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6. Ethics and the World without Others

In Nathan J. Jun & Daniel Warren Smith (eds.), Deleuze and Ethics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 108-122 (2011)

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  1. Positively dead : an examination of the concept of the death drive in Gilles Deleuze’s difference and repetition.Shaun Stevenson - 2021 - Dissertation, University of Warwick
    Death is often characterised within naturalism as being ‘nothing to us’ and we are urged to think of ‘nothing less than of death’. In his lectures on Spinoza, Deleuze says ‘thinking of death is the most base thing’. Thinkers such as Lucretius, Nietzsche and Spinoza, have clear perspectives on the need to avoid thinking about death. They share in the belief that meditation on death only leads to fear and sadness. These affirmationists, that is, philosophers whose writings aim at affirming (...)
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  • The Intensive Other: Deleuze and Levinas on the Ethical Status of the Other.David Ventura - 2020 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 58 (2):327-350.
    This paper develops a response to the ethical conception of the human Other formulated by Gilles Deleuze in his review of Michel Tournier’s 1967 novel Friday. The central contention here is that although Deleuze develops a compelling notion of intensive ethics in response to Tournier’s novel, that ethics also remains deeply problematic in refusing to ascribe a positive role to the human Other. My wager is that some of these problems can be brought to light by placing Deleuze’s philosophy in (...)
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