The Revolving Door and the Straight Labyrinth: An Initiation in Occult Time
(Part 1)
Part of the series The Revolving Door and The Straight Labyrinth: An Initiation in Occult Time
by Amy Ireland
A script from the absolute unknown, how do you even begin to think about
that? “Meaning” is a diversion. It evokes too much empathy. You have to
ask, instead, what is a message? In the abstract? What’s the content, at
the deepest, most reliable level, when you strip away all the
presuppositions that you can? The basics are this. You’ve been reached by
a transmission. That’s the irreducible thing. Something has been received.
[And] to get in, it had to be there, already inside, waiting. Don’t you see?
The process of trying to work it out — what I had thought was the way,
eventually, to grasp it — to unlock the secret, it wasn’t like that. That was
all wrong. It was unlocking me.1
We never find those who understand philosophers among philosophers.2
So we are confronted by a triad of mysteries: the death or otherwise of Lönnrot, the disappearance
of Carter into the coffin-shaped clock, and the deliquescence of Professor Challenger as he
absconds both slowly and hurriedly towards an invisible point below the strata. There is a blurry
edge in all detective work that, as Borges too competently demonstrates, skirts a zig-zag threshold
between apophenia and the truly canny connection of events that only appear, superficially, to be
disconnected. In the name of a method that is closer to invocation than criticism, a reckless
detective might refrain from determining exactly where an act of decryption lies on the ugly terrain
of legitimacy and, proffering sanity as the stake, live up to the problem as it stands. The greatest
puzzles are always a delicate balance of intrication and simplicity. What if a single answer were
capable of resolving all three of these strange cases — blinding in its solvent consistency?
In Kant’s Critical Philosophy, Difference and Repetition, his nineteen-seventies lectures at Paris-VIII,
and in a late, expanded reformulation of the preface to the first of these works (appearing in Essays
Clinical and Critical), Deleuze pairs and contrasts two schemata of time: the time of the ‘revolving
door’, and the time of the ‘straight labyrinth’.3 Quoting Hamlet, who furnishes the first of the four
poetic formulas he will relate to the innovations of Kant’s philosophy, Deleuze writes
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The Revolving Door and the Straight Labyrinth: An Initiation in Occult Time
(Part 1)
Time is out of joint, time is unhinged. The hinges are the axis on which the
door turns. The hinge, Cardo, indicates the subordination of time to precise
cardinal points, through which the periodic movements it measures pass.
As long as time remains on its hinges, it is subordinated to extensive
movement; it is the measure of movement, its interval or number. This
characteristic of ancient philosophy has often been emphasised: the
subordination of time to the circular movement of the world as the turning
Door, a revolving door, a labyrinth opening onto its eternal origin. [C’est la
porte-tambour, le labyrinthe ouverte sur l’origine éternelle.]
Time out of joint, the door off its hinges, signifies the first great Kantian
reversal: movement is now subordinated to time. Time is no longer related
to the movement it measures, but rather movement to the time that
conditions it. Moreover, movement is no longer the determination of
objects, but the description of a space, a space we must set aside in order
to discover time as the condition of action. Time thus becomes unilinear
and rectilinear, no longer in the sense that it would measure a derived
movement, but in and through itself, insofar as it imposes the succession
of its determination on every possible movement. This is a rectification of
time. Time ceases to be curved by a God who makes it depend on
movement. It ceases to be cardinal and becomes ordinal, the order of an
empty time. […] The labyrinth takes on a new look — neither a circle nor a
spiral, but a thread, a pure straight line, all the more mysterious in that it
is simple, inexorable, terrible — “the labyrinth made of a single straight
line which is indivisible, incessant”.4
The contrast between these two figures is due, first and foremost, to the relationship between time
and movement they express. In the schema of the revolving door, time is twice subordinated: first,
to a transcendent eternity which provides the rational model for the ordering of movement, and
second, to the rationally-ordered movement from which time’s number is derived (the aperture
‘onto the eternal origin’ constituted by the resonance of copy with model). In the schema of the
straight labyrinth, movement is subordinated to time, which conditions movement, inaugurating a
reversal of priority between the two and a shift from a spatialised classification of the difference to
a temporal one.5 The pairing of the two figures is more enigmatic. Since the former reappears as a
functional attribute of the particle-clock (“the assemblage serving as a revolving door”
[l’agencement qui servait comme d’une porte-tambour]), that strange vehicle which facilitates the
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disappearances of Carter and Challenger in “Through the Gates of the Silver Key” and “The Geology
of Morals”, and the latter clearly invokes the straight labyrinth (“the labyrinth made of a single
straight line which is indivisible, incessant”) used by Lönnrot to riddle Sharlach in the confrontation
at the Villa Triste-le-Roy, both seem to conceal passageways by which escape from specific
geometrical tyrannies — indexed here by extensity, cardinality, and ‘a space we must set aside’ —
may be effectuated.6 However, given the fact that the revolving door seems to implement the
geometrical conditions it somehow also affords an exit from, and the obvious preference Deleuze
(as a transcendental philosopher) exhibits for the straight labyrinth as a ‘rectification’ of time, the
counterintuitive nature of this proposition is not easily brushed aside. Deeper exploration is
required.
Revolving Door I: The Time of Philosophers and Theologians
In the history of Western philosophy, the revolving door is the archetypal image of pre-critical
temporality. It takes its coordinates first from astronomical movements, and then from terrestrial
ones: the rotation of planets and seasons.7 These revolutions, confining time to motion and
phenomenality, are held in contrast to what is outside them and what has been said to have
engendered them — an ever-present but non-manifest, spatiotemporally unconditioned, unified
mind or essence. In his lectures, Deleuze links this figure of time, curved by the hand of a god, to
“the arc of the demiurge which makes circles” in the account given by Plato’s Timaeus.8
Since the model was an ever-living being, [the demiurge] undertook to
make this universe of ours the same as well, or as similar as it could be.
But the being that served as the model was eternal, and it was impossible
for him to make this altogether an attribute of any created object.
Nevertheless, he determined to make it a kind of moving likeness of
eternity, and so in the very act of ordering the universe he created a
likeness of eternity, a likeness that progresses eternally through the
sequence of numbers, while eternity abides in oneness.9
Timaeus, an expert astronomer who has “specialised in natural science” refers several times to his
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cosmogony as an ἐικός λόγος (a ‘likely account’), a play on words drawing on the relation between
εἰκόνες and ἐικός meant to reinforce the notion of the cosmos as a likeness — the imperfect copy
of a perfect original.10 Here, worldly imperfection is due to the changeability of the contents of the
copy, which unlike their eternal origin, are subject to time:
This image of eternity is what we have come to call ‘time’, since along with
the creation of the universe [the demiurge] devised and created days,
nights, months, and years, which did not exist before the creation of the
universe. They are all parts of time, and ‘was’ and ‘will be’ are created
aspects of time which we thoughtlessly and mistakenly apply to that which
is eternal. For we say that it was, is, and will be, when in fact only ‘is’ truly
belongs to it, while ‘was’ and ‘will be’ are properties of things that are
created and that change over time, since ‘was’ and ‘will be’ are both
changes. What is for ever consistent and unchanging, however, does not
have the property of becoming older or younger with the passage of time;
it was not created at some point, it has not come into existence just now,
and it will not be created in the future. As a rule, in fact, none of the
modifications that belong to the things that move about in the sensible
world, as a result of having been created, should be attributed to it; they
are aspects of time as it imitates eternity and cycles through the
numbers.11
There is no measurable time prior to the demiurge’s imposition of order on a previously disordered
cosmos, composed only of confused matter and erratic motion. Because time arises from
movement, only a perfectly regular and harmonious totality of cosmic motion will install temporality
in the rational manner required to produce a sufficiently faithful copy of the model. This imposition
of formal regularity is not, however, without complication. Deleuze’s emphasis on the motif of
circularity arises from the description, first, of the demiurge ensuring that the matter of the
universe is “perfectly spherical, equidistant in all directions from its centre to the extremes”,
“freeing” its primary motion from imbalance by giving it a “circular movement … setting it spinning
at a constant pace in the same place and within itself”, and then, with the totality of the matter of
the universe thus arranged, of the inauguration of a complex process of division and mixing for the
purpose of imbuing the assemblage with a soul, which the demiurge creates via the combination of
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two media: the “indivisible and never changing”, and the “divided and created substance of the
physical world” (the former indexing identity, the latter, difference) obtaining a third medium with
aspects of both, thus allowing for a flow of information between the formal and the phenomenal.12
He then blends the indivisible with the divisible and the alloy of the indivisible and divisible,
fashioning from the tripartite mixture a homogenous whole, but not without effort, for “getting
difference to be compatible with identity [takes] force, since difference does not readily form
mixtures”. 13 Despite the complexity, might and skill brought to the work of ordering by the
demiurge (who is a craftsman, after all), a material remainder — what Deleuze will call “the
unequal in itself” — still persists, and further blending is required.14 This involves a tortured series
of intervallic material distributions from which the demiurge finally extracts an obedient harmony.15
The mixture is then split into strips, laid out like an X and folded together into two revolving circles,
the outer circle — containing “the equal in the form of the movement of the Same” — revolves with
the primary movement of the cosmos and is justly named “the revolution of identity” while the
inner circle — revolving at an angle to the circle of identity — contains the eight then-known
“planets” (including the sun and the moon) along with “what subsists of inequality in the divisible”
by distributing it among the planetary orbits, and bears the denomination “the revolution of
difference”.16 This latter grounds the derivation of time.
The Great Symmetrical Cycle
Because it is “the shared task” of the heavenly bodies “to produce time”, a considerable portion of
the “Timaeus” is dedicated to a geometrical description of planetary ambulation, offering precise
calculations of each planet’s orbit which, when taken together, add up to an internally and
externally harmonious totality (each orbit internally relative to the others, and the whole externally
relative to the revolution of the circle of identity): the world’s year.17 This single, great revolution
yields “the perfect number of time” and is marked by the “moment when all the eight revolutions,
with their relative speeds, attain completion and regain their starting points”, resetting the cycle of
the circle of difference in relation to the circle of identity.18 Pre-critical time is thus simply the
organisation and rationalisation of a prior, chaotic, spatiality in response to the exigencies of a
divine model which exists both outside space and time. A great compass, dividing a cosmic sphere
into equal and predictable portions, priming its matter for technological and cultural capture: the
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seasonal arithmetic that will come to ground agriculture; the compartmentalisation of the day, the
week and the year into periods devoted alternatively to the sacred or the profane; the striations of
latitude facilitating oceanic navigation, cartography, imperialism, and the proportional
fastidiousness of classical architecture and art.
An exclusive disjunction (the abiding feature of monotheistic religion) administrates the distinction
between eternity and the cosmos as the ordered structure of secondary appearances. Held apart
from the eternal and locked down by matter and movement, this turning according to number is
only an auxiliary, fallen ‘image’. A simulation generated and managed by a fully exteriorised and
transcendent non-time, which functions as the ultimate measure against which every determinate
object falls into a static and immutable hierarchical series whose order can never be shifted,
interrogated, or affected by feedback from within. Because it continues to be tethered to a
transcendent realm which imposes teleological order, the most generous aberration allowed to time
— one “marked by material, meteorological and terrestrial contingencies” — still remains derivative
of movement.19 ‘Time’ beyond revolution is transcendent, tenseless, authoritative and persistent.
The revolving door is therefore a dualistic image of temporality, inserting a gap between the
hierarchically organised, oppositional qualities of idea and appearance; unity and variation; identity
and difference; indivisibility and divisibility; being and becoming, good and evil, inside and outside
— its borders stalked by the constabulary of the laws of thought, and god. It is, as Luce Irigaray
tirelessly anatomises in “Plato’s Hystera”, the time — as space — of the Platonic cave, a “theatrical
trick” designed to inaugurate the great “circus” of representation via the circular repetition of the
same. The cave’s anterior tunnel leads upward into the light.
Upward — this notation indicates from the very start that the Platonic cave
functions as an attempt to give an orientation to the reproduction and
representation of something that is always already there. […] The
orientation functions by turning everything over, by reversing, and by
pivoting around axes of symmetry.20
The cardinal points of the compass, or four wings of the door’s turning hinge, exhibit the
spatialisation of time inherent to the image. The law of its number is cardinality — quantitative
measurement of internally homogenous content — and a representational form of numeracy. Being
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a sphere, it is intrinsically symmetrical. In this way, space and time are confined to the double
homogeneity of extension and simultaneity — to the circus of representational reproduction and its
clowns, whose comedy is always enacted in the mode of farce, a repetition that always “falls short”
of its model.21 There are, therefore, only “proportions, functions, [and] relations” available inside
the simulation that can be referred “back to sameness”.22 And this sameness is at once the model
for the beautiful, the truthful, and the good — astronomical rationality providing the exemplar for
human aesthetic, epistemological and moral order.
Truth
Man, as a rational animal equipped with the ability to observe and understand these relations, is
ontologically at home in the universe of the revolving door. Human cognition and sensibility, when
exercised correctly, are perfectly resonant with the structure of phenomena. Thought thus naturally
inclines towards the law that the demiurge embodies and by extension, to the model from which
the universe has been copied. Psychology, cosmology and rationality are bound in cosmic rhyme.
This is precisely what the latter part of the Timaeus then turns to, linking the account it has just
given of human perception, especially that of sight, to our ability to infer the universal law of the
good, the beautiful, and the true, and to reproduce it on a microcosmic level, specifically through
the practice of philosophy. 23 Plato’s cosmos is teleologically assured by the perfection of the
demiurge, and opposes both accounts of cosmogenesis more sympathetic to contingency, chance
and natural selection (such as those of Empedocles, Leucippus and Democritus, which offer
explanations exhibiting an awkward but prescient Darwinism) and the immanent teleology of
Aristotle. Revolution thus has a moral content, and Timaeus concludes his account of cosmogenesis
by stating that,
since the movements that are naturally akin to our divine part are the
thoughts and revolutions of the universe, these are what each of us should
be guided by as we attempt to reverse the corruption of the circuits in our
heads, that happened around the time of our birth, by studying the
harmonies and revolutions of the universe.24
In this way, “we will restore our nature to its original condition” achieving “our goal” of living “now
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and in the future, the best life that the gods have placed within human reach”.25 The importance of
sight to the practice of philosophy is insisted upon here because it alone of all the senses provides
us with access to the law of number (and by extension, a model of perfect morality) embedded in
the rotations of the planets. 26 Vision is thus the most morally-attuned sense, the conduit of
goodness and beauty, and the base upon which one can realise the latent harmoniousness of one’s
own relation to the universe. These ‘corrupt circuits’ in need of correction reprise the wandering of
the planets prior to the ordering of their movements by the demiurge, and not insignificantly,
‘wanderer’ (πλάνης), ‘illusion’, ‘deceit’ or ‘discursivity’ (πλάνη) and ‘planet’ (πλάνητας ἀστήρ —
wandering star) all share a similar root in ancient Greek, with Plato using the term ‘planomenon’
(πλανόμενον) elsewhere to mean ‘errant’.27 Truth emerges in inverse proportion to the itinerant
dithyramb of material insubordination. Timaeus completes the moral lesson of cardinality, vision
and aspirational goodness with a warning. Men who live “unmanly or immoral lives” are destined to
fall farther down the series of good and perfect beings in harmony with the order of the universe,
being “reborn in their next incarnation as women”.28
The return to sameness, finally, ensures that the universe will not degrade or dissolve of its own
accord. While “the model exists for all eternity”, “the universe was and is and always will be for all
time”, unless the demiurge explicitly wishes it to be so (“anything created by me is imperishable
unless I will it”); so long as the world remains in harmony, this dissolution will not occur — a threat
monotheism will make much of in the epochs to come. 29 Hence the biblical prophecies of
apocalypse such as that which suggests that when the day arrives, the heavens will depart “as a
scroll when it is rolled together”, inflected back into the curved palm of its god.30 Broadened beyond
its exemplary delineation in the “Timaeus”, the revolving door thus becomes a cipher for temporal
dualisms in general. Truth is located in a lost transcendence (the indivisible, god, eternity),
obtainable only at a delay via religion or via the work of philosophical contemplation shepherded by
vision — the decanting of a priori knowledge from empirical experience, which prior to Kant,
denoted a separate and transcendent ideality. If there is knowledge of this fallenness and of the
perfection of that other realm inside that of the world of motion and change, this can only be so
because ‘man’ is made in the image of a god, or has forgotten something he once knew.31 Thought
is inherently linked with its ground via an internal isomorphism — a rhyme — acting as the
guarantor of its intuitions of damnation and error, whose causes are always external. Its correlative
subject is moral or epistemological: the theologian or the philosopher, compelled to discover the
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realm of essences behind the veil of appearances.
There is, as there always is, a sexual difference attached to the dualism. Historically, the material,
fallen aspect of time-as-variation is feminised, secondary, and passive. Timaeus calls it the
“receptacle”, “the mother”, “the nurse and the nurturer of the universe” and characterises it via all
the emblems of lack: it is “altogether characterless”, a bare medium for the production of formed
elements; passive (“it only ever acts as the receptacle for everything”); it operates through mimicry
(“[i]ts nature is to … be modified and altered by the things that enter it, with the result that it
appears different at different times”) having no nature of its own, and is “difficult” and “obscure”,
while the creative force untouched by temporality — that which energises representation as a
condition of the feminised matter it circumscribes — is primary, active, de-substantialised, and
masculine.32 “It would not be out of place to compare the receptacle to a mother, the source to a
father, and what they create between them to a child.”33 Is there a neater epithet to describe the
age-old pact between reproduction and representation?
Sensible, material, and bound in harmonious relation to a transcendent non-time, pre-critical
temporality is irrevocably secondary and modal. The time of the revolving door is a mode of
eternity, the essential structure of which appears to us as a succession of moments — extensive,
cardinal, homogenous — arranged in a cyclical repetition of the same, with a spatial line delimiting
outside from inside.34 As Deleuze puts it, “all the time of antiquity is marked by a modal character
… time is a mode and not a being, no more than number is a being. Number is a mode in relation to
what it quantifies, in the same way that time is a mode in relation to what it measures”.35 In a world
for which time is a mere, cardinalised image of the eternal, held apart from it in a relation of
exclusive disjunction, administered by a god, all experience is that of a subject condemned to
reckon, neurotically, with its originary imperfection. The great line demarcating outside from inside
assigns interiority to time and exteriority to the non-time of eternity via a spatial horizon. A
definitionally beautiful misconception of the topology of time, but a misconception nonetheless.36
Straight Labyrinth I: The Time of Economists and Poets
The circle must be abandoned as a faulty principle of return; we must
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abandon our tendency to organize everything into a sphere. All things
return on the straight and narrow by way of a straight and labyrinthine
line.37
‘Rectifying’ the celestial or meteorological temporality of the revolving door, the figure of time
expressed in the straight labyrinth emerges in Deleuze’s various accounts as “the time of the city”
and also that of the “desert”.38 The subordination of time to space and motion dissolves into the
contentless, temporal determination of the empirical by an immanent yet abstract process. Deleuze
notes that Kant was able to apprehend this due to his historical and geographical situation —
virtually immobilised in his Königsberg study, yet sensitive to subterranean tremors — deep in the
heart of Europe during the ignition of modern industrialisation. There is an embedded double
reference to capitalist temporality, brought to light by Marx’s statement in the Grundrisse, that
Capital by its nature drives beyond every spatial barrier. Thus the creation
of the physical conditions of exchange — of the means of communication
and transport — the annihilation of space by time — becomes an
extraordinary necessity for it …
and to Friedrich Hölderlin’s “Notes on the Oedipus”, leading Deleuze to state that “it is correct to
claim that neither Fichte nor Hegel is the descendent of Kant — rather it is Hölderlin, who discovers
the emptiness of pure time”.39 If the industrial city is also a desert, it is the Athenian desert of the
Sophoclean tragedies, for, as Hölderlin writes, Oedipus is remarkable in its uniquely modern
conception of the genre, in which “God and man communicate in the all-forgetting form of
unfaithfulness”.40 Oedipus, like the subject of the First Critique,
forgets both himself and the God and, in a sacred manner, of course, turns
himself round like a traitor. For at the most extreme edge of suffering,
nothing exists beside the conditions of time or space. Man forgets himself
there because he is wholly in the moment; and God, because he is nothing
else than time. And both are unfaithful: time, because at such a moment it
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reverses categorically — beginning and end simply cannot be connected;
and man, because at this moment he must follow the categorical reversal,
and therefore simply cannot be in the following what he was in the
beginning.41
Hölderlin’s identification of a ‘categorical reversal’ in the dual turning-away of god and man is taken
up by Deleuze as the mark that indicates a historical transition in the schemata of time, and in turn,
the relation this reversal installs between the two sides of the disjunctive couple. With the figure of
Oedipus, the initial shift from the temporality of the revolving door to that of the straight labyrinth
is consecrated, and — following Hölderlin’s interpretation — coincides with a truly modern sense of
time, a time that is inherently tragic, but in an unprecedented way. While Plato’s arc of integrated
planetary motion is always returning — like the great cyclical tragedies of Aeschylus — to a state of
equilibrium, ending where it began, Hölderlin’s Oedipus is “traversed by a straight line which tears
him along” with “murderous slowness” towards an enigmatic dissolution at an unknown coordinate
in the shifting desert sands: and “Towards what? Nothing”.42 The distinction between ancient and
modern tragic forms — and elsewhere, between farce and tragedy — is determined by the
placement of the limit with which the hero interacts. In the ancient conception of the genre,
tragedy conforms to the exclusive disjunction operating under the aegis of the gods. The limit with
which the hero comes into conflict is external, manifested in a law that is then transgressed by
some excessive act for which the hero must atone, triggering a return to order.43 Deleuze sees in
this cycle of limit, transgression and return, a perfect isomorphism with the schema of the revolving
door.
[T]his tragic time is modelled on astronomical time since in astronomical
time you have the sphere of fixed points which is precisely the sphere of
perfect limitation, you have the planets and the movements of the planets
which, in a certain way, break through the limit, then you have the
atonement, which is to say the re-establishment of justice since the
planets find themselves in the same position again.44
The cycle is reinforced by the act of transgression, harmony is reinstated between the realm of the
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gods and the realm of men, and we know in advance the lesson that will be learned. 45 But
something different happens for Oedipus. The limit he encounters is no longer external, having
shifted simultaneously closer and further away — the threshold dividing gods from men, and time
from space, is both interior to Oedipus and beyond him — it has become “enigmatic”.46 It cleaves
him in two and drives him towards an infinity that rises up to meet him in an “all-forgetting form of
unfaithfulness”, annihilating him at Colonus whilst looping him back upon himself.47 Following
Hölderlin’s idiosyncratic, Kantian reading of the text, the Sophoclean tragedy is condensed into an
infernal play of diversion and re-orientation as Oedipus is forced to confront himself in the form of
an infinite self-displacing horizon which draws him across the deflated denouement of King Oedipus
and into the relentless modern desert of Oedipus at Colonus.48
Oedipus’ time is no longer the cyclical time of return to a founding order, but a simple, straight line
which complicates everything. The limit manifests both as a temporal fracture interior to Oedipus’
vexed subjectivity and a point to which he tends — “the gap of an in-between, which occasions,
finally, a loss of self”.49 There is no atonement for Oedipus, although there is a tribunal — and a
crime. He is not subject to a hero’s death, only a long and desolate exile (a little too long to be
comfortable) to which he voluntarily submits in the absence of divine directive.50 Thus Oedipus
“turns himself round like a traitor”, but in a sacred manner — the trial becoming what Jean Beaufret
(the Hölderlin commentator Deleuze draws most visibly on besides a few cursory gestures towards
Heidegger, who he cites laconically in Difference and Repetition and the lectures on Kant), names
both a “heresy” and an “initiation” — and is “returned to himself” in two ways.51 First, in terms of
the mythic narrative, as the cause of himself (Oedipus is the cause of the plague that causes
Oedipus) and more enigmatically at the terminus of his abstractly interminable wanderings, where
he ‘returns’ in such a way that he can no longer be what he was in the beginning.
When the god who “is nothing more than time”, finally, and not without an irony that is unique to
Hölderlin’s translation (“Why are we delaying? Let’s go! You are too slow!”), enables his demise, we
are denied the catharsis that typically accompanies the spectacle of the hero’s death.52 “What
happened?” implores the chorus of the small party that has accompanied Oedipus to the threshold
beyond which only he and Theseus are allowed to pass.53 The response is a brief and integrally
obscure report.54 It is speculated that Oedipus has vanished into “the earth’s foundations” which
“gently opened up and received him with no pain” or was “lifted away to the far dark shore” by “a
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swift invisible hand”, the prolonged arrival of his death heralded by thunder and strange surges of
lightning, illuminating, briefly, the hidden diagonal that haunts the in-between of sky and ground,
the realm of the gods and the realm of men.55 In the cracks of the Kantian machinery a different
disjunction momentarily rears its faceless mien, whilst at the end of the line, “death loses itself in
itself” and Oedipus, “having nothing left to hide” becomes “the guardian of a secret”.56 Between
these two returns, the modern tragic figure is split across time both intensively and extensively as
its own internal and external limit and source. The Sophoclean line does not restore a temporality
of lost equilibrium, as is the rule in classical tragedy, but ends unresolved, internally perturbed, and
terminally out of balance.
Shamanic Oedipus
Oedipus plays an ambivalent role in Deleuze’s writing. Like the shaman and the despot he is always
double.57 Carlo Ginzberg makes the connection between shamanic practices and the Oedipus myth
explicit in Ecstasies — his trans-temporal, trans-spatial study of the witches’ sabbath — where he
finds in the motif of the swollen foot (which gives Oedipus his name) the mytho-cultural stamp of
the shamanic initiate whose journey leads inexorably to the realm of the dead. 58 Oedipus
incarnates, as such, the mythical archetype of the dying god, which links him enigmatically with
Christ and Dionysus.59 Moreover, the persistence of lameness, monosandalism, bodily maiming, or
an unbalanced gait among the vast swathe of myths and cultural practices included in Ginzberg’s
study reveals a fundamental trait attributable to all beings who, like Oedipus, are “suspended
between the realm of the dead and the realm of the living”: “Anyone who goes to or returns from
the nether world — man, animal, or a mixture of the two — is marked by an asymmetry.”60 This
asymmetry, at once abstract and empirical, is measured against a perceived natural symmetry that
keeps the social realm in harmony with the circular world of revolving seasons and astronomical
cycles — coordinates that return the cycle to its beginning. “The trans-cultural diffusion of myths
and rituals revolving around physiological asymmetry”, writes Ginzberg, “most probably sinks its
psychological roots in this minimal, elementary perception that the human species has of itself”,
namely the “recognition of symmetry as a characteristic of human beings”. Thus, “[a]nything that
modifies this image on a literary or metaphorical plane therefore seems particularly suited to
express an experience that exceeds the limits of what is human”.61 Mythical lameness symbolises
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an otherworldly incursion, a problematic asymmetry that intrudes upon a so-called natural
humanity and opens a passage between worlds.
Ginzberg also notes in passing (although only to point out what he considers a superficial reading
indebted to an overly synchronic methodology) Levi-Strauss’ connection of symbolic lameness to
the passage of the seasons, where it features as part of a dance-based ritual performed to truncate
a particular season and accelerate the passage to the next, offering a “perfect diagram” of the
hoped-for imbalance.62 If Ginzberg is warranted in discounting Levi-Strauss’ hypothesis, perhaps
this is not because it is wholly incorrect so much as an interpretation that is limited insofar as it
remains indebted to a particular conception of time among its proponents. Ritual or symbolic
lameness grasped as a spell for accelerating the seasonal series acts as a superficial interpretation
covering over a deeper one, operating within an altogether different understanding of time. One
glimpsed beneath the esotericism of Deleuze’s statement that the “ego is a mask for other masks,
a disguise under other disguises. Indistinguishable from its own clowns, it walks with a limp on one
green leg and one red leg”.63 Read through these subterranean lines which knit it into a complex
cultural history of shamanic tropes and practices, Oedipus’ swollen foot condenses time
compression, an initiation preceding a journey to the realm of the dead and a fundamental
disequilibrium, and thereby acts as a cipher for the key aspects of the Sophoclean tragedy in
Hölderlin’s interpretation and the schematic shift from the revolving door to the straight labyrinth.
In “Notes on the Oedipus” and “Notes on the Antigone”, Hölderlin proposes a reading that can be
extrapolated from a “calculable law” opposing a discursive logic embedded in history, judgement
and the mundane affairs of the human world, with an obscure notion of rhythm.64 The idiosyncrasy
of his reading arises from an attempt to affirm the realist paradigm (grounded in scientific and
historical validity) that dominated early German Romanticism alongside an unnameable and
unrepresentable “efficacity”, located in “another dimension […] beyond and below” conceptual
thought, which he believed characterised the tragic in its essence.65 The aim of the law was to
make this obscure element momentarily graspable — not as something represented, but as the
form of representation itself — a momentary “inspiration” that “comprehends itself infinitely … in a
consciousness which cancels out consciousness”.66 As Beaufret frequently reminds his readers, the
influence of Kant on the young poet is difficult to miss, and is particularly apparent when Hölderlin
writes, for example, “[a]mong men, one must above all bear in mind that every thing is something,
i.e. that it is cognisable in the medium of its appearance, and that the manner in which it is defined
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can be determined and taught”.67 Applied to the two Oedipus plays, taken together as a single
drama, this yields an analysis in which a rhythmic distribution of the dialogue becomes
diagrammable as a speed differential broken by a caesura corresponding to the prophecy of
Tiresias. In contrast to Antigone where the structure is inverted (Tiresias’ prophecy being withheld
until the end), the caesura in the Oedipus plays occurs early in the drama, countering a momentum
which “inclines … from the end towards the beginning”.68
Hölderlin’s rhythmic diagrams of Oedipus and Antigone. Note that the notational progression from a
(caesura), to b (end), and c (beginning) implies that the caesura is logically prior to the two points
given in successive time.
By the time Tiresias speaks the “pure word” that reveals to Oedipus the truth of his identity
everything of significance has already taken place, and the drama is supplied by Oedipus’
apprehension and acceptance of his fate, dragged along by the line of time, in which he learns to
become who he is by becoming something else (as the cause of himself he is also the cause of a
difference from himself).69 The narrative is, incidentally, structured like a modern detective story, in
which one begins by asking ‘What happened?’.70 The caesura breaks the consistency of Oedipus’
conception of himself, rewrites his memories (“the killer you are seeking is yourself”), and throws
him into a time that suddenly becomes animate with a ‘before’ that was not previously available,
and ‘after’ that sutures him to zero: “This day brings your birth; and brings your death”. 71 The
terrible implication of his fate — the prophecy of patricide and incest that lead his parents to desert
him as an infant, supposedly left to die among the elements, and the discovery that everything he
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had done to avoid it has in fact functioned to bring it about — rises up before him. The ground falls
away and, as Hölderlin writes, the rhythmic structure of the text propels Oedipus backwards
towards his beginning with an incredible momentum, simultaneously interminable, due to the
indifference of the gods, whilst slowly hurrying him towards his death. It is not for nothing that
Hölderlin would pronounce in a letter to a friend that “[t]he true meaning of tragedy is most easily
grasped from the position of paradox”.72 The caesura shields the first portion of the two Oedipus
plays from their accelerated second portion, interfacing the differential speeds of dramatic action,
and in this, wordlessly renders Hölderlin’s idea of an otherworldly efficacity rhythmically
apprehensible without representing it.73 The operational rule of this manifestation is disequilibrium
or asymmetry, and asymmetry linearly breaks the foundational rhyme that animates the Timaean
cosmos, and inaugurates a new rule, the shamanic limp of schizophrenic auto-production.
Oedipus’s initiation is a countdown that re-initiates his fatal loop.
The caesura thus produces two ‘times’ — an asymmetrical, looped, auto-productive time (one slice
of which is rhythmically compressed, generating an empirical acceleration), and the asymmetrical
form of time productive of asymmetrical time (Hölderlin’s modern god) — and two deaths: the
horizontal death at the end of straight line, which takes Oedipus into the ground, and the secret,
vertical death of the caesura, which rearranges everything in a single instant, producing and
grounding the physical death of Oedipus and the time it takes place in. Hölderlin will denote both
with the mathematical expression “= 0”.74 In contrast to the progressive time of the heretic’s trial,
“the ever-oppositional dialogue”, the history and affairs of Thebes, and Oedipus’ voyage of
metamorphosis “in which the beginning and end no longer rhyme”, the caesura is the irruption of
time as a void which produces succession and abides within Oedipus in the function of an initiation
as he travels the line that will remove him “from his orbit of life … to another world, [to] the
eccentric orbit of the dead”.75 It is, to borrow a term from MVU’s resident Hyper-Kantian, R. E.
Templeton, a “transcendental occurrence”.76
Split across an asymmetrical empirical succession and a far more obscure asymmetry that both
grounds and ungrounds it, time indeed becomes a straight line with a subterranean labyrinth as its
premise. A strange kind of homogeneity forged in war. With the shifting of the limit — the great rift
that draws a threshold between two worlds, defining inside and outside — into the modern Oedipal
subject, everything changes. When Hölderlin claims that in the double betrayal of man and god,
“infinite unification purifies itself through infinite separation”, purification is no longer just a
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euphemism for catharsis but the precise characterisation of this pure and empty form of time.77
Anglossic qabbala distils this insight with economic clarity: Kant is a break and a link.
“Rather than being concerned with what happens before and after Kant (which amounts to the
same thing)”, writes Deleuze,
we should be concerned with a precise moment within Kantianism, a
furtive and explosive moment which is not even continued by Kant, much
less by post-Kantianism — except, perhaps, by Hölderlin in the experience
and the idea of a ‘categorical reversal’. For when Kant puts rational
theology into question, in the same stroke he introduces a kind of
disequilibrium, a fissure or crack in the pure Self of the ‘I think’, an
alienation in principle, insurmountable in principle: the subject can
henceforth represent its own spontaneity only as that of an Other, and in
so doing invoke a mysterious coherence in the last instance which
excludes its own — namely, that of the world and God. A Cogito for a
dissolved Self: the Self of ‘I think’ includes in its essence a receptivity of
intuition in relation to which I is already an other. It matters little that
synthetic identity — and, following that, the morality of practical reason —
restore the integrity of the self, of the world and of God, thereby preparing
the way for post-Kantian syntheses: for a brief moment we enter into that
schizophrenia in principle which characterises the highest power of
thought, and opens Being directly on to difference, despite all the
mediations, all the reconciliations, of the concept.78
There are three elements to this ‘furtive and explosive’ moment in Kant: the death of God, the
fractured I, and the passive nature of the empirical self, all of which correspond to the introduction
of transcendental time into the subject and usher in an immense complication of what we take to
be human agency.
The death of god is the effacement of the demiurge, along with the essences from which he
constructs the phenomenal world of appearance. Without this god, what guarantees the faithful
reproduction within the image-simulation of reality of its eternal model? How can we know our
experience rhymes with its ground? This leads to an ontological problem whereby ‘man’, the
plaything of empirical time, can no longer assume ‘he’ is at home in the world of experience. If
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there is to be a disjunction between law and its material manifestation, who, if not god, administers
it? Nothing is there to underwrite the Platonic values of truth, goodness and beauty, and the
modern, empirical subject finds itself at sea in a murderous asymmetry that promises nothing but
the cosmic fatigue of ultimate extinquishment under the second law of thermodynamics. The
fractured I is even more insidious. The subject, no longer infirm and fallen, as it is for Plato, is
constitutive, but “constantly hollow[ed] out”, spilt “in two” and “double[d]”, alienated from itself
across the form of time in such a way that it cannot experience its constitutive power.79 Worse, as
Rimbaud so acutely put it — “It is false to say: I think; one ought to say I am thought … I is another”
— that shard of self, the empirical ego which registers phenomena, cannot know what its double is
and must now contend with its new status of integral receptivity.80 How, then, does it believe itself
to act rather than simply be acted-through? On what does it found its ethics and its politics?
This is the initiatory consequence of the transcendental philosophy of time. The transition from the
revolving door dramatises the modulation from transcendent to transcendental distinction,
reconfigures the a priori, isolated notion of eternity, and moves time from a spatially subsumed
cardinality to a purely formal ordinality — in which distance between numbers opens onto the
realm of depth. Philosophy, of course, has preliminary solutions to all of these problems, but in
solving them, it steals intermittently back and forth between schemata, recuperating certain
comforts native to the time of the revolving door, and smuggling a dying theology into the
explosive zones of the city and the desert.
Initiation (Tragedy)
The straight line is the shortest path between two points. This is the example Deleuze uses to
explain Kant’s development of a priori synthetic judgements, those “prodigious monsters” that
overcome the historical a priori / analytic, a posteriori / synthetic dualism — “the death of sound
philosophy” — targeted by the First Critique.81 The straight line is thus also a diagonal one, and in
this sense, the leanest diagram of critique. The first, faint sketch of a philosophy erected out of
paradox.
The Lovecraftian machinery of the text follows from this primary opposition between synthetic
sense experience and analytic logic by reformatting it into a division between sensibility and
understanding and locating both within the bounds of the a priori on a transcendental diagonal.82
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Receptive, presentational and constitutive, sensibility furnishes the a priori forms of time and
space, while the active, representational and reproductive faculty of the understanding provides
the a priori concepts (or categories), both of which will be brought to bear on the determination of
empirical objects as the conditions of all possible experience, coincident with knowledge and
guided by the speculative interest of reason. The form of time delineated by Kant is empty — but
productive of a single dimension of successive time whose “beginning and end simply cannot be
connected”, and the form of space, likewise empty, can produce only the “infinite given
magnitude” of a Euclidean and co-extensive dimensionality. 83 Both forms are simultaneously
subjective and objectively-valid insofar as they are generative of reality for us.84 Time, classed as
‘inner sense’, is the form of internal affection. It envelops space, or ‘outer sense’, the form of
external relation and the possibility of being affected by exterior objects, which can only occur with
the presupposition of time, although the two are inseparable and arise together in the human
mind.85 Time can never appear to us as it is in itself and is always necessarily accompanied by
space in our representations of it. Thus, we
represent the temporal sequence through a line progressing to infinity, in
which the manifold constitutes a series that is of only one dimension, and
infer from the properties of this line to all the properties of time, with the
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sole difference that the parts of the former are simultaneous, but those of
the latter always exist successively.86
This succession is simply a mode of the form of time (along with persistence and co-existence, the
three categories of relation whose principles are procured in the Analogies of Experience), which is
not in itself successive. Nor are the modes of time properties of objects in themselves, leaving
movement — dependent specifically on modal persistence — strictly subordinate to the pure form
of time. Kant is adamant about this, demonstrating that if the form of time itself were successive it
would be subject to a problem of infinite regress.
[C]hange does not affect time itself, but only the appearances in time (just
as simultaneity is not a modus for time itself, in which no parts are
simultaneous but rather all succeed one another). If one were to ascribe
such a succession to time itself, one would have to think yet another time
in which this succession would be possible.87
Radically indeterminate, time in itself cannot be equivalent to its parts. It corresponds to the figure
of the straight labyrinth insofar as it is “in(di)visible” and — because it accompanies all of our
representations — “incessant”.88 To confuse the form of time with time-as-succession is a grave
metaphysical error. In the universe of the straight labyrinth, as Deleuze writes, “[i]t is not
succession that defines time, but time that defines the parts of movement as successive inasmuch
as they are determined within it”. 89 Space in itself, in a similar fashion, cannot be construed
following a pre-supposed grammar, the eclipse of Euclidean axioms in the history of mathematics
having no bearing on it as a pure form.90 The fact that experience appears to unfold along a linear
timeline and in three pitiful dimensions is simply a constitutive quirk of human mental structure.
Insofar as we can grasp their being in themselves as pure forms, space “signifies nothing at all” and
“time”, for us, “is nothing”.91
A priori synthesis occurs between the a priori categories on the one hand, and the a priori forms of
spatio-temporal determination, on the other, before they are applied to experience, furnishing its
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“rules of construction”.92 Since both components of the synthesis are a priori, they hold as universal
and necessary laws for everything that can be determined in experience. To return to Deleuze’s
example of the line, the Euclidean proposition, ‘the straight line is the line which is ex aequo in all
its points’ is an analytic judgement; the statement ‘this straight line is red’ is an empirical
judgement (straight lines are not universally and necessarily red). The statement, ‘the straight line
is the shortest path between two points’, however, is different, because the concept ‘shortest path’
is not analytically contained within the concept ‘straight line’, nor is it simply contingent on an
empirical encounter: it is a priori — it holds for all straight lines — and yet, it is also synthetic —
something new is added in the synthesis. ‘Shortest path’ is not a predicate of the subject ‘straight
line’ but a rule for the construction of a figure that requires assembly in space and time: to produce
a straight line, one must find the shortest path between two points. Put differently, a spatiotemporal determination must be discovered that accords with the concept ‘shortest path’.
Kant has two texts, one written before and one written after the Critique of Pure Reason, in which
he deals with the problem of ‘incongruent counterparts’ or enantiomorphic bodies, using the
necessity of the spatio-temporal assembly of a concept in experience to defend the heterogeneity
of space-time and concepts so integral to the difference between sensibility and understanding in
the First Critique.93 A left and a right hand, for example, both of which are determined by the
selfsame concept, with all its internal relations intact, are conceptually identical yet different due to
their positions in space. A left hand can never be superimposed upon a right hand without exiting
the confines of Euclidean dimensionality. In a similar fashion, a hand that is perceived now and a
hand that is perceived in the future may belong to the same concept, but they can never be made
to coincide in time. Thus, space and time are not reducible to conceptual determinations. We will
return to Kant’s ‘hands’, but for now let this thought experiment of his show that, given the laws of
the three-dimensional space that experience must unfold in, there is no possible way of
constructing the ‘shortest path’ other than along a straight line, and to draw a line rather than a
point, one requires time. Furthermore, no empirical experience will yield a straight line that is
anything other than the shortest path between two points. The a priori forms of space and time
thus harbour an irrefutable constitutive power that will underlie the empirical determination of all
possible experience.
Because both successive time and three-dimensional space belong a priori to the faculty of
sensibility, and therefore have their provenance in the human mind, they are impossible to exit
from for us, and must accompany every single denomination of what will be considered legitimate
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knowledge, which takes its declination from the intersection of empirical experience and the
restrictions imposed upon the latter by the transcendental exigency that produces it.94 Dreams and
hallucinations, occurring solely within the mind, constitute nothing more than a “blind play of
representations” — intuitions deprived of determinate objects — and are therefore illegitimate as a
basis for knowledge.95 This holds equally for our non-empirically validated Ideas of God, World and
Soul (objects of a concept for which there is no corresponding intuition), any concept of an object
deprived of sense data, and any contradictory and therefore impossible concept — and everyone
finds themselves in the same, spatio-temporal manifold, under the same categorical laws which
together act as a guarantor for the universalisability of human knowledge. 96 Consequently, we
discover that “we ourselves bring into appearances that order and regularity in them that we call
nature”, and moreover “we would not be able to find it there if we, or the nature of our mind, had
not originally put it there”.97 Although it underwrites the operation of the transcendental apparatus
at the most fundamental level, time, in the First Critique, is simply an inert and ultimately
unknowable form which beats out a series of inexorable, successive moments in experience. It is
prior to matter, movement and extension, and thus completely re-arranges or unhinges the
determination of time by motion so integral to the revolving door of the pre-critical cosmos. All
change, alteration and variation take place in time, but the form of time itself is invariable and
inviolable.
Time Compression (Circuitry)
Overcoming the irreconcilability of rationalist and empiricist methodologies via the innovation of a
priori synthesis nevertheless generates a new problem for Kant, for he has simply moved its
incompatibility into the subject, under the guise of the two faculties of sensibility and
understanding, which are fundamentally different in kind, one being passive, receptive and
immediate, the other spontaneous, active and mediate. Kant’s infamous Copernican revolution,
although beginning in radical unfaithfulness — replacing god with time — resolves the duplicitous
tension it cannot help but introduce between the two sides of its trademark a priori syntheses in a
fundamental identity and a vexed harmony negotiated through the enigmatic synthesis of the
imagination in the Transcendental Deduction, which reconstructs the syntheses along the contours
of the epistemological subject / object divide, remodelled as the transcendental unity of
apperception and the transcendental object = [x].
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In order to connect the abstract bundle of categories in the form of the transcendental object = [x]
to experience, Kant requires a link which he locates in the imagination, generative of a
transcendental synthesis of the appearance of objects across space and time by stabilising their
manifolds into a consistent unity for the application of concepts. The imagination performs this role
via three syntheses which occur together (but are grounded in the third) in order to produce
representation: the synthesis of apprehension which formalises sensible intuitions (diversity in time
and space, and the diversity of time and space) into representable shape within a space-time grid,
generating a single and uniform spatio-temporal manifold subject to extensive measurement; the
reproduction of spatial coordinates that are not subject to instantaneous apprehension (the
momentarily non-appearing parts of a volume, for example) as well as past and projected (future)
coordinates in the present; and the synthesis of recognition, which underwrites the possibility of
representably-stable conceptual traction via the relation of the prior syntheses of apprehension and
reproduction to the form of the object in the understanding, the ‘object = [x]’, and this relative to
the synthesising subject’s own transcendental identity, the ‘unity of apperception’.98
The first two syntheses structure a determination of space and time and the third relates it to
consciousness, together supplying an a priori basis for the spatio-temporal unity and continuity of
experience — intuited by us as one-dimensional time and three-dimensional space, only objectively
actualisable in extensity, due to the envelopment of space within the inner sense of time —
comprised of conscious perceptions anchored to a unified identity.99 The kind of compression
enacted by the synthesis of imagination is not simply a linear one, but the flattening of time and
space into a homogenous metric upon which the understanding enacts its determinations — which
only then provides a basis for linear compression or acceleration in extensity, such as that detailed
by Hölderlin in his rhythmic diagrams of Oedipus and Antigone.
Curiously, Kant employs the example of cinnabar to demonstrate the successive, temporal aspect
of the reproductive synthesis (which supplies the recognising synthesis with its input) — an
intriguing reference given its long history of alchemical and esoteric use. “If cinnabar were now red,
now black, now light, now heavy”, he writes
if a human being were now changed into this animal shape, now into that
one, if on the longest day the land were covered now with fruits, now with
ice and snow, then my empirical imagination would never even get the
opportunity to think of heavy cinnabar on the occasion of the
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representation of the colour red. [W]ithout the governance of a certain rule
to which the appearances are already subjected in themselves … no
empirical synthesis of reproduction could take place. There must therefore
be something that itself makes possible this reproduction of the
appearances by being the a priori ground of a necessary synthetic unity of
them.100
The conceptual identity of a piece of cinnabar, along with its empirical variations, endures in time
because we are able to synthesise past experiences of cinnabar with present ones via their
reproduction as images in memory. We produce a recognition of categorical consistency through
the relation of ‘cinnabar moments’ in the spatio-temporal manifold by connecting them to the
object we are determining as a piece of cinnabar by means of its steady appearance across
different times to the transcendental cogito, whose persistence as an identity is presupposed by
the act of recognition. Meanwhile, the endurance of cinnabar perceptions must, according to Kant,
be sufficiently objectively consistent for this to be possible in the first place, for if the objective
world was in itself so chaotic that such consistency could not take place, neither would our
syntheses of it. The Kantian ‘I think’ is thereby an identity which recognises itself as such against
the differences it measures empirically and supposes objectively. A move that is only made
possible through the combination of the syntheses of the unity of apperception and the spatiotemporal ordering effectuated under the faculty of the imagination. Together, the three syntheses
of the imagination place the receptive faculty of sensibility that is productive of apprehension and
reproduction in communication with the active faculty of understanding, which plugs them into the
object = [x] and the transcendental unity of apperception, ostensibly resolving the problem of
these faculties’ conflicting natures in the direction of categorical tractability, and subsuming spatiotemporal difference under a conceptual unity.101
Due to this implicit vectorisation — from sensibility to understanding — the transcendental
synthesis of the imagination can be grasped as an “aesthetic” function made to conform to a
conceptual, recognising one, which gives it its axioms — something we shall find reason to return to
as the mystery of Lönnrot, Carter and Challenger continues to unfold.102 Its operation applies a unit
of measure — Kant’s ‘magnitudes’ — to the sensible manifold in order to relate it to conceptual
elements in the synthesis of recognition. Kant will have cause, in the Third Critique, to show the
fragility of the transcendental synthesis of the imagination, one that is subject to the breaking of its
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measure by insurgent forces erupting from below. Subterranean revolt on behalf of the cold earth’s
volcanic core.
With a unified conceptual identity providing the transcendental ground for the objective validity of
the categories, and a consistent, extended and sequenced spatio-temporal manifold furnishing the
foundation for all appearances in intuition established via the deduction, Kant will attempt to knit
the two together in the application of the principles of judgement that constitute the schematism,
consolidating the objectivity of the phenomenal-real. The schematism is the temporalisation of the
categories, and thus works in reverse order to the operation of the transcendental synthesis of the
imagination — beginning with a concept and determining the spatio-temporal manifold in
accordance with it. The three syntheses of the imagination, taken together as a single mechanism,
provide the rules for recognition; schematisation, on the other hand, gives the rules of construction
for a concept in space and time. The understanding, under the guise of judgement, deploys or
expresses the spontaneous syntheses of the unity of apperception and the imagination in time,
completing the a priori synthetic weave between expansive sense experience and categorical
contraction.103
Each of the four divisions of the categories warrants a different form of expression: the three
categories of quantity (unity, plurality, totality) express extensive magnitudes; the three categories
of quality (reality, negation, limitation) express intensive magnitudes; the three categories of
relation (inherence and subsistence, causality and dependence, community and reciprocity)
establish the objectivity of time and space, and the three categories of modality
(possibility/impossibility, existence/non-existence, necessity/contingency) generate the postulates
of empirical thought in general. It is this penultimate group (developed in the reciprocally arising
conditions of the Analogies of Experience) which confine all human experience to a universalisable
temporality, and unfold change in time, consonant with the thermodynamic arrow.104 The unfolding
of all four categorial groups through a priori synthetic judgements constitute acts of representation,
which yield the actuality of the world for us, founding all knowledge upon representation as an
activity of the human mind bound to temporal succession. The schematism is therefore,
nothing but a priori time-determinations in accordance with rules, and
these concern, according to the order of the categories, the time-series,
the content of time, the order of time, and finally the sum total of time in
regard to all possible objects. From this it is clear that the schematism of
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the understanding through the transcendental synthesis of imagination
comes down to nothing other than the unity of the manifold of intuition in
inner sense, and thus indirectly to the unity of apperception, as the
function that corresponds to inner sense (to a receptivity).105
As a result, there are certain pieces of information we will always know in advance regarding the
possibility of anything whatsoever in experience, despite the a posteriori nature of certain aspects
of the latter. Namely, that “all appearances are, as regards their intuition, extensive magnitudes”,
and “in all appearances the sensation, and the real, which corresponds to it in the object (realitas
phaenomenon), has an intensive magnitude, i.e. a degree”.106 Kant defines an extensive magnitude
as ‘that in which the representation of the parts makes possible the representation of the whole
(and therefore necessarily precedes the latter)’.107 A unity in extensive magnitude is composed of
successive or co-extensive parts that can be added together due to the fact that they share a
homogenous unit of measure.108 The nature of their difference is therefore external — a difference
between parts. For the categories of quantity, the fact that appearances are systematically
subordinated to extension is straightforward, for this is how we apprehend space and time —
unified “multitudes of antecedently given parts”.109 For the categories of quality, however, the
surety of advance knowledge is less naturally evident because it bears on sensation and thus
involves an entirely subjective, empirical input. So much so that Kant will even write, years later, in
the Opus Postumum that
It is strange — it even appears to be impossible, to wish to present a priori
that which depends on perceptions (empirical representations with
consciousness of them): e.g. light, sound, heat, etc., which all together,
amount to the subjective element in perception (empirical representation
with consciousness) and hence, carries with it no knowledge of an object.
Yet this act of the faculty of representation is necessary.110
Intensive magnitude is a property of the real of sensation and is therefore strictly empirical, yet we
are said to have a priori knowledge of it. This is guaranteed by the conspiracy of the transcendental
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unity of apperception and the object = [x] that gives sensation its determinate form, and it is
therefore this form alone — not the determination but the form of determination — which can be
anticipated. Thus we can know in advance that every conscious representation we can ever have
will involve a degree of intensity, without knowing anything about the specificities of the intensities
which will affect us. To this end, Kant defines intensive magnitude as that “which can only be
apprehended as a unity, and in which multiplicity can only be represented through approximation
to negation = 0”. 111 Unlike extensive magnitudes, which imply a continuous aggregation of
homogenous parts, intensities differ internally on an infinite continuum (“of which no part … is the
smallest”) between 0 and n, and therefore must be apprehended instantaneously.112 However,
because of the nature of our perception, intensive magnitudes cannot be perceived separately from
space and time and thus come to “fill” extended magnitudes to various degrees.113 Consequently,
the intensive property of internal difference is controlled by extension, locked — forever — into the
extensive matrix of apprehended space-time. Most significantly of all, Kant tethers zero intensity to
pure consciousness, so that the subtraction of intensive matter from experience only reaffirms, in
the absence of contaminants, the immaculacy of thought.
[F]rom the empirical consciousness to the pure consciousness a gradual
alteration is possible, where the real in the former entirely disappears, and
a merely formal (a priori) consciousness of the manifold in space and time
remains; thus there is also a possible synthesis of the generation of the
magnitude of a sensation from its beginning, the pure intuition = 0, to any
arbitrary magnitude.114
Sensation degree zero indexes the annihilation of reality, not the subject. This division, although
Kant will go on to qualify it (writing that such an occurrence is not “to be encountered”, an empty
concept without an object comprising one of the four classes of illegitimate “nothing”) makes the
separation between sensible matter and thought inherent to the transcendental apparatus
luminously clear.115 Kant thinks intensity, but only in a way that renders it secondary both to the
form of its appearance in extensity and to the pervasive authority of transcendental
conceptualisation under the law of the understanding — “[subjectifying] abstraction” and
“[sublimating] death into a power of the subject”, all for the sake of maintaining a spurious notion
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of transcendental accord.116
For the Timaean cosmos, harmony between subject and object takes the form of an external,
teleologically-assured likeness between copy and model; for Leibniz, it finds its expression in the
notion of final accord, and for Hume it must, no matter how reluctantly, be presupposed.117 The
ideal of externally sanctioned accord between subject and object is overturned in the Critique of
Pure Reason by the necessary submission of objects to the subject, which refocuses the division
between subject and object to that between active and passive faculties interior to the process of
determination. We have seen above how the transcendental synthesis of the imagination operates
to bridge the divide. This causes Kant to rely on the understanding to rein in the productive
function of imagination, subordinating its syntheses to unified identity in the transcendental subject
and unified objectivity in the transcendental object, their productions nourished by passive
sensibility. Reason, the third of the three active faculties (alongside the understanding and the
imagination), by analogy with the function of understanding, attempts to determine its own purely
conceptual objects without the necessary components of time and space furnished by sensibility,
and in so doing, exercises its powers ‘problematically’ in the production of noumena — illusory
totalities which nonetheless have a positive role to play in systematising the knowledge produced
under the aegis of understanding in its stewardship of the syntheses.118 It can be seen, therefore,
that it is the faculty of understanding that is charged with the task of limiting the functions of the
other faculties in the production of experience, confining them to specific operations and drawing
the boundary dividing legitimate from illegitimate knowledge.
Although the three Critiques work together to define the ends of speculative reason, “[p]ure
reason”, in the First Critique, “leaves everything to the understanding”, casting it in the role of
legislator so that, in the great critical tribunal, it might judge according to the interests of reason,
even when this entails turning against reason’s own products.119 Knowledge is thus lent a maximum
of systematic unity via the relation between faculties delineated in the First Critique, which is
nominally harmonious without invoking the divinity of pre-established harmony that animated precritical philosophy. Instead, it produces an accord of “common sense”, the “subjective condition of
all ‘communicability’” — a return to the comfort of rhyme, now resonating between the faculties,
mirroring thought in its objects.120 Kantian accord may be understood as an innovation of preestablished harmony, but it retains lineaments of the Platonic Idea of the good in that it still sees
thought imbued with health and an honourable will, naturally inclining towards truth via the “best
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possible distribution” of its capacities. 121 And why would it be otherwise? Surely reason, the
“highest court of appeals for all rights and claims of our speculation, cannot possibly contain
original deceptions and semblances”!122 By means of the accord of common sense, we recognise
ourselves in the objects of the world.
What a surprise, after all this, to rediscover our own silhouettes still flickering on the cavern wall.
Common sense is “the norm of identity from the point of view of the pure Self and the form of the
unspecified object which corresponds to it”, it is always related to recognition, and “relies upon a
ground in the unity of a thinking subject of which all the other faculties must be modalities”.123 To
thinking, common sense contributes only “the form of the same”.124 The democratic distribution of
capacity and similitude is philosophy’s principal doxa, subtending what Deleuze will famously
denounce — in Difference and Repetition — as “the Image of Thought”.125 If is not simply an
illegitimate presupposition, saturated in humanist bias, whence does this principle arise? There is a
deeper problem with the positing of fundamental accord between the faculties in the Critique of
Pure Reason, and Deleuze will turn the legal distinction between rights and facts used in the
Transcendental Deduction back on Kant, asking by what right the critical philosophy takes harmony
as its ground for the relation of the faculties. 126 Kant, in the end, provided a remedy for this
oversight, but it would not be enough to placate the tremors the critical system had induced.
Despite his predilection for tribunals, Kant’s recalibration of thought replaces the transcendence of
god (and its models) as the ultimate arbiter of truth with the process of immanent critique, and thus
transposes error into illusion. The strangeness of this new form of falsity springs from the fact that
it is internal to the power of thought itself, contrary to the externality and materiality of error that
informs Timeaus’ universe. Reason’s propensity to produce illusion as a consequence of its
productive power brings Plato’s planomenon into thought itself, menacing it from inside “as if from
an internal arctic zone where the needle of every compass goes mad”, a further disturbance of the
cardinality which operates the turning of the great revolving door.127 This threat, nevertheless, is
immediately quarantined. With the understanding commandeering synthesis, it is no longer a
question of reversing of “the corruption of the circuits in our heads”, rather it is this very circuitry
that constitutes the correction of illusion by forcing everything through the transcendental unity of
apperception and its object = [x].128 The conservatism of the revolving door and the eruptive
potential of the straight labyrinth leak into one another repeatedly throughout the First Critique.
The labyrinth’s corrosive implications recognised then covered up, again and again, as if Kant
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realises the enormity of the abyss he has levered apart but cannot countenance its vertiginous
depth, a “depth [which] is like the famous geological line from NE to SW, the line which comes
diagonally from the heart of things and distributes volcanoes”.129 But Kant is no Empedocles. He
does not wish to explode the sun. Asymmetry petrifies him — and for good reason.
If the Critique of Pure Reason “seemed equipped to overturn the Image of thought” in its
substitution of illusion for error, the fractured I for a unified and substantialised cogito, and the
invocation of the speculative deaths of God and the self, Kant
in spite of everything, and at the risk of compromising the conceptual
apparatus of the three Critiques … did not want to renounce the implicit
presuppositions. Thought had to continue to enjoy an upright nature, and
philosophy could go no further than — nor in directions other than those
taken by — common sense.130
Where Kant hesitates at the caldera’s edge, Hölderlin explores it with tortured determination,
extracting from Oedipus what is truly radical in both “[t]he Greek image of thought” that “already
invoked the madness of the double turning-away”, and the Kantian one, which launches “thought
into infinite wandering rather than into error”.131 Vision, the Timaean antidote to corruption, is still
insisted upon as the implicit other of the blindness Kant so frequently invokes, but it must be
remembered that Tiresias’s prophetic knowledge is coincident with his loss of sight, and at the
moment of the comprehension of his fate, Oedipus blinds himself.132
Asymmetry (Alienation)
The true innovation of the critical project, then — and that which constitutes its unprecedented
modernity — is not the tiresome delineation of conditions for anthropomorphic experience
productive of and produced by an intransigent conceptual faculty, but its profound reconfiguration
of time. In Kant, pre-modern, cyclical, scroll-like temporality “unrolls itself like a serpent”, no longer
subordinate to gods or nature — to logic, to reason, psychology, matter or sense — no longer
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subordinate to anything, save the mystery of its own inner workings, an enigmatic process of autoaffection.133 An impersonal reading of the First Critique reveals this immediately: the subject may
have a productive role in the constitution of phenomena, but it is always in the thrall of something
it has no empirical access to, which, in turn, is producing its production of experience.134 Both of
these productive syntheses are temporal and, necessarily for Kant — who has reached for the one
thing common to the two sides of the rift he has opened up inside the transcendental production of
experience — only legitimately reconcilable by yet another temporal function: the application of the
categories to experience in time via the faculty of judgement.135 Rather than a fortification of
subjective prowess in the realm of experience, the Critique of Pure Reason is the story of time’s
relation to itself, through itself — and this relation takes the form of a limp.
The ruin that emerges in the wake of the critical philosophy exhibits, against its inaugurator’s best
intentions, the keenness of the blade he has used to vivisect his forebears. As Kant gingerly turns
the instrument over, it flashes the following message in the darkness of pre-critical dogmatism: the
production of time is not in time. (The killer you are seeking is yourself.) Kant, the reluctant
hepatomancer. This new configuration of the outside as time-production is further complicated by
no longer being external to the subject, but an internal constitutive part of it. The transcendental
outside — distinct from the exterior affection of objectified space, which is inside as an empirical
necessity — is thus interiorised in a way that will not only alter the schema of time, but profoundly
disrupt the subjectivity that carries it, alienating it from itself, and deeply troubling its sense of
agency from the point of view of the only part of it that it can properly know or experience.
This is the tragic modern time of Oedipus in both its pure form as the caesura, and the inexorable
linearity of the flight into the desert. An interior limit which Oedipus carries along inside himself,
always escaping him, yet irrevocably ‘his’. The tormented king, like Kant’s subject, torn apart and
along by an alien component which schizophrenises him, splits him off from himself, allowing him to
act in a secondary manner within time, but depriving him of any ability to act on his own
transcendental agency, everything Oedipus attempts to do to divert his terrible fate from its course
being subordinate to something else — the prophecy of the caesura, that traitorous modern god:
the pure form of time. What we know of this abstract part of ourselves cannot be anything other
than this empty form, contoured by the limits of categorical distillation; a strict ordinal sequence,
made countable and extensive in the schematisation of its “numerical unity”, and definitive of a
specific spatio-temporal organisation.136 Contrary to the spatialised exteriority of time relative to the
revolving door with its cardinal points, the contentless ordinality of the abstract ‘I’ is static, an
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inhuman domain within the human, transcendental and not transcendent and therefore not eternal
in the same way. It is immanent and productive: an immobile, black motor generates the
inexorable and, for Kant, insensible excess of the labyrinth composed of a single, straight line.
The byzantine architecture of the Kantian cogito threatens to suppress what is truly radical in his
arrangement of the relation of thought to its determinations. In Difference and Repetition, Deleuze
relates it to the Cartesian cogito in order to better show its novelty. Prior to Descartes, definitions of
the thinking subject are either formed in reference to an eternity which produces it as its
externalised other — an infinite unextended mind related to extended finitude, a fully disjunctive
difference circumscribed by space — or distilled from relations between pre-determined concepts,
those of generic and specific differences (‘man is a rational animal’).137 But Descartes effectuates
his own innovation, a logic of implication in which the thinking subject grounds itself. The Kantian
cogito takes up this logic, but where the Cartesian cogito precedes by a three-step determination:
the determination ‘I think’ determines the undetermined ‘I am’ as thinking substance (I think, I
am — determination, the indeterminate, the determined; the indeterminate determined by
determination), the Kantian cogito inserts an additional step which corresponds to the form of
determination. Stripped down to its bare mechanism, it proceeds as follows: determination, the
indeterminate, the form of determinability, the determined. The transcendental subject or abstract I
of the transcendental unity of apperception in relation to the object = [x], both active elements of
the understanding, commits a “spontaneous” act of determination which implies an indeterminate
existence.138 Because the transcendental I is also subject to the passive faculty of sensibility it must
make its determinations in time as the form of inner sense. 139 Time, therefore, is the form of
determinability which then yields the completely determined empirical subject.
The Kantian cogito begins in action, but because it is bound to pass through the pacifying form of
time, it can only represent itself to itself in experience as a passive subject, which holds the same
status in relation to the transcendental subject as any other empirical object. Against the Cartesian
cogito, which determines the I am as substance, the innovation of the Kantian transcendental
subject coincides, for Deleuze, with the “liberation” of the subject from substantiality, and the
strange and fecund domain of the unconscious swerves into philosophy for the first time. What we
are left with is “a synthesis which separates” — a link which is a break — and the inauguration of
something else completely new: constitutive alienation. 140 Where the productive other of the
revolving door is strictly outside — the “other of alterity” — drawn apart by a limit which
corresponds to space or extension (and its ordering, from which temporality is derived), the other
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of the straight labyrinth is one’s own self, an interior outside to which one is bound in a relation of
fundamental alienation.141
Marx will install the same constitutive rift in the transcendental division between labour and labourpower, as the alienation of the subject that abides between them in his analysis of capitalism: “The
alienation of labour-power and its real manifestation … do not coincide in time.” 142 Capital
production, like the Kantian cogito, abstracts and axiomatises the value of its products by
subsuming them under a homogenous metric, substituting use-value for exchange-value; a
qualitative measure for a quantitive one. Exchange-values are “mutually replaceable” because they
are of “identical magnitude”.143 It follows from this, adds Marx, in a particularly Kantian passage,
“that, firstly, the valid exchange-values of a particular commodity express something equal, and
secondly, exchange-value cannot be anything other than the mode of expression, the ‘form of
appearance’, of a content distinguishable from it”.144
Just as it is for Kant, whose system forces experience into a temporalised series of extensive
magnitudes, furnishing a priori knowledge as the form of determination, fully independent of
content, the measure of universal equivalence for exchange-value is a temporal one, in which all of
a commodity’s “sensuous characteristics are extinguished” — what Marx calls “socially necessary
labour-time”.145 The transcendental, auto-productive, alienating circuitry of modernity is tragedy
uncut, generative of nothing but episodic travesties of fast-burning empirical conflagration, and its
material form is M-C-M’.146 Capital emerges as the concretised shadow of the furtive and explosive
moment of the First Critique, before it is drowned in the epistemological structure that limits the
syntheses to the production of identity-driven representation and confines it to legitimate
knowledge. From a strictly philosophical perspective, it is the complication bound up with
determination across the form of time via the implicative logic of transcendental production which
grounds the unconditional accelerationist notion of anti-praxis. One cannot be anything other than
a passive subject as long as there is time. A tragic thought, but this is the full import of tragedy — a
dramatic form whose other face is fate — for the modern subject. Oedipus split by the line of time;
“infinite unification purifie[d] through infinite separation”.147
The Edge of Space and Time
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When the Antarctic fog lifts one sees the machine for what it does. Kant’s critical philosophy
introduces for the first time three great components: a tragic initiation, circuitry and compression,
and the alienation of auto-productive asymmetry. The time of the revolving door draws the line of
the outside along the edge of space; the time of the straight labyrinth draws the line of the outside
along the edge of time. Cognition, in the Critique of Pure Reason, is an abstract machine — and
because its enveloping form of determination is temporal, it is, more profoundly, an abstract
machine for the production of transcendental time.148 In What is Philosophy? Deleuze and Guattari
diagram the schematism as a circuit, “a moving wheel” partially immersed in “the shallow stream
of Time as the form of interiority, in and out of which [it] plunges”.149 If the stream is shallow, it is
because it is still all too human. As the circuit of transcendental production or application of rules
for construction, the schematism disrupts the philosophical dualism of essence and appearance
definitive of the revolving door with the unilateral and conjunctive couple ‘apparition’ (conditions of
appearance) and ‘phenomena’ (that which appears) — one could equally say Id and Ego.150 A “bolt
of lightning” generating a more complicated disjunction between time and what appears in time.151
On the other side of the limit of knowability, time in itself as something other than succession is
accorded a negative status — a blank cipher, slight as zero, outside the walls of transcendental
subjective security. It courses through us as an abstract yet immanent outside which conditions
experience via asymmetrical auto-production, but is fortified against our determinations, which
have no purchase on it. The philosophical problem at the core of critique abides in this strange
circuitry, no longer requiring a god for its productions, no longer sustaining hard truth / error,
essence / appearance distinctions, reconstituted in a dark zone of the subject itself — the abstract I.
But “God survives as long as the I enjoys a subsistence, a simplicity and an identity which
expresses the entirety of its resemblance to the divine”.152 Kant “replaces harmony with circuitry”
yet retains the residue of a rhyme — his betrayal of God is not yet fully double.153 Time in the First
Critique is intellectually subjective, and while it is infinitely troubling for any spontaneous notion of
subjectivity, it is nonetheless too anthropmorphic, too constrained to the unifying identity of
transcendental apperception, too geared towards the speculative ends of reason, too functionally
masculine, too centralised and regulated. Deleuze, writing of Kant but thinking of Nietzsche, issues
a caveat to those humanists among us who would yet profess to lay a claim to inhumanity: “the
death of God becomes effective only with the dissolution of the Self” — a self that Kant has
skewered, broken and scattered across the sand, but which logically envelops, by the
circumference of its epistemological horizon, that “panic desert of time and space” the Kantian
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subject, like Oedipus, reluctantly casts itself into.154 Schizophrenisation is a voyage of initiation that
plunges all to way to zero, that “transcendental experience of the loss of the Ego” which Deleuze
and Guattari link to shamanism via R.D. Laing in Anti-Oedipus. 1 5 5 The tragic voyage of
transcendental time loops asymmetry infinitely back to initiation, and the subject limps through its
circuitry, replaying the silence of the gods, until it learns how to betray not only their law, but its
own.
Reality is reconfigured by transcendental time in terms of a double relation, a primary and
generative form and a superficial, secondary experience: process and product, action and reaction,
infinity and limitation, time and what is in time. By understanding this abstract, transcendental
subject as a unity, Kant uses the conjunctive couple as if in the service of a god — or a father —
reining in its explosive potential by bringing synthesis and schematisation back to recognition and
representation, leaving consciousness, so resolute in its refusal of blindness, “blinded by all
knowledge that does not find cause in the mind itself”.156 There is still a division between form and
matter in Kant’s apparatus, a basic hylomorphism which locates activity in form and consigns
passivity to matter — an intensive matter which subtends the reproductive function of the
syntheses of the imagination but does not appear in its own right and is of no transcendental
consequence — its destabilising volatility confined within the extensive grid of apprehension. The
model of the transcendental, once applied to experience, is eternally set, the categories definitive,
as if the system “would thenceforth just continue, without disruption, in an innocent confirmation of
itself”.157 Reason officiates from on high, understanding controls the factory floor, everything is
known in advance, ushering in “so deadly a boredom that … one might finish by wishing to die …
rather than just have things go on … forever”, and death is not even only empirical.158
Into the Volcano
A philosopher terrified: this does not exist.159
The critical project may be the “most elaborate fit of panic in the history of the Earth” but “panic is
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creation”.160 Poetry and capitalism take this as their rule. Hölderlin, operating a subtle betrayal of
his own, discovered the true radicality of Kant, just as Rimbaud, poet-economist par excellence,
would best articulate the cogito for a dissolved self. Land too, quoting Bataille, evokes the secret of
Oedipus in relation to poetry, but not without that element of terror that will be so fundamental for
the next torsion in the history of the schemata of time.
Meanderings in extension remain trapped in the maze unless they cross
over into a ‘blind slippage into death’, ‘this slippage outside oneself that
necessarily produces itself when death comes into play’. A ‘slippage
produces itself’ we do not do so, a chasm opens, chaos (= 0), something
horrific in its depth, a season in Hell that ‘slips immensely into the
impossible’, ‘the intensity and intimacy of a sensation opened itself onto
an abyss where there is nothing which is not lost, just as a profound wound
opens itself onto death’. Poetry is this slippage that is broken upon the end
of poetry, erased in a desert as ‘beautiful as death’.161
The unfaithful, urban and un-coordinated temporality of the straight labyrinth as it appears in Kant
is a not a time to be apprehended by philosophers or theologians. It is the time of economists and
poets. It is they who see the subterranean opportunities to which the philosopher of the model is
blind. Empedocles, the eponymous hero of Hölderlin’s unfinished modern tragedy throws himself —
twice — into the volcano in Kant’s place, but the volcano returns a single sandal to its edge, an
omen of an asymmetry yet to be mastered. “Poetry does not strut logically amongst convictions, it
seeps through crevices; a magmic flux resuscitated amongst vermin. If it was not that the Great
Ideas had basements, fissures, and vacuoles, poetry would never infest them. Faiths rise and fall,
but the rats persist.”162
The outside will shift again, in a way that once more alters the human relation to it. Our mystery
has become infinitely more complex, and curiously in this, more tractable, but it is not yet twisted
enough. Kant, at the very least, has taught us the dubiousness of conclusions. We have procured
certain keys, a fistful of half-deciphered diagrams, and a sense of the limit, but we are still
hopelessly trapped in the maze. These explorations are just overtures to the journey that is about
to begin, and they have done little more than confer upon the investigation an additional set of
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questions. We are yet to understand why the particle-clock is a revolving door, and how to move
from this great turning figure, with its aperture open onto eternity, to those other, “successive
doors”, that “bar our free march down the mighty corridors of space and time” to that ultimate
threshold which “no man has crossed”.163 Does Kant’s elaboration of time as an infinite extended
magnitude give us sufficient means to decipher Lönnrot’s riddle? Is the straight line all that it
seems? Why is the revolving door ‘coffin-shaped’? Does Hölderlin’s invocation of aorgic panic
somehow connect to the expression on the young woman in the lecture hall where Challenger
executes his trick, and which Aspinwall also wears? Why does rhythm increasingly seem to play
such an important role? There is nothing for it but to leave the philosophers, the theologians, the
poets and the economists, and bore deeper into the heat of the earth. To solicit counsel from that
thing, which — feigning compliance with the laws of time and space — succeeds them, guardian of
the door in the back of the cave we have marshalled these unfinished rituals to access.
Thrown out of eternity, cursed by a faceless god, blinded, insulted, injured and abandoned, we find
ourselves with Oedipus, lurching catastrophically across the desert in uneven, hesitating steps,
following the curse of an incomplete exile. Towards what? Thunder roils in the distance, electricity
volatises the desolate pre-dawn fog, something rumbles underfoot. Nothing for πλέθρα. But if we
know one thing about the desert, it is this. Expelled from the labour of Kantian critique, accused by
Plato of sophistry, this is where the nomads go.164 The initiation has just begun, and like the voyage
consigned to Oedipus, its path leads underground.
Series Navigation
← The Revolving Door and The Straight Labyrinth: An Initiation in Occult Time (Part 0)
1. Nick Land, Chasm (Shanghai: Time Spiral Press, 2015), §25.
2. Gilles Deleuze, “Synthèse et temps 14/3/1978”, trans. Melissa McMahon,
Les cours de Gilles Deleuze, https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66.
3. The ‘revolving door’ motif persists throughout Deleuze’s work from 1963
to 1993, preceding Difference and Repetition and succeeding A Thousand
Plateaus, the two works that will be most consistently drawn upon here,
despite differences in the accounts of transcendental production given in
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both. The historical evolution of temporal modelling condensed into these
two images appears in the Logic of Sense, The Fold, and it also frames the
Cinema books, although the revolving door as a specific motif disappears
in these texts. Gilles Deleuze, Kant’s Critical Philosophy, trans. Hugh
Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam (London: Continuum, 2008), vii-viii;
Difference
and
Repetition,
see
“Repetition
for
Itself”
and
“The
Asymmetrical Synthesis of the Sensible” specifically; “Synthèse et temps
14/3/1978”, and “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
trans. Melissa McMahon, https://www.webdeleuze.com/groupes/4; “On
Four Poetic Formulas that Might Summarise the Kantian Philosophy”, in
Essays Clinical and Critical, trans. Daniel W. Smith and Michael A. Greco
(London: Verso, 1998), 27-29; The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque, trans.
Tom Conley (London: Continuum, 2001), 3, 6, 18-19, 70; The Logic of
Sense, trans. Mark Lester (London: The Athlone Press, 1990), 176; Cinema
2: The Time-Image, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Robert Galeta
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997), xi.
4. Deleuze, “On Four Poetic Formulas that might Summarise the Kantian
Philosophy”, Essays Clinical and Critical, 27-35. The final quotation is from
Borges’ “Death and the Compass”, examined in Part 0 of this series. Here
Deleuze shifts from “invisible, incessant” (Différence et répetition, 147) to
“indivisible, incessant”. “Sur quatre formules poétiques qui pourrait
résumer la philosophie kantienne”, Critique et Clinique. (Paris: Éditions de
Minuit, 1993), 40.
5. This is a framing contention of Anna Greenspan’s unpublished doctoral
dissertation Capitalism’s Transcendental Time Machine, from which this
essay draws some of its key ideas. Anna Greenspan, Capitalism’s
Transcendental Time Machine (University of Warwick, 2000).
6. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 82; Mille plateaux, 94.
Translation altered to reflect original. (See Part 0.) Deleuze, “On Four
Poetic Formulas that might Summarise the Kantian Philosophy”, Essays
Clinical and Critical, 28.
7. The constitutive role of planetary motion is even more overt in the first of
Deleuze’s 1978 lectures on Kant: “What is the joint? The joint is, literally,
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the hinge. The hinge is what the door pivots around. But the door? We
have to imagine a revolving door, and the revolving door is the universal
door. The door of the world is a revolving door. The door of the world
swings and passes through privileged moments which are well known:
they’re what we call cardinal points. North, South, East, West. The joint is
what makes the door swing in such a way that it passes and re-passes
through the privileged co-ordinates named cardinal points. Cardinal
comes from cardo; cardo is precisely the hinge, the hinge around which
the sphere of celestial bodies turns, and which makes them pass time and
again through the so-called cardinal points, and we note their return: ah,
there’s the star again, it’s time to move my sheep!” Deleuze, “Synthèse
et
temps
14/3/1978”,
Les
cours
de
Gilles
Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66. I have occasionally made small
modifications to the translation of these lectures, and have indicated
where this occurs in the following citations.
8. Gilles Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67.
9. Plato, “Timeaus”, Timaeus and Critias, trans. Robin Waterford (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2008), 25/37d.
10. Plato, “Timaeus”, 15/27a; 18-19/29d-30b.
11. Plato, “Timeaus”, 25-26/37d-36a.
12. Plato, “Timaeus”, 21/33b; 22/34a.
13. Plato, “Timaeus”, 23/35a.
14. ‘δημιουργός’ (demiurge), from δήμιος (belonging to the people) and εργος (a suffix indicating a worker), literally denotes ‘a skilled workman, a
handicraftsman’ in Ancient Greek; Deleuze, Difference and Repetition,
233.
15. Here is the sequence — which will play an important role in Difference
and Repetition — in full: “[H]e divided up the whole mixture again, this
time into as many portions as he needed, with each portion being a blend
of identity, difference, and substance. He began the division by first
taking a single portion from the mixture; next he took a portion which was
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double the quantity of the first, and then a third portion, which was oneand-a-half times the quantity of the second and three times the quantity
of the first; then he took a fourth portion which was double the quantity of
the second, and a fifth which was three times the quantity of the third,
and a sixth which was eight times the quantity of the first, and then a
seventh portion which was twenty-seven times the quantity of the first.
After this, he filled up the double and triple intervals by cutting off further
portions from the mixture and inserting them into the gaps, so that in
each interval there were two means, a mean that exceeded one of its
extremes by the same fraction of the extremes as it was exceeded by the
other extreme, and another mean that exceeded one of its extremes by
the same number as it was exceeded by the other extreme. These links
created, within the first set of intervals, further intervals of 3:2, 4:3, and
9:8, and then he filled up all the 4:3 intervals with the 9:8 interval, leaving
in each case a portion, and the portion that remained was an interval
whose terms, expressed numerically, were 256 : 243. And so at this point
the mixture, from which he was cutting these portions, was all used up.”
Plato, “Timaeus”, 23-24/35a-36b.
16. Deleuze, Difference and Reptition, 233; Plato, “Timaeus”, 24/36c-d.
17. Plato, “Timaeus”, 27/38e.
18. Plato, “Timaeus”, 28/39d.
19. Deleuze, “On Four Poetic Formulas that might Summarise the Kantian
Philosophy”, Essays Clinical and Critical, 27.
20. Luce Irigaray, “Plato’s Hystera” in Speculum of the Other Woman, trans.
Gillian C. Gill, (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), 244-5. The thing,
“always already there in the den” is the matrix or womb, which again,
following the injunction of cosmic horror — muted and covered over by
the schema of the revolving door — can never quite be shown, seen, or
described. Within the realm of representation (or the specular economy)
the anteriority of the hystera is displaced and oppositionalised as a
posteriority in the image before the men in the cave, generative of a telos
which appears linear but is, in fact, cyclical. Linearity hides an exoteric
return, which in turn hides an esoteric involution. Mark Fisher and
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Suzanne Livingston marshall a similar argument to counter Baudrillard’s
defeatist reading of seduction in his book of the same name: “Yet what of
seduction itself? For as a Process it is far in excess of its writings. For
Irigaray, these circles which constantly return to the point at which they
first began are not what they appear. For the female zero, vulva, circle
never finally closes up in the shape of a ring.” Livingston and Fisher,
“Desiring
Seduction”,
Ccru.net, https://web.archive.org/web/20011211011651/http://www.ccru.d
emon.co.uk:80/archive/seduction.htm.
21. “According to Marx, repetition is comic when it falls short — that is, when
instead of leading to metamorphosis and the production of something
new, it forms a kind of involution, the opposite of an authentic creation.
Comic travesty replaces tragic metamorphosis. However, it appears that
for Marx this comic or grotesque repetition necessarily comes after the
tragic, evolutive and creative repetition (‘all great events and historical
personages occur, as it were, twice … the first time as tragedy, the
second as farce’). This temporal order does not, however, seem to be
absolutely justified.” Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 91-2.
22. Irigaray, “Plato’s Hystera”, 247; “[The demiurge] endowed each of the
gods [the planetary bodies] with two kinds of motion: even rotation in the
same place, to enable them always to think the same thoughts about the
same things; and forward motion, under the sovereignty of the revolution
of identity and sameness.’ Within the teleological account tendered by
the Timaeus, to act for the best is to always act in the same manner.
Plato, “Timeaus”, 29/40a-b.
23. “[T]he visibility of day and night, of months and the circling years, of
equinoxes and solstices, resulted in the invention of number, gave us the
concept of time, and made it possible for us to enquire into the nature of
the universe. These in their turn have enabled us to equip ourselves with
philosophy in general, and humankind never has, nor ever will be granted
by the gods a greater good than philosophy.” Plato, “Timaeus”,
38/47a-47b.
24. Plato, “Timaeus”, 96/90c-90d.
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25. Plato, “Timaeus”, 96/90c-90d.
26. “[T]he gods invented and supplied us with vision to enable us to observe
the rational revolutions of the heavens and to let them affect the
revolutions of thought within ourselves (which are naturally akin to those
in the heavens, though ours are turbulent while they are calm).” Plato,
“Timaeus”, 38/47b.
27. αἴτιον πλανόμενον (errant cause). Thanks to Jake Hamilton for this insight
and for help with translations from the Greek.
28. Plato, “Timaeus”, 96/91a. Incidentally, the formulation of truth, which lists
a short taxonomy of external madnesses as afflictions to thought
(“shamelessness, stupidity, mental illness, willingness to lie, or an
indifference to truth”) which is otherwise naturally oriented towards its
object in @parallaxoptics’ piece, “Exit Accelerationism” exactly reprises
the premises of the universe generated through this figure of time — with
the “Outside” mapped by a theologically conditioned exclusive disjunction
separating a fallen, temporalised interority from a transcendent, perfect
exteriority — and the accompanying, dogmatic, image of thought. Thus
explicitly anchoring the fundamental axioms of what has come to be
known as R/Acc (along with some of its R/Dec variants) in an ancient,
theological conception of reality self-consciously at odds with the process
of modernisation and capitalistic temporality the term originally (and
perhaps more correctly) invoked. It will be seen that R/Acc, in want of a
better articulation, disbars itself from any real purchase on the demonic,
Lovecraftian imagery it so frequently delights in calling forth, insofar as
Lovecraft relates the insurgency of the Old Ones to time. The question the
above post dearly wants to answer: “[H]ow to access, or conceive of this
[non-human] intelligence? What is its relationship to human
spacetime?” is not discoverable by venturing outside the Platonic cave (as
it advises), but rather, by boring deeper into the cave and its illusions,
unearthing an altogether different model of truth and an alien conception
of time. The only way out is in. The inward trajectory of this limit defining
outside from in occurs in several steps, which the following parts of this
essay will attempt to bring — darkly — to light.
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29. Plato, “Timaeus”, 26/38c, 30/41a, 18/29e. Italics added.
30. The Bible, King James Version, Revelation 6:13-15.
31. Plato, “Meno” in Plato: The Collected Dialogues, eds. Edith Hamilton and
Huntington Cairns (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961), especially
363-374.
32. Plato, “Timaeus”, 40/49a, 43/51a, 90/88d, 43/50e, 42/50b, 50c/42,
49a/40. Philosophically, the receptacle is graspable only by “a bastard
kind of reasoning” and is something like what one apprehends in a dream
(25b/45). The sexualised nature of the dualism is both the target and the
weapon that annihilates it in Irigaray’s “Plato’s Hystera”.
33. Plato, “Timaeus”, 50d/40.
34. Space, too — as coexistence or simultaneity — is just another mode,
coexistence and simultaneity graspable only as arrangements, erratic or
ordered, relative to the positing of eternity. As well as the specific schema
of the “Timaeus“ and a figure denoting fundamental aspects of
monotheism, the revolving door also extends to index a prevalent trend in
pre-Kantian philosophy applicable to rationalist thinkers such as Leibniz,
who deems space and time to be modal expressions of an infinite,
conceptual intellect, confusedly perceived by finite minds (monads). “I
have said more than once that I hold space to be something purely
relative, as time is — that I hold it to be an order of coexistences, as time
is an order of successions. For space denotes, in terms of possibility, an
order of things that exist at the same time, considered as existing
together, without entering into their particular manners of existing. And
when many things are seen together, one consciously perceives this order
of things among themselves.” Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Samuel
Clarke, Correspondence, ed. Roger Ariew (Cambridge: Hackett, 2000), 15.
35. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67.
36. “We have misconceived the topology of time, and in doing so closed the
gates connecting time with eternity. The recovery from this greatest of
errors will sift the strong from the weak, setting the capstone of the
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‘Great Politics’ that open at the end of nihilism. Eventually, the philosophy
of time will decide.” Nick Land, “Nietzschean Shards”, Outside In,
http://www.xenosystems.net/nietzschean-shards/.
37. Michel Foucault, “Theatrum Philosophicum”, Language, Counter-Memory,
Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 1977), 166.
38. “Time is no longer the cosmic time of an original celestial movement, nor
is it the rural time of derived meteorological movements. It has become
the time of the city and nothing other, the pure order of time.” Deleuze,
“On four Poetic Formulas that Might Summarise the Kantian Philosophy”,
28; “And time will be this sort of form which is also pure, and this kind of
act by which the world empties itself, becomes a desert.” Deleuze,
“Synthèse et temps 14/3/1978”, https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66.
39. K a r l
Marx,
Grundrisse,
Notebook
V,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1857/grundrisse/ch10.htm.
Italics added.; Friedrich Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus” in Essays and
Letters, trans. Jeremy Adler and Charlie Louth (London: Penguin, 2009), ebook; Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 87.
40. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3.
41. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3. The reversal is that of the ‘caesura’
(see the following), which marks an inversion of “the striving out of this
world into a striving out of another world into this one”. Friedrich
Hölderlin, “Notes on the Antigone” in Essays and Letters, trans. and ed.
Jeremy Adler and Charlie Louth (London: Penguin, 2009), e-book, §2.
Thanks to Thomas Murphy for his insight regarding this problem of
temporality in Difference and Repetition and for catalysing the magmic
inclusion of Hölderlin in this essay.
42. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67,
translation
modified;
“[L]a
tragédie d’Œdipe est dans sa lenteur meurtrissante presqu’une tragédie
moderne.” Jean Beaufret, “Hölderlin et Sophocle” in Friedrich Hölderlin,
Remarques sur Oedipe, Remarques sur Antigone (Paris: Union Générale
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The Revolving Door and the Straight Labyrinth: An Initiation in Occult Time
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d’Editions, 1965), 50. The above, and all following translations of
Beaufret’s untranslated text are my own; Deleuze, “Untitled lecture
21/3/1978”,
Les
cours
de
Gilles
Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67.
Oedipus’ demise holds significant parallels to Empedocles’ dissolution in the volcano that
forms the crux of Hölderlin’s unfinished tragedy, The Death of Empedocles, which he had
abandoned just prior to writing “Notes on the Oedipus“, and these latter are generally
understood to be the completion of the inchoate theory of tragedy advanced in the
Empedocles texts. Empedocles’ volcanic dissolution haunts the whole of modern tragedy,
and Hölderlin’s own struggle with the infinity it called up in his writing will become more than
just the personal struggle of an alienated and ambitious poet in the history of dramatic
thought. See Friedrich Hölderlin, The Death of Empedocles: A Mourning-Play, trans. David
Farrell Krell (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2008).
43. “Sophoclean tragedy, for Hölderlin, is not the tragedy of Aeschylus or
Euripides. It is the singular tragedy of divine withdrawal. Everything that
is tragic in Sophocles enciphers the fact that the frontier between man
and God has become enigmatic. Thus it is different from the tragedy of
Aeschylus, for whom the limit is hardly an enigma. Here [in Aeschylus],
man surpasses the limit, and often does so despite the counsel of the
gods. […] Tragic action is thus the history of a return to order which
demands the violation of a limit.” Beaufret, “Hölderlin et Sophocle”,
15-16. In farce, it is the clown’s inability to reach the limit (which is clearly
defined by what has gone before) — and thus to perform his or her acts
adequately — that subtends the relation between agent and limit as both
Marx
and
Deleuze
will
define
it.
Farce
begets
only
an
inferior
representation, rather than a real alteration. See note 21 above.
44. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67; See note 43.
45. In Aeschylus’ Agamemnon, for example, “Agamemnon has hardly entered
his palace before Cassandra sees, as if through the walls, the exact
course the crime will take, and predicts the return of Orestes. But here,
the clamour of the prophetic voice does not carry the significance of the
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‘caesura’. Rather, it confirms only what was already expected. […] In the
triumphant king who descends from his chariot to tread the blood-red
carpet Clytemnestra unfurls beneath his feet, we have already recognised
the figure of one who is sentenced to death. There is nothing more
Aeschylean than a tragic act prefaced by the words ‘It is done’ — before
having even begun. Everything unfolds from one end to the other, right
up to the exoneration of Orestes by the tribunal of the Eumenides,
without a ‘lacuna’, certainly, but also without a ‘caesura’. Such is the
march of a destiny that does not cease to subsume everything into its
most precise image from the point of an initial transgression.” Beaufret,
“Hölderlin et Sophocle”, 31-2.
46. “Oedipus, the most economical formula of interiorisation (Case). It’s all in
your head.” Ccru, “Flatlines” in Ccru: Writings 1997-2003 (Falmouth,
Urbanomic, 2017), (:)(:)(:)::/108. Aeschylus and Euripides may
“understand better how to objectify suffering and anger”, but it is
Sophocles who truly grasps “the sense [sens] of man, in his voyage
towards the unthinkable.”; Hölderlin, Remarques sur Oedipe, Remarques
sur Antigone, quoted by Beaufret in “Hölderlin et Sophocle’, 16.
47. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3.
48. The bulk of French and German commentary on Hölderlin’s
interpretations of Sophocles read Hölderlin’s work as a subversion of
Hegelian self-consciousness, despite the former’s alleged youthful
participation in “The Oldest Program toward a System in German
Idealism” alongside Hegel himself. See Kathrin H. Rosenfield, “Le conflit
tragique chez Sophocle et son interprétation chez Hölderlin et Hegel”, Les
Études philosophiques, 77:2 (2006), 141-161, for a survey of this
difference.
This essay follows the former tendency, which is consonant with Deleuze’s own approach.
See, for an example beyond those given in Difference and Repetition and “On Four Poetic
Formulas that Might Summarise the Kantian Philosophy”, Nietzsche and Philosophy, where
Deleuze writes, “Dialectics in general are not a tragic vision of the world but, on the contrary,
the death of tragedy, the replacement of the tragic vision by a theoretical conception (with
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Socrates) or a Christian conception (with Hegel). What has been discovered in Hegel’s early
writings is in fact the final truth of the dialectic: modern dialectic is the truly Christian
ideology”. This bears heavily on his readings of tragedy and farce in Marx. Gilles Deleuze,
Nietzsche and Philosophy, trans. Hugh Tomlinson (New York: University of Columbia Press,
1983), 18. This is also Beaufret’s approach (see Beaufret, ‘Hölderlin et Sophocle’, 38) and is
supported by more recent commentaries in English, including (but not limited to) that of
Véronique M. Fóti, who writes “whereas Hegel situates tragedy, or tragic conflict and its
resolution, within ethicality (Sittlichkeit, as a surpassed self-actualization of spirit), Hö lderlin
decisively withdraws it from the ethical domain. … The twisting free of tragedy from the grip
of Hegelian ethicality does not mean that the concerns normally classed as ethical are cast
to the winds … but rather that they are resituated against a vaster horizon — the horizon,
perhaps, of what lies ‘beyond good and evil’, of the dispropriative trait in the propriative
event (Ereignis), or of the tragic structure in the instauration and despoilment of hegemonic
principles. […] [F]or Hegel, reconciliation remains the guiding aim of tragedy and defines its
cathartic work, the late Hö lderlin sees ultimate reconciliation — the reconciliation of man
with divinity — not as the ideal of a differential interrelation, but as a hybristic union,
destructive of the singular, and motivated by ‘eccentric enthusiasm’, which is fundamentally
a passion for death. The cathartic work of tragedy therefore becomes for him a work of
dispersive separation”. Epochal Discordance: Hölderlin’s Philosophy of Tragedy (Albany:
State University of New York Press, 2006) 2-3; Henry Somers-Hall, for whom Hegel’s
privileging of ethical action cleaves too closely to ancient conceptions of drama and fails to
see the novelty in Hölderlin’s reading, “Time Out of Joint: Hamlet and the Pure Form of
Time”, Deleuze Studies, Volume 5 (2011), 64-7; and David Farrell Krell, who wrests Hölderlin
from the grip of German Idealism via the notion of intensity in Friedrich Hölderlin, The Death
of Empedocles: A Mourning-Play, especially 304-6.
49. Beaufret, “Hölderlin et Sophocle”, 16.
50. “OEDIPUS: Cast me away this instant
Out of this land, out of the sight of man.
CREON: Be sure it would have been done without delay,
But that I await instruction from the god. […]
OEDIPUS: I have your promise, then?
CREON: What promise?
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OEDIPUS: To send me away.
CREON: God will decide, not I.
OEDIPUS: No god will speak for me.
CREON: Then you will have your wish.
OEDIPUS: And your consent?
CREON: I do not speak beyond my knowledge.”
Sophocles, King Oedipus in The Theban Plays, trans. E. F. Watling
(London: Penguin, 1974), 65; 67-8.
51. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3. Italics added. Beaufret, “Hölderlin
et Sophocle”, 50; 53. Beaufret’s untranslated commentary is drawn upon
repeatedly by Deleuze in his evocations of Hölderlin in Difference and
Repetition, and its influence is heavily apparent in Deleuze’s 1978
lectures on Kant (if not also elsewhere, “On Several Regimes of Signs” in
A Thousand Plateaus being one site that bears the mark of its impact).
Deleuze’s circumlocutionary references to Heidegger’s reading of
Hölderlin can be found in Difference and Repetition, 32 (note 4), and
Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67 and in A Thousand Plateaus, 138.
“A trial for heresy” is taken from “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3. Beaufret explains that a
heretic, for Hölderlin, is one “who aorgically and without mediation attempts to seize the
very essence of the divine”. “Hölderlin et Sophocle”, 50. The ‘aorgic’ is a term of Hölderlin’s
own making, and it is deployed to encipher the effusive, infinite, disordered and discordant
power of Nature in opposition to the structured, finite and organising principles of Art — or
the ‘organic’ — in the context of his theory of tragedy. The aorgic is closely linked to the
dissociative experience of panic by Beaufret and related to the “passion for death” by Fóti
who writes that, “ever hostile to man”, the aorgic “manifests [an] ambiguous aspect:
although it may appear welcoming and life-sustaining, it is an alien and unfathomable power
that — for all the effort to conceal it behind the screens of cultural and intellectual constructs
— fatally attracts sensitive individuals. Somewhat like the Freudian death drive, it impels the
individual toward dissolution or a return to the unformed. Hö l derlin relates the aorgic
element to the unconscious (or, perhaps, nonconscious) dynamics of the psyche, which
means that it now infiltrates the supposed organicism of subjectivity, eroding its boundaries
and affecting it with alterity”. Fóti, Epochal Discordance: Hölderlin’s Theory of Tragedy, 21;
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61; 47. The organic and the aorgic “inter-penetrate most profoundly and touch one another
in their uttermost extremes” in a manner not dissimilar to Nietzsche’s formulation of tragedy
with its opposition of Dionysian and Apollonian impulses — their unification bringing about an
epochal transition that gestures towards a “still inchoate world to come”. Hölderlin, ‘The
Basis of Empedocles” in The Death of Empedocles, 147; Krell, The Death of Empedocles, 170.
In his notes to the Empedocles manuscript, Hölderlin drew a number of diagrams meant to
evoke this unification. Krell reproduces them in his translation of the play, accompanied by
the following caption:
“The one on the left refers to the dispersion from the midpoint undergone by both art (the
organizational) and nature (the more aorgic), a dispersion that occurs in the most radical
enmity … while the one on the right tries to demonstrate some sort of higher unification or
reconciliation of the two”. (Krell, The Death of Empedocles, 257-8.)
Hölderlin thus saw aorgic infinity as the necessary corrective to contemporary Germanic
tendencies, which overemphasised the organic, organisational power of Art and culture,
whilst, for the Greeks who naturally overstated the aorgic at the expense of the organic, the
attraction of dissolution and excess was “especially danger-fraught because it destroys the
protective lucidity and measure that Greece had cultivated, unleashing the full wildness of
the fiery, aorgic element. Since the Hesperian formative drive tends toward this very fire and
sense of destiny, the Greek dys-limitation constitutes for Hesperia a warning example which
holds it back from following the sheer onrush of its own formative drive”. Fóti concludes this
part of her analysis with a comment which presages and (according to Hölderlin’s
identification of the orgic as the primary Germanic drive) inverts certain passages of A
Thousand Plateaus with its warnings against the “fourth danger” of the line of flight — the
pure line of abolition and destruction: “One can reflect here on what it may have meant —
beyond Hö lderlin’s historical horizon — for twentieth-century Germany to maximise the
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tendency of its cultural formative drive in a quest for grandeur and a sense of destiny, while
neglecting the free and creative (rather than obsessive or servile) cultivation of its natal
tendency to lucid ordering. It remains, of course, a consummate historical irony that
Hö lderlin’s thought and art were themselves (without benefit of attentive explication)
annexed and exploited by the Third Reich”. Foti, Epochal Discordance: Hölderlin’s Theory of
Tragedy, 82. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 252-5.
Finally, the aorgic seems to appear as the ‘orgiastic’ in Difference and Repetition,
(Holderlin’s ‘aorgique’, from Beaufret’s French translation, becoming ‘orgique’ in Deleuze’s
original French) and is similarly opposed to the ‘organic’. To wit: “When representation
discovers the infinite within itself, it no longer appears as organic representation but as
orgiastic representation: it discovers within itself the limits of the organised; tumult,
restlessness and passion underneath apparent calm. It rediscovers monstrosity.” And,
significantly, from the conclusion, “The greatest effort of philosophy was perhaps directed at
rendering representation infinite (orgiastic). It is a question of extending representation as
far as the too large and the too small of difference; of adding a hitherto unsuspected
perspective to representation — in other words, inventing theological, scientific and
aesthetic techniques which allow it to integrate the depth of difference in itself; of allowing
representation to conquer the obscure; of allowing it to include the vanishing of difference
which is too small and the dismemberment of difference which is too large; of allowing it to
capture the power of giddiness, intoxication and cruelty, and even of death. In short, it is a
question of causing a little of Dionysus’s blood to flow in the organic veins of Apollo”.
Difference and Repetition, 42; 262.
52. Quoted by Beaufret, “Hölderlin et Sophocle”, 50.
53. Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus, in The Theban Plays, trans. E. F. Watling
(London: Penguin, 1974), 121.
54. “MESSANGER: When we had gone a little distance, we turned and looked
back. Oedipus was nowhere to be seen; but [Theseus] was standing alone
holding his hand before his eyes as if he had seen some terrible sight that
no one could bear to look upon; and soon we saw him salute heaven and
the earth with one short prayer. In what manner Oedipus passed from this
earth, no one can tell.” Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus, 121.
55. Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus, 121.
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56. Deleuze, The Logic of Sense, 174; Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand
Plateaus, 320; Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 90.
57. “Oedipus is almost unique in the Greek world. The whole first part is
imperial, despotic, paranoid, interpretive, divinatory. But the whole
second part is Oedipus’s wandering, his line of flight, the double turning
away of his own face and that of God. Rather than very precise limits to
be crossed in order, or which one does not have the right to cross
(hybris), there is a concealed limit toward which Oedipus is swept. Rather
than interpretive signifying irradiation, there is a subjective linear
proceeding permitting Oedipus to keep a secret, but only as a residue
capable of starting a new linear proceeding. Oedipus, his name is atheos:
he invents something worse than death or exile, he wanders and survives
on a strangely positive line of separation or deterritorialization.” Deleuze
and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 138.
For the ambiguity inherent in the role of the despot, see Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus,
trans. Robert Hurley, Mark Seem and Helen R. Lane (London: Penguin, 2009). Thanks are due
to Edmund Berger for the many conversations we shared concerning this point, particularly
on the relationship between Oedipus and Cain as scapegoat figures in the fifth plateau of A
Thousand Plateaus. This is a reading supported by Ronald Bogue in “The Betrayal of God”,
Deleuze and Religion, ed. Mary Bryden (London: Routledge, 2000). Ed is also responsible for
providing the references making the link between schizophrenia and shamanism in AntiOedipus and R.D. Laing’s work explicit below.
58. “We may suppose that in the most ancient version of the myth of Oedipus
(identified as we have indicated, with a fable about magic) the wound to
the feet, the exposure, the period spent on the margins of the world of
the polis on the wild heights of Mount Cithaeron, the struggle with the
Sphinx — later mitigated by the solution of the riddle — marked the
stages of an initiatory journey to the beyond.” Carlo Ginzberg, Ecstasies:
Deciphering the Witches’ Sabbath, trans. Raymond Rosenthal (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1991), 228.
59. Ginzberg, Ecstasies, 237-8. See also James George Frazer, The Golden
Bough (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 396-404.
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60. Ginzberg, Ecstasies, 232; 247.
61. Ginzberg, Ecstasies, 241-2. See also Tom Moynihan’s excellent comments
on the connection between bilateral symmetry and faciality in evolution,
“The Gastrulation of Geist: or an Extended Meditation upon the WorldHistorical Connection Between Digestion and Simulation”, Vast Abrupt
(2018), https://vastabrupt.com/2018/02/08/gastrulation-of-geist/.
62. Ginzberg, Ecstasies, 226; 239.
63. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 110. The source of the strange
attribution of green and red to the “legs” in the image can most likely be
exhumed from Salomon Maimon’s critique of Kant in the Essay on
Transcendental Philosophy, where the origin of the difference between
perceptions of the colours green and red resurfaces consistently as
problem troubling Kant’s attempts to extract de jure principles for
experience, and is ultimately marshalled in support of an argument that a
philosophy concerned only with the conditions of possible experience
does not go far enough when it comes to questions of transcendental
production. Salomon Maimon, Essay on Transcendental Philosophy, trans.
Nick Midgely, Henry Somers-Hall, Alistair Welchman and Merten Reglitz
(London: Continuum, 2010), see for example, 22; 27-8; 74; 97-8.
64. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, Essays and Letters, §1.
65. Arkady Plotinsky, “The Calculable Law of Tragic Representation and the
Unthinkable” in At the Edges of Thought: Deleuze and Post-Kantian
Philosophy (Edinburgh: Edinbugh University Press, 2015), 130; Kathrin H.
Rosenfield, “Hö lderlin et Sophocle: Rythme et temps tragique dans les
Remarques sur Œdipe et Antigone”, Philosophique, 11: 2008, 20. This and
all following translations from the text are my own.
66. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Antigone”, Essays and Letters, §2.
67. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, Essays and Letters, §1.
68. “[I]f this rhythm of ideas is so constituted that in the rapidity of
enthusiasm the former are more torn along by the later ones, the caesura
(a), or the counter-rhythmical interruption, must lie from the front, so that
the first half is, as it were, shielded from the second; and then, precisely
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because the second half is initially more rapid and seems to weigh more
heavily, as a result of the caesura’s counter-action the balance will tend
to incline from the end (b) towards the beginning (c). If, however, the
rhythm of ideas is so constituted that the following are, rather,
compressed by the initial ones, the caesura (a) will come to lie more
towards the end, because it is the end which must, as it were, be shielded
from the beginning; and then the balance will incline more towards the
end (b), since the first half (c) extends further, but the balance sets in
later.” Hölderlin, “Notes on the Antigone”, Essays and Letters, §1.
Hölderlin’s diagrams are reproduced above.
69. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §1. In contrast, Antigone, singled out
by Hegel as the crucial specimen in the Athenian trilogy and from which
he draws a dialectical, ethical lesson, has a more straightforward
narrative structure, inclining from “the beginning towards the end”, its
caesura arising intelligibly at the end of the play (when Tiresias advises
Creon to allow the interment of Polynices).
Hölderlin, in an earlier essay, relates the tragic heroism of Antigone to the lyric mood in its
privileging of the subjective, cultural and “organic” side of the division between the gods and
man, while that of Oedipus is more thoroughly tragic, privileging the objective, natural and
“aorgic” side of the divide — its law proceeding from the “necessary arbitrariness of Zeus”,
“father of time” divine avatar of the rift in the unity of being. Hölderlin, “Notes on the
Antigone”, §1; Friedrich Hölderlin, “The lyric, in appearance idealic poem …” in Letters and
Essays, trans. Jeremy Adler and Charlie Louth (London: Penguin, 2009), e-book. Antigone is
also classed as the “more Greek” of the two because of the swift incarnation of time as
death, whilst the death of Oedipus is maximally prolonged, and in this, “modern”. “For this is
the tragic thing about us [moderns], that we should quietly leave the world of the living,
packaged in a simple box. Such a destiny is not so imposing, but it is deeper.” Beaufret,
“Hölderlin et Sophocle”, 49; 22. See note 48 on the rejection of Hegelianism in Hölderlin’s
readings.
70. And Deleuze will write in “The Philosophy of Crime Novels” that “[w]hile
Oedipus is the only Greek tragedy that already has this detective
structure, we should marvel that Sophocles’s Oedipus is a detective, and
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not that the detective novel has remained Oedipal”. In Desert Islands and
Other Texts, 1953-1974, ed. David Lapoujade, trans. Michael Taormina,
(Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2004), 82.
71. Tiresias to Oedipus, in Sophocles, Oedipus the King, 36; 38.
72. Friedrich Hölderlin, Samtliche Werke und Briefe, ed. Jochen Schmidt
(Frankfurt, Deutscher Klassiker Verlag, 1994) vol.2, 561. Quoted by
Rosenfield in “Hö lderlin et Sophocle: Rythme et temps tragique dans les
Remarques sur Œdipe et Antigone”, fn8.
73. The caesura “thus abolishes the distinctions and the understanding
ensured by succession (in human or physical time), insofar as the rhythm
makes appear a more all-embracing connection — and a timelessness,
not subject to the segmentation of the successive alternations. The
rhythm makes one see-feel-guess the unfathomable dimension that
ensures the connection of everything. Thus, paradoxically, the tragedy
presents, as equivalent and concomitant, the movements of two forms of
language: that of the arguments situated in the temporal succession and
the pure language of the seer (the counter-rhythmic movement). What is
accessible to knowledge and what is removed from human mastery are
presented simultaneously”. Rosenfield, “Hö lderlin et Sophocle: Rythme et
temps tragique dans les Remarques sur Œdipe et Antigone”, 82.
74. Hölderlin, Samtliche Werke und Briefe, vol.2, 561; Quoted in Rosenfield,
“Hö lderlin et Sophocle: Rythme et temps tragique dans les Remarques sur
Œdipe et Antigone“, 92, and Krell, The Death of Empedocles, 299-300.
75. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3; Deleuze, “Untitled lecture
21/3/1978”,
Les
cours
de
Gilles
Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67; Hölderlin, “Notes on the
Oedipus”, §1. My italics.
76. Ccru, “Glossary”, Ccru: Writings 1997-2003 (Falmouth, Urbanomic, 2017),
(((:):))(:)(:)/369. See also, “The Templeton Episode” which contains an
extended meditation on auto-productive Kantianism and cyclical time
control, (::::)-(:)(:)(:):/53-4. The occulted relationship of Professor
Randolph Edmund Templeton (“the model for H.P. Lovecraft’s Randolph
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Carter”) to the dissolution mystery outlined here provides vital clues that
will be returned to. Ccru, Abstract Culture: Digital Hyperstition, 55.
77. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, §3.
78. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 58. Patton’s ‘categorical abduction’
for ‘dé t ournement caté g orique’ has been changed to ‘categorical
reversal’ for the sake of maintaining consistency across English
translations of Deleuze.
79. Deleuze, “On Four Poetic Formulas That Might Summarise the Kantian
Philosophy”, 31.
80. Arthur Rimbaud, “Letter to Georges Izambard, 13 May 1871” in Selected
Poems and Letters, trans. Jeremy Harding and John Sturrock (London:
Penguin, 2004), 236. Translation modified.
81. Kant’s indices for these two tendencies, which he indirectly names
‘dogmatic rationalism’ and ‘sceptical empiricism’, in pre-critical
philosophy are Leibniz and Hume. “We have here presented to us a new
phenomenon of human reason — an entirely natural antithetic, in which
there is no need of making subtle enquiries or of laying snares for the
unwary, but into which reason of itself quite unavoidably falls. It certainly
guards reason from the slumber of fictitious conviction such as is
generated by a purely one-sided illusion, but at the same time subjects it
to the temptation either of abandoning itself to a sceptical despair, or of
assuming an obstinate attitude, dogmatically committing itself to certain
assertions, and refusing to grant a fair hearing to the arguments for the
counter-position. Either attitude is the death of sound philosophy,
although the former might perhaps be entitled the euthanasia of pure
reason.” Immanuel Kant, The Critique of Pure Reason, trans, Kemp Smith
(London: Macmillan, 1929), 385 A407/B433. For Deleuze’s exposition of a
priori synthesis via the example of the straight line see “Synthèse et
temps
14/3/1978”,
Les
cours
de
Gilles
Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66.
82. In his lectures, Deleuze’s preliminary description of the First Critique
reads as if it were a passage taken directly from “The Mountains of
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Madness”, and there is good reason to suppose this parallel with
Lovecraft is deliberate: “It’s an excessive atmosphere, but if one holds up
… all this Northern fog which lands on top of us starts to dissipate, and
underneath there is an amazing architecture … in this fog there functions
a sort of thinking machine, a creation of concepts that is absolutely
terrifying.” Deleuze, “Synthèse et temps 14/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles
Deleuze, https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66.
Compare Dyer and Lake’s discovery of the alien city beneath the shifting Antarctic mists in
H.P. Lovecraft, “At the Mountains of Madness”, Tales, ed. Peter Straub (New York: Library of
America, 2005) 508; 523: “I had seen dozens of polar mirages during the preceding weeks,
some of them quite as uncanny and fantastically vivid as the present sample; but this one
had a wholly novel and obscure quality of menacing symbolism, and I shuddered as the
seething labyrinth of fabulous walls and towers and minarets loomed out of the troubled icevapours above our heads. The effect was of a Cyclopean city of no architecture known to
man or to human imagination, with vast aggregations of night-black masonry embodying
monstrous perversions of geometrical laws and attaining the most grotesque extremes of
sinister bizarrerie. […] We had previously dismissed, so far as serious thought was
concerned, any theory that the cubes and ramparts of the mountainsides were other than
natural in origin. How could they be otherwise? Yet now the sway of reason seemed
irrefutably shaken, for this Cyclopean maze of squared, curved, and angled blocks had
features which cut off all comfortable refuge. It was, very clearly, the blasphemous city of the
mirage in stark, objective, and ineluctable reality. That damnable portent had had a material
basis after all — there had been some horizontal stratum of ice-dust in the upper air, and this
shocking stone survival had projected its image across the mountains according to the
simple laws of reflection. Of course the phantom had been twisted and exaggerated, and had
contained things which the real source did not contain; yet now, as we saw that real source,
we thought it even more hideous and menacing than its distant image.”
83. Hölderlin, “Notes on the Oedipus”, Essays and Letters, §3; Immanuel Kant,
Critique of Pure Reason, trans. and ed. Paul Guyer and Allen W. Wood
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 159 A25/B39
84. Both forms can equally be deployed in a strictly ideal capacity outside of
empirical determination, i.e. “when they are considered in themselves
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through reason” but this is illegitimate from the point of view of both
knowledge and experience. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 160 A28/B44.
85. “Time is the a priori formal condition of all appearances in general. Space,
as the pure form of all outer intuitions, is limited as an a priori condition
merely to outer intuitions. But since, on the contrary, all representations,
whether or not they have outer things as their object, nevertheless as
determinations of the mind themselves belong to the inner state, while
this inner state belongs under the formal condition of inner intuition, and
thus of time, so time is an a priori of all appearance in general … all
objects of the senses, are in time, and necessarily stand in relations of
time.” Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 163-164 A34/B50-51.
86. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 163 A33/B50. Italics added.
87. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 300 A183/B226.
88. See note 4 regarding the shift from ‘invisible’ to ‘indivisible’ in Deleuze’s
citations of Borges’ text.
89. Deleuze, “On Four Poetic Formulas that Might Summarise the Kantian
Philosophy”, 28. Kant provides the counter-argument and dismisses it in
the “Elucidation” that follows his exposition of the Transcendental
Aesthetic, concluding, alongside an explicit refusal of Leibniz’s purely
intellectual forms, “that the transcendental aesthetic cannot contain more
than these two elements, namely space and time, is clear from the fact
that all other concepts belonging to sensibility, even that of motion, which
unites both elements, presuppose something empirical. For this
presupposes the perception of something moveable. In space, considered
in itself there is nothing moveable; hence the moveable must be
something that is found in space only through experience, thus an
empirical datum. In the same way the transcendental aesthetic cannot
count the concept of alteration among its a priori data; for time itself does
not alter, but only something that is within time”. Kant, Critique of Pure
Reason, 165-7 A36-41/B53-58.
90. This is only a problem for the explication of space once it has passed
through the syntheses of the imagination and been subjected to the
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categories of the understanding in the schematism. Hence Kant’s careful
distinction of forms of intuition (space and time as they are given in
themselves) from formal intuition (space and time as magnitudes).
Without schematisation, which applies its concepts synthetically as rules
of construction, mathematics is simply a logical science, operating in a
realm isolated from experience. “Thus in the concept of a figure that is
enclosed between two straight lines there is no contradiction … rather the
impossibility rests not on the concept in itself, but on its construction in
space, i.e., on the conditions of space and its determinations.” Kant,
Critique of Pure Reason, 323 A220-21/B268.
91. “We can accordingly speak of space, extended beings, and so on, only
from a human standpoint. If we depart from the subjective condition
under which alone we can acquire outer intuition, namely that through
which we may be affected by objects, then the representation of space
signifies nothing at all.” And “[t]ime is therefore merely a subjective
condition of our (human) intuition (which is always sensible, i.e. insofar as
we are affected by objects), and in itself, outside the subject, is nothing”.
Furthermore, “we cannot judge at all whether the intuitions of other
thinking beings are bound to the same conditions that limit our intuition
and that are universally valid for us”. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason,
159-160 A26-7/B42-3; 164 A35/B51; 160 A27/B43.
92. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 289 A165/B206. “[T]ranscendental
propositions can never be given through construction of concepts, but
only in accordance with a priori concepts. They contain merely the rule in
accordance with which a certain synthetic unity of that which cannot be
intuitively represented a priori (of perceptions) should be sought
empirically.” Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 634 A721/B749.
93. Immanuel Kant, “Concerning the Ultimate Foundation for the
Differentiation of Regions in Space’”in Selected Pre-Critical Writings,
trans. and ed. G. B. Kerferd and D. E. Walford (Manchester: Manchester
University Press, 1968); Immanuel Kant, Prolegomena to Any Future
Metaphysics, trans. Gary Carl Hatfield (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1997). Both arguments are constructed to refute Leibniz, although
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in fact contain conflicting arguments (something we will revisit later).
Deleuze draws out the key point: “Kant will say that this [nonsuperimposibility] is what finitude is.” Deleuze, “Synthèse et temps
14/3/1978”,
Les
cours
de
Gilles
Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66.
94. Within Kant’s model of time as it is expounded in the First Critique, even
time travel would still be perceived by its subject as a succession, moving
consistently from T1 to T2 to T3, etc. If the time traveller began her
journey at point B and travelled backwards in history to point A, prior to B,
her temporal experience would still giver her T1 at B, T2 at A, and so on.
95. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 634 A721/B749; 235, A112. “From the fact
that the existence of outer objects is required for the possibility of a
determinate consciousness of our self it does not follow that every
intuitive representation of outer things includes at the same time their
existence, for that may well be the mere effect of the imagination (in
dreams as well as in delusions); but this is possible merely through the
reproduction of previous outer perceptions, which, as has been shown,
are possible only through the actuality of outer objects”. Kant, Critique of
Pure Reason 328 B278. The same status applies to any epistemological
traction one would hope to gain on the pure forms of space and time
themselves. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 382 A291/B347.
96. These four permutations together make up Kant’s divisions of nothing,
each division corresponding to one of the four sets of categories,
respectively (as listed above): ens imaginarium, ens rationis (the
noumena), nihil privativum (things-in-themselves) and nihil negativum.
Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 383 A292/B348.
97. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 241, A125.
98. When Deleuze says of Oedipus that Tiresias’ prophecy “constitute[s] the
pure instant, the pure present from which a past and a future will be
produced on a straight line, which is to say a before and after which no
longer rhyme”, it is this ‘pure present’ — the conditioning of the synthesis
of reproduction in the imagination that supports and is grounded by the
transcendental unity of apperception, the subjective form of auto-
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affection being premised on the latter, which affects its empirical
counterpart across the form of time. With the caesura, the pure form of
time and the asymmetrical auto-affection of the subject flash, for the first
time, into view, illuminating all the parts of time at once: process and
product. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles
Deleuze, https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67.
99. Alfredo Ferrarin, in his “Construction and Mathematical Schematism: Kant
on the Exhibition of a Concept in Intuition” restates Kant’s argument
especially cogently with regards to temporality: “Time is given, as the
indeterminate form of our intuition (as the possibility of a serial order):
but the order of the succession (its sense) is the result of our positing a
relation among representations. This relation, the order thus produced, is
itself the unity of a representation of a quantum, the whole that combines
the parts given in the succession. Inner sense per se does not contain any
determinate (formal) intuition. It is the apperceptive activity of the
understanding … that connects intuitions in time and produces the
manifold of time as the representation of before and after. All our
representations of objects in sensible intuition are subject to the order of
inner sense [the pure form of time] determined by our spontaneity [the
understanding].” Kant-Studien (January, 1995) 86:2, 143.
100. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 229-230 A101. Deleuze and Guattari also
cite Kant’s cinnabar passage in the conclusion to What is Philosophy? to
invoke the image of thought, referring to the reproductive synthesis of the
imagination as an “objective antichaos”, by which we “make an opinion
for ourselves, like a sort of ‘umbrella’” against the war below. Deleuze
and Guattari, What is Philosophy?, trans. Graham Burchell and Hugh
Tomlinson (London: Verso, 1994), 202.
101. Ferrarin’s analysis of the troubled distinction between the reproductive
imagination (which shepherds empirical associations) and the productive
imagination (which apprehends and schematises) is instructive here.
Despite conflicting descriptions in the First Critique, Ferrarin concludes
that the syntheses of apprehension and reproduction, and their
application in schematisation, are functions of the productive imagination.
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Alfredo Ferrarin, “Construction and Mathematical Schematism: Kant on
the Exhibition of a Concept in Intuition”, Kant-Studien (January, 1995)
86:2, 151-3.
102. Gilles Deleuze, “Untitled Lecture 04/04/1978”, trans. Melissa McMahon,
Les cours de Gilles Deleuze, https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/65.
103. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 268 B171/A132.
104. “Arising and perishing are not alterations of that which arises or perishes.
Alteration is a way of existing that succeeds another way of existing of
the very same object. Hence everything that is altered is lasting, and only
its state changes. Thus since this change concerns only the
determinations that can cease or begin, we can say, in an expression that
seems somewhat paradoxical, that only what persists (the substance) is
altered, while that which is changeable does not suffer any alteration but
rather a change, since some determinations cease and others begin. […]
Substances (in appearance) are the substrata of all time-determinations.
The arising of some and the perishing of others would itself remove the
sole condition of the empirical unity of time, and the appearances would
then be related in two different times, in which existence flowed side by
side, which is absurd. For there is only one time, in which all different
times must not be placed simultaneously but only one after another.”
Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 303 A187-9/B230-2.
105. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 256 A145/B185-5.
106. Here Kant again gives the example of the line: “I cannot represent to
myself any line, no matter how small it may be, without drawing it in
thought, i.e., successively generating all its parts from one point, and
thereby first sketching this intuition. It is exactly the same with even the
smallest time. I think therein only the successive progress from one
moment to another, where through all parts of time and their addition a
determinate magnitude of time is finally generated.” Kant, Critique of
Pure Reason, 286 A162/B202; 290 A166/B207.
107. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 287 (A162;B203).
108. Thus, “space consists only of spaces; time of times”. Kant, Critique of
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Pure Reason, 292 A169/B211.
109. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 288 A163/B204.
110. Immanuel Kant, Opus Postumum, trans. Eckart Förster and Michael Rosen,
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 141.
111. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 291 A168/B210.
112. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 295 A175/B217; 292 A169/B211; 291
A167/B209.
113. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67.
114. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 290 A166/B208.
115. Intuition = 0 corresponds to nihil privativum, the second division of
nothing relative to the categories of quality. See note 96. Kant, Critique of
Pure Reason, 290 A166/B208; 383 A292/B348.
116. Nick Land, The Thirst for Annihilation (London: Routledge, 1992), 117.
117. Deleuze, Kant’s Critical Philosophy, 12.
118. Reason produces its Ideas by totalising the categories of relation provided
by the understanding. From substance it conceives the absolute subject
(Soul); from causality, the completed series (World); and from community,
the whole of reality (God). Reason “reserves for itself only the absolute
totality in the use of concepts, and seeks to carry the synthetic unity,
which is thought in the categories, all the way to the absolutely
unconditioned”. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 401-2 A326/B383. Kant
refers to the Ideas of reason as ‘problems’ consistently throughout the
text. See, for example, 605 A669/B697.
119. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 401 A326/B383.
120. Deleuze, Kant’s Critical Philosophy, 18.
121. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 36.
122. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 605 A669/B697.
123. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 133.
124. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 134.
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125. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 129-167.
126. “Jurists, when they speak of entitlements and claims, distinguish in a legal
matter between questions about what is lawful (quid juris) and that which
concerns the fact (quid facti), and since they demand proof of both, the
call the first, that which is to establish the entitlement or the legal claim,
the deduction.” Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 219 A84/B116.
127. Deleuze and Guattari, What is Philosophy?, 52. See, note 27.
128. Plato, “Timaeus”, 96/91a.
129. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 230.
130. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 136.
131. Deleuze and Guattari, What is Philosophy?, 54.
132. The most famous invocation of this image being the oft-repeated maxim,
“Thoughts without content are empty, intuitions without concepts are
blind”. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 193-4 A51/B75. Manus, an Egyptian
hierophant, and the ‘Old Man’ of Hölderlin’s third and final draft of The
Death of Empedocles, who says to Empedocles “Oh, tell us who you are!
and who am I? … are you quite sure of what you see?” (ll. 391, 483) too,
is blind, and according to Krell, acts both as Empedocles’ double and a
precursor of Tiresias as Hölderlin will figure him in his notes on the
Sophocles translations. Hölderlin, The Death of Empedocles, 183; 187.
133. Deleuze, “Synthèse et temps 14/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66. Deleuze, following Nietzsche, will
make much of time no longer abiding by the laws of nature — a point
which will be extremely important for the role of thermodynamics in his
writing and which we shall return to, in time. “While the laws of nature
govern the surface of the world, the eternal return ceaselessly rumbles in
this other dimension of the transcendental or the volcanic spatium.”
Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 241.
134. Kant refers to this effect as the “paradox … of inner sense”: “[N]amely,
how this presents even ourselves to consciousness only as we appear to
ourselves, not as we are in ourselves, since we intuit ourselves only as we
are internally affected, which seems to be contradictory, since we would
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have to relate to ourselves passively.” Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 257
B152-3.
135. “In all subsumptions of an object under a concept the representation of
the former must be homogenous with the latter. [T]he pure concepts of
the understanding, however, in comparison with empirical (indeed in
general sensible) intuitions, are entirely un-homogenous, and can never
be encountered in any intuition. Now how is the subsumption of the latter
under the former, thus the application of the category to appearances
possible, since no one would say that the category, e.g. causality, could
be so intuited through the senses and is contained in the appearance? [I]t
is clear that there must be a third thing, which must stand in homogeneity
with the category on the one hand and the appearance on the other, and
makes possible the application of the former to the latter. [A]
transcendental time-determination is homogenous with the category
(which constitutes its unity) insofar as it is universal and rests on a rule a
priori. But it is on the other hand homogenous with the appearance
insofar as time is contained in every empirical representation of the
manifold. Hence an application of the category to appearances becomes
possible by means of the transcendental time-determination which, as the
schema of the concept of the understanding, mediates the subsumption
of the latter under the former.” Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 271-2
A137-9/B176-8.
136. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 288 A163/B204. It is perhaps unnecessary
to add that counting inevitably takes on a wholly different significance in
the Kantian schema of the straight labyrinth. For Kant, counting is
premised on ordinality, yet retains a fidelity to cardinality insofar as the
reproductive synthesis cardinalises the succession of temporal
apprehension. The “numerical unity” leant to the synthesis of
apprehension by the transcendental unity of apperception grounds the
possibility of number itself, which Kant defines as “a representation that
summarises the successive addition of one (homogenous) unit to
another” and “nothing other than the unity of the synthesis of the
manifold of a homogenous intuition in general”, because “I generate time
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itself in the apprehension of the intuition” (274 A142-3/B182). The
synthesis of reproduction, in counting the manifold, produces time as
number. It gives us a definition from which we extrapolate the natural
numbers, and therefore, all higher mathematics. This is what underlies
Kant’s use of arithmetic and his famous example of “5 + 7 = 12” to
illustrate a priori synthetic judgement. (144 B15-16). Importantly, the
synthetic genesis of number necessarily starts from 1 rather than 0, which
is not a magnitude and therefore falls under the class of nihil privativum.
(See note 96.) In the original apprehensive synthesis of the manifold
under the form of time, we generate an intuition which corresponds to 1,
and take from this synthesis the unit of measure or magnitude for all
following synthetic operations. The “successive addition” of units
presupposes this given unit and in turn, the unity of consciousness that
acts on its synthesis. Ferrarin likens the synthesis of succession to the
workings of “a metronome” which “makes time assume the shape that it
wants” — “it determines its length, its cadence.” And, like a metronome,
it does so by “disciplining a given one-dimensional flux” — time as a
homogenous continuum. This, Ferrarin argues, reveals the extent to
which Kant is unable to truly think plurality. Alfredo Ferrarin,
“Construction and Mathematical Schematism: Kant on the Exhibition of a
Concept in Intuition”, 166.
If number belongs to mental synthesis, one cannot help but imagine a foreign form of
intuition and an attendant, alien, construction of number. A thought experiment that
becomes infinitely more interesting when one applies it to the problem of extra-terrestrial
communication.
137. See Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 85-6 and Deleuze, “Untitled
lecture
28/3/1978”,
Les
cours
de
Gilles
Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/68.
138. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 228 A97.
139. In contrast to space (outer sense), time is the form under which autoaffection necessarily takes place.
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140. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 28/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/68.
141. Deleuze, “Untitled lecture 21/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/67.
142. Karl Marx, Capital Volume I (London: Penguin, 1990), 277. It is the
opening of Book One, Part Three, “The Production of Absolute SurplusValue” (where the reader is suddenly ushered behind the curtain of
commodity fetishism and onto the factory floor) that dramatises this
transition in Capital Volume I: “The consumption of labour-power is
completed, as in the case of every other commodity, outside the market
or the sphere or circulation. Let us therefore, in company with the owner
of money and the owner of labour-power, leave this noisy sphere, where
everything takes place in the surface and in full view of everyone, and
follow them into the hidden abode of production, on whose threshold
hangs the notice ‘No admittance except on business’. Here we shall see,
not only how capital produces, but how capital is itself produced. The
secret of profit-making must at last be laid bare.” Marx, Capital Volume I,
279-80. Italics added.
143. Marx, Capital Volume I, 127.
144. Marx, Capital Volume I, 127.
145. Marx, Capital Volume I, 128; 129.
146. Marx differs from Kant insofar as capital, as a critical process, is
materialised, which leads him to the following conclusion in Capital
Volume III: “Capital comes more and more to the fore as a social power,
whose agent is the capitalist. This social power no longer stands in any
possible relation to that which the labour of a single individual can create.
It becomes an alienated, independent, social power, which stands
opposed to society as an object, and as an object that is the capitalist’s
source of power.” Karl Marx, Capital Volume III, Chapter 15, “Exposition of
the
Internal
Contradictions
of
the
Law”,
Marxists.org,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1894-c3/ch15.htm.
147. Hölderlin, ‘Notes on the Oedipus’, §3.
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148. “The abstract machine in itself is destratified, deterritorialized; it has no
form of its own (much less substance) and makes no distinction within
itself between content and expression, even though outside itself it
presides over that distinction and distributes it in strata, domains, and
territories. An abstract machine in itself is not physical or corporeal, any
more than it is semiotic; it is diagrammatic (it knows nothing of the
distinction between the artificial and the natural either). It operates by
matter, not by substance; by junction, not by form. Substances and forms
are of expression ‘or’ of content. But functions are not yet ‘semiotically’
formed, and matters are not yet “physically” formed. The abstract
machine is pure Matter-Function-a diagram independent of the forms and
substances, expressions and contents it will distribute.” Deleuze and
Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 156.
149. Deleuze and Guattari, What is Philosophy?, 57.
150. “When Freud comes up and says that there are certain phenomena which
appear in the field of consciousness, what do these phenomena refer to,
Freud is Kantian.” Deleuze, “Synthèse et temps 14/3/1978”, Les cours de
Gilles Deleuze, https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66. This is explicitly
confirmable in Freud’s own writings, for example: “The psychoanalytic
assumption of unconscious mental activity appears to us as an extension
of the corrections undertaken by Kant.” Sigmund Freud, “The
Unconscious” in The Freud Reader. ed. Peter Gay (New York: WW Norton
& Company, 1989), 173.
151. Deleuze, “Synthèse et temps 14/3/1978”, Les cours de Gilles Deleuze,
https://www.webdeleuze.com/textes/66.
152. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 86.
153. Greenspan, Capitalism’s Transcendental Time Machine, 21.
154. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, 58. “[Oedipus’] destiny was a forced
correspondence with the categorical reversal, being called forth, says
Hölderlin, in a climate of plague, of confusion of mind, of universally
excited prophetism, in the middle of a dead time, to live the reciprocal
communication of the divine and the human in the all-forgetting figure of
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infidelity as it opens a panic desert of time and space, where hitherto
Homeric time reigned, which is to say a time ‘where the heavens and the
earth, walked and breathed together in the people of the gods’.”
Beaufret, “Hölderlin et Sophocle”, 29-30.
155. Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 84. Laing quotes Bateson — “It would
appear that once precipitated into psychosis the patient has a course to
run. He is, as it were, embarked upon a voyage of discovery which is only
completed by his return to the normal world, to which he comes back with
insights different from those of the inhabitants who never embarked on
such a voyage. Once begun, a schizophrenic episode would appear to
have as definite a course as an initiation ceremony — a death and rebirth
— into which the novice may have been precipitated by his family life or
by adventitious circumstances, but which in its course is largely steered
by endogenous process” — and proposes a therapy for schizophrenia that
enables patients to “find their way further into inner space and time, and
back again”. Laing, following Bateson, labels this process an “initiation”
which “[p]sychiatrically … would appear as ex-patients helping future
patients to go mad.” His sketch of the steps such a process would involve
reads as a synopsis of the Oedipus plays, including later, a confrontation
with the Sphinx: “(i) a voyage from outer to inner,
(ii) from life to a kind of death,
(iii) from going forward to a going back,
(iv) from temporal movement to temporal standstill,
(v) from mundane time to aeonic time,
(vi) from the ego to the self,
(vii) from being outside (post-birth) back into the womb of all things (prebirth),
and then subsequently a return voyage from
(1) inner to outer,
(2) from death to life,
(3) from the movement back to a movement once more forward,
(4) from immortality back to mortality,
(5) from eternity back to time,
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(6) from self to a new ego,
(7) from a cosmic foetalisation to an existential rebirth.”
R. D. Laing, The Politics of Experience and The Bird of Paradise (London:
Penguin, 1970), 97; 106; 111.
156. Luce Irigaray, “Paradox A Priori” in Speculum of the Other Woman, trans.
Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1985), 211.
157. Nick Land, “Art as Insurrection” in Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings
1987-2007 (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2012), 147.
158. Irigaray, “Paradox A Priori”, 213.
159. Jon Roffe, Muttering for the Sake of Stars (Melbourne: Surpllus, 2012), 22.
160. Land, The Thirst for Annihilation, 2; Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand
Plateaus, 81.
161. Land, The Thirst for Annihilation, 203-4. Italics added.
162. Nick Land, “Shamanic Nietzsche” in Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings
1987-2007 (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2012), 227.
163. Lovecraft, “Through the Gates of the Silver Key”, The Dreams in the Witch
House and Other Weird Stories (London: Penguin, 2004), 268. See Part 0.
164. “In the beginning, under the administration of the dogmatists,
[metaphysics’] rule was despotic. Yet because her legislation still retained
traces on ancient barbarism, this rule gradually degenerated through
internal wars into complete anarchy; and the sceptics, a kind of nomads
who abhor all permanent cultivation of the soil, shattered civil unity from
time to time. But since there were fortunately only a few of them, they
could not prevent the dogmatists from continually attempting to rebuild,
thought never according to a plan unanimously accepted among
themselves.” Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, 99-100 Aix; “As for the
sophists, I believe them to be true experts at making all kinds of
wonderful speeches on other subjects, but I’m afraid that, perhaps
because they roam from city to city without having made homes for
themselves in one particular place, they miss the mark when it comes to
describing the many different kinds of things that men who are both
philosophers and statesmen achieve in the real world in warfare and on
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the battlefield, and put into words in their negotiations with other
individuals.” Plato, “Timaeus”, 6/19e. Italics added.
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