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Gilles Deleuze

French philosopher (1925–1995) whose collaborative work with Félix Guattari and solo writings on difference, cinema, and power produced one of the twentieth century's most ambitious philosophical projects — and whose three-page 1990 Postscript mapped the architecture of AI-age power before the internet existed.
Gilles Deleuze was born in Paris on January 18, 1925, and died there on November 4, 1995. His philosophical career spanned four decades and produced works whose influence extends across philosophy, literary theory, film studies, political theory, and most recently, critical theory of digital technology. His early monographs on Hume, Bergson, Nietzsche, and Spinoza established him as a radical reader of the philosophical canon. His collaborations with psychoanalyst Félix GuattariAnti-Oedipus (1972) and A Thousand Plateaus (1980) — produced a body of work that continues to be read, contested, and extended. His solo works include Difference and Repetition (1968), The Logic of Sense (1969), and a two-volume study of cinema. His final phase of work culminated in the three-page essay Postscript on the Societies of Control (1990), which has become one of the most cited texts in contemporary critical theory.
Gilles Deleuze
Gilles Deleuze

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

Deleuze studied philosophy at the Sorbonne under a generation of teachers that included Ferdinand Alquié, Jean Hyppolite, Georges Canguilhem, and Maurice de Gandillac. His early work operated in the mode of creative commentary on philosophical predecessors — books on Hume (1953), Nietzsche (1962), Kant (1963), Bergson (1966), Spinoza (1968), and Leibniz (1988). These were not straightforward interpretations but philosophical interventions that used the predecessor as a resource for developing Deleuze's own project.

The encounter with Félix Guattari in 1969 transformed Deleuze's work. Guattari was a practicing psychoanalyst at the La Borde clinic, deeply involved in the political movements of May 1968, and committed to developing forms of thought that could address the new configurations of power emerging in late twentieth-century societies. Their collaboration produced Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (1972) and A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia Vol. 2 (1980) — two volumes that remain among the most ambitious, controversial, and productive philosophical works of the late twentieth century.

Postscript on Control
Postscript on Control

Deleuze taught at the experimental University of Paris VIII–Vincennes-Saint-Denis from 1970 until his retirement in 1987. His lectures, many of which have been transcribed and published, were legendary for their intensity and their refusal of conventional academic forms. He lived through the intellectual ferment of post-1968 Paris alongside Foucault, Derrida, Lyotard, and Lacan, but maintained a distinctive philosophical identity that resisted easy classification as structuralist, post-structuralist, or any other movement label.

In his final decade, Deleuze suffered increasingly severe respiratory illness — a legacy of tuberculosis contracted in his youth — that confined him to his Paris apartment. During this period he wrote the Postscript on the Societies of Control (1990), his essay on Beckett The Exhausted (1992), and his final solo book What Is Philosophy? (1991, with Guattari). On November 4, 1995, unable to bear the deterioration of his respiratory function, he took his own life by falling from the window of his apartment on the Rue de Bizerte. The death was, in its terrible way, consistent with the philosophical commitment to lines of flight that his work had theorized.

Origin

Deleuze's philosophical formation was shaped by the specific institutional and intellectual conditions of postwar French philosophy: the encounter with phenomenology and existentialism in the 1950s, the structuralist moment of the 1960s, the political upheaval of 1968, and the post-structuralist reconfigurations of the 1970s and 1980s. He belonged to a generation that took philosophy to be an urgent and public activity, and that believed new conceptual tools were necessary to address transformations in power, subjectivity, and technology that inherited frameworks could not adequately analyze.

Key Ideas

Philosophy as creation of concepts. Deleuze insisted that philosophy's task is not to interpret reality through given categories but to create new concepts adequate to the problems of a specific moment.

Felix Guattari
Felix Guattari

Difference as fundamental. Against philosophical traditions that treated difference as a derivative of identity, Deleuze argued that difference is primary and identity is an effect of differential processes.

The plane of immanence. Deleuze rejected transcendent foundations for thought in favor of what he called the plane of immanence — a field in which concepts are developed through their internal connections rather than grounded in external principles.

Power as modulation, not repression. The Postscript's analysis of control societies advanced a conception of power that operates through continuous adjustment rather than through prohibition and enclosure.

Resistance through creation, not opposition. Genuine transformation happens through lines of flight that produce novelty the system cannot absorb, not through direct confrontation with existing configurations.

Debates & Critiques

Deleuze's work has been the subject of sustained controversy throughout its reception. Critics from analytic philosophy have dismissed his prose as obscure and his arguments as insufficiently rigorous; critics from the political left have questioned whether his emphasis on molecular revolution and creative affirmation provides adequate tools for organized collective resistance; critics from feminism and postcolonial theory have asked whether his framework can accommodate the specific conditions of oppressed subjects whose experiences of power differ from those of the European intellectuals who developed the theory. Defenders have argued that Deleuze's thought is not a finished doctrine to be applied but a toolkit for creative thinking whose value is demonstrated in the specific problems to which it is applied. The Deleuze volume takes this position: the framework's value lies not in its universal applicability but in its specific usefulness for diagnosing the architecture of AI-age power.

Further Reading

  1. François Dosse, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari: Intersecting Lives (2010)
  2. Todd May, Gilles Deleuze: An Introduction (2005)
  3. Daniel W. Smith, Essays on Deleuze (2012)
  4. Michael Hardt, Gilles Deleuze: An Apprenticeship in Philosophy (1993)
  5. Brian Massumi, A User's Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia (1992)
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