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Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy (Continuum Impacts) (Continuum Impacts)
 
 
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Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy (Continuum Impacts) (Continuum Impacts) [Paperback]

Manuel DeLanda
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.; New Ed edition (30 Jun 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0826479324
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826479327
  • Product Dimensions: 20 x 13.1 x 1.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 354,079 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Review

'...Manuel DeLanda's Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy ...an exceptionally wrought and detailed investigation of Deleuze's philosophy in relation to contemporary debates in science, including the 'new science' of complexity theory...exceptional. DeLanda is and has been for many years one of the best explicators of Deleuze...his skill in this area is very much in evidence in his most recent book.--, "Immanence "

Product Description

Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy cuts to the heart of the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and of today's science wars. At the start of the 21st Century, Deleuze is now regarded as the most radical and influential of contemporary philosophers. Yet his work is widely misunderstood and misinterpreted. In this already classic work Manuel DeLanda does what the growing host of Deleuzians have falled to do - he makes sense of Deleuze for both analytic and continental thought, for both science and philosophy.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Funny that the review above should say that the reader felt "like it was hidden on purpose" - the virtual processes of the world being hidden by extensive beings is a recurring theme throughout the book.

I found De Landa's prose to be accessible and, although at times it was "thick", when compared to the texts of Deleuze, it read like children's literature. He wrote lucidly and repeated when it seemed necessary. He unravels and explains some difficult concepts in a professional yet informal manner.

He seems to follow one of Deleuze's ideas well: Philosophical buggery, make a philosopher say what you want. He certainly knows how to connect Deleuze's often times puzzling (difficult to fully understand) choice of language with mathematical and scientific language; see topology and advances in modern evolutionary biology.

Over all, I found this book entertaining and enlightening. And would recommend it to people interested in the philosophy of science and also ontology: In Intensive Science & Virtual Philosophy De Landa expounds a realist take on ontology, which does away with Essence and instead seeks to explain the becoming of extended beings (assemblages - its assemblages all the way down) through intensive processes guided by "virtual" nodes (attractor basins) through the use of state-spaces. Assemblages are explained as being bodies able to affect, and being affected by other bodies. An example would be the leg-foot-floor assemblage with solves the problem of movement for a vast number of different bodies, the foot is affected by the floor, just as the floor is affected by the foot; and the same goes for the leg. This has obvious implications for current ideas in evolutionary biology: evolutionary algorithmic modelling (no longer seeking a final goal, but finding paths towards goals (solutions to problems) that are immediate, and then finding paths from this new position (consider the leg-foot limb a "position"/solution) past new and different problems presented.

This may sound all "post-modern" and therefore glib and without much substance, but it is exactly Substance (Eternal) that he seeks to undermine and replace with these new concepts. It is an ontology of change and probabilities, and I think he explains it well. setting himself up nicely for his later book "A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory & Complexity" which I have yet to read, but am hoping to pick up in the near future.

I will be looking to read more on topology and state-space based mathematical modelling of systems due to this book.

+ The Cover is cool. It's a nice blue colour. And when you have read Anti-Oedipus by Deleuze & Guattari, then the egg on the front can be seen to be a Body without Organs.
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4 of 10 people found the following review helpful
what the ? 27 Jun 2008
By 666
Format:Paperback
Some really interesting ideas - drenched in the most thick, treacle-like over-written prose...
A shame - as there is something rather intriguing to the work - but felt like it was hidden on purpose...
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32 of 37 people found the following review helpful
Helpful so far as it goes... 29 Jun 2006
By A Philosopher - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
De Landa's Deleuze, as presented in this and other works, has its own unique "niche" among the various ways of reading this important figure. His approach tends to take as its principal text Deleuze/Guattari's *A Thousand Plateaus* and emphasizes that difficult "subtext" surfacing throughout Deleuze's broader corpus that involves what DeLanda refers to as an "ontology" derived from chaos and complexity theory and the non-linear mathematics underlying them. "Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy" is certainly the best available elucidation of this often perplexing strand of Deleuze's work and any serious student of Deleuze will benefit from it. The problem, addressed by the author in an "appendix" to the work, is that Deleuze quite deliberately alters his basic terminology from one work to the next, making a good deal of forcing necessary to fit other Deleuzian texts into DeLanda's "ontological schema." It is, in fact, not at all clear that Deleuze would have accepted DeLanda's claim about him operating with a fixed "ontology." And since DeLanda is convinced that the "key" to Deleuze is to be found in modern non-linear mathematical theory and its scientific applications, he tends almost completely to ignore that which constitutes another major aspect of Deleuze's work, namely, his intense and extensive engagement with the history of philosophy. As a helpful introduction to one very difficult aspect of Deleuze's work, this book excels; as a broader account of Deleuze's philosophy and its influence, it is quite limited and somewhat contrived.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A brilliant reconstruction of Deleuze's ontology 9 Mar 2011
By Brian C. - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book is a reconstruction of the ontology of the Continental philosopher Gilles Deleuze, but it is one of those rare commentaries that goes beyond being a mere commentary and achieves the status of an original work of philosophy in its own right. DeLanda's reconstruction of Deleuze's ontology is, interestingly enough, approached from the standpoint of analytic philosophy. DeLanda admits that he is taking a risk in attempting to reconstruct the ontology of a Continental philosopher in terms of analytic philosophy. He runs the risk of being 'too Continental' for analytic philosophers, and 'too analytic' for Continental philosophers. Personally, I tend to think that most philosophy students these days are a bit fed up with the Continental/analytic divide and are more then willing to make accommodations for those working in differing traditions. At any rate, the brilliance of DeLanda's reconstruction should be enough to silence any complaints.

DeLanda believes that Deleuze's ontology is fundamentally based on replacing the philosophical concept of 'essence' with that of 'multiplicity' (pg9). DeLanda writes, "In a Deleuzian ontology...a species (or any other natural kind) is not defined by its essential traits but rather by the morphogenetic process that gave rise to it...while an essentialist account may rely on factors that transcend the realm of matter and energy (eternal archetypes, for instance) a morphogenetic account gets rid of all transcendent factors using exclusively form-generating resources which are immanent to the material world" (pg.9-10). DeLanda's book is an attempt to explain in detail how this process works. DeLanda attempts to define multiplicities by using the resources of chaos and complexity theories (symmetry breaking bifurcations, vector spaces, attractors, etc.). DeLanda has recourse to a new modal status (the virtual) when determining the ontological status of multiplicities and he attempts to explain the differences between the virtual and the traditional categories of modal logic (possibility, necessity, and actuality). This is one way in which DeLanda attempts to provide an ontological account of a basic Deleuzian concept (the virtual) in terms that are more familiar to analytic philosophers (modal logic). DeLanda also gives detailed accounts of how virtual multiplicities and their singularities along with intensive properties and differences drive the processes of morphogenesis and individuation. For example, DeLanda gives a very interesting description of embryogenesis which is based on the work of Gerald Edelman and Stuart Kaufmann in which intensive properties (the rates of synthesis and degradation of different adhesion molecules, and the birth and death rates of cells) as well as attractors existing within nearby state space drive the structural and qualitative differentiation of cells which ultimately produces a fully formed organism from a single cell (pg62-65). This example illustrates the "three ontological dimensions which constitute the Deleuzian world: the virtual, the intensive, and the actual" (pg61). The virtual are the attractors which are nearby in state space and which guide the qualitative differentiation of the cell (these attractors are real but not actual, hence the term virtual), the intensive in this case are the rates of synthesis and degradation of different adhesion molecules and the birth and death rates of cells (DeLanda explains in detail and great clarity the difference between intensive and extensive magnitudes), and the actual is the actual structure of the organism which possesses both extensive and qualitative properties which then come to hide the intensive processes and the virtual multiplicities which produced it in the first place.

This is definitely a difficult book. DeLanda delves fairly deeply into a number of subjects which are going to be outside the scope of the average philosophy student (the history of mathematics, topology, chaos and complexity theory, embryogenesis, thermodynamics, etc.). A great deal of this book is still over my head. DeLanda's great saving grace is that he is an extremely clear and lucid writer a quality that differentiates him from many Continental philosophers including Deleuze. DeLanda also gives many concrete examples illustrating his abstract concepts which greatly aid the reader in understanding. Even with this help from DeLanda this book is still going to be a challenge for anyone who does not have DeLanda's grasp of all the relevant scholarship (and very few readers, if any, will). But unlike many philosophers DeLanda's difficulty does not simply frustrate but rather inspires. DeLanda inspires the reader to want to learn more about the subjects he is discussing in order to better understand what he is saying (if the reader is like me he or she may even wind up developing an entire research project centered around mastering the material referenced in this book). Unfortunately Deleuze, in my opinion, can often be more frustrating then inspiring. So even though I may take some heat for this I would actually recommend reading this book before attempting to read Deleuze himself. At the very least DeLanda should convince the skeptics that Deleuze does have something very interesting to say and he is worth the frustration which will inevitably accompany any attempt to read Deleuze's works first-hand.

-Brian
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