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EbookBell Team
5.0
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Author: Philip Gillham
At the end of the last chapter we saw how Deleuze concludes Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza by briefly invoking an image of ‘Leibniz's world’. This world, we learned, is ‘a continuum in which there are singularities, and it is around these singularities that monads take form as expressive centres’ (EPS 329). We noted how this statement hints at a much richer reading of Leibniz than the one presented throughout most of EPS. Indeed, we also observed how out of place this statement appeared, lacking as we did the resources necessary to understand this richer reading.
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Tags: The Problem, Representation, Deleuze, Reading, Leibniz, Transcendental, Philip Gillham