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Index
Title Page
Copyright Page
List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: The Problem of Representation
Chapter One. Deleuze and Transcendental Empiricism
Introduction
Kant and the Critique of Pure Reason
Sartre and The Transcendence of the Ego
Deleuze and The Logic of Sense
Conclusion
Chapter Two. Difference and Identity
Introduction
Aristotle
The Genus and Equivocity in Aristotle
Change and the Individual
Aquinas
Symbolic Logic
Preliminary Conclusions
Hegel and Aristotle
Zeno
Conclusion
Part Two: Responses to Representation
Chapter Three. Bergsonism
Introduction
Bergson's Account of Kant and Classical Logic
Bergson's Method of Intuition
Bergson and the Two Kinds of Multiplicity
Conclusion
Chapter Four. The Virtual and the Actual
Introduction
The Two Multiplicities
Depth in Deleuze and Merleau-Ponty
Deleuze and the Structure of the Problem
Bergson on Ravaisson
Conclusion
Chapter Five. Infinite Thought
Introduction
Kant and Hegel
The Metaphysical Deduction and Metaphysics
From Being to Essence
The Essential and the Inessential
The Structure of Reflection
The Determinations of Reflection
The Speculative Proposition
The Concept of Essence in Aristotle and Hegel
Conclusion
Part Three: Beyond Representation
Chapter Six. Hegel and Deleuze on Ontology and the Calculus
Introduction
The Calculus
Hegel and the Calculus
Berkeley and the Foundations of the Calculus
Deleuze and the Calculus
Hegel and Deleuze
The Kantian Antinomies
Conclusion
Chapter Seven. Force, Difference, and Opposition
Introduction
Force and the Understanding
The Inverted World
Deleuze and the Inverted World
The One and the Many
Conclusion
Chapter Eight. Hegel, Deleuze, and the Structure of the Organism
Introduction
The Philosophy of Nature
Hegel and Evolution
Hegel's Account of the Structure of the Organism
Hegel, Cuvier, and Comparative Anatomy
Deleuze, Geoffroy, and Transcendental Anatomy
Teratology and Teleology
Contingency in Hegel's Philosophy of Nature
Conclusion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
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