If youβre interested in reading it, the easiest option right now is to request a copy from your library.
04.02.2026 16:45 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0@grantmaxwell.bsky.social
Philosopher | The Philosophy of Isabelle Stengers (EUP) | Integration and Difference (Routledge 2022) | Deleuze and Polytheism (Bloomsbury, forthcoming) grantmaxwellphilosophy.com
If youβre interested in reading it, the easiest option right now is to request a copy from your library.
04.02.2026 16:45 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Thank you!
01.02.2026 15:41 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Iβm happy to share that my new book, The Philosophy of Isabelle Stengers, is out today. A paperback edition will follow.
edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-the-phi...
Isabelle Stengersβ Hypnosis Between Science and Magic is a short text that condenses and prolongs her work with Chertok in A Critique of Psychoanalytic Reason and presages her collaboration with Pignarre in Capitalist Sorcery. Itβs an excellent entry point into her work.
14.12.2025 14:39 β π 3 π 2 π¬ 0 π 0My book The Philosophy of Isabelle Stengers is now available for pre-order from @EdinburghUP.
30% off with code NEW30.
(This edition is priced for libraries and institutions. A more accessible paperback will follow.)
edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-the-phi...
βMy favorite text in all of psychoanalysis is a comment of Jungβs.β Deleuze, 1986 seminar
18.07.2025 11:36 β π 5 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0However, despite his paradoxical contradictions, I think that thereβs far more continuity than discontinuity in his work, though itβs the continuity of a constantly transforming mode of thought rather than any particular set of fixed propositions that one might attack or defend.
14.07.2025 18:12 β π 4 π 2 π¬ 0 π 0With relatively few exceptions, you can find something in his texts that seems to at least partially contradict a statement he makes elsewhere. He refuses to be pinned down to static, isolated positions. Heβs far more interested in what a concept renders thought capable of.
14.07.2025 18:12 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0It seems to me that attempting to express Deleuzeβs βviewβ on any particular subject misses the point. He doesnβt generally hold views on subjects. Rather, he creates concepts that allow novel modes of thought and becoming.
14.07.2025 18:12 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0βWhat poisons life is hatred, including the hatred that is turned back against oneself in the form of guilt.β Deleuze
09.07.2025 19:45 β π 6 π 1 π¬ 0 π 1I just finished writing about A Thousand Plateaus for Deleuze and Polytheism. Itβs the longest chapter so far, exploring the implications of the concept of βcosmic forcesβ in light of the equation of forces and gods in Nietzsche and Philosophy, as well as Varuna-Mitra-Indra, etc.
03.07.2025 15:46 β π 7 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I agree!
03.07.2025 13:17 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I love it that Deleuze, in a 1981 seminar, describes philosophers who mediate transitions between historical eras as βhinge-guys,β like Nicholas of Cusa at the border between medieval and modern. Deleuze and Guattari are hinge-guys between the modern and βa people to come.β
03.07.2025 12:22 β π 9 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0βLogic is always defeated by itself, that is to say, by the insignificance of the cases on which it thrives.β Deleuze and Guattari
24.06.2025 15:55 β π 7 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0Whatβs the most enjoyable book youβve read about Deleuze?
22.06.2025 22:57 β π 3 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0Whatβs the most enjoyable book youβve read by Deleuze?
22.06.2025 20:53 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0Yes, I think he similarly reads Bergson more carefully and creatively than the conventional, reductive image of him as a vitalist who simply privileged intuition over intellect. CE is my favorite, but Deleuze especially loved Matter and Memory. The Creative Mind is probably my second favorite.
27.04.2025 20:49 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Are you trying to be annoying, or does it just come naturally?
27.04.2025 20:48 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Not exactly, no.
27.04.2025 20:05 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0To my mind, a primary task of all great philosophers, including the Stoics, Spinoza, Nietzsche, and Deleuze, is to create novel concepts in the interstices of conventional conceptions, rendering those conceptions more subtle and profound by means of problematization and paradox.
27.04.2025 17:35 β π 6 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Itβs funny that Deleuzeβs readings of the Stoics, Spinoza, and Nietzsche are often considered βradicalβ when, it seems to me, heβs actually just reading what they wrote in all its paradoxical complexity rather than reducing them to doctrines conforming to conventional categories.
27.04.2025 17:35 β π 10 π 1 π¬ 2 π 0Ok, maybe one more.
27.04.2025 17:34 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Of course you can have some good interactions here, but thereβs several orders of magnitude more interaction going on for me over there. I gave this place a solid chance, but itβs just not worth my time right now, though maybe that will change at some point. Bon chance!
27.04.2025 00:44 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I honestly just get a lot more engagement over there.
26.04.2025 22:00 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0I keep forgetting to repost the things I post on Twitter over here. Iβll be over there if you need me.
26.04.2025 18:25 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0The key to this reading, rendering the disparate systems of these texts pervasively resonant, is that the pure Aionic surface of LoS paradoxically corresponds, by means of an inversion envisageable as a Mobius strip or mirror, to the intensive depths of the eternal return in DR.
17.04.2025 17:04 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Iβm writing about The Logic of Sense for my next book, Deleuze and Polytheism, and Iβm realizing that, whereas I had thought that there was an insuperable disjunction between this text and Difference and Repetition, theyβre actually profoundly coherent.
17.04.2025 17:04 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0βWhatever totalizations knowledge may perform, they remain asymptotic to the virtual totality of langue or language.β Deleuze
14.04.2025 16:33 β π 4 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0Schelling on Spinoza: βHe alone of all modern thinkers had a feeling for the primordial age we are trying to understand in this book.β (The Ages of the World)
13.04.2025 15:17 β π 7 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0