis capableof proving flie
existence of the bigbest entity by simply examining it-self and its own idea of God. But the
forces
empiricist critique
a re-evaluation of this assurance,by pomtmg out that the mere analysis
of an idea, even wben this is an idea of G(xt can only evaluate its logical validity and not its
relation to matters of fact. Kant's response is to give ground to empiricism. by denving
objective validity to representations of things-M-themselves. Metaphysics assumed that reason,
considered as an 'intellect"
intuition' independent of sensibility, can objectively represent
ForKant, this is a wholly unrestrainedand thereforeIranscenidem
tbings-in-themselves.
use of
demed.
A569/B597),
be
(CPuR
to
pure reason
which objectivity must
With this in-mind, we can now examine Kant's attempt to Inventory the conditions of
fonns
inherent
For
Kant,
beginning
to intuition
the
the
non-discursivepossible experience,
with
in
both
to
to
ourselves
empirical experienceas something
a
given
sensation
allow us
present
intuitions
These
differentiated,
to
objects,
as
geometry.
of
in
and present a priori
manifold or
forms are a priori becausethey cannot be abstracted from empirical objects-Iinstead, they are
it
is
If
be
is
be
if
to
to
possible
even possible.
necessary any presentation of an empirical object
first
be
including
from
distinct
ourselves,
must
else,
it
anything
consciousof an object as
distinguishableaccording to its spatial and temporal location, miiiimafly, we must be able to
The
divisible
A-10-1/B46-7).
A23-4/B38-9,
(CPuR
it
'now'
'here"
unities of space
and
mark as
first"
intuition
'come
they
to
of an objea and so
must
and time are thus not given us widiin an
3 Hume, 1983, § 12, FIL 3, p. 165.
20
intuition.
I'lus
formal
the
as
possibility of any
intuitions, constitutingthe a priori conditionsof
means, tbough, that they are simply forms of our intuitions, and that the manifold of iritultion is
being
(phenomena).
(Erscheinung)
the
to
only
while still
appearance
of objects in relation us
given to intuition and not somehow generated subjectively as an illusion (Schein.) (CPuR B6970).
Kant needsto show, however, that it is reason that legislatesthe forms of possible
The
fact
demonstrate
by
this
to
that the possibillt), of
The
experience.
opportunity
is offered
fonnal intuitions, Le., intuitions of the forin of space and time in general, cannot be explained
intuition.
From
is
to
the
solely with reference
standpoint of Mtuition, it not possible to exafniiie
its essential forms in order to account for them in any way. This is becauseintuition, being nondiscursive and passive, is only 'In' its forms. Reason, on the other band, is spontaneousand
develops
Deduction',
Kant
itself
In
CPuR's
'Transcendental
capable of reflecting upon
formal
intuitions
from
to
that
the
are only made
of
standpoint reason,
reflexive arguments sbow
possible by reason's own structure.
If this Is so, then certain discursive determinations will be necessaryto stabilise any
lawlike
finite
be
These
intuitive
of
principles, )n order to
must
a
set
presentation.
possible
finite
limits.
Kant
differentiates
it
definite
by
these
safeguardthe regularity of experience giving
by
(but
from
infinite
knowledge
thougbt
the
afforded
pure
posSibilities
unsecured)
principles of
f
CUltieS:
between
distincition
Wolff
t wo spontaneous,
the
rational a
s
aid
of
with
4
Understandi
(Yerstan(l)and pure Reason(Yernunfl). The Understanding'sa priori elements,the rules that
Kant's
intuitioný
table of twelve a priori concepts or
comprise
stabilise the manifold of
formal
ftmetions
logic,
the
transcendental
of judgement
purely
categories, which mirror, within
in general logic (CPuR A70/B95, AgO/BI06). The transcendental synthesesof the manifold
in
be
by
they
the
constitute
these
sense:
will
an
analogical
synthetic
rules
will
made possible
discursive.
A79/B
(CPuR
104),
the
the
and
identity of heterogeneous
non-discursive
of
elements
Ckygill, 1995, p. 347.
it
Kant's use of Deduktion as the title for the cenwal section of CPuR does not, then,
imply a deductive argument based on an unconditionally true proposition. Instead, the senseof
this term as employed by German jurists of Kant's time is intended: the tie jure right of reason
to the matter at band, objective knowledge, must be proven or deduced (CPuR A84-5/B] 16-7).
The deduction of the categorieswill be completed by a final, discursive foundation of
possibility: a condition of all the other conditions that requires no ftu-tber proof of its own
possibility.
The A and B versions of the Deduction, despite differences of approach and emphasis,
both argue that the discursive concept, as a predicate of synthetic judgement, is a necessary
condition of both the unity of the maMfold in the presentation of an objectý and of the
possibility of its being subsequently recomsed by the subject or reproduced in acts of
remembering. Each version also proposes that a foundational condition of possibility must
entail the necessary formal unity of all possible contents of consciousness.Kant calls this
condition the transcendental unity of apperception., a thought or representation of the
fimdamental unity of the subject With itself that is necessaryif consciousnessis to be
determinate at all. This unity is thus the UnIty of all the possible presentationswhich the subject
have
in
a1l
the
these contents (whether a priori or empirical)
of an object or
can
sense which
for
belong
in
to
the
them to be synthesisediii the fust place.
same subject order
must necessarily
This unity cannotbe explainedas either a product of mechanicalcausationor as an attributeof
it
is
logical
by
a
any representation,including those
noumenal substance,as
unity required
detertnined
it
As
the
to
categories
of
causation
and
according
substance.
such, is
representations
the most fundamentalform of regularity to which the intuited manifold is subject,and can only
be a relation of the subject to its own activity that does not itself presupposeany of the
for
far.
Kant
in
be
thus
that,
there
to
shows
order
experienceof
conditions enumeratedso
be
implicitly
for
its
determining
is
it
to
the
subject
conscious
of
own
activity
necessary
objects,
fact
it
itself
be
determining
'takes'
that
the
that
to
the
of
to
is,
obje4
an object in
with respect
22
'
such-and-such a way. This self-consciousness is neither knowledge of the subject as a
pbenomenalobject nor some'intellectual intuition' of the.subjectasit is in itself
Kant remarks in the secondedition of CPluR that the representafion 'I think', which can
potentially accompany all repTesentationsas a mark of self-consciousnessand thus identify
them as belonging to a single subject, is always itself accompanied by the subject's
)6
indeterminate empirical senseof its own existence(CPuR B42.6.
This
nituition of existence
-3n, .
is, unlike empirical intuitions of subiective states,not given through the mediation of other
forinal conditions Cexistence' here is 'not a category'). Neither, however, is it an intellectual
intuition of a thing-in-itself. Instead.,it is representedby thepureývintellectual representation'I
think', a representationthat denotes(bezeichnel)the reality of the foundationalspontaneityof
7
the subject. The 'I think' does not thereforeexpressa priori knowledgeof the essenceof a
for
it
did
Descartes.It simply points to an actuality that can neverbe determined
substance,as
for consciousnessunder the rules that make objects of experience possible, as it is itself the
A
This
logical
condition of
conscious representation.
and negative (as opposed to metaphysical,
formal
first
deduction
the
the
the
of
categoriesand
substantialand positive) result completes
Kant's i ustification of reason.
of
F---
part
The Deduction, however, only demonstratesthat a certain formal unity of the subject is
in
be
It
does
for
to
the
general
possible.
not sbow
of
an
object
consciousexperience
necessary
that this unity is actually specifiedas synthetica priori knowledgeof the determinateform of an
Principles,
Schernatism
be
in
Analytic
Kant
the
task
this
the
and
of
wbere
object.
undertakes
functions
do
determinate
logical
the
that
to
purely
provide
as
categories understood
aims show
This
demonstrate
intuitions.
for
that the rules of synthesis they
the
would
synthesis of
rules
5 Pippin, 1987, pp. 459-60.
'' Seealso Makk-red 1991, P. 10-5
pippifl, ()P. cm, pp- 454-5-
233
representare aciualýv transcendentalconditions, and not merely logically possible modes of
synthesis.
Time is the form of inner intuition in which all appearances
Each
are given.
categoryis
thus shown to represent a general rule for a synthesis of time. The applicability of this rule to
particularintuitions hasto be established.,
in order to knot togetherthe facultiesof intuition and
Understanding within a synthetic unity. This is ensured by the role of the productive
imagination, a mediating faculty that partakes of the natures of both the other faculties (CPIuR
A] 38/B]77), and which produces a schema, a determination of time that is given a priori by
the imagination to each category. For example, the schemaof pernianenceapplies to the
category of substance,while that of im-versible succession applies to causality. Insofar as the
schemaparticipatesin the sensible,intuition gives it specificity in time or particularity; insofar
as it participatesin the conceptual,the Understandinggrantsit universality.The sebematashow
that the categoriesdo, in actuality, constitutea priori knowledgeof the form of an object in
general.
The Ideas of Pure Reason
The forms of in-tuition, the categories, the spontaneousunity of consciousness,and the
inventory
Kant's
of the transcendentalconditionsthat are wwwneni it) or
schemata,complete
consfifulAwqf*possibleobjective experience(appearance).The first Critique's 'Transcendental
Dialectic' uses this inventory to criticise the Understanding's natural tendency to extend the use
beyond
limits
forms
intuition
legitimate
the
the
their
the
or
categories
of
employment to
of
of
This
in
fonnal
tendency
the
that
the
consists
conviction
conditions
appearances
or phenomena.
judgements
in
knowledge
to
things-in-themselves
the
about
apply
or
also
nouniena, as
of
is
basis
To
the
that
of
consciousness
an
enduring
soul-substance.
claim either that
proposition
forms
being
intuitions)
in
(instead
of
time
our
of
actually
inhere the substanceof
spaceand
do
that
they
not although we can neverthelessobjectively determine.
things-in-themselves,or
is
..
to contravenethe immanentrestnctions
or
substances,
causes
say,
things-in-themselvesas,
24
von valid a priori knowledge.Such contraventionsare not, therefore,erroneousjudgements
about real thing-in-thernselves.For Kant flxy are distortionsof the HnManentrole of reasonin
experience,or tramcendenial illavions that illegitimately presupposean entitlementfor reason
that it cannot justi fy.
Despite this, representationsof thing-in-thernselves do have a transcendentalrole with
respectto objective knowledge.This concernsthe sensein which, as a conceptof an object
isolatedfrom the conditions(Bedingutýgen)of obiective knowledge,the conceptof a thing-initself is connectedto the logical value of the unconditional(dw Unbedingle).FolloWingPlato,
Kant entitles such a representation.an idea (ldee) rather than a category. Whereas the category
bas objective validity becauseit determines the intuited manifold, the Idea by definition does
not relate to any possible intuition. As a concept of pure reason,it is only related to other
concepts,via generallogical PfInciples.
However,Kant finds that he hasto give an epistemologicalrole to the Idea in order to
provide a truly comprehensive answer to flume. By denying objective validity to the pnneiple
of necessaryconnection, Hume attacked the notion of causality on two fronts. The prInciple of
necessary connection, for Hume, conceals the presupposition of the uniformity of nature.
Behind the 'weak" senseof causality, i. e., that every event has a cause, hes the 'strong' sense,
i. e., that effects of type y necessarily have causesof type x, and so future occurrencesof x will
followed
by
Kant
be
cases
of
Y.
reeWises
necessarily
these two aspects, arguing that
&appearmcesare themselvessubject to ta fixed] rule, and that in the marnfold of these
in
takes
place conformity with certain rules [ I'
representationsa coexistenceor sequence
(CPuR A 100).
In order that experienceshouldnot be, at bottorn,essentiallychaotic,it is necessarythat it
it
formal
be
fixed,
both
to
and
material:
should
subject a
generalorder, and
possessa unity
In
'in
happen
conformity with certainrules'. other words, experienceshouldexhibit
shouldalso
Kant's
Transcendental
together
a
concretely
specified
with
uniformity.
an overall regularity,
Deductionand the schernatismof the categoryof causalityin the SecondAnalogy demonstrate
25
A-
formal
from
to
regularity.
moment, a
H= conscious experience exhibits,
moment
-
8 However,
Hus only demonstrates that causality in the 'weak' sense is a principle that Is constitutive of
have
does
It
that
similar events
experience and therefore objectively valid a priori.
not show
similar causes, and cannot therefore demonstrate that the uniformity of nature is a necessary
condition of experience.
A further problem is that a proof of the transcendentalstatusof the uniformity principle
would require that natureis in Usetfuniform. Kant's restriction of properly a priori knowledge
to the canon of conditions that make experience possible means that such a proof could not be
given a priori, as the entirety of nature cannot be given to the subject as the object of a single
In
it
justification
(CPuR
A328/B384).
this
that
intuition
case, seems
a complete
of the principle
is
Nevertheless,
in
Second
Analogy
the
the
of necessary connection
not possible.
arginnent
from
be
last
Kant
has
the outset that the critical philosophy must
the
cannot
stated
word, as
bow
is
BI
7-18).
Science.
(CPuR
presupposesthe possibility of the
natural
possible
show
science
by
is
objective existenceof a regular or unified empirical maMfold, which guaranteed the
category of causality.
What the category of causality does not guarantee, however, is the actual or material
is
There
thus no guaranteethat empirical nature exhibits an overall
the
manifold.
regularity of
have
in
that
necessary
empirical concepts of nature can
other words,
systematic regularity, or
interconnections. As John 11. Zannnito puts it, while Kant 'argued against Hunie that the
he
level,
the
transcendental
acknowledged at the same
concept of causality was necessaryat
time that Hw-ne bas every rigbt to consider any empirical application of that principle
9
based
firm
is
indeed
has
Kant
Hence
'
tlwon
not shown
natural science
contingent.
foundations,and has thus not shown that reasonis capableof a priop! knowledge.Unlessthe
be
deduced
the
the
manifold can
as a
u-nifoniiity or ývstematic unity of
assumption of
8 On the alm and scope of Kant's argument in the SecondAnalogy, seeAJ)Ison, 1983, Pt. I 11,Ch. ) 0, esp.
216.
p.
Zaniniito, 1992".P. 159.
26
transcendental condition of the achial employment of the Understanding- then, as Kant
recooses, not only will there be 'no coherent employment of the Understanding', but also 'no
sufficient criterion of empirical truth' (CPuR A65 I /B679).
Kant attempts to solve this problem in CPuR by showing that pure reason is the faculty
that directs the empirical use of the Understanding.This would prove that the a posieri.ori.
discovery of the real forms of the uniformity of nature is possible for science, wbile avoiding
the illegitimate conclusion that these forms can be known a priori. In the Transcendental
Dialectic, Kant tries to show that the Idea of the uniformity of natureis a necessarycondition of
any empirical use of the Understanding. If this is successfW,then Kant has demonstratedthat
fumisb
the a prio?! principlesof naturalscience.
pure reasoncan
Because the thought of an object in general depends upon the a priori concept of
causality, Kant can argue that reason,understood as that faculty whose role in general logic is to
determine the analytic relations between pure concepts, has the transcendental vocation of
be
deterMined
between
to
enabling specific empiTical Telationsof ground-and-consequent
objects of the Understanding, with, the overaH purpose of unt6ring empirical scientific
knowledge.Generalor formal logic relatespropositionsto eachother by meansof syllogisms.
In any given syllogism, the truth of its conclusion is conditioned by the truth of its prenfises,
infinity.
But
have
determMed
by
be
to
thought
a
so
on
other syHogisms,and
we
of as
which can
finther
itself
is
idea
to
the
totality
truth-conditions,
subject
no
of
of
which
non-contradictory
be
distinguisbed
from
bas
logical
Idea
This
A321/13377ff).
(CPuR
to
unconditional
condition
functions
logical
Whereas
the
transcendental
the categoriesare
of
the categories.
versionsof
formal
basis
logical
Idea
is
transcendental
the
three
the
pure
the
of
uncondifional
judgement,
forming
independent
We
Ideas.
the
objects,
stateof
are awareof our own stateand
conceptsor
Idea
(soui
determinations.
We
and
an
can representwith
two seriesof conditioned objective
the
totality
of
conditions
each
also
represent
in
case,
and
can
unity of
the
cosmos) unconditional
(CPuR
A333-4/13390-1),
Idea
(Goa)
in
preserving the overall unity of the
the two series another
naturalorder.
27
The unconditionalallows, in formal logic, the constructionof seriesof syllogisms in
ascending or descending directions. Ascending, these detemune the conditions of the premises
at increasing levels of generality; descending, these situate each conclusion as a premise of a
new syllogism. In its transcendentalrole, reason determines appearancesin a similar twofold
way -
subsurning them under empirically determined principles of classification at levels of
future
basis
be
to
the
increasing generality, or enabhng
of previous
cases
inferred on
regulanties.
However,, Kant is careful to withhold from the Ideas the objective and conslifulive
epistemological status attributed to the categOnes.The unconditional totality of conditions
cannot be given in an intuition, for the Idea of it represents.,not just a finite aggregateof objects,
but a unity with infinite extension that cannot itself be conceived of as conditioned by, or
fonns
illegitimate
do
Hence
Ideas
to,
the
time.
the
subject
of spaceand
not representan
use of
for
but
instead
the svstematic investigation and mapping of
regulafive
rules
reason,
are
but
A664-5/13692-3),
(ICPuR
In
they
the
this.,
are analoguesof
schemata
empincal expenence.
from
derived
they
the merely subjectively valid principles of general
are
are not constitutive as
logic, which operates independently of intuition (CPuR A336/B393). It is thus a necessary
condition of empirical science that we sbould assume that the order of nature is structured to
in
itself
know
do
We
that
therefore
to
systematically
nature
is
not
our reason.
conform
discovering
(the
Ideas)
do
know
but
that
that
conditions
reason is capable of
we
structmv4
discover
to
that
this
actual regularities in nature a
we
go
on
so
can
justify our assui-ning,
being
Ideas
The
..
constitutive conditions of any possible
of pure reason, wbile not
posleriori
experience, are regulative conditions of empirical experience.
Knowledge
Practical
c)
Kant sets out to explain the possibility of the objective validity of representational
divide
be
domain
into
the
that
actual
experiential
experienceof
consciousness,wbieb requires
Experience
that
to
of
objects
oughl
exist.
of existing objects
objects that exisl and experience
28
requires consciousnessof necessaryconnection to be a condition of the manifold of intuition.
which would prove that naturalscienceis possible.The secondkind of experiencedemandsthat
it be proven that consciousnessof freedom is a condition of purposive action, which would
demonstrate that morality is possible.
Kant's analysis of the practical employment of pure reason in CPrR and GMM is
intendedto demonstratethat thereare securefoundationsfora priori knowledgeof an objective
morality, which would both prescribe a universal duty for all rational beings, and demand that
the authority of this moral order be reccgnised as supreme over and above that of existing
political arrangements. A universal morality would only be objectively possible if reason
possessesby right a concept of causality that is objectively valid wilhow the schema of
free
succession,an unconditional,
and purposive mode of causation(GMM 397-400/10-13).
The Idea of purposive or rational freedom is central to Kant"s resolution of the Third
Antinomy of Pure Reason in CPuR, where it is discussedas the purely thinkable, hypothetical
causality that we can attribute to the unconditional or flfing-in-itself (CPuR A538/B566). The
Third Antinomy is an undecidable conflict between two theseson causality a) that freedom is
the necessmyground of appearance,and b) that the only form of causationis mechanical.The
first thesis dogmatically posits the Idea as an objective ground of existence, while the second
Kant's
former
that
to
this
the
conflict refuses
assumes
such a ground cannotemst.
answer
as
transcendentand the second as against the interest of reason in morality. Inste4
he gives a
freedom
fliinkable
Idea
the
of
as
merely
of the regulative unity of all
negative presentation
discussed
in
in
the previoussection.
the
manner
causalconditions,
If this negative, formal definition of freedom could be objectively justified in the spbere
be
have
to
then
shown
an ob*tive practicalcomponent
pure reasonwould
of practical reason,
that would buttressthe regulativerole of pure.reason.The assumptionthat the natural order is
inherently uniform would therefore not only be theoretically necessaryin order for empirical
It
be
indefeasible
be
duty
investigation
to
to assumethe
also
an
possible.
would
moral
scientific
implies
but
a
which
not
merely
such
unity,,
of
mechanical
uniformity,
a
overarchingexistence
29
purposive totality. Kant thus refers to freedom as 'the keystone of the whole architecture of the
). explicitly
system of pure reason and even of speculative [theoretical) reason' (CPrR 4.13.
elevating practical reason above the theoretical form (CPrR 120-1/124-6). 'Me final unity of
reason would thus consist in this hierarebir-alrelation.
So Kant must show that we can know a priori that we can act freely to produce real
effects in the world, independently of natural causal series. All motivations that prescribe
particular goals, such as hunger.,sexual desire and so on, belong to such natural causal series.
Theseseriesgeneratesubjectiveinclinationstowardsthe satisfactionof needs.Suchinclinations
are heteronomous motives for action to whick for Kant we fi-eely accede. They are actual
determinationsof the empirical subject,ratbe.
r than transcendentalconditions of all practical
expenence.
A determining motive with an absolute, objective value as opposed to a conditional,
bave
itself
for
A
through
this role is the love of
subjective one would
candidate
value only
duty, a will to act in accordancewith the moral law out of respect for the law alone, rather than
in the serviceof a particular goal -a
disinteresledpractical interestto rmrror the theoretical
interest in disinterested, objective truth. For this motive to be objectively possible, reason must
be able to freely determinethe will to act without imposing a particular contentupon it as its
"I
In
the
other
conditioned object.
words,
must be capableof being given a purely formal
determination.Kant formulatesthis condition of possibility as the 'categoricalimperative' in its
first, canonical fonn: 'Act only according to that maxim, whereby you can at the same time Will
that it should become a universal laV
(GMM 421/30). The only condition to which this
fortnal,
is
the
and thereforeunconditional,rule of non-contradiction.
purely
principle refers
The categoricalimperative plays the role of foundational condition of possibility for
in
does
for
It
Kant,
just
to
that which
the
relation
apperception
science.
is,
as
unit), of
morality,
free,
freedom
5/4)
(CPrR
the
that
that
are
ralio
cognoscenth
to
of
we
assw-ne
enablesus
its
The
foundation
both
further
possibility.
of
imperative
operates
as
a
explanation
requiresno
the
the
criterion
of
objectively,
universality
it
presents
is
condition
subjectively:
and
objectively
30
of action as such, for it expressesthe ultimate necessity of an action, the rule that something
forms
In
be
449-50/51)(GMM
the unconditional
Oughl objectively to
the case
such wise, it
condition for any action, whether autonomous or heteronomous, for all willing aims to create an
fonn
ftirther
it
bas
because
be
Its
the
objective existence. possibibty cannot explained
of pure
formal
because
is
definition
is
binding
the
universality, which a priori
on all rational subjects
it
fact
itself,
is
'an
thus
of pure reason
and
apodictically certain
as it were,of pure reason'(CPrR
47/48)Subjectively speaking, the law is a disinterested motive, determining the will to want
felt
CPrR
75/77).
This
is
(GMM
401/14n;
the
as an immediate,
only
affin-nation
universal
determination,
directly
(Achtung),
the
subject
nwnely respect or reverence
unconditioned
which
Respect
is
[its)
(CPrR
162/166).
'with
the
the
consciousness of
own existence'
associates
duty,
the
and affmns that no obligation outweighs
of
of
subjective recognition
unconditionality
that to obey the moral law. It is also the feeling 'that it is beyond our ability to attain to an idea
that is a lcmjbr us' (CJ §27,257/114).
Thus Kant's defence of freedom is simultaneously a defence of an indefeasible
Kantian
fundamental
The
methodological principle, that experiencenecessarily
obligation.
for
is
dependsupon the structureof the transcendental
the practical sphere
transformed
subject,
is
In
this
the
self-legislation
implied
concept
of
notion of a self-legislatingmoral subject.
via
both a) the free causalityof the will, that is, the nournenal.subjectiveagencythat gives the law,
fact
b)
law
deduction
by
the
is
the
the
and
a
of
reason,
as
of
objective
and whieb guaranteed
feeling,
the
through
the
of
an
obfigation
which
affirmation
reverential
receptivity of moral
into
law,
is
to,
the
suppressingInclination.
and constrained
phenomenalself given, or subjected
.-I-
Kant derives from the law itself conditions of possibility for the fulfilment of the
background
for,
take
it
that
of
against
a
all
action
must
place
given
stands
obligation
1-1
-
These
inclinations.
incorporating
nahn-al needs and
,imperfection'. the realm of nature,
freedom
God)
longer
(immortality,
regulative
and
are no
&postulates of practical reason'
but
for
that
theoretical
Ideas
they
presuppositions
reason,
are
were
as
transcendental
31
give objective reality to the ideas of speculafive reason
in general (by means of their relation to the practical sphere,)and they
it in holding to concepts even the possibility of
which it could not otherwise venture to affirin.
(CPrR 132/137)
Therefore, Kant's justification of practical reason and objective morality is meant to
make the regulative Ideas not just regulative conditions of empirical scientific investigation, but
objectively valid., constitutive conditions of the possibility of moral experience.The assumption
of the uniformity of nature, and the affimnation of the ultimate unity of reason, are both
demandedof us insofw- as we are conscious beings.
Fichte: the Grculari4, of Transcendental Philosopky
That Kant was not himself satisfied with his achievementsin the first two Critiques is
by
his
attemptsin the third Crifique to redefine the unity of reasonin terins of a
indicated
principle of reflective judgement to which both theoretical and practical knowledge are
isternically
Perbaps
impoirtant
bowever.,
historically spea-ing, were the
epi
related.
more
for-ward
by thinkers identified with the Sturm und Drang such
Kant's
to
objections
method put
first
The
both
Herder
Hamarm.
C'n'liques
and second
attempt to sbow that a pri .on .
as
and
is
They
by
formal
knowledge
that
the
proceed
proving
of objects possible.
synthetic
conditions
for
itself
de
that
or
moral
experience
are
structures
speculative
reason
possesses
of possibility
jure. Kant thus demonstrates that experience is only possible becausethe intuited manifold is
subjectto the discursivestructureof transcendentalsubjectivity. The othernessof the manifold.
its stable objectivity, is thus shown to be made possible by reason itself "'
Kant admits that his project begins from empincal expenence. and is bound up with
fundamentalinterestsof reason.In this.,it is not piresuppositionless
Descartes'
but
sense. this
in
is not a problem insofar as Kant is not attempting to begin from metaphysical first pnnciples,
but is instead tying to show how metaphysics is in fact possible (CPIuR BxXji-X-XjjI). However,
Kant has assumed a certain content for the term 'metaphysics'. by assuming that the field of
.Ipossible experience is restricted to the experience of an object as defined by Newtonian natural
science, or the experience of a moral object as defined by a Protestant morality. When the
foundational conditions for the possibility of a metaphysicsof nature or of morals are
determined,they are presentedas facts whose possibility needsno further epistemological
Bowever,
the content that they condition has simply been assurned,and their own
explanation.
fonnal structuresreflect this content(Deleuze,as we shall see,points this out).
For exmnple, the first Critique's inventory of constitutive transcendental conditions
comprisesthe divisible unifies of spaceand time, togetherWith the table of twelve categories.
These fonns are derived from Newtonian science and Aristotelian logic respectively. Kant's
foundational
fonna.
deduce
Uy
it
is
to
conditions, such as
necessary
possible
arguments show that
the interplay of intuition,,ima0ation andUnderstandingassubjectto the unity of apperception,
that make possibletheseparticular accountsof what experienceis like. What they do not show
is that theseaccountsof experienceare anythingmore thanparticular descriptionsof the nature
be
They
be
to
certainly
can
shown
universally
of the content of representational consciousness.
been
be
have
but
forms
therefore
to
they
shown
not
unchangingand
of experience,
possible
for
beings.
Hamann
Herder's
Kant
forms
rational
and
critiques
all
of
experience
of
necessary
forms
in
that
the
the
to
experience
of
critical
philosophy
set
out
the
which
way
concerned
This reading of Kant is not uncontroversial,Afflison(198JI) ins sts on a different interpretation of Kant's
focusing
'pure
the
intuition,
of
possibility
intuitions'.
on
of
account
3
historical
by
be
be
preconscious.social or
ground could themselves said to
made possible
'
1
fact
heteronomous
be
If
Kanfian
m-din
conditions.
uncritical.
this were so, then
methodwould
insofar it would be incapableof knowing the sourceof its own interests.
The first generationof Kants sympatheticcritics linked the weaknesses
of the critical
philosophy to two related problems- Firstly, by linýiiiting philosophy to the negative task of
enumerating a canon of the necessaryconditions of experience,Kant was unable to demonstrate
the real necessity of scientific and moral experience. In order to prove their necessity and
universalityas modesof experience,an organonof principleswould bave to be constructed,a
complete system of all the forms of experience that are inherent in representational
faculties
Secondly,,
difference
between
intuition
the
the
consciousness.
real
of
and reason,wbicb
is a condition of the specific problem identified by Hume that Kant's project is meant to solve,
is
heterogeneous.
But
that
this
that
they
epistemological
suggests
are really
is an
presupposition
happy
both
Christian
Kant
is
Newtonian
to assume
to
perfectly
common
science and
morality:
that a thing-in-itself influences the receptive faculty of intuition in some occult way (P §91
CPuRA 19/B33), in both speculativeandpracticalexperience.
r*%.
his
Kant
the
of
overall epistemological
recognising
validity
while
Omeway of criticising
-
intuition
difference
between
foundations
be
the
the
to
and
of
question
aims would
Understanding, given tbat, in conscious experience, both are subject to the unity of
for
had
begin
Reinhold,
K.
L.
This
is
to
the
with
whom philosophy
approachof
apperceptionitself,
the
as the objective presupposition of all
unity of apperception
self-consciousness,
fact
from
from
forms
derive
this
then
the
as
of experience
and
representationalconsciousness,
first
an unconditional
PM
12
Ciple(GnindvaL-).
This effectively turns the critical philosophy upside down., as it makes the unity of
formal
by
it
both
into
the
the
ground
of
as
prMCIple
positing
an
unconditional
apperception
11SeeBeiser, op. eil., pp. 17-22 and pp. 142-4.
12
Seeibid., Ch. 8.
possibility of experience, and the material ground of its actuality. Formally or negativelý
speaking,expefienceis impossiblewithout it and matenally or positively speaking,if this unity
is above all rational, then the forms that knowledge and experience take must follow
necessarily
from the actual nature of consciousness,wbich can be discovered via an immanent examination
of self-consciousness.This would., it was hoped, avoid the Kantian problem of heteronomy, as
no determinate or positive content would have been assumed as essential to expenence.
Philosophy would begin from a wholly indeterminate first principle.
Fichte differentiateshis own stanceregardingthe foundation-of an organonfrom that of
Reinhold in responding to criticisms of Reinhold advanced by G. E. Schulze in 1792. Fichte
agreeswith Scbulze that theffiel of the unity of consciousness,as deduced in CP'uR, cannot be
foundational as there is no absolute certainty that such a pure fact does not depend on a further
material or formal condition. To define the unconditional, Fiebte follows Spinoza in talking of
that which is the formal condition and material ground of itself only then to invert Spinoza's
"
by
it
in
tems of subjectiv4.
concept of substance recasting
For Reinhold, the fact of consciousnessis meant to remove Kant's division between
intuition and Understanding, which is still haunted by the thing-in-itself Yet the pure fact of
consciousnessis only the abstracted subjective half of this opposition. For Schulze and Fichte,
Reinbold,like Kant, is still guided by presuppositionsaboutthe essentialnatureof experience.
His unconditional principle is still detennined in opposition to the object and represents
foundation
form
For
Fichte,
the
of
a
particular
of
experience.
abstract
merely
consciousnessas
formal
this representsa regression,insofar as the abstractionof consciousness
as a
condition is
freedom.
The
from
entire practical spberewould thus remain
subjective
also an abstraction
Kantian
for.
his
In
the
at
critique
and successfulcompletion of
earliestattempts a
unaccounted
Absolute
is
Fichte
truly
the
that
or
unconditional
essentiallya principle of
stresses
project
be
The
that
must
conceived
of
as
genuine
unconditional
which underliesall
reason.
praclical
13Gu6roult, 1974, p. S.
35
representation, the Absolute Subject 'the representing subject which would not be represented'
(RA 9-10/65).
Mis Absolute Subject would be the ground of all the fonns of consciousnessby virtue
of the free causalitythat definesthe practicalwill. As a principle, it would be
a transcendentalidea which is distinguished from other
transcendental ideas by the fact that it is realised, through
intellectual intuition., through the I am, and indeed, through the
I sjmpývam, becauseJam JJchbin schlechthin,wed ich bin]
(RA 16/70)
'Intellectual intuition'
designates the mode, of this subject's indeterminate and
familiarity
detenninate
is
to
immediate unity or
itself.
prior
any
with
representation, and thus
'that whereby I know something because1 do it' (-%VL463/38). The 'I think', as a representation
depend
indeterminate
to
the
subject's own spontaneity and syntbetic Lmity, is seen
of
upon an
is
'I
and absolute am", which a synthetic unity produced through the subject"s own act. 'I'his is
the practical essenceof apperception:the Absolute Subject producesitself through its own
freedom,bringing itself into existenceor enactingitself. The subject's'being entirely depends
14
is
Spinoza's
(unlike
free
its
',
the
substance)a selfnot
subject
aC,. and so
absolutely
upon
it
is
directly
Instead.
'being'
to
or givennessas a pure
opposed
grounding metaphysicalenti(y.
'5
For the early, Fichte, this practical causality on the part of the
deed of brin&g-into-being,
by
theoretical
theoretical
consciousness
the
practical
making
and
reason
of
unity
secures
subject
dependenton the practical subject.The self-generatingsubjectis thus genuinelyunconditional,
14
Mid, p. 8.
I-' Seewilliams, 1992, pp. 36-7.
36
for Fichte, unlike Reinhold's subject,
determined
like
Kant's,
in relation to
which remains.
assumptionsaboutwhat constitutesthe essential.positive contentof consciousexpenence.
Intellectual intuition is not, then, an expression of dWnatic faith in the existence of an
lute
but
fiv
the
substance,
of
absolute certainty
ab
the subject of the sub ect's o%-.,
n
indeterminate existence as a knowing. The existential proposition it implies 'is
valid onlyjbr the
I itself. rather than being 'valid in itself (RA 16/71). But by being absolutely c&rtam for the
II
subject, it is therefore a formal condition of aH possible experience, as all forms of
representational consciousness are deteffninations of the indeterniinate symbetic unity of
consciousness.
Or put another way: every determinate synthetic proposifion about experience possesses
mediated validity, -positing a state of affairs which can have meaning only relatively to other
states of affairs represented by other propositions. The validation of such propositions, if it is
possible only with reference to other such propositions., would have to be an infinite process in
order to be complete, thus destroying the very possibility of adequate proof. The only
if
knowledge
is
be
is
foundation
to
that is the
alternative, objective
possible, a securerational
16
necessarycondition of any synthetic proposition. For Fichte, intellectual intuition provides
foundation,
like
it
built
'I
not
a
relative
synthetic
proposition
of
existence
sucha
as represents,
17
depends
house',
but
this
thefic
of
proposition existence, which
solely
rather an absoluteor
further
being
'I
the
objective condition.
made, and not upon any
am'
proposition
upon
Nevertheless, this proposition is only valid for the subject who has the intellectual intuition, and
is not
"
an 'objecti4ring thesis" that posits the absolutesubject as a transcendentsubstance,
is
is
Fichte
how
often misinterpreted.
which
16Z6)ler, 1995, pp. II 9_,21D,
17pfaj, 1994, p, IT
4
18Makkreel, 1994,
37
Even though the subject as the absolute enactniew (TahandJ-, n9)'9 of itself is thus, for
Ficbte, the formal presupposition of all representation,it cannot initially be understood as more
than a postulated Vound of consciousness. Why is this? The individual sub*t
can be
absolutely certain that its experience of intellectual intuition shows it its own formal ground, but
the uqv in which the absolute subject is a ground-,that is, what materially makes it a ground,
remains unknown. The absolute subject bas not yet been posited for subjectivity-in-general, that
is, in the totality of the forms under which it can determine itself At this point, the Kantian
problem of theTelation between canon and organon is being raised. Postulating the absolute
enactment as a thinkable 'notunenon" that underlies all representation provides representation
fon-nal
foundation,
forms
but
does
demonstrate
Kantian
that
the
not
of experience,or any
with a
others, are necessary,universal and unchanging conditions of objective experience.The absolute
enactment may be the beginning of ali consciousness,but it remains an abstrael or subjective
beginning until we can draw out the rational forms inherent in itý thus discovering the totality of
detemiines
Subject
laws
Absolute
the
through
consciousnessas consciousness
which
necessary
of something, and thus acts as a material ground of experience.
Ficbte thus recooses that given Ilerder and Hamann's Cnticisms of Kant, if we are to
demonstrate that reason can have synthetic a priori knowledge, we must deduce a complete
be
The
foundational
from
forms
principle.
subject must
a
of experience
system of the necessary
fonns
is,
the
the
totality
in
thes.
of
and as
widerstood two guises: as the unconditional, canonical
from
The
the
transition
synthe-sis.
organic
absolute
theoretical
an
and practical experience.
of
is
immediately.
A
be
from
required
method
to
canon organon, cannot effected
one to the other,
In
Ficbte's
foundational
immanent
the
to
in order to ensurethat this transitionremains
pnnciple.
in
subjectiveunity represented
this
consists the analysisof the pre-representational
early work,
191 have used 'enactment' as a translation of Talhandlung (fiteraBy ýdeed-act) to suggestboth the aci of
Kantian
bringing-into-being,
decree
the
two
its
thus
of
selfmirrofing
aspects
of
the subject and
C9
legislation.
20Breazeale,1994, pp- 44-5.
38
by the 'I am', and a subsequentdeduction of
follows
that
forms
of experience
the necessary
fonns
are
experience
of
the
that
thus
showing
firom
derived
the
analysis.
preliminary
rules
forms
Subject,
own
its
of
Absolute
the
to
because
they
immanent
are on-ns
necessary
appearance.
But would
Kritik,
than
a
Kantian
in
rather
deduction
of
be
the
sense
this really
a
metaphysical method of
first
In
the
version of
derivation that assumesthe existence of entities?
Completion
entails
WL, Fichte endows his method with a specific criterion of completeness.
This
is
consciousness-in-gencral.
the
of
condition
the
objective
that
enactment
absolute
proof
for
form
is
the
forms,
in
the
possibility
of
condition
where each
proof will consist a system of
in
to
the
it,
absolute enactment
movement
circular
that
a
grand
returns,
and
precedes
wbich
one
itself, understoodnow, not as a postulate,but as an objective foundationand real ground.This
its
is
status as
indeed self-groundin& proving
will show that the principle of the system
Absolute by actually demonstrating that it is the ground of all fon-ns of experience. There is no
hypothetical
is
its
here:
the
principle can only possess
complete,
system
metaphysics
until
for
is
54/113),
(CC
The
the criterion
method an epistemological experiment
objective validity.
deduced
from
first
implies
in
interim,
the
the
that
that,
of circularity
wbat is
we can only assimie
principje is objectively vali(t and that the principle is indeed capable of serving as the
GrundsaLz of a system: 'There is thus a circle here from which the human mind can never
It
its
in
is
to
escape.
good concede presenceexpficitly,
order to avoid being confused later by its
discovery'
(CC
61-2/119)
unexpected
Fichte's method aims to demonstratethat the absoluteenactmentmust supportrelative
become
determinate
forms
discursive
thus
as
and
consciousness,and that this follows
synthetic
The
from
indeterminate
its
identity
as
a
nature
wfity.
analytically
of the subject expressed by
the thetic proposition 1=1('l am F), is the absolutebeginning. Ficbte claims that this unity,
formal
law
identity
(A=A),
be
the
the
source
of
of
thought without
cannot
represents
which
formal
law
the
thought
the
the
to
opposite,
source
of
its
of
of non-contradiction
passing
(A; &-.A), i. e., the proposition 1*--l (I am not not-I'). The I cannot at one and the same tilne posit
itself absolutely as both I and not-1. The second proposition thus represents a necessary,,but
its
by
anfithefical
the
act
own outside as absolutelý,
or
posits
absolute subject produces
wbicb
,
independent of it. This absolute other is the postulate of the enactment of the not-1. the basis of
all knowledge or consciousnessof the objective world, which follows necessarily from the
freely posited unity of the subject.
The independence of the second postulate anses as the result of a necessary
contradiction: the 1,quo absolute, cannot be simultaneously I and not4, for then it would not be
111%so,
lute. But this independence
producesanothercontradiction:if the absolutesubjectand the
,,,
not-] are both posited absolutely, then they are absolutely external to each other or
incommensurable, and would be equiprimordial. However, the absolute other depends upon the
absolute subject, and so cannot be absolutely different and equipn.mordial. Paradoxically, if the
is
independent
not4
of the 1, then it must simultaneously be absolutely dependent upon
utterly
it, as the two postulates are linked by analytical necessity.
A third act of the I is the condition needed to make the positing of I and not-I possible.
It cannot be fonnulated, via fin-ther analysis, given that an absolute contradiction has arisen.
Instead,it is thoughtas a freely generatedsyntheticproduct of reasonthat relatesI and not-I to
each other in a non-contradictory way. This new relation is one of opposition, where each term
has a limited degree of reality with respect to the other: each is insofar as the other is noi. This
generalsynthesis,which completesa triad of postulates,statesthat in generalsubjectand nonin
be
limitation.
subjectcan only
relatedwithout contradiction a relation of mutual quantitative
Ficbte"smethod, thm defersto Kant by recognisingthat the restdt of attemptingto NA the
Like
Kant
Fichte
holds
is
be
that
an
antinomy.
an
antinomy
necessarily
can
unconditional
dialectically resolved once the terins under which it is conceivedare explicitly related to the
Unlike
Kant
however.,
Fichte
dialectic
having
experience.
of
sees
conditions
as
a
subjective
in
these
exactly
conditions are what
elucidating
role
positive
Ilmitation.
relation of reciprocal
40
initially, simply this general
With respect to the Absolute Subject itself, these three postulates show that. in order to
itself as relatively different to and relatively
posit itself fTeely at all, it must necessan posit 1-1
.
identical with something else. Synthests In general, as the form of positing fliat subsumes
relative difference and identity, is thus deduced as the necessan,form under which the Absolute
Subject.fýeeýy determines itself Each deten-nination of the Fichtean organon will, within the
hypothetical
he
the
!
transcendental subject, constitute a synthetic
overall
activity of
unity of
relation between a finite, conscious subject and a presentation of an object -a
fon-n of
oblective experience or knowledge.
The philosopher must methodically reconstruct the totality of forms be postulated as posited simultaneously within the unity of the Absolute -
which must all
in
deduction,
via a
fime, of the series of triads that constitute these modes, repeating the initial deduction of
deduction
(necessary)
the
postulates-.
analytic
of antinomically related opposed terms, and the
fonn
(free)
that
the
spontaneous
generation of a synthesis
resolves
antinomy With a new
of
experience. Each triad thus reflects Kant's conception of practical autonomy, bv embodying,
freedom
In
the
and
necessity.
each and every case, the
autonomous self-legislation,
unity of
fuTther
be
is
the
the
thesis
and antithesis, yet can itself
possibility of
synthesis a condition of
demand
into
In
this way, successive
thesis
that
also
reconciliation,
a
and
antithesis
analysed
being
conditions of the manifestation of the absolute enactment, are
syntheses, as well as
conditions of previous syntheses.
Reconstruction begins with the third postulate, the most general and least determinate
foun of sýmtheSls.I and -not-] are posited as limiting and determining each other, and so either Ii
the not-I limits the 1,or ii) the I limits the not-I (WL 125-6/121-3). This antinomy is the basis of
the distinction betweentheoTetiadand pTacticalphilosophy.In thefiTStcasethe consciousI will
feet itself determined by an object, while in the second this I will come to know itself as the
Fichtean
In
the
determinations
the
ewly
otject.
in
cause of
by
d
the
systemthe
of
completion
resolve,
be
Ibis
antinom,,
can
only
ý
system,
in other words, only the absolute relation between
]edge
be
kno,
forms
can
a synthesisadequateto the resolution of the
of
"
the totality of necessan,
41
by
determined
The
know
I
the presentedobject,
antinomy.
conscious must come to
itself not as
or as that which determines the presented object but as the absolutely free act that determines
all presentation in consciousness,the subject-in-itself
'Me early system begins With the theoretical porfion of philosophy, as the propoSifion
that the not4 determines the I assumesonly that the I fteA itself to be determined.,rather than
asswTdngthat the 1, as practical philosophy always already does, is opposed to an independent
object. The very objecthood of the not-1, and afl the forms under which this can be determined
(the forms of intuition, the categories) will be deduced from the bare awarenessof limitation or
deterimnation as such (the Anslofl or 'check). Nevertheless, it is necessarythat a trmsition to
practical philosophy should eventuallyoccur, so that practical, active synthesisin generalwill
be deduced as a transcendentalcondition of extemally-delimited theoretical knowledge and the
system can ultimately return to the absolute subject.
At the end of the theoretical portion (WL 227-46/202-17), the finite, conscious I is
for
different
from
This
itself
the
the
ground
as essentially
presented object.
prepares
aware of
practical philosophy where the finite I is aware of being divided internally between the
theoretical 'intelligence", and the active practical subject that transcendsthe 11MItationsof the
intelligence simply by being aware of it (WL 247/218-9). This internal division is a basic
by
final
the
system
returning to the unity
resolution would complete
practical antinomy wbose
deduction
depend
Crucially.,
the
the
of the
completion will not only
upon
of
absolute subject.
be
law,
but
the
can
acwalýv realised among moral
conditions under whicb it
also on
moral
forms
be
history
that
the
must
realised in
in order to create a rational
necessary
subjects,namely
Kant's
postulatesof practicalreason.
constitution,and wbieb replace
The practical portion revas two fatal weaknessesin the system, however. Firstly, the
impossible
formulate
The
from
to
to
proves
theoretical
satisfactorily.
practical
transition
unity
law
is
Fichte's
deduction
Kant's
the
to
to
moral
sought
establish
of
vital
early
of reason that
Subject
Absolute
be
be
the
to
activity
of
must
proven
system, as the practical, self-generating
foundation
thus
that
theoretical.
showing
experience,
of
reflective reason
the unconditional
4'.2
dependsupon practical,productivereason.However,the first principle of the systemturns out
to unden-ninethis overaU aim: the way in which Fichte detennines the postulate of the absolute I
that he takes to be necessary for consciousness-in-generaldestroys the coherence of the two
halvesof reason.
As Frederick Neuhouser has noted 21Fichte's 'transition' is only necessaryif the end
result of the theoretical portion directly contradicts the first principle of the. system, thus
maintaining the essential disunity of the finite subject. Otherwise the practical portion would be
unnecessary,as the conditions of the unity of consciousnesswould be exhausted within the
bounds of the general relation between an 1 and a not-! that determines it. The theoretical
portion endsby showing that the inteHigenceknows itself to be separatefrom the object that
determines it (WL 249/220-1); for this to directly contradict Fichte's first principle, the
Absolute Subject must from the outset bave been known to be. the ground of both object and
finite intelligence. But this knowledge is what the system is supposed to demonstrate. A
distinction must be drawn again between the canonical form of the Principle and its positive
form, whose validity remains to be proven. in its canonical form, the principle is, for the
be
first
the
the
thus
to
necessmy condition of all consciousnessand
claims
right
a
subject,
form,
from
it
is
different
but
insofar
it
has
this
the unity of apperception,which
no
principle,
as
free,
The
its
but
is
be
ground
of
consciousness.
prooj'of
not
a
sufficient
status
may spontaneous,
is
depends
first
it
i.
that
a
self-producing
grouwL
as
principle, e. proof
upon the completion of
the system. Hence the content of the real beginning of the system (the canonical principle) is the
failed
Reinhold
forrn
does
that
to
transcen(L
theoretical
of
consciousness
and
not
same
No
the
transitionis necessitated.
the
theoretical
the
part
of
system.
contradict end of
The second difficulty concerns the possibility of completing the system.,even if the
is
Practical
the reallsationof ends within the natural world.
activity
transition were necessary.
Activity, as an ozqhl, is a striving (Streben) that aims to overcome the division between the
21Neuhouser,
1990, pp. 49-52.
43
finite intelligence thatfeels itself to be detennined by the natural world and the infinite practical,
purposive activity that aims to realise absolute freedom witbin this world. However, this striving
is necessany unending. Even if the formal conditions of possibility for the realisation of
freedom (legal institutions, the State, etc.) can be deduced, this does not itself complete the
system,
This is becausepractical knowledge entails the reafisation of its conditions, mid hence
the activity of real subjects. The divided subject can only know itself as absolutely free if it
freedom.
The systemis seenin the historical contextof a nation of subjectsstriving
this
reallses
in unison to realise a single grand practical synthesis.Becausethe very basis of practical activity
is a real difference between the autonomous desire for a practical end and one's
beteronomously-determined consciousnessof -natural Mclinations that limit practical activity,
the realisation of final unity is infinitely postponed. At every level of practical philosophy, any
realisation of a purpose depends upon a difference that escapesthis unity, given that a
difference itself is necessary for any practical activity to begin. The absolute unity of
consciousnessbecomes impossible to reach: once the system opens onto historical time it
be
The
demonstration
cannot
completed.
of the objective validity
of the postulate of the
absolutesubjectremainsinfinitely deferred,the higbestpractical 'ought.
In later versions of the system constructed from 1796 to 1802, the primacy of practical
displaced
by
is,
in
Kant's
to
these
to
response
problems,
a
new
principle
closer
one
philosophy
its
391/4),
fundamental
in
(GMM
'differentiated
the
application'
solely
notion of a
reason
'self-positing'.
subjective activity of
Firstý the beginning of the system is reworked in the two
'Introductions' to the WL composedin 1797.The questionof beginningis now addresseAnot
in tenns of the quest for an objective beginning or conscious certainty (Geuyj heit), but in tserm
belief
freedom.
beginnin&
(Glaube)
in
This
a
necessary
reorientation also
of a subjectively
Fichte
for
his
the
antinorny
sees
to
which
as
universal
philosophy
methodological
of
a
responds
22
Ibid. pp. 11-12.
44
time: whetherto begin with a subjeefiveGrund5a1z.or to revert to a realist first PrMCIple'idealism' or 'dogmatism'. Neither position can establish its validity agwnst the claims of the
other. In both cases,the validity of any systemproducedfrom the first principle is only relative
to the overall validity of the principle (freedom or causaldeterminism),wbicb the systemitself
cannot prove but has to assume.For Fichte, the only factor behind choosing one over the other
must be a subjective one: a practical faith m freedom or determinism.
ne implication is that the WL's first principle cannot be an absolute confirmation of
the subject's freedoirn, and that the beginning of the WL is in fact mcompatible with its aim,
despite being a condition of consciousness-in-generalthat could be affinned by any subject.
Instead, the system will begin with a principle that only ought to be affirmed by any subject,
itself
that
the
i-neaning
system
will be genuinely circular, grounded only upon the practical
23
belief
freedom
affirmation of the value of a
M
.
The changesin Fichte's method are exemplified by the WLm-n of 1796-99. Here, Fichte
begins from the postulate that the absolute subject, wbether determined tbeoretically or
from
itself
That
be
I
to
the
the
Practically, always posits
which is not-I cannot simply
opposed
deduction
1,
WL.
Instead,
the
to
the
as
must
remain
wboIIy
immanent
self-positing
and
outset, in
deduce the conditions that make it possible for the I to ]unit Uself. rather than show how the I
from
This
duplicity'
itself
be
limited
'original
know
to
of opposed
without.
will entail an
can
its
1,
185/365)
(WLnm
the
the
ground of all
self-positings or representations
within
as
activities
of
itself.
24The
WLmn explicitly shows that 'differetticceis not rnerely the opposite of identitv-. it
is the wndition
of its possibility
25
-)
.
Fichte argues that self-positing is that by which, when one thia-s 'I arn', 'one feels
28/110).
determined
(V&nm
feeling
be
This
to
a
particular
manner'
in
can
one,s consciousness
feelmg
however
32/116),
(WLnm
in
felt
be
to
repose
or
indeten-nination.
of
a
opposition
only
"' On Fichte's 'antifoundationalism' seeRockmore, 1994, esp. p. I
24 See Z61jer,
1995, pp. 116,123.
45
f
being
bare
In
intuited
from
figure
the
eeling of
as if one
which it emerges.
a
against the pyound
detennined, then, is a difference between that which is merely pirivento consciousness, Or
positedfor it, and the Absolute Subject that posits the determination fi)r itsetf(WI-nm 20/112.
37/124). This is the difference between the theoretical and the practical, given that it comprises
free,
a
actualising activity (practical.), and an ideal (theoretical) consciousnessof this activity
(WLnm 47/140,49/142-3). In the feeling of being-determinect the most abstract synthetic form
of experience, the subject's nnmediate intuition of itself wavers between the repose that
feeling,
the
precedes
which is representedin consciousnessby the concept of the indeten-ninate.
and the feeling itself, representedby the opposed concept of the determinate. For the feeling to
be posited in consciousness,the passagefrom indeterminateto determinatemust be made
first
delenninable.
is
become
The
deterMMable-as-such
the
possible: consciousness must
first
the
thus
the
content of the systemproper.
of
absolute"s
self-determination,
and
condition
This condition is now analysed in order to deduce the further conditions which make
the I detenninable,i. e., capableof being hrMted.This musthappenthroughthe I ý'sown activity.
is
from
The
doctrine
it
is
deten-nined
Anstofl
the
that
of
without.
we cannot simply assume
Dame]
key
happens.
Breazeale
'check'
how
that
translates
this
this
to
points
out
show
revived
term inadequately, as it denotes both an obstacle, and an original unpetus that allows the I to
26
become determinate. Feeling (GeftiW as a power of the transcendentalL can serve as an
Ansto,# as it is purely subjective and yet is not finally produced by the 1,27being composed of
.F
limitation
Y's
infinite
together
the
that
activity,
or
the
cba-racterises absolute
with a
expansion
1.
So,
immanent
depend
the
the
that
examination of the
on
cannot ultimately
contraction
detern-tination
Subject
Absolute
that,
to
the
all
posits a condition of
conditionsthat must pertain
because it is basic to the system, cannot itself be analysed further within it. For theoretical
both
invigorate
For
that
restrict
and
consciousness.
practical
philosophy, it is senseimpressions
245
. Breazeale, 1995, p. 100.
Ibid., P. 88.
'-7lbid, p- 94.
46
philosophy it is the impression of the freedom of other human beings, the 'demand' or
4summons'(Aufforderung) that restrictsone's own actionsout of respect(Achning) for others'
autonomy by stimulating the will.
The
feeling
Fichte
the
emphasis now changes as
analyses
of determination itself
deducing from it the vafious tbeorefical and pTactical modes of the Fs activity. Once the
Absolute Subject has become determinable, it then takes on determinations that are the different
modes of experience, freely posited in conformity with its own nature, and beginning with the
positing within consciousnessof a representationof that feeling which initially made it
determinable (-WLnrn 65-7/171-3). Feeling is the condition of the fact that the I determines
itself, an opposed synthesis within the absolute subject conditions the what of the act of
positin& the representationalcontent of the deten-ninationof conscious experience.This
synthesis, the ultimate condition of being able to represent feeling as dependent upon an object
that is, the condition of our notion of object-bood itself -
belongs to the productive
imagination, 'the power to grasp absolutely opposed things in a single act' (WLnm 201/399.),
discrimination
judgement
by
renders
and
possible
providing a whole, an overall context
which
201/398-9).
(WLn-m
of relatednessas such
As a condition of any representation, this power immediately grasps the totality of
forms of conscious experience inherent in the absolute subject. This conscious thought 'cannot
do, since thinking is purely discursive' (WL-nm 202/401). Feeling and imagination are
within the
equiprimordial, non-discursivepowersthat are ultimate conditionsof consciousness
transcendental subject. The imagination is especially important: it 'creates the material for
found
is
it
that
empiria
consciousness
is
and the
within
representation: aloneshapeseverything
2/193).
Ficlite
identifies
itself
it
Spirit
(DSL
Kant's
(Geiv),
this
with
consciousness
creatorof
'animating principle in the mind [ ...1, the ability to exhibit aestheticideas' (CJ 313-4/181-2).
The imagination, seemsto be a symbol for the Absolute Subject, for it has an autonomy of the
kind attributed to the Mlhan(llung: imagination'obtains its rules from within itself It needsno
Yet
despite
71198)itself
(DSL
law
it
]a,%-,,; is a
its non-discursv%rity,
it remainssubjectto
unto
47
the inherentrationality of the absolutesubject,and to determinationvia the discursive.analytic
power of judgement, wbich sequentially dismembers the syntbesis of imagination (WLnm 2014/403-4).
Throughout the system, feeling and imagination allow consciousness to become
determinatetbrougbjudgement:awareof its object awareof itself as awareof the object and
awareof itself as positing determinationswithin the object. Consciousness
can thusbe awareof
an object that limits it, in variousforms; it canalsobe variouslyawareof its own acti-6ty.But in
it
is
either case
aware of itself only as determinate, as limited from without or within, and as
such remains different from the Absolute Subject which, being the totality of these
detenninations (the subject-in-itself), can alone be fimly self-detennining.
To know the Absolute Subiect as absolute remains an infinite task: the imagination
provides us with an Idea of the whole, giving to judgement a rule or schema which it is to
follow in reconstructing the instantaneously-graspedwhole in time, this rule being that of
striving for unity within a consciousness split between theoretical and practical activities
(WLnrn 415/208). This 'striving" is now a generalised rule of self-positing, by which the
Absolute Subject determines itself according to ever more comprehensive syntheses(the forms
itself
itself
intuition,
the
posits
as
aware
of
as containing,as
categoriesand so on), until it
of
transcendentalstructures, these forms as conditions of the experience of an independent object.
For this practical self-consciousness.,striving is the dernand that absolute freedom, the unity of
WL.
This
in
in
be
the
the
the subject
vision of mfmite practical striving
realised
world, as
demand
freedom
began,
demand
the
to
the
to
the
affirm
system
as the
with which
returns us
However, the demandis onýva demand.,a Sollen, and
beginningand end of all consciousness.
beginnin&
is
by
the
conditioned
the
of
a theoretical
which
the question of
objective validity
foundational
be
justification
the
the
status
of
absolute
subject,
cannot
settled
of
criterion, i. e. the
i.
fmedorn
The
that
to
ftafilment
I--criterion,
e.
prefer
we
eed
om.
unfr
of a merely practical
Dy the
kingdom
by
WL.
decided
be
the
the
the
of
Perfect
realisation
of
ends,
as
in
questioncould only
48
Fichte's failure to demonstrate the foundational status of the Absolute Subject depends
upon a contingency his method cannot eradicate. The Subject always needs feeling In order to
become determinate, for feeling introduces deten-ninability, potentially determinate difference.
into the absolute act's indeterminate identity. Now feeling is entire]y subjective Or Private, yet
does not depend entirely on the subject. The 1, in becoming determinate, 'is not the sole author
of its own being"g. Consequently.,feeling, as a condition of all consciousness,cannot itself be
explained by something like a determinate form of consciousness.In other words, the fact that
the subject is divided from itself and is actually deten-ninateis, as far as consciousnessis
concerned, entirely contingent, and not caused by any necessary law, as was the case at the
beginning of WL. But if this is the case, all consciousnesshas for its necessary condition its
own contingent or unexplainable division from itself This means that in actuality, it will
be
divided
from
itself,
necessarily always
as the practical part of the systernshows.
Early and later versions of the system encounter this same problem- The WL attempts
to avoid it by using the analytic identity of the absolute I as the means of deriving the difference
between I and not-1, but this makes the absolute too much like the merely theoretical unity of
faibng
to go beyond the Reinholdianposition that Fichte himself Cnticlsed.The
apperception,
problem really surfacesin the practical portion, and is still not solved in the WLnm. Real
individuals
the
part of actual
is necessaryto realise the goal of the system, to make
striving on
the Absolute itself an object of knowledge, but this fulfihnent of philosophy remwns infinitely
deferred.
For exwnple, the creation of a legal order derives from the conflict of individual wills,
freedom,
between
fi-eedom
thus
the
to
contradiction
reconciling
and seeks preserveUniversal
A
But
in
domination
the
that
of
against
all.
as an actual, and not merely
war
prevails
and
depending
internal
is
diNision
the
this
project
a
piecemeal
on
of the
possible mode of action,
in
determinate
depends
between
turn
and
natural
ends
inclinations,
which
on
practical subject
28 ibid,
9.88.
49
the moral feeling of real differencesbetweenone's own will and that of others-Every attemptto
reconcile a difference with a synthetic identity itself depends upon a further difference, and it is
this dynamic that infinitely postponesthe full presenceof the Absolute. Reasonnow finds itself
faced witb an aporia that is no longer Kantian. Wbereas Kant"s transcendental metbod
contingently assumes the necessity of certain actual forms of empirical experience, Fichte's
project appears to show that Reason,,no matter how far it goes In deduCMg and realising
determinations that are actual forms of experience and conditions of its own employment, must
always presuppose,a contingent difference that it cannot legislate for. Reasonbas been placed in
a position where it must bear the burden of an infinite labour, without ever knowing for sure at
if
it
has
indeed
any stage
proceeded correctly.
iv)
Schelling: The 'EcstmWof Reason'
Reason
Absr,
the
a)
and
-Imte:Negalive Philosophy
Fichte takes up Kant's central contention that objective knowledge depends fon-nally
Herder
Hamann's
the
the
transcendental
to
structure of
subject, and attempts answer
and
upon
objections by boldly making this fi-anscendental subject the sufficient condition of all
foundations
for
falls.,
bave
knowledge
As
to
this
seen,
attempt provide secure
consciousness. we
for it setsup a project that is de.jure impossibleto complete.However,Fichte's failure changes
the orientation of foundationalist method. Kant begins With the assumption that reason is
but
its
to
this assumption
empirical
experience,
of
relation
capableof an immanentexamination
is qualified by the furtber assumption that empirical experience is itself always already known.
Fichte argues that, because reason can determine what is fundamentally necessary in any
it
is
foundation,
Subject
by
Absolute
this
the
necessarily
Di=anent
in
that
and
is,
experience,
deduce
forms
demonstrate
it,
the
totality
that
the
can
systematic
reason
of
of
will
analysing
experience.
But the quesfionof criteria of certainn, of knowledgeremains.The systemis complete
is
knoim
have
the
that
subject
absolute
as
absolute.,
when we
its whole
only when we are certain
50
content before us. But finite consciousnessis posited as doubly conditioned- It is conditioned by
the self-groundingidentity of the canonical unconditioned,but also by an 'original duplicItY
(WLnm 185/365) of feeling. Hence the attainment of absolute knowledge (when the content of
the system is completed and utterly certain knowledge of the unconditional achieved) is
infinitely postponed. An other (feeling) that necessarily escapesbeing fully determined within
the system proves in fact to be a condition of the system itself
The failure of reason to prove its autonomy by fulfilling its own criteria of certainty can
be seento be at the heajl of the reaction of the Romantic movement against Kantian philosopby,
which, among other things, centres upon questions regarding the relation between the
foundation
knowledge.
The
Romantics
the
took- up
of
experience
unconditioned
and
subject of
themes which we have already encountered in relation to the leaders of the Sturm und Drang,
Herder and Hamann. Chief among these was what we n-figbt call the 'situatedness' of reason,
the way in which any account of the foundations of knowledge depends upon histoncally
linguistic
historical
by
that
specific
conventions and wider
conditions
are presupposed
any
is.
Epistemology
determine
knowledge
to
the
may seek
actual account of what genuine
but
doing
has
in
this
to
the
it
conditions of
validity of synthetic a priori propositions,
forms
(natural
the
the
science, morality) whose
of experience
presuppose
universality of
in
There
is
it
is
to
an essentialcIrCularity the epistemological
attempting ground.
possibility
in
Fichte
attempting to explain why certain rational terms are universal
clearly
saw.
as
project
conditionsof our expenence,philosophy assumesa pre-givenset of meaningsthat enableit to
get started, a set of subjective presuppositions -
just as, for Fichte, Kant assumed the
differencebetweensubjectand object without showinghow this would necessarilyanse given
for
its
first
Ficbte's
In
to
own
principles,
account
epistemology
the nature of reason. attempting
had to impose a doctrine of activity upon practical reason, and the motivation behind this
by
'governed
itself
cboice
caprice, and since even a capricious
a
practical:
imposition was
by
is
it
(lW
4-3)3/18).
Fichte
baNe
decision must
governed
inclination
and
interest'
somesource,
51
thus recognised that critical philosophy must begin with faith, but this left his own project
ungrounded.
The problem of the historical conditioning of reason led the Romantics to consider the
possibility of a non-rational grounding of reason in a higher, primarily aesthetic faculty. This
ideaý as developed by Jacobi and H61derlin, proved decisive in breaking Schelling's earl),
attachmentto Fichte, as it seemedto promisea meansof leaving behind the circle of subjecti%,
e
presuppositions- Scheffing's earliest work as a student of Fichte concerns itself largely With the
defence
exposition and
of Fichte's system and method. During the mid- I 790s, however, a
decisive change in orientation occurs, with Schelling proposing not a single organon of
knowledge founded upon the Absolute Subject, but tivo parallel systems, one dealing With the
Absolute Subject, the other With the unity of nature. This move away from Fichte's refusal to
I
be
the
to
the
to
assurne not-I as a posit parallel
may appear
a regressionto a pre-Mtical realism
(which is largely how Fichte interpreted it). However., the reasons for Schelling's change in
forced
from
Fichte
'criticism'
the
that
the
approachstem
sameproblemsregarding meaningof
to rework his system in the WLnm.
As we saw above, Fichte found that if he insisted on the practical, essentially free
be
faced
his
Grundsal.
then
the
an antinomy conceming the objective
system
subject as
- of
beginning of philosophy. The Absolute could be consistently defined as either essentiaflyreal or
being
idea
either
principle
capable of
accordingly,
constructed
Without
and a system
essentially
Schefling
(as.
'criticism"
'Dogmatism'
the
called them) were incapableof
and
other.
refuting
for
Absolute
the
the
clanined
itself
wd
as
each
with
philosophically,
other
each
contending with
intuition.
of an immediate
Whereas Fichte sought to resolve the antinomy by preaching an affimnation of idealism
by
Scbelling
freedom,
in
thatý
the
proposed
antinomy, it
redefining
the
of
interests
and criticism
be
'critical"
Absolutes
'dogmatic'
The
together
two
be
can
and
viewed
in
opposed
could solved.
different contextsthat correspondto differing basicphilosophicalquestions.The antinomy itself
dependsupon a pre-Kantianontological questionregardingthe essentialnatureof Being. But if
51%
I
the two absolutes are seen in the light of a specifically Kantian epistemological problem,
namely jblow
do ideas of external things anse in usT (IPN, 15/12). the antinomý- necd not
come about. If this question is asked, then nothing, is assumedbeyond the defixio and formallý
non-contradictory assertion that the independence of entities can be conceived, whereas the
ontological question assumestheir existence, and then posits an Absolute as a highest entity.
Two systems could be constructed as solutions to the Kantian problem, one based on
the concept of a real Absolute, the other on the basis of an Absolute Subject. Both would have
the sarne explananduni, the emergenceof consciousnessof objects.,wbile eacb utifising a
different principle as explanans. The system of Naturphilosophie would entail a deduction of
the actual natural forms necessary for the emergence of consciousness,while the
G-'eistesphilosophiewould follow the Fichtean model of the Wissenscht1fislehrein deducing
forms
necessary
of consciousnessfrom the Absolute Subject. Neither system can be constructed
fact
limitations
Given
to
the
the
that
of consciousness,and so each is circular.
without reference
ideas
have
of external objects, Nalurphilosophie constructs, on the basis of the concept of a
we
self-determining Absolute Life, a natural history of the role of nature in determining
fornatuTal
Geistesphilosophie,
organon
of
general
principles
science.
on the
consciousness,
an
for
freedom,
for
hand,
the
realisationof
an organon
practical
other
constructsa programme
detemiines
the object.
that
the
the
asswnption
subject
philosopby, on
Neither system could contest the claims of the other, as each has a different perspective
Each
holds
between
distinction
the
the
and
object.
sway over its own
subject
on
ground of
domain, the one beginning from the perspectiveof preconsciousfomis of 'experience' from
thereby
the
philosophy,
emerges
in
course of natural
and
consciousness,
which representational
itself Both systemsgive a geneficaccount
history, and the other beginning from consciousness
from
beginning
the
that
principle,
and
reacb
same
conclusion:
absolute
an
consciousness
of
for
It
Schelling
1797
this
that
the
in
themselves
is
reason
swne.
in
calls
subject and object are
fact
'the
that
that the absolute-ideal is
which assurnes
the higher or true philosophical viewpoint
difference
between
Just
59/44).
in
(IPN
the
the
as
relative
subject
and
object
the absolute-real'
53
either system depends upon a higher identity, so the Gnindsdize of either system are actua]INý
subsumedby a higher principle that is the indj&rence of both nature (Absolute Life) and spirit
(Absolute Subject). While the principle of a system can be either subjective or objective. the
principle of principles, Absolute Indifference, is simultaneouslY both subjective and Objective,
and neither subjective nor objective. This true Absolute is without a unique essential
determination, and Sebelling calls it the absolutely necessarypresupposition of all philosophy.
the necessarycondition of all. knowledge.
Sebelling's concept of the true Absolute th-us initially plays the role of a negative
in
the same way as Fichte's Absolute Subject and retains the same
condition
unconditional
hypothetical validity. Positing the Absolute as Indifference
in no way proves anything as to the reality of this idea
being
I
)
the ground of all eVidence,can only prove
wbieb ...
Our
inference
hy
itself
is merely ypothetical.
- if philosophy
is
its
then
that
exists,
necessaTy
presupposition.
(IPN 59/44)
However, Schelling conceives of the Absolute as 'higher' or more inclusive than the
Absolute Subject, for it subsumesboth Natur- and Geislesphilosophie. Fiebte"s major objection
to his former disciple's foundational concept is that it must necessarily collapse philosophy into
dogmatism or realism, as it appears to result in a system that, by VNing a genetic account of
dependent
that
on natural process, actually reduces subjectivity to this natural,
is
subjectivity
29
freedom.
destroying
Schelling's
But
the
Possibility
of
real
necessarily mechanistic process,,
indifference,
is
indifference
Absolute,
the
of the subject of
consideredas
point is that the
knowledge and objective being, and is reducible to neither. Hence both subjectivity and
29See Vater, 1994, pp. 198-202.
54
objective being have a common root that expresses itself immanently in bo& as different
polencies (Polenzen) of itself. Subjectivity expresses this root with a higher exponent, as it
were, given that the forms it takes on express a reflexive awareness of both nature and itself
Hence a relation between subject and object in the theoretical portion of the Geivesphilo.sophit!
cannot, for example, be reduced to a relation between expansive and contractile basic forces in
the Nalurphilosophie, wbereas a lawlike relation between bodies can be reduced to a relation
betweenforces.
Like Fichte's hypothetical postulate, Absolute Indifference must prove itself If systems
of natureand spirit canbe completedupon this basis,tbe.n this Gnindsal.- Will show itself to be
the necessaryand sufficient condition of all knowledge and existence. However, the philosophy
is
based
of nature
on a misconstrual. The Naturphilosophie purports (unlike, say, Spinoza's
philosophy) to describe what nature must be like in order f or there to be representational
consciousness. In such wise, while positing the Absolute Life as a unifon-n whole,
Naturphilosophie only renders this whole determinate in relation lo consciousness.If a genuine
deduction of nature in-jiselj'is not possible, then Nalurphilosophie is not a separatesystm-nas
suck but remains immanent to the general viewpoint of Geistesphilosophie. The 'two-system'
Nalurphilosophie
in
be
itself
if
can reduced this way to part of the
viewpoint cannot sustain
for
it
derives
have
A
the
the merely subjective status of
then
principles
system of subjectivity,
30
detemfinations
being
fictions,
than
of nature.
necessary
rather
speculative
After 1800, a methodological shift occurs. hi 1800, Schelling's STI, the second half of
bis double system and his attempt at a Fichtean Geisiesphilosophie, ends by foHOWingNovalis
in making aestheticintuition a privileged mode of accessto the Absolute.The final condition of
is
deduced
Subject
In
Absolute
the
the practical
the
as
of
art.
work
the practical realisationof
infinite
dangerous
labour
lays
the
Schelling
STI,
the
consequences
of
practical
of
out
of
part
r--The
lack
final
fulfilment
Fichtean
in
by
the
of
a
promise
of
system.
results
calf-positing required
30Seeibid., P. 201, on Fichte's view of accountsof nature as 'fictions.
55
a finaJ dichotomy vvithin consciousness:the entirety of the history of the reallsatiOn Of the
Absolute is conceived as either being detennined with a prion ., pire-given necessity or being
utterly indeterminate, and subject to no law (STI 601-2/209). The categorical imperative of
Streben
both
fatalism
Jamnite
results either in
equally
and accedia, or anarchism and chaos,
destructive of the polifical and legal order that strives to reallse the Absolute.
The only way of redeeming practical subjectivity of its ultimate diVidednessis if the
Absolute can actually be present in consciousnessas a 'providential' unity of necessity and
freedom. Schelling recOgnises that the truth of Fichtean, subjective self-legislation is the
unending Streben to fulfil an abstract practical doctrine, and proposes instead that true
experience of the absolute unity of freedom and necessity lies In artistic production. Art unites
both conscious, subjective activity (the artist-subject's grasp of a lelos) and unconscious,
objective activity (the meaning of the artwork is lnexbaustible). Art can representas an aesthetic
historical
humanity,,
in
its
division
disunity:
'[sIcience and
the
situation of
all
and
whole
31
forever
forever
possesses'. Importantly, the expenence of aesthetic creation
morality
seek; ail
just
is
instead
is
longer
but
that
the unity of
subjective,
or reception expressesa unity
no
which
determinate
differentiation,
This
is
and is thusa productive
spirit.
experience
natureand
without
intuition of the absolute unity rather than of the merely relative unity of consciousness,which
always rehes on differenfiation,, and can thus never be at rest.
Already in the earlier bi-perspectival system the postulate of a 'higber' Absolute
divided into natural and spiritual principles demonstratedthe presenceof a non-Fichtean
inspiration in Schelling's work. After 1800, Schelling's attemptsat constructingan organonof
foundation
first
higbeT
detenninations
this
theiT
as
pnnelple,
the necessmy
of expenence utilise
from
intuition
This
into
intuition
STI's
turn
the
away
an
of reason.
aesthetic
transfonning the
FichteanSubjectcan be understoodin relation to the critique of transcendentalphilosophy that
3( Fackenheim, 1996, p. 89.
32Frank, 1995, p. 75-6.
56
is furnished by HbIderlin, Novalis and above all, Jacobi, and initiated by Jacobi's rediscovery
"
Spinoza.
Jacobi argued that the genuinely unconditioned presupposition of Imowledge has
Of
to be thought of as transcendent to all conditioned forms of knowledge. and thus cannot be
reduced, as Fichte had argued, to the subject's knowledge of itself3" Fichte's Absolute is
posited as a subject opposed to the abstract thing-in-itself of realism: it is a form of knowing
that is defined over against a being, and is thus conditioned. For Jacobi, if the unconditioned
be
known, then it is in an intuition that is utterly immediate. Our experience of this
can
transcendent Absolute would thus be indeterminate, being an intuition, not of an object
35
by
but
conditioned
a category,
of primordial Being.
H61derlin concurred with this view in the fi-Vnent
'Judgement and Being' (c. 1794-5),
arguing that Fichte's intellectual intuition cannot be unmediate, for it is supposedto represent
the subject's intellectual 'perception' of itself, yet this perception of subjectivity cannot be
defined without mediation, without presupposing a relation between subject and object.36The
absolute knowledge spoken of by Jacobi and H61derlin, however, is a certainty that is radically
bjj,,
(Iý
37
The circularity that Fichte acknowledgesas a necessaryfeatureof his systemcan thus
be criticised from a 'higher' standpointas a kind of transcendentalillusion in Kant"s sense(see
25 above). The unconditioned is meant to allow the possibility of eXPenenceto be explained
Fichte's
foundation.
flowever,
to
a secure
unconditioned cannot explain this
with reference
is
by
difference
If
the
charactensed
awareness
of
representational consciousness
possibility.
between subject and object, then Fichte's Absolute cannot account for this difference, for the
definition of it as a subject already presupposesthe distinction between subject and object. It is
from
is
(this,
only
an
abstraction
our
experience
and
as we
thus not genuinely unconditioned,
33SeeBeiser, op. cii., Ch. 2 on Jacobi's discovery of Spinozaand his early critique of Kant.
34Frank, op. cii., pp. 66-7.
35 I&L,
67,74.
pp.
pp. 17-25.
Holderlin, 1988, pp. 37-8. Seealso Bowie, 199-3),
37 IýMp, 12/48, on the nature of absolute certaintv
Cf
57
shall see, anticipates Deleuze). The Absolute is thus assumed to be a substantial image of the
fori-ris of expenence with which we are familiar. Whereas Kant gave a merely formal deduction
of the possibility of certain varieties of experience whose universality he simply presupposed,
Rebte assm-nes,that the Absolute resembles in its internal articulations our familiar (and
historically situated) experience. Hence he posits the Absolute as having an internal or necessary
'r.chl *
is
be
to
that
representational
consciousness
only assumedand cannot proven.
,elation
Once Schefling had attained a 'hip-her' point of view on the Absolute afforded by the
non-Fichteanelementsof his Nalurphilosophie and the accountof art in STI, he could attempt
to remedythesedeficienciesof Fichte's approach.DespiteagreeingWith Jacobi and H61derlin
on the transcendenceof the Absolute with respect to all conditiomng relations, Schelling still
demonstrate
to
the autonomy of pHosophical reason by using this Absolute as the
wanted
foundation for an a priori system.But in order to do this, this foundation bad to proVide a
genuine explanation of the possibility of experience, and this, as we shall see, raises real
Jacobi
H61derlin
had
if
that,
problems.
and
argued
it is possible,then all conditionedknowledge
must presupposethe immediate identity of the knowing subject and the Absolute- But this only
foundation
had
been
Like
Fichte,
Schelling
that
adduced.
meant
a negative, canonical
saw that
derived
from
foundation
knowledge
this
only a complete organon or system of
immanently
knowledge
to
synthetic
and secure the autonomy of reason.
ground
a
prion
would suffice
Hence the necessary relation between the Absolute and the genesis of representational
difference
between
The
had
demonstratedbe
be
had
to
to
subject
and
object
consciousness
in
itself
detennination
Absolute
immanently
be
that
transcendsall
of an
necessary
an
shown to
knou,
be
Absolute
In
forms.
the
this
n rather than simply
would
way,
such conditioned
Tathandlung.
Fichte's
unlike
presupposed.,
With this changein viewpoint Scbelling developswhat would becomeknown as the
'Philosophy of Identity.
The dual system is replaced by a single system based on the
Identity,,
Absolute
of
out
nature
and
subsequent],
which
consciousness
of
postulate
ontological
-v
be
deducedSchelling's
fonns
have
having
to
its
projectin
rejected the
theoretical and practical
58
flavourSpinozistic
have
ichtean standpoint, now seernsto
taken on an explicitly pre-Kantlan,
However, the Pbilosophy of Identity is not dopriatic in Kant's sense, it does not claim a
Superior intuition of the nature of the thinig-In-it-self Like Fichte's system, it remains
hypothetical and circular until it is complete. In order to explain the possibilitN, of experielice.
the unconditioned foundation or in-itself of expenence, the indeterminate Absolute Identity of
all conditioned forins must itself be shown to be inherently rational. This rationality of the
Absolute is the assumption with which the system begins. It can only be proven by a system that
returns to its beginning, as Fichte's was supposedto, and thus completes and grounds itself
Despite its SpinoZistic overtones, then., Schelling's approach remains critical, as it
makes the objective validity of its assumption (that the Absolute is rational and can thus be
known as the sufficient ontological ground of all determination) dependent upon the proof of
this assumption, rather than dogmatically assuming that the Absolute Is necessarily rational. To
is
Schelling,
if
knowledge
Absolute,
the
paraphrase
philosophy, articulated a priori
of
real, then
the absolute identity is its objective presupposition (IPN 59/44)ý but this means that the reality
Absolute
thus
the
the
as unconditioned, positive and necessary
and
existence
of
of philosophy,
longer
be
has
be
demonstrated.
in
Absolute
the
this
to
only -i
will no
ground
way,
The
begiii
its
but
have
then,
system
must
itself,
proven
absoluteness.
with
presupposition,
will
the hypothetical proposition that, if the Absolute is indeed ontologically absolute or selfgrounding, fliis self-grounding is also absolute self-knowing.
For Schellin& this means that the antinomy of 'dogmatism' or 'criticism' that the
finally
be
While
the unity of reason
properly.
to
addressed
solve can now
earlier system set out
(whether
is
Absolute
realist or idealist), in order to
philosophy
the
all
of
presupposition
and
both
be
this
that
out
of
encompasses
unity
unfolded
resolve the antinomy a system must
fTeedom
be
be
to
the
than
The
Absolute
of
and
necessity,
rather
unity
shown
must
viewpoints.
38
deduced
be
From
Nan.
detemiinacy
i
that
must
a
philosophie
it
mr
simply a pure, self-abidmg
3"' On the importance of this chtenon
for Schelling, see NA-liae, 1983b.
.; Q
gives wi a priori account of the determinations of nature in itself, independently of the subject,
and a Geivesphilosophie that accounts for the actuality of bw-nanfreedom. 'Experience'
noNý,
is
r
to be understood as including, not only the practical law, the categories and the forms of
intuition (Kant), and their internal, preconscious articulations (Fichte.) but the unconscious
determinations of nature out of which subjectivity has to be thought as emeTVing. In this way,
the subject of 'experience' is no longer the finite, human subjectper se.
Hence the new system, in its higliest stage of development in WS (1804), takes on an
increasingly theol091
ical as well as epiistemol091
"cal aspect: the analysis of the Absolute will
denve the detenninations of subjectivity out of nature, but this nahn-al history will
simultaneously be the histoiy of the IlVing Absolute"s own progessive self-revelation, its
experience of itself, in a universe that it createswhile still remaining etemally united with itself
above this process as its transcendentor unconditioned condition and ground. The Absolute is,
for Schelling, Immanent in the uttiverse, but is also irreducible to it and thus trmscends all Its
detemunations and the conditioning relations between them. However, at this most developed
begins
Philosophy
Identity.
Schelling
the
the
to
of
of
stage of articulafiotiý
abandon
standpoint
The reason for a further change in Schelfing-s approach concerns, as we shall see, his ow-n
failure to provide a genuine explanation of the possibility of experience.
Schelling begins by acknowledging that reason must presupposethat it is identical With
the Absolute. To reiterate, this unity has always already overcome all oppositions between
ktioirs
(WS
from
'only
totality
the
the
me'
system,
in
perspective of
subject and object, and so
140/143). Hence reason, in its identity with the Absolute undergoesa kind of ecstasy,as Jacobi
knowledge,
knowledge
but
had
H61derlin
this
identity is not conditioned
already noted;
and
beyond all mediation. I'lie Philosophy of Identity has been interpreted as proto-Heideggerean
for this reason, given that such an ecstatic unity of reason and Absolute, beyond conditioned
knowledge, seems to be reminiscent of the primordial openness of Dasein to the Being of
39See Schulz, 1954, esp. pp. 349-50. on this transcendence as e\eniplified in Schelling'., later philoophy,
60
beings.'
Schelling's intentions remain tied to the idea of an absolute system however: he
assumesthat puTereasonis the essentialmode of the Absolute's self-exPressiOn,
throughwhich
be
it immediately knows itself (WS 151/149-50), and thus it claims a certainty tliaL whilst
I
Ing
blind, is still 'an intuition of reason or [ I an intellectuol intuition'
...
(WS 153/151). Philosophy
can thus begin without having to first hone its methodological tools and searchafter detenninate
grounds for its claim on a prior! knowledge, as in Kant and Fichte. This is becausethe positing
of the universe is grounded in the very nature of the presupposed identity., or so Schelling
proposes.However,ibere is a crucial ambiguity in this idea that endangersSchelling'sproject,
one with which he would wrestlethroughouthis career.We will now draw this out.
Schelling begins by analysing the Absolute. Its defining feature is its immediacy: hence
the Absolute or God, considered in itself as the condition of all difference, is the pure
affirmation of itself (WS 164/158-9), and this affirmation is the Absolute's knowledge of itself
(WS 154-5/152). The Absolute is thus implicitly that which is affirmed of it and that which
affirms itself
On this basis, Schelling argues that the Absolute is implicitly
completely
differentiated. It contains within itself an 'ideal universe' or 'first creation' of its logically
follow
fTom
detenninations,
the implicit opposition
possible
whicb
with analytical necessity
between its affirming and affmned aspects. Its eternal unity, Schelling argues, necessarily
its unity containsthis negativeopposition,
implies its differentiatim because.
the arclietypeof
(affirming
in
term
and affmned) requires the other in order
all conditional relations, which each
to be what it itself is. This ideal differentiation is only ideal, bowever, representing the formal or
Kant
had
The
to
only
subjective
allowed
validity.
purely reflexive side of pw-e reason which
first creation is a totality of etemal Ideas, and is thus the merely formal or possible aspectof the
Absolute (WS 204/187) -
it does not explain the emergenceof any actual difference within the
knowledge.
With
dimension
to
this
regard
Absolute, and thus cannot ground syntbefic a priori
describes
in
himself
later
his
Schelfing
'ecstatic,
37.
29-0,
absolute
reason
as
much
1975,
Ohashi,
pp.
-7
c.areer
its
is,
i
this
outside
elf, absolutely ecstatic'
posited
positing,
q... I therefore reason in
I (PO 162-3).
I
61
of the Absolute, we should note that, in addition, ow knowledge of it can only be histOncally,
rather than logically, empleted. We will only find within it content that reflects our histOncally
situated expenence back to usThere is still, thenýthe question of how the Absolute actualty differentiates itself If the
Absolute is a genuinely transcendentcondition, then it is the unity of all conditioned
determinations. In order to enter into a determinate relation with itself, to become known to
itself (and to our reason),it must divide itself. But if it is a genUlnelytranscendentunity of all
conditioned determinations,then the processof division cannot be understoodin terms of
--I
.relations
familiar
from experience that are themselves conditioned. We could, for example,
imagine that the formally necessary logical determination of the Absolute (the first creation)
explains the emergenceof real difference. But this would be to posit a purely ideal or subjective
for
the Absolute that, as in Fichte, presupposesthe reality of a conditioning relation.
content
Here, this relation is that between necessity and freedom, each of wbieb can only be understood
be
difference
Such
the
to
the
of
real
other.
explanation
of
emergence
an
would
with reference
like
Fichte,
for
illusory,
it
Absolute
the
that
thus
is itself
circular and
would simply presuppose,
image
beliefs
but
(e.
being
the
our
about
experience
g., our conviction
of
nodfing
conditioned,
that experienceis characterisedby necessity).Hence,Mowing JakobB6hme, Schellingbegins
in the Philosophy of Identity to dfink of the Creation in Christian terms as the FaIL a disruption
41
freely
is
both
God"s
that
enactednecessaryand yet
of
unity
In order for real difference to
free
hence
be
be
there
ungrounded positing of what is already
and
a
must
posited.,
actually
h1t
it
4ý
If
formally imphcit in the Absýo e se
.,
Importantly, Schelling conceives this ungrounded act as an absolute positing of
determinationthat is grounded only in the Absolute as an umnediately affin-nativeunit-y. in
in
Subject's
Fichtean
the
is
it
of
a
not-L
positing
negative,
the
which
unlike
other words,
41 See BroWn, 1977, pp. 107- 1
-1.
42Carl Eschenmayer,a student of Schefling's, madethis point in 1803; seeEsposito, 1977, p. 141,
11
62
limiting relation between I and not-I that is the necessarybasis for all determination of
consciousnessis supposedly freely posited. This would simply assw-nethat the freedom of the
Absolute or its transcendenceis identical with the relation of opposition between the subject and
the object that is constitutive of representational consciousness. By arguing that negatiNe
opposition is the archetype of necessity that determines the merely ffirmal
first creation,
Schelling has refused to take this view. The actual, rather than merely ideal or possible, positing
of opposition requires that the Absolute introduce within itself and through its pure immediacy
an ontologicA difference (WS 174/165). This posifing is described by Scbelling as the
potentiation or raising-to-a-power of the Absolute: the differences that constitute the actual
universe are powers (in the mathematical sense) of the Absolute, for the Universe and
everything in it can only exist because the Absolute affims itself in them, even though they
themselves are detennined through negative conditioning relations, from the basic opposed
forces that produce matter, up to the subject and its object (WS 210/191). In this sense, the
being of the Universe and its constituents is identical or univocal (WS 187/174-5), and actual
difference is thought of as having its basis in pure affirmation rather than negation., being
identity
identity'
infinite
[Polenzierung]
by
'an
the
of
of
produced
potentiation
43
even thougb
being.
this
negative relations are comprised within
unity of
However, with this recognition of the difference between possible and actual
differentiafion that is necessaryin order to effectively overcome Fichte's position, the ambiguity
nere
becomes
Schelling's
apparent.
own position
and circularity of
are, in effect two
is
hand,
On
Schelling's
in
there
the
the
Absolutes
purely affirtnative
one
system.
postulated
Absolute in whieb all distinctions are dissolved, and whicb putatively serves as the ungrounded
its
determination
through
affin-nation
simply
of
of
all
ground
ontological
and unconditioned
itself On the other, there is the Absolute as rational, as immediately self-knowing, which serves
frOfn
has
Schelling
knowledge.
to
the
that
these
two
foundation
PrlýýsuPPOse
outset
all
of
as the
43Von Uslar. 1968, ppý 503,507.
63
aspects are united, and acknowledges this assurnption. However, his account of the ecstatic
unity of reason and Absolute allows the latter aspect to predominate. Absolute reason is literally
beyond itself in that which ti-anscendsall mediated knowledge. Tbis is the first Absolute, the
purely affirmative aspect the distinctionless unity of itself and reason, an arahonal unity. But
insofar as the Absolute is the unity that is the foundation of genuine knowledge and the
autonomy of pure reason, the unity whose necessaq consequenceis the first creation, then
is
reason assumedto have found itself again in this distinctionless Absolute, as it were. But this
presupposesthat the detenMate conditioning opposition between relations of necessary
entailment and relations of contingent juxtaposition is already known, and that the relation of
the Absolute to itself is known to be characterised by necessary entailment. But reason's
immediate unity with the Absolute cannot provide any such knowledge of determinate
difference and identity, by definition. Mence the presupposition that the transcendentAbsolute
is neverthelesspredominantly rational is as subjective and as circular as Fichte's postulate of the
Absolute Subject. In order to explain and ground experience, it seems,,we need to presuppose
that our foundation or explanans always already reflects essential features of expenence, and
determinately
itself
in
But
through
them.
this cannot provide us With a real
and
must posit
explanation of the actuality of experience, as it supposes that the real substantiality or
transcendence of the Absolute is constituted by its rationality. This, however, is not real
transcendence:as we have seen, the transcendenceof the Absolute and the 'higher' nature of
Sebelling"s viewpoint are to be constituted by the arationality of the Absolute. Only by taking
determination.
hope
Yet
by
doing
Schelling
higher
to
actual
this
explain
Viewpointseriouslycan
foundationalist
jeopardy.
he
later
in
his
the
project in
thought, as we sball see, places
this
In stunmary, Schelling cannot avoid positing an Absolute whose exact status ws-a-vis
bas
be
band.,
Absolute
On
to
the
is
the
understood as a genuinely
one
ambiguous.
reason
'higher" unconditioned,which unifies in itself all conditionIng relations,such as
fi-anscendent,
be
defined
by
therefore
cannot
MY term that is part
that between subject and object and which
by
Schelling's
is
Absolute
This
talk
the
represented
of
purely
affirmative
relation.
a
such
of
64
foundation
desit-ned
be
On
hancL
Absolute
the
to
unconditioned.
the other
of a system
is
if the
to prove that a prioil
synthetic knowledge Is possible, and that reason is autonomous and
immanent to itself, then it has to be defined in terrns of one pole of a conditioning relation, i. e.,
as predominantly rational. But this determination of the Absolute is, therefore, no less
subjeefive than Fichte's.
The Philosophy of Identity simply assumes that the overall unity of the Absolute is
rational, and necessa?!ýy gives rise to the actualisation of the totality of possibilities that follow
logically from the very idea of the Absolute as an immediate unity.44The element of irreducible
freedom has disappeared, and has been subordinated to a theological schema: the Absolute is
conceivedaspositing itself becauseof its internal teleologicalnecessity,a desireto know itself,
implies
distinction
which
within the eternal Absolute itself In order to demonstrate that reason
knou,
that the Absolute is the foundation of a priori knowledge, a complete system of the
can
Absolute is needed. But if this system is only subjectively valid, derived like the 'first creation'
from a purely rational foundation, then it is not complete, even if it begins and ends With the
idea of the Absolute. The only proposition to be extracted from such a system is hypothetical: if
form
is
it
knowledge
through
then
this
the
pure reason alone exists,
system
synthetic
will take.
But does such knowledge exist? Can we know that 'the real and the ideal universe are but the
be
decided
by
This
(WS
187/205)?
taking up the genuinely
except
cannot
same universe'
'hi,v,her' viewpoint on the Absolute. About thirty years later, in criticising Hegel's account in SL
formulating
fonner
his
Schelling
Idea,
Absolute
collaborator of
a wholly
would accuse
of the
interpretation
Absolute
the
the
of
as the source of
negafive philosophy,, concerned only with
forms
the
empirical mamfold as merely possible
of
categories that stand over against
his
Memadissivem
by
Schelling
to
This
own earlier
evaluation was also extended
experience.
(LMP
Schelling's
'highef',
We
to
the
137/142).
attempts
adopt
examine
now
will
Absolute as the foundation of his system.
44 On this necessary character of the actuallsation, see Fuhrmans, 1954, p. 42.
65
arational
b) Development Towards 'Positive Philosvopky'
In the Philosophy of Identity, Schelling forsakes the Kantian and Fichtean emphasisoii
reflexivity as the condition of knowledge, by positing a transcendent,non-reflexive ontological
....
-Ii
founda-fion of knowledge with whicb reason is immechalek united in an ecstanc
mtuition. - In
this, as I noted, lie appears almost HeidetTerean: Schelling proposes that if finite beings are
disclosed to us, then this necessarily requires in the background a primordial opennessto the
46
beings
Being of these
This ontological turn had been M evidence since the earlier
.
Naturphilosophie, where the unity of nature was conceived as a primordial, self-limiting Life
(EE 287-8). However, the Philosophy of Identity is more radical in that it makes the Absolute
fTom the outset a unity of natuTeand spifit that tTmseendsboth. Nevertheless, this move isdespite its theological character, epistemologically necessary,for this definifion of the Absolute
for
for
Sebelling
H61derfin,
le
itimate,
Jacobi
the
only
as
and
non-illusory or non-cli-culaiis,
detenninate
knowledge
to
that
must presuppose.
all
way understand
which
Subsequently, however, it becomes apparent that the transcendentAbsolute itself needs
to be thought as doubled: it has to have rational wid non-rational sides, wid also has to he the
foundation
it
Only
the
these.
then
of a system of actual and not i-nerely
can serve as
unity of
for
first
doubled
This
Absolute
being.
determinations
time in the
the
also
appears
of
possible
divide
NNature
Sebelling
Naiurphilosophie,
to
the
that,
of
itself, it
is
notes
if
unity
where
early
2881),
(EE
both
'duplicity'
be,
time,
primordial wiity and a primordial
at one and the same
inust
like Fichte's Absolute Subject in WLnm. The problem is, how to take up the 'higher'
together,
Absolute
two
these
think
aspects
without effectivel,,
the
and
perspective on
Identity
Philosophy
Here,
transcendental
the.
produced
a
of
the
to
other.
subordinating one
is
Absolutes
the
illusion. It presupposesthat the unity of
rafional and non-rafional
itself rafional,
29.
Frank,
1975,
135,
p.
ol.,
Bcvwie.
See
and
pop.
46On Heidegger and Schelfing. see Box-oe, op. cil., pp. 53,64 and Sikka, 1994, p. 428 ff
66
positing this rationality in an emment, theological f6m
i-e., an inner telaý that necessitatesthe
self-diVision of the Absolute, thus leaving the actual self-di,.rision of the Absolute, which must
be ungrounded., unaccounted for. Schelling has acknowledged that reason must presuppose
from the outset that it is identical with the Absolute, but now this does not seem to be enough.
His reiiwiciation of the viewpoint of the Philosophy of Identity leads to the middle penod of his
career, and his most sustainedattempts to realise the higher perspective on the Absolute.
Above all, then, the self-division of ffie Absolute cannot be conceived as a necesswy
identity
Absolute
this
the
the
the
Calf-limitation,
as
simply
affirm
would
of
rational aspect
witb
se,
of experience, i. e-, the conditioning relations of opposition between its determinations, whilst
its
transcendenceor otherness.In this way, no explanation of the actuality of division
ignoring
be
happened
in
WS,
the identity of Absolute and experience could only be
given,
and,
would
as
beyond
distinction
by
their
secured
presupposing a pre-existing lelos of complete divine selfknowledge, with this division then becoming merely a privation necessaryfor the realisation of
A- :
higher
Schelling
Against
this
end.
position,
subsequentlyattemptedto think the self-division
this
its
Absolute,
the
of
and
necessary consequences,as a positive reallsation of the Absolute's
I,-- -
however,
lapsing
than
as
a
self-limitation..,
into arbitrariness
rather
negative
without
freedom
iffationalityand
From 1809 to about 1815, Schelling's preoccupation is with how reason is a priori
freedom
into
insight
of
without simply reducingit to the
sucha positive notion
capableof an
by
logical
outlined
possibilities
purely
47
dius
diat
He
the
proposes
negative philosophy.
free
be
its
Absolute
principle or will, yet a will
conceived as a
eternal unity must
transcendent
in
foundation
This
the
negative
is now
of all
without subjectivity,, one which wills nothing.
knowledge, being potentially a conscious will and thus potentially rational and free, or
has
how
be
Absolute
However,
to
the
still
given
of
an
account
conditioned and unconditioned.
47VVM)eScheffing's works fi-om this period exhibit rea) and important differencesin their accounts of the
features
I
if
that
they
share,
upon
which
will concentrate
Absolute, there are equally, not more important
in this SeCtiOn.
67
immanently, i. e., through itself, divides it-self If this higher Absolute transcendsall dualities,
then how can it he thought as dividing itself without presupposing the implicit or pre-existing
possibility of these dualities as the ground which necessilalestbe division of the AI)solute"
Schelfing's attempts to solve this problem hit on a solution that recalls again Fichte's
account in WLnm of the 'onginal duplicity' within the Absolute Subject. However, they also
take on ever more esoteric, mythic forms. But this methodol091
ical shift is, paradoxicafly.
epistemologically necessary:the higher perspective cannot deduce self-division from the idea of
the Absolute -
rather, it must think a groundless act of differentiation that opens up the
narrative of the revelation of a transcendent God. Schelfing describes the state of the primal
Will outside time as that of a restful unity that 'rejoices in its nonbeing' (AW 49/134.). In
addition, though, he proposes that this eternal unity is implicitly differentiated. This implicit
differentiation bas two aspects: the Absolute is conceived as containing its possible
detenninations, as in the earlier pbilosopby, as its own ideal and specifically eternal dimension.
But the Absolute is also implicitly deten-nined in a pseudo-temporal fashion, containing the
itself
Schelfing
'after.
In
WS,
'before'
shadowy presentiment of
as split into a
and
was quick to
identify the implicit 'affm-ned' and 'affirmmg' aspectsof the Absolute with logical constituents
however,
he
knowledge-relation.
Here,
separatesthe rational and non-rational aspectsof the
of a
is
iiTu-nediately
botb
Absolute
Will
W)iI
On
distincfion.
the
the
as
as
non-rationalSide.,
implicit
the ground of its existence, and Will as its actual, detenninate existence (THF 357/31-2). Like
'feeling' in relation to the Ficbtean subject, the ýwill of the ground' here is witbin God, yei is
distinguishable
be
but
from
from
hH''n,
himself,
to
God
'inseparable
sure,
nevertheless
not truly
bim' (THF 358/32). For Robert F. Brown, the nature of this 'dark" will of the ground is to be
[it]
therefore
between
and
is a stnving that is
, inten-nediate
unconsciousnessand consciousness
frec'
fully
ncitheTrigidly neccssarynor
48
.
Brown, op. c1l., P.
68
'Mis 'dark will' is what will serve as the ground of detennination within the Absolute.
However, it is an odd sort of 'ground'. if we understand grounding in the senseof necessary
entailment. Like Fichte's 'feeling'. it is a problematic term that introtluces determfnabllftý into
the indeterminate Absolute unity. But here, it is an onto]Clip
ical factor, the 'incomprehensible
basis of reality in things' (THF 360/34.). And consequently, and again like Gý,6ihl, it is
somehow 'in' the Absolute, but not entiTely 'of, it, for although it vvill becorne the &q-otindof the
Absolute's determinate existence, it is not posited bv the Absolute through something like a
conscious act. Within the Absolute, it emerges as a Iongingý' (',;ehnsuchl) without an objecl
(714F 359/33-4.), and the belonging-together of this obscure difference with the pure unity of the
Absolute can only be articulated as a paradox: 'the more this composure is profoundly deep and
intrinsically full of bliss, the sooner must a quiet longing produce itself in eternity, without
helping
eternity either
or knowing' (AW 53/136.). This disturbance introduces the impetus
towards the act of creation. Hence, unlike Fichte, Schelling sees the problemafic, purely
deten-ninable element as the posifive ground of all determination: precisely becai4se it is
problematic, its essence(conscious or unconscious wiII9) radically undecidable, its presencein
eternity creates an existential tension within the Absolute Identity. This tension propels the act
division
in
of actual
which the world is created...and which replaces the unresolved tension
49
Imear
SPL
428/203
).
in
time
the
progressivity
of
stable,
UDIdirectional
within eternity with
,
in
first
into
Absolute
'dark
the
this act, the
or posits itself
potency.
will' as its
contracts itself
Schelfing proposes that becausethe dark will and the opposed element, the will to deterrmnate
Absolute,
inseparable
this contraction releasesthe will-to-existence,
the
within
existence, are
it
logical
draws
darkby
the
the
out of
actuality of
possibilities
'Will,
opposing the
which,
first
(the
in
Absolute
creation).
eternal ideal universe or
contained the
in this way, the positing of actual detennination appearsas ungrounded. and as positive
forced
blind
The
Absolute
Absolute
the
the
and
to
contraction
itself.
of
or affinnative in relation
49 on the po,. -t'
ý'ýek-, 1996, pp 31
of this act, see
69
is, as with the division of the arational Absolute In the earlier philosophy, its 'doubling'
(Doublirung) or 'intensification" (Zunehmung) (SPL 424-5/200; AW 55-7/137-8). It posits the
Absolute absolulety.,yet as actually differentiated. This difference is simply the affirmed will of
the ground, however, and is thus problematic or determinable: it is only through the actiN,
-e
opposition of the will -to-existence (the second potency or difference of the Absolute) that a
deterymnate synthetic product is produced, in which the overall unity of the Absolute is
from
(its
difference
third
reasserted
potency or
itself). For exwnple, In the classic fonnulation of
Nalurphilosophie,
(first
h&
A')
gravity
-die
potency,
and
')
(second potency, A' are the actual
conditions of the emergence of matter (third potency, A). In this way, Schelling en%,
-Isions a
dialecticaldeductionof natureand spirit proceeding,onceagain,from the Absolute.In this way,
the inherent rationality of the Absolute will exert itself through the second potency, and will
dark
The
is
dominate
Absolute
to
the
the
time
thus conceivedas
come
self-unfolding of
in
V"ll.
by
different
three
epochs, each ruled
one of the proto-temporal
comprising
qualitatively
dimensions that are dimensions of the Abscdutein eternity, and each of which includes different
human
(Will-toforms:
dark
(the
theoretical
consciousness
and
practical
nature
will),
synthetic
SPL
Will)
(TIF
405/85-6,
(tbe
Absolute
'spi-rit
-,
unity of
world'
existence), and the yet-to-come
482-4/242-3).
In this way, Schelling explicitly reintroduces the histonco-practical dimension of
Fichte's system, but in a theological form analogousto the Joacbimite 'third disMsation'.
The
his
inherent
(his
is
God's
Schellingian
of
own
experience
work
system
completion of the
labours
beyond
the
the
this
of
is
of
system
than
completion
so
and
ours,
more
even
rationality),
be
the
that
the
can
only
transformation
of
of
condition
world
our reason, requiring an actual
The
human
spoken
of
pro-vidential
in
effort.
unity
than
practical
through
rather
grace
effected
Sollen,
Fichte's
thus reappears as a
had
practical
Schelling
STI, which
emphasised against
THF
Wk
Absolute,
Schelling"s
by
the
the
towards
of
end
of
This
Sollen of faith.
is underlined
qua
divine
by
Reason,
but
the
Ungrun4,
of
not
notion
expressed
as a unity
higher Absolute or
404-8/84-90).
(THF
Love
divine
by that of
70
In this way, however, Schelling's attempts to resok,e the problem of circularity are
iII thought of as having arational (the dark will. ) and rationa (the
compromised- The Absolute is
will-to-existence) aspects, but these remain united in a higher Absolute that is still not truly
transcendent and unconditioned- Tbe Utignind in this period remains a teleological unity. in
which the emergenceof the dark will within eternity, 'without eternity helping or knowing, is
actually subordinated to the higher unity of the Absolute as Love. this expresses a higher
necessity, through which the Absolute has to divide itself from itself in order to become what it
only implicitly is (the first creation). The emergenceof difference within the Absolute, which
also has to be an Ungrund, is actually grounded in a pre-given purpose, the 'final purpose of
creation' (THF 404/85.). Once again, the Absolute is only illusorily
conceived of as
for
it
forms
familiar,
the
unconditioned,
reflects
of expenence with which we are
with this
in
Oos.
higher
'grounded'
The horizon of our theoretical and practical
resemblance
a
expenetice withm the second epoch of the Absolute is thus fixed by the proVidetitial,
is
that
always-to-corne.
unattainable unity
Yet again, we have to presuppose that the determinateness of our experience is
in
but
the objective proof of this sulýjectlve postulate
rational
grounded a predominantly
unity,
for
Schelling's
Once
deferred,
be
third
the
advent
epoch.
given with
of
is infinitely
it will only
foundationalist
Schelling's
in
Flebte"s
own earlier systems, a
philosopby and in
more, as
is
The
Absolute
leaves
that
the
rafional is only an
assumption
reason ungroundedmethod
It
has
However,
appears that without this
now
emerged.
another problem
assumption.
dissonance
Absolute
be
based
the
on an unaccountable
within
presupposition, the system will
dissonance)
V)igmnd,
(the
If
that is, not
this
is
ground
is an
that equiprimordialwith its identity.
based
hence
then
the
by
system is
on an arbitrary
determined
unknowable,
another term and
for
in
Absolute,
be
knovn
fon-ns
the
cannot
It
principle
idenfification of our
of experience v"th
Yet
(the
the
time,
this
them.
same
at
require
be
we
ground
in
to
necessanly immanent
being
I
'ngrund
to
the
be
there
explain
possibility of
in order
anv
dissonance) to
an
71
deten-ninationat all, without
getting caught in a circle of presupposing what we are meant to be
y'
explaining.
The irony of Schelling's middle period
is
that, despite their theosophical
works
fail,
they
not through their obscurity., but because they are, in their own way.
character,
rigorously foundationalist. In attempting to prove the entitlements of pure reason.,Kant, Fichte
and Schelling all try to show that reason is capable of immanently deducing the
foundations that are necessaryfor the
possibility of knowledge. Yet each
finds proof of its own sufficjencýy as a condition
knowledge
-
incorrigible
of these foundations
the criterion of genuinely objective
always displaced beyond the limits of the enquiry. Kant's unity of apperception
and categorical imperative are only abstracted from given forms of empirical experience that
form the subjective presuppositions of transcendentalmethod. Fichte's
self-identical absolute
subject as the negative condition of all consciousness,is displaced by feeling, an element of
actuality and difference that cannot finally be cancelled within the Fichtean organon, in order to
complete the system and ultimately demonstrate that the subjective presupposition from which
it began is in fact objective. And now, Schelling's Absolute Identity, the necessary,negative
is
displaced
by
determinate
being
knowing,
'will
the
all
of the ground, the
and
condition of all
determination,
difference
'ungrounds'
(subverts)
the
and
which
sufficient condition of real
is
Absolute
that
the
essentially rational.
subjective presupposition
Reason is forced to recognise its own lack of autonomy, its dependenceon something
that is not fully its own. Ile
however:
have
form
the
altered,
problem
of
conditions and
forms
historically
had
Kantý
the
to
given
of experience,
reality of
assume
reason
whereas, with
is
demonstrates
jniernalýv
foundationalist
that
reason
Scbelling's version of the
project
Absolute
that is incommensurable
transcendent
has
It
heteronomous.
to presupposea genuinely
immanent
thus
is
the
reason,
in
some
and
within
way
universe,
within
that
yet
and
with reason
determination,
thought
an
of
that
unconscious
Within
all
grounds
activity
as an unknowable
50Cf Bracken, 1972, P. 71
72
thought. Reason, it seems,is no longer even in principle immanent to itself Ilie final period of
Sebelling's career, his 'positive philosophy'
for
how
this
problem is
ruinous
shows
foundationallstthought.
The purely 'negative' philosophy of identity was a dialectical system of possible fon-ns
of the Absolute, leaving out the problem of actuality. To paraphrasea remark of Scbelfing's on
E"rescartes
(LMP 15/50), it showed that God, the actual unity of the world., exists necessarily in
certain forms, but only if be actually exists. Earlier. we restated this critique of the ontological
in
proof
an epistemological form: a priori knowledge of actuality must conform to certain
necessarydeterminations if it exists, but this itself is no proof that there is any such knowledge.
If philosophy exists, then the pre-eminently rational Absolute Identity is its condition of
possibility -but
does it indeed exist? Is the bypothetical system produced by reasonapplicable
to the actual world? This problem is, as we have seen, appears objectively iffesolvable, for an
affirmative answer can only be based on assumption rather than proof And Schelling addresses
this problem onceagain,asdid Fichte,in ten-nsof faith.
With respect to 'negative' philosophy, as Emit L. Fackenheimputs it,
The problem is that dialectic cannot understand the
for
Schelling
this
that
and
means
meaning of existence,
dialectic cannot absorb existence into a system. Dialectic is
fragmentary knowledge and must turn to experience for the
51
knowledge of act.
The okiective applicability of rationality to experience still presupposesthe original,
Existence,
difference.
for
differentiation
the
that
actual
can
ground
alone
of
non-rational act
Schelling of the positive philosophy, is thereforeprior to essence,or, the ground of conscious
'Fackenheim,op. ecit.,P.
73
experience and of our reason is itself incommensurablewith reason and conscious expenence. It
is the meaning of the fact (Talsache) of the genesis of the world (DPE 228) that the positive
philosophy takes for its object and this attunement to fact requires a methodological
realignment: Scbelling, like Fichte in the WLnm, chooses to acknowledge the extent of his
reliance on faith and the experimental nature of reasoning, referring to the basis of his new
system as a 'pbilosopbical empiriClsm5.
This new title signifies a real affinnation of the difference between thought and
existence,against those philosopherswho follow Descartesin collapsing being into thought
(ýDPE233-4), like Fichte and Hegel. Reason may be capable of constructing an a priori system
that begins from the presupposition of the unmoved Absolute, and sets out from the act of
creation to cover the totality of nature, theoretical and practical spirit, and the futural period of
God's true existence,but thesethreepenods of revelationremain only possiblewithout actual
experientialproof if God exists,he doesso necessarily,but he must be first shownto exist. The
transcendental Idea of the unconditional ground is non-contradictory, but the fact of its
existence is not demonstrable a priori. The reality of its ideal determinations has to be proven.
Hence Schelling can no longer just employ dialectical constructions, which derive from
a theoretical reason that merely conducts an a priori reflection upon the nature of the Idea of the
Absolute. Instead, it is necessaryto asseTtagain the primacy of the practical, wb)cb here stands
for a freely willed afffimation of God as the real, absoluteground, which ignores the inability of
God
in
Fackenheim
it
As
to
this
sense.
puts this 'leap' is, wbile
negative pbilosophy
encompass
being 'outside all reason', still not 'arbift-ary', as the 'predicament from which it arises is the
.1
5ý
human condition itseX in which rationality itself is rooted'. Schelling's positing of an ecstasy
is
foundation
the
the
the
system
now
recast
as
practical, subjective and private
of
as
of reason
just
historically
human
rooted
the
not
character
of
exisienfialty and
reason. which
affirmation of
52ibid., p. H 5. On the fact that the higher Absolute cannot be reached through reason alone, see also
Bracken, op. cit., p. 105.
74
is nevertheless simultaneously the affirmation of this existence as somehow rationally
determinate, despite the lack of a priori foundations for this faith. The only gound for this
affirmation is that it is in the interestsof the philosophical searchfor foundations and thus of the
autonomy of reason.
The experience of the affirmation is meant to add what reason alone could not produce:
certainty In the validity of the purely hypothetical system. The second stage of the process now
consists in carrying out an empirical confirmation of the system in detail, which entails the kind
of researebthat constitutesthe empirical part of the later Scbelling's histOncalphilosopby of
mythology. The private, practical affirmation of the sufficiency of the Absolute would be
by
the elaboration of a positive, factual system, based on historical and
publicly vindicated
anthropologicalresearch.
The failure of this final effort of Schelling to construct a system upon a basis that denies
neither necessity and theoretical knowledge, nor freedom and practical will, is not causedby the
fact
fails
labour
by
In
because
the
task
empirical
sets.
infinite
required
it
it
it sets up a new
antinomy of 'dogmatism'
and 'criticism',
ffireatens
the posSibility of
wbicb actually
foundationalist thought itself it is here that we finally encounter the 'trawna of reason' that we
from
One.
The
in
Chapter
negativeto positive phflosophy,the momentof
shift
madeour object
failure
by
from
derives
the
that
of negative philosophy
is caused
a crisis of reason
affinnation,
to encompassthe fi-eedorn of the Absolute. As such, the moment of affirmation presents,not a
it
but
of
this
merely an acknowledgement
crisis,
solution to
fundamental
hides
a
and
from
Philosophy
Identity
Schelhng'ýs
has
the
thought
of
on.
threatened
contradiction that
What is this conmadiction?Reason,in reflecting on knowledgein generaLis able to
is
Identity.
Absolute
the
its
immediate
mdetenrdnate,
unconditional negative condition
state that
Nalurphilosophie,
Jacobi
insisted
taking
the
has
the
Schelling
on
of
insights
This much
on since
bowever,
that
is
that
It
the
the
reason
is
capable
of
sbowmg
liblderlin.
case,
also
and
being
difference,
determination
there
that
of
any
stable
as
such,
is,
of
condition
unconditional
is
The
being
that
ground
a
positive
not
itself
rational.
all,
is
connection
at
rational
any
order,
any
75
between this ground and that which it grounds is not itself rationally statable. given that the
grounded ten-n here Is rationality itself. Schelling refers to this tqound as a problematic we On.
or a non-heing, not in the senseof that which I-s wholly without an\! being at all (ganz und gar
nichiSeyende), but that which is not ci being, as it lacks essence.(DPE 235-6).
The problem is that the system of determinations reconstructed in thought out of the
Absolute can only be objectively valid if the Absolute is inherently rational. But just as an
arational and free act is presupposedas the oyound of difference that impels the Creation, the
system itself a rational construction, paradoxically presupposes such an act as the condition of
its applicability to the real or actual world. So the validity of the system dependssimultaneously
upon the essentialrationality of the Absolute, the necessityof a dialectical process of revelation
(the position of the IdenfildissYstem)and upon the Absolute being essentially incommensurable
with reason.
As the positive philosophy shows, philosophical reason is faced with a choice: either
the hypothetical system produced by a negative, theoretical reflection on the concept of the
Absolute, or the practical affinnation of the real ground as commensurable with reason,
itself
longer
longer
becoming
to
accountable
no
iminanent
entailing reason
utterly ecstatic,no
to itself The inadequacy of the former is matched by the final impossibility of the latter as a
leap
Importantly,
Mai
for
justt&
the
the
to
q1'reason.
if
is
auiononýv
seeks,
a philosopkv
route
between
flie
the ground and reason is just as unstatable as
then
connection
made,
if one
heteronomousiy
Reason
conditioned
is
rernams within the perspective of negative philosophy.
by something that it cannot assimilate, but rather than impinging from without- as with Kant and
Fichte, the otherness here is the existential ground of reason itself, internal to its own activity.
Its
the
therefore
of
or
opposite
reasonrelation to
negative
The incommensurable ground is
not
far
for
the
so
as
of
reason
in
it
is
incommensurable
ground
only
it
is
problematic,
more
is
reason
It
detenninate
thus
stands
outside
relation.
any
system
of
in-educible
conditioning
to
any
with it.
7
rational relations, but as the ground of any such system, a ground whose relation to the system is
unstatable in terms of any such system.
5-1
The choice of negative or positive philosophy thus becomes a dilemma: either there is
no proof that the Absolute takes on determination according to the dialectical process
considered as its own inherent law, or the sole grotmd of achiality is affirtned as that which need
not give itself any specific law. the ground 'might express its Will in an indefinite nurnber of
54
being
but
ways, rationality
one of them. This dilemm-acan be said to mark at once the highest
failure
the
point and
of the modem philosophicalproject conceivedof as a searchfor a secure
foundation of knowledge. The only possible Viewpoints seem to be either an utijustified
dogmatism
the
the
rationalist
affirmation
of
apodicticvalidity of reason- or an ungrounded
epistemological scepticism. This latter option leads to relati"sm and ultimately to selfbe
knowledge,
because
there
theoretical
the
refutationcan
no oklective
either
or practical,
objective ground of reason is itself incommensurable with reason. But if theoretical reason
reachesits limit in this fashion,it forcesus into a crisis.If we go beyondthis crisis by affin-ning
that this gyound.is non-rational, then we affinn that at least one proposition is objectively valid,
i. e., that notliing is oklectively valld because of the nature of reason. We thus ignore the status
have
de
jure
therefore
this
no
right to either Viewpoint, and
and
can
as
a
postulate,
of
ground
thus no distinction between criticism and dogmatism can be made, for there is no way to tell if
illusory
as opposed to the other.
is
one viewpomt
Wben the Enligbtenment staked its successon the discovery of secure foundations for
for
dilemma
With
this
the
were created.
conditions
the authority of reason over experience,
Schellln& the Idealist project seemsto have committed suicide, and its death has not simply
Enlightenment
in
As
the
the
the
early
reactions
against
caseof
placed epistemology in question.
in
Revolution,
French
the
the
of
pure
primacy
reason
matter
assumed
of
its
the
offsprin&
and
53Bowie (,ry.). cjL) emphasises this point in arguig for Schelling's historical and philosophical importance
2&
thought.
19'h
century
to
and
in relation
54Fackenlielin. op. cit.. P. ]-'I
77
judging
the legitimacy of traditional institutions is again placed under suspicion. If
philosophical reason is itself heteronomous, how can it assume the night to criticise existing
political arrangements? We have reached a stage where, according to N4iietzsche,modern
nihilism is born, where the highest values, such as objective knowledge. suffer a devaluation of
themselves. The interest of reason in its own autonomy has, in taking up senOuslYthe ssue of
the justification of this autonomy, shown itself to be ungrounded, requiring instead a faith in
itself that takes the field against other forms of belief without being able to decide the issue of
its Tight to do so. The result of the immanentexaimnationof reasonby itself undertakenby
Kant., Fichte and Schelling is that it becomes impossible to distinguish dogmatism from
Schellin
the
trauma
the
and
of
reason
pmlosophy,
is embodied in
91ian epistemological dilemma.
_I_:
78
Chapter Three
Deleuze: Philosophy as Practice
Introduction
The trauma of reason signifies, above all, a limit point in modern philosophy. In
examiningthe versionsof antifoundationalismformulatedby Deleuzeand Hegel,we Will
discover how these thinkers attempt to account for this limit-condition, and thus surpass
it, with reference to the Kantian notion of transcendentalIllusion, thus establishing that it
is more than just a purely accidental historical phenomenon. Their own doctrines of
transcendentalillusion, neither of which require the distinction between dogmatism and
be
fixed
to
philosophy
with reference to an unchanging wmscendental or ontological
foundation, also go beyond Kant by subjecting his influential model of critical thought to
critique. In this way, the Enfightenment"s conception of reason, which affinns and
it
Descartes,
be
foundationalism
the
to
of
attempts extend
Will
undermined, and with the
foundationalist
from
the
that
pro*ect.
I
cnsis
results
In my opinion, the importance of Deleuze in this -regard, which makes hirn
his
in
his
lies
French
throughout
commitment,
philosophers,
unique among post-war
career, to two seemingly incompatible
fon-nulate
how
to
a consistent
problems: a)
kind
dogmatic
the
that
that
of
posits an
relativism
a
into
collapsing
avoids
perspectivism
for
fact
lack
foundation
(Ithe
the
that
thought,
genuine (i priori
say)
we
nature of
olýjective
iven
how
Absolute,
b)
knowledge,
that
think
the
to
91
an ontological
and
synthetic
for
Deleuze,
is,
to
order
maintain philosophy's
in
necessary
this
order
of
commitment
Deleuze's
discipline.
these
two
main
inspirations
in
cntical
a
genuinely
as
identity
unique
I
he
but
Bmson,
the
Nietzsche
argue.
next
chapter,
as
in
is also
will
and
areas are.
her'
Schelfing's
'hig
to
Beqgson)
to
perspective on the
adopt a
(through
attempts
close
,
Deleaze
I
how
Schellingto
By
explain
conceives the
this
N"ll
Absolute.
tracing
relation
Deleuze's
Absolute
to
conditlons.
coinminnent
that
cntique
it
the
which
In
of
immanence
79
means that, as I will show, he remains a thinker of Enlightenment who wants philosophy
to free itself from its intemal illusions conceming the
This can on]v be done.
-Absolute.
however, by re-evaluating the t1jealling of philosophy as an ethos or way of living and
being.
In a 1971 discussion with Foucauk Deleuze agreesthat the essenceof philosophN
can no longer be considered to be disinterested knowledge of the universal. Philosophý
as primarily theoretical and disinterested knowing bas undergone some kind of crisis in
from
derives
Greek
'Theory'
the
iheoro.ý, a spectator at a festival, implying a
modernity.
'
disinterested
being
'pure4- present to what is mily real'. For
pure attitude of
attention,
Foucault and Delenze, the question of bow to think the situatednessof philosophy, its
The
faith
Enlightenment
has
become
to
of modernity in
relation
real interests,
urgent.
for
being
these thinkers.
reason,
ungrounded, is implicitly contradictory and nihilistic,
When pw-c reason wicovers the extent to which it is wigromided, alongside the
it
that
possibility
is merely the expression of certain existential conditions, the
Enlightenment commitment to the uitical
dissection of dogmatism is in danger.
Philosophy can no longer be theory if by theory is meant 'an fliumination from a safe
distance' (Foucault), a representation of the essenceof being. Instead, philosophy must
The
to
new ethos
takeits situatedness,
its relation as a practice other practices,seriously.
like
box
'is
be
tools
theory
that
of
a
exactly
a
of philosophy V"II
...
It must be useful. It
2
like
Foucw-jlt,
DeleuzeIn
(Deleuze).
function'
this
envisions the modermqWW
must
-y,
be
limits
(lethos)
that
towards
can
reallsed at any
its own
of philosophy as an attitude
development
historical
as a theoretical
epoch in its objective
time, rather than as a
'
discipline. Only by changmg philosophy's image of what it means to philosophise, can
I
Deleuze's
In
be
this
chapter, Will examine
analvsIs of
truly established.
this modernity
1GadanicT.1903.p. 124.
2 See 'Intcllcctuals
208.
1977.
FoucaWL
Pcn,.
p,
in
-er'
and
3 Cf. Foucault. Ak-hat I-,;Enlightenment',". In Foucault. 1984. pp. 32-50. at p- 39.
80
what lie considersto he the historical barriers to the realisation of this elhos, -,NIth
reference to his notion of the -image of thought.
Circularitv, and Modern Critical Thought
One important aspect of Deleuze's relation to Schelling lies in the way he
appreciatesthe omnipresenceof circularity in philosophies that stand forth and proclaim
their unique grasp of a foundation that entities them to mark boundaries between
legitimate and illegitimate truth-claims. This is what I want to explore now, by presenting
brief
historical
a necessarily
oveMew of certain aspects of the post-German Idealist
,
-Iphilosophy
of
finitude
in relation to Schelfing"s inadvertent undennInIng of
foundationalism. As we shall see, post-Sebellingian developments reinforce the
epistemologicalnihilism of the traumaof reason,bringing out more ethical and political
dimenSionsof this nibilism.
We will focus initially upon Marx's thought, as the most influential post-German
Idealist philosophy to have acceptedSebelling's entique of transcendentalthought, while
between
The
for
desire
holding
the
to
the
similarities
present.
a nvorous critique of
still
Schelling's late critique of negative philosophy and Marx's critique of Hegel have been
4
Schelling's
by
The
fashion
Frank
Manfred
in
of
cnitique
result
of
treated exemplary
.
in
that
the
the
existential, contingent
ebapter,
previous
saw
as
is,,
we
pbilosopby
negative
being
hwnan
the
factical
than
rational or essential.
primary
as
more
seen
is
of
aspect
or
With Kant., thougbt loses its gfip on the infinite, becoming instead immanent only to
human
by
definition
T'his
making
of philosophy,
pro,%ridesan anthropological
itself
by
Schellingknowledge.
to
this
overcome
attempting
the
of
measure
reason
further
by
definition,
thought
that
things
takes
showing
is
a
stage
actually
anthropological
CTom
limitations
but
that
to
cannot
conditions
it
receives
its
itself
Immanent
even
not
To
this
confingency
requires
an
irreducible
ungrounded
overcome
priori.
a
comprehend
4 Frank. )975.
81
and hencedogmaticfaith in reason-In this way. the foundationalistproiect, which sought
to establish a grenuinelyuniversal meaning for human knowledge is rendered problematic
by the notion that reason is itself rooted in obscure real processes that cannot be
transparent to pure reflection. This relative -primacy of existence- over the 'essence' of
the Absolute as delineated by the categories of pure thoughL was taken up as a major
5
by
Left
liegellans,
Marx
F is development means
--Ini
tbeme among the
and parhcularly
-.
.,
that the P-oalof knowledae of the Absolute is renouncedFor Marx, the real processes within which philosophical reason is rooted are
between
material relations
social classes.These classesare themselveshistorically
differentiated by changesin the organisation of the material baseof a society5sexistence.
the means of fulfilling its economic needs. 'Morality, religion, metaphysics [ I thus no
...
longer -retain the semblance of independence. I ] Life is not determined by
...
but
by
consciousness
consciousness,
lif
-)6.
e
Philosophy,which presupposesitself to be
fact
has
because
the
objective
conditions
in
real
of
on
pure
reason,
in
absolute
its
reliance
a
interests of social classes.The subjective presuppositions of philosophy are thus rooted
base
in
the
of a society.
material
in objectivereality,
The meaning of history is vital for understanding this objective base of
for
consciousness,
itself
consciousness
is
representational
the dividedness of
for
Feuerbach
Marx
Hence
CrIticises
representative of the real structure of soclety.
determinate
Human
bw-nan
existence is
essence.
positing an abstract, ahistorical sensuous
in
but
in
that
it
terms,
economic
is
also
of
sensuous
conceived
is
or concrete only when
between
hu-mans
by
hurnans
between
by
defined
relations
and nature, and
relations
as
dependent
historical
to
variation
a process of constant
themselves, that are all subject
The
the
tied
to
meaning
also
critique
is
of
meaning
production.
the
of
organisation
upon
has
he
but
Critique
to
to
this
shown
interest
is
interestecL
itself
this
process.
objective
of
199 1. pp. 1' 4-5.
Marx- 'The German Ideology'- in Mar.\- 1977- p- 164-
82
be more than merely subjective: the social relation its consciousnessrepresentshas to be
the yet-to-be-realised objective resolution of contending subjective interests, and this is
only possible if crifique is scientific, based on knowledge of the material basis of social
existence. Pbilosopby, qua disinterestedknowledge. is illusory., as it does not take for its
object the real matenal and social conditions of its own form of consciousness.The
philosopber's role as a representative of the supposedly universal interest in objective,
di.vinterested knowledge hides an ideological clam" given that 'disinterested' a priori
statementsabout 'the way things are' seek to displace all interested claims about the way
things oughl to be. In this way, a division between 'domatism" and scientific cnticism is
set up, with Marxist 'theoretical reason' forming the basis for the prescriptions of
Marxist 'practical reason.
The meaning of history has, then, to be based on empirical investigation into the
real conditions of consciousness.In this way, the divisions of the present and the details
However,
Marx's
history
be
determined.
the
critique of
can
of
objective goal of
bourgeois philosophy and its epistemological dilemmas can-notitself avoid the issue of
7
circularity.
Marx had to develop a positivistic
notion of science, as opposed to the
'absolute knowledge' of German Idealism, in order to get at the history of the real
for
facts
die
But
believe
themselvesremains an
that
to
speak
conditions of consciousness.
facts
faith
Marx's
for
foundation
The
this
in
is
assumption that requires justification.
definition of the 'species-being'of humanity.,the sensuoushumanbeing as homo-l,ýber.
But then the question arises, which of these terms is the foundation of the other9 Do the
former establish the latter, or does the definition of human being actually make possible
the selection of the facts.)
This question is not merely scholarly, but has had a real political and historical
IN!
Marxism
The
a
the
as
international
of
influence
enormous
why
reasons
presence.
One
Way
Second
World
began
the
to
of
ariousare
way
after
%,
wane
movernent
political
7 Cutrcfc)io. op. cn.. p. 9. quolinp Habemas. Knowle4ý,,,c andh:.,? ran
83
accounting for this change, though, would be to show how, in connection with real
political events sucb as the Frencb colonial wars in Algena, much effort was expended
on the Continent in drawing out Marx's own a priori ideological presuppositions. For
example, in relation to the historicist orientation of Marxism, the definition of hw-nan
beim, that serves as a foundation of history must rest on a non-ideologia
science of
natural distinctions between humans and non-bui-nans.But these distinctions themselves
are either simply accepted, or derived from empirical, historical docwnents of the
activity of human beings. Marx's deten-ninationof the real conditions of consciousness
thus rests upon an abstract, unhistorical definition of hurnan essence, which simply
reflects an interpretation of bistOncal experience that purpo-rts to ahvqvS alrea4y be
The
horizon
science.
of Marx"s conception of history is the human as homo-Mber, and
this glVes impetus to his analysis of
I 91h
idea
the
century capitalism and
of an objective
interest in critique. But this interest, from which Marx derives his Sollen, communist
is
if
its
foundation
be
defined
The
Fichtean
society, ungrounded
can only
circularly.
and
Schellinglan problem of the inconsistency of foundationalism, of presupposing
be
demonstrated
(in
this case, that there is an objective
to
meant
subjectively what was
has
been
between
distinction
than
and
science)
not
ideology
rather
merely subjective
solved.
Mai-x's supposed foundation could be (and has been) situated as an ideological
form of consciousnesswithin other histories.The basis of thesehistories would be the
difference between other interests, such as those of colonists and colomsed (a history of
These
histories
histoiy
(a
those
of patriarchy).
of men and women
racist imperialism), or
face
in
having
however,
the
to
problem of self-consistency
thernselves would also,
Nevertheless,
Marxist
for
the
their
presuppositions.
influential
own subjective
account
distinction
has
between
for
the
ideology and science
conceiving of critique as
paradigm
Its
but
been
circularitN,
not
only
epistemologically
also
is
thus
placed in question.
Marxists
has
theinselves,
to
the
occupied
regard
relation of
with
wid
suspect,
politically
84
theory to practice: must the theory of capital wid its anthropologir-al underpinnings
objectively Justifv practice, or will practice prove theory by bringing about socialism)
How can we act without objective justificafion of our programme, given that we shall be
opposed by other interests who claim absolute right for themselves9But how can we wait
for the theorists to do their work, when we are oppressed?
Other movements on the philosophical and political lek particularly in post-war
France, have taken this problem of circularity to be defiiiitive
of the whole
Enlip-btenment paradigm of philosophical thinking that is established most firmly by
Kant. This predominant modem paradigrn attempts to establish a distinction between
knowledge and non-knowledge in relation to the freedoin of an agent. The interest of the
Enlightenment in autonomv of thoup-htand action Is thus the justification for this attempt.
Hence the issue for sorne currents in post-war French thought, under the influence of
Nietzsche and Heidegger, became the possibility of a new paradigm of critique, which
fi-eedom
Enlightenment's
the
true
to
mterest in
would remain
Without getting trapped in
the dominant paradigm's recun-ent epistemological circulanty. Central to this turn, I
idea
in
is
founded
the
to
the
that
critique
argue,
are
objections
interest
upon an
would
integrated subject of knowledge and action, whose unity is epitomised by the faculty of
for
Fichte,
Schelling
Marx,
Descartes,
Kant,
This
true
and
example.
of
reason.
was
This idea of a subject that ft-anscendsthe distinctions within the realloy that it is
Nietzscbe
Heideg
In
by
both
is
this way, the
ger.
and
conscious of In experience criticised
.
in
by
Marx
begun
'the
the
the
name
of
reaF is continued.
of
reason
autonomy
attack on
For Heidegger, any clairn to possessa privileged, transcendentviewpoint on the world
'
being
Schelfing
the
of
as
sbowed.,
and
reason.
whicb,
identity
simply presupposes
-I-,
has to acknowledge as its own fundamental assumption. Such claims always
.philosophy
foundation
hipokeimenon,
(the
'what
)
iheoros.
subjectivity
as
or
presupposea pri'vileged
faculty'
Heidegger.
)
98
9.
7.
-1
'presupposmg
the
See
in
as
reason
p.
t)le
on
s,
-ý
remark
85
9
lies present in advance of everything, what already presencesand presencesin advance-ý
Even Marx presupposes such a subjectiNity. governed by a positivistic 1090.s that
performs a pre-gatbenng of what is to count as kiiowledge. This Heideggereanattack on
the foundational subject is well representedby Foucault's denial of the Marxist idea that
practice must seek to reallse the true essenceof the human being. no longer estranged
frorn itself by the defon-nations of his.tory. 10 'ýijbjjecfivjty 1,; itselfTooted m existentia)
conditions, modes of the disclosure of Being, that are pre-rational. This is the
Heideggereanreal 'beneath'consciousness.
The influence of Nietzsche on the disparate thinkers known as 'post-structurallsts'
"
was perhaps even more decisive. -Tberesult was the adoption of "genealogy' as a rubric
for a number of different ways of practising critique, whose difference from the
dominant paradigm was marked by the inversion of the relation between theorýyand
beginning
I
This
the
this
practice, which mentioned at
of
chapter.
represents,again, wi
basis.
for
Genealogical
to
to
critique,
attempt relate consciousness its real
vanous poststructuralist thinkers, posits the dependence of representational consciousness upon
individual
domain
but
the
to
to
of
subjects or to social
refuses restrict
interest
interest,
base
These
'interests"
the
of consciousnessin that they are practices
are
matenal
classes.
being
(elhoj),
of
in relation to whieb consciousness is an epipbenomenon.
or ways
Consciousness is, for Nietzsche, the product of forgetting the impact of practices of
training and discipline upon the body. In this way, the idea of a transcendentsubject or
fiction
bom
identity
being
thought
the
and
is preserved is a
of
iheoros in which
essential
foundationalist
Hence
the
philosophy is a practice that
of
insecuritv of consciousness.
form
fostering
being
by
fi-agile
of
illusions, yet it gets caught up in
aims to preserve a
dilemmas such as the trauma of reason and those which beset the Marxist paradigm.
'ý Hcldcgger. 1989. p. 182.
"Miller.
1993- p. 174ýp 336.
II Sce Smith. 1995. Ch- -;, esp. pp, 140 ff.
86
For
the
which render it impotent to resolve issues concerning
status of subjectiviN!.
genealogicalcntique, issuesconcerningdomination and fTeedom.or doginatism and
criticism, can only be settled by evaluating individual practices according to their own
immanent tendencies.
The inevitable epistemological rejoinder to both of these positions concerns the
issue of self-consistency, pointing back to Schelling and the trauma of reason. If the
con ition o consciousnessis the immanence of an opaque, pre-rational real In it, then
the question is bow this relation between the real and consciousnesscan be known. If it
cannot be known and is thus without foundation, then how can such cntiques of
bave
subjectivity
any status beyond that of an mteresting fictionr) But if it is supposed
that it can be known, does this not once again imply a transcendent conception of
immanence, a conception of an identity of thought and being that is 'higher still'9 Does
the persistenceof a critical orientation towards the presuppositionsof truth-claimsnot
testify to an implicit 'higher subject' whose interests drive the denial of transcendenceto
identity
becomes
In
The
this
the
reason?
question of
of
subject
urgent. whose name are
ISuspicions
Cartesian,
Kantian,
that sucli cnfiques
the
etc. subject conducted?
entiques of
fascist
totalitarian
thus
to
the
or
potentially
are not resistant
emeigence of irrationalist and
have
been
voiced.
subjectivities
It is from this point of view that we can approach Deleuze. I will contencl,in this
and in the next chapter, that this problem of consistently grounding critique is a central
Schelling.
his
is
his.
Central
to
the
to
this
relation
question of
concern
concern of
Deleuze's Nietzschean emphasis on the question of how the primacy of practice over
theory should be conceived is, I shall argue, due to his appreciation of the problems
involved in constructing a discourse of the real once the issue of how this discourse can
become
has
itself
justify
explicit ultimately
in
Schelling's
problems which.
work.
between
dogmatic
traurna
the
reason
and
an
ImPossible
of
choice
rationalism
produced
,ýE-,. Frank I (),S9. pp, 341-2.
87
and dogmatic relativism. Further, he attempts to overcome these problems by pursuing a
recognisably Schellinglan strategv. conceming how the -hlgher' Absolute is to be
thought, beyond the illusions of foundationalist philosophy. For Deleuze. only by
reintroducing the theme of the Absolute can the suspicions regarding the cli-cularitY Of
both the Marxist and post-Marxist paradigms of critique can be addressed.As we saw,
These positions, from an epistemological point of Niew, seem to renounce the
transcendenceof reason in favour of its finitude, only to smuggle in a transcendent
subject without realising it. Deleuze wants to establish a post-Marxist paradigm by, in a
sense, returning thought to the infinite. This, as we shall see, relies on BergsonIs
transformation of Scbelling's conception of absolute intuition. Deleuzean cnfique, then,
is neither Kantian foundationalism nor a Niet! schean doctrine of pure 'fictions, but a
knowledge.
paradoxicalversionof absolute
iii)
The Trauma of Reason aN 'Double-Bind'
Given that Deleuze remains committed to a notion of philosophy as ciitique, and
thus in a certain sense,
13
to the goals of the Enlightenment as expressedby Kant,
we
by
it
be
basis
his
first
that
the
to understand
a
cannot grounded
of
orientation, given
need
transcendent foundation. Deleuze's stance can be refeiTed to as antifoundationallst, in
influence
image
it
'philosophy"
thus
the
that refuses a certain
means,
reflecting
of what
"'
being
first
We
Nietzsche.
Heldegger
exactly
erstand
reftised
is
rmist
what
up-dand
of
here, and why it should be refused, which I will examine in the rest of this chapter.
Cf the remarkson Delewc and the EnlightenincritIn Hallmard, 1997.p. 17. On the connectionbetwecrithe
Enllphtcmncni and the 'ne-,N,paradigm. of critique see e.g. Miller. ap. cit., pp. 301-4. on Foucault's
'Qu'est-cequela cnliquO'.
"' The ideaof sucha refusal. aswe shall seein ChaptersFive to Seven-is also ýýhat connectsDeleuzeto
Hegel.
98
'Die meaning of philosophy ffiat Deleuze questions is that which has been central
to the foregoing chapters, namely that philosophy is a discipline of pure knowledge. for
which immanence is the identity of reason and being in some form. To jusfiN, this
assumption is what foundationabst thought attempts to do. N-ow, the.OnIN!Proof Of thj'-ý
immanence can be a secure foundation that transcends all conditioned cases of
knowledge. Without this foundation, there could be no sure means of distinguishing
between knowledge and mere belief In this way, foundationalist thought presupposes
that there is an oNeclive difference between genuine knowledge and dogmatism, i. e.,
between securely grounded knowledge and conditioned or subjective knowledge that
simply believes itself to he objective. This has been the case, as we have seen, V"th
Descartes,Kant, Fichte, Schelling and Marx: the distinction has had to be presupposedin
order to be proven, but it eventually becomes apparent that if we have to presupposean
objective distinction of this kind., we cannot prove it. For Deleuze, these thinkers posed
the distinction as if it could be made by a iheoros, the perfect disinterested observer of
being. Following Heidegger and Nietzsche, he refers this hypothetical perfect observer
back to The 'real' of its preconscious orientations, the realm of practice or actIVIty. in
illusory
We
have
it
becomes,
Deleuze's
thus
to
to
posit.
in
relation
view, an
which
distinction
level.
becomes
dogmatism/CrItique
the
this
of
if it is made at
consider wbat
Can this be done without presupposing a foundation of our 'knowledge' of the practical
realin?
This is a complex quesfion and one which will have to be approached
by
Deleuze
A
Firstly,
turn
to
means
practice.
parfial answer to
what
we
circumspectly.
be,
the
to
that is, what
activity
meanjtýg
of
an
this question concerns what we assume
Foundationalism
is
it
thus
a certain practice or
acfivities.
other
against
off
rules mark
follows
defines
thus
certain
philosophy as outlined above, and which
acfiVit),, one which
This
to
the
tratima
than
enables
re-examine
others.
us
of reasm
rather
conduct
of
rules
below', as it were, and discover it's mechanics. 'flus dilenrima, as we saw in
89
Chapter Two, is Inherent in Schelling's philosophy, and anses from a meditation on what
foundationalist method requires in order to be able to explain the possibility of
knowledge or expenience. It presents us with two incompatible options' either affirrn the
identity
of
reason and the Absolute
(dogmatic
rationalism.), or
affirm
the
incommensurability of reason and the Absolute (dogmatic relativism). Tlils choice is a
dilemma due to two feattires: a) both options advance truth-claims that are meant to be
objectively valid., yet b) we are only forced to choose because the possibility of a
foundation for any trutb--claimbas been denied.
As with Fichte's 'idealism' versus 'realism', neitlier option cwi be Justified
against the other. Although the relativist option has the appearance of a limited,
fior
know,
that,
there are no secure
epistemological scepticism, one suggesting
a// ive
foundations, it actually contains an ontological claim, namely that it is because.of the
it
Reason,
be
that
to
consistent,
of
objectivejustification
is
if
nalure
reason
impossible.
is
has to affin-n that to choose either option would be actually irrational. Worse still, if we
opt to deny both options as unjustified, and thus remain nominally rational and critical,
fate,
faced
Philosophy
have
thus
to
caught ]n anxiety over its
is
with its
nowhere go.
we
is
Nietzsche
As
the
the
crucial aspect of nihilism
suggested,
own nothingness.
"
it
finds
that
in real -suffering.
meaninglessness
The idea of a trap that confines thought is often evoked by Deleuze, with the
because
thinking.
the
that
traps
an
activity
of
that
govern
of
rules
arise
such
implication
A clue to how we can understand the trauma of reason as such a trap is offered by
Andrew Cutrefello's use of a relevant Foucauldian notion, 'discipline', in examining the
16
legitimacy of Kantian en ti qUes The cenval tenet of the modem epistemological
One,
Chapter
discussed
is the idea of the self-iustification of
in
tradition, as previously
E.g. Nietzschc. '1994. Ill. '08. For a different analysis of the a,"fccuvc aspects of nihilism in tcmis of an
127.
1999,
Ansell-Pearson"ovdcd-e.
p.
see
excessof
1
16 CUtrefel
10. )P
&Chs.
I
5
cit.. esp.
90
reason, which assumesthat there is a distinction between knowledge and dogmatic belief.
Kant's concept of a Dedukhon gives this notion its purest form. that of a legal or
Juridical proof of objective entitlement derived as Cutrefello notes (cifini-I Dieter
Henrick), from the real pracfices of German ju-ii,-.t--,,17 Cutrefello themafises this
-!
institutional connection in order to make plain that there is at the heart of Kant's project
an unexaminedprciefice of thought, that of legal justification.
If Kantian philosophy presupposesthe universality of certain forrns of experience
is
and thus circular, this is only a secondary phenomenon. It is heteronomous primarily
because it models itself upon another practice that thus determines its own meaning.
Philosophy has thus already accepteda method or set of procedural rules as given, rather
"'
being
than
truly self-legislating and autopomoti-s. Consequently it busic--s.
itself with a
tortuous and circular task without ever actually questioning the le itimacy of this task-as
a proctice. In Foucauldiwi language, thought has been disciplina
has
become
and
dominated from Without. Discipline is a process whereby a body, the material and
existential precondition of thoupJit,is 'trained' by historically specific practiceswhich
force its capacitiesto function according to certain babits and rules. There is, then, a
here
between
a material ground that operates on
producfive and reproducfive relafion
bodies ('power) and thought, conducted through empirical practices. Once the capacities
harmless
have
bodies
been
to
them
to and complicit with real
trained
as
render
so
of
becomes
dominationdiscipline
them
The
exercised
upon
structures of power,,
Tlus kind of conception of domination also plays a role in Deleuze's work. A
domination
desenbed
Deleuze
AO,
delimited
technique
of
is
and
in
example of a
clearly
Guattari's fierce enfique of the disciplinary force of psychoanalysis. [Jsing Gregorv
Bateson's concept of 'double bind', they describe the wider socio-historical condifions
by
the
the
that
social
structure
subjecting
underlying
reproduce
society
capitalist
within
17Culrcfcllc). (1p.cn.. pp. 5-6. CPuR A 84-5jB I 10-
is CLtrefclio- ()p. c-il_ p. 8 &- Ch- 5. passim-
91
individual psyche to the Oedipus complex. The nature of these conditions need not
concern us now. The structure they produce is more important for our parposes. this
being the 'double bind' itself, a psychic. existential dilemma which forces the individual
to accept that his/her very individuality depends upon the choice between the constraints
on sexual desire that exist within the capitalist family (prohibitions on incest), and
neurotic fantasies about breaking these taboos (AO 93-4/78-9). The dilemma is that even
if one 'resolves' the Oedipus complex and avoids neurosis. one internalises the
desire
constimints on
and thus reproduces the complex itself in a new mode, witli an
extenial authotity-figure as object.
Hence the problem of individual psychic development as constituted by capitalist
Oedipus
the
society,
complex itself and its resolution, sets up a situation similar to the
classic prIsoner's dilemma. Either the individual acceptsthat the restrictions on desire are
relevant to bim/ber and that sfhe is thereby guilty, tbus effectively affirming the
irresolvability of the complex even as it is 'resolved', or one becomes neurotic. Neither
be
though
the
chosen, given that the
problem, even
one i-nust
option really resolves
by
desire
family
the
the
subjecting
creates
complex
capitalist
actively
itself.
structure of
19
foi-ms
does
it
incestuous
The
to certain constraints. eitber takes on
not.
or it
siftiation is
one where
disjuncfion
is
an alternafive, an exclusive
defined in ten-ns of a principle which, however,
constitutes its two tenns or underlying wholes, and
1
1.
the
alternative
where the principle itself enters into
(AO 95/80)
19Sce also Bell, 1995ý p. I
pp. 3,5-6.
92
The structure of this ongoing emotional crisis also recalls that of the trawna of
reason: an irrational eboice between -two te,11s' or illusory solutions is rendered
necessary by an underlying 'principle' -
not a principle in the sense of an objecfive
foundation, but rather aprm-lical imperafive of desire or a subjective presupposition. i. e..
a presupposition on the side of desire, that is merely given to desire. Here we can make a
liný witb the trauma of reason. Psycbic identity is constituted via the imperative
oedipal crisis of incestuous desire must be resolved', modern epistemology. epitomised
by Kant, assumesthat 'Reason must ustify its a priori employment. In either case,a set
of practices, rules or procedures is given that must be mastered in order to resolve the
problem. However, if one plays by the rules in accordanceWA the 'principle', resolution
actually becomes impossible, and the choice, together With the practice that forces it, is
faced with a Crisis of meanim,. Given a capitalist familial structure, either another
neurotic is produced, or Oedipus is internalised.(thus producing another neurotic who
Oedipal
imperative
foundationalism
If
the
that
the
crisis).
practical
remains Within
of
foundation
for
distinction
between
discover
the
that
philosophy
an objective
requires
we
and dogmatism, the result of this imperative as it plays itself out is the trauma of reason:
its
it
denies
dogmatically
(inconsistently)
own
priori
or
a
assertsit
either reasoti
validity,
(IthusSimultaneouslydenying it).
Delcuze and Guattaii remark, in a manner reminiscent of both Marx and
Wittgenstein, that the oedipal problem 'is not resolved until we do away With both the
be
97/81).
That
(AO
the
the
the
is,
rules
of
gaine
must
refused
solution'
problem and
Cutrefello
in
but
to
order
the
escape, as
narne of an alternative practice, in
outright,
20
dileMMa,
Ln
Oedipus
to
the
to
order
avoid
or the
prisoner's
points out vNithrespect
desiring
fall
does
thinking
that
of
or
mode
not
victim
traw-naof reason, we require a new
distinction
between
'dogmatism'
'nus
double-binds.
that
new
a
and
means
to these
be.
in
What
The
being
this
to
are
might
not
a
position
we.
yet
ýýcesuggested.
'critique" is
'(1()p. cii.. pp.
93
first step towards understanding Deleuze's version of this distinction will be to examine
the practical elements of 'dogmatism', i. e., the rules of the foundationallst 'game5.
66
iti)
The Image Offhought
For Deleuze, philosophical anxiety is a product of a dogmatic or heteronomous
fon-n of philosoph that is no longer able to function (N 186/136). As we saw in the last
.y
definition
this
section,
practical
of heteronomy implies the unquestioninp, acceptatice of
problems and methods that reflect those that define other practices. In this stress on the
connection between the acceptanceof problems from elsewhereand philosophical cnsis,
Deleuze is, above alL Bergsoman ' For Deletwe, it is the history of pbjlosophy as a
ý2
scholarly sub-discipline that works to reinforce and reproduce this state of heteronomy
around the repetition of problems that are themselves never questioned -
in fact, it is
philosophy's own version of the Oedipus complex' (N 14/5). This emphasis on the
history of philosopby as a scholarly practice, ralber tban, say, a universal narrative of the
'forgetting
Repressed
Foucault
'great
Being'
that,
there
is
no
of
puts it,
means
as
of
Western philosophy' for Deleuze-, instead the history of philosophy is understood in
22
forces
dominate
local,
that.
to
thought.
to
seelagreed
cornprornises
with
parti-Ja
relation
, to
If pbilosophy unquestioningly takes Up pToblemsthat are nDt Its own, then 11will
develop an image of itself, of what it rneansto do philosophy, based on these problems.
For example, we saw In the last section bow Cutrefello's reading of Foucault makes the
link betweenjUndical practiceand Kant's image of the 'tribunal' of philosophv: in this
botb
defendant.
being
This
divided
and
iudge
image of
against itself,
image, critique is
basis
fornis
1)
the
the
172/133
(DR
of
unquestioned practical imperative that
thought
21Scý:Be, g-, ni. ) 9(-ýO. 105.
22Foucault. 1970-890-A72. modified.
94
drives a heteronomous philosophy. and the rules that it gives itself The history of
philosophy, in Deleuze's view, functions to consolidate this image of thought as an
imaginedtimelessessenceof philosophythat is subjectto ininor vanafion throughoutits
bistory, as the basic problems of pbIlosopby are subjected to different treatments and
different solutions are proposed. In this way, philosophy is reproduced as an actual.
empiric
practice that is defined by certain subjective (i. e., on the side of thought.)
presuppositions (DR 169/129)., which philosophy reflects back to itself in an illusory
imageof its timl-Ilessessence.
What
are these presuppositions? Deleuze characterises his
'transcendental empiricism'
thought as
(DR 79-80/56-7). which already contains echoes of
Schelling'.--r-philosophical ern-piric.
11.
23
Aga]in, this is a complex term that needs
unpacking. In the present context, it is enough to note that 'empinclsm' here means that
the subjective presuppositions of a philosophical elho.v or practice are to be discovered in
its empirical products, i. e., philosophical texts. In this way, the real, i. e., the practical
form
preconditions of a
of philosophical experience or consciousnesswill be laid bare.
Although Deleuze produces differing empirical analyses of the same philosophical
his
idea
invariant
throughout
the
career,
practices
of an essentially
and reproductive
image of thought reinforced as an 'essential' elhos by the history of philosophy remains a
by
di-rectly,
him,
Deletwe
self.
affLrmed
continumg
mportance
constant, its
i
24
Dunng the late 60s, Deleuze identifies this ethos in DR and LS as 'Platonism'. He
Plato's
is
that
there
philosophy a moment where the practical imperative
suggests
within
its
essential or transcendent image of
that pbilosopby will subsequently consolidate as
2ý
82-3/59),
(DR
itself can be discerned clearly
and related to other practices. Plato's
philosophy takes up a specifically political problem, which Nvecould relate to the
:ý; Sec Baugh, 1993, P. 26 and Boundas. 1996. p. S7.
74On the importanceof the 'ima ge of thought'- seeMartin- 1993-'Uttre-PrUace dc Gilles Delcu/c- r)
25On Deleuz.c and Plato- see also Patton, 1994
95
instability in Athens following ffie PelopponesianWar. This concernsthe mediation of
competing claims on authority within the polis, and desires an ultimate and universal
standard by wbicb the validity of such claims can be measured.Plato's philosophy takes
up this problem, binding the destiny of thought to the task of differentiating good claims
from bad ones, and thus securely distinguishing the meantngs of 'pure' and 'Impure'.
'authentic' and 'inauthentic' (LS 293/254). The Platonic imperative, which already
suggests the need for a foundationalist method, reflects the assumption that the most
desirable State would be one wbere individuals., instead of being free to usurp power
through violence or cunning, are allocated the roles they are nattirally or essentjalýysUIted
to.
Plato's philosophy thus simultaneously transforms this political problem into one
that exists for pure thought whose eros is supposedly directed Iowards that which is
highest
desire,
Good
therefore
the
the
object of
unchanging, universal, and
itself as a
higher ontological unity. In this way, the political project receives legitimation fTorn the
-Iphilosopher, the
friend (phdos) of wisdom, who claims access, through his mental
discipline, to that which alone is truly transcendent and foundational, above the
distinctions and confusions of polis and pkvsis. For Deleuze, Platonic philosophy thus
field
to
the
the
of contesting claims and gather them, placing them,
claims
right
survey
togetherwith the particular desiresto which they give expression,in hierarchicalorder,
bow
to
close they approacb to the universa the model of whicb they are only
according
dialectic
is
by
Platonic
less
the
method
which claims are related to
exact copies.
more or
the specific Idea Oustice, love etc.) they refer to., and by which questions such as 'who is
be
The
Idea
has
is
'who
loverT
the
true
answered.
can
a positive
statesmanT
the true
and
basis
to
their
the
their
the
model
on
of
refer
actual
copies
status:
ontological
jusL
but
Justice
Only
being.
fimly
the
is
vanous claimants who
its
in
participation
being-just
the
for
possess
each
quality
of
the
of
Judge
In varY.Ing
position
contend
96
degrees,a distribufion that is decided according to the content of their claims. and what
this reveals about their way of life or elhos (DR 84-5/60, LS 293-4/2-53-4).
Platonic philosophy is thus defined as a practice by a political problem which it
accepts, and in ten-nsof wbieb it imagines itself In reflecting on the possibility of a real,
stable political unity that would be governed according to a higher criterion, it imagines
itself as a search for that which is genuinely trmscendent, a puTe unity of thought and
being that is known as suchand which can thus function as a foundation,a criterion for
jud&g
contending claims. In this way, Platomc thou;gbt 'borrows its properly
philosophicalimage from the Stateas beautiful, substantialor subjectiveinterionty', and
thus 'invents a properly spiritual State,like an absoluteState' (D 20/11). Later.,Deleuze.
Guattari
Platonic
foundationalist
this
and
call
and
image that of 'State philosophy',,
is
fiction
State
is
'capable
by
the
that
of
inventing
of
a
whieb
universal ngbý of elevating
the State to the level of de jure universality' (TP 465,1375).This illusory meaning of
L
-.
.philosopbical
activity is thus forced upon tbougbt, and interionsed by it.
This 'forcing' is important; the adoption of an image of thought is not just an
decision
by
implicitly
thinker,,
a
an
autonomous (and thus transcendent)subject.,
arbitrary
but is forced by the relation between thought and other practices extant within a society,
a relation which is mediated by the body of the thinker. Hence the notion of habit is
by
forces,
Bodies
for
Deleuze.
trained
a process in which
are educated or
central
fimctional habits that are needed to regulate humans Within a unitary social order are
26
for
Bergson,
discursive
Nietzsche
for
Deleuze
This,
true
the
and
as
of
as
is
inculcated.
faculties and consciousnessas mueb as it is of the non-discursive faculties of sensibility,,
With
Platonic
128-9/96-7).
(DR
to
the
respect
philosophy,
and
imagination
intuitioti
is
bound
The
body
the
also
political
philosopher
up
with
interests.
the
of
training of
forms
State
for
that
desire
physical
the
in
realised
imply specific spatiois
nnlifical
its
(TP
483-4/388-9).
body
The
between
the
environment
and
physical
temporal relations
26 Cf Nietzschc. op. cit., 11. §sý 1.16.
97
spaceOf ffie P(diSis consolidatedas a geometricalspaceof extension,a diVIsIbleunity
defined by the city's limits, which acts as a material boundary of inclusion for the
citizens (TP 483-4/388-9). The citizens themselves are distfibuted within the polis
according to a process of division that assigns them subordinate unities or territories
within the city (DR 53-4/36). Time in turn is administered in terms of spaceas a divisible
unity, and thus subordinated to it. Means of measuring time depend upon a linear and
iffeversible model of the repetition or addition of smallest units defined by movement in
an extended spacebetween two fixed points (DR 367/287; B 7-8/18-19,22-3,131).
The role of Platonic philosophy is, in essence,to securethe best division of the
establisbedspace and time of the polis: Plato's dialectic, for example, attempts to
establish differences within an undifferentiated yet divisible material unity, the polis as a
(TP
DR
82-4/59-60),
484/389;
mass of people
according to the natuTesof classes of
people and their proximity to an Idea...differenceswhich then form, for example, the
basisforprescriptions concerningthe generaladministrationof taskswithin thepolis and
in particular, the organisation of work. In this way, the rules that govem Platonic thougfit
q
fimctions
(DR
54/36)
be
"sedentary'
the
of
spatio-temporal conditions of pbySlca]
will
formed
is
In
through the
the
this
the
practiceof philosophy
polis.
existencewithin
way,
forms
between
body.
Deleuze
th-us
the
training of
certain
of
posits a genetic relation
Platonic
(such
the
(such
time)
and
and
others
as
ordering of space
as
practice
heteronomous
Hence
philosophy's unquestionmigaeceptanceof certain
a
philosophy).
R]
'objective'
imphes
the
that
practices
consfitute
real
and
a clusterof pre-existing
problems
(i. e., external to thougbt) preconditions of this pbilosopby's image of tbougbt (its
inscribe
habitual
thought.
a
orientation
upon
and
which
presuppositions),
subjective
The dogmaticimageof thoughtis constitutedby a set of rules, the 'institutions' of
derive
from
the
State,
to
modification,
samecondition,
yet
subject
are
the spiritual
which
for
itself.
does
In
DR
Deleuze
thought
that
not set
extractsthe
the presenceof a problern
Plato,
from
Aristotle
Aristotle
than
these
that
fon-ns
rather
gl*ven
basic
rules
of
98
consolidates die doWatic
image for thought by intellectuali sing it. For Deleuze,
Aristotle's criticisms of Plato centre on the perceived inadequacy of the Idea as a ground
of difference. The allocation of degrees of participation in the Idea is based on an
esoteric insigbt expressedby a myth of metempsychosis(DR 85-6/61. LS 293-4/254-5),
in which the souls of the various claimants approach or recede from the perfection of the
Idea according to their eihos in life. When it is asked wlýy a given claimant is assigneda
particular rank, only a circular justi fication can be given, one which relates the hierarchy
in the polis to the mythological heavenly order. The polis should., according to the
Platonist,reflect the ideal, substantial,spiritual State,and thusreallseits essentialrelation
to the ground of its being.
Against this concept of division, the Aristotelian notion of contrariety is an attempt
to give, in every case, a reason for the differences between entities, namely a genus
be
defined
'animal',
the
species
cati
as
contraries:
e.
g.,
genus
within which
specified as
'with feet' and 'with wings' (DR 45-6/30). 'llie ground of difference is thus to be found
in the intellect. However, this completesthe col()Msafionof thoughtbegunby Plato, by
making the 'spiritual State' completely internal to thought, rather than positing it as
dependenton an unaccountableintuition. Aristotle thus presupposesand reinforces the
image,
demonstrating
dogmatic
that the role and
the
subjective presuppositionsof
definition of the State within thought is the same as that of the State per se: the
TP
(DR
441/357)
172-3/1-')2;
being
conservabon of away of
Deleuze analysesthese subjective presuppositionsof thought as follows. The
into
indeterminate
itical
the
turning
mass
of
people
a
self-sufficient
unity
of
problem
po
Fýl
is reflected in the philosophical State by the assumption that 'thinking is the natural
is
faculty
faculty,
this
that
possessedof a good nature and a good Will'
and
exercise of a
(DR 173/132). Everyone can think, and this means that everyone essentially thinks in the
is
thought
implies
the
that
true
that
source
of
and
this
unity,
it
presupposition
sameway,;
Therefore
the
the
by
the
true.
universal,
unchanging,
affinity
with
an
possesses right
99
desire
inherently
The
thought,
everyone is
its affinity and
a theoros.
virtuous eros of pure
for the universal, is reflected in its good sense(bon sens) and common vense(.,wnx
commun), the French senv here designatingboth a mental faculty and a direction of
activity common to all minds, a supposedly universal context or horizon of meaning (DR
171-2/131).
When thought conceives of an object, it is determined by two assumptions: that
this object would be conceivable for any other thinker (good sense)and that it is
in
conceivable the same way, or is essentially the same for any thinker (common sense).
The harmonyof thesetwo practices,which constitutesthe generalform of the activity of
State-philosophy,is recognifion-good sensein reciprocity with common sense,as when
one greets firiends, engagesin debate, or advancesa claim to be judged (DR 174-7/113-
5). Recognitionassumesthat individual experiencesarerepresentative
of the universalor
Recognition
itself
takesplace within an encompassing
essentialcharacterof expenence.
horizon of thought. Platonism assumes an external and an internal essential form of
borizon.
final
being
Wbole
'the
the
of
or
all-encompassing
and the
ground
as
unity,
Subi ect as the principle that convertsbeingeinto being-for-us' (TP 469/379), with the
latter deriving its affinity for the former from the virtuous eros of thougbt. Tbese forms
define a milieu. co-extensivewith cosmosand polis, in which State-philosophycan be
fonn
is
the
of philosophical consciousness
as
practiced, that of represenlation,which
determinate
it
four
by
to
that
possible
construct
relations
make
principles
such,governed
interior.
between
identity
difference
the
the
exterior
and
object and
subject
and
of
First and foremost, the identity qf the concept, the unity of the thinking subject as
fimdarnental
fonmal
Kant's
this
Like
integrity of
reflects a
unity of apperception.,
such.
discursive
is
Platonism,
for
thought prior
condition
of
any
a necessary
the subject which,
does
(Deleuze
not consider this a
to the work of common senseand good sense
Oppovilion
the
thought,
see
shall
tn
next
chapter).
as we
fundamentalcondition of any
differentiation
determination
the
the
empty
concept
of
via
and
makes possible the
100
faculty
the
of
comparison of possible predicatesand their opposites, and regulates
imagination. Analogv allows the faculty of judgement to deten-nine objects with
concepts, by making possible the apprehension of the difference-in-identity that
charactenses synthetic knowledge- the object is and is not identical to the concept.
Finally, the resemblanceof the object with respect to itself, its continuity across time, is a
necessarycondition of the application of concepts to objects (DR 44-5/29,49-5 1/331
-4,
179-80/137-8,337/262).
For Deleuze, the model of representation can be clearly discerned beneath
Aristotle"s notion of contrwiety. I'lie specification of real differences can only take place
according to the principle of contrariety (perfect opposition), and this only within the
identity of a higher concept, the genus., a third term that establishes the ground of
difference for its species: birds and men are different insofar as they are both animals
(DR 45-9/30-3). Whereas the Platonic mode of determining difference is circular,
esoteric and 'capncious' (DR 83/59), the Aristotelian mode affirms the real autonomy of
finite,
into
identity
determinate
by
the ground
tbought
the
the
concept
making
of
rational
is
This
internalisation
State
difference.
the
a more efficient meansof
of
complete
of
bad
destabilise
denounce
it
thought
that
the
that
claims
regulation, as means
will not only
in
its
intemal
itself,
become
but
the
and
engrossed
own
polis,
will also police
unity of
dramas, sucb as periodic epistemologicalcrises that render it temporarily unable to
function: minor double-binds that act as blockages. In this way, it will eventually come to
history
its
history,
its
to
the
of
uncritical compromises
or rather. what amounts
own
write
don-fination.
heteronomy
its
and
withexisting practices,of
The type of dogmatism Deleuze finds in Plato and Aristotle constitutes an organk
form of representation (DR 44/29), part of an ethos of contemplation (WP 11/6-7,
its
historical
concretenessas a unique
21/15). This specificity of the eihos constitutes
it
it
has
Contemplation
that
assumes
an esential
is a meta-physics:
forin of compromise.
its
difference
the
real
ground
object,
of
all
thus
as
real
within
possesses
and
with,
affinity
101
the pkvsis or physical universe.This ground cannotbe part of the universe,and is thus
Posited as transcendingits tangled distinctions and confusedmixtures. Platonism thus
posits its relation to this universal, its idenfity with IL as being beyond spaceand time.
We now need to explicitly relate this analysis of the dogmatic image of Platonic,
foundationalist philosophy to the traurna of reason.For Deleuze, the Christian era, within
which modern philosophy is firmly rooted, seesthe image of thought's outline shift, as
the form of the identity of thought and being that it presupposeschanges from
contemplative identity to reflective identity,, moving from the relative priOnty of the
finite
the
object and
concept, to that of the subject and the infinite concept (WP 11/6-7).
Reflection as the new elhos of Platonism unplies a cbangein the practice of pbilosopby.
This is brought about by a consciousnessof the separationof thought from the universal
that has to be overcome. Cartesian doubt, as a variation on this ethos, presupposesa
representationalconsciousnesstructuredaccordingto a presentationof a unified space
(as
and time, con-n-non
senseand good sense presuppositionsof the scepticalmetbod),
identity,
the
and
postulates of
opposition, analogy and resemblance.But now knowledge
has to be guaranteedby the subjectitself as a ground of reflection, in relation to both a
(the
cogilo) that provides unchanging and transcendent
ground
of
certainty
subjective
formal criteria for objective knowledgeof the woTld throughreasonalone ('clarity' and
'distinctness'), and an objective ground of being that acts as an unchangingand
is
for
knowledge
this
transcendentreal criterion
and thus the true universal (God).
It is clear, I think that in the post-Enlightenmentperiod, the difference between
for
is
Fichte
Scbelling,
truth
explicit
and
who
subjective certainty and objective
distInguish between formal and material criteria of truth. The distinction of reason
betweenthesecriteria has to be reducedto an identity, and this is supposedto take place
by
fonnal
begins
journey.
the
intellectual
reflecting
upon
ground of
wbich
via an
it
i
then
t
turn
t
ground,
and
matenal
attempts
o
re
o
postulated
a
via
certainty undastood as
forms
knowledge
the
thus
of
all
are
encounteredL
which
upon
path
circular
a well-marked
102
-Iit
snowing to be the true
is
defined
by
formal
departure
The
a moment of
point
universal.
absolute experience (common sense) that connects the finite subject to its absolute
precondition, the foundation of the difference or mediation that charactenses
representative consciousness.'I'lie moment wben the circle is closed, bowever. is always
postponed, because the difference between the necessarily transcendent ground
(Tathandlung or Absolute Identity) and that which it is the foundation of is in practice
infinite. That the foundationcan be knownas the groundof all actualexperience,the true
universal,can only be presupposedandnot proven.
The trawna of reason arises in relation to Schelling's philosophy when we realise
that negative philosopby cannot make the connection between the transcendent selfidentical ground and real difference without a practice of affimnation that actually makes
L--
'Me
intellectual
of
sueb
a connectionImposSible.
Knowledge
Intuition or experienceof a
Absolute
is
rational
presupposedas the inner, common sense(meaning and
which
direction) of representationalconsciousnesscannot ground the deten-ninatedifferences
that are subsequently deduced 'from' it. Both the Fichte of the WLnm and (more
later
Scbelling
inadvertently
the
radically)
sbow that a purely transcendent,self-identical
diffirrence
if
though,
even
philosophy
univers9 cannot serve as a sufficient ground of
difference.
it
Tbc
it
is
that
sufficient
ground
of
a
modem
exists, must presuppose
Platonic project of justification must therefore fail. The real existence of the true
knowledge
it,
be
Absolute)
(the
of
can
only
ever
and reason's
rational
universal
ffices
double-bind
Philosophy
know-nthus
the
than
of the traumaof
presupposedrather
be
for
by
its
Deleuze's
from
trap
a
prepared it
ero.v
point of view would
reason,whicb
for the universal.
This desire for the true universal, in which all differences are unified and which
by
Deleuze,
is
difference,
to
related
as
saw,
the
of
we
a political
ground
tbus
as
serve
can
forced
from
by
desire
thought
This
problem
a
which
is
upon
other
stems
project.
heteronomous
transforms,
then
creating
a
philosophicalpractice.
it
which
and
practices,
103
In this way, Platonism or fbttndationallsniý as the dominant tradition of Western
philosophy, assumesthat the destiny of thought is to detein ine the essentia timeless and
transcendentmeaningof the universal.In relation to other disciplines, philosophy sees
itself as setting out to give final unity to burnan knowledge, by detennining the
transcendent meanin& the Truth, of what is. Deleuze, following Bergson, enticises
Platonism, not for being a 'bad claimant' with regard to its conception of the True, but
for begmnmg with a problem which is SIMply assumed to be universally relevant, the
27
problem of problemS. It is fliis pToblem flud, along with its various solutions, Deleuze
will try to 'do away with' (AO 94/8 1).
The traumas that Platonic/foundationalist tbought undergoes are not wholly
They
from
illusion
for
Deleuze, as we shall see in
thought
that
accidental.
result
an
within
the next chapter,is a transcendentalillusion (one immanentto ontological conditionsof
determination). This illusion, which marks the sens (meaning/direction) of Platonist
thought arises fi-om the 'social problern' that defines Platonism, and is an illusion of
thought's transcendence.That is to say, Platonism seeksthe true, timeless Universal that
for
difference.
Because
foundation
knowledge
this searcb will
of
real
all
will act as a
define philosophy as the discipline that unifies all human knowledge,Platonism thus
is
Universal
itself,
this
to
true
that
thought's
seek
essenceand meaning
within
assumesa)
implicitly
Universal.
dwells
For
b)
this
thus
that
thought
within
always already
and
but
in
Descartes
to
the
the
reach
method
order
universat
a
method
constructs
example,
(innate
ideas)
Kant
that
common
sense
exists.
alreadypresupposes a mediumof universal
.
has
that
show
pure
critique
reason a right
Will
methodof
proposesthat the transcendental
he
but
knowledge,
that
the
tr-anscendental
also
presupposes
to claim objective a priori
the
de.
jure.
medium
of
as
such
common
given
within
sense.
universal,
itself
is
method
27BergSon.1962.pp. 355-6.
104
The content or meaning of the Universal will thus secure the horizon of meaning
28
embodied in the presupposition of a common sense.
This meansthat Platonic thought is subject to a constrainingdouble movement.
wbicb is exemplified by the Ficbtean and Sebellingian systems. in particular, Scbelling's
system shows an appreciation of this double movement as a necessity for thought
(though Deleuze would ask for what kind of practice this movement becomesnecessary).
As we saw M Chapter Two, Schelling's Philosophy of Identity recognised that the
knowledge
presupposition
ultimate
of all
was the immediateunity of knower and known,
in
itself
could be reduced to neither subject nor obj ect (WS 137/141,145-6/146).
which
itself
bas
be
inberently
i.
to
postulated
as
unity
rational,
e., as an ontological unity
I his
that is also an immediate knowledge, a blind certainty. However, as we also saw, this
foundation
be
fact,
if
In
the Absolute was
postulated
could not
posited as simply rational.
neither subject nor object its content was also neither simply rational nor simply
irrational. I'lic task Scbelling undertook in bis middle period was thus to demonstratethat
this Absolute had an inherent tendency to become more and more rational through
positing itself But this tendency itself was presupposed in positing the Ungnind as
divine love. Schelling's prqjectý to prove that reasoncould know ffie Absolute foundation
inadvertently
demonstrated
Universal,
that reason
the
true
eventually
of experience.,
it.
Foundationalism
knowledge
this
prove
and
could
neier
could only ever presuppose
has to presupposethat the timelessessenceof thoughtis to know the universal.It cannot
for
for
is
the
thought's
the
universal search
this
that
case,
show
distinctions -
the unity of all
distinction
between
itself
the
the
thought
of
reality
presupposes
within
distinction
is
The
this
(its
reality of
what
and its implicit essence real unity with what is).
foundationallst tbougbt cannot itself account for, even v"th Teferenceto Scbelling's
distinction
do
that
this
is a necesswy
Absolute, All it can
is illegitimately posit
28 Cf. Hei&v_,,
m's
dismers
the
-mctaphýsjcs'
as
inquiry
%khich
of
presentation
(vorm-cgnehmen),1976,p. 108.
105
only bý anticipating
consequenceof the Absolute, as when Sebelling posits a concephial 'first creation' as the
basis of deten-nination. But this positing of the distinction as necessary can only be
circular and hence subjective.
To reiterate, for Deleuze such traps result from the illusions of transcendencethat
ebaracterise foundationallst thought. As we have just seen. the pnmarv aspect of such
illusions is to posit an essential,timelessinner resemblancebetweenthat which is to be
conditioned, i. e., the real distinctions within the physis and polis, and that which is to act
as the foundation of thesedistinctions,proViding an explanationof their possibility (LS
128/105).The foundation is thus posited as the substantialaspectof thesedistinctions,
securing them within itself and abiding immanently within them in their real
But
separateness. all that this meansis that a transcendentcondition has been posited
is
distinctions
familiarIts
the
only
content
are
already
only
whose
with which we
additional determination is formal- it is a "higber' unity of these distinctions. If it
itself
inherent
distinctions,
tendency
to
to
these
this
give nse
possesseswithiti
an
real
itself bas to be presupposed,as was sbownby Scbelhng'sidentification of the possible
(the 'first civation') and actual dialectics of the Absolute's self-determination.
The crucial aspect of the illusion of transcendencefor Deleuze is the way in which
it posits the Universal as a reflection of real practices. These practices are those real,
habitualmodesof being that regulatethe behaviourof humanbeing as socialhabits,such
functioning
intuition,
harmOnlous
the
of
memory and
as common senseand recognition,
fimes.
different
Such
habits
identify
the
at
are not
to
swne objects
thought that allows us
innate, but are inculcated in us by flie material limits of our social existence. Opinion and
judgement, practices that seek to detem ine what the meanings of these unitary objects
follow
really are,
in the wake of recognition,
regulated by common sense and the
from
habits
Platonic
thus
these
the
abstracts
philosophy
representation.
of
principles
Universal as that which is meant to perfectly regulate opinion, Judgement and
judgements
bad
be
distinguished
bad
from
In
and
can
opinions
this
way.
recognition.
106
good ones according to a timeless, invariable standard. The transcendent Universal is
thus an imagined pure caseof recognition on the part of a virtuous thinker who attends to
thought itself in order to trace the Universal Within it and discover its essential
determinations.
For Descartes, the Universal was God conceived as the real ground of being and
knowledge, a role secured for the concept of God by analogical argument. God is the
supreme being and real ground becausehis nature is infinitely per&ct. In other words, he
possessesin an eminem sense real finite qualities whieb denve their meaning from
familiar opinions, suchasgoodness,wisdom and power, and it is this eminenceof God's
nature that makes him God (SP 45-6/54-5,60-2/70-3). For Kant the Universal was the
transcendental subject, whose determinations (such as the categories and forms of
intuition) reflected the most general constituents of our received opinions about the
nature of experience. This subject thus represented a tautological, formal abstraction
from Newtonian science and Christian morality, an 'originary consciousness'at the base
of consciousness(LS 128/105).
These elements of eminence and tautology represent respectively the essential
difference of the Universal from that wbicb it conditions and its essentialidentity With it.
This equivocal senseof the Universal is best expressedby Fichte's Absolute Subject,
indeed.,it is just this equivocation that Jacobi, H61derlin and Schelfing reproach him for.
The Tathandlungis postulatedas a) an absoluteand thus self-producingact, and b) as
implies
for
be
is
impossible,
however,
T'his,
to
subjective
self-consciousness
subjective.
The
Talhandlung
this
relation.
a
conditioning
is thus
is
over against an object, and
(self-producing
(self-knowing
both
and
conscious
or
erninent)
unconscious
postulatedas
is
Schelling's
definition
definition
This
the
present
also
in
of
equivocal
tautological).
or
difference,
for
if
Schelling's
project is to
Absolute as the already rational unity of all
be
both
Absolute.
has
'higher'
Absolute
to
essentially
a
neither rational nor
the
succeecl,
This
Absolute.
requirement of thinking the
irrational, and a predominantly rational
107
Absolute as simultaneously radically different from and identical With the field of
experiencealso meansthat Sebelling'sproject must fail, however.as we saw.
Ilie abstraefion that charactefises Platonism/foundationalism is thus a supreme
analoff posited between the Universal and that which it is meant to condition, the real
differences that make up the world. In this way, the transcendentUniversal is posited as
immanent in the conditioned while still transcending it: like Sebelling's Absolute, it
posits itself in finite things while remaimm, above them as their eminent foundation. But
this relation is only presupposed,being securedonly by the tautologythat is also posited
between condition and conditioned- the Absolute always already contains lust those
deten-ninationsthat we are familiar with, and thus fori-nally justifies tbeir possibility, but
leavesthe real ground of their necessitystill to be discovered-The fact that for Platonism
the stress is on the tautological aspect makes the analogy between condition and
conditioned a bad one. The problem that we discovered in Kant's philosophy, the merely
formal tracing of the conditions of experience that assumes the universality of a
definifion of experience ('psychologism'), is discovered by Deleuze to be a recurrent
problem for the dominant tradition of philosophy. There is always an internal relation of
being
between
Universal
it
transcendent
that
posited
a
and
which is supposedto
unity
Universal
that
the
the
content of
only repeats that of 'received opinion',
condition, sucb
the product of given, empirical practices that goes unquestionedby Platonism. In the next
justifies
Deleuze
distinction
between
bow
illusoiN
this
makes
and
a
chapter, we will see
belief or dogmatism and a non-illusory critique or philosophy, without making a similar
Deleuzean
be
distinguished
In
himself
'Enligbtem-nent'
the
this
of
ethos
will
way,
move
r-.
dogmatism
Platonism,
heteronomous,
of
the
unenlightened
which cannot
from
-
i.
degree
it
lack
the
transcendence,
to
of
e.,
which is genetically
acknowledgeits own
bodies
disciplining
the
and of thought.
to
of
related
108
Chapter
Four
n-1Absolute
the
and
, emuze
i) Inlroduclkm
At the beginning of the previous chapter, I noted that for Deleuze- as for
Foucault, understanding modernity or Enlightenment philosophically becomes. not a
defining
matter of
a historical evoch containing, specific modes of reflection upon the
timeless problems of philosopby, but one of reafising an eihos, practice or 'attitude'
defined
over
against
other
elhoi,
Predominant
among
which
Is
Platonism/foundationalism. This indicates a refusal of any timeless essential and
universal meaning that has been posited for philosophy, with the consequencethat that
the task of 'modern philosophy' is the renverwmenl of Platonism (IDR 82/59, LS
292/253). On the one hand, renversementmeans 'overturnlin"'. This is the task taken up
by Deleuze in his analyses of the dogmatic lynage of thought, showing how Platonism
be
can
referred back to subjective presuppositions (Internal to thouglit) and okiectiN,e
presuppositions (external to tboug-bt) tbat, as components of practices, i-ernain
itself
be
that
to
it.,
given
assumes
a transcendentpractice capable of
it
unadch-essed
within
into
however.
Remersement
'inversion',
Deleuze's
seeing,
also means
procedure
what is.
how
he
Platonism
be
to
traced
this
chapter, in order
show
of inverting
in
redefines
will
the task of pbilosopby in terms of non-Illusory problems witbout appealing to a
transcendent foundation in order to justifY this redefinition. Against the model of
by
Enlightenment,
the
to
in which a mind is putified of its illusory
education appealed
foundation
Universal,
to
the
the
the
genuine
of true
opinions about
world in order reach
knowledge, Deleuze constructs a model of training or apprenticeship designed to reshape
the meaning and onentation (sens) of the subject and thus overcome habituated modes of
in
for
implicated
loss
The
that
nihilism,
of all meaning, philosophical thinking
thinking
are
109
that is experienced in the traurna of reason. Deleuze thus aims to restore meaning to this
4suffienng'of tbought.
This chapter will thus show how, even though he provides (as we saw) an
Deleuze
does
define
Platonism,
that
the
the
account of
real, genetic grounds of
illusions
not simply repeat Marx's mistake, by relying in this account on a presupposed and
knowing'.
On
definition
before
buman
'knowing
tbus
on a
essence,and
unprovable
of a
the contrarv, Deleuze, M his inversion of Platonism, remains true to Schellitig's MsMhts
into the impossibility of foundational philosophy. MoreoveT, his Bei-gsonian and
Nietzscheanreinventioti of philosophical modernity is consonant with certain tendencies
I
draw
Schelling's
Absolute,
the
thinking
own
of
shall
out in order to
within
which
Deleuze's
lon.
defined
as the identity of
notion of immanence,which is no
per
understand
being and thought in knowledge. In this way, we shall progress towards an understanding
between
dogmatism
distinction
Deleuze
draws
the
and genuine philosophy, illusory
of
and non-illusory modes of thought.
ii)
Towards Thinking Absolute Difference
The key to my interpretation of Deleuze is the conViction that, with bim,
distinguish
doginatism,
in
Absolute
to
to
the
order
with its concern
philosophy returns
for the transcendentUniversal, from philosophy. It is this attention to a theme that is
bea
Deleuze
that
by
20"'
to
allows
notion
mvorn-ouft
century philosophy
often understood
to carry out a radical excavation of the presuppositions of philosopby. In addition, bow
the Absolute or unconditioned has to be thought in order to 'modemise' and restore
draNN
In
I
I
tbis,
to
concern.
sboNVIng
voll
philosof)by is, as Will sbow, a constant
meaning
first
Bergson
lie
from
his
announces
early work on
where
on various sources, ranging
110
that '[tlbe Absolute is difference' (B 27/35) to his final published essay on the meaning
'
Guatt--M.
of the notion of absohiteimmanence,developedwM
I referred previously to Deleuze's thought as 'trwiscendental empiricism', and to
the positing of a transcendent Universal as the foundation of real difference as the
primary "transcendentalillusion' of Platonism. The senseof 'empiricism' was related to
Deleuze's investigation of actual philosophical pmctices which allowed him to define
Platonism. What, though, does 'transcendental' mean in these two expressions? In the
first case, it does not, as with Kant, refer to that wbieb is the essential condition of the
possibility of experience and which can thus be known as such independently of
Instead,
it
experience.
refers to those conditions of experience which thought must
presuppose as real but also as being, actually incommensurable With thoughtý and yet
fin-n
'objective
Here,
(its
tbought
try
to
tbink
must
presuppositions).
a
connection
whicb
be
Schelling's
irreducible
'higher'
Absolute,
to
concept of a
our concept of it, can
with
In
Kantian
'transcendental'
the
the
reflects
sense, thougb modified
made.
second case,
through a reading of Berpon, pertaining to a tendency within the real conditions of
experience to give rise to illusions within thought. Transcýmdentalempincism, as it has
the goal of dispelling Illusion, Will as we see constitute a kind of absolute knowledge,
thougb in a very special sense,wbicb owes more to Bergson than to Schelling.
Like Marx's analysis of bourgeois philosophy, Deleuze's attack on Platonism
in
If
Platonism,
positing the
accusesit of reversing an actual, empirical relation.
Universal as the object of a privileged thoughtý thus abstracts its obiect from real
life
inion
judgernent,
that
and reco9111
nition
regulate
OPI
within the secure,
practices of
for
it
Deleuze,
bounds
the real conditionsof expenence,
the
polis,
of
ignores,
sedentary
incommensurable
Platonic
defined
by
thought
the
themselves
above all
with
which are
identity
being.
These
the
the
of
of
concept
real conditions
with
subjective presupposition
from
dt&rence
by
Platonism.
Deleuze
defined
the
their
thinking
thus
regulated
of
are
' Sec IL 3-4i3-4 (on the diffcrcnec bct,%vocnimmancncc and transccndcnccas a djffcrcncc bctx,,
-ccn
ill
Platonic
the
to
differences
thus claims that they are real
that are transcendentally prior
image of thought, in that they can explaln the genesisof such practices. and thus account
for real fonns of experience. To asswne that these differences are reducible to being
thought in terms of the identitv of the concept, which seeksto regulate difference within
the polis so as to secure its overall unity, is the fundamental subjective assumption of
Platonism, which is incarnated in the positing of a Universal. Of course, Deleuze's claim
he
how
We
this
stage.
itself appears simply a presupposition at
will now examine
by
beginning
it
just
than
to
that
returning to
an assumption,
attempts
show
is more
Schelling's 'hi p-her' Absolute, throuA Deleuze's late di stinction in II. between 'relative'
immanence.
This
'absolute'
attempt will require that thesereal conditions, which are
and
basis
into
by
Platonism.
the
of a new image of thougk not
positive
are made
suppressed
is
For
Deleuze,
Universal,
but
knowledge
only througb sucb a
as creenjon.
it
as
of a
2
it
be
positive mversion of Platonism that a true c-Tifiqueof can- cons"cted.
Deleuze's critical distinction between 'relative' and 'absolute' immanence 0L 34/3-4) distinguishes two fonns of philosophical tbinking of the relation between thoup-bt
band,
being:
the immanence of the transcendent, and on the other
the
on
one
and
immanence 'in itself, which 'is not in something, not to something' 0L 4/4)- The first,
Platonic form, seeks the Universal that is to serve as the ground or explanans of
difference. This ground is therefore posited as being immanent in or to what it
it.
Kant's
bevond
difference,
while nevertheless subsisting
conditions, i. e., real
transcendental subject is immanent to the empirical, expeniential medlwn
of
Schelling's
be
experienced.
representational consciousness, and yet cannot itself
Absolute expressesitself in the determinations of its finite and infinite potencies, yet it
34/1261).
(AW
in-itself
these
the
potencies
other of
or essentially neither one nor
remains
For Deleuze, even I-leideggerdoes not escapethis illusion, for lie relies on the notion of a
fn.
/321
11).
In
Being
188
169/120(DR
each case,
n.
of
pre-ontological understanding
unconditionedand conditioned).
112
the condition is posited in an equivocal relation with the world that we experience as a
differentiated manifold, i. e., as simultaneously separatedfrom and immanent in it.
Looking back on the issue of the consistency of historical versions of critique, as
discussed in the previous chapter, it seemsthat we can say that in a eeneral theoretical
sense,critique after Kant came to refer to the practice of demonstrating the dependence
deten-nination
that bad been posited as absolute upon a
of a
-around
of explanation, an
For
ii
objective presupposition
example,
explanatory
power.
with greater or more general
.
in evistemol%,-y Jacobi, H61derlin and Schelfing showed that Fichte's Tathandlung was a
priori dependent upon a more comprehensive unity. In political economy, Marx showed
that bourgeois economic theory was dependent upon specific empirical social
fonnations, and that a history of these formations could be constructed on the basis of a
for
foundational
lies,
The
this
model of critique
general anthropology.
inconsistency of
Deleuze, in its repefifion of a basic illusion of transcendence.In this way, the cnfique of
by
fon-n
by
by
demonstrating
that
thought
the
principle adopted
one
of
another operates
the fon-n to be critiqued is itself based upon distinctions that it cannot explain, as is
Fichte's
Tathandlung.
The
discoveiy
the
of a new pnnciple is meant to
c1mly
case with
for
determination
by
the
and relation to those
accounting
its
old principle
undercut
deten-ninations that condition it, as when Schellinp, posits the Absolute as neither
both.
For
Deleuze,
(somehow)
in
as
expressing
itself
subjective nor objective, yet
however, the universality of this principle in relation to real difference is in every case
is
This
be
another way of expressing
justified or provenonly assumed and cannot
Schelling's insight that
the essential connection between the Absolute and our
foundationalist
Such
demonstration.
faith
than
a
of
rather
experience is a matter of
from
be
illusion,
for
Deleuze,
the
accepted
an
result of abstracfion
only
principle can,
form
ive
to philosophical
thus
these
91
pre-philosophical presuppositions
pracfices:
thought, and tio-ra becomes reflected as ur-dava (DR 175-6,1134).
See Hm-dt- 1991- ;,-sp. pp. xm-x%iii.
113
Deleuze aims, like Marx's critique of the model of exchange proVided by
bourg,eois political economy, to explain the fact that an abstraction has been posited. In
this sense, he seems to approach the model of critique just discussed- in aiming to
explain the determination of a practice. However. the 'gound' he appeals to does not
imply the Presupposition of a Universal that somehow enfolds or subsumes the
determinationof that which it is meant to explain by transcendingit. The difference
between his critique and this 'relative' mode lies, as we shall see, in his conception of the
relation between real difference and thought, which does not presuppose that thought,
thanks to its supPOsedly unique identitv with being, is capable of transcendingdifference
f
towards that wbicb, remaining eternay independent of difference, contains it in its
totality.
Although Platonism is that ethos of thought that in affirming certain problems,
drives the history of Western philosophy and thus dominates OUTimage of what
6philosophy' means, Deleuze refuses to posit philosophy as such as monolithically
dogmatic. He is enthusiastic about an alternative tradition, including Lucretius, Spinoza,
Hurne, Nietzsche and Bergson (N 14/6) who manage to resist thinking grounds in terms
of their relative immanence, and instead promote a different image of thought, which
knowing,
but
These
the
the
affirms
centrality of
problem, not of
of creation.
are thinkers
from
do
illusory
image
thought
pre-philosophical eihoj and model
of
not adopt an
who
concepts upon it, rather. they invent concepts that are not posited as transcending
difference, but as following its real articulations, as being absoluleiv immanent.
For Deleuze, thinkers who are otherwise Platonic in the extreme occasionally
fonn
invention.
firne,
An
'pure
the
the
and
empty
of
example is
achieve such conceptual
Kantian
the
ego's empirical self-perception, which ensures that the
medium of
transcendental ego and empirical ego can never be identical in and for consciousness
(DR 81-2/58,116-8/85-7,
KP vii-viii. SQ
Another such, even more emphatic
219-30).
be
Schelling's
I
suggest,
would
vision of the 'higher' Absolute. Mv
case, would
114
discussion in Chapter Two of the 'two Absolutes' in Schelfing is reflected by Deleuze's
brought
he
hand,
'difference out of
Scbelling's
assessmentof
achievements:on the one
the night of the Identical' (DR 246/191 but on the other the Absolute Identity remains
_),
354/276).
difference'
(DR
130/107)
'nothing'
'cannot
(LS
an abvssal
that
sustain
be
between
that
to
made
now want
an important connection can
suggest
Schelfing's account of the Absolute as primordially dissonant Within itself and the nofion
help
Deleuzean
to
this
of absolute immanence, which will
idea. As we saw
us understand
at the end of the previous chapter, Platonism believes that the Universal internally
Deleuze
Kant.,
that
the error of
to
resembles
which it conditions: as
writes with respect
transcendental philosophy is to 'think of the transcendental in the image of and in
resemblanceto, that which it is supposed to around' (LS 128/105). Schellina, however,
be
It
that
there
to
that
the
this
shows us
is no a priori reason assume
case. can only
is
justified)
is
faith
(which
to
to
jusfified
say. not
m the autonomy of
with reference our
reason.
Schelling proposes that the presupposition of all philosophy is this faith, the
fon-nal
Identity.
However,
Absolute
this
the
transcendent
oniv
is
unity of reason with a
does
demonstrate
It
that philosophy, qua absolute
not
presupposition of philosophy.
knowledge, in fact exists. In other words, it does not show that this Universal is the real
Schelling
is
difference.
To
this
the
that
case,
attempts to think the
show
ground of
Absolute as different within itself at the same time as thinking it as a transcendentunity.
These two aspects prove ultimately irreconcilable, however. In fact, the obscure
difference within the Absolute, which reason needsto presupposein order to account for
functions
like
Fichte's
GýMhl,
difference,
making a system impossible to complete.
real
Becausethe difference is itself non-rational and unaccountable,an (Ingnind, it cannot be
taken up into the systern. which means that the systern is incomplete and not absolute.
Reason thus has to presuppose a primordial difference that it cannot subsume under the
identity
the
the
relying
concept.
instead
on
presupposed
of
of the
eminent
identity
115
divine
is
love.
An
a
pathological
itself,
reason
as
wilhin
active
otherness
ýAbsolute
condition that makes absolutely a priori synthetic knowledge imf)ossible.
For Deleuze, Kant's moment of true invention lies in introducing a problematic.
purely determinable term (the empty form of time) as constitutive of the relation between
the indeterminate condition and the conditioned it deternfines. Fichte and Schelling, are
forced to introduce their own versions of this determinable term, thus effectively
remoVing the possibility of grounding difference in a higher identity. In this way, a
radical or priimordial difference is introduced into philosophical thought: as Deleuze puts
it with respect to Kant, this moment in b-anscendentalphilosophy is 'a matter of
establishing the difference and inleriorising
it within being and thought' (DR 117/86, my
emphasis).
Schelling actually goes further than Fichte or Kant, however, something which
Deleuze does not explicitly acknowledge. He tfies to think a higher Absolute, one that
transcendsreason, not as an eminent fomi of identity. but as incommensurable with it,
foundation
the
and yet which can still serve as
of a system. The former requirement is
by
necessitated the need to explain detennination but, as we have seen,it upsetsthe latter
requirement. Nevei-theless,Schelling still attempts to think the relation between this
Absolute and creation throupili his theory of potencies, as a positive dialectic of
produefion-,an Erzeugungsditilektik
3
In Chapter 2 (pp. (2-. 3above), I noted that the ungrounded act of the Absolute
that posits actual difference is conceived in the Philosophy of Identity and thereafter as
an absolute positing that is grounded only in the Absolute as an immediately affin-native
from
disfinguisbed
This
has
be
Subject's
Fichtean
the
to
positing of a not-1, in
unity.
between
is
for
limifitig,
basis
I
that
the
the
relation
and
negative,
not-I
necessary
all
which
deten-nination of consciousnessis supposedly freely posited. Here, Fichte has merely
fteedom
that
the
of the Absolute is identical with the relation of opposition
assumed
3 This is Ilic icrm cmploý cd by Bcach- 1994, pp. 84--:,.
116
between the subject and the object that is constitutive of the conditioned un1tv of
theorefical and practical consciousness.Schelling, had argued that negative opposition
was the pureiv necessarvmode of dIfferentiation that determines the merely Possble first
creation, and wants to think the freedom of the Absolute differently, so as to avoid
positing it under the fonn of a conditioning relation that simply reflects the constitution
of the finite.
Schelling's doctrine of potencies is thus an attempt to understand the
immediacy
Absolute
for
the
the emergence
to
of
such
unconditioned
in
a way as account
of real difference with sole reference to this pure immediacy. Difference is thus to be
thought Without negation, that is, without self-limitation as conceived either on the
Fichtean model or as in Schelling's more Neoplatonic moments, when the positing of
difference in the Absolute appears to be necessary.'Me emergenceof difference has to
be thought of as the realisation of the Absolute and not as its degradation. In Schelfing's
middle period, this requirement is fulfilled. 'Me act of posifing Is an utterly blind and
describes
from
Schelfing
the
that
the
to
as a
actual
non-actual
spontaneous passage
from
It
Absolute.
the initial
the
allses
contraction, self-doubling., or intensification of
impulse provided by the 'dark will', which emergesunaccountably in eternity. within the
fully
fully
The
dark
Absolute.
or
conscious
unconscious,and thus
peaceful
Will Is neither
indicates a problernatic. Primordial and pseudo-temporal ('before and after') dissonance
itself
Absolute
the
within
In relation to the actual temporality of the world, this
dissonanceis always already past, a substantial rather than vanished past that continues to
blind
In
24-5/120-1).
(AW
the
the
contraction,
act
of
the
actual
universe
influence
Absoltite posits itself through this dissonance.
I'he theory of potencies indicates how this affirmafive positing is camed over into
Creation. The first potency intensifies rather than negating or firnitim4 the Absolute,
Bi
The
it.
first
or
tension
produced.
in
potency as actuall--v
within I
creating a real
4 On the -ict of contraction. sce Zukck- 1996, pp- -, i-2.
117
Schelling's notorious shorthand. is the affinnation of the disturbed Absolute (A) in which
the dark will and the will -to-exi stence have begun to emerge. and so it repeats and
intensifiestheir differencewitifin it-self,which Schellingrepresentswit-b Aý (A=B) or N'
(SPL 440-1/211-2). Ilie process continues lil,-e a series of li ghtning- flashes: the tension
n A' is the difference between-it and the A (the initialt state) that it augments. N' is not
identical with itself but implicates this difference within it as its condition. and so its
is
the original, unactualised difference between itself and the second
condition
ultimate
potency. the unrest that paradoxicaliv anses within that which is etemaliv at rest, which
the first votencv britw-,s to life and active1vexpresses.Hence A is intensified through the
first potency again, this time in another direction or mode, that is, in the second potency,
the will-to-existence, posited alongside the finst as A' (SPL 425-6/200- 1).
V----N
The third potency, that of absolute indifference, is posited next in sequence,as a
relative identity of the first two potencies. At this point, Schefling is concerned to reassert
the overall priority of the Absolute Identity. The positing of real difference from Within
the Absolute 'awakens' the Oterund understood as eminent ident1tv, the Absolute-inGod
Love,
thus subduing the ray-ing individual powers within a synthetic unity,
itself,
as
making them into opposites. Like the Fichtean I and not-1, they limit each other, but
Fichtean
do
the
they
postulates,
so actively, as they each internalise the potential
unlike
have
Nevertheless,
limitation
Absolute.
the
they
that
power of
entered a relation of
defines a synthetic identity. and in this way a 'cooling' of the process of Erzeugung is
effected.
This third potency is the stable relation of mutual limitation between the other two.
With the positing of A', the absolute attains a stable form of actual existence, but thk vý
it
idenfity.
for
implicates
its
it
still
as
condifion, the primordial
oniv a relafive
within
dissonance of the Absolute. As such it cannot be equal to the L)ngrund. In so far as
difference
this
in itq own existence, A-' remains.on1v relativeiv stable. The
implicates
lowest
Absolute
levels
the
the
once
again
augmented
is
of
within
of material
power
118
nature and so on, towards the point where, in human consciousness.the prionty of the
first potency, that of nature, is subvertedbv the developed secondpotency. that of spint.
The irreconcilable tension in Schelfing's work has been traditionally understood as
that betweenfTeedomand systern.or that betweenthe unification of the absoluteand its
falling asunder into simply opposed real mid ideal principples-5However, if we read
Schefling as proposing that philosophy, in order to explain real difference, has to
presupposea primordial dissonancewithin the Absolute, then the tension in his work is
difference
identity
"higher'
Absolute
that
transcends
positing
a
all
as
an
emment
between
(and which thus illegitimately resembles that which it is supposed to condition and
cannot tberefore explain its emergence)or positing a 'bigber' Absolute as a problematic
difference that createsreal difference absoluleýy,that is, through its own relation to itself
The self-ldentical Ungrund suffers fi-om the disadvantage of relative immanence. It is
be
difference,
foundation,
be
but there
to
the
to
transcendent
assumed
measureof real
its
is no wav of demonstrating that this is the case. To explain real difference, an
equiprimordial, pseudo-temporal difference has to be presupposed,but this means that
the self-identical Ungrund cannot serve as a foundation without a difference that it does
difference
URgrund
In
the
this
conceived as primordial
can
not itself produce.
way. only
be Absolute, that is, a self-related condifion of actual difference, for as we have seen,it is
itself
higher
difference,
to
this
through
the
of
a
power, that
raising
of
its
only
affirmation
is
betweenA
A'
distinction
'Me
and
not therefore one of
relation
real
is posited,
differences
between
difference
but
two
posited
internalised
one of pure
resemblance
without relation to Identitv.
flie onlv ground for reducing this relation to one of resemblance would be our
has
faith
but
in
thought
that
this
an
itself, our conviction
'faith the autonom of reason,
Deleuze's
for
Universal
terms, only a product of our attachment to
the
in
is,
affinity
habituated ethoi or forms of experience. fin this way, it can be seenthat our positing of a
5 Seee.g., Wlitc- 1983b.
119
transcendent,sell'-identical Universal, and of an internal resemblancebetween it and what
krzzeupmgýidialektik,
The
it conditions. is relative to our experience and not absolute.
however, is a construction which. thouO, it is meant to explain real difference. implies an
In
difference.
difference,
to
this
that
only
positing
relation
is,
in
vay. it is
of
absolute
irreconcilable with foundationalist thought for it appears to posit the Absolute as in
from
incommensurable
infmitely
different
principle unknowable, as
or
with the concept.
It also seems to be self-contradictorv, proposinu that we can know the Absolute to be
Nevertbeless,
immanence
disturbed
in
dissonant
Absolute
the
the
of
and
its
unknowable.
products is not relative immanence. It is, on the con",
the univocal and unilateral
difference
further
difference
that it produces.
of
one
problematic
a
immanence
in
It is this kind of relation that Deleuze descnbes as absolute immatience, which 'is
in itself (IL 4/4), rather than being the relative immanence of a transcendent term iti
something else. As we saw in Chapter Two, Schelling cannot sustain this thought,
however. It is opPOsed, even in his middle rwriod. by his commitment to
foundationalism, which requires that the Absolute be posited as an ernment identity (Ithe
Ungrund as Love). 'Mis un1tv is assurnedto remain 'above' the real dissonanceof the
Absolute, making sure that things turn out alright, as it were. Schelling thus remains
Deleuzean
immanence,
from
thinker
point of view.
a
of relative
primarily a
We now need to exannne the evisternolowcal status of this Deleuzean absolute
determinable
from
the
the
that
within thought as its absolute
positing of
results
relation
by
Two,
in
Chapter
Schelling,
means of
posits a special intuition
as we saw
ground.
literally
higher
Absolute,
thought
the
outside
is
and in which
which thought is united with
(potencies)
determinations
for
basis
As
the
of the
constructing
a
itself or ecstatic.
\bsolute, this ecstatic intuition is simply the immediate identity of thought and Absolute.
,,
6
Schell'
his
into
In
thinker
the
middle
period,
ing
through which
nature.
ga-ins
in'sight
its
I
-'unconsclous'
thought
the
the
of the
of
pw-tido-tempOral
as
With
unity
conceives intuition
6 See von Uslar. op. cit.. P. ; o8.
,
120
Absolute before time (AW
12-13/116-7,27/122).
The exact meaning, of
the
transcendenceor ecstasy involved in this intuition is still ambiguous, however. Schelling
describes it as access to an 'essenceoutside and above the world' (AW 5/114). which
might be thought to imply the Ungrund as eminent identity or as Universal. What this
essenceis, however, is the substantial past. the problematically differentiated Absolute.
is
qualilalively distinct from 'the world', i. e., the time of the present (Alvk' 24which
5/121), which differs in nature from the past because of its unifineanty, the fact that time
as we commoniv or habitually expenence it is a successionof instants.
If Schelling, in thinking the absolute positing of difference soleiv with reference to
difference,
a problematic
can be said to have gone beyond relative immanence (Ito an
extent), it should he noted that this is becausethe role he asslamsto intuition is connected
firne.
be
fin
Bergson,
this,
a
concept
of
a
connection
should
pointed
with
out with
one of
the most important of Deleuze's lPfluences or 'mediators'
7
Bergson had accused the
post-Kantians of positing a 'timeless intuition' as the basis of philosophy, which.
although it goes beyond Kant's stresson the finite Understandingand thus his fonnalism,
false
in
to
the
connected
goal
of
a
arch4ý-science
grounded
a
remains
unitary
8
transcendentUniversal. This, however, is not entirely tnie of Schelling. Each epoch of
time, for him, is a qualitatively distinct mode of being. The present exists, ansing and
being
is
because
but
the
this
of
substantial
of the past the
vanishing constantiv.
differentiated
Absolute,
problematically
whicb is immanent in the present as its ground.
Schellitig thus tlies to think the relation between past and present without reducim-,it to a
temporal scbema of succession that would depict the relation between Absolute and
In
he
between
two
this,
temporal
instants.
relation
world as an already unifinear
Deleuze
duration
Bergson's
notions of
and virtuality, which provide
Ith a
N%
approaches
DR.
model of absolute immanence in
On Bergson and Schell]ing, sce Io%cloy, 196) and Mcrjcj,, -P0nt%-,
' Berg-son. 1%2. p. 361
121
pp. 14-5-6.
For Bergson, duration, as qualitative temporal distinction. is the Absolute itself
the ground of real differentiation. He proposes that knoVAIedpeof this Absolute is
possible via an 'tiltra-intellectuatl intill
Q
C that wo-i-i-ldenable us to re-live the abs-olute"9
'Ultra-intellectual' here refers to an intuition that takes representational consciousness
(the realm of V"erstand)beyond itself into its inner lived expenence of fime, whicli Kant
descnibedfon-nally as the 'pure and empty fon-n of time'. This intuition gives knowledge.
not of the transcendent, Universal foundation of determination, but of the 'virtual
tendencies' that are immanent in the present existence of a phenomenon and mark the
process of its evolution--10The Absolute here is not the transcendentGround of whicb all
things are internal determinations. Duration does not lie beyond all things, but rather can
be traced in them as their own 'lived time. It is problematically differentiated and thus
internally different in kind from itself, or self-differentiafinp- like Schelling's disturbed
Absolute. Because it is internaliv different from itself, it is incommensurable With
identity and thus with representationalconsciousness.It is thus transcendenton1v in this
in
sense, that our habitual practical orientations (representational consciousness)do not
allow us to trace its influence. It is transcendental,in that it is the condition in principle
of differentiation. yet is also empirical, in that it can only be traced in actual phenomena.
Dele-uze's'Wanscendentalempinclsm' thus begins with Bergson.
As with Schelling's dialectic of potencies, Bergsonian duration explaitis
differentiation as the congelation of its own internal activity. Yet the virtual or pure past
as the bemg-m-itself of the present does not possess the same substantiality as is
Stich
Universal,
Schelling's
Umversal.
the
to
transcendent
g.,
a
e.
earlier
a
attributed
detenninations
Absolute,
thought
is
of as containing all
internal to
eternal, self identical
detenninations,
This
to
reahse.
which somehow it comes
itself as its own possible
between
I
the
previously,
existence
of
an
resemblance
internal
assumes, as noted
Schelling
he
The
as
conditioned,
which,
shows.
cannot
justified
priori.
and
a
condition
'4Ibid.. p. 359. p. 157.
122
idea of a Substance as that in-itseif which contains within itself all determinafions as
possible, and which then realises them by limiting, itself. like Fichte's Taihandlung. is
opposed by Schellinp_'ssubversive thought of the dissonant Absolute. even though this
conception is thought alongside that of a transcendentSubstance(the Unkninti as Love.
which supposedly belongs to the future and the past).
From a Deleuzean point of View, Bergson opposes this transcendenceand the
it
relative immanence implies more consistentIv. Duration. being, different from itself
has a power of variation which is intfinsically infinite. as each singular duration is
different
from
)
quahtafiveýv
all others, and in this, its problematically (for consciousness.
differentiated nature, resides its substantiality and thus its suitability as an evlanans.
Extension in the phenomena]realm as presentedto representationalconsciousness,which
is only infinite quanfilative difference under a general fon-n of unity (113
22-3/31). can
thus he explained w-ith reference to duration, which 'includes' it. All extension can be
duration
the
as
phenomena]
product
of
contingent
modifications
of
in the
viewed
temporal order of the present (in which time and space are constituted as Infinitely
divisible unities): a Bergsoman piece of wax is not defined, like Descartes, by the stable
by
that
it possesses virtue of its extension and which allow it to
inathemafical properties
be recognised, with the alterations it undergoes being modifications of extended
'marv:
the
instabilltv
Instead,
the melting
the
alterations
are
pri
of
substance.
wax and its
duration.
The
difference,
front
fire
is
temporal
the
the
a
wax itself,
a pure
of
of
wax in
by
a contingent modification of a
expenence
produced
qua extended substance, is an
collection of such variations, which constitutes a threshold of consciousness.
The substantialitv of a transcendentUniversal that contains all determination under
the form of possibilit-v is illusory for Bergson, and for Deleuze. The idea that this
Possibilit-v that supposedly pre-exists all actualltv can thus ground actualitv is cn*ticised
by Bergson as an illusory projection inlo the past of the familiar image of the real that is
't) Scv Hardt- i 993. pp. 4-7
123
11
produced in intuition and thought by our habitual ethoi. it is thus an image abstracted
frOm empirical practices in the sense that we have traced in Deleuze's crifique of
Platonism. Duration, on the other hand, includes in its virtual dimension a tendency to
congeal as extended matter, so that actualisation is a matter of duration becoming
external to itself rather than, as with a trwiscendent Universal, limiting itself Duration,
becauseit is internally qualitatively different from itself, is infinitely determinable being,.
As such, the being of Bery-sonian substance is radically unstable, rather thati being
eternally self-identical. Deleuze suggeststhat sucb problematic being be written '9-being'
(DR 89/64) or as 'non-being'. thouOmnot in the sense of ouk on, that which has no
but
reality,
rather m4iýon (DR 253/196), that whose essenceor senseis undecidable and
Schelling
himself,
Deleuze
246-7/190-1),
(DR
as
unstable.
recognises
refeffed to the
incomprebensible ground of real existence as a me on, a non-being that is without stable
essencerather than that which is without any being Cizanzundgar nichi Sevende)(DPE
235-6).
12
If this dimension of the real is incommensurable with consciousness,however,
bow can it be known? Where is the certainty that is demanded by foundationalism and
knowledge?
Universal
Will
that
transcendent
the
it
seeks
a
secures
of
in
not
which
unity
the method of inwition only produce arbitrary explanations of phenomena?For Bergson,
the intuition of duration is continuous with sensory intuition, being simply a higher form
dimensions
duration
it
beyond
to
that
to which
takes
of
of
consciousness
us
being
fied
to the temporal order of the present and the
consciousnessand sensibility,
"
Bergsonian intuition, as
ordering and perception of extended matter, is inferior,
form
Deleuze
'pure
to
the
time'
that
of
seesas the
and empty
previously noted. is related
difference
Kant's
thought,
that
the
truly transcendentalmoment of
introduction of a pure
from
knowing
the
itself as it is in itself and which is nevertheless
subject
prevents
But
for
being
Bergson,
the
this intuition is elevated to the
the
suýject.
of
of
constitutive
" Bcrgson, i 960. p. I 10.
124
foffn of a method, in which the incommensurability of different durations. the 'lived
time' of different phenomenais experienced directiv (as with the melting wax). Absolute
Difference can be 'known' becauseit can be felt in this way. 'flits does not. however.
mean it can be represented, for it k still incommensurable with the identit-v of the
concept. We now need to explore this notion of absolute knowledge as Deleuze uses it,
in order to understandbis distinction between doematic and cnticai images of tbought.
iv)
Thinking Immanence
Platonism's faith in the 'good will' of thought, i.e., In the essential unity of
thought and being is, for Delcuze, testimony to Its basis in a false problem, that is, how
to achieve knowledge of the transcendent universal, the foundation of the good order.
I'lils goal is assumed to be the essential and definitive philosopbical expenence:
Enlightenment
Deleuze
Guattari
parousia,
and
invoke another kind of expenence,
however, which testifies to the necessity of reinventing philosophical practice, that of a
paihos of thought (TP 368/377-8), in which thought fuids itself suffel-ing a breakdown ill
find
longer
This
being,
itself meaningfifl.
which it can no
mode of
which I earlier
definitive
suggestedwas
of the trauma of reason. our philosophical double-bind, suggests
another image of thought and different subjective presuppositions about what it meansto
think. This other image is that of the 'ill will'
froin
thought,
the
arises
of
which
is
'malefic
thinker'
experience of a
who actually ýpowerlessto think' either naturally or
Only
(DR
171/130).
'WIlthout
thus
the thinker
philosophically and
presuppositions'
is
begin
intense
intellectual
finds
to
thinking
Crisis and
it impossible
who undergoessuch an
despite
many
again
frustrated efforts
has achieved the Cartesian goal of
14
presupposilfionlessness,
Such a thinker no longer has an image of what it means to think. IAke Artaud,
definite,
for
but
'simply to manage to think
predefined
any
goal,
she stlives not
)ý Sccalso Scidcl, 1976.pp.
.;-15-6.
125
something' (DR 191/147). There is no longer anywhere to begin from for all the
habitual practices of thought have broken down. Sinving, to regain the shattered
perspective of the good will of thought would be a memingless act. The trauma of
reason tinden-ninesthe Platonic/foundationalist image of thought itself, and with it. the
unif,ving, Universal as the destitiv of thowht. The trap set for thouOmtbv external forces
(the objective presuppositions of Platonism) has been sprung. But this nihifistic
overcoming of Platonism contains the seedsof something,else. The problem that thought
has to take up now is one thatis not given to it firom without, but one that is related only
to its own destitute mode of being: how to carrv on thitiking without an image of
thought? Referring to the difference between Eudoxus, the Idiot of Descartes who
representsthe innate good will of thougJit, mid Dostoevsky's Idiot, Delcuze and Guattan
but
idiot
'tt]he
that
the
truth,
old
idiot wanted
new
write
wants to tum the absurd into the
highest power of thought -
In other words, to create' (WP 61/62).
Importantly. this experience constitutes for Deleuze a different forrn of
knowledge to that fetishised by Platonism. The trauma of reason arises becausethought
forced
deten-nination
that
to
the
is
propose
necessary condition of any
is that the
Absolute is incommensurable With rational thouuht. Philosophy is thus forced to
conceive its own existence as ungrounded, that is, as dependent upon a difference that
This
be
thought.
taken
cannot
is a conclusion that overturns
up into rational
foundationalist presuppositions about the essenceof thought, for here thought is without
from
derives
The
thought
thus
the negative proposition
pathos of
any stable meaning.
that the existence of thought is dependent on and constituted by the infinite internal
difference of thought from itself This proposition gives rise to the dilemma between
double-bind.
Nihilism
that
the
trauma
constitutes
as a
is the
rationalism and relativism
difference
from
living
thought
this
of
with
itself- the effort to think is not
condifion of
living
but
the
reasserled
a-,
conditions
constantly
of
continue to make
renounced,
" Bcrgson. 1962. p. 3,59
126
demands upon thought. But no beginning with any enduring consistency can be made.
Nihilism
but
is
by
lack
by
ised.
\irvana-like
IIIII
i
absence,
a
a pure,
of meaning characten
not
,,.
a continual activity that fails to constitute anv stable distinctions that constitute meaning.
In this way, nibilism partakesof the nat-ureof chaos as Deleuze and Guattarl define it, 'an
infinite speedof birth and disappearance'(WP I 11/118).
In using the trauma,of reason to throw a little light on the role of the paihos of
thoup,bt, I waint to suggest here that the aforementioned negative proposition conceming
the existence of thought would be, for Deleuze, knowledge of nihilism. It is not objective
knowledge that can be shown to rest on a transcendentfoundation, but it is knowledge of
the existential condition of thought, of the mode of being of thought. And not just of the
for
Deleuze, if foundafionalism is based on an image of thought that subjects it to
mode:
an impossible task (as Schelling shows), then the idea of a transcendentUniversal as the
being
beyond its paiticular modes has to be suspended.Hence the knowledge
essenceof
of the mode of being (eihos) of thought counts for Deleuze as knowledge of ffie being of
thought as such. To reiterate, however, this is not objective knowledge of the essenceof
thought, but knowledge of its eihos, of the style of lik of thought. Further, it is not the
pure insight of a theoros into the essentialmeaning of this eihos, but is knowledge that is
bound up with the affective side of nihilism, the senseof constraint, of being unable to
go on, the pathos of thought. For Deleuze, it is this aesthetic dimension that,
pat-adoxically. makes this knowledge absolute knowledge, i. e., practical knowledge of
the real, inescapable forces that drive a heteronomous philosophical practice.
Foundafionalist thought cannot deny its dependence upon a radical difference that it
for.
In this way. the exPerlience of nihilism contains practical
cannot consistently account
knowledge of the constraints of an ethos of thought and thus of the uneaning,of nihilism
form
is
Kant's
time
of
another instance in %vhichthis nihilism of
pure and empty
itself
thought becomes known. In arguing that the empi6cal subject can only knoNNitself as
14See also Murphy. 1`993.pp. I 10- 1-
127
determined under the form of time as the a prion, form of inner sense, Kant effectiNcl\
denies the subject knowledge of itself All it can know it that it is determinate. and in
k,",
dejure
determinate
determitiation
it
Ile
determined
this
is
source of
somehow.
is
weing
Kantian
however.
limits
This
the
to
testifies
the
unknowable,
critique.
of
practice of
which then becomes dogmatic in positing a unified transcendental subject on the 'far
side' of the crack of time that prevents the empirical subject fi-om becoming present to
f
(DR 116-8/85-7).
tsel
i
Deleuze's argument witli respect to the practical knowledge of a malefic thinker
is that what it presents is a mlnflnal in'lage of thought. one without Orientation (sens). It
has thus partially freed itself from the heteronomous problem that drives Platonism,
desire
the
to represent in thought the best order of the polis (DR 170-1/130). It
namely.,
has discovered another problem, one that-is immanent in its own minimal image of itself
-
in fact, the problem of all problems for philosophy in DeleuzeýsView: how to create a
For
Deleuze,
has
been
thinking.
this
new ethos of
alreadv
part of the education of
thought towards 'Enlightenment', or rather, disillusionment. However, it seernsto have
left thought without any resources to create with. The education of thought is thus
but,
for
do
by
Thought
Deleuze,
this
it can only
staging
must create itself,
unfinished.
encounterswith other modes of being.
ne Nietzschean and Bergsonian model of education that Deleuze fon-nulatesis
fragmented and aesthetic. The question is how to force thought to begin anew and
how
that
to revitabse
to
is,
its chaotic state,
continue without immediately returning
thought? The key to this model is the paihos of thought, i. e., reconceiving thought, not as
but
that
transcends
iheoros
all pbysical interaction,
as itself irnbued with a
a pure
be
from
be
This
to
to
thought of
affected
capacity
without.
is
not
sensibilitv, an aesthetic
f6tindationalist
has
be
Instead.
to
presuppositions.
it
mechanistically, which would imply
found
difference
has
thought
that
the
ternis
of
within itself and yet cannot
conceivedin
forrn
has
be
Thought
for.
to
to
a
of
violent
undergo
paideja
in
order
re-educated
account
128
('NP 123-4/108-9). This requires a specific kind of singular. sensory -encounter' v-ith an
object, one in which we are faced with an object thm is incommensurable with the
supposedly universal contexts of meaning associated with good sense and common
sense.
Deleuze refers to Plato's distinction in the Republic between encounters with
objects that can in principle he recognised and those which cannot (DR 180-1/138). If an
is
it is consfituted for the subject as commensurablewith
object in principle recOWUsable,
good sense, common sense, and well-trained faculties of intuition. If it is not, then it
belongs to that order of obiects that Plato called simulacra, and which do not belong to
either the order of the Idea as transcendentUniversal, or to the order of the copies of the
Idea that participate in it (DR 167-8/128, LS 295-6/256). The simulacrum is a
habituated
difference,
does
to
the
thresholds of the
problematic
which
violence
individual
in
Dcleuze
learning
to
the
swim order to clarify
sensibility.
example of an
uses
the conception of education implied by the encounter with simulacra. It is only upon
becoming
by
learns
to
the
that
overwhelmed
a
swim suddenly
one really
entenng water
(DR
being
lifted
by
the
sense of vertigo on
waves
-35/22-3,214/165).
This encounter
forces
force
the
the sensibility of
throu0i
the
propagated
waves
infinite vanations of
with
the swimmer to become habituated to new thresholds of actiVity. There is thus no
lead
Deleuzean
to
education,
one
us to the truth of
which would
essential method
Enligbtenment. Instead it Is expenmental, based on the determination to risk unforeseen
Celine's
Bardamu,
be
An
this
rather
model of education might
exemplar of
encounters.
tiMle
than Rousseau's
or Goethe's Wilhelm Meister*
Still, I believe I gained strength listening to such
ffirther,
to
the
things,
go
a strange sort of
strength
deeper
be
down
I'd
to
time
able
Po
even
strength, next
listen
I
hadn't
heard
befoi-c
lower,
to
that
plaints
and
and
129
beyond
because
had
had
difficulty
or
in understanding.,
the plaints we bear there always seem to be others that
we haven't yet heard or mdersitood-'ý
Philosophy, then, has to consist initially in forcing thought to risk encounters
with other modes of being that are incommensurable with it, that is. in findinp
'mediators' for thougbt (N 168-71/123-5). In order to be sufficient to force thought to
think and give itself meaning and direction, these mediators have to be either practices
that are external to pbilosopby (as wben Deleuze encounters Francis Bacon and comes
away with the new concept of the 'percept' and new analyses of the funcfioning of
sensibility) or philosophical practices that attempt to think an ontology of Absolute
Difference, as opposed to Platonic practices that think being, in terms of transcendent
identifies. Nibilism forces tbouat to recognise its real dependenceon difference, and
this recognition as we saw constitutes a kind of practical knowledge. The only operation
is
this
consistent with
insight to realise philosophy as an ontology of the kind of being
that is encounteredin nihilism. I'lus would be to transfonn passivephilosophical nihilism
into activity. Hence thought has to seek out among philosophical practices those ethoi
incommensurable
Platonic
to
thitilk
that
thought. In this way,
which attempt
which is
with
pbilosopbical concepts wiU be encounteredthat act as simulacra, forcing tbougbt to tbink
Absolute Difference, which appearedto be the basic presupposition and thus the internal
hi-nit of Platonic tbouebt, and therefore literally imtbinkable for it. bi this way, and as I
Bergson's
'Intuition", that which seemsto transcend thought
to
above
regard
noted
with
as unknowable (the Absolute) is not essentially unthinkable (which implies contradiction)
but only unthinkable in relation to a specific heteronomous practice. If this practice is
transfon-ned, then the immanence of the unconditioned (.Absolute Difference) in that
be
(DR
182/140).
Deleuze
Bergson,
thus
grasped
can
seeks
out
conditions
which it
15
pp. 318-9.
130
Spinoza, Nietzsche ei al., in order to pass through a philosophical apprenticeship in
faced
The
thus
whicb a new practice of thought Is engendered.
problem of creation is
head on.
11inking will thus pass fTom a state of lack (the knowledge of the absenceof
foundation.) to a new and singular thought of Absolute Difference in which thinking has
affin-ned its own difference from or lack of identity with itself as its own excessive
being. 'Mis occurs a) through exPenmenting With mediators and b) reallsing the thought
of Absolute Difference in a new fon-n. The inequality of thought with itself remains, but
is lived differently,
16
In this way, thought thinks the
according to a new ethos.
unconditioned transcendental condition of its activity immanently, that is, without
presupposing that this unconditioned real difference is itself conditioned by a
transcendentUniversal. In this way, the new ethos of thought that develops an ontolop,
difference
be
both
its
of
capable of explaining
own emergence and that of other
will
Platomsm.
Consequently,
distinction
between
dogmatism
practices, such as
a new
and
its
be
iven
Platonism
that
established,
always presupposes own reality
philosophy can
and thus cannot explain it.
An ontology of difference is a thinking of being as Owund,
that which is
Difference
In
Absolute
transcendent
as its unique object,
ground.
affirming
without a
thought is claiming not the transcendent,but the purely immanent, not the eternal, but
that which moves with infinite speed (i. e., that which cannot be arrested in a single
but
is
Deleuzean
Hence
juris,
there
thought).
one that
quid
a
quaestio
perception or
by
Kantian
'What
(Platonic)
thought
the
claims
right, what it selects,is
versionsubverts
4-0/'37).
Thought
(WP
the
the
claims the
movement of
infinite'
infinite movement or
Universal,
but
be
determine
to
the
the
transcendent
to
essential
meaning
of
right, not
without essence, instead of interminablv seeking its essenceposited as a transcendent
foundation of real difference. The objective (i. e., external) condition of determination is
131
no longer thought of as a fixed transcendent.but as a movement of difference acro,ýs a
tTanscendentalfield of conditions, as when Platonism is linked with the training of bodies
in the polis. The new direction of thought presupposesonly the I 4ýgrund of the nfinite
variation of Absolute Difference as the movement from which thought begins: Deleuze
concurs with Schelling, that, before any thought of being, there is the beine of thought,
difference
from itself (DR 183-4/141'). This claim to be able to trace the
which is its
itifinity movement of real difference will serve as the 'foundation' for an evaluative
distinction between a 'beteronomous' (dogmatic) and an 'autonomous' (ICntical) image
of thought. As Deleuze put it in an interview, 'if we're so oppressed, it's becauseour
movement's being restricted, not because our eternal values are being violated' (IN
166/122).
A thinking that thinks its own limit in such a way as to be able to immanently
trace its real conditions has much in common with Bergsonjan intuition. In thinking, this
limit, it retains a connection to its pathos, and thus refuses to renounce its aesthetic
aspectin favour of the 'innocent' thought of a theoros. It thus exceedsits own habituated
thresholds: in tracing the real movements of difference that give rise to phenomena,i. e.,
itself
ically,
be
The ontology upon
to
ecstatic
in analySing,phenomena onto]091
it will
Hence
based
thought.
the
this
are
ecstatic
such
analvses
establish
will
ethos within
which
be
thinkable according to this aesthetic
objective conditions of phenomena will
known
foundationalist
if
be
thought,
they
objectively
as
even
cannot
remodelling of
17
Absolute
Difference
does
In
this
thinking
the
as
method intendsunconditioned
way,
fliings-In-fliemselves.
knowledge
Kanfian
Absolute
of
restrictions on
not infTinge
Difference is not a concept of the Absolute as such, which reduces it to a transcendent
incarnated
form
knowledge
being
Rather,
the
of
as a
of practical
of
it is always
unity.
To
tracing.
thought, an activity of
mark this absolute knowledge as different from that
16On these two modes of mcquality. and the -crack' separating them. see CARI 19- " '13,x8-9 1. and cf. Ni w-ph%
ff.
06
op. Cit. esp. pp
17Baugh. op. cit p, 17.
132
claimed by the theoros, which is rooted in the supposedly wanscendentun,tv of the
concept, Deleuze and Guattan refer to it as a djogram (.TP 176-7/141-2,).
We now need to consider some aspectsof the ontology Deleuze develops in DR.
in order to see bow the analysis of phenomena can proceed, and to thus flesh out the
meaning of transcendental empiricism so we can understand how Deleuze secures his
distinction between dogmatism and this ahos of pbilosopby. Deleuze follows Scbelling
and Leibniz in seeing conscious experience as the outgrowth of problematically
differentiated unconsciousforms of 'expenence' that are u-nmanentin Consciousness,and
18
developing
thus
a natumra-listic
ontology, However, in DR this ontology is developed
Bergsonjan
lines as a novel account of the relation between virtual conditions of
along
differentiafion and actual differenciation, a philosophical practice driven by the problem
of how to constitute a creative eihos of thought.
Deleuze's differential ontology is basedupon the Berusomannotion of tendency,
19
which it employs to explain real difference- A tendency of development js the past of a
phenomenon which, in line with Bergson's thought, is immanent in or actively continues
to insist in the present of the phenomenon.As suck the being of a tendency is Virtual (the
being of m6 on) rather than actual or possible- Such a tendency is the movement of
Absolute Difference, which differentiates itself as a line of development from other
tendencies, and differenciates itself as the actual detenninations of a phenomenon that,
history
There
linear,
their
the
the
thus
own,
on
constitute
of
phenomenon.
viewed
no
is
temporal ground-cmisequentrelation here between virtual and actual, as if the virtual was
a transcendentSubstancethat enfolded all the possibledeterminationsof itself, positing
them through a negative operation of self-limitation. 'A thing in itself and in its true
before
83).
(ICD
tendency
the
the
of
a
of
a
expression
it
effect
cause'
nature is
is
Deleuze adopts from Bergson the charactensation of tendenciesas supenor and
differences
Difference.
depending
(.
Absolute
they
)
on
Implicate
whetheiin nature
inferior,
133
or differences in degree (relative difference). The fonner are superior because they are
themselves the sufficient reason of differences in degree. This Is because they include
within themselves their own difference in nature from differences in degree, whereas the
converseis not the case.Differencesin nature externallsethemselvesin differencesin
degree: duration 'relaxes' and becomes spatialised or extended. The virtual past is thus
not an inert entity witbout an internal active principle, unRe a transcendentSubstance.
Tendenciesactively differentiate themselves from each other, because they differ
internally from themselves, and this virtual activity is thus the sufficient reason of actual
phenomena. Nevertheless, the passage of the virtual into actuality is thus not
predetermined by the content of the virtual, as there is no transcendent content to the
is
its
differentiation.
There is thus no relation
that
the
given
outside
virtual
of
process of
internal
between
the virtual and the actual (organisms do not, for
of
resemblance
exwnple, resemble theff genetic codes (DR 239-40/184-5))., whick as we have seen, is
not the casewith the circular explanations of determination provided by foundationalism.
There is no necessary development of the content of the act"
from
rwming
past to
future, for the future unfolding of the virtual depends solely on the difference in nature
betweenwhat is actualand the virtual dimensionof this actual,and is thus unforeseeable.
This allows us to understandthe senseIn wbich Deleuze'sontology is a transcendental
flie
be
The
that
traced in actual
tendencies
empiricism.
make up
virtual can only
-I.phenomena.
Nevertheless,
these
tendencies
remain
transcendental,
being
differ
from
in
different
in
they
themselves
the
actual,
as
nature
incornniensurable with or
kind from themselves.,whereas the actual tends to externalise these differences as
differences in degree. In this sense,the actual is determined by the virtual, or the
determined
by
but
by
the
the
the
transcendental,
virtual is simultaneously
empirical
become
Given
do
'visible'.
tendencies
that
through
actualisation
virtual
actual, as only
lg On Lcibruz, sec esp. DR '175-W 134,325W253, on the gencsisof consciousexpcnenccsce also Smith,
2
1996.pp. 35-9.
For fullex wcounts. seee g. Anscll-PcarsorL1999,and Boundas. 1996.
1
134
the sufficient reason of the actual is Absolute Difference, Deleuze's ontology in DR is
not an ontology of knowable essences,but one of creative being.
Further, if thought is tracing these tendencies through its own being, which is
Absolute Difference, then it is not simply 'dmen' by the virtual past, but is itself acfiN-e
differentiating
those tendenciesthat are already active. Thought does not, then, belong
in
to the past or to eternity, but to the future, for it intervenes in the past. This is
for
instance, by Deleuze's ovai philosophical differentiation of thinkers in
exemplified,
be
from
takes
their 'official' existence as historical figures whose value
an interest
whom
derives from their 'participation' in the essence of philosophy, with Spinoza being
perhaps the pnme example. By making connections between empirical philosophical
practices without regard to the necessaryprocessesof descent that have traditionally been
traced by philosopbers of history. Deleuze clianges an image of thouglit in the present by
Thought
has
the
tendencies
the
the ability, by thinking the internal
retracing
of
past.
difference of its own being, to ascendto a thought of difference, as expressedin the idea
of a virtual tendency, that in turn allows it to 'descend' to the actual, tracing its genesis
and thus accounting for its determination. By affin-ning, the substantiality of Absolute
Difference, thought thus becomes an agent of change and creation in the present At the
ý2"
same time, this can only occur in relation to tendencies that are afready present and are
21
difference.
actualised.in 'mediators, practices which are am-enableto the thinking of
In this way, Deleuzean thought, like Bergsoman intuition, claims to be tracing
is
difference.
The
this
tracing
of
neither a concept of essence
product
real movements of
for
diagram
becoming
but
history,
the
of a phenomenon, which
a
of
nor a concept of
Deleuze is real in that it affinns the incommensurability that thought finds within its own
being as the meaning of being itself, yet is at the same time fictive in that the
interventions of thought within the actual are creative retracings of the becoming of the
Nietzschmn
DR
3
11
Sce
Dcleuzz's
(esp.
the
cternal
of
-durn
in
wcoynt
-20
-1
thought of the future.
41 -44),
'untimck
uh-c-,,
21CF Bell, 1993,p- 379 on ffic needfor a thougM of botb future and paq for a creative'imageof thought, and
-.
Dclcuz-c'sremarkson his own 'history' of philosophy in N 15/0-7.
135
aettial,that makenew distinctionsvisible in what hasbeenacceptedas the history of a set
of phenomen&22Tbenew image of thought that Dejeuzeseeksto realise is a thought
without essence, and the actual reallsatiOn of this image we have surveyed is his
ontology, a doctrine of being without essencewhich allows accounts of real phenomena
to be given. Tracing the becoming of phenomena in this way is thus to explain their
genesis by 'subsuming' them under a 'higber' point of view. This pomt of view is not,
however, that of a theoros who possessesthe perfect concept of a transcendentUniversal
in which all real difference can be shown to be included, but that of a malefic thinker
who traces the immanent movement of real difference in a diagram. The difference
between these two elhoj is thus a matter of their respective fitness to think immanence,
the infinite movement of difference in virtual and actuaL which is complicated by the
tracings of thought. Whereas the former can only follow the pre-given and thus
heteronomous orientation of a problem that forces a double movement away from and
towards a transcendentfoundation, the latter, by affirming witb the aid of mediators the
problem of creation, rises to diink the unilinear movement of real difference. Thanks to
the fact that thouglit is capable, in moments of crisis, of discovering its difference from
itself as the internal limit of its activity, it is capable of affirming the problem of how to
its
de
createas
own jure problem, a problem that is Immanentin it as its onentation
towards a (for Deleuze) genuinely self-determining diinking.
Hence the Deleuzean distinction between dogmatism and philosopby can now be
basis
Difference.
'Philosophy'
Absolute
the
the
on
of
ontology
of
is the
understood
becoming
the
the
of phenomena so as to
retracing of
realisation in praclice of
virtual
distinguish them from eachother, not accordingto their essence,but accordingto their
dominant
Platonism
tendency immanent in real philosophical
tendency.
is a
overall
Fichte
Schelling
is
(as
Kant,
tendencies
also
mixed
other
and
with
practices,which
when
I On this fictive aspect, see Deleuze-s remmts on die triumph of simulacra over essences (DR 1678/128), and tmnscendental empiricism as 'a kind of science fiction' (DR 3,,,x-x), or, as Ronald
Bogue (1989, p. 159) has )'t, the modelling of 'imaginary woTids' based on parado: ucaJ concepts.
136
posit a transcendental difference within the subject), which can itself be related to real
non-philosopblcal practices that constitute its own tendency of becoming (the processes
in which bodies are trained, the political tendencies of a society
is
in which phi-losophy
practised, etc.). 'Modern', 'enlightened" philosophy is also a tendency, whicb Deleuze
differentiates from Platonism by an active tracing of its becoming, through Lucretius,
Spinoza, Bergson ei al., and whose tendency is marked by the thinking of differences in
nature as absolute, i. e., as constituting the nature of being-in-itself PlatoMc philosophical
practices on the other band are marked by their thinking of differences in degree as
absolute: 'real' difference is thought of as being established between entities or forms
CLU
I-
that realise,to a degree,the UnItyof a transcendentUniversal. Their resemblanceto this
Universal, the amount of its perfection they express, is hierarchically ordered, and
maximised in philosophy, whose essencesupposedly contains the Universal itself
Deleuze's claims that his ontology (transcendental empiricism) enables the
differences between actual practices to be traced via the transcendental movement of
difference, which allows local, non-transcendent explanations of their genesis to be
constructed. I'lie genesis of practices which are illusory, i. e., practices that take the reality
of their own internal Absolute Difference to be unreal (e.g., Schefling's negative
-1is
is
immanent
that
thus
to the internal movement of being itself,
a
process
philosopby),
for Deleuzeargues,like Bergson,that differencesin nature(AbsoluteDifference) are the
23
identity.
differences
degree
defined
Such
that are
sufficient reasonof
In
in terInSof
illusory practices produce illusions that are both ontological and transcendental, for they
in
itself
Nevertheless,
difference
being
is
the
this
thinking
of
are immanent
paradox
of
that although, for Deleuze, it t1finksthe real, it only does so insofar as it is simultaneously
intervenes
in
in
fictive
that
the
thinking,
one
past order to recreatethe present.it thus
a
'objective"
(i.
the
thinks
conditions
of
phenomena
e., the active virtual or the
only
far
it
does
difference)
'subjectively',
in
that
so
as
in
so
of
is, order to realise a
movement
13
5,125
HardtSee
n-2.
pp.
op. ca.
also
-
137
new difference, such as that between Platonism and Deleuze's
modemism'. I would argue, then, that Deleuze's disfinction bet\ýeen philosophy and
doi4matism seeks to overcome the trauma of Platonic or foundationalist reason Via a
perv,erwýv foundationalist move. The traumatic discovery by philosophy of thought's
lack of coincidence with itself can actually enable thouOt to realise itself as a selt'determining practice on the basis of a problem that is immanent in this discovery itself.
This problem is how to give meaning to a thought without essence,or more simply, how
to reallse pbilosopby as a crealive actiVltv. Hence Deleuze's new image of tbought,
he
differential
his
to
attempts
realise
in
a
ontology,
and
manifold tracings of the
which
becomings of phenomena, both on his own and with Guattari, are practices which, as
dogmatism.
difference
between
Tbey
to
the
practices, are meant realise
philosophy and
are thus exemplars of a practical attitude, rather than representationsof a universal which
between
Deleuzean
The
difference
have
by
texts.
to
access
simply
reading
we can
.philosophy
-I-,
and dogrnatism is a problem of the creation of meaning, not of the
ktiowledge of essence,mid is only realised as a difference when it is practically reallsed:
Lit is not enough to say, -Loný, live the multiple", difficult as it is to raise that crv [ ] The
...
displaced
Deleuze's
be
I
I'
(TP
13/6).
Foundationalism
thus
is
in
made ...
multiple must
fact
Ungrund,
is
foundation
by
that
true
a
a selfpositing, as ground a
practice
differentiating difference. The making of the difference between philosophy and
dogmatism requires a practical construction of the meaning of this distinction, wbich can
but
difference,
be
longer
one which is
no
viewed as an eternally secure. essential
continualiv subject to practical vanation.
To sum up: Deleuze seesnihillsm as the outcome of a partictilar tendency within
thinking, which manifests itself in Platonic philosophical practices that are not equal to
Schelling
difference
that,
the
showed, is their own
as
probleinafic
the task of thinking
difference,
Nbsolute
In
'tarne'
that
the
to
assume
sucli
practices
is
order
condition.
But
the
traurna
the
thought.
of reason,
expenence
of
as
nihifism.
in
commensurable with
138
where this assumption is overturned, leads for Deleuze to a potentially positive outcome.
When thought finds itself confronted with its
A itself, it faces the (for
" own dissonanceVIII
Deleuze) undeniable fact that this difference is the minimal presupposition of any
practice of thinking. To supposethat the essentialtask Of thought is to understandin what
disinterested knowledge consists is to ignore this fact. The problem that confronts
thought in the experience of nibilism is, for Deleuze, an autonomous and immanent one,
as opposed to the heteronomous tasks accepted by Platonism. This is because it is
immanent to the experience of difference that constitutes the basis of nihilism. Nihilistic
thought has to try to create itself anew according to a stable practice of thinking, which
be
irreducible
difference
that
the
can only
one
cbaracter of
recognises
and attempts to
construct a philosophical practice that can trace the movement of real difference within
empirical phenomena. Such a practice would be absolutely immanent to being, ratbeithan positing be'Ing under a transcendentform of identity and as relatively immanent in
is
by
his
Hegel,
As
taken
often
critics
empirical phenomena.
we shall now see,
who
(including Deleuze) to be a foundationalist, a Platonic fliinker of relative immanence,
in
terms of absolute immanence, of a thinking that
also conceives of genuine philosophy
avoids positing transcendence.
139
Chapter Five
Hegel's Critique of Representational Consciousness
i) Introductkm
Deleuze, as we have seen,attempts to overcome foundafionalism and its doublebinds by renouncing, like Bergson, and like Scbelling in his more anfifoundationalist,
'Deleuzean' moments (see previous chapter), the Kantian paradigm of transcendental
in
favour
determination.
the
conditioningof an ontological account of
real geneSisof
This was in one sensea response to the recurrent difficulties that critical thinking has
faced in the post-Gen-nanIdealist pefiod right up to the present, causedby its failure to
take the nibilism of the trauma of reason seriously enough. Taking Marx as an example,
bow
difficult
we saw
foundationalist
'image' of what philosophy.
it was, given a ceTtain
4science'or critical tbinking essentially is, to avoid simply presupposing absolute or a
pri .ori knowledge of the real, wben any n Ot to such knowledge was precisely wbat was
Deleuze
by
at issue.
responds
viewing this image of philosophy ('Platonism') as an
illusion inherent in the existential conditions of thought, which can be overcome by
changing our model of philosophy as a practice of thinking.
The task for Deleuzean thoup-btis to avoid all presuppositions about the nature
Universal,
knowledge
desfinv
transcendent
thoup-ht
that
the
of a
and
of
impIv
which is
Instead
be
their
the
the
to
of this
real as
ground.
articulations of
supposed
immanent in
a-,
in
'relative
the
the phjlosophcr is required
the
r
posited
immanence" of
unconditioned
to force thougbt to become equal to the absolute immanence of real difference itself, bv
for
difference
Deleuze,
that,
terms
the
of
ungrounded movement of
recasfing ontology in
determination,
by
tbe
of
all
and
using this ontology as a means of
sufficient reason
is
bv
This
'descent'
the
tracinR the
of empincal phenomena.
requirement is grounded'
negative, stiýjective experience of
I
foundationalist
the difference of
thought from
itself that
thought undergoes when approaching its limits. The rc,ýulfini-,,decav of
140
the meaning of foundationalist philosophy presses home the task of using this vendirection)
tbougbt.
(meaning,!
basis
into
expenience as the
of a re-injection of sens
Pbilosophy becomes a matter of affirming throuO practical acti. 1ty the immanence of
the incommensurable 'hiOer'
Absolute in experience. with this redefinition of
in
but
being
Universal,
timeless
a singular expenence of
philosophy
grounded, not in a
knowledge'
loss
kind
'absolute
that
possible.
cnsis, a
of essence,
of
nevertbelessmakes a
now want to argue that, if we go back to the beginning of tbc bistorical period
find
foundationalist
has
been
the
crisis,
can
conception of philosophy
in
we
in which
foundational
to
another example of an attempt reabsean anti
ist version of critical thought
that remains committed to the idea that thia-ing the Absolute is necessaryfor any sucb
Schelfing
This
by
Hegel.
the
time
at
same
as
endeavour.
attempt was made
was
ftom
Chapter
foundationallsm
I
Hegel
in
Within. omitted any mention of
undermining
Two so as to be able to trace cleariv this intemal dvnamic of foundationalism which I
have used to elucidate Deletize's thought. In the course of this and the next two chapters I
features
in
has
Hegel's
to
that
common with
many strategic
approach crifique
will show
Deleuze's, before examining the differences between their respective critiques of
foundationallsmin the concludingcliapter, in order to assesstheir respectivesuccessin
overcoming the trauma of reason.
Central to this re-examination of Hegel is the clwm that Hegel's Kantian
logic,
to
the
as againstthe specialintuitions
of
importanceepistemological
commitment
Kant
by
Scbelling
Fichte,
of
to
also
critical
in a way
and others, is nevertheless
appealed
by
Schelling,
Bergson
turn
the
that is consonant with
camed out variously
ontological
1
Hegel
distinguish
between
This
Deleuze.
the
that
of
reading
claim requires
we
and
fail
his
influential
here
to
take
the
that
interpretations
of
work
pre,,
lous
and
purstied
I The
for
by
Rose
Hegel
11
98011,
Kant
(
affirmed
such
as
recent
is
interpreters
of
importance
floulgate (1986,1991),
ki2ek
(19933), Maker (1995), Pinkard (1995) and Dusing
Pippin (1989),
(1995,1977)ý
141
did.
himself
Hegel
I
incoherence
foundationalism
think
problem of the
as senously as
of
In addition, we must take into account the enticisms of Hegel advanced by both
Schelling and Deleuze and respond to them, In order to delineate Hegel's unique reply to
foundational ism. Hegel's Absolute Knowing is not, I shall maintain, mere knowledge of
the forms under which thought must necessarily think being. This would be to agree with
the later Sebelling's assessmentof flegel, and to reduce Begelian logic to the status of
being
deduces
determinations
the
negative philosophy, which
of
possible
real without
it
knowledge
41_2
Nor
that
they
to
are
alsoable
show
actu.
Is
of a transcendent
metaphysical substance, which, like the Absolute as Schelling conceives it in the
-Pbiloscohy of Identity, grounds all real difference as internally related to it through the
its
is
necessaryprocess of
self-limitation, and which
somehow given to thought as a
3
foundation
Hcgel avoids these alternatives becausehe sees Absolute Knowing
positive
as knowledge of the structure of Being that does not posit Being as only determinate Ibr
Kantian
determinate
(as
a
phenomenon), or as a metaphysically
us
substance,a thing-initself of some kind. Our first task is to show how such a non-foundational, ontological
reading of Hegelian Absolute Knowledge can beemeaningful. nis
Will require that we
is
in
foundationallst
his
the
theory.
conducted
examine
extended critique of
which
Phenomenologv.
.6
The
Idea
Phenomenolo&
of
a
ii)
For Hegel, Absolute Knowledge, the standpoint of genuine philosophy, is
first
has
be
begins
logic.
This
in
to
that
standpoint
system
embodied a philosophical
with
habitual
This
however.
the
entails a process of educatior4 aimed at overcoming
attainecL
is
definitive
its
the
that
consciousness
of
world
view of
assuranceof representational
2 For a seminalversion of this negative reading, seeHartmann, 1976,esp. p- 106.
This is the Hegel of the British Idealists (see Russe-fl'scomments(1995, pp. 701-1-5)),but is also
Hegel's
Absolute
1975)
(
Taylor's
of
reading
as a real, substantiallZrOund.
reminiscentof
142
experience. Hegel tbus affirins that a critique of presuppositions is a necessan, part of
attaining a genuinely pbIloso-pbleal viewpoint. He also anficipates Deleuze by arguing
that this critique will entail overturning, not certain accidental errors or partiCular
unquestioned babits, but a whole 'imnc'
be
to
think,
thought,
and
of what it means
of
affirms that this image infects both 'natural' consciousnessand philosophy. Further. this
image is akind of transcendentalillusion: as with Deletize's account of Platonism, Hegel
for
domatism
Cabstract' or finite thinking that takes itself to be absolute)
account
will
ontologically as an illusory aspect of being itself, as we will see in the following
chapters.I'lie education of representationalconsciousnessthat takes us to this standpoint
is undertakenIll the
p&4
Hegel begins the Introduction to the PS by meditating on the requirement that
for
thought,
the discovery of trutb, should be Critical of itself
critical
as an instrument
above all. This already assumesa difference between thought and what it knows. It is this
consciousness of
distinction
between subject and
object
that
characterises
It
representationalconsciousness. was the conditions of possibility of this consciousness
form
as a
of real knowledge that Kant, Fichte and Schelling were concernedwith, as we
saw. Witb this in n-tind, Ficbte and ScheUMP-responded to Kant's formal deduction of
these conditions by affin-ning the need for a decisive break ývith the standpoint of
it.
in
Without the unconditioned as the
to
ground
representational consciousness order
Kant's
predicament, in whicb the
remain
in
ultimate condition of possibility, we wotAd
forms
However,
this move proved
the
of our experience was unknowable.
necessity of
form
it
determined
because
the
as the
was
problematic
unconditioned, in wbatever
be
presupposedas this necessan, ground in
necessaryground of experience, could only
forms
known
familiar
than
to
of
experience,
rather
unconditionally as such.
relatioin our
4 The role of the PS in relation to the Systernhas, histoncEdly,been an object of controversy see
P6ggeler, 1993, pp. 174-85. Even Hegel's own view altered somewhat (ibid. p. 224) However,
for a statementthat remainedunalteredeven in the final version of the SL, seeSL 1,421-3/48-9ý
14"
This inevitable circularity became in Deleuze's thought charactenstic of a -N-holc
recumng practice of tbought, in wbicb the Absolute Is posited as resembling the content
of familiar beliefs about experience.
For Deleuze, the issue regarding the Absolute is how to th, tik it as a Schelfingian
'bigher' Absolute, that Is, as incommensurablewitb that wbich it conditions, as genuinely
neither subject nor object, etc., and yet how this thought can be a kind of 'knowing' that
is creative rather than contemplative or reflective, where both these latter images of
thought imply a transcendent Ufflversal that thought strives to know but can only
illusory
presupposeas an
ground. For Hegel too, tb-evl
standpoint of philosovily requires a
refusal of
the distinctions
consciousness. This will
and oppositions
that characterise representational
enable us to comprehend the Absolute as a 'neither-nor'
structure (Spirit), not because thoug-lit has discovered a transcendent, substantial
Universal that grounds the possibility and necessity of real difference, but because
genuinely philosophical thougbt knows itself to be being that is insofar as it immanenfly
deteri-ninesitself (PS 25/14 §25). As we shall see in the next chapter,the relation of
structures of otbemess to this immanent process of self-detennination will be crucial for
this study.
Unlike Fichte and Schelling, Hegel sees the turn against representational
consciousnessasjustified, not by an appeal to a special intuition in which the Absolute is
known immediately, but by the structure of representational consciousnessitself This
structure is self-contradictory, for it is characteristic of all detenninations of
(EL
both
they
that
are
immediate and mediated
consciousness
PS 57-8/41, §67, SL
66/68). For example, if an object is known, then this k-nowledge has to include both
between
The
these two aspectsis necessarib.,circular, as the
relation
proof and certainty.
Fichtean and Schellingian systems demonstrate. In these systems, the intuitive certainty
Absolute
the
the
qua condition of experience requires proof if this
nature of
as to
Absolute is to tv olýjectivelv known as the ground of the necessityOf OUTexpenence. Yet
144
the method of proof turns out to be an infimte deduction, and possessesno foundafion
except the initial certainty. In this way, the mediafion of the intuitive certainty by proof
and the immediacy of the certainty that justifies the method of proof are both needed as
foundations of knowledge. But if both are essentialand foundational. then neither can be,
for tbey are eacb posited as the foundation of one another, as the means througb wbicb
the other is known. This circularity, which gives rise to the traurna of reason in which
foundationalism finds itself unable to continue, is, for Hegel, based on the conviction
that the structure of representational consciousnesswhich cbaracterisesall our familial,
conscious expeiience, and which
be
could
said
i to constitute the 'famil' iahity' of
this expenence itself, i. e., the fijndamental ftarnework in wbich expeneince makes sense
for us, must be relied upon as the basis of philosophy's image of itself
It can be argued that Hegel was even in his earliest Writings interested in the
possible untenability of foundational]sm, given its dependenceon habitual, unquestioned
structures of expenence. From bis FrankfuTt penod (1797-1799) on, be was, along WItb
his fiiend Schelling, concemed with the legitimacy of Kant's distinction between
Vernunji and Vervand., and the possibility of oklective knowledge of the unconditional.
In this period, Hegel and Schelling were influenced by their colleague H61derfin's
Hegel
deten-nined
Fichte's
definition
Absolute
the
the
also
of
absolute suý:Ject.
critique of
it
Being
(Sein),
a systematic role as the unconditional
and gave
as immediate
5
Chapter
As
Two,
knowledge.
this
saw
III
and
analyfic
we
of
synthetic
presupposition
leads to the view that all detertninate knowledge, even the Fichtean subject's supposedly
depend
itself
determinately
subjective, must
upon a selfas
immediate recognition of
first
di'vision
identity
Absolute
the
that
makes
act
of
and
an
absolute
abbiding
deten-ninable. As Klaus DfiSing shows, the central problem for Hegel throughout this
fliit
in
before
PS
hlch
Jena
lie
to
time
the
one
is a similar
spent
writing
%-.,
period and
how
defined
demonstrate
Scbelling:
Absolute,
Fichte
to
that
the
as the
and
plagued
5 Dusing, 1976, pp. 43-4,49- 50, Fujita, 1985, pp. 79-8 1.
145
unconditional condition of all knowledge. can be known immediately or in itselfbeyond
this relation to determinate forms of knowledge. as a genuinely immediate unity that is
also the real foundation or ground of experience.6 In the Frankfurt ftagment 'Glauben
i
und Sein', for example. faith is assigned the role of kno wing
the Absolute. But th'is
repeats in another form the Fichtean and Schellingian aporia: one must presupposethat
the Absolute is known immediately (but subjectively) as the unconditional foundation in
order to begin, but by doing this, one indefinitely postpones the final, objective
for the immediacy of the beginning simply reinforces the
justification of this beginning,
4
difference between mediated, conditioned fon-nsof proof and unconditioned immediacy.
This problem of the circular interdependence of immediacy and mediation is
thus of primary concern to Hegel, as a basic, inescapable difficulty
for the
foundationalist philosophies of his time, 7 To understand how the PS addresses this
problem Ma way that owes much to Kant's influence, we must bepin with the early Jena
period (1801-4), wben liege] becomes explicitly interested in this problem, and wben bis
critique of his contemporaries, and particularly of Fichte and Schelling, begins to
develop as a Kantian reflection on the i-ole of logic in relation to a system of knowledge,
'
being
bound
foundationalist
KantiaMsm.
wMst also
aspectsof
up with a entique of the
Hegel later cbaracterised.Kantianism as being 'overawed by the object', which
resulted in it being 'left with the residue of a thing-in-itself, an infinite obstacle, as a
beyond' (SL 1,45/51). Hegel alludes here to certain presuppositions about experience,
is
left
by
Kant
think,
the
to
the
and
post-Kantians.
meaning
of
what
unquestioned
about
ý1ý
The central asswnption bere is that of the ultimacy of representationalconsciousness,or
6
DUsing, 1976, pp. 51-), 81-3,14-37-5,also 1969, p. 118-9.
7 Hegel's awarenessof this problem thus led him away ftom HoldeTfimseeMenTich,1971a-,p- 11,
p. 29., pp. 35-6.
On
begins
109ff.
Schellingy
here,
liegelýs
DiIsing, I Q76.pp. 211
the
that
e\idence
critique
of
see
).
--3
Fujita, op. cit., pp. 149-50,156-60.
146
in other words, that this structure is representative of the meaning of thought as such.
This leads to the assumpfion that thought is essentially finite, defined in opposition to an
object of which it is neverthelesssupposedto have knowledge. Out of this contradiction
J
anses the question of the unity of representationand reality. and an image of pbIlosopby
as the search for an immediately certain foundation of this unity is therefore necessary.
But bow, Hegel asks, can this vocation of philosophy itself, based on a structure
of experience which is simply accepted as givem be justified? For Hegel, this selfunderstanding of pbilosopby is well representedby its image of itself as an ultimately
impartial, critical judge of the legifimacv of representations of the real, which was
by
the Enlightenment's critique of traditional authority. In 1802, he
consolidated
describes contemporary philosophy as 'nothing but the culture of reflection raised to a
system' (FK 322/64). In the Enlightenment, the emphasis on the empincal, intended to
combat the excessesof rationalism as well as those of superstition, means that wben
thougbt inevitably turns to self-reflexively critique its own representations,tbe criteria for
this critique are derived from familiar empirical experience (IFK 318-9/60).
Kant and Ficbte reacted to this movement by redefining, the task of philosopby
on the basis of altered conceptions of the nature of thinking. For Hegel, however, each in
his own way defines thought as deterinined by the empirical. Their respective
philosophies base themselveson notions of a self-Idenfical.and universal concept that, by
fonnally
rigbt,
but
incal
instances,
subsumes all empi
wbicb is still opposed to finite
empirical content to which it, in terms of its content, can only be approximate. There is
always a contingency or difference which these stndpoint-s cannot in principle account
for (Kant's reliance on presuppositions about the real content of experience or Fichte's
Gcffihý. Reason thus acquires what it takes to be its essential task by accepting its
difference from the empirical as given, thus subjecting itself to an infinite labour (FK
320-2/62-3') that can never be complete. For Hegel, this purely conceptual infinite 'is
itself not the truth since III
unable to consume and consummate finitude [die
147
Endlichkeii aqf-4uzehrenl'(FK 324ý"66).The distinction between infinite and finite reason
here, or between pure and empirical reason is weighted in favour of the finite or
empincal. The infinite concept is infinite because it is not finite. and is therefore
conditioned by the finite, rather than being genuinely infinite or unconditioned.
Consequently we can see that, for Hegel, if we attempt to reflexively detennine
the conditions of possibility for expenence, the result Will necessarily reflect our
assumptionsabout experience. Primary among,these assumptionsis that of the difference
between subject and object that defines repi-esentationai consciousness. It is this
assumption that, as noted above, creates an epistemological problem that seems to
require a foundationallst solution. In this way, the foundation will inevitabiy reflect in its
form the identitv of subject and object, and in its content, modes of objectivity and
subjectivity that we are familiar with from experience. Like Deleuze, tben, Hegel
discovers that the positing of a relation of resemblance between a transcendent or
foundationalist
is
For
thougbt.
the
of
conditioned
cbaracteristic
abbstractcondition and
formal
Kant's
the
identity of subject and obiect
example,
unity of apperception reflects
but
fori-nal
knowing,
the
the
thus
possibility of
establishes
in my consciousness,and
determinations of this unity are simply read off other accounts of experience that are
Schelling,
Fichte
Absolute
And
the
is posited as the
and
as
Vven.
accepted
with
but
between
foundation
distinctions
subiect and object,
of all
unconditional unity and
forms
(the
it
deriving
totality
the
to
of
of our experience,) that Will
content
when comes
foundation
the
of all experience, this process is unending,,with
objective
establish it as
it
identity
distinction
between
the
the
pure
and
real
is meant to
that
the result
relation
in
flunkers
Both
becomes
terms
then
this
of a
concelve
of
relafion
problematic.
ground
leaving
difference,
that
their
they
the
project,
content
undennines
which
primordial
familiar
Absolute
for
the
as a merely subjectively valid reflection of our
construct
'first
Schelling"s
of
a
creation'.
construction
experience, as in
149
For Hegel, then, foundationalism, in remaining tied to the structure of
representational consciousness,must always presupposesomething about the constitution
of experience, an unquestionednominal definition of experience that
be reflected in
the foundation that it deduces. If this is the case, thinks liege]. then the only alternative
for thought is, instead of beginning with a relation to something simply 0ven to it, to
.
take up an active relation to jiself, wbieb nevertbelessallows it to provide real definitions
(EL §24 Zus. 2). All justifications of objective knowledge m relation to experience can
be
oniv
valid relative to that content and therefore Hegel's radicai conclusion is that the
foundationalist
it
thought,
the
that
model of
whole
and
assumptions
underlie (the given
difference between subject and object), must be done away with, for so long as
foundationali sm remains a blueprint for philosophy, ffiought will be unable to deterimne
itself, that is, to stand in a truly infinite and autonomous relation to itself As noted
is
for
for
Deleuze
image
Hegel
of thought that we must reject, rather
previously,
as
it an
than ceTtain configurations of this image. This image is that of foundationallsm, the
Lphilosophical' transposition of representational consciousness into a supposediv
transcendent realm (cf DR 173-4/132-3). Hence Hegel's first task, as set in the early
Jena writings, is to overcome the temptation to construct an image of philosophy out of
be
describes
PS
Later,
the accomplishment of this
in
about
experience.
presupposifions
task as the 'way of despair' (PS 69/49 §78) for representational consciousness. In
if,
finite
'feels
together with the mode of
the
as
consciousness
genuine philosophy,
is
has
been
horne,
it
the
pulled
very ground where stands solidly and at
representation,
from undeT it' (E L §31).
If this overcoming is to be genuine, then Hegel's properly philosophical
If
itself
thought.
the
of
object
any
presuppositions
about
rely upon
perspective must not
failed
have
be
Hegel
to
transcend
the
to
turned
present
out
would
such presuppositions
by
to
tied
of
a
consciousness,
remaining
a
conception
representational
of
standpoint
determinate object that is somehow givel, to thought a,ý determinate. This would mean
149
that Hegel makes the same mistake as the early Schelling. by presupposing that the object
of tbought is an absolute unity of subject and object that is given to us as inherently
rafional, and thus that negative philosophy alone is sufficient to know the Absolute.
Despite the fact that the later Scbelling cnlhcises Hegel for just this error (L\IP
",14*.
6/147-9), Hegel is aware of the dariger of positing the Absolute under a conditioned forin
9
fiLshion,
both
denunClation
]atter
Jena
EL
(bis
in this
of
III the early
and
m
writings,
formalism in §12). His attempt at a solution to this problem centres on the thought that
the attainment of a truly pbilosophical perspective must be dependent upon concrete
forms of experience that constitute the living present of thought, and yet at the same
time, this very dependence can be the means of overcoming representafional
consciousnessper se, tbus providing a total critique of representational consciousness
that does not fall into a foundationallst aporia by presupposing that it is based on a
foundation that is somehow immediately known as such.
In DFS (1801),, which may have had a decisive influence on Schelfing's
development of the Menfildi.vsystem,10 the difference between the actual, present
Condition of philosophy and its eternal truth in absolute knowing is presented as the
difference between a finite, reflexive Verstand, and an infinite, speculative Vernuqfi.
Here, ]Hegel affinns that the genuinely pbilosophical standpoint requires a radical
'In
order to reach the essence of
consciousness:
overcoming of representational
into
it
it
is
to
throw
a corps perdu oneself
necessary
philosophy
meaning by "bod.v"
bere, the surn of one's idiosyncrasies' (DFS 111188).-nie question of the possibility of
Jena
Schelling
finite
the
then
answerswith the
arises,
reflection
which
such a rejection of
is
For
Jena
Hegel,
intellectual
the
intuition.
it already the case that
notion of an absolute
the solution must involve a meditation on method, and the question of immediacy and
9 See DUsing, 1976, pp. i,;.
-3 on Hegel's cntique of Fichte- s one-sided Absolute, and p. 1-33
1 on
-14
how this reflects Jacobi's Fichlekrilik.
"' Dtisirig, 1976, p 139 and 1968, esp. pp. 95-6, pý 114, pp 119-20
150
mediation, which distances him fTom Fichte and Schelling and their idea of an
intellectual intuition in which the Absolute is kno,.Nrnin-itself, although be still employs
the notion of a 'transcendental'intuition in a systematicrole in the 1801,ý02)lectureson
lo 91
ic and metaphysics in order to make the leap into philosophy a corps perdu. a move
he would later rej ect,11
In the pre-Jena period, Hegel had determined the relation between immediacy
and mediation as a relation between an ultimately presupposed unity O'Nein)and
'antinomies' produced by reflection, 12 In the Jena penodý Hegel, in a similar way to
Fichte, interprets the dichotomy tEnt-n-vejung] that 'is the source of the need for
philosophy' (DFS 12/89) as an apparently irreconcilable antinomical relation between
different definitions of the Absolute that is definitive for flic present culture of reflection
its
and
plillosopby. The Absolute, the in-itself of being, appears in this milieu as either
the diversity posited by the Understanding, or the unity desired by Reason. In relation to
the wider intellectual culture, the history of philosophy is seen here as a series of
dichotornous
definitions of the real that anse through
to
attempts
reconcile various
reflection on familiar experience(Spint'Extension,Subject/Objectetc.). Theseattempts
'have not resulted in a final and absolute reconciliation (for then there would be no history
instead
identities
but
have
that posit a
a plethora of relative
of philosophy),
produced
Reason
between
Absolute
continually identifies itself Witb
and
conditioned.
resemblance
the conditioned term that represents unity within the dichotomy (e.g., Spirit, Subject),
from
its
it
13/91),
(DFS
abstracting it
relation to the otber terin.
and posits as absolute
Tbe Enligbtenment culture of reflection presents a special opportunity to overcome this
tendency, howeveT, even as it confinues it, for its own intemal dichotomy, which is
'' Cf DUsing, 1976, p. j 40-3 on Hegel and Scheiling's use of intuition in the Jenaperiod.
12See.jbid, pp. 60-1, on Hegel's non-Kantian interpretation of 'antinomy'. from the Frankfurt
Hegel
uses this term to refer to the relation of contradictory predicates to a
period onward,
betv,
jud.
lhing-jn-ýself
the
to
than
een
contTadictor-y
relation
s
and
a
rather
subject,
-gernem
151
between
for
by
Fichte's
Jena
Hegel
the
exemplified
the
thought, concerns
veiA relation
difference and identity.
According to Hegel, irreconcilable dichotomies anse for reflection becauseit is
its
is
than
of
representational consciousnessas such that contradictory. rather
just some
definitions of expeiience. The very fact that to represent something is to be aware of a
difference between relative identities (e.g., subject and object), means that representation
finds that it is dependent on contradictory presuppositions, in the folio Will
ig way. On the
,
band,
one
consciousnessof the relative difference that defines representationpresupposes
the absolute unity of the differentiated tenns (e.g., subject and object) (DFS 15/93), for
only then could they be known as different. On the other hand, the 'el-nergence
[Herausgetrelensein] of consciousness from the totality,' (DFS 15/93), and thus the
difference
lack
between
the subject and what it is conscious qJ
absolute
or
of relation
is
forced
both
be
Representational
thus
to
assumed.
consciousness
posit
must
presuppositions as essentialto it. When it becomes explicitly foundationallst, and reflects
foundational
for
it,
it
forced
to affirm the
or
on which assumption is more essential
is
it
determinateness
Subject,
(as
to
a
pTesupposed
unity, wbicb TepTesents itself as given
Knowledge, etc.). Without this recogmition and this representatton,it would be unable to
13
posit an essential relation at all, But this means that the absolute unity of the
differentiated tenns is representedas a relative identity, one whose positive content is a
implies
deterininateness,
therefore
conditioning relations With other
and
given
which
deterrninatenesses.This representation, assumed as given, is thus conditioned by
determinate relations that are derived from our familiar experience. A conditioned
been
has
therefore
posited as corresponding to the content of the unconditioned
content
background
lies,
the
of representational consciousness.
unexpressed, in
or absolute that
T'his positing of a relative content for the Absolute means that a resemblance has been
13As we'will see in the next nko chapters, this foundationalist requirement of determinatenessin
is
by
in
Heg
SL's
foundational
Doctrine of Essence.
critici
sed
relation
II
the essentialor
zel
_
1-;-)
posited between the Absolute and the relative
T111s.for Hegel. is necessanly
contradictory. The absolute difference wbich has to be presupposed is supposedly
negated in a relative identity, which has its source in one pole of the difference. This is.
however, just testifies to the unjustifiable foundationalist assumption (present in 'Fichte's
philosophy, as we saw in Chapter Two) that the relation and lack of relation between two
terms can both be grounded in one of theseconditioned terms.
We have discovered here Hegel's account of a 'double movernent'. comparable
Deleuze
that
suggestsis charactenstic of Platonism. Hegel, however, posits
with
which
this tendency as an iflusion constituted by the movement of reflection, rather than as the
product of a non-conscious ontological tendency. Hegel concurs With Deleuze, thougii, in
seeingfoundationallstphilosopby, understoodas the tendencyof reflection to posit the
absolute in relation to the relative, as presupposing a subjective orientation that it cannot
justify (DFS 16/94), an interest of reason (in Kant's sense)in unity. which arises out of
forins of non-pbilosopbical experience in wbicb diebotomies that appear irreconcilable to
foundationalist reflection are continually encountered.The trauma of reason representsa
internal
is
bare,
being
dichotomy
dynamic
laid
this
philosophical
in which
Without
focus
For
Hegel,
long
the
as
of philosophy falls elsewhere than
entirely understood.
so
lack
this
the
of
of understanding will
reflection,
on
inherently contradictory nature
'111hilosophy
be
driven
beyond
dichotomies
thus
continue, and
will
Will persist in arising.
dichotomy:
later
Schelling's
'solution'
the
to
to
the
problem
an
of
again
itself again and
implicit or explicit act of faith In which the reconcilability of the dichotomies of
Absolute,
the
the
of
rationality
is affirined Without
or
inherent
representationwith reason,
being proven.
For Hegel, the difficulty
for philosophy is ulfimately that of articulating a
difference
bemeen
belween
that
the
them
sucb
contradiction
and
can
tmity
relation
Ilie
Absolute
be
to
element
oi'the
essential
itself
major
obstacle
as
an
grasped
actually
the success of any such atilculation is the stubborn ngidity
I Z,-1
of representational
consciousness. For representational or 'natural' consciousness. the subject of a
Proposition is ruled by the principle of non-contradiction: if opposing predicates are
posited in the swne subject (e.g., the Absolute, x, is both absolute ident'ity and absolme
difference), then the result is a disjunction. X can be either, but not both. Ho-*N:
e,,er. as we
saw in Chapter 2 in relation to Schelling's acceptanceof 1161derfinand Jacobi's critiques
of transcendental idealism, for objective Imowledge of disjunction to be possible, one
must presupposean Absolute that does not obey this law of disjunction. Hegel's attempt
to provide a critique of consciousness must sbow bolx one can articulate sucb an
Absolute in consciousness,without simply dogmatically presupposing that the essenceof
the Absolute in-itself is knowable, and without imposing the burden of pToVing the
validity of this account of the Absolute as an infinite Sollen upon consciousness.
So the Hegelian Absolute must be understood as inclusive of absolute
contradiction, as both 'Subject' and 'Substance' (PS 20/10 § 17), and therefore cannot be
articulated in opposition to the finite, for then it becomes the source of a Sollen, a merely
Lconceptual' infinite conditioned by the fitilte. Further, an account of the Absolute, for
liege], cannot be based on something like a Schellingian ecstasy of reason in which
representational consciousness is annihilated in favour of pure immediacy,
14 for
this
option, by pointing to the 'outside' of reason, reinstates a disjunction between infinite
(immediate) and finite (mediated or conditioned). Instead, critique must focus oil the
fixity of representational consciousness,the way it, as a babitual mode of tbinking,
between
thus
the
to
the
to
of
non-contradiction,
and
opposition
principle
remains wedded
Hegel
difference.
will not rigidly oppose the immediacy of an intuition to
and
identity
the mediatednessof thoughtý but will instead demand of philosophy that it render finite
14Cf, letter to Hegel, 04.,"02.ý)7795,in Fuhrmans, 1973, p. 65 'f.. I we should break- down these
). This
barriers, i. e. we should leave behind the finite sphere for the infinite (practical philosophý,,
finitude
[Zerxii.
destruction
demands
the
of
and vvill take us therebv to the supeTsensible
)ning]
also
world'.
1 4
-5
thinking itself fluid, 15 i. e., capable of comprehending Its own contradictory structure,
which would mean that, in transcending the sphere of representational consciousness
from within, thought has discovered its own genuinely infinite aspect.
In the later Jena period (1805/06), Hegel moves decisively away from the
Schellingian theme of intellectual intuition and towards a theory of what might (despite
the Ficbtean connotations) be called absolute suklectivity, and thus away ftom the
division lie had hitherto made between a preparatory, critical Logik in which finite
is
reflection undermined by showing bow its determinations are inherently contradictorv.
and a subsequent, positive organon or Metapkvsik in which the Absolute is kiiown
througb its reflections in consciousness. This division is dissolved in a Logik that
considers absolute knowledge, not as intuifion, but purely as cognition, Erkennen. It is
this move that sets the scene for the development of the model of absolute knowledge
16
presentedin the PS.
How could an idea of self-grounding, absolute cognition, however, be anything
determination
determinations
being,
than
a
negative
of
merely
posSible
of
other
which
forms
be
being
these
to
true
of
in itselP As previously noted,
narcissistically assumes
this was the charge brought by the later Scbelling against Hegel: the notion of a pure
thinking of antinomies as identical With absolute knowledge seems simply to have
ignored Kant's distinction between intuition and the understanding, and Schelling's own
disfinction between the purely rational Absolute and the problematic, 'higher' Absolute.
liege] thus appears to be a kind of dogmatic Fichtean who assumesthat being-In-Itself
has the same 'contradictory'
structure
17
as thought, By turning now to directly
examme
the PS, we will discover how liege] at least anticipates such olýjections.
I; Cf Fujita, 1985, pp. 156-8.
16SeeMsing, 1976, pp. 156-7, p. 198.
17It is such a 'dotginatic' reading that IfI
n orms Wiffianis' (1989, p. 43) and Marc-use's (19,97, p. 10.
between
Hep-el's
Hegel
the
Marman
of
38)
account
Telation
of
subject
and
object
is
assessments
p.
1Z,ý
For Hegel, it is foundationalism that Is narcissistic or. in his teii s, fon-nalistic,
for it is nothing but the reflexive. methodological expression of the 'natural'. or rather,
familiar and accepted, perspecfive of representational consciousness. and thus it
presupposes the ultimac,,,, of the divisions that cbaractense this consciousness.
Fowidationalism
understood as an expression of representational. and therefore
contradictory, consciousness,will itself tberefo-rebe a contradictory position (PS 656/46-7 §73). Hegel's response seems Cartesian: he asserts that absolute knowledge or
,
--I-
pnilosopby is absolute (and non-fo-rmalistic) because it is presuppositionless (SL 357/43-5), i. e., it does not begin from a positive, determinate definition of the meaning of
18
experience, The presuppositions of foundationalism concern the modes of experience
that representationalconsciousnessis familiar With, and are extracted from accepted
accounts of the inner structure of these modes such as natural science. Foundationalism
then attempts to show how such accounts are themselves possible as universally
fonns
of experience. Giving an account of the genesisof thesepresuppositions
necessary
(which as we saw in Chapter 3, is central to post-Hegelian thought.) that foundationalism
for
finally
becomes
But
is
done,
then
this
then a
cannot
account
necessary.
if
Schellinglan objection suggestsitself any attempt to objectively explain the genesis of
known.
Before
that
their
are
already
presupposes
conditions
somebow
presuppositions
the enquirybegins,a foundational,transcendentsubjectivity(Deleuze's'common sense')
been
being
has
thought
presupposed.
are unified
already
and
in which
In relation to this problem, Schelling made the important point that, if
foundational i sin is to be self-consistent, then the diversity of presuppositions about
fundamentally
based
be
on a
non-discursive, non-representational
experience must all
(and non-articulable) form of experience-a
foundationalistproposition that places
he
dialectical
because
the
that
'absolute
in-itself
possesses
a
objectassumes
structure.
idealist'
an
As we shall see,this is inaccurate.
18Cf Butler, 1996, p 1, and Maker, 1995, Ch I eip pp- 59-60
I ; (,
foundationalism itself in jeopardy. However, for Hegel this appeal to an ineffable
immediacy only repeats the reflexive principle that the mediated must rely on the
immediate, and therefore ignores the fact that the converse is also true. Schelling does
not consider bow the act of abstracting the Absolute from the finite as its unconditioned.
which is a form of reflexive mediafion, inevitably implies the quesfion of how the
19
Absolute
itself
be
This
difficulty
possibility of an actual inlififion of this
can
proven.
necessarily resurfaces later in the systematic problem of the Sollen, which implies the
subjection of the finite to the 'bad infinite' of an abstract concept in the effort to pi-ove
the objective validity of the intuition from which the system begins. This imperative
places the finite under the domination of the tbougbt of Absolute Identity as real ground,
20
deten-ninateness
finite
the
against which the
of
cannot endure.
If we aTeto bave any bope of fon-nulatinga successfulresponseto the pToblem
of overcoming the circle of presuppositions without positing the existence of a special
intuition, we must Tecognise, liege] argues, that Absolute Knowing cannot begin
otherwise than with both immediacy mid mediation: its beginning must be both
pTesuppositionless and bistorically conditioned. This bistoncal conditioning bas its
for
it
Kant's
thought
proximate philosophical expression in
is the modes of experience
intellectual
bistorical enIvITonmentin
Kant's
that
the
pbilosopby
provide
reflected in
is
Hegel's
Knowing
Knowing
Absolute
Absolute
that
assertion
can exist.
will
which
flwefore include or comprebend the dicbotomies of Kant's tbougbt. The first intimations
dichotomy
diversity
Preface,
PS
the
this
the
a
outlines
of
wider
are in
which
of
process in
19Diising, 1976, p. 21, p. 142-11977, p, 120, p, 122, p. 127.
20Hegel's cl-ItIcIses theSollen becau-seit implies an infmite division of concept and reality (EL §55,
§60), and through this division, creates an ethical relation in which the concept of the absolute
Terror
416/174,
PS
(FK
413-22/355-63
the
revolutionary
as
in
the
world,
natural
clorninates.
§Z
§"582-95).
Cf Rose op. cil., pp 100-1, pp 171-4)
157
and unity: the cuffent historical situation of philosophical thought is opposed to
anticipations of the new Absolute.
is true that these anficipations can easily be misunderstood as unjusfifiable
abstractions about the nature of the absolute, that are somehow rneant as foundations that
will justify Hegelian Science from the outset. However, they appear in the midst of a
discussion of wbat Hegel bad eaTher in Jena called the 'culture of reflection". Hegel
discussescontemporary views on the relation between the subject of knowledge and the
Absolute that sbow Kantian, Ficbtean and Schellingian influences. These are abstract
reflections on familiar forms of experience (science-,Chrisfian morality, pietist faith), and
have themselves become familiar tendencies within the wider intellectual culture. That
is
merely familiar (lbekanni), however, is through its very familiarity
which
or
immediacy, not mediated or genuinely known (erkanni) (PS 31/18 §31). This Hegelian
disfitiction is not a difference between something, mifially accepted on the word of
another, subsequently doubted, only to return as a ceriainty grounded in one's own
reason (PS 69/50 §78_).Such a Cartesian model of doxa versus knowledge is itself a
foundationalism, wbicli begins from accepied definitions of wbat is to be doubted. As
previously noted, Hegel agrees With Deleuze that it is the horizon of 'familiarity'
as
inberent
the
tendency of reflexive thougbt to rely upon the structure of
such,
representationalconsciousness
in defining the relation of thoughtto being, that must be
different
its
totality
to
image of philosophy.
crificised in
in order present a
However, the familiar cannot be negated by immediately proclaiming a new
Absolute. This would simply reject previous versions of the Absolute in favour of a neNNdetermination, which would once again reflect dichotomies ansing from a definition of
be
from
'shot
28i2l
(PS
§37,
SL
1,
that
merely
given
or
a
pistol'
itself
would
expene-nee
65/67). Representafional consciousness,when it becomes foundationali st, demands that
fied
Hegel
be
this
that,
and
or
proven,
means
as
justi
recognises, simply
all tnith-claims
between
knowledge
difTerence
Absolute
the
the
proclaimed
of
and accepted
insisting on
18
-1;
Sci
opinion will not suffice. This would simply mean that Absolute Kno%vledge
or ience
Lwould be declaring its power to lie simply in its being, but the untrue ti. e.. familiar]
knowledge likewise appealsto the fact that it i,ý, and assures us that for it Science is of no
account' (PS 68/49 06). And a vindication of the possibility of Absolute Knowledae, if
it is also to be a critique of foundafionalism, must recognise the central Hegelian paradox
in the PS, i. e., that representational consciousnesscan only be related to the Absolute
through its own overcoming of itself
Any attempt to specify a new beiond of
representationalconsciousnessas its negative simply binds philosophy anew to
representational consciousness, especiafly when this beyond is defined as utterly
transcendent of consciousnessas sucb (as wben Sclielling makes an ecstatic 'Intuition'
and a Sollen equally essential to philosophy). Hegel's goal is to allow representational
consciousness, as concretely defined by
bistorically-prevalent
dicbotomies, to
demonstrate that the Absolute is not external to it. This demonstration must therefore
foundational
be
to
consciousness,involving no
itself
immanent
method that has to be
demonstTation-21
to
the
prior
juss6fied
This enables us to addressthe apparent inconsistencv that results from a Preface
that reinstates a duality of diversity (fmiliar
dicbotoniies.) and unity (the new absolute).
This apparent inconsistency will turn out to be consistent in relation to the requirement of
finite
in
distinctions
by
A
the
made
reason
an immanent method. consciousnessschooled
its
lose
be
to
rividity and reject the supremacy of the PrInciple of noncannot persuaded
forced
be
immanent
In
by
to
to think
talk
method.
order
of an
contradiction simply
be
di
Junctively,
to
than
such a consciousness must
subiected
I
Si
inclusiveiv, rather
its
habitual
that
orientation towards an object of thought, examples
erode
paradoxes
"' Ohashi, (.)p cli., p. 21, points out that, for the early Schelling, the absolute had also to be
But
Schelling,
like
H61derlin
than
to
as
rather
opposed
it.
conceived of as wilhin consciousness,
(Henrich, 1971a. pp. 16-17) conceived of this internal relation as one between productive
for
be
Hegel,
a
peftho
would,
principfi.
tendencies,
which
ontolosucal
I -;()
familiar.
forms
from
the
whose
among
of expression are themselves selected abstractly
but which neverthelessforce a consciousnessused to abstraction to see itself and its truth
in the paradoxes they Co
in. 22 H
Pta
-
- -ence
farn-fliar
the Preface present
the ab.-stractions
of
its as
mathematical reasoning, formalism, and 'enthusiasm'. before gomg, on to present.
equaliv abstractiv, the paradoxical 'speculative proposition' (PS 52-6/35-40 §§58-65) in
which, for Hegel, the Absolute is expresse& and finally, in the Introduction, -,Ne find
Kantian
within
and Reinholdian aspectsof the relation between the 'for itself' and the 'in
itself the paradox of 'detenmnate negation.
So the purpose of these initial moves cannot be to determine the objective
difference between a condition of 'fallenness' cbaractensed.by our reflexive awareness
of difference and an intuition of the Absolute, for such a distinction would then itself
in
The
Introduction
Preface
(which was composed
the
require grounding.
and, particular,
book
for
the
the
tempting
after
rest of
was complete) constitute an apparatus
representational consciousness,not to reject the familiar in favour of the claim of a
but
itself
in
initially
to
recognise
somefliing
magisterial intuition,
utterly unfamiliar to it
for
it.
Thus
be
induced
therefore
to see itself as
consciousnessmust
and
without meaning
bening
than
the
oppossedto
as
absolute,
rather
containing
23
it.
This will subsequentlygive
in
fact.
is
Hep-el,
demonstration
It
this
tben,
that
to
opposition
of
clear,
wav an nnmanent
to Schelling, grants representational consciousnessqua consciousnessof difference an
for
desire
Absolute
'opposing
tendency',
the
the
ardent
over
against
inalienable right
§26).
26/14-15
(PS
unity
This immanent demonstration, the 'method" of the PS, cannot then be based
24
1-ni
foundafion
detefrmnate
that
expeficnce
in
fernams
unquestioned. ste,94 it can.
upon a
be nothing other than a descriptive method, beginning WIlththe experiential assumptions
22Cf Rose, 1980, P. 151
23Seealso Lamb, 1980, pp- 15-16.
24
30.
Lamb. o,,,
p.
cii-,
i?
160
that charactenserepresentational consciousness.and criticising them systematicalIv. thus
remaimng i; i
15
begin
has
'method'
Yet
to
somewhere.
to
anent its -subjectmatter.
such a
We could begin abstractly by enumerating (to use a Kantian tenn.) the historically
deten-ninatepresuppositions of a consciousnesswhich Hegel charactensesas 'natural' so
as to sketch its 'Ideological'
familiar
its
convicfions about NNhatis
merely
character,
4natural'. We migbi include in this list of assumptions the followlng: that there Is an
essential relation of correspondencebetween the subject's representation and the nature
of the object, that this relation can be articulated, and that the validity of this relation can
I--
And
basic,
ditlerence
there
the
the
proven
a
priori.
even
more
assumption of
is
be
-I,_
itself
is
And
the
the
then
there
the
subject
and
object
self-sufficiency of the
between
reason of the individual: there may be many doxai about the nature of the world, but the
individual has the capacity to sort the true frorn the false (an assumption Deleuze also
points to).
These opMlons may be basic to the modem 'Image of thought'. But there
remains the problem of the necessity and completeness of our investigation of tbern.
Kant's enumeration of the conditions of the possibility of expenence was cnficised
for
precisely
its abstract and contingent cbaracter. In attempting to overcome tbis, a
finds
itself
begin
by
Fichte
Schelling
having
by
to
as
employed
and
genetic method
forms
deterrmnation
Absolute
that
the
the
the
of
of
in order
assurning
validity of a
from
But
be
deduced
this necessity is consequently only
necessity.
experience can
it with
from
Absolute,
flow
the
the
to
nature
of
and nofliing is thereby genuinely
assumed
in
the
deduction.
In
this connection,
there
gum-antee,
of
completeness
no
is
explained, as
PS,
its
System,
Hegel's
is
the
the
to
to
in
role
as
introduction
as a
it necessary understand
Knowing,
Absolute
by
detluclion
the
of
of
idea
operates
which
iranscendenial
15DON,
17-19.
1970,
pp.
c,
161
progressively deducing the conditions of a basic fonn of consciousness,ending with the
20
uncondifional,
There are thus two interpretative issuesto be decided: a) the question as to where
the PS must begin, and b) bow the complete deduction of Absolute Knov,"Ing is to be
understood. Beginning with the latter, we should note that Hegel's solution to the
problem of presuppositions is Fichtean, in that be envisagesa systematic deduction that
is self-enclosed, requiring no externally given presuppositions. TbIs influence is,
bowever, tempered by that of Kant. Hegel refuses to begIin from an intellectual intuition
of the Absolute in itself, qua ground of determination. Yet, given Hegel's denunciation
of Kant's critical philosophy as a merely finite form of reason, bow can he affirm the
foundationallstidea of a L)eduklion?Does this not repeatthe division of consciousness
that Kant assumesas ulfimate?
We should note that what Hegel sees as important in Kant's transcendental
deduction is not the synthetic unity of consciousnessdefined over against the
transcendental object, which was transformed by Fichte and Schelling into different
forms of productive intuition, but rather the ltýgical relation between consciousnessand
self-consciousness that is essential to Kant's
argument. On Robert Pippin's
27
Kmft's
CPuR
B138)
for
Hegel
(at
takes
that it is
argmnew
example,
up
interpretation,
only In relation to the unity of self-consciousnessthat even any presentation of an object
is
"pure
therefore
there
that
are
intuitions' without
and
no
possible,
made
in intuition
for
for
Kant
Hegel,
Experience,
to
and
is therefore not
self-consciousness.
relation
in
simply a change the state of a subject, the reception of stimidl or the currency of a
28
In
Kant
Hegel),
(for
but
this
of
existing
object.
an
way,
is consciousness
mental state,
: ('On the importance of the specifically Kantian notion of a deduction for Hegel, see Pippin, 1989,
6 and p. 19. Again, this roie of the PS has not beenuncontroversial-seen. 4 above.
27Qp. cit., pp. 20-31and 27-9.
Mid, p. 116.
I 62
,ihows that all experience of objects arises through a certain mode of self relation on the
part of the subject. The question is. bow must this self-relation be conceived9 Is it
absolute knowledge understood as the self-presenceof the sub,ect, ts knowledge of tself
as it is in itselP
This cannot be the case, for this supposedly a priori knowledge would be an
illusion of the kind that Kant refutes in the Paralogisms. Hence the self-relation here does
not entail that we are intuitively present to ourselves alongside every case of presenting a
syntbesis of an empirical manifold to ourselves. The Kantian 'I tbink', in terms of
logic, indicatesan alwayspotentialrelation of knowing (the representation
transcendental
'I think' can accompanv all my presentations): it is this potential knowledge of the
discursive rules of synthesis for a mwilfold of intuition that is the condition of the
difference between a merely subjective association of mental states and the
consciousness of an object29 Kant's insight is thus that any knowledge-claim
must
it
is
become
discursive
that
to
the
presuppose
possible
conscious of
rules that allow the
30
claim to be made in the first place. In order to presentx to ourselves as an objectý it is
necessarythat we should be able to become conscious of the rules, ffic practice or 'point
of
VieW",
31
"
knowledge
Importantly.
to
to
employ
present
x
ourselves,
of these
which we
for
but
is
knowledge
the
of an object,
of
conditions of presentation
an object. In
rules not
it
knowledge
is
as
arises only through a relation of the
unconditioned,
a sense, such
intuition
itself
but
to
of the subject in itself
it is neverthelessnot an
subject
Just as some of the assumptions, characteristic of flie fmiliar
or "natural'
in
PSs
deduction
Absolute
the
that
of
appear
systernatically
will
consciousness,
Knowing are first dealt Witli abstractly in the Preface, so is the Introduction an abstract
29Ihid, p, 19, Diisin_,
491)
1993,
p,
g
30Pippin, 1989, p. 23.
31Pinkard, 1995,52,
12jhj4j_ p, 46, Pippin, 1987, pp 459-60
16
form
for
deals
itself.
deduction
dynarnic
the
presentation of the necessary
with
it
of the
of this self-relation of the subject. It explicitly discusses this issue in terms of the
necessaryrelation between any intended object and self-consciousness.s1iowing that this
relation is a necessaryinternal movement of self-consciousness.rather than an intuition.
This movement is a process of E'rkennen,co&mition.but also (to employ another of this
word's meanings in German) recognilion, or rather re-cognition, a necessaryprocess of
re-thinking a relation. This movement of re-cognition is a logical movement from an
object to the rules that allow it to be posited, i. e., from conditioned to condition, ratbeithan being a psychological act of matching up diverse contents with the aid of a concept
33
Unlike
logical
'psycbological'
that wb,
them
the
all.
recognition,
movement
of
-,
-umes
.
recognition actually prevents self-consciousness from affirming that the object it reby
inifially
the
cognises as conditioned
certain niles is
same object of which it was
conscious. It is this process, through which the object becomes unfamiliar, that the
Int-t-oductionpresentsas the inner 'experience' (Eýfahrung) of natural consciousness(PS
75/55 §86). In this way, the independenceof an object is undermined, and consciousness
becomes aware, not of the object as an independent entity Simply given to it, but of the
It
the
as
subject in positing it
independent. Is this movement that will, in the
role of
levels
Absolute
deduction,
develop
the
througb
several
of complexity into
course of
Knowing.
We now need to examine the nature of this movement as the Introducfion
has for its basic
describesit. As we have seen,for liege] representationalconsciousness
immediately
it.
being
The
the
conscious
of
an
object
opposite
of
awareness
structure
be
be
Absolute,
immediacy
takes
to
the
to
the
or
consciousness
this
is what
content of
in-itself
But
it
this consciousness is also aware of itself as
is
the
h-uth of
object as
different from the object, as the knower of the object, and thus in relation to it. The
fbr
Thesc
defined
is
two
only
aspect
as
consciousness.
a
second
aspects
thus
in
object
33Pinkard, op. cil., P. 3622n. 10. For the p.,.rchological usage, cf. CNR A 103-) 0.
1(14
reflect Kant's account of the two modes of representingan object via Reason and .,-]a the
Understanding. The difference between these two aspects is thus one between: a.)
consciousnessof the foundation of truth, and b.) consciousnessof the mode or method
vla which this foundation is known (PS 72-3/52-3 §§82-4). If consciiousnessre-cognises
this difference, it alters its perspective on itself effectively comparing one moment of
itself (tbe definition of the foundation or of trutb) with anotber moment (the knowledge
of method or of the difference between consciousnessand the truth.), and thus becomes
aware of the difference between a moment of immediate idenfitv and one of mediated
difference. This difference between moments does not become fixed, however, creating
an either/or disjunction between the immediate and the mediated, as both thesemoments
themselves 'are_/,br the same consciousness,this consciousnessis itself their comparison,
it is for the same consciousnessto know wbether its knowledge of Theobject corresponds
to the object or not' (PS 74,154ý'85). The awarenessof the difference between the two
is
latter,
disjunctive
demonstrates
this
that the
comparison, which inevitably
moments
supposed 'in-itself
is,
fbr
that
that the veiýy
consciousness,
is only an immediacy
immediacy of the obiect is only possible tIm-ougba relafion to consciousness.Througb
this experience, which is necessitated by the dualistic structure of representational
a further changeoccurs:
consciousness,
Since
consciousness thus
finds
that
its
I -. -
its
does
to
object, the object
not con-espond
Knowledge
itself does not stand the test, in other words, the
for
it
is
for
that
testing
altered when
which was
criterion
fails
been
have
to pass the test, and the
the
cntenon
to
know,
but
is
testing
also a
of what we
testing not only a
knowing
the
of
is.
testing of
critenon
what
(PS745/
g5ý
4-5 ýý,
-5
165
The supposedly immediate foundation and the conditional knowledge are not
absolutely negated in this process, as in the kind of superficial scepticism Hegel
denouncesearlier (PS 52/56 §59) that knows how to point out the necessarydifference
between the two moments of consciousness but cannot pToduce anything positive
thereby, and seesonly a circular either/or, where each term is the foundation of the other.
Sucb a capricious and subjective scepticism is opposed to the necessaTN!
and absolule
for
Hegel,
is
that,
scepticism
absolute becauseit is immanent to 'natural' consciousness.
This absolute scepticism does not place in question our knowledge of objects, by raising
the spectre of the unknowable foundation of knowledge or thing-in-itself, but rather
idea
the
questions
of the possibility of defining a thing-in-itself, or self-subsisteint
foundation, as such.
The in-itself is not iust defined formalIv as 'external' or other, but also, seeing as
foundation,
defined
as a
it is
it must have a specific content. The difference between the
two moments of identity and difference is thus itself comprehendedwithin a new unity, a
foundation
The
in-itself,
definition
the
of
object.
content of this new
new
or
a new
definition will follow necessarily from the difference between the two previous moments
before.
delerminaie
is
And again,
thus
negation of what went
of consciousness: it
a
through its own fon-nal relation to the subject, the content of this definition will prove to
be afflicted with the difference between in-itself and for-another. This, then, is what
logical re-cognition initially amounts to: consciousness recogmses that the 'familiar'
in-itself
between
for
difference
fact
in
the
there
to
moments
of
is a
it,
unfamiliar
object is
knowledge,
from
knoWlng,
for-another
the
that
and
of
of
crIterion
prevents
unity
and
b ei
34
sl
and immediate
Consciousnessthen fi nd,; that another object bas ansen
behind its back., as it were. In this way,a definition of experience, NvInchimplies a
34Cf Rose, eV. cil., pp. 48-9.
166
specific practice, viewpoint or rule through which a particular obiect is constituted,
undermines itself As observersof the phenomenological development of recognition. we
simply contribute to this process the tracing of the necessary connection between the
content of one 'shape' of consciousness(the moments of identity and difference) and the
one that replaces it (PS 76/55-6 §87')-35That is, we can see new objects ansing out of the
contradictions
IIi
ci in the old ý30 -Nat
cnnsciou..,mess,itself can-not become aware of
__Mal
the necessitvof its iournev until it reachesthe end, whereit reflectson its own progress.
This movement, wbicb Hemel must simply desCnbe (as a phenonienological
observer) while at the same time pointing out the necessity with which each new object
is
dialectic.
formulated
Dialectic
the
thus
arises,
phenomenological
on
is
inot a method,
the basis of assumptionsabout the contentof expenenceand then applied reflexively to
37
expencnecas to an extcrnal ContCnt, bUt is a movcTnentthat ansesimmancntly witbin
is
The
'antinomy'
thus that
consciousness
of
consciousness
representational
itself
between the object defined as in-itself and as for-anodier: the only way to resolve an
antinomy. as for Kant, is to re-latethe opposing terms to their conditions of possibility,
difference
both
This
the
to
third
terin
that
possible.
and
of
active
a
makes
identity
i. e.,
behind
back
The
that
the
the
of
consciousness.
progression of
occurs
process
relating is
'sbapes of consciousness' that is the PS is thus the va-netv of immanently-unfolding
foundation
for
its
determine
knowledge
finite
to
the
a
consciousness
part of
attempts on
fact
in
between
And
difference
identity
it is only when
subject and object.
and
of the
these moments of
determinate, relative
difference
and idenfitv
that define
PS
been
have
the
the
that this movement
end of
cast off at
representationalconsciousness
have
become
By
be
finally
this
time.
consciousness
will
uttefly
understood.
can
'5 Dove, op. cif-, p. 26.
36This is why it is difficult to appreciatethe necessityof the movementonk, with referenceto the
follow.
being
to
Introduction.
only
a7mcipme
whai Is
abstract, can
which,
abstract
37Cf Bialer, 1996, p 12
167
unfwniliar to itself, precisely because these constitutive moments will have been
exhaustively critiqued. Instead of focusing on a determinate object posited opposite it,
consciousness will have transcended its representational structure. having attained a
perspective where the process of its own movernent. or its developed relation to itself. is
its 'object.
This movement, bowever. is not a determinate object but the Process
through which objecti"ty
for
If
be
the
this
itself is constituted
subject.
viewpoint can
attained from within the PS, then the structure of representational consciousnessNvill
have been completely comprehended as a product of this movernent itself T'his, for
Hegel, is Absolute Knowing.
The issue of the completenessof the deduction brings us back to the problem of
beginning. Comprebending the difference and identity of the moments of in-itself an(i
for-another means that consciousnesswill gradually come to understand its own role in
the constitution of'both. The definitions of the in-itself as critenon and of the moment of
knowledge, which show themselvesto be conditioned by a new in-itself Will eventually
change so that the moment of knowing itself becomes the criterion. In this way,
consciousnesswill gradually recognise (as will we) that only through the mediation of
discursive rules can the immediate (the in-itself) be constituted for consciousness.Selfconsciousnesswill thus be re-cognised as the condition of possibility for consciousness
development
Self-Consciousness),
At
(Itbe
this
the
of
cbapter
of an object.
point
on
have
Kantian
Fichtean
been reached.This fonn
consciousnesswill
and
general pattern of
however,
already presupposesvarious complex assumptions
of abstract consciousness,
difference
between
(the
the
theoretical
the
nature of intuition,
about
nature of experience
).
To
PS
how
the
the
these
anticipate
next
chapter,
show
etc.
will
and practical reason
presuppositions, as
deten-ninate relations
historicallyto
objects.
already presuppose
modes of relating
'bct-,,,,
cen suklects. Intersubjectivity,
rather than absolute
But
because
be
the
thus
of
self-consciousness.
condition
of the relative
subjectivity. will
it
be
in
PS
to
the
necessary
these
is
ofk-no,.
modes
Ning,
prope-relsewhere.
complexity of
169
This is because the PS must be exhaustive. and the criteria for this
exhaustiveness cannot be given outside of the phenornenolo&qcaldevelopment Itself
(otherwise the foundationalist problem of circulantv would return). The critique of the
multiplicity of 'familiar' prejudicesthat constitutephenomena]kno-iodedge
in the present
can only be consistent with itself if it proceeds with necessity, and begins ftom the most
basic fonn of immediate identity that is possible for representationalconsciousness.The
inconsistencv' of beginning from the sIMPle and immediate fonn of consciousness that
Hegel calls 'Sense-Certainty', rather than from a historically contemporary Kantian or
Fichtean presupposition, is thus consistent when -vie-wedin the fight of the reqtitrenients
of an absolute critique
of Tepresemation.
38 Crucially,
tbis basic form of consciousnes. s
be
can neither
consciousness of an object as it is determined for us, nor can it be
consciousnessof an object in itself Any sucb beginning would already presupposea pregiven foundation and would thus still be cIrCular: either a deten-ninationof a thing-inis
'for
to
the
object
itself in relation
us' constituted, or the unitv of consciousness
whieb
beginning
be
The
the
thing-in-itself
and
can only
understood, I would argue, in relation
to a moment in Kant's pbilosopby wbere the distinction between pbenomenal objects and
becomes
As
between
problematic.
an
obiects-for-us and objects-in-themselves,
notimena,
Descartes)
Kant
(including
his
to
notes that the
adjunct
Critique of rational psychology
'indeterminate
'I
think'
empirical intuition' whose exact status
an
expresses
proposition
is ambiguous:it
fliat
something
real
is given, given
siofies only
indeed to thoubt in general, and so not as appearance,
but
(nounienon),
thing-in-itself
as something
nor as
der
[in
Tal]
bicb
exists, and N-,,
in the
whicb actually
denoted
'I
think'
is
as such.
proposition
3ýRose, op. cil., PP 150- 1
-
169
(CPuR B422-3)
The intuition bere is an undeniable, thouO, indetenninate, feeling, of existence
associated with consmousness, rather than Descartes' ffilly detenninate
intuition of a thinking thing. Its exact status in consciousness is problematic, being
neither a representation of an intuited phenomena] object, nor a presentation ý-,
Iven
througli a special form of h1gher intuition. It can only be called consciousnessof being
further
detennination.
In
has
that
this,
no
without
it is unconditioned, given
it
determination eitber as for-us or as an in-itself It does not presupposeany foundation in
order to be known as this Indeterminate terrn, whether this foundation be discursive (i. e.,
intuition),
determinate
intuition)
(a
a
categorial synthesisof
or non-discursive special
and
consciousnessof it does not therefore presupposea circle of conditions.
This immediate, indeten-ninateconsciousness,in which there is no determinate
distinction between our consciousnessof being and being itself, is the 'pure Being' with
find
begins.
Upon
PS
this
that it splits nito two simple
the
reflecting on
unity, we
which
Sense-Certainty
detenTdnafion
the
that
of
proper, opposed to eacb otber
constitute
unities
being
the
the
awareness
of
conscious
and
immediate
as
immediate awarenessof an object
Ilowever,
of an object.
these terms are not tbemselves opposed to the initial
is
initial
both
fact
Being.
In
to
the
that
their
problernatic:
relation
unity
indeterminate
dem
Sein
1...
1
herausfallen]'
beinglaus
happen
hemerge
to
terms
reinen
out of pure
§92,
(PS
80/59
From
iii
Sense-Certainty
diversity'
).
'cnicial
this
the
modified.
constitutes
initial diNision, the dialectic of PS begins: each opposed tenn is posited in tum by
iction
foundation
the
the
results
of
other, and
resulting contradi
consciousnessas the
the
fon-n
immediate
knowledge
Sense-Cei-twnty
"
supposediv
consistent
of
I
as a
overcomin-P-of
deduction
Hegel's
Knowledge
Absolute
The
thus
of
of
rests
completeness
object.
of an
being
that
educated
consciousness
so
it is aware, not of
'natural'
represcntational
or
on a)
itself
is
but
through
that
onk,
as
constituted
a
process
of objectivity
a particular oklect
170
intenial to consciousness,and b) bewnnimý with a fonn of consciousnessthat is utterly
basic in lacking the determinate structure of difference and identity that characterises
representationalconsciousness.
In the next chapter, we will examine the processlaid out in the PS in more detail,
before turning to the SL, which for Hegel elaborates the standpoint of Absolute
Knowledge as an ontolouv. Now, in concluding this chapter, we will re-viewthe project
that PS is meant to fulfil. The immanent dynamic of the PS is, as we have seen,a process
in which consciousnessfinds its unacknowledi4edpresuppositions being laid bare, these
presuppositions being rules that are constitutive of subjective perspectives on the world
In
of objects. this way. this process (understood negatively) can be called deconstructive,
since it consists of an immanent exat-ninationof the claims of consciousnessabout the
objective nature of experience that demonstrates that they are only made possible by
unTecognised rules that are constitutive of objects
-for
consciousness. However,
acknowledging these rules makes the objeefivity of the claIMS that depend upon them
link
between
bas
been
for
to
the
maintain once
rules and claim
recognised,
impossible
the apparent givenness of the object has been undermined, and a PreVlouslv'
bas
been
brougbt
lip-bt.
to
element
of
constitutive
subjectivity
unacknowledged
While this negative process is vital in demonstrating that the claims of
representational consciousness about experience are ultimately illusory,
it must
deduction
be
a
or
of the perspective
as
re-construction
simultaneously
viewed positively
deduction
(i.
demonstration
Formally,
Knowing.
Absolute
as
a
e.,
as
a
of
it operates
of
but
because
Knowing),
Absolute
materially, it is a reconstruction,
the possibility of
it
'it
[consciousness]
to
object
in
getsTld of
which
presentsa new relation of consciousness
is
for
it
burdened
being
that
alien,
only
and as an other',
with something
its semblanceof
for when consciousnesscomes to reflect upon self-consciousnessas the condItion of the
object.
171
becomes
appearance
idenfical
where
with
essence,l ...I its exposition wfl] coincide at just this point
finally,
Spirit.
Science
And
the
with
authentic
of
when
consciousnessitself grasps this as its own essence,it
will signify the nature of absolute knowledge itself
(PS 77/57 §89, modified)
This is a reconstruction because the Absolute, the enfireiv new and unfamiliar
'object' of thou-gbtpresents an actual task, ratber than a mere bypothesis that remains to
I-
The
deduction
Absolute
Knowing
proven..
of
would show that all representational
be
consciousnesspresupposesan autbentic and absolute unitv of subject and object, which
is itself the negation of the structure of representationalconsciousness,and therefore also
'9
for
foundationalist
the
Tlivs final stage will pT-cwM a
of
need
a
image of nbilosaphy.
conception of the object defined as in-itself for consciousnessthat is actually consistent
HoweveT,
definition
its
the
of
relation to coos6ou-"-e.,
with
---s4)
there is no longer Imowledge'
this will ako entail that
as it has been understood by representational
consciousness,for in order for there to be representationalknowledge, there musi be both
detenninate difference and ide-ntitv between subject and object. Absolute Knowing, then,
be
in
ill
embodied a negativeunity of
W1
39
40
"'
'neitber-nor'
objw,
a
el
structure,
ýsmbjcct
-and
Pippin, 1989, pp. 10-1-5; Houlgate, 199.1-,p- 71.
Westphal, 1979, pp. 11-11
41 Cf
-
Maker, 1995, Ch, 3, on this difference between representationand absolute knowledge
Maker, however, stressesthe pure negativity of absolute knowing (pp. 78-82")too much, for it is
(the
this
too
the
to
of
positivity
result
way in which it servesas the element
understand
necessary
it
dogmatic
Schelfing's
Science),
thought
transfonning
a
into
unity
of
and
intuition
as
in
without
of
Ideiiii0tv.wstem
.
172
But this gTasp of the fluidity
or the 'x-mishing' of the structure of
representational consciousnessstill belongs to the perspective of a rigidly disiumfive
consciousness that cannot tolerate paradox. and that- despite itself finds its content
perpetually disappearing in its intemal dialectic. Like Deleuzc, Hegel holds that it is also
necessaryto comprebend this loss of meaning as a positive result. Absolute Knowing, is
self-conscious knowledge of consciousness as that which only coincides -,N-itb itself
insofar as it always changesits limits, insofar as it differs from or exceedsitself It is not
knowledge of a foundational, transcendentmeaning that fixes the horizon of a common
sense.Instead, it is consciousnessof the negative movement of the PS as being its own
lacks
foundational
'essence'
transcendent,
innermost meaning, an
any
moment of
which
fomi
The
PS
the
thus
presence.
end of
contains a
of knowing that is equal to the
problematic, basic consciousnessof unity that marks its beginning in Sense-Certainty.
Self-consciousness as Absolute Knowing
knows the logical
condition
of
the
determinationof its object and of itself vis-a-vis each other insofar as this condition is
in
its
like
its
'failure'
to
a
own
coincide
itself
something
simply
self-differingWith
intuition
plenary
-
its fluidity or constant vanishing. The difference between negative
for
difference
between
dialectic
knowledge
Hegel,
the
is,
and positive views of absolute
finite
Versiand
between
or
consciousness,and
a sceptical oveTcomingof
and speculation,
a comprehensive overcorning, which grasps the positive meaning of the instability of
§§81-2),
(EL
an instability which is implicit in the
representational consciousness
beginning of PS and which reflection upon it draws out.
As witb Deleuze, the minimal presupposition of deterymnateconsciousnessis
from
here
difference
But
difference
the
be
thought
itself
is a conceptual
the
of
shown to
being
thought
that
the
terms
of
as
thematised
Nkhichis utterjv other
of
in
one
relation, not
difference
for
this
And
the
is
therefore
of
itself
comprehensible,
structure
than thought.
difference.
However,
jdentjýý,
the
Knowledge
this
of
Absolute
identity
and
presents
still
back
Hegei,
for
into a relative identity of concept and intuition,
does not,
collapse
173
subordinated to the concept. In order for there to be even the most minimally
determinable difference between subject and object (as presented in Sense-Certainty).
Hegel suggests,consciousnessmust be capable of knowing itself as self-diffenng- and
with this knowledge one has authentically broken through the limits of representation,
without giving up the idea of knowing.
Absolute Knowledge is not the abolition or destruction of finite consciousnessm
the name of a presupposed absolute t, nitVz42
I.-,
In4
il"Ite
d
f
consCl
qtca
it
repre.
wnts
r-ý-..
3.
its
renunciation of
own fixity, even though finite consciousnesswill inevitably remain the
medium through which human beings habitually relate to objects. The Absolute here is
not an unjustified, one-sidedly practical commandment, whicb subordinates all being to
the project of its realisation. Instead, it constitutes an insight, won not through immediate
intuition but through the labour of the negative' (PS 21/10 § 19), into the non-subjective
in
sense whicb self-consciousnesscould be said to be a condition of objectivity as such.
This is self-consciousnessas the movement of what Hegel calls Absolute Negafivity, in
behind
the
the positing of specific objects are revealed.
subjective
which
presuppositions
This mode of knowledge tums out to be the negation of all foundationalism, becauseit is
inberently without positive representationalcontent and yet it is the positive truth of the
'way of despair', because it comprehends what Hegel in the Preface called the
'tremendous power of the negative' (PS 32/19 ý02) which gains expression in the
deten-ninationof the different moments of in-itself and for-another and in the negation of
this difference. In this way, Absolute Knowing comprehends the whole movement and
therefore the totality of consciousness,for it discloses a non-representationallogical selfconsciousnessthat is immanent within the negativity of representationalconsciousness.
To recap: Hegel opposesthe foundationalist notion (affirmed bv both Ficbte and
Schelling) that the object of philosophy is a ground of representationalconsciousnessthat
is essentially opposed, as infinite or absolute, to all finite consciousness.Instead, Hegel
47 Rose, 1980, p. 150.
174
arizuesthat the Absolute is immanent to finite consciousness.and shows that this Is so bv
Presentingin PS an internal, deconstructivecritique of the structureof representational
consciousness, in wbich Absolute Knowing emerges as knowledge of the movement
fixity
its
This
througbwbicb consciousness
the
of
own structure.
meansthat
undermines
Absolute Knowing is not Presupposed as detennined relative to our experience (which,
Ficbte
as
and Sclielling sbowed, requires an infinite deduction to prove that it is more
than just a presupposition), but is demonsirated. Hegel, like Deleuze, thus critiques a
whole 'image of thought', and does this by tracing the immanent movement of the
internaldifferenceof consciousness
from itself
175
Chapter 6
Hegel's Account of Absolute Knowing: Logic and Being
i) Introduction
The result of the PS is the dissolution of the basic certainty possessed by
representational consciousness,namely, that the essential structure of experience is the
opposition between subject and obj ect. Hegel believes that with this basic certainty
for
foundationalist
for
image
the
the
philosophy,
as
a secure
need
a
of
need
vanishes
foundation only ariseswhen we are conscious of a distinction between the object-in-itself
and the object-for-us. Instead, we can now take up the standpoint of Absolute Knowing,
in which the nature of the genuine, non-foundational unity of being and thought can be
determined, or rathei-,allowed to deten-nineitself tbrougb our tbinking. Representational
having
been
consciousness
exhaustively deconstructed, self-consciousnessis not now
die
it,
but
Absolute
(Gegensiand)
the
trutb,
over against
aware of
as an object
as its own
Sache selbst. Reflection is no longer finite, related to a given foundation, but infinite,
SL
itself,
immanent
have
The
to
thus
to
thus
to
thought think
aims
only
and
itself
related
begin
from
fixed
being.
does
For
Hegel,
this
not
a
supposedly
process
its own unity with
foundation determined reflexively in relation to a definition of experience wbich is
accepted as given, and is in this sense non-foundational. PresupPOsitionlessand selfdetennining.
The idea of an Absolute that is identical with self-determining thought is the kev
SL
The
be
Hegel's
the
of
not
merely
of
immanence
pbilosopby.
a
of
will
aspect
Vision
logic that details the inner determinations of thought, for then it could not be absolute.
For Hegel's reconstruction of philosophy to be successful, the SL must also be an
being
however.
I'lus
has
been
details
the
the
that
nature
of
itself
strong
claim,
ontology
176
begmning
Hegel's
target
main
with
critics.
of succeedinggenerationsof
'
Schelling. In the
i
last chapter, I noted that Schelling was critical of Hegelian logic for being what. In
Schelling's view, could only be a negative pbilosophy that deducescatmorial conditions
be
SL.
for
In
being
be
detenninate
the
fhougbtit will
assessing
witbout wbicb
cannot
being
determine
logic
Hegelian
to
itself. or whether
necessary consider whether
can also
this rational unity of thought and being can only be an unprovable assumption for
has
Schelling
it
is
just
Hegel
If
then
philosophy, as
argued.
an assumption,
not overcome
foundationalism, and bas in fact merely regressedto Schelling's foundationalist position
in the Philosophy of Identity.
My strategy in this chapter wifl be to defend Hegel's account of Absolute
KnoWing, against vanous objections that are eitber implicitly or explicitly dependent
Scbelling's
This
deeper
Absolute
Knowing
a
position.
consideration of
upon
will entail
before
focusing
PS,
SL
By
flegel's
deconstruction
the
to
going on examine
in
itself
on
in
the
transcendent
of
notion of a
ground the SL's Doctrine of Essence,I will then show
bow Hegel reads foundationalism as a transcendentalillusion rooted in being itself The
Schellingian objections to Hegels position will thus be unden-nined,given that all of
them rely on Schelling's own account of what reason must presuppose in order to get
in
deconstruction
Hegel's
started philosophy.
of grounding will show how Schelling's
foundationalism is inherently self-contradictory, and based on the unquestioned
In
I
Hegel's
the
assumptionsof representationalconsciousness.
next chapter, will pursue
claims further by examining, in relation to objections advanced against Hegel by
Deleuze, the non-foundational ontological account of deterimnation in SL which, I shall
argue, operateswithout reference to transcendentgrounds.
'Mere now follows a summary of the objections I will be considering here, whicli
bave been raised by Klaus Msing, Walter Scbul7. Manfred Fran'k-and Andrew Bowie.
1 Qv. Bowie, ) 993, Chs 5 and 6. Frank, 1975 gives a good account of Schelling's influence on
Feuerbachand Marx.
177
a) Dfising Provi
both
SL
Hegel,
an
as
reading
a 'strong' interpretation of
ing,
DU
For
the negatiN,
e unitN? of
sl
account of absolute subjectivity and an ontology.
both
be
j
PS
to
of consciousnessof an
the
a condition
subject and ob ect at
end of
is meant
in
itself,
determinateness
that
and this way, the
manifold
intuited manifold and of the
of
Kantian distinction between intuition and understanding disappears Ddsmg relates this
ý2
between
CPuR
B132-6
but
Kant's
Ficbte,
two
the
to
to
of
relation
move, not
account at
in
For
Kant
the
a synthesis consciousness
aspects of
synthetic unity of consciousness.
however,
be
by
the unitv of this synthesis
the
only
can
produced
productive imagination,
is contributed by the svnthetic unity of apperception. As Dfising notes, the second edition
'
of CPuR makes the work of the imagination dependent upon the unity of apperception.
There is an opening here for the idea that one could go beyond Kant by thinking the unity
determining
is
that
ase/fin
the
of apperception as
manifold
synthesised.But this would,
for Dfising, only be a self-thinking apperception, not a self-knoulptQ one, which for
DOsing would be one that knows its own determinations to be identical WItb those of
being-in-Itself Hegel assumes in the SL that self-determining thought will in fact be
4
Substance,
that whicb truly exl--,
fs. Thai one can thin1c,the
identical with real
deten-ninationsof what, jbr us, appears to be the only self-consistent candidate for the
does
Absolute
of
not prove that these are themselvesabsolute: this thinking remains
role
hypothetical
Hence, the SL can only be Circular., In a stMilar way to Schell'in 9s' negati
.5
ive
pbllosophy.
b) Schulz focuses on Hegel's formulation of the speculative proposition, e.g.,
Substance is Subject, whicb is meant to express the true unity of subject and object
achieved in Absolute Knowing, i. e., the dissolution of the fixity of representational
00sing, 1995, p. 2-335.
3 Ibid. pp. 237-8.
jbid
23Q-40.
pp.
.,
5 Mid, pp. 226-7.
178
consciousness.This unity only arises through natural consciousness'sexperience of the
forms of the difference between in-itself and for-another. Schulz thus terms the
speculative proposition the 'unity of the related terms an(J their relation" that has been
developed through reflection on what is given in consciousness,with the final unity of
the two ten-ns being the Absolute that constitutes and is immanent in the whole
pbenomenological senes. He sees Schelling's essential objection to the SL as being
directed against the idea that reflection can ground itself by simply reflecting on this
result. Reflection cannot ground itself in this way and be genuinely absolute, becauseit
has, for Schulz, to recognise that there is a minimal difference between the process of
reflection and the verv-fficl that a process of reflection exists. And so this tbat-ness of
reflection is not an arbitrarily posited being, but is reflection's mm condition, in which it
7
is 'always already inserted' , As we saw in Chapter Two, Schelling claimed that it was
necessaryfor reason to presupposea 'hip-her', non-rational Absolute in order to ground
reason. This Absolute is thus posited as transcendentto reason, as more than simply the
totality of possible rational determinations of the Absolute, and vet also as somehow
internally related to reason as its ground. Schulz agrees with Schelling that Hegel, by
arguing that the fixity of the distinction implied by such transcendenceis based on the
betrays
basic
dogmatic
prejudices of consciousness,
a
assumption, that
unprovable and
is
reason identical v"th being.
by
Schulz
is
Frank
Bowie.
The
related to the positions
c)
and
critique presented
held by Frank and Bowie, which again focus on the issue of the absolutenessand selfScbulz's,
Scbelling's
like
'hip-her'
Absolute.
Frank
to
of
and,
refer
sufficiency
reflection,
Knowing
be
Absolute
that
to
cognition of the immanence of the true
reco&Mises
is meant
finite,
is
both
Fichte
the
that
this
and
a
cnfique
of
infinite or Linconditioned in
and
6 Schulz, 1954, pp. 340-1.
jhjd_ pp. 144-5
179
H61derlin.8 "c understands Hegel as wanting to show that the independence of that
finite
because
illusion
the
that
of
persists only
which exists outside the subject is an
9
by
begins
SL.
Hegel
Here.
this
subject itself, and argues that
move is repeated in
thinking the Absolute as an indeterminate unity (Being) and subsequently shows that this
immediate unity requires as its condition of possibility a self-related, reflected untN!
(Essence) like the finite subject. But, for Frank and for Bowie, the problem %viththis
kinds
immediate
fails
distinguish
between
Hegel
that
two
to
of
move is
unity: an
immediate unity posited in relation to self-consciousness,and a real immediate unity
(Scheffing's higher Absolute)-lo An un-mediate unity that is the relative other of thought,
finite
be
in
to
the
said
such as an object posited relation
subject, could unproblematically
to be conditioned by self-related reflection. A real ground that is irreducible to reason, on
the otber band, is the necessaryground of sUbjectiVity wbicb it can only presuppose,as
Schulz., following Schelling, has already argued. As Bowie points out, Schelling here
follows Kant by 'Introducing a non-reflexive fbird ten-ninto the structure of knowledge',
is
being-in-itself
the
the
as against
subject and
phenomenal object which
i. e., nournenal
11
onlyfi)r the subject.
That reason or reflection is identical with the real ground can only be an
be
Knowing
I'legel's
Absolute
presuppositionless or truly
cannot
assumption, and so
"
by
Hegel's
follow
Schellmg
both
Frank
Bowie
that
suggesting
mistake k
absolute.
and
the same as Ficbte's: imagining that the unconditioned must resemble the finite, selfHepel
kind
thus produces an
of reflexive self-relation.
conscious subject as an eminent
Yrank, 1975, p. 29.
Ihid., p 30
10Bowie, 1993. p. 135.
11Ibid. p. 1314-5.
ý
12Frank, op cil., pp 51 55
-2N
180
account of the Absolute that simply determines it in relation to the subject, rather than
determiningit asit is in itself
The Ontological, Venseof Absolute Knowing
I'lie question concernIng the account of Absolute Knowing in the PS that we
in
is
light
Hegel's
to
the
these
need pose
of
phenomenological project
objections whether
implies unacknowledged foundationalist assumptions.These assumptions would concem
a fonn of determinate knowledge that the PS has to presuppose in order to attain the
knowledge that it claims is absolute. In otbeTwords, I-legel's proposition that Substance
is Subject would, from this perspective, imply that the actually appeanng detenninations
Substance
in
itself
Subjectthe
that
objectivity
of
are manifestations of a
is
identical With
being
by
this
in-itself,
expressed the concept of Absolute Negativity. 'Spirit' would
unity
then refer to this certainty of essential unity. But, from Schelling's point of view, this
be
it
is
first
be
PS
this
that
the
can
only
attained
if
presupposed,
and
unity
means
would
circular, and thus unable to achieve a total critique of representational consciousness.
Hegel's acknowledgement of histofical conditioning would thus only he a negative
deconstruction of the subjective presuppositions of consciousness,and could not be
knowledge
be
the
absolute, as
only
provided would
relative and negative, concerning the
inability of representationalconsciousnessto proV]de foundations for knowledge.
Can Absolute Knowing be characterised in this way? I want to argue that this
Absolute
Knowing
the
that
cntique is misplaced, given
attainment of
involves
acknowledging the utter collapse of any foundational. transcendent conception of
in
before
knowing".
'knowing
suýjectiVlty, whicb is presupposed as given
advance as a
Absolute Knowing is not a process in which the subject becomes alienated from itself
only to eventually return to its essence,the subject as it is in-itself This NNouldbe to
Schellingian
Fichtean
foundafionalist
PS
the
the
and
on
conceive
model, as systernafic
knowledge of the unconditional based on a special intuition of the non-reflexive unih- of
181
the subject and object in themselves. I will now nwx the development of Absolute
Knowing as a progressive decentring of consciousness,wbicb will demonstrate bov.,the
Schellingian critique misses its taraet.
Consciousnessis first decisively decentred when it discovers that it cannot itself
serve as a transcendent foundafion of knowledge. This occurs in the sections on SelfConsciousnessin PS. The transition from Consciousnessto Self-Consciousnessoccurs
becauseof natural consciousness'sdiscovery that it is itself responsible for the positing
of its object. The question that then anses for natural consciousnessconcerns its own
determinatenessas a foundation. Why does it posit objects in certain ways? This question
bebind
Ficbte's critique of Kant: what is the sufficient reason, the real necessity,
was
bebind the specific detenninations of transcendental subjectiVity? How can a
"
defined
consClousnessthat is
essentially by an activity of positing itself be detent 1-ned?
Hegel shows that this question forces us to recognise that the idea of a foundational,
transcendentalsubjectivity is not enough to explain its own determination.
The sections on Self-Consciousnessbring out the previously implicit historical
dimension
Self-consciousness,
and social
of subjectivity.
as it tums out, is only capable
for
itself
if
it
of constituting objects
is conscious of itself as being as other subjects view
it through its actions. Initially, self-consciousness is undeveloped, conscious of the
I
(PS
133/105
067),
but
'an
enduring existence'
also
sensuousworld confronting it as
conscious of itself CI am F) as an undetermined existence. The consciousness of
Sense-Certainty
being,
noumenal,
neither phenomena] nor
With which
problematic
begins, has become this consciousnessof ni-vexistence. The subject now posits itself as
the foundation of objective detennination. The criterion that would prove this
from
independence
the sensuous
thereby,
self-consciousness's
constitutive relation, and
for
by
Desire
to
then-La relation
the
objects constituted
practical relation
its
world, is
througb wbicb it acts to negate the independenceof objects and tbus sbow its power over
II Pippin, 1989, ppý 146 ff, pp. 154-5.
182
them. Desire is thus the subject's active attempt to realise the determination that it posits
as its essential oT in-itself side.
Crucially, this self-awarenessturns out to be the subj.ect's awarenessof itself as
lacking knowledge of its supposedly essential, foundational dimension, subjectivity-initself Its active relation to objects is a practical attempt to establish its own difference,
from
the objective world, whieb would not be necessaryif it was somehoNN:
qua subject,
itself
it
is
in-itself
fails,
This
however,
to
already present
as
attempt
as the subject ends
up ideniffiving itself witb the objective world, making itself dependent upon impulses
it
lead
(PS
the
towards
these
anse
in as given, and upon
objects
which
impulses
which
138/109 §175). Simple Desire, then, cannot be the foundation or essence of selfconsciousness,but appears as a minimal, relatively asocial and ultimately untenable
'4
If consClo-usne&sis to become a self-consciousness certain
strategy of self-confirmation.
just
itself
desire
but
to
of its constitutive role, it cannot
relate
natural objects,
must
and
bave contact witb objects that are not just objects, but are also self-conscious, in wbicb it
can find confirmation of its own freedom. Again, however, encounters with other
do
in
back
the
to
subjects not simply result
mifforing, of natural consciousness'sessence
free,
foundational
The
subject's positing of itself as a
subject
it as in a passive medium.
aggaingoes awry.
Self-consciousnessas such, it turns out, is only made possible by a relation to at
least one other self-consciousnessthat is recognised as sucb in this relation: this relation
is what Hegel means by Spirit, the "I"
that is "'We" and the "We" that is 'T" (PS
139/110 § 177). 'Mis is a relation to self that is onýv constituted through one's
being-for-another.
However,
once self-consciousness encounters a
consciousness of
being that it posits or re-cognises as self-conscious, it discovers that this %,,
er-v,act of
in
This
has
be
to
act
reciprocal,
order that the
posititig entangles it in new problems.
14 This counts against Kojeve's anthropologica) reading of PS (1980, pp. 3-4) On this- See
Williams, 1997, p. 12,
183
relation-to-other can ground the relation-to-self (certainty of one's independence) that
self-consciousnessposits as its own essence.The initial phase of the sections on the Lord
and Bondsman, the struggle to the death for re-cognition, is the first of the IncreasIni-fly
intersubjective procession of attempts to reallse reciprocal re-cognition that form the rest
of the PS. It fails becauseit representsan attempt on the part of two self-consciousnesses
to prove, each to the other, their freedom, and thereby the fact that they are able to recognise each other. But this can only occur through wl attempt to kill the Other, and
because of the need for reciprocity, through each risking his or heT own life (PS 1445/114-5 §§188-9). This strateizv,however, is completely self-defeating, for re-cognition
knowledge
freedom
is
impossible
and
of my own
if I kill the Other or the Other kills me.
To resolve this problem, one self-consciousness must capitulate, losing the
but
freedom
keeping
life,
the
struggle
its
re-cognismg
of the Other and thus coming to
know itself as unfi-ee. T'his situation is that described in 'Lordship and Bondage. The
importance of this 'advance' is that it introduces the idea of a shared social project (even
if this project is not based on perfect reciprocitv), in whicb an imperfect relation of re"
facilitated
by
cognition is
social practices, These social practices, of labotu and
consumption, transform re-cogMtion through the medium of objects that are transformed
into raw material for labour and goods for consumption. The Lord (re-cognised selfknows
itself
free
through consuming the object that the Bondsman
as
consciousness)
works on. The Bondsman (Itbe re-cognising consciousness)knows itself to be unfi-ee
becauseof its semce.
As is well known, however, this situation is upset: the Lord comes to re-cognise
itself as dependent upon the Bondsman's labour (and thus as unfree), whereas the
Bondsman comes to understand itself as responsible for the determinations of the object
free.
Crucially,
however,
thereby
partiafly
neither discovers itself to be genuinely
and
15Pinkard, op. cil., p. 56.
194
free, for neither other-relation can ground reciprocal re-cogrutiom16and so the Bonds-man
17
for
from
ne
is not as often thougM, the victor.
social relations,
result is a retreat
consciousness now posits pure thinking. its ability to reflect upon its relation to
*
-Iobjectivity,
independence,
foundation
thus metamorphosing
the
true
as
and expression of
into those forms that Hegel calls Stoicism and Scepticism. This new direction of desire in
turn proves inadequate, ending in the Internally riven forin of the reli ious Unbappy
Consciousness. Here consciousnessis forced to re-cognise that pure thought is a selfcontradictory foundation of the certainty of one's fTeedom, and that in order to resolve
this contradiction, it is necessaryonce again to actively take up a relafion to others as the
means of understanding one's freedom. But this relation is one in wbich the
individualistic understanding, of freedom is again shown to be inadequate, for the
Unhappy Consciousness, which posits the unity of Its thinking outside itself as the
divine
freedom,
its
is forced to recognise an Other as a priestly
ground of
unreachable
mediator between it and the divine (PS 168-9/136-7 §§227-9). This means that a
different object, the impersonal unity of thought has now replaced the natural object that
fortned the third term of the Lord-Bondsman relation. It is this irnpersonal viewpoint
by
itself
in
the
now
serves
as
means
natural
consciousness
recognises
which
which
an
Otber, namely, in the unity of the priestly mediator with the diVine (PS 170/138 §230).
The new object-in-itself, the new foundation of freedom, is this universal thinking. It is
for
desires,
the
the interrelated
a common object
posited as
unity of all individual wills or
being
initial
The
'We.
the
indeten-ninatecertainty of
with which PS
social
subjects of
beganhas thus been transfonned into Substance,a foundation posited by representational
initially
in
deten-ninations:
the subject's certainty
to
this
consciousness relation other
was
have
be
foundation.
Now,
it is the impersonal unity
as
seen,
cannot
a
of itself, which
we
16Pinkard, op. cit, p. 6'3.
17This claim is above all Koj6ve's (op. eir, p. 20). For a different refutation of this claim, see
Rose, 1980, pp. 120-30.
185
Substance.
divine
(Reason)
thought
true
of
rather
in-itself
which is take to represent the
than the indi,,idual subject.
The process of re-cognition that takes us from Consciousnessto Reason cannot
be reduced to the common misrepresentationof Hegellan phenomenology that views it as
a process of simple reflection in which the subject finds, through its 'self-alienation'.
confirmation of what it presupposed about itself. In fact, the subject's attempts to find
such confin-nation are continually ftustrated. Simple reflection on an objIect simply
renders explicit wbat was implicitly
be
to
the case, thus preserving the
assumed
foundational unitv of the subject throughout a inerely illusory moment of difference. Recognition, however, includes a moment of real difference, through which the subject's
relation to its own certainty of being- and later, its consciousnessof its own existence, is
transformed -a
movement which constitutes Hegelian 'experience.
Just becauseself-consciousnesshas become aware of itself as Spirit, however, its
be
frustrated
its
It
to
education is not over, continues
attempts to establish a stable
in
foundation. At the end of the sectionson Reason,it finds itself once again opposed, as an
isolated consciousness,to a body of historically given norms that constitute the being,
Substanceor actual Spirit of the society to which it belongs. These non-nscondition the
its
desire
Passing
them.
through the
although it cannot rationally justify
content of
determinate
historically
life
Spirit
that
the
ethical
proper,
concrete,
sections on
is,
(Sildichkeu) of the society (wbicb tell once more the same story from a more inclusive
finds
freedom
decentred
its
within a context
perspective), naturW consciousness
vet more
it
is
The
for
to
that
not responsible.
wb-Icb itself
society,
of ends and values specific
transfort-nation of natural consciousness into the subject of Religion produces a new
Spint,
developed
Now,
opposes
consciousnessof
self-consciousness,as a
object again.
life
lived
476/412
(PS
body
through
to
the
is
of actual practices
which its ethical
itself
§678), and reflects on the purposes that these practices express.It thus representsto itself
life,
foundations
highest
their
ethicai
and
reflects
the
of
its
on
consistencv
as
of
ends
186
knowledge. 18 These purposes are now taken to represent the Substance of socl2l
has
become
Self-consciousness
its
foundation
being.
that
existence,
and essential
religious Spirit, which reflects on such ends, is thus reflecting upon their self-consistencV
for
In
Substance,
when considered as
action. positing them as objects
as ultimate grounds
of reflection, it represents them as divine, firstly as part of the natural world, then as
stemming from the 'life of the people'. The tbird stage, the self-consciousness of
Christian 'Revealed Religion', is when Spirit represents itself to itself as neither given,
nor simply posited, but as self-renewing, as 'tbe universahtv of the Spirit who dwells in
this community, dies in it every day. and is daily resuffected' (PS 547/475 §784).
Reflecting on the consistency of a notion of actual Spi-fit that finds its ends extemal to it,
and then upon one that creates its ends, self-consciousnessfinds that Spirit the otberrelation that constitutes all self-relation, must be a self-renewing positing of and
its
reflection upon ultimate ends, if it is to be self-consistent.
nere is still a difference present bere, bowever, between subject and object. This
difference represents the infinite
ditTerence between the Substantial ground of
determinations (God as the infinitely
mIgbty Lord)
and the representational
consciousness(fallen humamtv) through which reflection uncovers these determinations.
In the Revealed Religion, the time of reconciliation between the self-consciousnessof
Spirit and its Substwice is thus infinitely deferred (PS 549-50/477-8 §787), as was the
case with Schelling's postulated third age of revelation (SPL 482-4/242-3). 'Me
transition between Revealed Religion and Absolute Knowing
in
consists
self-
becoming awareof itself as Spirit's oun self-consciousness:
the in-itself,
consciousness
the representedhighest end (self-renewing and self-reflexive Spirit), is not itself different
from that which posits and reflects upon it. It is different only-ffir natural consciousness.
Again, it must be stressed that this event is not the becoming-conscious of an intuited
Instead,
Absolute.
the phrase 'Spirit's own self-consciousness' defines
metaphysical
I.x Nd,
P. -1-11,
187
Absolute Knowing as a self-consciousnesswhich is aware of the presuppositions behind
levels
different
detem
desires
the
of
its own
inate
or practical interests, namely.
Spirit
Spirit,
thus
as its
of
actual
aware
intersubjective mediation that constitute
and is
own being or Substance. In other words, it becomes conscious of the development of
Spirit in PS as its t)wn devekýpment,and turns to examine the hision, of this development
(PS 552-3/480-1 e790,565-6/492 e808).
Hence, self-consciousnesscannot be thought of at the end of PS, as coming to
know itself as a putative 'in itself,
as a Wmscendent, foundational and substantial
forced
Wben
itself
history,
to
turn
subject.
self-consciousnessis
and re-cognise
it
in its
finds itself at the end of the path of despair: its formeT finitude and fixity has been given
for
fluidity,
for
its
being
determinations
total
the
the
it re-cognises
as
movement of
of
up
Spirit. It bas discovered that its initial, indeterminate and problematic being becomes
developed as a foundational relation between a constitutive finite subjectivity and its
objects, and which then becomes a relation between this subjectivity and intersubjective
structures that act as its foundation. The initial indeterminate being of consciousnessis
thus determined as Spirit, a decentred structure of mediation in whicb self-consciousness
itself proves itself to be the force behind its own decentring. But in thus re-cognising
have
been
left
have
lost
if
to
to
itself, self-consciousnessappears
itself: it is
with nothing,
but
determined,
it
is
the
through
then
nothing
movement
inwhich subject and object are
itself neither the finite subject nor the object. Absolute Knowing is therefore, from the
but
deten-ninate
the
collapse of all
perspective of representationalconsciousness,nothing,
itself
in
'Me
this
the content of its
structure.
subject
relations into
neither-nor
re-coonises
development as 'its own restlesssublation of itself (PS 564/491 §805, modified), that is,
Absolute
finite
be
'cannot
negativity,
an
absoluie or self-related
stated' in a
wbicb
19
synthetic proposition that would expressa relative unity,
It.) Rose, op. cil.. P. 18).
188
Nevertheless,self-consciousnesshas thereby come to comprehend jtseýfin a way
that is neither expiressiblein finite propositions nor grounded In an infinite intufion, but
is not therefore simply nugatory. The distinction introduced bv Hegel in the Preface
between the finite synthetic proposition and the speculative (,ýpekulahve, but also
begreýfende)proposition can now be regarded as non-abstract, from the viewpoint of
self-consciousnessthat bas,comprebended(begnffi(en)Absolute Negativity as the process
ý
-,
of its own development. If the standpoint of Hegelian Science is expressed bv the
propositions 'Substance is Subject' and 'Being is Tbought' (PS 48/33 §54.), then we
finite
Science
this
to
as
might understand
reducible
synthetic propositions that would
deten-nination
by
be
Substance
have
in-jlseýf
to
to
exhibit a
need
grounded.
would
virtue
of which it could be identified with Subject -
but then the certainty or knowledge of this
deten-ninationwould itself require justification from within the Subject, and we would
thereby be caught up again in the contradictions of representational consciousness.
However, Hegel's account of tbespeculalive proposition concerns,not a fixed, synthetic
relation of two deten-ninate ten-ns, but the experience of the developing difference
between two terms which is itself finally comprehendedas their developed identity (PS
20
54/38 §6 1), The emergence of
-Absolute
Knowing is the comprehension of the unity
Negativity,
difference,
Absolute
'barmony'
the
this
as
emerges
a
of
which
unity
within
(PS 54/38 §61) of
histoncally
determined Substance or objectiVity-in-general
('thingbood', Dingheit) witb Subject or subjectivity-In-general (PS 551/479 §788).
Absolute Negativity or as it will be called in the SL thought or philosophical
.,
determinate,
the
overcoming
of
all
consciousness,appears in a positive sense as
intuition,
between
differences
thought
and
and thus
subject and object,
representational
from
fixity
breakdown
And
knowledge
this
the
the
their
of
of
unity results
of
unity.
as
finite consciousness.It has not been abstracted from finite consciousnessaccording to a
foundationalist method, and posited as its absolute presupposition.
2oSee also jbid, pp. 48-9.
189
To understand this overcoming- the sensein which Absolute Negativity can be
knowledLe or
Absolute Knowing or 'absolute reflection', as opposed to finite negatIN-1ty.
reflection, this unitv of objectivitv and subjectivity must be compared with its Kantian
analogue, the relation between the transcendental object, the 'concept of something in
g,eneral' (-CPuR A251). and the transcendental subject or unity of apperception (CPuR
A-346/B404) 1 The status of these transcendental forms rem3j -nsproblematic in Kant's
ý2
account of the two 'regions' of exverience. The transcendentalobiect is not a noumenon,
but neitheris it a phenomenon,for it is the form of appearances
in general(ICPuRA253).
And the spontaneous transcendental subject is not the ground of freedom which the
subject as thing-in-itself can be thought to be (CRuR A538-41/B566-9), and nor is it an
is
for
itself,
for
deten-nined
the
appearancein which
subject
it is the condition of the
synthesisof appearances(CPuR A354).
These unities are required by transcendentallogic as ultimate formal conditions
for-anotber
determined
of experience, unities only comprehensible as
neither
nor inthemselves.For example, the transcendentalobject, as the form of an object in general, is
for
necessary the synthesisof -particularempirical objects under the universal categories.
The formal conditions of unitv are also a limit relative to the subject for they define the
for
Knowing
knowledge
it
Hegel's
Absolute
of the relation
is
us.
object as appears
between these formal constituents of representationalconsciousnessin general. It is not a
'for-another"
the
aspect of objects that is supposed,
or
conditioned
reflexive negation of
does
in-themselves,
know
them
to
to
through
and
not therefore
simply
negation, allow us
intuition
Absolute
identification
or
of
a
postulated
real
V"th
of reasonwith
entail an
knowing. Thus far, it remains Kantian, for its is simply knowledge of the conditions of
kind
knowing.
But
and
not a special
of intuitive
at the
representational consciousness,
from
has
knowledge
this
resulted
an exhaustive critique of the verv idea of a
sarnetime,
If 2i2ek (1995) has pointed this out in his innovative and illuminating account of the relation
between Hegel and Kant, which I have madeuse of in the discussionthat follows.
190
thing-in-itself It is knowledgethat Spirit quo AbsoluteNegativity. the negativeunity of
all determinations of representational consciousness.is identical WItb the problematic
being of Sense-Certainty. Hegel thus discovers that Kant's indeterminate empirical
detennined.
becomes
being
througb its
the
the
intuition of
of
subject necessanlY
mediation as Spirit as the identity of the formal unities of the subiect- and object-ingeneral.
More evidence concerning the radically negative (neither nor) character of
...
Absolute Knowing can he found in EL §44, wbere Hegel dismisses the idea of an
he
'T'his
dismissal
does
thing-in-itself
that
thereby affinns that we
mean
not
unknowable
know
He
the
tbing-in-itself,
througb
can
eitber
pure reason or in intuition.
notes that it is
ftom
for-another,
is
detenninations
to
the
the
easv
object
abstract
of
until only what
totally 'empty' is left, or at least, what is empty fior-us. namely the 'beyond' of the initself, that which we cannot know. But secondly Hegel points out that it is equally easy to
'Me
thing'beyond'
'only
1he
tbinking'.
this
pr(.-)ductof
see
qua problematic existent as
in-itself as a 'negative determination' is a product of thinking, for it is the reflection of
the 'empty self-idenfitV of the transcendentalsubject. It is a product of the empty unity
being,
in
by
indeterminate
Kant's
empirical intuition of
expressed
wbich there is no
deten-ninatedifference between subject and object or tbouOt and intuition. Here, Hegel
does indeed go further than Kant does, but not in the direction of the positive
identification of reason with an intuition of a putative thin g-in-itself, Kant pointed out
that the ftmscendentalobject is coffelative to the ftmscendentalsubject (CPuR A10910). Hegel argues that the emptv fbing-in-Itself is simply the reflected fon-nal unity of the
beyond.
It is a negative
than
still
positively
existent
an unknowable yet
object rather
foTit is not found in expenence
detenninationof the simple unity of self-consciousness,
but is 'listed among the Kantian categones' (EL §44, modified) as a concept of an object
in general, a concept of rqlectjon (CPIuRA290/B346).
191
For Hemel,this identification of the negative unity of the thin g-in-itsel f with the
absolute reflection or self-determinationof the transcendentalsubject is Immanently
justified by Absolute Knowing. where the movement of self-consciousnessin PS is recognised as the condition of any positing of a determinate object. '[I]t
is the
externallsationof self-consciousness
that posits the thinghood [Dingheifl' of the object
(PS 551/479 §788). Self-consciousness does not, by knowing itself as Absolute
Negativity, know itself as a putative subject-in-itself as the Substantial ground of the
exisience of an object, but rather as the condition of the very externality or othernessof
the object of expenence. Absolute Knowing
has a conlem which it diftrentiales from itself
for it is pure negativity or the dividing of itself it is
consciousness.This content is, in its difference, itself
the T, for it is the movementof self-sublation,or the
T
that
the
samepure negativity
is.
(PS 559/486 §799, modified)
No positive determination of the object as it is in itself (even if this positivity is
but
be
that
thing-in-itself)
of an existent
just
possible without this
unknowable
would
negative tinih, of subjectivity and objectivity as a 'blank' wbicb can never be directly
It
experienced in representational consciousness.
is itself the condition of any
by
being
througb
at
all,
simply
moving
all
representations
ever
representation
Witbout
fixed in a definite 'place' and becoming known in a positive, essentialdetennination.
As the positing of an external unity is not a reflection of any positive.
finite
but
content
it
is
not
a
or
given
an absolute reflection of the
presupposed
When
the
suýject.
self-consciousness re-cognises itself in the
indeterminate unity of
it
'at
home
in
its
Otherness
[in
and
objectivitV.
is
subjecfi,
of
%-Ihf
itself
I
with
y
negative unit
192
But
'being-atAndensein
559/486
beisich,
(PS
§799,
this
is/1'
veinem
modified).
wlbsl
home' is not a confirmation of the finite subject's assumption that it is the foundation of
the detenninations of the object, which occurs through the subject's 'self-alienation'.
Sueb an externalisation would be relative to the presupposition that the finite subject
could be posited as the foundation of the object, and would belong Within the early
sections of PS on Self-Consciousness,before sucb presuppositions are deconstructed in
the emergenceof Spirit. Absolute Knowing cannot fix the content of the Absolute as a
foundational subject or object for it is the moment when self-consciousnessre-cognises
fluldity.
is
determinate
the
itself in absolute
negation
wbicb
of all
content.
'Me true radicality of Absolute Knowing, tben, is the speculativetrutb that the
identity of Substanceand Subject can only be grasped when they have been shown to be
different,
absolutely
as never coinciding VVItheach other or themselvesexcept insofar as
they are always moving, always negative, always internally different from themselves.
'Me Fichtean and Schellingian assumption that the Absolute is a positive, fixed essence
in itself which then somehow becomes split, reflected in another or 16r itve//' and
eventuallv becomes conscious of this fixed essence,is unden-nined.Substanceactually
suffers the absolute loss of itself as a self-subsistent, positive unity: it turns out to be
Subject, but this subject is not itself foundational or substantial, but is the decentred
movement of self-consciousnessexpressedby Absolute Negativity.
My claim is, then, that Absolute Knowmg is absolute because it expresses,
logic,
Kant's
h-anscendental
the ontological umtv of subject and object as
unlike
Absolute Negativity, but that it only has this ontological aspectbecauseit is a unity that
arisesout of an exhaustive crifique of a) the idea of any knowledge, whether reflexive or
b)
the very idea that a thing-in-itself (Viven as such
tbing-in-itself,
and
intuitive, of a
be
ically
the
of
self-consciousness)
activity
of
could
ontolo 91
real. Here,
independently
Hegel allies himself with Kant against Fichte and Scbelling, who both find themselves
having to posit a special intuition through which the Absolute can be known as it is in
193
between
difference
This
this
Fichtean-Schellingian
itself
move introduces an infinite
Absolute known in itself in intuition and the Absolute determined for us by reason. The
tbing-in-itself as the unknowable 'beyond' of the limit set by the transcendentalobject on
our faculties of knowledge, is the Kantian element that is absent from Absolute Knowing
at the end of the PS. For Hegel, even the delineation of a posiliieýy unknoulable thing-in-
4-enceof a Ding on the othercide of a
itself irWolvespositing the real exi..
1, Mit.
22
';nlik-e
many interpreters of Kant, Hegel does not believe that the thing-in-itself is only present
in the critical philosopb
.y
ical
as a subjectively necessary posit. The epistemolo91
difference Kant insists on between receptive and spontaneous subjective faculties
reflects, for Hegel, an assumption that there is an ontological difference between the
subject and the thing-in-itself, the objective 'coffelate' (CPuR A30/B45, A19/B33) of
sensation: 'It]be capacity (receptivity) for receiving representationsthrougb the mode in
by
[Gevensidnden],
objects
whicb we are affected
is entitled sensibility' (CPuR
A]9/B33). For Hegel, Kant's faculty-model is based on the unaddressed,contingent
i
assumption that there is a difference between the subject and the object that 'causes' its
sensations(P §9). Kant's deduction of the conditions of experience cannot account for
this assumption, given that this deduction remains consistent only insofar as this
presupposition remains unaddressed.'Kant's method is thus itself conditioned by his
For
hand,
Hegel,
the
the
on
other
assumptions about
structure of experience.
selfitself
be
(Absolute
Negativity)
that
absolutely can
sbown
consciousness
reflects or repels
to be the condition for the positing of an existent something-or-other that is implied by
Kant's assumption.
Absolute Knowing thus expresses the unitv of being and thought, but Hegel
detenninations
the
to
of thougbt witb the posifive essenceof a putative
refuses identify
being-in-itself, which would mean that he had produced a merely negative (in Scbelfing's
knowledge,
one wbieb rested on an unprovable presupposition.
sense)model of absolute
22Nd., p, 37.
194
The unity of being and tbought in PS begins with the indeterminate. problematic unit-\:of
Sense-Cenainty
I-
indelermmate being- which is the minimal determination of any
consciousness.On being reflected upon, this splits itself mto,two aspects.This negativltv
of simple being is eventually comprehendedas identical with the immanent movement of
1-1.1
,elf-consclousness Itself
Being is understood by self-consciousness as existence,
expressedby the 'motionless tautology' I am F (PS 133/105 ý167'). a merel-v 'passive
[ruhigel unity' (PS 132/104 ý'166). Later, it becomes the unity of actual Spirit, before
finally becoming the unity of Absolute Negativity, in which self-consciousnessknows its
own incessant self-differing
movement as the negative unity of the opposed aspects of its
is
This
on-ly constituted through The experience of real, internal
objects.
unity, wbich
difference, expressesboth mediation and an immediate certainty of being. This being,
however, is neither simple Being nor Existence, but the Actuality (Wirkhchkeit) of selfconsciousness(PS 559/486 §800). Consciousness,in all its developments, is awareness
from
full
being,
but
develops
being
PS
this
to
actuality,
of
in
simple, indeteTminate
is
distinguished
from
bemg
by
developed
pure
its explicitly
content, i. e., selfwhich
from
itself
being
different
knowledge
Absolute Knowing
of
as always
consciousnessas
lacking
knows
has
become
being
that
itself
as
an inonce it
self-consciousness
is pure
Subject
knows
that
that
a
itself as a transcendent
would mark It as
itself aspect, an aspect
Substancethat grounds all deten-nmationsas Its own inner possibilities. And precisely
becausethis supposedly foundational aspect,whicb was still posited in the early sections
itself
knows
has
Self-Consciousness,
as alwavs
collapsed. self-consciousness
on
being
ne
actual
of self-consciousnessis a movement that
externallsing itself absolutely.
lacks a positive content and is also constantly exceeding itself I-I
Absolute Negativity,
first
determinations
through
they
through
as an empty space
which
all
which passes
become determinate. Being, is thus nothing beyond consciousness,existing as some sort
detenTimation
this
the
if
givemess
is just
of urtknowabilm of in-itself or givenness, even
195
Givenness itself has been shown to be an illusory determinatiom one %vhichdoes not
include any recognition of the role of self-conscious activit-,- in its positing.
The Science of Logic as Absolute Knowing
Absolute Negativity thus expressesthe knowledge consciousnesshas at the end
of PS of its own uncondifioned presupposifion. For there to be representational
consciousness,that is, any determinate relation between the subject and an object \\,blcb
is defined as having positive content both for the subject and in itself, there has to be an
absolutely negafive relafion of self-consciousnessto itself, through which it repels its
empty form out beyond itself We can now see whv the first of the objections to Hegel's
Absolute
Knowing
listed
beginning
by
the
this
that
model of
at
of
chapter,
advanced
Dfising, is mistaken. Dfising claimed that the identity of Subject and Substance in
Absolute Knowing representedthe certaMty that the Subject u,as Substance,as if Hegel's
finite
Tliis,
speculative proposition were a straightforward
synthetic proposihon.
as we
does
identify
be
Hegel
the
the Subject WItb Substance,
case:
saw, cannot
not p0sifively
tbus assuming that the Subject is some kind of transcendentmetaphysical foundation or
do
in
Ficbtean
Sebellingian
To
Hegel
Absolutes.
this,
the
the
and
ground,
manner of
being,
difference
between
have
thought
to
that
the
the object-for-us
and
assume
would
and the object-in-itself, can be erased in an intuition in which the thing-in-itself,
Substance, is somehow known to be identical with the Subject. This he does not do,
between
difference
the object-for-us and the
that
any
epistemological
sbowing instead
form
difference
the
ontological
of experience in which
object-in-itself presupposes a
between subject and object is accepted as real. Further, the PS shows that the
distinction
is
the negative relation of selfontological
presupposition of any such
be
to
cannot
identified witb either a phenomena]or nournenal
consciousness itself which
being
but
the
actual
of self-consciousness.
constitutes
subject,
whicb
196
As noted in the previous chapter, Absolute Knowing is. for Hegel, knowledg-eof
knows
decentred,
However,
transcendental
a
this subjectivityis radical],,,
yet
subjectivity
itself as such. This unity of self-consciousnesswith Itself is what Hegel calls the Concept
(PS 34/20 §34). Absolute NegatiNity is not posited by self-consciousness as a
transcendentfoundation, rather, self-consciousnessknows it as its own movement. This
form of knowing marks a point wbere,foundationali sin bas been exbaustively critiqued
becausethere is no longer a difference between for-us and in-itself, knowledge and truth,
foundational
This
claim and criterion.
relation has been what the PS has sought to
from
is
The
Concept
Knowing
Absolute
the
outset.
or
not the thought of a
undermine
foundation, a positive in-itself Instead, it is the thougbt of pure negativity, the loss of all
foundations that is vet the ultimate presupposition of all representationalconsciousness.
With the Concept, all distinctions between subject and object, including that
betweenpossibleor hypotheticalknowledgeand actual truth, have decisively collapsed
for self-consciousness. No sucb distinction, even tbougb it may be necessary for
everyday life, can be thought of as absolute. Hence the Concept is not a hypothetical
form of knowledge of the real, as flaTtmann's 'negative' reading of Hegel suggests.It
does not impose a Sollen upon thought in the same way as Schelling's or Fichte's
just
Concept
When
Absolute.
the
the
negatively as the
is grasped, not
concept of
but
loss
of itself,
also positively as the
consciousness"
consummationof representational
for
has
itself,
it
thought
task,
an
actual
it
with
-presents
unity of self-consciousnesswith
led finite consciousnessto the point where it has become philosophical consciousness.
This task, which SL is intended to fulfil, concerns the further determination of the being
Kantian
Fichtean
PS
While
that
representational
shows
or
of self-consciousness.
foundation
the
that
of real objects is only conceivable as
posits itself as
consciousness
later
determined
and
as the movement of negafix-ity that is
intersubjectively
determination
has
Concept,
the
this
the
of
not vet
negativemovement
comprehendedas
been understood. In other words, self-consciousness does not ý-now it-hy it always
197
23
for
Hegel
ledge
kn(-)x-.
lIMIt,,
tassk
To
that,
the
this
exceedsits own
positive
is
am
au
restoresmeaning to philosophy after the prolonged journey through PS.
Given that, for Hegel, the Absolute must be the Concept, in which the negative
movement of self-consciousness is not simply posited as a foundation, but is
comprehended as self-consciousness'sown being, the SL can only begin with this unity.
It is this being that the SL will analyse. At this point, Pippm's understandingof the SL as
in
PS
the
the senseof being an analysis of the logical rules that we
a continuation of
in
require
order to posit any object at all is inadequate, and, in Schelling's terms, too
24
SL
for
The
Hegel, determine th-essurum-re
negative.
will,
of being itself, where being is
by
is
PS.
SL
In
the
the
this
the
in
radically
negative
sense
elaborated
sense,
understood
historically conditioned: its standpoint presupposes or is justified by PS insofar as
Absolute Knowing emerges as self-consciousness's 'liberation from the opposition of
consciousness5(SL 1,43/491).
However, this is not a justification in the foundationalist sense,any more than
Deleuze's positing of Absolute Difference is. Hegel notes that the PS is not a 'grounding'
(Begrfinduýkg)of Absolute Knowing (SL 1,42/48). Absolute Knowing is not knowledge
of a positive foundation, a transcendentSubstancewhich has its being in-itself, and for
determinations.
determinations
knowledge
It
the
are its internal
is
which all phenomenal
that the fixity
been
has
overcome, Dven that
of representational consciousness
.
bv
determinate
structures of relative identity and
representation is characterised
difference that give
stability
to expenence, and whicb make foundationalist
knowledge.
in
true
to
that
these
represent
structures
order
show
methodologies necessary
Ilie PS is thus not the foundation of SL in that it Justifies its validity Nvithrespect to an
Such
foundational
deten-nination.
to
the
true
notions
object of which it purports represent
been
by
have
PS.
Instead,
be
inning
S1,
Justification
the
oveTtumed
of
91
is immanentin
of 1
ý3Cf Rose, op. -jL, p. 183.
24 Cf
Pippin, 1989, p. 176.
198
the PS. The 'object' of SL is not a Gegensland over against consciousness.but is die
Sache selbst witb respect to consciousness,its internal negativity, its being. In ihis sense,
the SL is presupposifionless, as its bimprining has not required to be jusfified in a
foundafionalist fashion. by a determination of being-in-itself that is assumed to have
been simply given to consciousness,e.g., throup-ban ecstatic or supenor intuition. Hence
the beginning of SL is both immediate and mediated, for it begins immediate]), with
being, yet does so in actuahýy only by sublating the whole of the PS, the developed
actuality of self-consciousness (SL 1,68/69'). The Concept includes Witbin it or
comprehends the mediated existence, the actuah(v of self-consciousness,yet does so iii
an inunediate way (SL 1,66-7/68-9ý in 'the meradicable thouot that thougbt is"
If all that philosophical self-consciousness-
or more simply, thought -
can do
is
Absolute
Knowing
in
analyse simple being, then all it can do is begin with the sti-nple
Concept of itself, which cannot be distingiusbed from the empty unity of its beting.This
be
for
bas
that
there
tbougbt
means
can
no critenon
wbetber
proceeded correctly except
that of self-consistency. In the Fichtean and Schellingian systems, this cntenon was
applied in ten-ns of the grand circle wbich was to connect the Absol-ute qua formal
postulate with the Absolute encountered again in the culmination of philosophy, this time
be
SL,
however.
The
difference
No
distinction
made in
as objective ground.
such
can
between bypotbesis and objective knowledge
is
simply
a determination of
be
The
'on
therefore
of cc-]
only
cnten
representational consciousness.
scif-consistency can
itself.
just
PS
the
the
thought
to
as
allowed consciousnessto compare
applied
content of
itself with itself, so philosopbical consciousnesswill compare itself with itself in SL.
Pbilosophical self-consciousnessthus simply refuses to intervene in the process
Knowing
Absolute
that
witb any subjective assumptionsabout the nature of
is
of analysis
the Absolute, allowing instead the matter that tbougbt bas in band (die Sache selbst) to
determineitself ne necessityof the consequentstagesof the processthus ansesout of
25Houlgate, 1992, p. 50,
199
the immanent self-refutation of Inadequate determinations of the Absolute. Inadequacv
here can only be indicated by the inconsistency of a determinafion of Absolute Knowing
In this way. philosophical self-consciousness observes itself becomiing
itself
with
conscious of its own ontological content. Ber-ause'tbe beginning of pbilosophy' remains
ccompletely immanent in its furtber determinafions' (SL 1,71/71 ), the process Is, like in
.
the PS, self-consciousness'sown experience of itself, the experience of its actuality (the
Concept) as mediated by consciousness'sreal difference ftom itself A closer
examination of the beginning of SL will show bow this immanence operates.
The beginning is without 'any deten-ninatenessrelatively to anything else, and
Lcannotcontain within itself any detenninateness,any content' (SL 1,69/70). Hence the
beginning is made with a determination of the Absolute which is not known through any
deten-nination.
Such
determination
or
method any other
a non-foundational yet necessary
be
itself
is
by
the
that
can only
expressed Hegel as the
unity of self-consciousnesswith
Concept, and which cannot be distinguished from the being of self-consciousness.The
beginning is thus made with the determination of Being as such, a simple, indeterminate
be
beginning
has
Dieter
flenricb
that,
the
to
argues
while
unconditioned, and thus
unity.
it
has
be
initial
determination
be
to
this
that,
nor
also
can only
negative, neither
its
positively
26
beginning
be
the
grasped or taken up in order to
.
enrich sees t.'his as
it
is
be
for
beginning
has
to
the
and
as
grasped
absolutely,
insofar
problematic,
absolute
SL,
between
is
difference
the
the
there
rest of
it and
which
a real
grasped absolutely,
27
it-follows from it and is relative to
if it is, grasped as the absolute begi-nmingat the
beginning, f7henthis gmsping seemsto be intuitive. If the beginning is intuited and the
subsequent steps arise in thought as a consequence of thinking the content of the
beginning,, then we are close to the Scbellingian objections advanced by Fran],, and
Bowie. SL would be founded on the difference between a superior kind of intuition and
2" Henrich, 1971, 'Anfang und Methode der Logik', pý
'17
lbi, l., P. 93.
200
thought, which it then attempts to sublate in thought, thus presupposing that the hN:
o are
somebow ýpvento us as identical.
Ilis
determination
determinafion
The
however.
the
a
is
of
inifial
case,
is not
tbougbt in wbicb there is no determinateepistemologicaldifference bet-weenintuition
be
for
distinction
1,82-3/82).
Such
(SL
thougbt
and
can only
made
or m relation to
a
consciousness, but the basis of sucli distinctions, our conviction that the fixit-,, of
is
representationalconsciousness basic to all experience, has been deconstructed.The act
of beginning can be identified with the first of three moments of thought described by
Hegel in EL. Thought, in thinking the Concept as simple Being, operates as
Undervanding, which, in thinking the Absolute, 'abstracts a particular category fi-om its
28
its
The beginning only occurs when thought
context and clarifies
specific meaning',
from
Understanding
the
the
qua
abstracts
simple, absolute unity of self-consciousness
developed actuality of self-consciousness,and holds it fast as a determination of thought
(SL 1,71/71-2, EL §80). Here, then, it is apparent that the fixity that cbaracterises
has
in
consciousness
an
analogue
philosophical consciousness or in
representational
being itself The illusory fixity of representational consciousnesswill tbus reappear and
be comprehended in SL as an ontological detennination, as characteristic of being.
Becausethis is a necessarydeten-ninationof bein& illusion is not simply accidental, but
Hegel
Like
Deleuze
Bergson,
and
will thus identify the internal
is ontologically rooted.
being.
tendency
the
of
appearing of a
illusions of consciousnesswitb
The inconsistency of the initial detennination with itself (wbicb we will exwnine
fully
Absolute
failure
Understanding
in
the
to
the
render
of
a moment),
i-nore closely
deten-ninate, is the second moment of thougk
thought as dialectical. This is not a
different subjective faculty. but a relation of thougbt to itself that develops out of the
It
Understanding.
is thus not external reflection, which transcends what is
moment of
it
but
by
to
transcending
the
to
as
an
object,
Itself
immanent
opposing
it
given
28Burbidge, 1995, p. 42,
201
[Hinausgehenl' of Understanding. and 'the genuine nature that properly belongs to the
detenninations of the understanding' (FL §81). Through this self-transcending of thought
'immanent coherence and necessitv enter into the content of Science' (EL §81, Hegel's
empbasis).
This negafive moment in which thought experiences its real difference from
itself is itself immanently transcended in the third moment of thought, thought as
In
difference
from
this
the
thought
authenticallyspeculafive.
moment
of
itself is grasped
as the reconstituted unity of thought with itself This unity is no longer simple, like the
from
Being
beginning
but
has
itself
different
PS,
the
of
at
of
experienced
as
itself
unity
it
is
"something-concrete [ein Konkreles]' (EL §82)1 like self-consciousnessas
and so
actual at the end of PS. This result has emerged analytically from the initial, abstract
it
for
itself
Understanding,
has
thought
experienced
as
unity of
yet is a synthetic result,
from
different
itself
Through
development,
itself
this
thought
really
recognises
again,
but also re-cognises itself, as altered from what it expected to find, for new content has
emerged out of the preceding difference. The names used for the determinations of the
Absolute that are arnved at in this way may be contingent fi-om the standpoint of
Science, for they are taken from a vocabulary that has developed historically. However,
their scientific meaning as determinations of the Absolute, is not abstract, as it arises
immanently within thought.
The transition from Being to the determination of Beconung,provides a concrete
is
Being
thougbt.
this
of
internally undifferentiated,and
example of
self-transcending
is
inconsistent
detennination.
But
Being
thus
to
with itself,
externally unrelated any other
for its content turns out to be Nothing, absolute nullity, empty thiný-jng, lack of content
(SL 1,82-3/82). There is nothing in Being to determine it as the grasping of content as
lack
Similarly,
the
of
content.
of
a
wben tbougbt considers the
grasping
against
determinafion of Nothing, there is no positive content to mark it off against the content
detennination
is
Nothing,
because
the
Being,
thought
this
of
although
noxv
of
202
determination still js thought (SL 1,83/82). Every fime thought tries to separatethem, it
cannot find anything in its content to distinguish them. yet is sifill a-wareof them as
different. Attending to itself as Being and as Nothing, presentsa difference. but one that
immediate.
it
This
distinction
disappears
is
as soon as appears: even- tiine Being or
Nothing, is grasped, it immediately passesover mto the other, or rather, 'has passedover'
(.SL 1,83/83) into the otber, for eack insofar as it is gi-aspedas what it is, Being or
Nothing, is always already its other. This paradoxical result is the dialectical moment of
thought that results.from the initial deteimiination of the Absolute as Being.
But the difference of each from itself and its vanishing into the other cannot be
separatedfrom the vanishing of the other In it. This means that the difference of each
in
thought, but one that has been constituted through a moment of
from itself is a unity
difference. Thougbt re-cognisesitself in this new unity, Becoming. as the restlessrelation
of Being and Nothing (SL 1,83/82-3). This speculative moment comprehends the two
determinations
by
Becoming as the
totality,
initial
within a
which is constituted
determination that includes both their identitv and their difference. However, this is an
open totality, for Becoming is itself the negative unity of Being and Nothing, only
gmped as a positive, immediate unity of the inconsistenciesof each. Becoming contains
itself,
itself
be
tbus
to
and will
also sbow
negatiVity witbin
inconsistent witb itself wben it
is isolated as a positive, fixed determination.
The process of determining the Absolute in SL can ordy be complete wben this
for
determinations
itself
becomes
the
explicit
inconsistency or negativity of
various
thought or being as a dimension of itself, comprehendedor included within a
deten-nination that is not inconsistent with itself
The positive immediacv of the
determinations of the SL's Doctrine of Being and their immediate difference from other
detenninations will themselves be understood in the second division, the Doctrine of
Essence, as detenninations of a foundation or ground that lies behind or within
foundafionalism
head
for
Hegel
'essential
Here
this
on,
attacks
relation' will
immediacy.
203
itself turn out to be an inconsistent or illusory detennination of being. This is finally
demonstrated in the Doctrine of the Concept. where thought comes to comprehend its
unity with being (the Absolute) as a self-determining unity, which is determined neither
by its immediate difference from other, 91
iven determinations, nor by the mediation
1
of an
1
essence.
iii)
Positing, Presupposing and Grounding in the Logic of Essence
The argument of SL is thus that the absolute umty of tbougbt and being cannot
be consistently determined as either a simple, immediate unity, nor as an essence,ground
foundation,
because of the negatiVity that these determinations imply in different
or
TbIs,
I
directly
Hegel
to
that
argue now, means
ways.
want
addresses Schelfingian
objections to the absolutenessand presuppositionlessnessof Absolute Knowing in SL.
jWe have already seenhow Absolute Knowing, as introduced by PS, emerges out of the
deconstruction of finite consciousnessand foundationalist method, and is not dogmatic
it
Dfising
being.
We
have
the
to consider the objections advanced
in
accuses of
now
way
by Scbulz, Bowie and Frank, all of wbicb focus on Schelling's positing of a 'higber'
Absolute, an immediate non-rational unity of thought and being that is posited as the
Hegel's
Absolute
Knowing),
(including
and which
ultimate presupposition of all reason
but
through
cannot know directly as
an ecstatic intuition
reason can experience
determinate.
This unity is, as we saw in Chapter Two, posited as transcending even reason,
becomes
Its
becoming
the
subject
of
a
mythological
narrative.
and so eventually
detenninate for itself cannot be regarded as necessary, and so it is ungrounded,
inexplicable. In the PS, Hegel treats the positing of i-'ust such an uttefly transcendent
in
it
Revealed
the
immanent
produces,
nevertheless
what
sections
on
in
unity, which is
Religion. I'lie religious consciousnessposits God as the foundation of determinafion,
his
be
However,
becornes
through
to
the
that
relation
self-conscious
creates.
world
who
204
the creation itself is inberently mysterious. The sense in wbicb God is immanent in or
related to the world is impossible for representational consciousnessto understand: the
relation between them appears as an 'incomprehensible happening [Geschehen]', with
God, the in-itself of religious consciousness,assuming 'the fon-n of jndýfferenl being'
(PS 543/471 §780). Elsewhere, Hegel distinguishes philosophical cognition from
Lnarration[s] of happenings lwas geschiehtl', foT philosophy must 'comprehend that
in
the narrative, appears as a mere happening [bloOes Geschehenl' (SL 11,
which,
260/588).
Recourse to such 'happenings' in philosophy in order to explain deten-ninations
idly representationalconsciousnessto think the
represents,for Hegel, the inability of a ri 91
Absolute successfully. Difference is posited as simply suddenly appearing in the
Absolute, an event which can only be understood in tenns of the 'before' and 'after' of a
narrative, as in Schelling's mythology of creation. The positing of an utterly
transcendent,indifferent term as the presupposition of philosophy which is known as this
presupposition tbrougb a superior intuition means that knowledge of its immanence in
the world becomes problematic. There is no way of making a necessary or essential
connection between the Absolute and the relative without simply illegitimately
internally
Absolute
that
the
presupposing
or essentially resemblesthe relative.
Hegel sees the positing of a higher Absolute in which dissonance is simply an
illusory
has
'event'
the
that
a
consciousness
as
product of
not comprehended
ungrounded
the negativity inherent in the detennination it has posited in the Absolute. In the Doctrine
from
immediate
difference
determination
is
Being,
the
of one
of
as we saw,
another
it.
happens
Doctrine
Essence,
however,
'llie
to
that
simply
of
comprehends
something
this negativity as an effect of an essence,foundation, or ground. But this relation between
immediacy
itself
has
form,
deten-ninations
of
intemal negativity In a new
and
essenceand
I
beyond
leads
now want to show bow Schelling's positing of a higbeT
thus
itself
Absolute can be read as inconsistent with itself by relafing it, not to the Doctrine of
205
Being and Hegel's account of immediacy. but to the determinations of PresupposinL,and
Positing Reflection in the Doctrine of Essence.In this way, the objections of Schulz,
Bowie and Frank will be shown to be dependent on a definition of the Absolute that
cannot explain finite deten-nination.
In SL, Being, and its subsequent determinations are immediately unequal to
tbemselves:as soon as tbey are graspedpositively, they differ from themselves.Being,is
immediately Nothing; later, Something is immediately Other (SL 1,125-7,1117-19) and
first
deterrninations
In
Doctrine
the
the
the
so on.
place, all
of
of Being simply are, yet
through being deten-ninateas themselves,they are also something other than themselves.
All detenninations of Being are tbus inadequate to tbemselves, as they cannot
basic
instability
deten-ninations
their
comprehend
own
as
of Being, which contains
negativity and hence instability, but as undevelopedor implicit negativity.
The end of the Doctrine of Being sees Being itself sublated: rather than one
beconling
Being
another category and thus sublating
immediately
unstable category of
itself, all deten-ninationsof Being are sublated in the categorv of Absolute Indifference,
insofar
it
detel-minations
Being.
But
this
the
as is
of
it is
unity only
wbich is
unity of all
the negam,e unity of their internal movement, that is, of the immediate transitions that
it
is
PS,
Like
different
determinations
Being
the
to
a result
end of
of
eacbotber.
relate
that comprebendsthe beginning of its development, but knows it now as posited througb
inherently
As
the totality of the transitions that make up the
movement.
an
negative
Doctrine of Being, Absolute Indifference is therefore not itself an immediate transition
(Ilbergang), but a -negatively self-related and i1whicitly differentiated unity which
detenninations.
foregoing
the
comprebendsall
If Indifference is this unity, then the Being, Determinate Being etc. of anything js
be
being
Indifference.
because
to
thought
the
of
and
shows itself
absolute unity
only
Indifference is the condition of the stabilitv of Being and of its instability (SL 1,
457/385). I'lie detennination of Indifference is 'a simple and infinite, negative relation-
206
to-self, its inherent incompatibility with itself a repelling of itself from itself' (SL 1,4567/384.). Hence Indifference is not, for Hegel, the uttefly transcendent 'iffeflexive'
determination of the higher Absolute that it is for Schelling.29 it is a unity that is
understood a) as the unity of the deten-ninationsof Being- and then b) as that which is
other than Being and posiis its determinations, which now appear as being what they are
because
they are mediated (SL 1,457/384). Indifference has a further determination
only
in b), and is consequently graspedas Essence.
Essence is not therefore simply an immediacy over against Being, and
determined in relation to it as the immediate Other of Being. Instead, it Is an 'advance'
Being,
from
the sublation of the spbere of Being or of inmediacy as sucb.
on
resulting
Essenceis what Being tums out to be when the inconsistency of the immediate with itself
bas been fully comprebended as that wbicb defines all determinations of Being, (SL 11,
14/390). Hegel's claim is thus that any immediate determination of the absolute unity of
being and tbouglit presupposes Essence as the determination that renders immediacy
thinkable or determinate. The determinations of Essence will
comprehend the
determinations of Being as mediated througb Essence,as reflected, opposed, grounded,
is
into
Essence
that
conditioned and so on.
self-related negativity,
which all immediate
determinationsof somethingare reflected.717bis
mediatedunity of Essencewith itself (as
immediate
itself)
is
Essence
Being's
to
opposed
inequality with
is also unstable (SL
wby
11,16/391).
Schulz, Frank and Bowie all read Schelling's higher Absolute as a critique of this
Hegelian claim. Frank and Bowie, like Schulz, argue that reasonhas to presupposethat it
itsexistential
inserted
-00
'always
ground, with which it is united in a superior
in
already
is
intuition. This around is an utterly immediate, untbinkable unity that is radically otber
'9 Cf Frank, 1975, pý 148 and Schulz, op. cii., p. 347 on the Absolute as an wivordeiiA-licher
G,rliiid that is neverthelessthe ground of reason.
30Schulz, op. cit., pp. 3344-5.
207
than thought, while sfill being the ground of though and thus somehow immanent in it.
In this way, the relation between the Absolute and reason cannot be reduced to a rational
relation: the Absolute is not simply the relative other of thought. for this would concevve
their relation as one of mutual negative conditioning, like that between the Fichtean I and
be
defined
To
has
Absolute
through such a negative relation. or
to
that
the
not-1.
assume
even as such a relation itself, is nothing more than an assumption which cannot be
The
has
For
Frank
Absolute
true
to
transcend
proven.
al-I such relations.
example,
acknowledgesthat Being in the SL is implicitly self-relation, and thus requires a negative
its
of
reflection
as
conditionunity
31
But the idea that this is absolute knowledge means
that, for Frank, liege] moves in a circle. Irnmediacy is re-cognised as conditioned by
mediation onlv because the immediacv that fonns the beginning is a mere concept of
immediacy. 'Me identity of the Absolute and the concept of immediacy can ordy be
presupposed.
We now turn to the Doctrine of Essence in order to assessthese criticisms.
Essenceinitially emerged as the negative movement of immediate Bemg, but defined
fast
Being.
This
held
Being
Essence
over against
as immediately nol
is
as a qualitatively
distinct kind of Being, as essential Being over against inessential (immediate) Being (SL
11,18-19/394-5). But Essence has already been shown to be the negation of all
immediacy as sucb. Essence,as negative movement.,tbus expressesthe self-nullification
illusory
for
immediacy
but
Being,
Being,
'show'
nothing
of immediate
is now
which all
longer
be
is
Schein
"sbine'
(Schein).
that
self-subsistent simply
or
can no
immediacy
tbrough being immediate. Being turns out to be a moment of Essence,distinguished from
it through Essence'snegative relation to itself, and then sinking back into Essence,as this
but
Essence
11,20-1/396-7).
(ISL
the
negative
nothing
movement
of
is
itself
immediacy
As Being is now conceived of as the 'shining' oj'Essence, Essencehas shown itself to be
from
longer
different
Bei
itself,
no
simply
a
negative
into
unity
which
ing
internally
31Frank, 197-5,pp 33-4.
208
collapses, but also Reflection, its own internal movement of posifing and return (SL 11,
23-4/399; EL § 112).
Being is not therefore simply nothing. It is an immediacy that is nothing but a
movement of absolute negativity, yet is distinguished from Essencethrough Essence's
own negative relation to itself (EL § 112 Zus.). Hence there is nothing outside reflecfion
32
to negate: there is no longeT any munediately given otherness(SL 11,25j400) Essence.,
.
as that which Being shows itself to be, "I
turn out to be a reflection that excludes itself
from itself, or Opposition (SL 11,59/427),33It will thus posit itself as being,, througb its
different
from
own self-relation, reallv
or other to itself This will be important, as we
sball see in the next cbapter, for Hegel's account of the emergence of real difference
from unity in the Doctrine of the Concept. But with absolute or self-related Reflection,
there is no real difference between Essenceand its 'sbining'. onlv a distinction which is
posited through or for Reflection, and is therefore not real, but constantly collapsing.
'17hisisbecause absolute Reflection has two moments, each of which thought isolates and
internally
Positing
is
Reflection
the sublation of the restless
each of which is
unstable.
negative movement that is Essence,and the positing of Being, or immediacy in general,
Essence
that
through
the
positing,
occurs
movement
i. e., one
of
which is an absolute
itself But it is simultaneously Presupposing Reflection, as it requires that there be an
immediacy that is dissolved into the restless movement of Essence that sublates,all
So
the positing of immediacy througb reflection only occurs in relation to a
immediacy.
but
is
only relative (SL 11,26-7/400-1). Essenceas a
given immediacy, and not absolute
Being
This
Fichte
the
that
posit
absolutely.
problem
was
self-related unity cannot simply
free
by
has
be
I
WL,
the
the
the
to
positing
of
not4
reconceived as
encounteredin
where
the necessary,negative conditioning of each by the other, becausean absolute positing of
31Schmidt, 1997, p. 59 n. 80.
33
lhid, p 71
209
difference is inconceivable in terms of abstract unity -a
proposition with NNhich
Deleuze would agTee.
Hence Essencebas sbown itself to be that througli whicli Being is posited, but
only insofar as this positing of immediacy is also the presupposing of immediacy.
Essencethus presupposesitself as its own Icendation',
its own 'in-itself,
for it only
emergesfrom Being if Being has already been posited as InbeTentlynegativity, Inherently
circular, Reflection will turn out to be an inadequatedetermmation, but not in relation to
a foundationthat is given to thougbt, sucbasthe Scbellingianbigber Absolute.Instead,it
be
will
inadequatelo iiself, for the incessantto-and-fro movement whereby it posits only
because it presupposes and vice versa will
be
actually
constitutive of a un,IN,
(Determining Reflection) in which thought comprehends this internal difference of
Reflection in a new determination.
Initially, the presupposing side seems more stable. It may begin from an
is
(Geselzisein),
but
detenninate
that
this
immediate
only as positedness
immediate is
over against Reflection, as nol Reflection. Reflection therefore appears as External
Reflection, becauseit presupposes,not an Irm-nedlatelydifferent other, whose difference
from it would be vanishing or illusory, but i1self as other, as an entirelv sublated or
n)
(SL
11,27-8/401-2).
negated movement of negativity
Reflection's
I
own otber,
is
difference
between
from
internal
difference,
here
Reflection
there
so
a
real
resulting
its
14Precisely because thisdifference
immediacy
and
'.
illusory,
however.
it
and
real
is
-not
but
be
the
the
otber,
presupposed
irnmediacy
is
not
of
an
immediacy,
cannot maintained:
bas
been
(i.
It
Reflection
that
posiled as an immediacy
is absolutely e., througb
of
as such.
Reflection's own self-relation) other than reflection, or as presupposed (SL 11,28-9/402-
3). The apparent stability or full detertmnatenessof External Reflection is only apparent:
External Reflection presupposes itself as absolutely subiated, as the negative of
34
Ihid, p. 49.
210
negativity.but this itself ansesthroughthe self-relationof Reflection.Even thought it is
the negation of all positing, it is still posiled as this negation.
Extemal Reflection too is not what it was taken to be. It is re-cognised as
Determining Reflection, in which the immediate is constituted through the negative
relation-to-self of essence,as being itvetf related-to-self. Here the immediate is posited as
being related-to-self and thus as self-subsistent, and as related to another negative selfrelation (SL 11,30-2/404-5). In this way, Reflection becomes determinate in relation to
itself positing itself as determinations (identity, Difference etc.) which, becausethey are
posited as related-to-themselves,subsist as really different to other Concepts rather than
simply passing over immediately into tbem.
It is this whole sequence, from Positing through External to Deten-nining
Reflection, that Frank and Bowie make the object of a detailed critique. The pivotal issue
for them is whether or not thought can be genuinely infimte and comprehend an absolute
immediacy that is in-itself neither thought nor an object posited relatively to thought and
is
They
be
the
this
the case,
that
presupposifion
of
all
reflecfion.
all
argue
which
cwmot
that thought can only presupposethat it can comprehend the Absolute. For them, Hegel's
logic/ontology is purely negative, for it is a kind of presupposingreflection that assumes,
finite
be
did
Fichte,
Absolute
that
the
the
must
resemble
subject,
and
a reflexive selfas
Bemg,
"higher'
Absolute.
transcendmg
truly
than
the
relation rather
all reflexivity as a
immediacy witb whieb SL begins., is notliing more fban a reflection of the unity of
thought, rather than being a true immediacy, which could only be known in a superior
Positing
Consequently,
Frank
that
thougbt
the
cannot
of
argues
recognise
unity
intuition.
but
External
Reflection
in
thought,
can only presupposethat this unity is
as absolute
and
fails
difference
between
And
to
the
acknowledge
presupposition
real
a
sucb
absolute.
self-related reflection and reflection that is related to a true immediacV given through an
Schulz
immediacy
is
because,
This
intuition.
true
as
argues,
is that .N-hicbis
ecstatic
fTom
that
self-groundingwhich any reflevve reco-Wition
positively and substantially
211
begins. The immediacy that reflection posits. being a negation of the restless movement
of negativity, is notbing positive, on])- hTtmediatenon-being or Schein in relation to the
ie notes that the
true, iffeflexive and real immediacy that conditions the movement. BoW1
Extemal
of
unity
and Positing Reflection in thought would have to include the real
difference between a posited immediacy and the real immediacy of Absolute Identity.
and their identity. This is not possible in thought, however, for any conceptual unit.%,
would simply be posited by thougbt, and would thus be negative in Schelling's sense.
This Cntique is, in Hegelian terms, advanced from the perspective of
representational consciousness,and posits an illusory distinction between the Absolute
and the relative, and between intuition and tbought. As we saw, the PS ends Witb the
dissolution of all distinctions between objects-for-us and objects-in-themselves. Absolute
is
dogmatic
therefore
the
not
certainty of the unity of reflection with a superior
Kjjowing
intuition of the in-itself of obj-.ects. Instead, it is knowledge of the decentred.mode of selfis
for
be
determinate
that
there
to
relation
required
any
positing of an object-]n-itself or
object-for-us at all. A possible Schellingian objection to this notion would be that the PS
itself simply assumesthat the real difference between an object-for-us and an object-mffir
difference
itself is a
in
fact
it
implies
consciousness, when
an irreconcilable
difference between thought and intuition. The PS thus relies on an identity in
consciousnessof the object-for-us and the object-in-itself that is merely posited. and
which thus does not acknowledge the absolute presupposition of all reflection. Hegel's
for-another
difference
in-itself
this
the
objection
simply
repeats
of
responseis clear:
and
it
without comprehending
And to refuse to comprehend it is to ignore the fact that all
ý36
for-us
between
in-itself
difference
the
and
experience of
is consciousness's own real
difference from itself its own mode of existencewhicb it knaws as its own.
li Bowie, op. a.t., p. 142
A6Pippin, 1989, pp. 94-6.
212
The difference between Schelling's positing of a higher Absolute as the ground
follows.
The
distinction
Hegel's
of
and
immanent overcoming of consciousness is as
for
Schellingitself
from
the
difference
is,
repeated experience of consciousness's
Absolute,
between
difference
the
experience of an unsublatable
self-consciousnessand
higher
be
in
the
a
wlilcli can only
identity through which
overcome
ecstatic experience of
the reality of the distinction is destroyed. For Hegel, this experience of difference
constitutes the actuality of self-consciousness,and can only be overcome through itself
by
in
than
rather
positing,
addition to this reality, a superior intuition which gives access
to the true unity that grounds all experience. This intuition of an indetenninate unity that
deten-ninate
be
be
to
that
is nevertheless
as ground can only
posited as something
ougghi
37
possible, but cannot in principle be kni-,
mw to be possible. It can only be postulated as
the equivocal ground of knowledge, as knowledge that is not-knowledge. The bigber
Absolute, as we saw in Chapters Two and Four, becomes posited in Schelling's more
dogmatic moments, not as genuinely absolute, but as resernbling in itself the relative.
For Sebelling, the relafion between self-consciousness and the Absolute is a
contradictory one: an absolute opposition that neverthelessincludes a ground of identity.
Self-consciousness is an inessential, negative self-relation that produces nothing but
Schein, whereas the Absolute has substantial, positive existence. From a Hegelian
it
between
is
that,
the
them
standpoint
appears
cruciafly.
ground of identity
merely
posited: the Absolute is not just an indeteffninate unity, but the indeten-ninateunity that is
determined
immanent
This
the
as
ground of reason.
problematic groundsimultaneously
relation is required in order not to reduce the Absolute to a relative other of thought.,an
does
have
deten-nination
is
Hence
Absolute
by
the
that
not
a
presupposed
object-for-us.
by
foundation.
further,
it
detennined
And
this positing is
posited
or
reason
as
a
reason, is
for
it
happens
terms
a presupposin&
only
in relation to given or
also on its own
immediate determinations of experience. The positing of an Absolute which is utterly
171
Cf Dusing, 199-5,pp. 21,142,197 7, pp. 1-20,122,12T
213
transcendent yet at the same time immanent in reason as its own condition is made
necessaryby presuppositions about experience. Primary bere is the assumption that the
difference between subject and object is the internal limit of consciousness that
determines what will constitute meaningful expenence for us. and that consequent]-yall
consciousnessis representational. Hence the positing of a higher Absolute is relative to
these assumptions.
Scbelling's reliance on a superior intuition is meant to break the circle of
Presupposingand Positing Reflection, for reason is understood as only presupposing this
if
But
this presupposed intuition is knowledge of the Absolute determined as
intuition.
the foundation of all detennination, then Scbelling contradicts bimself. The Absolute that
be
in
intuited,
be
experienced
would
such an intuition could not
as previously noted. as
the ground of reason. Sucb an intuition could only contain the dissolution of all
determination,as Schellinginsistsin his more consistentmoments.In order to knoir the
Absolute as the ground of reason, Schelling, like Fichte, has to take on the impossible
task of constructing a complete system of the Absolute in order to fully determine this
grounding relation. Ile pm-adoxical intuition througb whicb reason becomes ecstatic in
knows
determined
its
is
Absolute
to
the
relation
as
as
ground thus merely
itself and yet
foundation
Schelling
himself
the
of philosophy.
affin-ns this when he tiies to
posiled as
think the Absolute in his middle period as genuinely 'higher. outside all relation to the
finite yet still as the ground of determination. But this just affirms that the relation
between the transcendent Absolute and determinate experience cannot in principle be
knowm jJust liik e the relation between the ftmscendent God and the world that is posited
by the religious consciousnessin PS.
We thus have to consider two points: a) Hegel's model of Absolute Knowing
does not function as Scbelling and his interpreters believe it does, and b) Scbelling's own
is
Absolute
(the
the
contradictory,
and
afflicted
with a negativity
relation
conception of
between Absolute and relative) that it cannot comprebend, but can on]Nr poO.i as
214
further
demonstrated
be
The
Schelling's
Absolute
unknowable.
can
in
inadequacy of
relation to Hegel's explicit attack on the idea of a transcendent foundation in flic
subsequentsections on Ground, in which the illusory basis of foundationalist thought is
furtber undermined. Ground is the consequenceof the collapse of the determination of
Opposition
itself,
because
it
inadequate
be
to
to
Opposition.
proves
remains determined
by the contradictory relation between self-subsistenceand positedness(Ire]ation-to-otber.)
that first ariseswith Reflection. The positive and negative poles of an opposition, sucb as
Absolute Identity and self-relation, are simultaneously self-related and related to an
other. This relation is asymmetric4 however, for the positive (Absolute Identity), insofar
as it is positive, is opposedto the relation of opposition itself or is independent(SL 11,
58-9/426). The negative (self-related reflection) is the negation of the positive, and is
thus the relation of opposition itself (St It, 59/427). In this way. eacb is related to the
other through itself the positive is the exclusion from itself of the relation of opposition,
and the negative is the exclusion from itself of the positive that is negated opposition.
Here, the difference of thought from itself is no longer that which was known as Positing
38
or Detennining Reflection, but is now Excluding (auvvViý, 0enkle)Reflection.
Essenceis itself insofar as it excludes itself from itself or is external to itself this
is the result of Opposition, in which is made explicit the previously implicit
detennination of Contradiction, in which neither side, positive or negative, is positive or
is
its
insofar
both.
Each
negative, or rather, each pole
pole excludes own self-subsistence
as it is self-subsistent (SL 11,64-5/431) and is reflected into its other. These opposites
thus ceaselessly collapse into each other (SL 11,70/4351). This negative unity is
Contradiction, but grasped as a unity that excludes itself from itself, thus positing the
In
between
Identity
it
Ground.
Absolute
tenns
the
of
relation
and selfopposition,
is
is
Absolute
Absolute
Ground
the
the
postulated
as
of
and self-relation, or
unitv
relafion,
11,84/447).
However,
(SL
Absolute
it is no more stable than the relation
and relative
of
38Schrmdt,op. cjt,, pp, 74-5.
215
contained in Opposition, for the contrad,ctory relation between self-subs,stence and
poS]tednessstill determines it.
Ground is the unity of itself and that which it grounds. However, as ground of a
grounded tenn, that is, asJust this ground, the ground has both form and content, and is
determinate, for it is Ground in relation to an opposition (.SL 11,94-5,455-6). From tiow
on, the problem of the circle of self-subsistence and positedness arises again. For
example, witb the Concept of Formal Ground, the grounding relation is consfituted by
the fonnal reflexive relation of Cirround to itself, whereby the content of Ground is
reflected in the grounded (SL 11,96/456-7) (Absolute Identity qua ground of knowing is
posited as positing itself in and tlirouO the relative). However, in this way, the Ground is
just as mucli posited as Ground by the grounded. The notion of an undifferentiated
Ch-oundthat is the unity of itself and the grounded itself turns out to be alreadv the
grounded of another Ground. There is no stable difference between the posited tenn
(initially., the grounded) and that which is presupposed (the ground'), as they stand in the
samerelation to each other.
In relation to this development, Schelling's account of the Absolute as an
be
from
presupposition
can
only
consistent
unconditioned
witbin representational
consciousness.Hegel shows that the idea that detennination can be explained solely with
is
Ground
to
transcendent
thougli
reference a
ground illusory, even
arisesas an immanent
(thougb incomplete) determination of the meaning of the Absolute. Ground can never be
if
it
is
it
Hegel,
then,
argues
simply presupposed:
is only ground
understood as a ground,
because of its determination in relation to that which it is supposed to ground. In this
is
distinctionless,
Absolute
transcendent
the
of
as
either
posited
a
conceived
as
nonway,
in
it
case
cannot serve as a ground, or it is posited as a
which
rational substantial unity,
in
Schelling's
first
first
In
the
the
account
as
of
creation.
unit-v,
case,it
rational substantial
for
is
formal
determination,
determinate
it
posited
as
a
unity
without
any
cannot stil)port
latter
determinate
In
bet,,
the
the
case,
to
the
relative.
relafion
-,-een it and the
relafion
216
Scbelling's
breaks
own
relative is simply posited in relation to experience, whicb
restriction on positing an internal resemblancebetween the Absolute as an ontological
unity and that which it conditions. The only other option consistent with representational
consciousnesss awareness of diff erence is to think the Absolute itself as internalIN.
different from itself, but this also cannot, for Schellmg, ultimate]y explain determination.
as it undermines foundationalism from within.
Hegel's deconstruction of the structure of Ground is vitally important, as we
for
SL,
for
his
the
the
shall see in
meaning of
enterprise in
it
next chapter,
understanding
marks the point at wbicli his critique of the ontologically-rooted illusory nature of
foundationalismbegins to becomeexplicit. Through it, he shows that foundationalism
itself is based on a circular, intemally negative structure of being and thought. A
transcendent in-itself cannot serve as an unconditioned ground of deten-nination, for
insofar as it is unconditioned, it is Without determination, and insofar as it is determined
foundation
it
is
determined
in
be
to
the
of something,
relation
subject and cannot
as a
it
is
it
Further,
distinctionless
simply understood as a
if
unity, is neither
unconditioned.
for-us, nor in-itself
And if this is so, then we are dealing With the thought of a
begins
both
PS
SL,
Being
Hegel
and
and which
problematic, positive unity of
with which
turns out to be internally negative. Begel's model of Absolute KnoWing can be defended
it,
firstly
because
Schelli-rigian
these
then,
objections misconstrue and
objections,
apainst
foundationalist
for
itself
because
the
the
of
position
structure
account
secondly
it can
behind these objections, shoWing it to be illusory or self-cancelling. In the next chapter,
his
bow
Concept,
Doctrine
Hegel's
to
the
order
see
it
realises
goal,
of
in
we will examine
to formulate an antifoundationalist philosophy.
217
Chapter Seven
Hegel's Concept as an Antifoundational Principle
i)
Introduction
Contrasting with the view that is commonly taken of the relationship between
Deleuze and Hegel, namely, that they are thinkeTs whose visions of the task of
incommensurable,
four
the
philosophy are
previous
chapters have laid out a thematic
territory common to both. A central feature of this territory is the idea that transcendental
illusions native to reason are the sources of all philosophical misdirection. This ideafrom
Kant's
Copernican
Revolution. replacesthe Cartesiannotion of error (DR
resulting
195/150), just as Kant's notion of Darvellung undercuts Descartes' representationalist
theory of truth. Both Dele-uzeand Hegel take Kant to task, however, for failing to
I-adequately understand the nature of transcendentalillusion. For these thinkers, illusions
from
destiny
the
nature and
arise
unquestioned presuppositions about
of thought. These
foundationalist
force
to
presuppositions
philosophy
produce a
model of thought,
exemplified by the models of critical thinking that dominated the Enlightenment.
Enlightenment thinking, in attempting to establish a rigorous distinction between
justifiable knowledge and mere belief was forced to fight a rearguard.action against the
distinction
it
had
deployed.
The
of
such
a
was seen to
possibility
veqv scepticism
itself
depend upon the possibility of proving that theTeis a priori svntbetic knowledge. which,
by
in
Kant,
Fichte,
Chapter
Two,
and.,above all,
was
undermined
successively
as we saw
by Schelling, despite their intentions.
I have tried to show that the trauma of reason, a philosophical crisis of meaning
foundations,
be
be
Enlightenment
to
the
obsession with
that is the iresult of
can
said
an
important point of orientation for both Hegel and Deleuze. Both attempt to construct
foundationalism
be
the
that
to
enable
presuppositions
will
of
models of philosophy
Both
for
that
the only adequate. non-circular
also
affirm
criticised.
and
accounted
218
focuses
be
these
on the
account of
presuppositions will
an ontological one. which
meaning of the Absolute as the 'object' specific to philosopby. Hegel and Deleuze see
transcendentalillusion as rooted, not in accidental deten-ninationsof consciousness,but
in being itself For Deleuze, as for Bergson. Illusion Is the product of .,-Irtual tendencies
being
that are actualised as differences of degree and which thus distort the nature
within
of being, which is to be different in kind from itself For 14egel,illusion is rooted in the
negatiVltv of being, and its immanent determination as immediacy, and as mediated
immediacy or Essence.
We still needto considerthat determinationwhich Hegel considersan adequate
expression of the Absolute, wbich will require us to examine the Doctrine of the Concept
SL.
Chapters
In
Three and Four, we traced Deleuze's development of an image of
in
philosophy that affinned the lack of incomgible foundations as a positive state of affairs.
We need to consider now the fulfilment of Hegel's own antifoundationali st ontology in
SL. I aim in this chapter to exarnine Deleuze's Schellin&"an denunciation of Hegel's
'hidden' fbundafionallsniý and to show how Hegel can be read against this interpretafion,
further
concentrating
upon the critique of the idea of a substantial, transcendent
foundation that is developed in SL. In this way, the antifoundationalism of Hegels
be
brought
ontology will
out, and allowed to stand alongside Deleuze's. In the next,
concluding chapter, their respective versions of antifoundationalism Will be clIfically
examinedin relation to eachother.
ii) Deleuze's Critique of the Immanence of the Pure Concept
Many of Deletize's criticisms of flegel share their orientation with those
Schelling,
Both
Deleuze
Hegel
by
Schelling.
and
accuse
of not acknowledging
advanced
that the Absolute is incommensurable with thought. As we have seen,theN7argue for this
different
different
intentions.
Nevertheless,
both
and
ways
with
in
inconunensurability
For
construct
that
cannot
a
presuppositionles&
philosophy
absolute
system.
affinn
219
Deleuze, as for many post-war French thinkers. the ideal of an absolute, self-grounding
Scbelling
As
is
target.
tbus
saw,
we
and
self-enclosed philosopbjcal system a primary
first undermined this ideal from within. by arguing that philosophy has to presuppose.as
the ultimate condition of real determination, a 'hiaer'
Absolute that cannot in principle
be comprehended within thought. This means that there can be no a priori conceptual
basic
Schelling
Absolute.
the
the
tbus
assumption
exposed
system capable of containing
foundationallst
of
philosophy, i.e., that the Absolute is identical With reason, as an
for
Deleuze's
the
to
attempt account
ungrounded and unprovable subjective conviction.
origins of this belief follows Schelling's general line of thinking by, after Bergson,
determining foundationalism (Platonism) as a transcendentalillusion that expresses
certain virtual tendencies within being. He argues that foundationalisin always has to
knows
transcendent
that
the unity of reason and Absolute, i. e.,
presupposea
subjectiVity
an act of 'knowing before knowing'. This presupposition is what Schelling makes
explicit as an act of faith.
Deleuze's deten-ninationof the Absolute, the movement of Absolute Difference,
higher
be
determined
Absolute
to
think
to
the
in relation
is an attempt
without allowing it
to experience. As we saw in the previous chapter, the wnbivalence of Schelling's higher
Absolute can be understood vnth reference to Hegel's deconstruction of ground-relations
had
be
Absolute
SL.
We
that
the
to
posited as the transcendent,substantial ground
saw
in
bad
be
illegitimate
detennination.
But
to
this
that
an
resemblance
posited
meant
of
between Absolute and relative, with the detenninations of the relative being presupposed
its
inner
deteffninations.
Hence
Scbelling
does
Absolute
the
as
necessary
as inherentin
definitions
Kantian
that
the
problem of assuming
certain
of the meaning of
not solve
for
Deleuze,
betrays
true
that,
of
all
expenence,
an
assumption
experience are universally
the deeper assumption of a transcendentsubjectivity, a common sense,a shared context
horizon
i
Deleuze's
the
of
meaning
always
is
already
estabil
universal
sbed.
in wbich
implied
disavow
bv
Platonic
the
to
the
of
a
common
notion
sense
image of
response is
220
before
'knowing
in
hope
transcendent
thought
the
of avoiding the presupposition of a
knowing', wbich forces foundationalist thougbt to move in a circle. Instead. he attendsto
for
.
thinkingthe minimal presupposifion of philosophy considered as a pracu ce of
which
bim is the internal difference of thought from itself. This, for Deleuze, is the inner limit
of thought, which cannot be comprehendedby a concept. It is thought's transcendental
being.
limit,
by
because
that
contingent
object,
it is its own
its own
which is its
nght,
Deleuze thus takes up Schelling's prq:ject of detennining the Absolute-in-Itself without
positing
It as internally
resembling
presupposed
structures
of experience.
For Deleuze,
all
is,
thinking,
that
thinking that seesthe identity of the concept as the measure
conceptual
of genuine knowledge, must presuppose the movement of the internal difference of
thought ftom itself as a minimal condition of any activity of thinking. As this movement
incomprehensible
for
is
conceptual thought, Deleuze concurs With Scbelling that the
Absolute is encounteredinitially by philosophy as the contingent being of thought itself
As with Scbellmg- this contingency is an irreduCible ontolo 91
.cal presupposition that is
forever impossible for foundationalist thought to comprehend, even though the
tendenciesthat bring tbougbt into existence are absolutely immanent NVItbintbougbt.
Deleuze's criticisms of Hegel centre on the idea that the Hegelian svstem aims to
ic and Realphilosophie. In this,
be a total, closed ontological system, including both lo 91
he follows his teacher Jean Hyppolite in taking seriously Hegel's claims about the
import
Deleuze,
Knowing.
For
liege]
Platonist
Absolute
then,
of
is
a
or
ontological
foundationalist, who presupposes the existence of the priNrileged perspective of a
transcendent subject, a lheoros. Deleuze reads SL as purporting to deduce the inner
form
logical
Being,
an a priori
grammar of the Absolute, and
whicb will
articulations of
determinafion.
fact
The
the
that ouT conscious
thus
of
all
condition
actual
constitute
will
is
it
is
be
Being,
thus
the
the
as
structured
will
grounded
of
world
in
nature
of
experience
The
fixed
have
horizon
thought.
to
thus
pure
system
will
a
accessible
of
which is
ineaning
or common
sense within
which
we can
221
think Being, that of the self-relation of
the Concept or self-thinking thought. Any talk of Being that defines it as infinitely other
than thought, or incommensurable with itself posits it illegitimately as really existing
beyond this horizon of meaning. Thus far, Deleuze concurs with Schelling's reading of
SL as a negative philosophy that identifies. the inner meaning of an absolute unity with
the conceptual unity of thought, and supposedly grounds itself by retuming immanently
through the analysis of this umtv to the point where it began, havmg unfolded its whole
content. To assume that this content comprises anything more than merely possible
determinations of Being is, for Deleuze and for Sebellim,, to posit an illusory unit-v of
being and thought.
In an early review of Hyppolite's Logique el existence, Deleuze points out that
Hegel determines the absolute borizon and meaning of experience by proposing that
Absolute Knowing is not knowledge of things-In-themselves beyond the veil of
ical grammar of the
appearance. Instead, it is Simply knowledge of the internal lo 91
familiar meaning of our experience (A 458). Deleuze thus agrees with Schelling and
Marx that Hegel's analysis of the Concept of pure Being reverses an actual relation
between consciousnessand its real, matenal conditions. This analysis analyses nothing
but our presuppoSitionsabout the meamng of our own experience, a procedure that can
only reveal the internal structure of these presupposedmeanings, rather than accounting
for their existence. Hegel determines this structure through the self-relation of the
Concept, which for Deleuze is a relation that embodies in Hegel's thought the
foundationalist assumption of a transcendentsubjectivity. Deleuze suggeststhat Hegel's
fundamental assumption, that the minimal meaning of Being is as simple, indeterminate
Being
(DR
a
philosophical
reflection
simply
of
an
empirical
and so on, is
image of
169/129) that posits it as identical with the pure Concept. The real source of interest, for
Deleuze, is thus bow to explain the genesis of these presuppositions. which be attempts
to do by leaving behind the intenonty of the self-tbink-ing Concept.
222
Deleuze then, like Schelling, arguesthat Hegel simply assumesthat Being is. like
This
means that the inner
to
reflexive self-consciousness, related
itself negatively.
determinations of Being anse through its inconsistency with itself, i. e., through the
logical operation of contradiction. For Deleuze, this determination of difference as
for
is
difference
highest
degree
that
thinkable
the
representational
contradicfion
is
of
degree
determined
difference
It
tbus
of
in relation to a
consciousness.
remains a
for
kind),
identity
difference,
difference
(rather
than
it
a
of
an absolute
presupposed
representsa unity that is itself only insofar as it differs from all it is not, a negative unity.
The Absolute, for Hey-el, is that which expresses the contradictorv nature of all
fact
that, in relation to consciousness,any appearanceis both itself and
the
phenomena.,
Hegel
Kant's
the
the
two.
thus
tied
to
and
negative
something else
unity of
remains
transcendental Ideal of the complete determination of a self-identical individual in
relation to the totality of other individuals (DR 65/45). The reallsation of this Ideal would
mean that the real, internal relations between phenomena would have been fully
determined. Such an Ideal would therefore be a transcendent substance, for which all
be
itself
full
This
to
pbenomenal relations would
aspectsof its internal relation
goal of
determination is, according to Deleuze, meant to be fulfilled by the Doctrine of the
Concept, where the Concept becomes the Absolute Idea, the transcendent 'ground' and
substanceof all difference (DR 61-2/42). But this whole image of philosophy is basedon
image
is
difference
by
Absolute
the
that
the
empirical
of
reflected
contradiction, an
into
ahos of thought known as Hegelian Science.
Ilis absolutisationof a self-contradictoryunity is further reflected in the aspect
is
his
Hegel's
Deleuze,
historv.
that
to
treatment
most
repugnant
of
philosophy
namely
of
Deleuze reads this treatment as proposing that the hidden motor of historv. namelv the
Being,
logical
of
is gradualiv revealed through the historical process as
grammar
inner
through philosophy of Absolute Spint. In other words, the
the becoming-self-conscious
Hegelian horizon of meaning, the common sense behind Absolute Knowing, is our
223
historical knowledge of previous systerns of philosophy. The Absolute is thus
analytically determined in thougbt as a set of possibilities that are notbing but a reflection
of a particular domain of historical experience. For Deleuze, Hegel sees history as
determined by a single transcendent problem: how to disclose the implicit content of
Being for us through thinking and thus render the Absolute self-conscious and thus fully
reconciled to itself in a supreme Science. As in Scbelling's PbIlosopby of Identim',
history would be conceived of as the unfolding of a merely possible first creation that is
derived in its totality from the pure concept of the Absolute. If the Absolute is a selfcontradictory unity. then its determinations must be thought as subsisting eternally within
it in the same manner as the determinations of Schelling's ideal universe. History is tbus
the external appearanceof the Absolute, its becoming for-itself, 'a continual progress
'
is
the
"regress
that at
same time a
into the ground"', a gradual realisation of the internal
possibilities of a transcendentsubstancethrough its autonomous self-]iml tation.
For Deleuze, Hegelian onto-logic thus claims to be the condition of all
determination, but can only do this by assuming that its immanent. supposedly
presuppositionlessexamination of the category of Being realýv delineatesthe contours of
actuality.The oppositionbetweenthoughtand being is, from Hegel'spoint of view. only
an illusory one, as the ground of the opposition, the negative self-relation of the Concept,
remains transcendentto all deten-ninationsof thought and being as their foundation.,thus
Deleuze
their
securMg
agrees With BerWn
resemblance or mner umty.
that Hegel's
philosophical ethos 'believes itself to be reunited with the real when it compensatesfor
the inadequacy of a concept that is too broad or too general by invoking the opposite
concept (B 38/44). Hegel's assumption of the transcendenceof the Concept preserves,in
pbilosopbical consciousness,,the interiority of representational consciousness,,for even
I Balke, 1998,
SL,
1,70j"71.
24,
quoting
p.
224
beginning
between
largest
in
the
difference
Hegelian
that
the
immediate
thought
posited
.-1
Concept
System,
the
the
to
itselt. and
end result of the
v; internal
iii)
Hegel, Deleuze and KanIian. Se#-Con-vciou.vnexv
As we have seen, Deleuze's central objection against Hegel is similar to
Schelling's, i. e., that Hegel can only presupposethat his analysis of the concept of simple
Being is a real deduction of the necessarydeterminations of Being. Deleuze adds to this
Schellinglan objection the observation that the reason for this predicament is Hegel's
foundationalist assumption that the essential meaning of philosophy is tied to the
transcendenceof thought. Hegel cannot for Deleuze, what Lessing called the 'broad,
between
ditch'
hypothetical
detennination
the
of the Absolute and its real
ugly
determination (DR 254 fn/325-6 n. 15).
This question of this distinction between bypotbetical and absolute knowledge
first
be
Our
be
briefly
to
to the similarities and
addressed.
step Will
return
will now
differences between Deleuze and Hegel's respective accounts of reflexive subjectivity.
Both accounts, I want to suggest,are intimately related to the ambiguous Kantian account
first
Chapter
Five.
Kant
I
of self-consciousness
affirms, against the
introduced in
rationalist tradition, that the validity of representations of pure reason can only be
for
.
hypotbetical,
Understandmg
the
the
or
only
syntheses
of
camed out upoin
sub ective
the intuited manifold can possess objective validity. This epistemological distinction
between pure thought and thought as related to intuition is problernatised, however, by
Kant himself As noted in Chapter Five, Kant holds that there is an immediate form of
is
'indetenninate
that
embodied in an
empincal, intuition' given to
self-consciousness
'thought in general' (CPuR B422-31). The epistemological status of this Intuition Is
It
that
represents
neither
it
a
noumenon
given
nor
a
phenomenon.
ambiguous,,
is an
feeling
of existence associated with consciousness,
undeniable, though indeterminate,
ibid., P. 26.
225
For
fully
determinate
Descartes'
thinking
thing.
than
of
a
rather
intellectual intuition
Deleuze, Kant's insistence that this intuition is only determinable under the form of time
feeling
T
The
bis
thougbt
the
the
marks
of
is
genuinely Critical moment of
pbilosophy.
known
itself
that
through or in
than
existence
is
rather
representinganything substantial
the feeling, suchas a soul. Any determinatecontentof the 1,including the proposition 'I
for
form
tbinking'
the
exist
is only given as an appearanceconstituted inner senseunder
of fime (CPuR B430). Thus my appearanceto myself cannot be identified with whatever
feeling
denoted
by
T
that
the
it is
refers to, the entity that thinks. The connection
between the feeling marked T and the determination of thinking is thus unrepresentable,
foundational
that
thing
the
that
thinks
presuppose
unless we
is a spontaneous,
subject,
is
continuous with the phenomena] subject that is determined for itself in selfwhich
consciousness.
This Kantian notion of a unified transcendentalsubject is, for Deleuze, simply a
presupposition, a retrospective positing of the unity of the passive, detenninate empirical
form.
The identity of the phenomena]ego and
subject as its own condition, in an eminent
that to which the indetemmnate feelmg of existence is understood to refer is purely
hypothetical. Hence Deleuze reads Kant as assuming that the identity of passive subject
fact
the
thing
to
that
thinks,
and subject in-itself,
is given
us, when in
it is not and is in
fact impossible to establish. Deleuze constructs an alternative account of subjectivity,
however, based on the idea that the "thing that thinks" is a dispersed plurality of
differences, or the movement of Absolute Difference itself insofar as it is actualised as a
faculties
in
body
Deleuze
Rimbaud's
the
system of mental
rooted
of an individual.
uses
fundamental
'crack' in the subject that
'I
to
this
express
proposition
is another'
discovery
Cýapter
for
Kant's
bim
As
Four,
the
transcendental.
of
constitutes
we saw in
determinable,
the constitutive role of a purely
problematic element is filled bv GeIiihl in
Fichte"s account of subjectivitv, and bv the 'dark will' in Schelling's middle-penod
in
Absolute.
between
basic
three
the
all
cases,
a
relafion
is
established
of
a
accounts
226
differentiated
element, prior to any
intuition of existence and a problematic, internally
actual, stable determination of this existence for-us. Deleuze affirms the prionty of this
is
bemg
80'56-'/ý
by
(DR
Difference
Absolute
the
the
that
of
relation
sensible
proposing
182/139-40)ý3This goes for the feeling of existence associated with consciousnessas
mucb as for sensibility per se.
Hegel too, however, affirins the Kantian difference between transcendental
subjectivity and the pbenomenal subject, and even goes so far as to sbow M PS that the
proposition, T is an Otber.,representsa necessarydetermination of Spirit, given certain
I
describes
intersubjectiverelations. is another'
accuratelythe structureof consciousness
in the secfions of PS on the world of Self-Alienated Spirit or Pure Culture, in which the
subject's earlier loss of certainty as to its transcendence of the world (in the SelfConsciousnesschapter) becomes explicit. The subject finds that its 'true original nawre
§489,
Spirit
being'
348/298
(PS
the
and substanceis
as
alienation of natural
modified).
What 'I am' here is not the certainty of myself as my own foundation, but the difference
in nature of what I am for myself (finite consciousness)and wbat I posit myself as being
in truth (the in-itself, natural being, the supposedly substantial. essential or transcendent
'thing that thinks'). Spirit alienated from its own being is an intersubjectively determined
dynamic
Scepticism:
itself
ftorn
that
the
consciousness
repeats
earlier
of
it repels
itself,
from
difference
or is only aware of its
itself
Tbis subject is., as a detemiination of Spirit, doubly decentred. Firstly, it has
come to understand itself as Spirit in gener4 that is, as a relation to self that is this
its
is
Secondly,
itself
to
through
relation only
relation
other subjects.
it
aware of
as a
movement of negativity without a substantialnatural foundation, and this movement
identical
be
Substance.
This
latter
as
re-cognised
With
itself Will eventually
identity of
Subject and Substance is not simply posited as given, unlike the Kantian identim, of
detennining
Instead,
free
the
subject.
activity. the 'thing that thinks'
passive subject and
See also Baugh, 1993, p. 18,
227
Subject
Substance
PS
the
the
of
and
as
unity
is
which is re-cognised at the end of
Absolute Negativity. the actuality of self-consciousnesswhich has developed out of the
simple beginning of the PS. 'Mere is no longer a substantial 'thing' posited behind the
activity of deterrmnabon, in fact, the absolutenessof this negativity consists in its being
both subject and obje4 and neither. It thus representsa complete loss of any dimension
of givenness,positivity or substantiality,,and constitutes the overcoming of the rigidity of
representational consciousness only because of this lack of an in-itself dimension.
Deleuze's reading of Absolute Negativity as the embodiment of the transcendenceor
substantiality of the Concept which will eventually become the ultimate transcendent
ground, the Absolute Idea, is at odds With this result.
The PS thus overcomes the transcendentalillusion representedby the refusal of
natural consciousnessto see beyond the fixity of the distinction between subject and
.ect. As we saw in Chapter Six, this empirically appearing illusion is, as in Deleuze's
ob9for
However,
Hegel it is rooted in ontolo91
ical structures
analysis, ontologically rooted.
in
analysed the Logic of Essence,which appear in histoncally concrete fonns. Absolute
Negativity is. in addition, not only the truth of self-consciousness.As noted in Chapter
Six, it is the trutb of the beginmng of PS, the mdetenninate being of Sense-Certainty.
'Phisbeing, wbich, as I argued m Cliapter Five, must be identified witb the ambiguous yet
feeling
B
CPuR,
Kant
to
the
of
existence
refers
edition
of
in
is itself neither
undeniable
being
This
subject nor object.
is not the certamty of my existence as a substantial self, but
for
bare
feeling
be
to
that
a
comes eventually
marked
me as T, and thus becomes the
This
latter
transcendent
self.
representation 'I am' is made
illusion of a substantial or
but
by
this is not all-, it is also made possible by the
possible
intersubjective recogMtion,
Absolute
Negativity. This is the result of PS. The
Being
that
is,
itself,
structure of
Hdduiýg of the subject is not a process whereby it rediscovers its substantialitV on the
from
difference
itself
other side of its
In fact, the resulting actuality of self-
loss
dimension
The
Unconditioned
the
of
any
absolute
of
substantiality
is
consciousness
228
is not an actual, empirical self-consciousnessposited illegitimately as its own condifion.
Instead, PS ends vntb the aclualitv of self-consciousnessin Hegel's senseof Wirklichkeir
through the educative expenence of its own difference from itself self-consciousness
comes to know this difference as its own condition and truth.
Deleuze, as we have seen,insists Ue Schelling that the dialectical Authebung of
simple Being requires the assumption that thought is identical With the substantial or initself aspect of Being. If one disregards this assumption, then the absolute, undeniable
thesis, the feeling of existence, cannot be mediated through antithesis and synthesis,it is
not taken up or 'does not follow' (DR 74/52). However, Deleuze makes this point by,
again like Sebelling, relying on a somewhat crude reading of the dialectic of immediacy
PS
in
and SL. In order to grasP the relation between the beginning and end of PS, for
example, we miust attend to the specific relation between the initial indeten-ninateBeing
from
the
two
that
terms
and
opposed
emerge
it. These two simple unifies, opposed as
I-
"
objective and subjective or as tbesis and antithesis, are not tbernselves opposed to the
initial indetenninate Being. Each of these unifies is unsuccessfiffly posited in tum as the
foundation of the other, before any further distinction between subjective and objective is
posited. However, their relation to the initial, indetenninate Being is problematic that
both terms happen to 'ernerge out of pure being [aus dem reinen Sein [
...
] herau.ýfallen1'
§92,
diversity'
in
80/59
'cnicial
Sense-Certainty
(PS
the
constitutes
modified). The
movement of emergencehere does not subsequently become known as the activity of a
substantial, self-positing subject, as was Fichte's goal. Instead, this movement, and the
simple unity fTom whicb it begins, is known at the end of the PS as Absolute Negativity,
an unconditioned that remains unstatable in terms representational consciousness(being
attached to simple positiVity, substantiality and transcendence) would understand,
ltýgical
(philosophical)
exposition.
a
requiring instead
In the PS, simple indeterminate Bejýkgis re-cognised in the assertion of Existence
before
(I
becoming
am')
eventually
recognised as the Actuality
in self-consciousness
229
that is Absolute Negafivity. Deleuze's assertion that Hegel's beginning with Being.
whether in natural or philosophical consciousness,is not presuppositionless, because it
assumesthe identity of being-for-us ('sensible, concrete. empirical bemg', DR 169/1291)
and being-in-itself, is mistaken. flegel does not begin vAth concrete being, but with
problematic being, the ambiguous Kantian feeling of existence that Deleuze himself
affirms in his account of the transcendentaldifference at the heart of thought. Here, there
are no distinctions between subject and object., phenomenon and noumenon, or
bypothetical and categOncal.Hegel's accotint of Absolute KnoWIng does not purport to
describe what the determinate, positive unity of thought and being-in-itself must be like.
Instead,it is knowledgeof what the unity of thoughtand being must be if the difference
between being-for-us and bemg-m-itself can even be presented in consciousness.In this
way, Absolute Knowing undercuts the foundationalist model of knowledge and its
aporia.,for it is not knowledge of a foundation, but of the simplest possible beýginningof
thougbt.
iv) Immanent 'Ungrounding'and
the Immanent Concept
Botb liege] and Deletize employ accounts of self-consCiousnessin order to
foundationalist
the
undennine
image of thought, in such a way that the unquestioned
foundationalism
light.
brought
For both thinkers, the problem
to
presuppoSitionsof
are
foundationallsm
is
it
for
detennination
that
tries
to
the
possibility
of
with
account
with
the aid of a transcendentfbimdation. This proves to be a self-destructive orientation, as
Schelfing shows, for foundationalism can only presupposewhat it sets out to prove, i. e.,
that knowledge of the real through reason alone is possible. Deleuze accusesHegel too of
being a foundationalist, for assuming that the Concept is identical with the putative
dimension
Being.
But
have
is
this
of
as
we
seen,
substantial or in-itself
not an accurate
230
4
account of Hegel's Absolute KnoWing. Absolute KnoWing is knowledge of the structure
of the immanent, negative movement of consciousness,in which there is no possible
determinate distinction between thought and being. It is thus the result of the collapse of'
any possible distinction between for-us and in-itself
now want to sbow bow Hegel develops an ontology in SL that accounts for
determination without referring it to a transcendent ground posited as Internally
it
that
resembling
which grounds. This will entail a further examination, following the
previous chapter, of Hegel"s deconstruction of foundationalism in the Doctrine of
Essence,before we pass on to the Concept. This examination will show how the Concept
comprebendsan absolute difference that results in stable determination.
Our survey will take in the categones of Existence, the Absolute and Actuality,
before moving on to that of the Concept itself My argumentbere,is that the n-reducibility
of the categoriesof Existence, Actuality and Concept to that of Ground demonstratesthat
liege] leaves behind fou-ndationalism and all illusory methods of explanation ftom
grounds. His account of the relation between Possibility, Contingency and Necessity
demonstrates that Hegel's ontology does not presuppose a transcendent identity
form
the
preposited under
of possibility or eminent identity. Finally, the Concept itself is
explicated as a self-deten-nining principle wbose activity is not one of grounding in the
foundationalist sense, and in which is realised Hegel's Critique of the notion of a
transcendentand substantial Absolute. The relation between thought and beingfOTHegel,
4 Given the
for
his
Deleuze
texts
reads
philosophical
own purposes(a
in
strategically
way which
it
being
his
Koj6vean
PS
NP),
the
on
reliance
a
reading of
would perhaps be
in
good example
for
interpretative
him
'errors'.
figures
His
to
cntiques of
within the tradition
mistaken reproach
deliberate
in
driven
by
be
and
creative
exercises
as
n-ýsdirection,
a sensationof
could understood
his
the
need,
and
acknowledged
in
accounts of the process in which
philosophical oppression,
difference
between
to
the
transformed.
thought
Tnark
such negative 'mediators' and
are
imagesof
those he found more conducive to creative thinking.
231
by
Concept
the
transcendence
the
as we shall see, is not an internal relation secured
of
qua Ground, for the Concept cannot be understood through this illusory category.
As we saw in Chapter four, Deleuze's ontology presentsthe relation betN%een
the
transcendentalor virtual, and the empirical or actual. in terms of Absolute Difference or
their mutual incommensurability The virtual is in-itself different in kind from itself, and
becomes for-itself in actuality by externalising itself Like Bergsonian duration, the
virtual tends botb to 'relax' itself tbrough actual differences of degree in extension, and
to remain immanent or implicated within differences of degree as Absolute Difference.
In this way, the relation between virtual tendenciesand their actual expression is external
and contingent, unlike the necessaryand internal relation that is posited in Schelling's
Philosophy of Identity as existing between the substantial unconditioned and the
for
This
Deleuze,
conditioned.
externality,
gives real, creative explanatory power to
philosophy. As we shall see, Hegel's own account of the ontological principle of
determination refuses all transcendenceto this principle, describing it in terms of internal
difference and externalisation, rather than ascribing to it substantiality and a transcendent
limiting
becomes
detenninate
by
through
itself
self-relation
which it
We begin in the Doctrine of Essencewhere we left off in the previous chapter,
by
Groiind
The
detenmnation
Ground.
of
is cbaractensed a relation of two terms in
witli
intemaliv
thev
are
relatedto
which their mutual exclusivity is necessaryor essential,i.e.,
determination,
The
this
to
which is
each other.
instability of
each other as external
fixity
insistence
beyond
the
the
to
thinking
that
of ground and
on
stubborn
goes
apparent
in
Chapter
As
from
'shining-into-other'.
this
saw
we
mutual relation of
grounded,results
Six, any Ground can only be a Ground if it presupposesan other that it grounds. Ground
itself
Grounded,
logical
the
structure
thus includes within its
and its
and their
unity of
distinction. This distinction is the Form (SL 11,86-7/449-50) of the Ground, and the unity
becomes determined as the specific determinafion of the Ground, its Content. Given a
Grounded
in
first
its
Formal
Ground,
to
the
its
is
relation
instance
a
case
of
specific
232
Grounding- in which the inner unity of the two. their common Content, is posited in a
doubled form (SL H 97-8/457-8). An example of this logical relation menfioned by
Hegel is the notion of attractive force in physics. where a phenomenon is explained by
referenceto a groundthat is Simplythe particularpbenomenonpositedas existing under
the fonn of universality or abstract possibility (SL 11,98-9/458-9). Hegel is tbus directly
criticising the type of explanation of determination that Deleuze accuseshim of giving,
is
the
wbere
actual
assumed to pre-exist its actualisation as a possible. internal
5 For Hegel, this type of explanationis
determinationof a transcendentunconditioned.
because
logical
the
illusory
structure of Ground is not self-consistent. This lack of
is
consistency the result of a failure to comprehend adequately the structure of Absolute
Negativity, for Formal Ground is a determination which still requires that an external
term, the Content, is presupposed as given to thought, which then inscribes a merely
fon-nal or accidental distinction within it.
The instability of Ground and Grounded is repeatedin Formal Ground, WItb the
Formal distinction presupposing the unity of Content rather than being genuinely
it.
identical WItb The result is an attempt to tbink the unity of Form and Content anew.
Real Ground is the result, where the distinction of Fon-n is internal to Content itself, such
that Ground and Grounded are external to each other, not solelv becauseof their Form,
but due to their Content. However, the insufficiency of Formal Ground, which was due
to the inessentiality of the Foirmal distinction, is now matched by the excessive
distinction
internal
Content
Real
(SL 11,103-5/462-3).That
to
the
externalityof
which is
if
to
say,
is
we simply posit the ground of a phenomenon in another phenomenon
external to it that we simply associate with it, there is no ground of unity between the
two except in the merely subjective judgement throligh which we link them. In this wav.
it becomes impossible to say what it is in the phenomena themselves that constitutes a
Any
be
phenomenon
could
adduced as a ground of any other (SL 11,
relation.
grounding
5 On Deleuze's critique of this type of explanation, seeChapter Four
233
above, pp. 123-4
106-7/465). Here, the unity of the two Contents is presupposedrather than posited, and
again.,no explanation is produced
The overcoming of the inconsistenciesassociatedwith Ground really begins with
the determination of Existence (SL 11.125/481). With Existence, there Is no Ions-,,
er a
§
(EL
(Grundlage)
123
between
terin
grounding relation
essential
substrate
and
its
a
7
ZUSý).
Ground relies on the given externality of two terms,, whick for representational
consciousness, implies both spatial and temporal externality. However, the logical
structure of Existence is not that of grotind and consequent,but implies the totality of
Conditionsthat haveto exist for one existentto be the Groundof another.A Condition is
bas,
be
in
for
be
to
there
to
precisely wbat
present
order
a relation of grounding- an
immediacy which is simply present, rather than being posited bv the Ground. The
deten-nmation of Condition thus acknowledges the insufficiency of Ground, which is
that given two phenomena,it is impossible to explain the necessarydetenninafion of one
by the other simply by considering the phenomenathemselves.The necessaryrelation of
grounding requires certam contingent Conditions in order to exist. The necessary
billiard
ball
between
Humean
the
of
one
and that of anotber
connection
movement
Conditions
be
totality
to
of
established, which are unified in or related
requires a whole
to just this ground-relation: a level surface, the absenceof strong draughts, and so on.
Tbe determination of Condition marks the comprehension of this fact, in which the
presupposition of Ground is determined as immediately other., as an Etwas (ISL 11,
113/469). Yet, as has been the case in the Lojdc of Essence from External Reflection
onward, this external relation to a Condition cannot be understood without relating it to
the internal self-relationof Essence,which in this caseis that of Ground.
6 On the
Ground,
Formal
Real
of
and
see also Mure, 1984, p. 108, Taylor, 1975,
insufficiencies
1910.
120-2.
McTaRgart.
263-4
pp.
and
pp.
7 See
109.
Mure,
p.
op.
cu,
also
234
A Condition is a Condition, and not just something immediate without further
Grotmd
the
content.becauseit is relatedto a Ciroundand a Girrounded,
yet
relation on]v
exists under certain Conditions. Each side is both immediately itself and mediated with
respect to the other, or is a posited Contradiction (SL 11,114-5/471-2). Given that
Grounding and of Condifioning are each both itself and its other, they are idenfical,
collapsing into a negative umty (SL 11,116-8./472-4.), i. e., the active Emergence
(Hervorgang) of an Existent Fact (SL 11,119/474). An Existent contains or implies both
Ground and Condition, but as internal moments of its own Form or Show (&hein) (SL
11, H 8-19/474). The overcoming of the mutual externality of Ground and Condition
does not., however, imply that Existence is reabsed in a sole Existent. a theological.
transcendentunitv that acts as a Ground of the relation between conditioned Grounds and
Conditions.
Existence is the immediacy, the Being, of all actual empirical
grounded
things when we consider them as relation4 as inseparable ftom other things. And the
important point to bear in mind is that the Existence of any thing can-notsolely be
by
finite
explained
grounding relationships that only exist under certain specific
Conditions. Existence is not a ftirtber determination of Ground, but the overcoming of its
supposedself-subsistence.
Why is this? The extemal Conditions of a thing are its own Form, a
lo 91
ical/ontoto 91
ical stnicture that allow certain temporally and spatially determinate
between
be
discerned
from
ExIstents
to
the perspective
arounding relations
it and other
of a fimte consciousness.The detenmnation of Existence means that the idea of an
implies
Ground
Conditions
illusory.
Each
Existent
absolute
without
is
a totality of
Conditions without which it would not exist. But it is this totality of extemal Conditions
that brings something into Existence, and not Ground. In this way, Ground appearsas an
illusory
determination of
the Absoltite,
one that embodies the structure of
finite
representational consciousnessand
reason. The real explanation for the Existence
Condition&
to
must
refer
and the elementof necessityhere lies in the fact
of somethiiig
235
that they must be just this something's Conditions. The confingency of any Oven thing is
for
Kant,
finite
the
then,
not,
case wltb
wbom
an effect of our
understanding- as was
knowledge of the true necessity of any given object (Its complete determination) could
only be a regulative goal for fimte consciousness.Infinite knowledge, for Kant. involved
the unending hnking of judgements of experience that connect objects to each other,
bv
judgement.
Bowever,
deduction
Hegel's
reflective
within networks inscribed
of the
determination of Existence shows that the contingency of any thing, its externality to the
totality of its conditions, is not due to the inadequacy of our faculty of knowledge, but is
a necessarydetennination of Being itself For Hegel, there is, pace Deleuze, no Ideal of
complete determination In genuine philosophy. The Ideal is a construct produced by
finite consciousness. Such an Ideal, posited as the regulative goal of theoretical
knowledge witb regard to my particular thiiig, is itself finite. This is becauseit fails to
comprehend the irreducible contingency of any given thing, representing instead the
fhing-M-Itself
the
in relation to the IndiVidual phenomenal object, as the
unity of
substantial, transcendent UnIty of appearance. This would, in Schelling's philosophy,
become the real Absolute Identity., qua Ground of all determination, defined as a Sollen
for reason.
For Hegel, the totality of conditions of an Existent is a totality only becauseall
Existents transcend their conditions as negatively self-related terms. Every Existent is the
Condition of other Existents, and as such is equaUy irnmediate, or external to them. In
other words, the basis for thinking all Existence is, according to Hegel, externality, rather
than an essential, internal, and necessary relafion between empirical reality and a
8
Substance.
Each Existent is grounded in relation to other Existent-s,but
transcendent
Faylor (op. cit., p. 289) makes this point, yet his discussion of the 'inner umty' of the effectivity
is
Concept
the
shot through with ambiguities regarding the mode of this effectivity-. is the
of
Concept still an 'underlying reality' (p- 262, p. 279 ffi. 1) or is there nothing behind Show (p,
262)?
236
finite
from
illusory
the
of
a
only
consciousness, which
perspective
incomplete and
Idea.
From
the
a properly philosophical
projects
unity of these relations as a regulative
perspective, the problem is to understandin what way the ungroundednessof an Existent
is a necessarvelement of its Being.
By unden-nining the notion of Ground, Hegel also distances himself from the
illusory distinction of real and possible that Deleuze crificises, as we shall see now in
deten-ninations
Absolute
to
the
the
relation
of
and of Actuality
If the idea that all
Existents are necessarily Grounded is illusory, then so is the idea that the difference
between Essence and Existence is one between a possible detennination and the same
determination witb reality 'added' to it. This illusory difference determines, for example,
Sebelling's account of the relation between the first creation and the Absolute's real selfdifferentiation. For Hegel, bowever, Essenceis Existence. This speculative proposition
(Eniduperung)
'emptying'
the
total
turning-inside-out
expresses
or
of Essence into
Existence (SL 11,128/483). The idea of internal relation has, by deconstructing itself
shown its truth to be Existence, the unity that implies a totality of external relations in its
own self-relation. '11e Conditions of an Existent are not possibilities abstracted from
is
but
Existents,
Existent
by
reality,
other real empirical
and a given
not only conditioned
these Existents, but also transcendsits relations with them, for they are UsConditions.
As elements of the Existent's relation to itself, its Conditions are its Appearance,
Sbow.
difference
between
Erscheinung
Schein
Erscheinung
The
and
consists
or real
its
in the stability of the Conditions. The Conditions have been shown to be, not merely
Essence.
but
Existences,
thus
self-tiegating
vanishing products of a self-related and
from
deconstruction
determination
has
the
terms
of the idea of
immediate
resulted
whose
'Mere
here,
Existents
Essence.
thus
two
totalities
that
transcendent
and that of
are
of
a
Condifions. or in other words, that of the Existents considered as immediate, and that of
their externalmediation. One seemsto be the Ground of the other, but this repeatsthe
237
form.
The
in
unstable ground-relation a new
result is the collapse of these totalities into a
negative unity, i. e.. Being determined as the Absolute.
The Absolute here means at first the sublafion of Reflection through itself (SL
11,187-9/530-1). In this way, it is similar to the Absolute as Schelling understood it- the
foundation
necessary
of any reflexive distinction., arrived at through reflexlve reason's
affirmation of its own inability to act as foundation. ne deten-ninationsof Essenceup to
this point in the SL have been comprehended here as partial attempts to grasp the
Existent and its totality of Conditions. The relation between the totality of Existents and
that of Conditioning relations has collapsed mto the unity of the Absolute, which again
has an appearance of transcendent Ground about it. The Absolute grasped as this
positive, indifferent unity is the end of Reflecfion and is opposed to it, in the same way
became
Matter
Forrn
SL
(ISL 11,89-901451-2):'there is nothing
to
as
opposed
earlier in
in the finite which could preserve for it a distinction against the Absolute' (SL 11,
190/532). This is also, for Hegel, the prime characteristic of Spiinoza's Absolute (SL 11,
197/538).
This Absolute-as-Ground,,however, is only relative to the process of reflection,
the 'negative exposition tAus1gguikg]of the Absolute', that sublates itself in it (SL 11,
189-91/532-3). If we understand the Absolute not only as the vanishing of the two
totalities, but also as the truth of Being or of immediacy as such, then the exposition of
the Absolute through Reflection is in fact the positive exposition of the positive, pure
itself
Absolute
In
Being
Absolute,
the
this
the
as
immediacy of
is compTehended
way,
that is, as related only to itself not as passing over into another because of its own
Existents
but
iiself
as
instability, nor as shining-into-another,
and
ratber as manifesliiýg
their Conditions. What does this mean? We saw in Chapter Two that Schelfing's
Absolute, as reflexively or negatively expounded, was the Absolute of purely negative
hypothetical
determinations, the 'first creation, had to be
philosophy, whose merely
sublatedin order to passover to the affirmation of the Absolute as a rational Ungrund.
238
The positive exposition of the Absolute lay, for Schelling, outside the Absolute itself
difference
Absolute
the
that, as the works of
in
relying upon an unthinkable positing of
his middle period showed, had to be thought as equiprimordial with the unified Absolute.
Schelfing's problem is that the Absolute, in its substantial, grounding role. that
is, as transcendentto all its modes of expression, including reason, has been abstracted
from thesemodes,its own content,which thenhaveto be thoughtas somehowmigrating
it
dissonance.
deten-nination
That
through
a
primordial
into
rather than indeterminate
identity exists Is, as noted in the previous ebapter, an 'incomprebensible bappening' (PS
543/471 §780). For Hegel, however, that the Absolute is related, not only to Essenceand
Reflection, but to Bein& means that the real content of the positive, immediate. abstract
Absolute is its own ontological content or its developed logical structure, that Is, thefiki
that it manifests itself in a totality of Existencesrelated to a totality of Conditions (SL IL
194/536). Therefore the real content of Being comprehended as the Absolute is not an
abstractly conceived predicate or positive content, attached to the Absolute as to a pure
finally
be
No
such
predicate
could
justified against the opposed predicate that
substance.
implies,
Absolute-as-freedom
Absolute-asthe
against
as
case
it reflexively
is
witb
definition
Schelling's
Absolute
the
of
as
necessity, or as subject against object.
transcending all predicates acknowledges this. For Hegel then, the content of the
Absolute is, in fact, the intemal negati%rityof Bemg, the vejy fact that it mamfests itself
logical
PS
from
itself
different
This
the
the
more
comprehensible
in
as
renders
result of
terms, for Absolute Knowing there arose as consciousness of the whole process of
from
be
identity
difference
911111
Ing WItb the
itself,
natural consciousness's
with and
immediacy
The
deterrnmation
Absolute
Being.
the
shows that the process of
of
simple
of
becoming external to itself and only thus becoming identical With itself, or Absolute
NegatiVity, is the logical content of umnediate Being itself
The developed tinity of the second Absolute with itself is the mith of its Being.
It is Being and its inberent instability, the ceaselesstransitions of the Logic of Being and
239
the circular sbining-into-other of Essence, comprehended. As such, it is not just
Absolute, a unity 'absolved' of reflexive difference, but Actualav, a unity that includes
both
Fxistents
itv
the
totality
of
mutually-external
within it, as moments of
self-relation.,
determination
Existence.
Conditions.
In
than
the
their
this
of
and
way, it contains more
Pure Being is comprehended, then, as implicitly Actuality
Actuality explicates and
expressesthe meaning of Beirig- whereasBeiiig cannot even explicate its own meaning,
for its sense is inseparable from Nothing. Bemg is revealed, not as a transcendent
substanceposited outside thought, but as the process of internal difference, 'the activity
becomes
Actuality, grasped abstractly or
through
of self-development'
which immediacy
§
(EL
124 Zus.).
subjectively as a positive unity
The internal dissonance of Being and its resulting retum to immediacy in
Actuality is thus ii-nplied, for Hegel, by the intemal structure of H=ediacy
itself, in so
far as it is thought through. As a logical structure, the Absolute is its own reflexive
exposition as detem-tmateExistences and their detenninate Conditioning relations. As
A
thought,
posited oulside
outside
reflexive relation, as an alogical ontological identity,
it is posited by the Understanding as removed from any determinate relation with the
in
is
detennined
that
reflexively
sublated it. But this relation cannot
reahn of experience
be denied: it turns oa
SIX,
be
Chapter
the mutual implication of
to
as we saw in
Presupposingand Positing Reflection. Indeed, it resurfacesin the problem of circularity
that afflicts Sebelling's Absolute, Wherethe Absolute as alogical umty bas to be posited
as a ground that resembles the realm of experience even though it is also posited as
it.
In
this result, the transcendent
transcending
it, as utterly not resembling
utterly
Absolute turns out to possessordy illusory being. Schelfing's foundationalist project can
by
detenninate
be
the
only
explaining
rescued
real, substantial genesis of
relations via a
Absolute,
incamates
Absolute
Difference,
Absolute
the
that
genuinely non-rational
form
the
of an externality that nevertheless 'Insists' or 'persists' (to use
immanence in
240
Deleuze's terminology) in its products. This, as we saw in Chapters Two and Four.
proves in fact to be the undoing of foundationalism.
So, to recap: In trying to tbink sometbing as determinate througb its simple Being
(wbieb refers not to concrete, empirical Being, but to Kant's 'indeten-ninate empirical
intuition'),
find
have
that
to think its content, not as substantially or
we
we
Grounded,
but
logical
determination
metaphysically
as a
processof
in which its simple
Exisis
in
relation to other Existents. And theseExistents are related to it as its
immediacy
Conditions only because of their real externality This process is Actuality, which is
subsequentlygrasped as its positive, immediate unity, that is, pure or abstract Possibility.
For Hegel, what for Kant were still only modal categones,that is. relations not between
(as
but
between
the
objects
case with substantiality and causality)
was
objects and the
faculties
knoWIng,
subject's
of
are determinations of Actuality itself Possibility is not the
truth of Actuality, however. Hegel does not here revert to a conception of the Substantial
Conditioning
hole
Existents
of
and
relations as a possible unity that pre-exists
w
does
Actuality.
Possibility
distincfion,
but
empirical
as
mean such a unity, without real
is
such it
abstract and illusory. As an abstract, transcendent identity, it is an unstable
determinationof reflection, and implies both its own differenceand the developmentof
logical
If
A
that
possibility, we simply state that no
a
pure
or
an opposition. we state
is
contradiction is involved in thinýg
hold
But
to pure possibility in this way is to
to
it.
is
implied
by
A,
impossibility
the
the
the
equally
of
opposed
state,
wbich
ignore
is
believing
be
Given
A.
the
there
to
no real necessity in
it
conception of
merely possible,
impossibility
(SL
11,202-4/5
than
any more real
its
9
In relation to an Actualltv. this means that, although it is related to other
Existents as its Conditions, it is also immediate, an Existent u-nity that transcends its
Conditions. Hence it canjust as well not exist. Tbe Existence of amActuality. then, is not
Groundedby the internal unity of a substantialwbole, but can be or not be, and is thus
9 Houlgate, 1W.
P. 39.
241
Contingent:
'necessityis inifially nothing
necessarily,or as a result of its own content.
but the necessity of contingency
."
It is a contingent fact that A rather than something
else is Actual, but the fact that A is either impossible or possible. and is thus really. and
just
not
merely, possible, is Grounded in other Actualifies. Nevertheless. Actuality is
both
is
Possibility
Possibility
determination
thaii
more
a
abstract and real
of Actuafitv
rather than the other way -round, and 'points to another, to actuality in which it augments
and completes Isich ergan.-Ij itself
11#
(SL 11,203/543,
modified). Real Possibility thus
extemallsesitself in Actuality.
Actuality always includes Contingency, whereas pure Possibilitv seeks to
it
is
exclude and tbus illusory. That an Actuality exists implies a totality of Conditions,
the assembling of which is not guaranteed by the internal le/os of some substantial
but
Contingent.
What
Contingent,
for
Actual
thus
there is no transcendent
is
whole,
is
is
Ground or timeless reservoir of Possibility
that pre-exists it and guarantees its
implies
Possibility
production.
nothing but the potential of the Actual as it (the Actual) is
assembledaccording to the logical relationships of Conditioning in wbich it exists. The
Actual is potentially other Actualities, but what these shall be when they emerge into
Existence is Contingent. Real possibility, then, does not transcend 'the whole set Idas
Game] of conditions, a dispersed actuality which is -notreflected into itself [ ]' (SL 11,
...
209/547).
Real Necessity is not internal to a transcendent principle, but is instead the
Existing
between
Actualities
that are, in anotber Wect,
relations
working-out of
themselvesdeterminants of real Possibilities. (SL 11,210-11/548-9). This reinforces the
idea
is
illusion
'first
that
the
transcendental
conclusion
of a
creation'
a
of the
Understanding, which, as the static, abstract unity of all possible detemiinations of
actuality, assumesthe existenceof a positive Substance,a transcendenthing-in-itself
Actuality is determined then, not by metaphysical Grounds, but bv the Necessarv
10]hid.,
)
-4
242
Contingently
Real
Actualifies
that
those
really,
exist.
manifestation of the potentiality of
Necessity thus presupposesContingency.
Looking back, we seethat the Being of the given has been deten-ninedas its own
its
becoming
ical
becomIng,
i.
in thougbt and av tbouat, but also
onto-lo 91 process of
e.,
-I-Iit
is
determined
In
this
and
process,
in
as aclualilv.
as an Actuality, that is. a self-related
Existent that includes in this self-relation its mediation by otber FxIstents, its Conditions.
This self-relation, its unity as an Actuality, is necessarily Contingent, but Contingency
here expresses the cliance assembly of its Conditions as the Conditions of just ih4s,
Actuality. However, when these Conditions are assembled. then the Actuality of which
they are the Conditions emergesNecessarily into Existence. Real Necessity, the unity of
a set of Conditions as expressedin their resultant Actuality, is thus inseparablefrom their
Contingent
be
Existence.
It
cannot
own
understood as transcendingit in any way, as predetennination.
Substance.
The tinltv of Real Necessltv and
the
existing it as
inner
of a
Contingency is Absolute Necessity. the movement of Being to Actuality itself its unity
itself
from
internal
dissonance
Absolute
grasped
once
again
as
resulting
or
its
with
NegatiVity. Being is, in Actuality or in thought, constantly destroying itself and yet
in
destruction.
Contingent,
It
to
this
is constantly external itself or
and
maintaining itself
for
it
this
is also the manifesting of
yet is in
very externality always identical with itself
Real Necessity, the appearing of Actuality out of the potential of wbat is already Actual.
In this way, Being qua Absolute Necessityis shown to be 'simple immediacy that is
(SL
11,215/552).
absolute negafiVltv'
nlý
In Being qua Absolute NegatiVity, finite flungs emerge out of the productive,
Contingent
Yet
ExIstents.
(Real
Possibility)
Actuality
tbey
as
immediate,
active side of
itself,
Existence
its
Bein&
their
the
and so
excess over
is
are thus
self-externality of
ftom
This
dissonance
is their own productive actiNity, and
negativity.
internal
inseparable
disintegrating
become
to
themselves
turn,
they
external
as their potentialities
in
so
243
complete themselves by emergmg as other
"
Actualities. -Me relation between Absolute
Necessity and Actuality is not therefore a relation between a transcendent Ground that
determinations
its
lelos,
produces, according to
actual
out of the totality of its
internal
limitation.
determinations
Their
possible
operation
of
an
relation expresses not
via
internal limitation, but a.) the self-externalisation of Actualities through their internal,
Absolute Negativity, b) the emergenceof their potential as other Actualities, and c) the
'
Being
through them.
self-transcendenceand self-augmentation of
We now turn to the Doctrine of the Concept, in which the self-determining
aspectof Actuality becomes fully manifest. As I noted earlier, the way in which Ground
began
'shining-into-other'
be
to
structured
is
as
u-ndennined witb Existence, which
4containsthe [ground] within itself, and the ground does not remain behmd existence'
(EL § 123 Zus.). The determinafions of Substanceand Causality are the final incarnations
Ground-structure
Logic
the
the
of
of Essence,and their overcoming constitutes the
within
final sublation of the residual elementsof this structure within Being understoodas
Actuality. In the final determination of Essence,that of Reciprocity, the relation between
two Substancesdeterrmned as Cause and Effect, the last manifestation of the implicitly
temporal and spatial Ground-relation, collapses. In Reciprocity, the Cause and the Effect
from
be
to
are shown
indistinguishable
each other (and thus indeterminate), as each is
necessanly both Cause and Effect of the other (SL 11,237-8/569-70). The same thing
in
Chapter
for
Ground
Six,
to
occurred,as we saw
and
similar reasons,,
With respect
and
Grounded. A third term.,a negative unity, is thus implied., which determines itself In both
II
for
Substances,a 'context' (Ziisammenhang)
their respective processesof change.
11Cf
ibid., pp. 46-7.
12Cf. Hegel's
remarks on theories of emanation,regarding their lack of 'reflection-into-self (SL
11,198/539)or self-related negativity, i. e., Absolute Negativity.
13Schick, 1994, p. 180-
244
Ilis negative unity of the two Substancesis the sublation,of their Substantiality
Substance is Absolute Necessity grasped abstractly as a positive, self-mediated unity,
'beink that is becauseit is' (SL 11,219/555), recalling Spmoza's definition of Substance.
In Reciprocity, however, the internal, causal relation between Substancesthat appearsto
he
Essence
Actuality
the
to
constitute
of
is sbown
illusory, a subjective
metapbysical
attempt to maintain the independenceof both which does not acknowledge their mutual
(SL
Necessity,
11,252/582).
Absolute
the
their
shining-into-each-other and
negative unity
logical movement through which Being determines itself as its Actuality, thus tums out
to be, in truth, this unity or third, which Hegel calls the Concept. As in the relation
between Form and Essence, where both terms lose their independence, becoming
'momentsof a singgleactivit),.
1-
14
determining
dynarnic
the
of-fornting', the Substances
become moments of the ConceM a 'comprehensive dynamic activity. 15
The recursivity of the logical movement of SL that began to become explicit
in
Essence,
witb
w-hicb Bemg was explicitly included as one of its moments, is now
foregoing
All
Concept,
from
the
the
reallsed.
moments are moments of
just as,
from
Actuality,
leading
Being thTough Existence and
the
peirspective of
moments
Condition are elements of its appeanng. The movernent that begins witli Being and
is
by
itself
Absolute
Necessity
therefore
the self-externallsation
whose UMty expressed
is
Concept.
Actuality
the
of
its
and
appearing are equally moments of the Concept
of
thought which knows itself as thought, that is, not as immediate Being, nor as posited
outside itself as Essence or as Ground, but as the unity that comprebends all the
determinations of immediacy and of relation. All attempts to sustain difference and
determinationthrougb some internal relation of Groundingbave proven inadequateand
self-cancelling, and thus illusory. Categories such as Existence and Actuality, on the
higher
have
hanoý
status in relation to the Concept for they foreshadow its nonother
a
14
Burbidge, 1981, p- 8-
15Ibid-,
pI
11,
245
foundational nature, in which the unity and internal difference of Being are
However,
Concept
the
only
itself.
comprehended as moments of one negative unity.
along witb its subsequentdeterminations. will prove truly adequateto sustaindifference.
We saw that Absolute Necessity was the inner logical movement of the Actual,
deployed
both
Contingency
Real
Necessity
Nevertheless.
this
through
and
itself
which
Mrough
it
Actual,
the
occurs in it, because of the negatiNity, the
movement moves
Actual
Real
Possibility.
the
positedness or relation-to-other withm
which constitutes
Hence the Actual suffers Absolute Necessity Without compi-ehendingit. The significance
of the Concept is that it transcends the movement of Absolute Necessity, in that it
develops
through
or attains to itself Absolute
includes it as a moment of itself,
which it
Necessity is primarily the immanent development of SL itself. ne inner negativity of the
finite, its incessant ansing and perishing, is thought in the Concept as its own moment.
The characteristic of the finite, as it is thought in the determination of Opposition, for
is
be
both
both
to
the
time:
the
positive
same
positive is
example,
itself and its other at
and negative, and vice versa. In this way, it excludes itself from itself and collapses. The
fiMte
both
la&k-s
Bemg
thus
the
the
exceeds
and
expresses
in
negativity of
which
way
itself at the same time when it is embodied in finite determinations, whether these are
immediately self-related (Beirig) or related to themselves through an other (Essence).
Neither Being nor Essenceare stable in relation to themselves,and this instability is also
their self-externalisation, as when, for example, Essencepassesinto Existence.
The Concept, on the other hand, has a stable self-relation. This is not, however,
becauseit knows itself as Essence,Ground or Substance,subsisting beyond the flux of
Illusory Being, Reflectiort, or Accidents as a thing-in-itself
On the contrary, such
foundations are, as we have repeatedly seen, transcendental illusions. As transcendent
for
Ground
detenninate
illusory,
'lacks
that
thus
a content
is
in and
itself, and
'and
§121
itself
bring
foi-th'
it
does
Zus.
(FL
As
).
of
and
not
act
previously
consequently
Schelfing's
Absolute,
difference
true
that
this
of
which
requires
is
a
somehow
noted,,
246
has
Concept
But
determination.
the
a content as part of Its
anse in it in order to explain
been
has
Negativity,
Absolute
thought as the internal
self-relation, namely
which
Concept
Hence
Necessity
finite
determination
Absolute
the
movement of the
of
in the
develops itself through the internal movement of the finite detenninations. This
development occurs through its becoming-external to itself in both the abstractly positive
determinationsof Being,,and in those of Essencein wbich it finds itself expelled out
from its abstract unity. It subsequentlypasseson to determinations in which it determines
but
Actuality.,
(self-related'),
that
as
stable
itself as
is,
perisbing, self-externality.
In this
finite
the
the
movement of
way,
is within the Concept, and through it, thought comes to
determine itself as Concept. Just as simple Being was the abstract presupposition or
beginning of the PS whose meaning for natural consciousnesswas explicated in the
Concept,
became
Absolute
Knowing,
Being
SL
by
that
the
movement
in
is explicated
itself
beginning,
Being,
the
as
posited in an abstract, externallsed
which comprehends
form. Being is, in effect, the self-detennining activity of the Concept -
is
which
Essence
Concept
Logics
the
throughout
the
comprehendedever more concretely
of
and
-
form,
the puTe unity of the activity of self-development
grasped in its most abstract
(EL § 124 Zus.)The Concept that has left behind Substancewill thus come to comprehend itself
itself,
beyond
the
activity of presupposing
not as given, as positive,
all its accidental
as
deten-ninations,but rather as posited external to itself The Concept is not, then, a
knowilirig that retroactively
i
AI
presupposes self in its own ground,
i the
that is. In
foundationalist sense that Schelling, Deleuze and Hegel all denounced in one way or
another. It does not presupposethat the in-itself, ground or condition resembles that of
foundation.
On
logical
the
the
the
contrazy,
genesis of the Concept always
which it is
determilled
forms
through
such illusory
presupposesitself as
of fou-ndationalist relation
(as Presupposing and Positing Reflection, as Opposition. as Ground and Grounded), and
also presupposes itself as the gradual overcorning of illusion, througli Existence,
247
Actuality and Absolute Necessity It presupposes itself as posited as the implicit actiNity
of self-determination (the purely affirmative
determination of Being), which explicates
itself with fully immanent, Absolute Necessity, and then explicates this Intemal
nega,hvity as itv own, in the determination of Concept.
Hence Logic is not, for flegel, self-grounding. The self-grounding system as
developed by Fichte and Schelling is M fact the highest contradiction that foundationalist
involves
It
method can express.
a thinking that presupposesitself as giren, as abstract
Substance, and wbich then tries to deny its own negativity, its own reflexivity or
difference from itself in order to become, finally, abstract Substance. For Hegel, only
the Concept and its determinations express the tnith of philosophical thinking, because
they express, not a self-grounding thought, but an actively self-delerminhýg and thus
autonomous one.
However, the Logic of the Concept is not a final resting-place. Hegel envisaged
it as the gateway into the Realphilosophie, the philosophy of Nature and of Spirit. The
reasonsfor this Will hopefully become clearer as we examine the nature of the Concept a
little closer, for they concern again the meaning of the Concept as the actiVity of tbinking
by
internally
different
in
from
being
detennined
being
that
nature
or
is
itself The
Concept, as the unity of positing Essenceand posited Being, is first of all Universal, the
is
determined
its
determinations
(SL
11,
that
them
negative unity of all
and
in
which
274/601). But as such, it remams mfected, %qtbAbsolute NegatiVity, and so presupposes
itself, the result of the movement of the SL, as posited in its various determinafions. It is
it
SL,
It
the
this
the
that
the
movement
itself
of
is
not only
compTehends
movement
unity
[Scheinen
Concept,
'shining
deten-ninate
Particular
the
the
thus
as
outwardv
nach
is
Universal.
This
Essence,
11,281/606)
'sbining"
(SL
the
of
as
onl"' 111tisory.
is,
in
au#en]"
The illusory fixity of the Particular Concept is that of the Understanding (St. 11,2856/610-11), in which the Universal appears as the Ground of the Particular. This
Concept
deconstructs
Ground-relation
did
the
the
on
itself,
as
perspective
in
subjective
248
the Logic of Essence.In relation to the Ground, the Grounded is a vanishing term that
Substance,
Ground,
Accident
returns into its
and similarly the abstract
of a
or an
Particular vanishes into the Universal (SL TI, 296/618). Hegel's point here is that, in
order to sustain real difference, the relation between a substantial Universal and its
Particulars is not enough.16The transcendent Universal of traditional realism is thus as
powerless to sustain difference as is a metaphysical Substance, such as Schelling's
Absolute Identitv.
However, the Particular is also inwardly determinate, as well as determinate over
the Concept in its Schein as a Grounded. This is becauseit is identical witb the
against
C
Concept. As we saw with respect to Actuality, the externallsation of potentiality through
Contingency is itself identical With Absolute Necessity, the logical movement of
Absolute Negativity. The negativity of Actuality entails its movement outwards into real
but
Actual
externality,
it remains
in this externality, rather than simply dissipating.
Likewise, the Particular Concept is still Universal, and thus a negative unitv with itself
constituted through mediation and thus unlike Ground or Substance,for example, which
illusory
inwardly
As
deten-ninate
are
negafive unities posited as outside all mediation.
itself,
to
the Particular Concept, with its illusory reference to what is
thus
and
external
outside the Concept, is itself immanently the Singular Concept, which has a real
17
reference outwards.
The Singular Concept is Vitally important. becauseit marks the point where the
Concept begins to move outward beyond itself, discovering that explicitly
real
mediation, mediation with that which is really outside it is its own immanent meaning. It
is, firstly, the positing of the unity of Universal and Particular, the emergence of the
dimension of Universality (Absolute Negativity). within the Particular. The Concept thus
16Cf Winfield, 1998, p. 11.
17Seethe Introduction to the English translation of EL,
pp. xlx--vc, on some reasonsfor preferring
'the Singular' to 'the Individual' for translating Hegel's das Eimelhe.
249
returns to unity witb itself a real unity constituted throuO, mediation ratber than an
illusory
one, posited in opposition to all mediation.
However. a paradox1cal result
into
Concept
itself,
but
immediately
Singularity
'not
the
the
occurs.
return of
its
only
is
loss' (SL 11,299/621). The Concept, as we shall see,marks the point of development for
philosophical consciousnessthat is simultaneously its 'highest mawrity, and where 'its
downfall begins' (SL 11,287/611). This downfall will be the passage from Logic to
Nature, in which the Concept externalisesitself as absolutely different from itself
With the Singular Concept, the Concept has deterinined ilse/fas a totalm. This
Ufflversal...
Particular and Singular is immediately Identical With
that
means
each moment,
itself
the
all
others, or presupposes
as posited in and through them. Each is Universal, or
simple negatiVity. each is Parficular, or posited as an illusory determination in relafion to
a Ground (the Concept determined illusonly as Ground), and eaeb is Singular, a real
Concept
the
externalisation of
qua activity of thinking in which the Concept is identical
itself
In turn, looking back, all the deterrmnationsthat make up the SL,,having been
witb
comprehendednow as deten-nmationsof the Concept, are themselveseach of these three
A
That
determination
their
therefore
and
otherness
simply
a
aspects
is
of the
unity.
Concept as a self-enclosed totality (and is thus merely apparent otherness)seemshard to
deny at this point. If this is so, then the suspicion that the Concept is an expression of a
dogmatic image of thought must resurface. But when we turn back to the Singular
Concept, we find Hegel describing it as the realisation of the unity of Universality and
Particular, but oniv in so far as it is the 'posited separation [Abscheidung]' (SL 11,
300/622) of the Concept from itself
Wbereas Particulanty
implies only an illusory
implies
is
Concept,
Singularity
beyond
Universalitv
that
the
the
something
of
i-eference
distinguished
[monsirierl
11,300/622),
(SL
'pointed
in Actuality. This is
out
wirdl'
really
not an illusory relation of self-excluSion or self-repulsion, as was encountered in the
Logic of Essencebefore the emergenceof Existence as the En0u, #erutkg of Essence.
250
Singulanty )s thus the final term in the totality of the pure ConcepL and also this
totality's transcendenceof itself towards that which is absolutely external to thought. -N,,
in
Existence,
Essence
Fntdu#erum-,
the
that
saw
realised
such, it recalls the
of
we
Absolute, and in Actuality. Looking back once more over the progress of SL. it becomes
has
be
difference,
thought
the
the
to
that,
to
of
given
apparent
in order sustain
immediacy
as Universality (its Being), then as Particulansed,in terms of Quality. Quantity, and the
from
that
the collapse of Essence,such as Existence and Actuality.
self-relations
result
But it is only really differentiated when it is thought in terms of the Concept, which is
itself
identical
i
itself,
Hence
to
the
thus
absolutely extemal
and only
immanence of
with
aLy
III
the self-determining activity of tbougbt only remains immanent to itself by being
absolutely external to itself It Is not simply opposed to itself for here there is no Essence
that excludesitself from itself in a relafion of Opposition.
And m this way, the immediate is only fully differentiated when it is the Singular
Concept. As Universal, or simply immediate, and Parficular, or mediated by others, its
self-relation is still illusory. In thesedeterininations, it is still under the domination of the
Grounded,
Identical,
Substantial,
Understanding,
the
given
as
or
subjective
which views
in
Only
its self-relation.
i. e., as posited outside all mediation, as not including mediation
is
is
by
this illusory
secured
a relation of absolute exterionty
when its relation-to-self
Schelling
aspectremoved.
and Deleuze maintain that the immediacy of the given is only
immediacy
Concept,
the
that
this
is thus illusory
and
all reflection of
real outside
(Schelfing),or that this immediacyis real becausethe being of the sensibleis Absolute
Difference and thus outside the Concept, (Deleuze., DR 80/56-7,182/139-40). Ig The
define
be
immediacy
to
to
that
any attempt
as self-related is
enslaved by a
implication is
transcendentalillusion that dominates Difference. But this does not take into account the
determination of the Concept, according to SL. It is the activitv of thought or being that
Substance,
it
difference
from
than
only
insofar
as
rather
realises
is activity,
its absolute
18See
18.
1993,
Baugh,
p.
also
251
itself Its self-relafion is thus comprehended as a dimension of its irreducible internal
difference, its Absolute Nlep-afi"ty.
This is emphatically demonstrated by the passagefrom SL into the Philosophy
of Nature, which has perhaps been the most controversial aspect of Hegel's ontology.
Like other a priori philosophies of nature, including Schelling's, Hegel's has been often
dismissed as the product of rationalism gone mad. But recent interpreters of German
Idealism have sought to rescue Nalurphilosophie, by showing that it is not necessarily
dogmatic or hubristic, 19 The crucial question is whether A'aiurphilosophie must
be
determine
to
necessarily
an attempt
nature as it must be in-itself As we saxv in
Chapter Two, Scbelling's early Nalurphilosophie proposed instead to determine nature in
relation to our experience, in order to show what nature must be like in order that we
should have representations of Objects outside us. Hegel rejects both options. Whether
in-itself,
be
like
for-us,
or
we ask what nature must
we are working with a foundationalist
image of philosophy. From the perspective of flegel's Absolute Knowinal the question
has to be whether or not the immanent determinafion of the absolute unity of thought and
being as the self-determining, Concept also requires that the Concept deten-nineitself as
Nature, as that which is genulnely other than thought. If this is the case, then a
philosophy of nature has to determine what is entailed in such a determination, which
embodies the self-transcendenceof self-determining thought.
As William
Maker 'has pointed out, the transition from onto-logic to
Naturphilosophie cannot mean that Nature is a) posited by thought.,so that Nature is not
Both
itself ontologically real, or b) that Nature has all along been determining thoUgbt_2()
these options remain illusoqv, foundationalist determinations of the Absolute. This is,
again, becausethey imply the structure of Positing and Presupposing Reflection without
19In
intended
Guattari's
last
Deleuze
and
project was tfie construct on ot d
addition,
Alaturphilosophie.
20Maker, 1998,
8,11
pp.
-14
252
immediacy
by
be
it.
Nature
thought
an
as
comprehending
absolutely posited
cannot
Reflection.
be
Positing
for
Concept
did
the
this.
outside it,
an unstable
it would simply
if
This instability is caused by its failure to acknowledge its necessarypresupposition. an
immediacy that would have to be piven to it so that it can posit another such immediacy
relative to the first. Nor could Nature simply be presupposed by thought., for it would
bave to be presupposed in a determinate form abstracted from accepted data. and
-I]
have
been
therefore would
just as much posited as presupposed.ý B oth these optionss
between
thought and nature, wbose absolutenesscould
would simply posit a resemblance
only be assumed.
These options may be incoherent, but this alone does not mean that an alternative
is possible. The quesfion is whether or not Hegel's immanent determinafion of the
being
and thought as the self-determining Concept will immanently
absolute unity of
detennine itself further as absolutely other to itself as the idea of Nature. As argued
Concept
dividing
itself
from
the
that
through
is
which is itself only
itself utterly
"above,
Its negativity is thus comprehended as constitutive of its self-relation. Even the Absolute
Idea, the final determination of the Concept.,is constituted as identical with itself through
its intemal negativity, or is in unity witb itself only InsofaTas it loses Its unity witb itself
The negative unity of thought and being includes Absolute Negativity. or is just as much
22
lack
between
being,
And the Concept is explicitly
the utter
thought and
of relation
detennined as this internally dissonant unity. So, if the Concept is that which only
determines or realises itself through its utter difference from itself, then it must transcend
determination
towards
the
itself
of a genume other. If this other is to be
immanent
be
for
detennMed
Concept,
be
then
through
the
genuinely other,
it must
it cannot
assumed to be other because of some merely given determiation, as then the circle of
Positing and PresupposingReflection would arise,again. So it must be determined
21Ibid.,
p. 13.
22 Miller, 1998,
p. -441.
253
tbrough the Concept, but it must be thus determined as absolutely unlike the Concept. As
Maker notes, Naiurphilosophie implies the 'radical nonidenfiýv" of thought and nature:
'thought and nature do not even resemble one another.
I,
The thought of Nature that anses immanently from the Concept is thus one of
Jven
that this
radical externalltv,a mode of deten-ninationthat is not self-determination-,
gj
.
Concept.
Nevertheless,
is
fiAly
determinate, for it is an expression
the
characterises
it still
of the absolute uMty of being and thought, rather than being determined in relation to
Nature
being-outside-jiself
being which is always
something acceptedas given.
is simply
immediately other to itself. yet which subsists as such being, rather than losing its
determinatenessbecauseof its sheerimmediacy, as did the determinations of pure Being.
Naturphilosophie for Hegel has then to take up the task of immanently determining this
deterrmnation,,
different
to that of tbought, but whicb is still
mode of
whicb is utterly
capable of being determined in thought, given that the very idea of this mode only arises
through the self-determination of the Concept.
v) Concluding Summary
Deleuze's image of Hegel's thought has thus been shown to be illusory on four
Concept,
key
the
the
the
of
of
self-relation
1j) the characterof
related
points: 1)
meaning
the Concept as 'self-grounding", 111)the reality of the Concept as a "totality', and vv) the
difference.
To
Concept
I
to
this
the
think
end
chapter,
real
will
of
consequentinability
foregoing.
in
light
four
the
these
of
reassess
points
For Deleuze, the Concept interrially resembles the phenomena]
0
Self
for
it,
like
Kant's
simply reflects
notion of a spontaneous
subject,
the presupposition that the conditions must resemble the conditioned,
illusion.
have
However,
thus
transcendental
a
as we
seen, the
and is
23Maker,
4.
cii.,
p.
op.
254
Concept does not resemble the pbenomenal subject. In fact, as we saw
Self
bow
Kant's
PS
the
spontaneous
is an illusory posit
earlier,
sbows
that denves, from a cnsis within consciousness.At the end of the PS.
Absolute Negativity. it is true, retains the charaCtCT of a ground or
from
but
the perspective of the natural consciousnesss
conditioned,
only
that views it as an abyss, similar to Schelling's Absolute, into NN-hicb
its
determinations
disappear. From the perspective of pbilosophical
own
consciousness,which takes it up as identical with the ambiguous Being
beginmng
the
presented in
of PS, this opposition does not exist. And
further, it is shown to be an illusory or non-Actual difference. Hegel
notes that Kant's transcendental unity of apperception is a genuinely
speculative moment of his thought. But as we saw in the previous
chapter, Hegel means here Kant's definition of apperception as neither
phenomena] or noume-nal.Only by beanng this definition in mind Will
it
for
be
to
means
apperception
aclhlýv, rather than
we understandwhat
For
Hegel,
the 'thing which thinks' is not a
appearanceor substance.
thing, but a non-foundationalactiVity,the 'existentConcept' (ISL11,2534/583-4). It is a mode of determining (self-deten-nination)that the finite
fact
explicates the utter ontological
subject cannot possess.and which in
decentring of the finite subject in the Doctrine of Essence.
0
The Concept does not presuppose itself in the form of a
transcendentSubstancewhich is somehow deterrfflnately given to
thought, and which securesthe inner meaning of thought and of being as
For
Deleuze,
Hegel
Concept
the
the
saw
absoluteness
of
as
one tmity.
deriving from the fact that it expressed the contradictory nature of all
In
this way, it supposedly cwi adequately
,
appearance.
pbenomenal
Kant's
Ideal
transcendental
of complete determination, in whose
express
255
reallsation
the
real
relations
between phenomena would
be
for
be
Ideal
Such
a substance
which all
would
an
comprehended.
itself
be
to
aspects of its internal relation
pbenomenal relations would
However, this means that Deleuze has assimilated the Concept to the
self-groundingfoundationalist systemsof Fichte and Schelling. Both of
these presuppose that the Absolute can be given through a superior
intuition as a substantial or transcendentfoundation, which must then be
deduced as a full ground by a metbod that, beginning from the absolute
Substance.eventually retums into it. But this method means that thought
has to both presuppose and disavow its ow-n negativity (tbe difference
between Substance and finite reflection cannot be crossed; only
subjectively cancelled by an act of faith). The Concept, on the other
hand, presupposes itself in its beginning, but as posited by itself as
is,
difference
That
between
begirming
the
to
external
itself
and end
arises, in light of the survey of its own development taken by the
Concept at the end, from the negatiVity comprehendedby the Concept as
the implicit determination of the beginning.
w)
The Concept is thus -nota totality in the metaphysical sense,i. e.,
an internally differentiated Substance.As the transitions ftom Essenceto
Existence, from -Universalto Particular Concept, and firom Absolute Idea
to Nature demonstrate,the Concept determines itself as a totality only in
the momentwben it exceedsitself as toudity. Existenceis iffeducible to
Essence,and becomesa dispersed set of Conditions, which from a
subjective standpoint,'ought to' return to unity (SL It 209/547). The
SinguharConcept is the moment in which the intemal relation of the
Universal Concept becomes realised or positecL only insofar as it is
divided
from
itself Nature is that which is determinedthrough
utterly
256
the self-determining, Concept as being utterly other than the Concept.
'Me Concept is thus not in pnneiple a closed systern, but a system xvith
the power to transcenditself to lose itself and only thus to be itself
Difference is, in relation to the Concept, ungrounded. It is not
Opposition or Contradiction, for both of these presuppose a Ground. It
dimension
'however,
Concept
being
the
than
is still,
a
of
itself rather
simply given to thought in some determination or other. The Concept is
thus shown to be that which requires its own Aciual and absolute
difference from itself in order to be fully itself This is shown by the
transition to the idea of Nature, in which the Concept detennines itself as
that which cannot and does not resemble thought, yet is still deten-ninate
in and for itself as a uniquemode of determination,rather than being a
simple indeterminate negative of thought. The Concept maintains itself
in 'destruction, but this can never be given in advance as an assurance.
It can only be shown by expenence itself The negativity of thougbt, its
Substance,
in
doubts
lack
transcendent
expressesitself
perpetual
of pure,
about thougbt's power of self-determination, by feeding the desire for
fact
is
This
thouglit
the
can
attain to its own
only
in
way
expenence.
Difference
by
finding
that
reality,
itself in
which is absolutely outside it.
but
is
intemal
this
to
thouglit
as
activin,,
not the same as saying that
is
Differenceis internalto thoughtasSubstance.
257
Chapter Eight
Conclusion: Hegel and Deleuze -A
Critical Assessment
i) Introduction
The trauma of reason, as we have seen. is a dilemma that arises because of
Both
define
'image'
that
a
specific
of
philosophy.
or Orientation
certain presuppositions
Hegel and Deleuze take this view. They also affirm that, if the crisis of meanmg implied
by the trauma is not to paralyse philosophical thought. this image has to be criticised as
illusory
by
representation of philosophy, and overcome
an
a new. anfifoundational
model of philosophy that conceives of the immanence of thought in a way that
adequately explains the production of determination, externality, or otherness.In the last
three chapters, I have defended Hegel's version of an-fifoundationalism against
objections raised by various thinkers, including Deleuze, all of which share their
Schelling's
critique of Hegel. To conclude, I want to bring the
orientation with
foundational
i
have
Deleuze
Hegel
I
anti
st positions of
and
as
presented them here
together in a brief critical dialogue, in order to sketch the advantagesand disadvantages
of their respective positions.
The Deleuzean solution to the double-bind presented by the trauma of reason
by
be
involves
Gregmy
'counteractualisation'.
Bateson's
This
termý
can
summed up
an
force
dilemma,
in
Deleuze's
the
the
ten-nsImplies
which
explicit acknowledgement of
of
foundationalist
internal
the
thought
practice of
an encounter on
part of a
with its own
llmlt
the infinite difference of thought from its own being, which foundationalist
thought cannot think. This experience itself becomes *inDeleuze's thought the means to
forces
internal
It
difference.
but
the
thus
recognition
of a real
reinvi,gorate philosophy.
is
iII
that
thought
a
problem
I immanent to this undeniable limit: flie task of
With
presents
how to create a stable thinking qj'this difference that remains immanent to it. Thought is
thus provoked to cbangeits image of itself. becominga,practice that creaieýknowledge
258
of the real, rather than hoping to discover it as given through contemplation or
Teflection. In this way, the crisis of meaning is not resolved- but remains as the basis or
non-foundational foundation of new creation, through which philosophy gives senseto
itself by selecting mediators and analysing the virtual tendencies of actual phenoine-iia.
To reiterate, the justification
for this new image of thought is. for Deleuze. immanent to
the trauma itself, for the inability of foundationalist thought to think its infinite
difference from itself is not accidental. It results from an encounter with the
transcendental oklect of thought, that which belongs to thought by Tight, a minimal
presupposition that all actual practices of thought must, for Deleuze, acknowledge.
Hegel's solution, Absolute Knowing. is not really a resolution of the crisis
either, given that it recognises this tendency of nihilism as inherent in representational
consciousnessitself For Hegel, pbilosophy cannot orgaruse itself around the fantasy of
dissolving the intemal divisions of consciousness.For him, philosophy has to re-cognise
bow self-consciousnessis detemined, both intersuýjectively and ontologically. In this
is
immanent
determination
the
way, philosophy
of the being of self-consciousness,
is
being
is
that
neither phenomenal nor noumenal. The Concept provides the
which
(Icontext' in which the trauma of reason can be re-cognised as ansing out of
transcendentalillusion. And this context is neither presupposednor simply posited, but a
self-determining unity that is constantly moving beyond itself through its own internal
differencefrom itself
The failure of foundationalism to buttress the autonomy of reason is thus
confronted by both thinkers. Both critique the very idea of an incorrigible, transcendent
foundation for the constraints that it places on thought. Foundationalism, as we saw in
Chapter Three, presupposes above all the existence of a transcendent subject in some
forni, which fimctions as a 'knowing before knowing' and gives philosophy a secure
becaine
begin.
This
to
explicit in the thought of Fichte and Schelling. where this
place
faitb:
knowledge
subject is a subject of
is explicitly posited as 'grounded' in an
identitv
Absolute.
Here,
the
the
the goals of
conviction
in
of
reason
and
urljustifiable
259
Enlightenment, which were set solely in relation to human reason. are placed beyond the
reacb of reason. The anainment of Enlightemment in the senseof secure knowledge of
the distinction between dogmatism and genuinely self-critical philosophy is made
impossible. due to the image through which 'self-criticism' is understood.
ii)
Deleuze and Hegelian 'Reconciliation'
As we saw in Chapters Three and Four, Deleuze reconceives the goal of
Enlightement as the attainment of a specific practical attitude in thinking, which, like
thel'ationalist Enlightenment, demands a Te-educationof the subject. This education is
however,
through a regulated method that functions within the
not conducted,
interpretative horizon of a common sense,but by forcing thought to undergo encounters
witb practices botb philosopbical and non-pbilosopbical that drive it to tbink its
internal
limit.
have
We
immanent or
seen in the previous chapter how Deleuze's
distorted
image
Hegel
readings of
often present a
of his philosophy. -1-hereremains.
however, a dimension of Deleuze's critique of Hegel that can, I think, be separatedoff
from the 'Schellingian' criticisms addressedin the last chapter. This aspect has to do
with the very immanence of negativity In flegel's philosophy, and the theme of
reconciliation between thought and being that it implies.
Deleuze's critique of reconciliation is inseparable from his model of education,
and his account of the subject of this education. As we have seen, he accounts for selffaculty
is
the
thought,
consciousnessas a pathos of
of
which deten-ninedby the work of
the movement of difference that acts upon and through it. There thus persists a 'crack'
difference
be
heart
that
the
the
cannot
overcome, and which
at
of
subject, an irrimediale
therefore remains as an immanent otherness within thought. We learn to think, as we
learn to do mything else, by taking on habits that both 91ive an onentation to our activitv
I1
""'learning"
always takes place in and through the unconscious, therebv
and constrain it:
bond
between
the
thought and nature' (DR
a
of
profound
complicity
establishing
214/165). Hence the re-education of thought demands a cntique of unquestioned habits.
260
the
'crack'
the
be
based
in
of
which can only
on an acknowledgement and affin-nation
is
be
the
has
thought
This
to
Idea
re-educate
to
order
that
In
subject.
rejected
means
what
faculties
for
Deleuze.
Methodthe
of the mind within
of a method.
always only regulates
the boundaries of common sense in order to achieve a result that is essentially
knowledge
i.
that transcends the empirical content of experience.
predetermined, e.,
Kant's Criticalmetbod,for example,reflectspresuppositionsabout experiencethat Imply
a common sense, such as the idea that Newtoman science and Christian morality are
detenninations
knowledge
The
of
it achieves is
conscious
experience.
universal
knowledge of transcendental apperception, of the fonnal conditions of possibility for
these determinations, but this, for Deleuze, simply hypostasises.the formal unity of
and determinesits categoriesin relation to thesepresuppositionsabout
consciousness,
expeTience.
Method, then, is the meansto a predeterminedend whosevalue is related to a
common sense. The value and validity of the end (transcendent knowledge) is thus
hand,
is
Deleuzean
'learning'
'training'
(dressage),
the
or
simply presupposed.
on
other
it
This
that
an end-in-itself
means
is not relative to a presupposed common sense,,a
transcendent subject or 'knowing before knowing'. Instead, it fimctlons through the
affirmation of Deleuze's 'higher' Absolute, the rninimal presupposition of thought, the
difference that traverses the entire subject and prevents it from really coinciding with
in
is
'ours'
Learning
the sense of possession
thus
throkgh
not
and
itself
occurs
us.
by
in
Kant's
established
unity of apperception relation to the content of consciousness.
Kant, for Deleuze, shows in his account of the 'crack' that we do not autonomously
orient ourselves in thought as subjects whose essencetranscendsthe practical exigencies
life.
Thinking is not something that takes time; instead, 'time takes thought' (DR
of our
216/166). Elsewhere. Deleuze notes that 'ftlhere is no more a method for leanung than
there is a method for finding treasures,but a violent training, a culture or paideia which
individual'
(DR
215/165),
ffiat
jt1hought
the
entire
and
affects
never thinks alone and
bv itself (NP 1231108).
261
Deleuzean learning is, therefore. a matter of becotmng equal to the difference of
thought from itself, a process that requires encounters with 'mediators' (intercesseurs).
In this way, Enlightenment understood as the autonomy of philosophy, is for Deleuze an
attitude that is only established by becoming equal to movements of difference that
traverse the body of the thinker., and this cannot be realised by the indiNidual alone. As a
response to double-binds such as the trauma of reason, Deleuze's model of education
thus disavows the Kantian, self-conscious aspect of the double-bind, the awarenessthat
it is a product of my actuality (the rules out of which it is generated are, as in Kant's
account of the categories, an aspect of my self-consciousness), and that it thus
deten-ninesin turn my actuality as a thinking being in the present. In this way, Deleuze
implicitly acknowledges Adorno's observation that the transcendental dimension of
subjectivity (the Kantian unity of m_Yconsciousness) is a posited reflection of the
powerlessnessof the suklect. The trauma of reason, for example, subjects thought to
domination on the basis of a presupposed image of philosophy, one which implies the
for
transcendence
the
now-farniliar
of
subject
whom everything that is thought is an
itself
The
that
to be transcendent
object of unobscured observation.
subject
presupposes
thus has no resources to deal with the trauxna of reason. It experiences itself therein as
from
its
by
it
this
that
infinitely separated
essence,and
is accompanied
affects
cannot
accommodate, as it undergoes a crisis of meaning. Deleuze accusesdogmatic images of
thought of narcissism, and solipsism in the senseof a lack of belief in 'the world' (ECC
87-8). The transcendentunity of thought with being is a presupposition that simply gives
is
[ones]
(ECC
58).
'a
to
one reason Mflate
own ego'
as the crisis that resultswhen this
for
assurnption is revealed
what it is. Learn-ing works against such tendencies, by
affirming directly that which exceeds thought, precisely through being immanent in it
(Absolute Difference). '
1 On the
banality,
or the negative aspect of thought's difference frorr. Itself, and
of
overcoming
the reinvigoration of 'belief in the world', seeToole, 1993 esp-pp. 239-42.
-
262
Learning in Deieuzeis thus firstly learning about the realltv of double-binds.
i. e., about the internal limits of acceptedpTactices,and affinning these limits as Internal.
rather than as external limits imposed by accident on a theoros who, in principle,
remains united with its essence. Secondly. it is learning about the singular. local
interventions that may be carried out in thinking in order to free it from traps. In both
for
learning
for
Deleuze,
knowledge.
But
is
knowledge.
cases,
is
it
absolute
which
Deleuze means practical knowledge, the inculcation of habits that create unforeseen and
novel responsesto situations. Absolute knowledge is th-ussynonymouswith training,
with the accumulation of augmentation of 'good habits' and the active forgetting of bad
ones.
In this light, we can read Deleuze's critique of Hegel as a critique of Hegelian
education, and thus of the PS above all (DR 215/166). 1 would suggestthat, for Deleuze,
Hegel still sees education as a matter of method, in the sense that the goal of PS is
foreseen in its beginning -
even if we understand this beginning, not in terms of a
being-in-itself,
but
kind
thought
the
of
positive unity
and
as
of immediate consciousness
of being that Kant refers to as an 'indeterminate empirical intuition'. Absolute Knowing
is nothing but the reconciliation of self-consciousness with its being, with its own
dividedness. Even if Hegel deconstructs all oppositions between subject and object,
he
for
between
Deleuze, that the
that
actuality,
still
assumes,
including
possibility and
problematic being of self-consciousness is identical with the negatively self-related
characterof reason.
Hegel claims to have overcome the internal divisions of consciousness,
including
those
within
Schellingian
self-consciousness, between
faith
and
foundationalist reason or between absolute and relative, that give rise to the trauma of
be,
from
Deleuze's point of view, an incomplete overcoming.
But
this
would
reason.
The historically determinate presuppositions of representational consciousnessmav have
been deconstructed,but the result of this. the idea that self-consciousnessis the
movement of
Absolute Negativity,
does not enact the full
263
renversement of
foundationalism. It comprehends the movement of self-consciousness in terms of its
internal dividedness, but becausethis movement is observable, or nij, internal negati%-ityit implies once again a theoros who recognises the drarna of the PS as her own. This in
tun implies a common sense,a horizon of meaning in which the drama Will be enacted.
is
by
the negative unity of the Concept. The nihilistic tendencies of
which
represented
representational consciousnessare not thereby overcome. only internalised. It conserves
the present by baptising it as 'my' actuality (NP 185-6/16 1).
Hence, in order to -understandhow Deleuze does more than sIMPly accuseHegel
of a foundationalist conflation of hypothetical with absolute determination, I think we
he
has
to
that
need emphasise
criticlsed Hegellan education as a process of leaming to
live with' nihilism. This conservesthe past as the underlying necessity of the present, by
trying to sbow that the way to overcome the present is to grasp the bistory of a common
sense(of the Concept) as one's own actuality. In Nietzscheanterms, Hegelian education
is a vast prcject of remembering the development of the Concept as 'my wound'. It is a
titanic effort to bear the present by affin-ning one's own complicity in it (the dividedness
is
dividedness),
is
thus the partial, reactive affirmation of
of consciousness nýy
and
Nietzsche's ass or came] (NP 207-9/180-2). Tbs is the only 'absolution' achieved by
Hegel's Absolute, according to Deleuze (DR 61/42), an absolution in which the internal
differences of self-consciousnessfrom itself (the shapesof consciousnessin PS) vanish
inner,
identity
Subject
the
them,
the
transcends
that
negative
of
supposedly
as
into
which
their Whole. The self-transcendenceof this whole at the end of PS is thus illusory. There
for
in
Eacb
Deleuze.
Hegel,
totalities
moment of self-b-anscendenceare no open
at
the end of PS, at the end of the Doctrine of Essence,at the end of SL in the transition to
Nature -
Subject,
the
transcendent,
the
negative unity of
is simply a reaffirmation of
difference'
(DR
62/42).
The
'the
of
production
evanescence
and
which grounds
immanence of the Subject is thus a relative immanence, which presupposesthe negative
its
Subject/Concept
Hegelian
'Enlightenment' can onIN,
the
as
common
sense.
unity of
264
be an acquiescence in the present that cannot respond creatively to the divisions or
blockages that it encounters. but can only relate them to the unified, negatively selfdiffering Subject of which none can be an adequaterepresentation, and thus deconstruct
them Adorno's observation about transcendentalsuklectivity !s thus confirmed. for
.2
Deleuze. bv Hegelian Absolute Knowing, which he denounces as a refinement of
nibilism that retains unquestioned subjective and 'objective' practical presuppositions.
iii)
Hegel contra Deleuze: Absolute Difference and Experience
This Deleuzean critique of Hegel's I-Mageof thought as 'reconciliation' goes
further than those criticisms we examined in the previous chapter. It claims that Hegel's
--Iis
philosophy epistemologically (and politically)
suspect, not just because it confuses a
negative, hypothetical mode of determination with an absolute one, but because it
deten-ninesthe Absolute as negative difference. Although Hegel acknowledges that the
Absolute is internally different from itself
he still assumes that the process of
differentiation here can be observed., and thus presupposes a transcendent subject
capable of being a theoros. For Delettze.,the negative character of Hegelian difference
arises precisely through its being difference posited for a self-identical subject that
kind
possessesnegativity as a
of transcendent essenceupon which it can reflect. This
difference is not a truly internal, immediate difference, as it remains related to a suýject
that posits itself as the transcendent measure of difference, i. e., as absolute. Difference
from
for
determination
HegeL
a process of mediation. Difference arises from
and
arise,
self-relation, but this relation is itself mediated by other-relation. Deleuze, on the other
band, argues tbat, unless differentiation is understood as unmediate or absolute, it will
be always posited as occurring within or for a transcendent subjectivity, a common
foundationalist
the
error. The epistemological
sense. which repeats once again
2
See Rogue, 1989, p. 159, on this reactive character of deconstructlon from a Deleuzean point of
limitations
Ansell-Pearson,
On
1999, pp. 207-8
thought,
the
a
conciliaton,
of
model
of
see
view.
265
for
foundationallst
Hegel's
thought reveal a
assumptions of
eihos that, as always
Deleuze, is driven by a moral and political imperative, namely the reconciliation of
for
It
thus
the
conflicts even at
an obfuscating philosophical shell
expenseof nihilism. is
ýAL
an essentially political
difference.
Deleuze envisions
the
project:
suppression of real
Hegelian autonomy as self-imposed complete subordinafion to the Absolute Idea, which.
as the System reveals, is perfectly incarnated in the fon-n of the State. Reconciliation. in
deconstruction
reality, means a narcissistic
of antinomies u-nmanentin experience that is
perfectly corrunensuTablewith political domination.
The centrality of reconciliation as a theme in Hegel's thought is clear. However,
the exact meaning of this ten-n is as ambiguous as any other supposedly firW definition
of his thought. Hegel uses it, for example, in EL with reference to Absolute Knowing,
be
to
not phenomenology, when
statesthat the goal of philosopbv Is the reconcillatIon of
setf-deiermining lhoughi 'with the reason that is [mii der seienden Vernunfil, or
actuality' (EL §6). Reconciliation has, then, to be understood in the first place, I would
ar9ue, with reference to Hegel's onto-logic, and the deten-ninationsof Possibility and
Actuality. Reconciliation here is not simply the phenomenological result of a negative
unity into which A shapes of consciousnessvanish. This, as we saw in Chapters Five
from
SIX,
PS
theTesull
the viewpoint Of Tepresentational
and
is only
of
consciousness.
Another view of this result is possible, as we have seen,in which the structure of Being
itself is comprehended, after the possibility of a distinction between hypothetical and
absolute thinking has been undermined.
The fact that Being is immanently detemiined in SL as the self-detennining
Concept does not immediately Imply anything about Hegel's evaluation of political
actuality. Without going into the much-debated details of Hegel's politics, I want to
light
Hegel's
(In)famous proposition that the actual ad the
the
that.
of
in
argue now
IIn
identical
24/20),
in
(PR
determination
the
to
and
are
relation
onto-logical
rational
of
Actuality, that Deleuze's interpretation of 'reconciliation'
266
is mistaken. Further, the
relation between thought and actuality that emerges in Hegel allows some criticisms of
Deleuze's vim of the heteronomy and autonomy of philosophy to be advanced.
In Hegel's view, the actual is not that which is simply accepted as given in
experience. Actuality in SL emerges out of a long, complex dialectic in which the
immediacy of experience is deconstructed. It has for its content the relations between
existentsand their existent conditions, which are not relations internal to their tenns.
instead, they are external. 11iis means that Actuality is not thought of in terins of
metaphysical notions of grounding or causality, but in terms of thinl6ng or big
tat
determines itself through self-externalisation. Actuality is thus a dimension of the
Concept, and is rational, whereasimmediacy is abstract and irrational, i. e., indeterminate
and uncomprehended. Empirical reality. for Hegel, whether conceived of as natural or
social, must tberefore be conceived in terms of Being, Existence and Actuality, It will
include within it elements that are relatively abstract and others that are relatively
if
is
But
that
concrete.
which
genuinely Absolute for Hegel is self-determination, as
embodied in the Concept, then there is, as we saw in the last chapter, a real difference
between the Concept and being determined as Nature (or as Spirit). Although the
Concept is self-determinmg, it is relatively abstract. The Absolute Idea in SL is not
known as containing Within it, as a substantial unity, all the deterrninations of reality
under the form of possibility. It is the negative unity of the Theoretical and Practical
Ideas, or the abstract unity of thougbt and actuality in generat' The Concept may be
absolute in the sensethat it is a self-deten-niningactivity (rather than a Substance),but it
fully
in
that
concrete as this activity.
it is not
is also not-absolute,
It is thus internally negative, with the result that it passesover into Nature and
System,
but
Hegelian
Spirit.
This
the
pTocess
at the same time, this is
eventually
yields
the system in thokizht. Tle political Act"ity
detailed in PR, for example., is not
Prussia
Hegel's
liberal
the
time,
totalitarianism,
either
of
with
modern
or
identical
3 Rose, 1980,
p. 186-7.
267
democracy. If this is the case, then the immanent necessity of the Concept can be
expressed as 'reconcillafion', but this has a specific mearting. Reconciliation means,
would argue, that thought becomes acquainted with the immanent determinations of the
self-detennining Concept, with the historical Actuality of its own present. and with the
identity and difference of the two. Philosophy has to reconcile itself with the identity of
thought and reality and their difference. This means that there is a kind of Sollen in
Hegelian thought, without which it would risk becoming purely acqmescent.ThisS'o/len
lies in the re-cognition of the difference between the Concept and reality, which implies
the abstractnessand irrationality of reality, and which dernandsreal action in the present.
However, the determination of this Sollen, of what 'ought-to-be', is not based on a
foundational, abstract presupposition, which makes Hegel different from Fichte and
Schelling. Instead, it is grounded in a re-cognition of the rational elements of the real or
its Actuality, those elements that accord with the immanent determinations of the
Concept.
Actimlity is, as Hegel notes, a dispersed set of conditions that 'oughl to return
into itself (SL 11,209/547, my emphasis). Hence the Sollen is an tmmanently necessary
consequenceof Hegel's ontology. If the re-cognition of the real in relation to Reason
implies knowledge of the conditions of Actuality, then it always implies a perspective on
the real and its conditions taken by consciousness. The totality of conditions, being
'dispersed' cannot be known as a totality. To imagine that this could be the case would
be to posit an abstract,,subjective regulative Ideal. It is a consequenceof the nature of
Being, for Hegel, that existents imply an element of contingency, rather than being an
limitations
faculties.
Hence
the re-cognition of the
the
effect of
internal
of our mental
Actual on which the Sollen is based is mevitably partial, foT it will be a pTocess
between
conducted as a negotiation
a histoncally detein inate consciousness and its
between
it
the
social
real
relations
awareness of
and other subjects. So the attempt to
Actual
feature
an
of political reality is both required by the
make self-determinafion
268
Concept and problernabsed.bv it for the re-cognition of the Actual elements n th'Is
but
has
is
by
Concept,
the
reality made possible
also
its reachi-estricted.
From the practical side, the re-cognition of the Actuality of the present implies a
determinationof the Practical Idea.,the Soflen,in relation to wbat can be re-co
sedas
the Real Possibilities of the Actual. Again, this orientation of action will be negotiated,
just as the re-cognition of the conditions of the -presentis negotiated. And if it too is a
"
is
partial re-cognition, then the outcome of any practical action unforeseen. In this way,
Hegelian 'education' does -notend with the -negativeunity at the end of PS, or with the
completion of a System. It is an immanent consequenceof the nature of the Concept that
its concrete meaning sbould be negotiated by reai subjects wbo determine and are
determined by real political structures. The Absolute Idea is not absolute because it is
deten-nined at the end of SL: it is absolute because it is concretised a) through real
for
both
in
determined
processesof negotiation, which possibilities
action are
in relation
to the immanent determinations of the Concept and in relation to existing political
intervenes
b)
in
Actual.
The
the
ceaseless
structures, and
practical activity, which
in
detemnnation of the Absolute is thus a task for existin& fmite consciousnesses,and this
Concept
Hegel]
'an
is
direct
the
the
thus
of
itself.
education
II
consequenceof
nature
is a
'im
the world', and there is no guarantee that its
activity
inconceivable without real
its
for
be
Actuality
be
re-cognition
of
will
always
a
subject's
outcome will
successful,
limited.
partial and
This education is also Absolute Knowing. It can only be conducted once the
between
Hence
PS
SL
has
been
Being
the
transition
and
cogrUsed.
is
internal structure of
for
it makes possible the theoretical and practical orientation toward the
a real advance,
does
have
I
Hegel's
I
that
philosophy
sketched above.
present
-not, would suggest,
if
does
And
to
the
the
present.
education of consciousness
not end even
simply capitulate
4 Certain currents -within Marxism reflect this strand
ppý45-6,
269
of Hegelian thought. Seee.g., Debray, 1975,
with the System, then there is no transcendentsubjectivity embodied in the Concept. The
Concept is indeed a kind of conu-nonsense-in that it is a 'context'5 in which meaning is
detennined. But this context is without any foundational determination. 'Negativity'
be
cannot regardedas transcendentor foundational,as it cannotbe statedor represented
finite
in a
proposition. It is not hypostasised, for it is graspable only as process, not as
atffibute or predicate. The Concept is not therefore, a transcendentsubjectivity. because
its self-deteffnination occurs through its internal negativity, and not because i is a
positively detennmate Ground. It does not possessa transcendentperspective on its own
being or on external being. It is at once the result of the deconstruction of the antinomies
of representational consciousness, and the reconstruction, througb its immanent selfdetermination, of an ontolo gy that demands that finite theoretical and practical
perspectives on the real be developed that can acknowledge the meaning of Actuality.
The supposed transcendence of Absolute Knowing is, viewed ftom the broader
perspective on the System I have sketched above, an illusion. The articulation of the
Systern and its relation to the real does not detennine a presupposed transcendent
it
determines the context in which the relation of an intrinsically divided
Rather,
subject.
finite subject to the real (Bemg- Nature and Spirit) must be understood.
This sketcb of the relation between onto-logic, System and empirical reality
direct
suggests a
critical response to Deleuze, regarding his model of absolute
immanence. Absolute Difference is, for Deleuze, the absolute presupposition of thought.
the expression of the othernessthat is unmanent within thought and which is its genetic
condition precisely becauseit prevents it from coinciding with itself The tracing of the
tendencies that constitute this difference is, as in Bergson, the work of a superior
it
is
forced
becomes
thought
to encounter its
identical when
intuition, with which
difference from itself This is reminiscent. once again, of Schelfing's position. However.
it resuits from affin-ning that which Schelfing cannot truly affirm, that the being of
5 Schick, 1994, p. 180.
270
limit.
has
Once
difference
from
this
its
thought is its
thought
internal
encountered
itself
transcendental object, it is capable of altering its image of itself, and affirming that the
sole problem of philosophy is the creation of concepts.
The requirement of a new image of thought based on the minimal
difference
from
itself
for
Deletize, immanent to
the
thought
presupposition of
of
is,
certain experiencesof this difference as the internal limit of thouglit. It is not tberefore a
transcendent requirement that reflects Platonic assumptions about the unity and
difference of thought and being. I have suggested that the trauma of reason is one
example of this experience, which is encountered by foundationalist thought as a crisis.
Deleuze does not argue that Absolute Difference can be known by a superior intuition
that is simply other than thought. This intuition is in fact a higher power of thought
by
tbougbt
itself, wbicb
can attain
undergoing certain encounters. The exPerience of
for
for
it subverts settled habits of thought that become
this
crisis is vital
power,
in
living.
A crucial element of Deleuze's
to
the
sedimented
response
exigencies of
is
double-bin&
thus
the
position
acknowledgement of a real
which, as I argued in
Chapter Three, is a double-bind because it depends on certain rules that create a
dilemma. Deleuzean ontology refers these rWes back to objective conditions, practices
it,
become
filnction
that
training
to
thouglit
to
immanent in
external
ne-vertheless
it
in
become
But
there
of
which
can
we
conscious. This
certain ways.
are rules, nonetheless,
dilemma.
As
the
actually
creates
conscious recognition of constraining rules
with the
trauma of reason,we become conscious that, becauseof the way the game is set up. once
filrtber.
Once
longer
be
have
it
can
no
can
P-o
no
played, the
certain
moves,
made
we
we
6
loses
game'
its value or meanmg,
It is in relation to this experience that Deleuze sets up the requirement for a new
image of thought. He does not, then, try to think the opposite of Platonism, which would
be a dogmatic relativism. Instead.,he tries to think the inverse of Platonism, where unity
is an effect of difference rather than the other way around, and where all virtual and
SchellIng's
'higher'
Absolute
relations.
external
are
positing
relations
of
a
actual
Is, as I
271
argued in Chapters Two and Four, an unsuccessful attempt to realise a sirrular account of
the Absolute, in which there is no internal resemblance between condition and
conditioned. When such a resemblance is posited, the result is a relative identity, which
can only be posited by thought and cannot be known. The need for an unconditioned
I
ground of knowledge, i. e., a 'higher' Absolute that is still a ground of knowledge, is
determined in relation to experience. It has to be a unity of all determinations. for only
then will it be unconditioned, but it has to still be a predominantly rational unity in order
to be a ground of knowledge. Schelling is defeatedby these two criteria.
Deleuze. however, appears more successful in thinking the 'higher' Absolute,
determined without resemblanceto that which it conditions. However, the move towards
Absolute Difference in thought is, as I have argued, inseparable from a certain kind of
experience, wbere thougbt becomes conscious of its difference from itself, Deleuze
argues that, to escape the trap with which this experience threatens thought, this
difference cannot be understood as mediated by a prior identity. It must be affirmed as
1
.1
immediate, which makes thou6t
incommensurable with itself
By thus inverting
Platonism,,Deleuze believes he has avoided simply positing the Absolute in resemblance
to that which it conditions. But the initial impetus here is not from the "higher power' of
thought, but from the experiences of a foundationalist or representational consciousness,
as with Schelling.
We saw in Chapter Six that Schelling's conception of the Absolute as a pure
it
implies.
dimension
The
Absolute
failed
the
to
of
positing
acknowledge
presupposition
detennined
Absolute
be
or unconditioned except in relation to expenence,
as
could not
be
it
that
to
that
which it was meant
was inevitably posited as resembling
which meant
the condition of The positing of this Absolute was guided by a foundationalist image of
thought, NNqtbtranscendent knowledge as its goal. With Deleuze, however, a different
The
difference
thought
us.
guides
or
immediate
of
incomprehensible
ii-nage of
from
Kant"s
'cracked"
the
as
embodied
itself
of
in
account
subject, is to
consciousness
be positedas absolute.By simply inverting the procedurethrough which the Absolute is
272
determined, however, Deieuze fails to recognise that his version of the unconditioned is
for
by
theTequirement
that
to
the
it.
also just as much conditioned
gives nse
experience
The difference of consciousnessfrom itself gives us a different image of thought, and
ical and
Deleuze, in my opinion, works out with utter consistency what the epistemolo91
Iimplications
image
this
ontolo 91
tical
of
are. However, this consistency is in relation to a
detennination of representational consciousness.The procedure of renversement
involves a recognition of the actimlity of consciousness (Its deterymnatlon by cert.,
rules that constitute a suklective practice of thinking) that cannot itself be recolgnised,
because Deleuze, in his zeal to overturn transcendence and return effectivity to
philosophy, posits the immediate difference of consciousnessfrom itself as its immanent
'foundation'. Hegel, on the other hand, deals with the relation between representational
consciousnessand philosophical consciousnessin a way that allows the relation between
the former and the latter to be acknowledged and understood immanently, as well as
immanence
in
fmite
Absolute
the
the
enabling
of
consciousnessto be comprehended.
Deleuze effectivelv
hvpostasises the expen'ence of crisis that is immanent
i
to
,
fiffly
consciousness,,without
acknowledging the role of self-consciousness(knowledge
of the 'rules of the game') in constituting this crisis.
iii)
Concluding Remarks
I would suggest that the Deleuzean Absolute tends to fefishize the experience of
fetishize
foundationalism
identity.
in
difference
The
tends
to
the
that
sarneway
abstract
its
identity
in,
for
hasty
too
of
and
refusal
mediation,
operationof renversemenis rather
Absolute
does
that is utterly unconditioned,
the
that
positing of an
even
it
not recognise
utterly unlike what it conditions, is still a positikg that presupposes a self-conscious
deten-ninationof expenence. In fact Deleuze's Absolute must, I think, be judged as the
product of an illusory practice of thinking,, one that remains tied to an image of the
Absolute as Substance,utterly removed from negatiNity and mediation.
273
The epistemological issue concermng whether difference must be thought as
positively immediate or as mediated turns, I believe, on the crucial antifoundationalisi
question of the relation between the positing through which the conditions of difference
are establishedand what in expenencedetenninesthis positing. I have suggestedin this
Conclusion that Deleuze's version of this positing cannot comprehend its own
determination. I bave also suggested that Hegel's conception of the relation between
relative and Absolute can do this more successfully, becauseit recognises the aspect of
identity in representational consciousnessas well as its internal difference. Because
does this, with the result that the unitv of self-consciousnessis the decentred unity of
I
Absolute Negativity, it is immanent to experience in a way that Deleuze's new image of
thought is not. Consequently, Hegel advances a version of antifoundationall sm that I
believe empbaticallydemandsconsiderationtoday
Nevertheless, it is also necessary to recog-nise that the issue of the
determination
the
acknowledgement of
of thought demands fuTther examination, beyond
the scope of this investigation. For instance, the question of Hegel's relationship to
sophisticated materialist accounts of social relations. such as the later Marx's dialectical
materialism, or the libidinal materialism of Deleuze and Guattari in the two volumes of
Capiialism and Schizophrenia, could be addressed, in order to deter-minejust what
dimensions of social reality 'acknowledgement' should refer to, and in what it should
itself
be
interesting
latter
from
between
The
the
two
positions
consist.
would
relationship
this point of view. But such concems would take us beyond the limits of this enquiry'image
focused
has
of thought, and into political and social
philosophy's
upon
which
theory proper.
274
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