英文摘要 |
The present paper seeks to discuss how Deleuze conceptualizes the difference as the veritable beginning of philosophy, and on the other hand, how difference serves as an “already repetition." The philosophical genesis remains situated and saturated in a permanent and singular intensity: difference of being already repetition implicates a veritable beginning, but the philosophy ends in the repetition of the beginning. Intertwined between the veritable beginning and already repetition, philosophy is thus brought to its emergence, and then placed in its series of (re)commencement. This explains why the concept of difference and repetition plays a pivotal role in examining the thought of Deleuze. As such, the paper attempts to demonstrate how Deleuze’s philosophy is dedicated to the stake of genesis, the stake stemming from the profusion of genealogical inheritance, such as the philosophical thread sparked from Spinoza to Foucault through Leibniz. Also, the genealogical inheritance of genesis opens Deleuze’s thought onto the problematic of philosophy and aesthetics such as the genres of literature, painting and cinema. |