tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7461948747659071092.post3976505288419126277..comments2023-09-29T02:49:02.989-07:00Comments on An Emphatic Umph: Podcast on Deleuze & Guattari's "What is Philosophy?"Daniel Coffeenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03912050391869734890noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7461948747659071092.post-41449721403762011832013-04-25T15:18:20.721-07:002013-04-25T15:18:20.721-07:00@ *: Thanks for the props.
@ Dusty: Many beautifu...@ *: Thanks for the props.<br /><br />@ Dusty: Many beautiful things here.<br />So: Schizoanalysts. I have a friend in NYC who is one — he practices psychotherapy with acupuncture and homeopathy and calls himself a schizoanalyst. <br /><br />Your read on the Cinema books is gorgeous and has me inspired to reread them. And, what's funny, is the only thing I really understand in that book — or think I do — is the any moment/space whatever. I've always read that in terms of Gene Kelly vs. Fred Astaire, the anywhere vs. the stage, the proliferation of events vs. the Big Event, etc. Cinema as non or event anti-monumental, taking in anything and everything, anywhere and everywhere. Daniel Coffeenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03912050391869734890noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7461948747659071092.post-11694555629659892542013-04-24T06:13:20.302-07:002013-04-24T06:13:20.302-07:00It's good to hear your voice again.
'Wha...It's good to hear your voice again. <br /><br />'What is Philosophy' is my favorite book, and I first heard about it through your lectures.<br /><br />Concerning this latest installment I really liked imagining the insanity of what painting would be like without the art scene, and philosophers without philosophical history. <br />I think telling people that they will never fully understand any book they read is probably the best thing you could ever tell anyone.<br />I approach 'What is Philosophy' primarily as an artist; I think it’s the best thing I have ever read about art.<br />Philosophy is the production of ideas, but art is the assembling of moods that exist before the artist. Yet both are made, true inventions. We take for granted that Apples didn't always exists, but it's totally missed that no one ever really felt 'kinda’ Blue' before Miles Davis blew his horn. There is such a thing as a modern mood, thanks entirely to people that make shit.<br />One thing that has struck me lately is that with all the talk about Deleuze and Guattari applied in this or that way, I’ve never really heard about their application in real world psychiatry. I work in the psychiatric field, as an entry level staff person at a transitional housing facility, I'm just there dealing with the people in their day to day. It’s usually pretty chill. But I wander what Guattari was like as a psychiatrist. I bought the biography to find out, but it was all pretty vague. There are a few procedures that remind me of their approach; aversion therapy, activity based group therapy, you know, a schizophrenic on a walk. But these things don’t really feel like “schizoanalysis.” Are there really Schizoanalysts out there? Can you actually go to a Guattarian analyst and get all rearranged? <br />Oh, and we were talking about the cinema books. I have some ideas about this. I think its Peirce’s contribution that makes those books so different. Peirce is known as a pragmatist, but he is really a mystic, maybe a mystic pragmatist. Firstness is really unlike any other Deleuzian concept. Firstness is a genuinely subjective quality almost like a pure humanity untouched by becoming, like a sentiment that sticks it’s self to some object or other, the object then would be secondness and so on un tell you have hole symbolic network; Deleuze relates it to the affection image, so he’s not talking about a human he’s talking about a movie. In a thousand plateaus he destroys the face, like an iconoclast. In the cinema books the face is holy, I think, maybe, this is Peirce’s firstness shining through. Later on in the book you have all these different ways that black and weight interact with each other. In some cases there in conflict and in some cases they are in harmony, somehow he even sees Marxist dialectics in them. Oh and one of the best things about the cinema books is the way he quotes the directors, they might be talking about movies or actors or something else but he makes them speak like sages. Something I don’t understand is the ‘any (moment) space whatever’. There are a lot of weird things about those books. It’s the way he forces Peirce’s trichotomy . It’s a building of a symbolic cinema. <br />dustygravelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01877215902611486889noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7461948747659071092.post-32390291752846121472013-04-23T23:04:31.417-07:002013-04-23T23:04:31.417-07:00Great to have you back on the air! so to speak. Great to have you back on the air! so to speak. sean zhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02475617014479254551noreply@blogger.com