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Pure Immanence

Essays on A Life

Gilles Deleuze

with an introduction by John Rajchman

Translated by Anne Boyman

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"1 ·11I1I1I.lIlcnee: Une Vie" originally published in Philosophie 47 ©


Immanence: A Life 25
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1"'"11"<1 in Ihe United States of America.

1hSlrih"led hy The MIT Press,


(·.,",hridge, Massachusetts, and London, Englalld

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Introduction

John Rajchman

Gilles Deleuze was an empiricist, a logician. That was


the source of his lightness, his humor, his naïveté, his
practice of philosophy as "a sort of art brut" - "1 never
broke with a kind of empiricism that proceeds to a
direct exposition of concepts." 1 1t is a shame to pre-
sent him as a metaphysician and nature mystic. Even
in A.N. Whitehead, he admired a "pluralist empiri-
cism" that he found in another way in Michel Fou-
cault - an empiricism of "multiplicities" that says "the
abstract doesn't explain, but must itselfbe explained:'2
lndeed, it was through his logic and his empiricism
that Deleuze found his way out of the impasses of the
two dominant philosophical schools of his genera-
tion, phenomenological and analytic, and elaborated
a new conception of sense, neither hermeneutic nor
Fregean. 3 He tried to introduce empiricism into his

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PURE IMMANENCE INTRO DUCTION

very image of thought, and saw the philosopher as an yet singular," and so requires a "wilder" sort of em-
experimentalist and diagnostician, not as a judge, even piricism - a transcendental empiricism.
of a mysticallaw. From the start Deleuze sought a conception of em-
" ... We will speak of a transcendental empiricism piricism that departs from the classical definition that
in contrast to everything that makes up the world of says that all our ide as can be derived from atomistic
the subject and the object" he would thus reiterate in sensations through a logic of abstraction and general-
the essay that opens this volume. Transcendental em- ization. The real problem of empiricism is rather to
piricism had been Deleuze's way out of the difficulties be found in a new conception of subjectivity that
introduced by Kant and continued in the phenome- acquires its full force in Hume, and goes beyond his
IlOlogical search for an Urdoxa - the difficulties of "associationism" - the problem of a life. A life in-
"1 r,lIlsccndental-empirical doubling" and the "traps of volves a different "synthesis of the sensible" than the
(olls{'iousness:' But what does such empiricism have kind that makes possible the conscious self or person.
10 do with the two ide as the essay's title joins together Sensation has a peculiar role in it, and Deleuze talked
".1 lire" and "immanence"? of a "being of sensation" quite unlike individual sense
Wc lI1ay think of a life as an empiricist concept in data waiting to be inserted into a categorical or discur-
(0111 r.lsi to what John Locke called "the self:' 4 A life sive synthesis providing the unit y of their manifold for
b.iS (I"ite different features than those Locke associ- an "1 think:' The being of sensation is what can only be
.lll'd with the self- consciousness, memory, and per- sensed, since there precisely pre-exists no categorical
sOIl,d idcntity. It unfolds according to another logic: a unit y, no sensus communis for it. At once more material
logie or impcrsonal individuation rather than per- and less divisible than sense data, it requires a synthe-
sOllal individualization, of singularities rather than sis of another, non-categorical sort, found in artworks,
!l,lI't ieu britics. lt can never be completely specified. It for example. Indeed Deleuze came to think that art-
is ,1Iw,lYS inddïnite - a life. It is only a "virtuality" in works just are sensations connected in materials in
Ihe lire of the corresponding individu al that can some- su ch a way as to free aisthesis from the assumptions of
lillll'S ('llIcrge in the st range intcrval bcforc dcath. In the sort of "common sense" that for Kant is supposed
short, ill (,olllr,lst (0 the self, a lifc is "impersonal and by the "1 think" or the "1 judge:' Through affect and

9
PURE IMMANENCI
INTRODUCTION

percept, artworks hit upon something singular yet connections of subject and predicate and the sets and
impersonal in our bodies and brains, irreducible to functions that Gottlob Frege proposed to substitute
any pre-existent "we:' The "coloring sensations" that for them. lt is a logic of an AND prior and irreducible
Maurice Merleau-Ponty saw in Cézanne are examples to the IS of predications, which Deleuze first finds in
of su ch a spatializing logic of sensation, no longer David Hume: "Think witb AND instead ofthinking IS,
dominated by classical subject-object relations. But instead of thinkingJor IS: empiricism has never had
we must push the question of sensation beyond the another secree'6 It is a constructivist logic of unfin-
phenomenological anchoring of a subject in a land- ished series rather than a calculus of distinct, count-
scape, for example, in the way Deleuze thinks cinema able collections; and it is governed by conventions
introduces movement into image, allowing for a dis- and problematizations, not axioms and fixed rules of
tinctive colorism in Jean-Luc Godard. 5 There is still a inference. Its sense is inseparable from play, artifice,
kind of sensualist pi et y in Merleau-Ponty - what he fiction, as, for example, in the case of Lewis Carroll's
called "the flesh" is only the "thermometer of a be- "intensive surfaces" for a world that has lost the con-
coming" given through "asymmetrical syntheses of ventions of its Euclidean skin. Transcendental em-
the sensible" that depart from good form or Gestalt. piricism may then be said to be the experimental
Such syntheses then require an exercise of thought, relation we have to that element in sensation that pre-
which, unlike the syntheses of the self or conscious- cedes the self as weIl as any "we," through which is
Iless, involve a sort of dissolution of the ego. lndeed attained, in the materiality of living, the powers of "a
what Deleuze isolates as "cinema" from the fitful his- life:'
tory of filmmaking is in effect nothing other than a In Stoic logic, Deleuze finds a predecessor for such
multifaceted exploration of this other act of thinking, a view. But, at the end of the nineteenth century, it is
this other empiricism. Henri Bergson and William James who offer us a bet-
In such cases, sensation is synthesized according to ter philosophical guide to it than do either Husserl or
a peculiar logic - a logic of multiplicity that is neither Frege. lndeed, at one point Deleuze remarks that the
dialcctical nor transcendental, prior not simply to the very idea of a "plane of immanence" requires a kind
world of subjcct and ohjcct, but also to the logical of "radical empiricism" - an empiricism whose force

10 Il
\

PURE IMMANENCe INTRODUCTION

" ... begins from the moment it defines the subject: a cism" becomes possible, one concerned with what is
habitus, a habit, nothing more than a habit in a field of singular yet "in -human" in the composition of ourselves.
immanence, the habit of saying 1:'7 Among the classi- Deleuze would find it in Bergson and Nietzsche, who
cal empiricists, it is Hume who poses su ch questions, imagined a "free difference" in living, un -conscious and
Hume who redirects the problem of empiricism to- no longer enclosed within a personal identity.
ward the new questions that would be elaborated by While Deleuze shared with his French contempo-
Bergson and Nietzsche. raries a suspicion about a constituting subject or con-
That is the subject of Deleuze's youthful Memoire. sciousness, in Hume he found a new empiricist way
He sees Hume as connecting empiricism and subjec- out of it, which he urged against phenomenology and
tivity in a new way, departing from Locke on the ques- its tendency to reintroduce a transcendental ego or
1ion of personal identity. In Locke's conception, the a material a priori. The real problem dramatized in
.';(' 1fis ncither what the French caIlle moi or le je - the Hume's humorous picture of the self as incorrigible
1 () 1 t he me. 8 Rather it is defined by individu al "owner- illusion is how our lives ever acquire the consistency
\hip" (l1~self'Jourself) and sameness over time (iden- of an enduring self, given that it is born of " , .. delir-
1il y). \'ocke thus introduces the problem of identity ium, chance, indifference"9; and the question then is:
.111<1 divcrsity into our philosophical conception of can we construct an empiricist or experimental rela-
Olll.\clvcs. What the young Deleuze found singular in tion to the persistence of this zone or plane of pre-
11111I](''s cmpiricism is then the ide a that this self, this subjective delirium and pre-individual singularity in
pnSOll, this possession, is in fact not given. Indeed the our lives and in our relations with others?
.\\,11' is oilly a fiction or artifice in which, through habit, Immanence and a life thus suppose one another.
Wc' COIllC to believe, a sort of incorrigible illusion of For immanence is pure only when it is not immanent
livillg; and it is as this artifice that the self becomes to a prior subject or object, mind or matter, only when,
l'ully p.J.rt of nature - our nature. Hume thus opens up neither innate nor acquired, it is always yet "in the
l!Je question of other ways of composing sensations making"; and "a life" is a potential or virtuality sub-
t!J,11l those of the hahits of the self alld the "human sisting in just such a purely immanent plane. Unlike
Il.lIule'' t!J,tt t!tey supposc. A IlCW or "supcrior empiri- the life of an individual, a life is thus necessarily vague
\

PURE IMMANENCE INTRODUCTION

or indefinite, and this indefiniteness is real. It is vague social thought. In the place of the dominant idea of a
in the Peircian sense that the real is itself indeterminate social contract among already given selves or sub-
or anexact, beyond the limitations of our capacities jects, Hume elaborates an original picture of conven-
to measure it. We thus each have the pre-predicative tion that allows for an "attunement" of the passions
vagueness of Adam in Paradise that Leibniz envisaged in prior to the identities of reason; only in this way can
his letters to Arnauld. lO We are always quelconque- we escape the violence toward others inherent in the
we are and remain "anybodies" before we become formation of our social identities or the problem of
"somebodies:' Underneath the identity of our bodies our "partialities:' Hume thus prepares the way for a
or organisms, we each have what Deleuze caUs a body view of society not as contract but as experiment-
(a mouth, a stomach, etc). We thus have the singularity experiment with what in life is prior to both posses-
of what Spinoza already termed "a singular essence," sive individuals and traditional social wholes. Prop-
and of what makes the Freudian unconscious singular, erty, for example, becomes nothing more than an
each of us possessed of a peculiar "complex" unfolding evolving jurisprudential convention.
through the time of our lives. How then can we make There is, in short, an element in experience that
such pre-individual singularities coincide in space and cornes before the determination of subject and sense.
time; and what is the space and time that includes them? Shown through a "diagram" that one constructs to
We need a new conception of society in which move about more freely rather than a space defined
what we have in common is our singularities and not by an a priori "scheme" into which one inserts one-
our individualities - where what is common is "im- self, it involves a temporality that is always starting up
personal" and what is "impersonal" is common. That again in the midst, and relations with others based
is precisely what Charles Dickens's tale shows - only not in identification or recognition, but encounter
through a process of "im-personalization" in the in- and new compositions. In Difference and Repetition,
terval between life and death does the hero become Deleuze tries to show that what characterizes the
our "common friend:' It is also what Deleuze brings "modern work" is not self-reference but precisely the
out in Hume: the new questions of empiricism and attempt to introduce such difference into the very
suhjectivity discovcr their full force only in Hume's idea of sensation, discovering syntheses prior to the

14 15
PURE IMMANENCE INTRODUCTION

identities of figure and perception - a sort of great For the problem with Theseus becoming a Ger-
laboratory for a higher empiricism. Of this experience man, aIl-too-German hero is that even if God is dead,
or experiment, Nietzsche's Ariadne figures as the dra- one still believes in "the subject," "the individual,"
matic heroine or conceptual persona: " ... (Ariadne "human nature:' Abandoned by Theseus, approaching
has hung herself). The work of art leaves the domain Dionysius, Ariadne introduces instead a belief in the
of representation to become 'experience; transcen- world and in the potentials of a life. We thus arrive at
dental empiricism or science of the sensible ... "11 an original view of the problem of nihilism in Nietz-
But to assume this role Ariadne must herself un- sche as that partiaIly physiological condition in which
dergo a transformation, a "becoming:' She must hang such belief in the world is lost. In fact it is a problem
herself with the famous thread her father gave her that goes back to Hume. For it is Hume who substi-
to help the hero Theseus escape from the labyrinth. tutes for the Cartesian problem of certainty and doubt,
For tied up with the thread, she remains a "cold crea- the new questions of belief and probable inference.
ture of resentment:' Such is her mystery - the key to To think is not to be certain, but, on the contrary, to
Deleuze' s subtle view of Nietzsche. The force of her believe where we cannot know for sure. In his Dia-
femininity is thus unlike that of Antigone, who pre- logues on Natural Religion (which Deleuze counts as
serves her identification with her dead father, Oedi- the only genuine dialogue in the history of philoso-
pus, through a defiant "pure negation" that can no phy), Hume suggests that God as weIl as the self
longer be reabsorbed in Creon's city. Ariadne be- be regarded as a fiction required by our nature. The
. w h 0 says "
cornes th e h erome " ra th er th an " no " -
yes problem of religion is then no longer whether God
yes to what is "outside" our given determinations or exists, but whether we need the idea of God in order
identities. She bec ornes a heroine not of mourning to exist, or, in the terms of Pascal's wager, who has
but of the breath and plasticity of life, of dance and the better mode of existence, the believer or the non-
lightness - of the light Earth of which Zarathustra believer. It is here that Deleuze thinks Nietzsche goes
says that it must be approached in many ways, since beyond Hume, who, in connecting belief and proba-
the way does not exist. She thus points to an empiri- bility, found the idea of chance to be quite meaning-
cist way out of the impasses of nihilisrn. ICSS. 12 By contrast, Nietzsche introduces a conception

17
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PURE IMMANENCE INTRODUCTION

of chance as distinct from probability into the very this question, they in fact come from different junc-
experience of thought and the way the "game of tures in Deleuze's journey. The essays on Hume and
thought" is played (its rules, its players, its aims). He Nietzsche are from a first phase, after World War II,
asks what it means to think that the world is always when Deleuze tried to extract a new image of thought
ma king itself while God is calculating, such that his from the many different strata of the philosophical
calculations never come out right; and so he extends tradition, and so rethink the relation of thought to
the question ofbelief to the plane of" delirium, chance, life; the image of a "superior empiricism" accompa-
indifference" out of which the habits of self are formed nies aU these attempts. The first or lead essay, how-
and from which the potentials of a life take off. Nihil- ever, was Deleuze's last. It cornes from a late phase of
ism is then the state in which the belief in the poten- "clinical" essays, in which Deleuze takes up again the
tials of a life, and so of chance and disparity in the many paths and trajectories composing his work, sorne
world, has been lost. Conversely, as Ariadne becomes leading to "impasses closed off by illness:'14 Vital,
light. what she affirms is that to think is not to be cer- often humorous, these essays are short, abrupt in their
tain nor yet to calculate probabilities. It is to say yes transitions and endings. They have something of Franz
(0 what is singular yet impersonal in living; and for Kafk.a's parables or the aphorisms Nietzsche likened to
(hat one must believe in the world and not in the fic- shouting from one Alpine peak to another - one must
tions of God or the self that Hume thought derived condense and distill one's message, as with Adorno's
l'rom it. image, invoked by Deleuze, of a bottle thrown into the
Deleuze caUs this way out of nihilism an "empiri- sea of communication. For it is in the idea of commu-
ci st conversion," and in his last writing,it gains a nication that Deleuze came to think philosophy con-
pcculiar urgency. "Yes, the problem has changed" he fronts a new and most insolent rival. Indeed that is just
declarcs in What is Philosophy? "It may be that to why the problem has changed, caUing for a fresh "em-
bclieve in this world, in this life, has become our most piricist conversion" and a Kunstwollen or a "becoming-
dilTicult task, the task of a mode of existence to be art" of the sort he imagined the art of cinema had
discovcred on our plane of immanence today:'1î Al- offered us in the rather different circumstances of un-
tllOugh the tluce cssays in this volume each take up certainty following World War II.15

19
PURE IMMANENCE INTRODUCTION

Written in a strange interval before his own death, NOTES

"Immanence ... a life" has been regarded as a kind of 1. Pourparlers (Paris: Minuit, 1990), p. 122.
testament. What is clear is that Deleuze took its "last 2. Dialogues (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987),
message" to occur at a time of renewed difficulty and p. vii, following the declaration "1 have always felt that 1 am an
possibility for philosophy. As with Bergson, one need- empiricist, that is, a pluralist:'
ed to again introduce movement into thought rather 3. Claude Imbert examines "why and how an empiricist
than trying to find universals of information or com- philosopher, as Deleuze certainly was, became aIl the more
muni cation - in particular into the very image of the interested in logic" (Unpublished MS). Her Pour une histoire de la
brain and contemporary neuroscience. In the place logique (Paris: PUF, 1999) may be read as an attempt to imagine
of artificial intelligence, one needed to construct a what a history oflogic might look like from this peculiar empiri-
new picture of the brain as a "relatively undifferen- cist point of view; it thus expands on her earlier work Phenome-
tiated matter" into which thinking and art might in- nologies et langues formulaires (Paris: PUF, 1992), in which she
t roduce new connections that didn't preexist them closely examines the internaI difficulties in the phenomenologi-
- as it were, the brain as materiality of "a life" yet to cal and analytic traditions leading to the late Merleau-Ponty and
be invented, prior and irreducible to consciousness Wittgenstein. In this way, Imbert offers a more promising ap-
olS well as machines. In his last writing, "Immanence proach to the problem of the relation of Deleuzian multiplicity
... a life," we sense not only this new problem and to set theory than does Alain Badiou in his odd attempt to recast
this new urgency, but also the force of the long, in- it along Lacanian lines.
credible voyage in which Deleuze kept alive the sin- 4. Etienne Balibar makes a detailed case for Locke rather
gular image of thought which has the naïveté and the than Descartes as the inventor of the philosophical concept of
strcngth to believe that "philosophy brings about a consciousness and the self. See his introduction to John Locke,
vast deviation of wisdom - it puts it in the service of Identité et différence (Paris: Seuil, 1998).
a pure immanence."II, 5. See L'Image-mouvement (Paris: Minuit, 1983), pp. 83ff.
for Deleuze's account of why Bergson offers a "cinematic" way
out of the crisis in psychology in the nineteenth century that
contrasts with Husserl and the subsequent focus on painting in

10 21
INTRODUCTION
PURE IMMANENCE

phenomenology. In his Suspensions tif Perception (Cambridge, side of Adam, from a singularity ... out of a pre-individu al tran-

MA: MIT Press, 1999), Jonathan Crary goes on to show how scendental field," (pp. 141-42).

this analysis may be extended to painting. In the late Cézanne, 11. D!fJérence et répétition (Paris: PUF, 1968), p. 79.

he finds a more Bergsonian synthesis, as yet unavailable to 12. On the contra st between Hume and both Peirce and

Manet or Seurat, a " ... rhythmic coexistence of radically hetero- Nietzsche on this score see lan Hacking, The Taming if Chance
geneous and temporally dispersed elements," which " .. .instead (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990). Hacking's "un-

of holding together the contents of the perceived world, seeks tamed" chance is akin to the "nomadic" chance that Deleuze dis-

to enter into its ceaseless movements of destabilization" (p. cusses, for example, in Différence et répétition, pp. 36lff. in terms

297). of the transformations of the game of thought.

6. Dialogues, p. 57. 13. Qy 'est-ce que la philosophie?, pp. 72-73.

7. Qy'est-ce que la philosophie? (Paris: Minuit, 1977), p. 49. 14. Critique et clinique (Paris: Minuit, 1993), p. 10.

8. Paul Patton translates le je and le moi, of which it is ques- 15. See L'image-temps (Paris: Minuit, 1985), pp. 223ff. "Only

t ion throughout D!fJerence and Repetition, as "the 1" and "the belief in the world can reconnect man to what he sees and hears

self:' Strictly speaking, however, the self is le soi, which, accord- ... to give us back belief in the world - such is the power of

ing to Etienne Balibar, in fact cornes into philosophical French modern cinema ... :'

Vi.l Locke, its inventor. Balibar tries to sort out the philosophical 16. Qy'est-ce que la philosophie?, p. 46.

implications of such terminological differences in his entry


"Je/moi/soi" for Vocabulaire européen des philosophies (Paris:
Seuil, 2001). He sees the problem of the 1 and the Me as deriving
li"om a Kantian recasting of Descartes's cogito, while the Lock-
l'an self starts another min or tradition that leads past Kant to
James and Bergson.
9. Empirisme et subjectivité (Paris: PUF, 1953), p. 4.
10. Sce Logique du sens (Paris: Minuit, 1969), pp. 138ff. The
prohlem of "vague Adam" is then put in these terms: " ... the
individual is always quelconque (anyone), born like Eve from a

22 2)
CHAPT ER ONE

Immanence: A Life

What is a transcendental field? It can be distinguished


from experience in that it doesn't refer to an object
or belong to a subject (empirical representation). It
appears therefore as a pure stream of a-subjective
consciousness, a pre-reflexive impersonal conscious-
ness, a qualitative duration of consciousness without
a self. It may seem curious that the transcendental be
defined by such immediate givens: we will speak of a
transcendent al empiricism in contra st to everything
that makes up the world of the subject and the object.
There is something wild and powerful in this tran-
sc endentaI empiricism that is of course not the ele-
ment of sensation (simple empiricism), for sensation
is only a break within the flow of absolute conscious-
ness. It is, rather, however close two sensations may
be, the passage from one to the other as becoming, as
increase or decrease in power (virtual quantity). Must

2')
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PURE IMMANENCE IMMANENCE: A LIFE

we then define the transcendental field by a pure im- object falling outside the plane of immanence is taken
mediate consciousness with neither object nor self, as a universal subject or as any object ta which imma-
as a movement that neither begins nor ends? (Even nence is attributed, the transcendent al is entirely de-
Spinoza's conception of this passage or quantity of natured, for it then sim ply redoubles the empirical (as
power still appeals to consciousness.) with Kant), and immanence is distorted, for it then
But the relation of the transcendental field to con- finds itself enclosed in the transcendent. Immanence
sciousness is only a conceptual one. Consciousness is not related to Sorne Thing as a unit y superior to an
becomes a fact only when a subject is produced at the things or to a Subject as an act that brings about a
same time as its object, both being outside the field synthe sis of things: it is only when immanence is no
and appearing as "transcendents:' Conversely, as long longer immanence to anything other than itself that
as consciousness traverses the transcendental field at we can speak of a plane of immanence. No more than
an infinite speed everywhere diffused, nothing is able the transcendental field is defined by consciousness
(() reveal it.' It is expressed, in fact, only when it is can the plane of immanence be defined by a subject
rdlccted on a subject that refers it to objects. That is or an object that is able to contain it.
why the transcendental field cannot be defined by the We will say of pure immanence that it is A LIFE,
consciousness that is coextensive with it, but removed and nothing eise. It is not immanence to life, but the
l'rom any revelation. immanent that is in nothing is itself a life. A life is the
The transcendent is not the transcendental. Were it immanence of immanence, absolute immanence: it is
l10t for consciousness, the transcendental field would complete power, complete bliss. It is to the degree
be defined as a pure plane of immanence, because it that he goes beyond the aporias of the subject and
c1udes aIl transcendence of the subject and of the the object that Johann Fichte, in his la st philosophy,
ohjcct. 2 Absolute immanence is in itself: it is not in presents the transcendental field as a life, no longer
something, ta something; it do es not depend on an dependent on a Being or submitted to an Act - it is an
ohjcct or bdong to a subject. In Spinoza, immanence absolute immediate consciousness whose very activity
is Ilot immanence ta substance; rather, substance and no longer refers to a being but is ceaselessly posed in
IllOdcs are in immanence. Whcn the subject or the a life. 3 The transcendentai field then becomes a gen-

27
PURE IMMANENCE IMMANENCE: A LIFE

uine plane of immanence that reintroduces Spinozism whom everyone empathizes and who attains a sort of
into the heart of the philosophical process. Did Maine beatitude. It is a haecceity no longer of individuation
de Biran not go through something similar in his "last but of singularization: a life of pure immanence, neu-
philosophy" (the one he was too tired to bring to tral, beyond good and evil, for it was only the subject
fruition) when he discovered, beneath the transcen- that incarnated it in the midst of things that made it
dence of effort, an absolute immanent life? The tran- good or bad. The life of such individuality fades away
scendental field is defined by a plane of immanence, in favor of the singular life immanent to a man who
and the plane of immanence by a life. no longer has a name, though he can be mistaken for
What is immanence? A life ... No one has described no other. A singular essence, a life ...
what a life is better than Charles Dickens, if we take But we shouldn't enclose life in the single mo-
1he indefinite article as an index of the transcenden- ment when individual life confronts universal death.
1.11. A disreputable man, a rogue, held in contempt by A life is everywhere, in aH the moments that a given
nnyone, is found as he lies dying. Suddenly, those living subject goes through and that are measured by
1.lking care ofhim manifest an eagerness, respect, even given lived objects: an immanent life carrying with it
love, for his slightest sign of life. Everybody bustles the events or singularities that are merely actualized
.d)out to save him, to the point where, in his deepest in subjects and objects. This indefinite life does not
('C nna, this wicked man himself senses something soft itself have moments, close as they may be one to an-
.lIld sweet penetrating him. But to the degree that he other, but only between-times, between-moments; it
(omes back to life, his saviors turn colder, and he be- doesn't just come about or come after but offers the
(Ornes once again mean and crude. Between his life immensity of an empty time where one sees the event
.IIH\ his death, there is a moment that is only that of yet to come and already happened, in the absolute of
d lil'e playing with death. 4 The lil'e of the individual an immediate consciousness. In his novels, Alexander
.l',ives way to an impersonal and yet singular life that Lernet-Holenia places the event in an in-between
rdC,lSCS a pure event l'reed From the accidents of inter- time that could engulf entire armies. The singularities
Il.11 and cxtcrnallil'e, that is, l'rom the subjectivity and and the events that constitute a life coexist with the
ol'jcctivity or what happens: a "Homo tantum" with accidents of the life that corresponds to it, but they
PURE IMMANENCE IMMANENCE: A LIFE

are neither grouped nor divided in the same way. They scendent that falls outside the plane of immanence,
connect with one another in a manner entirely differ- or that attributes immanence to itself, aIl transcen-
ent from how individuals connect. It even seems that dence is constituted solely in the flow of immanent
a singular life might do without any individuality, consciousness that belongs to this plane. 5 Transcen-
without any other concomitant that individualizes dence is always a product of immanence.
it. For example, very small children aU resemble one A life contains only virtuals. It is made up of virtu-
another and have hardly any individuality, but they alities, events, singularities. What we calI virtual is
have singularities: a smile, a gesture, a funny face- not something that lacks reality but something that is
not subjective qualities. SmaU children, through aU engaged in a process of actualization following the
their sufferings and weaknesses, are infused with an plane that gives it its particular reality. The immanent
immanent life that is pure power and even bliss. The event is actualized in a state of things and of the lived
indefinite aspects in a life lose aH indetermination to that make it happen. The plane of immanence is itself
the degree that they fill out a plane of immanence or, actualized in an object and a subject to which it attri-
what amounts to the same thing, to the degree that they butes itself. But however inseparable an object and a
constitute the elements of a transcendental field (in- subject may be from their actualization, the plane of
dividual life, on the other hand, remains inseparable immanence is itself virtual, so long as the events that
from empirical determinations). The indefinite as such populate it are virtualities. Events or singularities give
is the mark not of an empirical indetermination but to the plane aH their virtuality, just as the plane of
of a determination by immanence or a transcendental immanence gives virtual events their full reality. The
determinability. The indefinite article is the indeter- event considered as non-actualized (indefinite) is lack-
mination of the person only because it is determina- ing in nothing. It suffices to put it in relation to its
tion of the singular. The One is not the transcendent concomitants: a transcendental field, a plane of im-
that might contain immanence but the immanent con- manence, a life, singularities. A wound is incarnated
taincd within a transcendent al field. One is always or actualized in a state of things or of life; but it is
the index of a multiplicity: an event, a singularity, a itself a pure virtuality on the plane of immanence that
lif'c ... Although it is always possible to invoke a tran- leads us into a life. My wound existed before me: not
PURE IMMANENCE
IMMANENCE: A LIFE

a transcendence of the wound as higher actuality, but 4. Dickens, Our Mutual Friend (New York: Oxford Univer-
its immanence as a virtuality always within a milieu sity Press, 1989), p. 443.
(plane or field).6 There is a big difference between the 5. Even Edmund Husserl admits this: "The being of the
virtuals that define the immanence of the transcen- world is necessarily transcendent to consciousness, even within
dental field and the possible forms that actualize them the originary evidence, and remains necessarily transcendent to
and transform them into something transcendent. it. But this doesn't change the fact that ail transcendence is con-
stituted solely in the l!fe if consciousness, as inseparably linked to
that life ... " (Méditations cartésiennes [Paris: Vrin, 1947], p. 52).
NOTES This will be the starting point of Sartre's text.
1. "As though we reflected back to surfaces the light which 6. Cf. Joë Bousquet, Les Capitales (Paris: Le Cercle du Livre,
emanates from them, the light which, had it passed unopposed, 1955).
would never have been revealed" (Henri Bergson, Matter and
Memory [New York: Zone Books, 1988], p. 36).
2. Cf. Jean-Paul Sartre, who posits a transcendental field
without a subject that refers to a consciousness that is imper-
sonal, absolute, immanent: with respect to it, the subject and the
object are "transcendents" (La transcendance de l'Ego [Paris:
Vrin, 1966], pp. 74-87). On James, see David Lapoujade's analy-
sis, "Le Flux intensif de la conscience chez William James," Phi-
losophie 46 (June 1995).
3. Already in the second introduction to La Doctrine de la
science: "The intuition of pure activity which is nothing fixed, but
progress, not a being, but a life" (Oeuvres choisies de la philosophie
première [Paris: Vrin, 1964], p. 274). On the concept of life
according to Fichte, see Initiation à la vie bienheureuse (Paris:
Aubier, 1944), and Martial Guéroult's commentary (p. 9).
CHAPT ER Two

Hume

The Meaning of Empiricism


The history of philosophy has more or less absorbed,
more or less digested, empiricism. It has defined em-
piricism as the reverse of rationalism: 1s there or is
there not in ideas something that is not in the senses
or the sensible? It has made of empiricism a critique
of innateness, of the a priori. But empiricism has al-
ways harbored other secrets. And it is they that
David Hume pushes the furthest and fully illuminates
in his extremely difficult and subtle work. Hume's
position is therefore quite peculiar. His empiricism is
a sort of science-fiction universe avant la lettre. As
in science fiction, one has the impression of a fic-
tive, foreign world, seen by other creatures, but also
the presentiment that this world is already ours, and
thosc creatures, ourselves. A paraUel conversion of
science or thcory Collows: theory becomes an inquiry

l'l
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(the origin of this conception is in Francis Bacon; The Nature of Relations


1mmanuel Kant will recall it while transforming and Hume's originality - or one of Hume's originalities-
rationalising it when he conceives of theory as a court cornes l'rom the force with which he asserts that rela-
or tribunal). Science or the ory is an inquiry, which is tions are external to their terms. We can understand
to say, a practice: a practice of the seemingly fictive such a thesis only in contrast to the entire endeavor of
world that empiricism describes; a study of the condi- philosophy as rationalism and its attempt to reduce
tions oflegitimacy of practices in this empirical world the paradox of relations: either by finding a way of
that is in fact our own. The result is a great conver- making relations internaI to their own terms or by
sion of theory to practice. The manuals of the history fin ding a deeper and more comprehensive term to
of philosophy misunderstand what they caU "asso- which the relation would itself be internaL "Peter is
ciationism" when they see it as a theory in the ordi- smaller than Paul": How can we make of this relation
Il.1ry sense of the term and as an inverted rationalism. something internaI to Peter, or to Paul, or to their
IJuIIle l'aises unexpected questions that seem never- concept, or to the whole they form, or to the 1dea in
tlH'kss l'amiliar: To establish possession of an aban- which they participate? How can we overcome the
dOllcc! city, does a javelin thrown against the do or irreducible exteriority of relations? Empiricism had
sulTicc, or must the door be touched by a finger? To always fought for the exteriority of relations. But in a
what extent can we be owners of the seas? Why is the certain way, its position on this remained obscured by
ground more important than the surface in a juridical the problem of the origin of knowledge or of ideas,
system, whereas in painting, the paint is more impor- according to which everything finds its origin in the
tant than the canvas? 1t is only then that the problem sensible and in the operations of the mind upon the
of the association of ideas discovers its meaning. sensible.
What is caUed the theory of association finds its di- Hume effects an inversion that would take empiri-
rection and its truth in a casuistry of relations, a prac- cism to a higher power: if ide as contain nothing other
tice of law, of politics, of economics, that completely and nothing more than what is contained in sens ory
changes the nature of philosophical reflection. impressions, it is precisely because relations are ex-
tcrnal and hcterogeneous to their terms - impressions
,
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

or ideas. Thus the difference isn't between ideas and Human Nature
impressions but between two sorts of impressions or What is a relation? 1t is what makes us pass from a
ideas: impressions or ideas of terms and impressions given impression or idea to the idea of something that
or ideas of relations. The real empiricist world is is not presently given. For example, l think of some-
thereby laid out for the first time to the fullest: it is a thing "similar" ... When l see a picture of Peter, l
world of exteriority, a world in which thought itself think of Peter, who isn't there. One would look in
exists in a fundamental relationship with the Outside, vain in the given term for the reason for this passage.
a world in which terms are veritable atoms and rela- The relation is itself the effect of so-called principles
tions veritable external passages; a world in which the of association, contiguity, resemblance, and causality,
conjunction "and" dethrones the interiority of the aIl of which constitute, precisely, a buman nature.
verb "is"; a harlequin world of multicolored patterns Human nature means that what is universal or con-
and non-totalizable fragments where communication stant in the human mind is never one idea or another
takes place through external relations. Hume' s thought as a term but only the ways of passing from one par-
is built up in a double way: through the atomism that ticular idea to another. Hume, in this sense, will de-
shows how ideas or sens ory impressions refer to punc- vote himself to a concerted destruction of the three
tuaI minima producing time and space; and through great terminal ideas of metaphysics: the Self, the
the associationism that shows how relations are estab- World, and God. And yet at first Hume's thesis seems
lished between these terms, always external to them, disappointing: what is the advantage of explaining
and dependent on other principles. On the one hand, relations by principles of human nature, which are
a physics of the mind; on the other, a logic of rela- principles of association that seem just another way of
tions. 1t is thus Hume who first breaks with the con- designating relations? But this disappointment derives
straining form of predicative judgment and makes from a misunderstanding of the problem, for the
possible an autonomous logic of relations, discovering problem is not of causes but of the way relations func-
a conjunctive world of atoms and relations, later de- tion as effects of those causes and the practical condi-
veloped by Bertrand Russell and modern logic, for tions of this functioning.
relations are the conjunctions themselves. Let us consider in this regard a very special relation:
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

causality. It is special because it doesn't simply go same time as distinction in the understanding tailors
from a given term to the ide a of something that isn't belief to the calculus of observed cases (probability as
presently given. Causality requires that 1 go from calculus of degrees of belief). The principle of habit
something that is given to me to the idea of some- as fusion of similar cases in the imagination and the
thing that has never been given to me, that isn't even principle of experience as observation of distinct
giveable in experience. For example, based on sorne cases in the understanding thus combine to pro duce
signs in a book, 1 believe that Caesar lived. Wh en 1 see both the relation and the in fer en ce that follows from
the sun rise, 1 say that it will rise tomorrow; having the relation (belief), through which causality func-
seen water boil at 100 degrees, 1 say that it necessarily tions.
boils at 100 degrees. Yet expressions such as "tomor-
row, " " always," " necessan·1y," convey sorne th·mg th at Fiction
cannot be given in experience: tomorrow isn't given Fiction and Nature are arranged in a particular way in
without becoming today, without ceasing to be to- the empiricist world. Left to itself, the mind has the
morrow, and aIl experience is experience of a conti- capacity to move from one idea to another, but it does
gent particular. In other words, causality is a relation 50 at random, in a delirium that runs throughout the

according to which 1 go beyond the given; 1 say more universe, creating fire dragons, winged hors es, and
than what is given or giveable - in short, 1 infer and 1 monstrous giants. The principles ofhuman nature, on
believe, 1 expect that ... This, Hume's first displace- the other hand, impose constant rules on this delir-
ment, is crucial, for it puts belief at the basis and the ium: laws of passage, of transition, of inference, which
origin of knowledge. The functioning of causal rela- are in accordance with Nature itself. But then a strange
tions can then be explained as follows: as similar cases battle takes place, for if it is true that the principles
are observed (aIl the times 1 have seen that a follows of association shape the mind, by imposing on it a
or accompanies b), they fuse in the imagination, while nature that disciplines the delirium or the fictions of
remaining distinct and separate from each other in the imagination, conversely, the imagination uses these
our understanding. This property of fusion in the same principles to make its fictions or its fantasies
imagination constitutes habit (1 expect ... ), at the acceptahle and to give them a warrant they wouldn't
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

have on their own. In this sense, it belongs to fiction of faculties, illegitimate functioning of relations. In
to feign these relations, to induce fictive ones, and to this as well, Kant owes something essential to Hume:
make us believe in our follies. We see this not only in we are not threatened by error, rather and much worse,
the gift fantasy has of doubling any present relation we bathe in delirium.
with other relations that don't exist in a given case. But this would still be nothing as long as the fic-
But especially in the case of causality, fantasy forges tions of fantasy turn the principles of human nature
fictive causal chains, illegitimate rules, simulacra of against themselves in conditions that can always be
belief, either by conflating the accidentaI and the corrected, as, for example, in the case of causality,
essential or by using the properties of language (going where a strict calculus of probabilities can den ounce
beyond experience) to substitute for the repetition of delirious extrapolations or feigned relations. But the
similar cases actually observed a simple verbal repeti- illusion is considerably worse when it belongs to hu-
tion that only simulates its effect. It is thus that the man nature, in other words, wh en the illegitimate
liar believes in his lies by dint of repeating themj edu- exercise or belief is incorrigible, inseparable from
cation, superstition, eloquence, and poetry also work legitimate beliefs, and indispensable to their organi-
in this way. One no longer goes beyond experience in zation. In this case, the fanciful usage of the principles
a scientific way that will be confirmed by Nature of human nature itself becomes a principle. Fiction
itself and by a corresponding calculus; one goes be- and delirium shi ft over to the side of human nature.
yond it in an the directions of a delirium that forms a That is what Hume will show in his most subtle, most
counter-Nature, allowing for the fusion of anything difficult, analyses concerning the Self, the World, and
at aIl. Fantasy uses the principles of association to God: how the positing of the existence of distinct and
turn them around, giving them an illegitimate exten- continuo us bodies, how the positing of an identity of
sion. Hume thereby effects a second great displace- the self, requires the intervention of aU sorts of fictive
ment in philosophy, which consists in ~ubstituting for uses of relations, and in particular of causality, in con-
the traditional concept of error a concept of delirium ditions where no fiction can be corrected but where
or illusion, according to which there are beliefs that each instcad plunges us into other fictions, which aU
are not false but illegitimate - illegitimate exercises form part of human nature. In a posthumous work
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

that is perhaps his masterpiece, Dialogues Concerning modern skeptical virtue of Hume, against irony, the
Natural Religion, Hume goes on to apply the same ancient dogmatic virtue of Plato and Socrates.
critical method not sim ply to revealed religions but
also to so-caIled natural religion and to the teleologi- The Imagination
cal arguments on which it is based. Here, Hume is at If the inquiry into knowledge has skepticism as its
his most humorous: beliefs, he says, aIl the more form princip le and its outcome, if it leads to an inextricable
part of our nature as they are completely illegitimate mix of fiction and human nature, it is perhaps because
from the point of view of the principles of human it is only one part of the inquiry, and not even the
nature. It is no doubt in this way that we should un- main one. The principles of association in fact acquire
derstand the complex notion of modern skepticism de- their sense only in relation to passions: not only do
veloped by Hume. Unlike ancient skepticism, which affective circumstances guide the associations of ideas,
was based on the variety of sensible appearances and but the relations themselves are given a meaning, a
errors of sense, modern skepticism is based on the direction, an irreversibility, an exclusivity as a result
status of relations and their exteriority. The first act of the passions. In short, what constitutes human
of modern skepticism consisted in making belief the nature, what gives the mind a nature or a constancy,
basis of knowledge - in other words, in naturalizing is not only the princip les of association from which
belief (positivism). The second act consisted in de- relations derive but also the principles of passion
nouncing illegitimate beliefs as those which don't from which "inclinations" foIlow. Two things must be
obey the rules that are in fact productive of knowl- kept in mind in this regard: that the passions don't
edge (probabilism, calculus of probabilities). But in a shape the mind or give it a nature in the same way as
final refinement, or third act, illegitimate beliefs in do the principles of association; and that, on the other
the Self, the World, and God appear as the horizon of hand, the source of the mind as delirium or fiction
aIl possible legitimate beliefs, or as the lowest degree doesn't react to the passions in the same way as it
of belief. For if everything is belief, including knowl- does to relations.
edge, everything is a question of degree of belief, Vle have seen how the principles of association,
even the delirium of non-knowledge. Humor, the and espccially causality, required the mind to go be-

44 4')
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

yond the given, inspiring in it beliefs or extrapola- tion: how can we invent artifices, how can we create
tions not aIl of which were illegitimate. But the pas- institutions that force passions to go beyond their
sions have the effect of restricting the range of the partialities and form moral, judicial, political senti-
mind, fixating it on privileged ide as and objects, for ments (for example, the feeling of justice)? There fol-
the basis of passion is not egotism but partiality, lows the opposition Hume sets up between contract
which is mu ch worse. We are passionate in the first and convention or artifice. Hume is probably the first
place about our parents, about those who are close to to have broken with the limiting model of contract
us and are like us (restricted causality, contiguity, re- and law that dominated the sociology of the eigh-
semblance). This is worse than being governed by teenth century and to oppose to it a positive model of
egotism, for our egotisms would only have to be cur- artifice and institution. Thus the entire question of
tailed for society to become possible. From the six- man is displaced in turn: it is no longer, as with knowl-
teenth to the eighteenth century, the famous theories edge, a matter of the complex relation between fic-
of contract posed the problem of society in such terms: tion and human nature; it is, rather, a matter of the
a limitation, or even a renunciation, of natural rights, relation between human nature and artifice (man as
from which a contractual society might be born. But inventive species).
we should not see Hume's saying that man is by nature
partial rather than egotistical as a simple nuance; rath- The Passions
er, we should see it as a radical change in the practical We have seen that with knowledge the principles of
way the problem of society is posed. The problem is hum an nature instituted rules of extension or extrap-
no longer how to limit egotisms and the correspond- olation that fantasy in turn used to make acceptable
ing natural rights but how to go beyond partialities, simulacra of belief, such that a calculus was always
how to pass from a "limited sympathy" to an "ex- necessary to correct, to select the legitimate from the
tended generosity," how to stretch passions and give illegitimate. With passion, on the other hand, the
them an extension they don't have on their own. problem is posed differently: how can we invent an
Society is thus seen no longer as a system of legal and artificial extension that goes beyond the partiality of
contractuallimitations but as an institutional inven- human nature? Here fantasy or fiction takes on a new

47
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

meaning. As Hume says, the mind and its fantasies in the imagination, which makes of culture at once
behave with respect to passions not in the manner of the most frivolous and the most serious thing. But
a wind instrument but in the manner of a percussive how can we avoid two deficiencies in these cultural
instrument, "where, after each beat, the vibrations formations? On the one hand, how to avoid the en-
still retain sorne sound which gradually and imper- larged passions being less vivid than the present ones,
ceptibly dies:' In short, it is up to the imagination to even if they have a different nature, and, on the other,
reflect passion, to make it resonate and go beyond the how to avoid their becoming completely undeter-
limits of its natural partiality and presentness. Hume mined, projecting their weakened images in aIl direc-
shows how aesthetic and moral sentiments are formed tions independently of any rule. The first problem is
in this way: the passions reflected in the imagination resolved through agencies of social power sanctions
become themselves imaginary. In reflecting the pas- or the techniques of rewards and punishments, which
sions, the imagination liberates them, stretching them confer on the enlarged sentiments or reflected pas-
out infinitely and projecting them beyond their nat- sions an added degree of vividness or belief: princi-
urallimits. Yet on at least one count, we must correct pally government, but also more subterranean and
the metaphor of percussion: as they resonate in the implicit agencies, like custom and taste. In this re-
imagination, the passions do not simply become grad- gard, too, Hume is the first to have posed the problem
ually less vivid and less present; they also change their of power and government in terms not of representa-
color or sound, as when the sadness of a passion rep- tivity but of credibility.
resented in a tragedy turns into the pleasure of an The second point is also relevant to the way in
almost infinite play of the imagination; they assume a which Hume's philosophy forms a general system. If
new nature and are accompanied by a new kind of the passions are reflected in the imagination or in fan-
belief. Thus the will "moves easily in aIl directions tasy, it is not an imagination that is naked but one that
and produces an image of itself, even in places where has already been fixed or naturalized by the principles
it is not fixed:' of association. Resemblance, contiguity, causality - in
This is what makes up the world of artifice or of short, aIl the relations that are the object of a knowl-
culture: this resonance, this reflexion of the passions edge or a calculus, that provide general rules for the

49
PURE IMMANENCE HUME

determination of reflected sentiments beyond the must a finger touch the door in order to establish a
immediate and restricted way in which they are used sufficient relation? Why, according to civil law, does
by non-reflected passions. Thus aesthetic sentiments the ground win out over the surface, but paint over
find in the princip les of association veritable rules of the canvas, whereas paper wins out over writing? The
tas te. Hume also shows in detail how, by being re- principles of association find their true sense in a
flected in the imagination, the passion of possession casuistry of relations that works out the details of the
discovers in the princip les of association the means to worlds of culture and of law. And this is the true
determine the general rules that constitute the fac- object of Hume's philosophy: relations as the means
tors of property or the world oflaw. A whole study of of an activity and a practice - juridical, economic and
the variations of relations, a whole calculus of rela- political.
tions, is involved, which allows one to respond in
each case to the question: Does there exist, between a A Popular and Scientific Philosophy
given person and a given object, a relation of a nature Hume was a particularly precocious philosopher: at
such as to have us believe (or our imagination believe) around twenty-five years old, he wrote his important
in an appropriation of one by the other. ''A man who book A Treatise if Human Nature (published in 1739-
has chased a hare to the point of exhaustion would 1740). A new tone in philosophy, an extraordinary
consider it an injustice if another person pushed ahead firmness and simplicity emerge from a great com-
of him and seized his prey. But the same man who plexity of arguments, which bring into play the exer-
goes to pick an apple that hangs within his reach has cise of fictions, the science of hum an nature, and the
no reason to corn plain if another man, quicker th an practice of artifice. A philosophy at once popular and
he, reaches beyond him and takes it for himself. What scientific - a sort of pop philosophy, which for its
is the reason for this difference if not the fact that ideal had a decisive clarity, a clarity not of ide as but of
immobility, which is not natural to the hare, is closely relations and operations. It was this clarity that Hume
related to the hunter, whereas this relation is lacking would try to impose in his subsequent works, even if
in the other case?" Does the throw of a javelin against this meant sacrificing sorne of the complexity and the
a door ensure the ownership of an abandoned city, or more difficult aspects of the Treatise: Essays, Moral

50
PURE IMMANENCE

and Political (1741-1742), Philosophical Essays Con- CHAPTER THREE

cerning Human Understanding (1748), An Inquiry Con-


cerning the Principles cif MoraIs (1751), and Political Nietzsche
Discourses (1752). He then turned to The History cif
England (1754-1762). The admirable, Dialogues Con-
cerning Natural Religion rediscovers once again that
great complexity and clarity. 1t is perhaps the only
case of real dialogues in philosophy; there are not two
characters, but three, who play many parts, forming
temporary alliances, breaking them, becoming recon- The Lije
ciled, and so on: Demea, the upholder of revealed The first book of Thus Spoke Zarathustra begins with
religion; Cleanthes, the representative of natural reli- the story of three metamorphoses: "How the spirit
gion; and Philo, the skeptic. Hume-Philo's humor is becomes camel, the cam el becomes lion, and how
not simply a way of bringing everyone to agreement finally the lion becomes child:' The camel is the ani-
in the name of a skepticism that distributes "degrees" mal who carries: he carries the weight of established
but also a way of breaking with the dominant trends values, the burdens of education, morality, and cul-
of the eighteenth century and of anticipating a philos- ture. He carries them into the desert, where he turns
ophy of the future. into a lion; the lion destroys statues, tramples bur-
dens, and leads the critique of aIl established values.
Finally, the lion must become child, that is, he who
represents play and a new beginning - creator of new
values and new principles of evaluation.
According to Nietzsche, these three metamorphoses
designate, among other things, the different moments
of his work, as well as the stages of his life and health.
These divisions are no doubt arbitrary: the lion is pre-

')2
PURE IMMANENCE NIETZSCHE

sent in the camel; the child is in the lion; and in the adne and suggested the parallelisms: Bülow-Theseus,
child, there is already the tragic outcome. Wagner-Dionysus. Nietzsche encountered here an af-
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche was born in 1844, in fective structure that he had already sensed was his
the presbytery of Rocken, in a region of Thuringia that and that he would make more and more his own. But
was annexed by Prussia. Both sides of his family came these glorious days were not trouble-free: sometimes
from Lutheran priests. His father, delicate and weIl edu- he had the unpleasant feeling that Wagner was using
cated, himself also a priest, died in 1849 of a softening him and borrowing his own concept of the tragic;
of the brain (encephalitis or apoplexy). Nietzsche was sometimes he had the delightful feeling that with
brought up in Naumburg, surrounded by women, with Cosima's help he would carry Wagner to truths that
his younger sister, Elisabeth. He was a child prodigy; he, Wagner, couldn't discover on his own.
his essays were saved, as weIl as his attempts at musi- Nietzsche's professorship made him a Swiss citi-
cal composition. He studied in Pforta, then in Bonn zen. He worked as an ambulance driver during the war
and Leipzig. He chose philology over theology. But he of 1870. At Basel, he shed his last "burdens": a certain
was already haunted by philosophy and by the image of nationalism and a certain sympathy for Bismarck and
Arthur Schopenhauer, the solitary thinker, the "pri- Prussia. He could no longer stand the identification
vate thinker:' As early as 1869, Nietzsche's philological of culture with the state, nor could he accept the idea
works (on Theognis, Simonides, Diogenes Laertius) that victory through arms be taken as a sign of cul-
secured him a professorship in philology at the Uni- ture. His disdain for Germany was already apparent, as
versity of BaseI. weIl as his incapacity for living among the Germans.
It was then that his close friendship with Richard But with Nietzsche, the abandonment of old beliefs
Wagner began. They met in Leipzig. Wagner lived in did not assume the form of crisis (what occasioned a
Tribschen, near Lucerne. Nietzsche said those days cri sis was rather the inspiration or the revelation of a
were among the best of his life. Wagner was almost newidea). Abandonmentwas nothis problem. We have
sixt y; his wife, Cosima, just past thirty. Cosima was no reason to suspect his declarations in Ecce Homo
Liszt's daughter. She left the musician Hans von Bülow wh en he says that in religious matters, despite his
for Wagner. Her friends sometimes called her Ari- ancestry, atheism came to him naturaIly, instinctively.

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Nietzsche retreated further into solitude. In 1871, he resort, in Switzerland, in Italy, in the south of France,
wrote The Birth if Tragedy, where the real Nietzsche sometimes alone, sometimes with friends (Malwida
breaks through from behind the masks of Wagner and von Meysenbug, an old Wagnerian; his former stu-
Schopenhauer. The book was poorly received by phi- dent Peter Gast, a musician he hoped would replace
lologists. Nietzsche felt himself to be untimely and dis- Wagner; Paul Rée, with whom he shared a taste for
covered the incompatibility between the private thinker the natural sciences and the dissection of morality).
and the public professor. In the fourth volume of He sometimes returned to Naumburg. In Sorrento, he
Untimely Meditations, "Richard Wagner in Bayreuth" saw Wagner for the last time, a Wagner who had be-
(1875), his reservations about Wagner become explicit. come pious and nationalistic. In 1878, with Human,
The Bayreuth inauguration, with its circus-like atmos- AlI Too Human, he began his great critique of values,
phere, its processions, its speeches, the presence of the age of the lion. His friends misundcrstood him;
the old emperor, made him sick. The apparent changes Wagner attacked him. But ab ove aIl, he was increas-
in Nietzsche astonished his friends. He was more and ingly ill. "Not to be able to read! To write only very
more interested in the sciences: in physics, biology, infrequently! To see no one! Not to hear any music!"
medicine. His health was poor; he had constant head- ln 1880, he described his state as follows: "ContinuaI
aches, stomachaches, eye trouble, speech difficulties. suffering, for hours every day a feeling of seasickness,
He gave up teaching. "My illness slowly liberated me: it a semi-paralysis that makes speaking difficult and, as a
spared me separations, violent or ugly actions .... It en- diversion, terrible attacks (during the last one 1 vom-
titled me to radically change my ways:' And since Wag- ited for three days and three nights, and hungered for
ner was a compensation for Nietzsche-the-Professor, death ... ). If! could only describe the relentlessness of
when the professorship went, so did Wagner. it aU, the continuous gnawing pain in my head, my
Thanks to Franz Overbeck, the most loyal and in- eyes, and this general feeling of paralysis, from head
telligent of his friends, Nietzsche obtained a pension to toe:'
from Basel in 1878. It was then that his itinerant life ln what sense is illness - or even madness - pre-
began: like a shadow, renting simple furnished rooms, sent in Nietzsche's work? It is never a source of inspi-
sceking favorable climates, he went from resort to ration. N cver did Nietzsche think of philosophy as
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proceeding from suffering or anguish, even if the phi- for the mad Nietzsche is precisely the Nietzsche who
losopher, according to him, suffers in excess. Nor did lost this mobility, this art of displacement, when he
he think of illness as an event that affects a body- could no longer in his health make of sickness a point
object or a brain-object from the outside. Rather, he of view on health.
saw in illness a point if view on health; and in health, a With Nietzsche, everything is mask. His health was
point if view on illness. "To observe, as a sick person, a first mask for his genius; his suffering, a second mask,
healthier concepts, healthier values, then, conversely, bath for his genius and for his health. Nietzsche didn't
from the height of a rich, abundant, and confident life, believe in the unit y of a self and didn't experience it.
to delve into the secret work of decadent instincts- Subtle relations of power and of evaluation between
such is the practice in which 1 most frequently en- different "selves" that conceal but also express other
gaged ... :' Illness is not a motive for a thinking sub- kinds of forces - forces oflife, forces of thought - such
ject, nor is it an object for thought: it constitutes, is Nietzsche' s conception, his way of living. Wagner,
rather, a secret intersubjectivity at the heart of a single Schopenhauer, and even Paul Rée were experienced as
individual. IIIness as an evaluation of health, health as his own masks. After 1890, his friends (Overbeck, Gast)
an evaluation ofillness: such is the "reversaI," the "shift sometimes thought his madness was his final mask. He
in perspective" that Nietzsche saw as the crux of his had written: "And sometimes madness itself is the
mcthod and his calling for a transmutation of values.! mask that hides a knowledge that is fatal and tao sure:'
Dcspite appearances, however, there is no reciprocity In faet, it is not. Rather, it marks the moment wh en
hct wccn the two points of view, the two evaluations. the masks, no longer shifting and communicating,
l'hus movemcnt from health to sickness, from sick- merge into a death-like rigidity. Among the strongest
IlCSS to hcalth, if only as an idea, this very mobility is moments of Nietzsche's philosophy are the pages
thc sign of superior health; this mobility, this light- where he speaks of the need ta be masked, of the
IlCSS in ll1ovement, is the sign of "great health:' That is virtue and the positivity of masks, of their ultimate
why N idzschc could say until the end (that is, in 1888): importance. Nietzsche's own beauty resided in his
"1 ,1111 the opposite or a sick persan; 1 am basically hands, his ears, his eyes (he compliments himself on
w(·II." Aild yd OIlC lllust say that it would ail end badly, his ears; he sees small ears as being a labyrinthine

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secret that leads to Dionysus). But on this first mask But he was often very anxious and experienced
there cornes another, represented by the enormous many frustrations. In 1882, there was the affair with
mustache: "Give me, please give me ... - What? - Lou von Salomé, a young Russian woman who lived
another mask, a second mask:' with Paul Rée and seemed to Nietzsche an ideal disci-
After Human, All Too Human, Nietzsche continued ple and worthy of his love. Following an affective
his project of total criticism: The Wanderer and His structure he had already had occasion to enact, Niet-
Shadow(1879),Daybreak (1880). Heworkedon The Gay zsche soon proposed to her through a friend. He was
Science. But something new emerged: an exaltation, an pursuing a dream: with himself as Dionysus, he would
overabundance, as if Nietzsche had been pushed to the receive Ariadne, with Theseus' s approval. Theseus is
point where evaluation changes meaning and where the higher man, the image of the father - what Wag-
illness is judged from the height of a strange well- ner had already been for Nietzsche. But Nietzsche had
being. His suffering continued, but it was often domi- not dared to aspire openly to Cosima-Ariadne. In
nated by an "enthusiasm" that affected his very body. Paul Rée, and in other friends before him, Nietzsche
Nietzsche then experienced his most exalted states of found other Theseuses, fathers that were younger,
being, though they were interlaced with menacing less imposing. 2 Dionysus is superior to the higher
feelings. In August 1881, in Sils-Maria, as he walked man, as Nietzsche was to Wagner and aIl the more so
along the lake of Silvaplana, he had the overwhelming to Paul Rée. Obviously and inevitably, this sort of fan-
revelation of the eternal return, then the inspiration tasy had to fail. Ariadne always still prefers Theseus.
for Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Between 1883 and 1885, With Malwida von Meysenbug acting as chaperon, Lou
he wrote the four books of Zarathustra and gathered von Salomé, Paul Rée, and Nietzsche formed a peculiar
notes for a book that was to follow. He carried criti- quartet. Theil' life together was made of quarrels and
cism to a higher level than ever before; he made of it reconciliations. Nietzsche's sister Elisabeth, who was
the weapon of a "transmutation" of values, the No that possessive and jealous, did her best to break it up. She
is at the service of a higher affirmation (Beyond Good succeeded, because Nietzsche could neither detach
and Fvil, 1886; Thc Gcncalo8Y ~f MoraIs, 1887). This is himself from her nor dampen the harsh judgment he
the thircl I1wtamorphosis. or the becoming-child. had of her ("people like my sis ter are irreconcilable

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adversaries of my way of thinking and my philosophy, in a last momentum before the final collapse. Even his
this is due to the eternal nature of things .. :'; "souls tone changes in these masterful works: a new violence,
such as yours, my poor sister, 1 do not like them"; "1 a new humor, as with the comedy of the Overman.
am profoundly tired of your inde cent moralizing Nietzsche paints a picture of himself that is global,
chatter.. :'). Lou von Salomé's fondness for Nietzsche provoking ("one day the memory of something extra-
was not truly love; but many years later, she did write ordinary will be linked to my name"; "it is only thanks
a beautiful book about him. 3 to me that there are great politics on earth"); but at the
Nietzsche felt more and more isolated. He learned same time, he focused on the present and was concerned
of Wagner's death, which revived in him the Ariadne- with immediate success. By the end of 1888, he had
Cosima idea. In 1885, Elisabeth married Bernhard started to write strange letters. To August Strindberg: "1
Forster, a Wagnerian and an anti-Semite who was also convened in Rome an assembly of princes, 1 want to
a Prussian nationalist. Forster went to Paraguay with have the young Kaiser shot. Good-bye for now! For we
Elisabeth to found a colony of pure Aryans. Nietzsche will me et again. On one condition: Let's divorce ...
didn't attend their wedding and found his cumber- Nietzsche-Caesar:' On January 3, 1889, he had a crisis
sorne brother-in-Iaw hard to put up with. To another in Turin. He again wrote letters, signed them Diony-
racist he wrote: "Please stop sending me your publi- sus, or the Crucified one, or both. To Cosima Wagner:
cations; 1 fear for my patience:' Nietzsche's bouts of "Ariadne, 1 love you. Dionysius." Overbeck rushed to
euphoria and depression followed more closely on Turin, where he found Nietzsche overwrought and lost.
each other. At times, everything seemed excellent to He managed to take him to Basel, where Nietzsche
him: his clothes, what he ate, the people who received calmly allowed himself to be committed. The diagno-
him, the fascination he believed he caused in stores. sis was "progressive paralysis:' His mother had him
At other times, despair won over: a lack of readers, a transferred to Jena. The doctors in Jena suspected a
l'lTlillg of death, of dcceit. syphilitic infection dating back to 1866. (Was this
Theil came the great year 1888: TWilight if the based on sorne declaration of Nietzsche's? As a young
h/o/s, 'J'he WClflner Case, The Antichrist, Ecce Homo. It is man, he told his friend Paul Deussen of a strange ad-
.IS il' his ncative Elcultics werc bccoming exacerbated venture in which he was saved by a piano. A text of
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Zarathustra, "Among the Girls of the Desert," must be itself became inseparable from the end of his oeuvre
read in this light.) Sometimes calm, sometimes in cri- (Nietzsche had spoken of madness as a "comic solu-
sis, he seemed to have forgotten everything about his tion," as a final farce).
work, though he still played music. His mother took Elisabeth helped her mother take care of Nietzsche.
him back to her home; Elisabeth returned from Para- She gave pious interpretations to the illness. She made
guay at the end of 1890. His illness slowly progressed acid remarks to Overbeck, who responded with much
toward total apathy and agony. He died in Weimar in dignity. She had great merits: she did everything to
1900. 4 ensure the diffusion of her brother's ideas; she orga-
Though we cannot know for certain, the diagnosis nized the Nietzsche-Archiv in Weimar. 5 But thcsc
of an overall paralysis seems accurate. But the ques- merits pale before the highest treason: she tried (0
tion is: Did the symptoms of 1875,1881,1888 con- place Nietzsche in the service of national socialism.
stitute one and the same clinical picture? Was it the This was the last stroke of Nietzsche's fate: the abu-
same illness? It seems likely. Whether it was dementia sive family member who figures in the procession of
rather than psycho sis isn't significant. We have seen every "cursed thinker."
in what way illness, and even madness, figured in
Nietzsche's work. The overall paralysis marks the mo- The Philosophy
ment when illness exits from the work, interrupts it, Nietzsche introduced two forms of expression into
and makes its continuation impossible. Nietzsche's philosophy: aphorism and poetry. They imply a new
last letters testify to this extreme moment, thus they conception of philosophy, a new image of the thinker
still belong to his work; they are a part of it. As long and ofthought. Nietzsche replaced the ideal ofknowl-
as Nietzsche could practice the art of shifting perspec- edge, the discovery of the truth, with interpretation
tives, from health to illness and back, he enjoyed, sick and evaluation. Interpretation establishes the "mean-
as he may have been, the "great health" that made his ing" of a phenomenon, which is always fragmentary
work possible. But when this art failed him, when the and incomplete; evaluation determines the hierarchi-
masks were conflated into that of a dunce and a buffoon cal "value" of the meanings and totalizes the fragments
under the effect of sorne organic process, the illness without diminishing or eliminating their plurality.
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Indeed, aphorism is both the art of interpreting and losing itself along the way. N ow we only have the
what must be interpreted; poetry, both the art of eval- choice between mediocre lives and mad thinkers. Lives
uating and what must be evaluated. The interpreter is that are too docile for thinkers, and thoughts too mad
the physiologist or doctor, the one who sees phenom- for the living: Immanuel Kant and Friedrich Hûlder-
ena as symptoms and speaks through aphorisms. The lin. But the fine unit y in which madness would cease
evaluator is the artist who considers and creates "per- to be such is yet to be rediscovered - a unit y that
spectives" and speaks through poetry. The philoso- turns an anecdote of life into an aphorism of thought,
pher of the future is both artist and doctor - in one and an evaluation of thought into a new perspective
word, legislator. on life.
This image of the philosopher is also the oldest, In a way, this secret of the pre-Socratics was al-
the most ancient one. It is that of the pre-Socratic ready lost at the start. We must think of philosophy as
thinker, "physiologist" and artist, interpreter and eval- a force. But the law of forces is such that they can
uator of the world. How are we to understand this only appear when concealed by the mask of preexist-
closeness between the future and the pa st? The phi- ing forces. Life must first imitate matter. 1t was for
10sopher of the future is the explorer of ancient worlds, this reason that to survive at the time of its birth in
of peaks and caves, who creates only inasmuch as he Greece, philosophical force had to disguise itself. The
recalls something that has been essentially forgotten. philosopher had to assume the air of the preceding
That something, according to Nietzsche, is the unit y forces; he had to take on the mask of the priest. The
of life and thought. It is a complex unit y: one step for young Greek philosopher has something of the old
life, one step for thought. Modes of life inspire ways Oriental priest. We still confuse them today: Zoro-
of thinking; modes of thinking create ways of living. aster and Heraclitus, the Hindus and the Eleatics, the
Life activa tes thought, and thought in turn ciffirms life. Egyptians and Empedocles, Pythagoras and the Chi-
Of this pre-Socratic unit y we no longer have even the nese. We speak of the virtue of the ideal philosopher,
slightest idea. We now have only instances where of his asceticism, of his love of wisdom. We cannot
thought bridles and mutilates life, making it sensible, guess the peculiar solitude and the sensuality, the very
and where life takes revenge and drives thought mad, unwise ends of the perilous existence that lie beneath
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this mask. The secret ofphilosophy, because it was lost iologist or doctor and becomes a metaphysician. He
at the start, remains to be discovered in the future. ceases to be a poet and becomes a "public professor:'
It was therefore fated that philosophy degenerate He daims to be beholden to the requirements of truth
as it developed through history, that it turn against and reason; but beneath these requirements of reason
itself and be taken in by its own mask. Instead oflink- are forces that aren't so reasonable at aIl: the state,
ing an active life and an affirmative thinking, thought religion, aIl the current values. Philosophy becomes
gives itself the task of judging life, opposing to it sup- nothing more than taking the census of aIl the reasons
posedly higher values, measuring it against these val- man gives himself to obey. The philosopher invokes
ues, restricting and condemning it. And at the same love of the truth, but it is a truth that harms no one
time that thought thus becomes negative, life depre- ("it appears as a self-contented and happy creature
ciates, ceases to be active, is reduced to its weakest which is continuaIly assuring aIl the powers that be
forms, to sickly forms that are alone compatible with that no one needs to be the least concerned on its
the so-called higher values. It is the triumph if "reac- account; for it is, after aIl, only "pure science").6 The
tion" over active life and if neBation over affirmative philosopher evaluates life in accordance with his abil-
thouBht. The consequences for philosophy are dire, ity to uphold weights and carry burdens. These bur-
for the virtues of the philosopher as legislator were dens, these weights, are precisely the higher values.
first the critique of aIl established values - that is, of Such is the spirit of heaviness that brings together, in
values superior to life and of the principles on which the same desert, the carrier with the carried, the reac-
they depend - and then the creation of new values, of tive and depreciated life with negative and depreciat-
values of life that call for another principle. Hammer ing thinking. AlI that remains then is an illusion of
and transmutation. While philosophy thus degener- critique and a phan tom of creation, for nothing is
ates, the philosopher as legislator is replaced by the more opposed to the creator than the carrier. To cre-
submissive philosopher. Instead of the cri tic of estab- ate is to lighten, to unburden life, to invent new pos-
lished values, instead of the creator of new values sibilities of life. The creator is legislator - dancer.
and new evaluations, there emerges the preserver of The degeneration of philosophy appears clearly
acccptcd values. The philosopher ceases to be a phys- with Socrates. If we define metaphysics by the dis-

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tinction between two worlds, by the opposition be- and a mutilating thought, what is the use of recuper-
tween essence and appearance, between the true and ating them or becoming their true subject? Did we do
the false, the intelligible and the sensible, we have to away with religion when we interiorized the priest,
say that it is Socrates who invented metaphysics. He placing him into the faithful, in the style of the Refor-
made oflife something that must be judged, measured, mation? Did we kill God when we put man in his
restricted, and of thought, a measure, a limit, that is place and kept the most important thing, which is the
exercised in the name of higher values: the Divine, place? The only change is this: instead of being bur-
the True, the Beautiful, the Good .... With Socrates dened from the outside, man takes the weights and
emerges the figure of a philosopher who is voluntar- places them on his own back. The philosopher of the
ily and subtly submissive. But let's move on and skip future, the doctor-philosopher, will diagnose the per-
through the centuries. Who can really think that Kant petuation of the same ailment beneath different symp-
reinstated critique or rediscovered the ide a of the phi- toms; values can change, man can put himself in the
losopher as legislator? Kant den ounces false claims to place of God, progress, happiness; utility can replace
knowledge, but he doesn't question the ideal ofknow- the truth, the good, or the divine - what is essential
ing; he denounces false morality, but he doesn't ques- hasn't changed: the perspectives or the evaluations on
tion the claims of morality or the nature and the origin which these values, whether old or new, depend. We
of its value. He blames us for having confused domains are always asked to submit ourselves, to burden our-
and interests; but the domains remain intact, and the selves, to recognize only the reactive forms oflife, the
interests of reason, sacred (true knowledge, true morals, accusatory forms of thought. Wh en we no longer want,
true religion). when we can no longer bear higher values, we are
Dialectics itself perpetrates this prestigiditation. still asked to accept "the real as it is" - but this "real as
Dialectics is the art that invites us to recuperate alien- it is" is precise1y what the higher values have made if
ated properties. Everything returns to the Spirit as reality! (Even existentialism retained a frightening
the motor and product of the dialectic, or to self-con- taste for carrying, for bearing, a properly dialectical
sciousncss, or evcn to man, as generic being. But if taste that separates it from Nietzsche.)
our propcrtics in themsclvcs express a diminished life Nietzsche is the first to tell us that killing God is
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not enough to bring about the transmutation of val- conquest and subjugation, from reactive, secondary
ues. In his work, there are at least fifteen versions of forces, of adaptation and regulation. This distinction
the death of God, aU of them very beautiful. 7 But is not only quantitative but also qualitative and typo-
indeed, in one of the most beautiful, the murderer of logical, for it is in the nature of forces to be in relation
God is "the ugliest of men:' What Nietzsche means is to other forces and it is in this relation that they
that man makes himself even more ugly when, no acquire their essence or quality. The relation of force
longer in need of an external authority, he denies to force is called "will:' That is why we must avoid at
himself what was denied him and spontaneousl y takes aIl costs the misinterpretations of the Nietzschean
on the policing and the burdens that he no longer principle of the will to power. This principle doesn't
thinks come from the outside. Thus the history of mean (or at least doesn't primarily mean) that the
philosophy, from the Socratics to the Hegelians, re- will wants power or wishes to dominate. As long as the
mains the long history of man' s submissions and the will to power is interpreted in terms of a "desire to
reasons he gives himself for legitimizing them. This dominate," we inevitably make it depend on estab-
process of degeneration concerns not only philoso- lished values, the only ones able to determine, in any
phy but also becoming in general, or the most basic given case or conflict, who must be "recognized" as
catcgory or history - not a fact in history, but the very the most powerful. We then cannot recognize the
principlc l'rom which derive most of the events that nature of the will to power as an elastic principle of
have dctermined our thinking and our life, the symp- aIl of our evaluations, as a hidden principle for the
toms of a decomposition. And so true philosophy, as creation of new values not yet recognized. The will to
philosophy of the future, is no more historical than it power, says Nietzsche, consists not in coveting or even
is eternal: it must be untimely, always untimely. in taking but in creating and giving. Power, as a will to
AU interpretations determine the meaning of a power, is not that which the will wants, but that whieh
phenomenon. Meaning consists of a relation of forces wants in the will (Dionysus himself). The will to
in which sorne aet and others reaet in a complex and power is the differential element from which derive
hierarchized who le. Whatever the complexity of a the forces at work, as weIl as their respective quality
phenomenon, we can distinguish primary forces, of III a complcx wholc. Thus it is always given

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as a mobile, aerial, pluralist element. It is by the will history of man, but in the history of life and the earth,
to power that a force commands, but it is also by the at least on the face of it inhabited by man. Every-
will to power that a force obeys. To these two types where we see the victory of No over Yes, of reaction
or qualities of forces there correspond two faces, two over action. Life becomes adaptive and regulative,
qualia, of the will to power, which are ultimate and reduced to its secondary forms; we no longer und er-
fluent, deeper than the forces that derive from them, stand what it means to act. Even the forces of the
for the will to power makes it that active forces ciffirm, earth become exhausted on this desolate face. Niet-
and affirm their difference: in them affirmation is zsche caUs this joint victory of reactive forces and the
first, and negation is never but a consequence, a sort will to negate "nihilism" - or the triumph of the
of surplus of pleasure. What characterizes reactive slaves. According to him, the analysis of nihilism is
forces, on the other hand, is their opposition to what the object of psycholoBY' understood also as a psychol-
they are not, their tendency to limit the other: in them, ogy of the cosmos.
neBation cornes first; through negation, they arrive at It seems difficult for a philosophy of force or of
a semblance of affirmation. Affirmation and negation the will to explain how the reactive forces, how the
are thus the qualia of the will to power, just as action slaves, or the weak, can win. If all that happens is that
and reaction are the qualities of forces. And just as together they form a force greater th an that of the
interpretation finds the principles of meaning in strong, it is hard to see what has changed and what a
forces, evaluation finds the principles of values in the qualitative evaluation is based on. But in fact, the weak,
will to power. Given the preceding terminological the slaves, triumph not by adding up their forces but
precisions, we can avoid reducing Nietzsche's thought by subtracting those of the other: they separate the
to a simple dualism, for, as we shaH see, affirmation is strong from what they can do. They triumph not be-
itself essentiaUy multiple and pluralist, whereas nega- cause of the composition of their power but because
tion is always one, or heavily monist. of the power of their contagion. They bring about a
Yet history presents us with a most peculiar phe- becoming-reactive of aU forces. That is what "degen-
nomenon: the reactive forces triumph; negation wins eration" means. Nietzsche shows early on that the
in the will to power! This is the case not only in the criteria of the struggle for life, of natural selection,

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necessarily favor the weak and the sick, the "secon- have others attribute to one established values: money,
dary ones" (by sick is meant a life reduced to its reac- honors, power, and so on). Yet that kind of will to
tive processes). This is all the more true in the case of power is precisely that of the slave; it is the way in
man, where the criteria of history favor the slaves as which the slave or the impotent conceives of power,
such. It is a becoming-sick of alllife, a becoming-slave the ide a he has of it and that he apphes when he tri-
of all men, that constitutes the victory of nihilism. We umphs. It can happen that a sick person says, Oh! if
must again avoid misconceptions about the Nietzsch- 1 were well, 1 would do this or that - and maybc he
ean terms " strong"an d " wea,k"" master "d" l "
an save: will, but his plans and his thoughts are still thosc of
it is clear that the slave doesn't stop being a slave when a sick person, only a sick pers on. The same goes for
he gets power, nor do the weak cease to be weak. the slave and for his conception of mastery or power.
Even when they win, reactive forces are still reactive. The same also goes for the reactive man and his con-
ln everything, according to Nietzsche, what is at stake ception of action. Values and evaluations are always
is a qualitative typology: a question of baseness and being reversed, things are always seen from a petty
nobility. Our masters are slaves that have triumphed angle, images are reversed as in a bull's-eye. One of
in a universal becoming-slave: European man, domes- Nietzsche's greatest sayings is: "We must always pro-
ticated man, the buffoon. Nietzsche describes mod- te ct the strong from the weak:'
ern states as ant colonies, where the leaders and the Let us now specify, for the case of man, the stages
powerful win through their baseness, through the of the triumph of nihilism. These stages constitute
contagion of this baseness and this buffoonery. What- the great discoveries of Nietzschean psychology, the
ever the complexity of Nietzsche's work, the reader categories of a typology of depths.
can easily guess in which category (that is, in which 1. Resentment: It's your fault ... It's your fault ...
type) he would have placed the race of "masters" con- Projective accusation and recrimination. It's your fault
ceived by the Nazis. When nihilism triumphs, then if l'm weak and unhappy. Reactive life gets away from
and only then does the will to power stop meaning "to active forces; reaction stops being "acted:' It becomes
create" and start to signify instead "to want power," something sensed, a "resentment" that is exerted
"to want to dominate" (thus to attribute to oneself or against everything that is active. Action becomes

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shameful: life itself is accused, separated from its pow- called nobility. We say that someone is noble and
er' separated from what it can do. The lamb says: l strong because he carries; he carries the weight of
could do everything that the eagle does; l'm admir- higher values; he feels responsible. Even life, espe-
able for not doing so. Let the eagle do as l do ... cially life, seems hard for him to carry. Evaluations are
2. Bad conscience: It's my fault. .. The moment of so distorted that we can no longer see that the carrier
introjection. Having captured life like a fish on a is a slave, that what he carries is a slavery, that the car-
hook, the reactive forces can turn in on themselves. rier is a carrier of the weak - the opposite of a creator
They interiorize the fault, say they are guilty, turn or a dancer. In fact, one only carries out of weakness;
against themselves. But in this way they set an ex- one only wishes to be carried out of a will to nothing-
ample, they invite aIl of life to come and join them, ness (see the buffoon of Zarathustra and the figure of
they acquire a maximum of contagious power - they the donkey).
form reactive communities. These stages of nihilism correspond, according to
3. The ascetic ideal: The moment of sublimation. Nietzsche, to Judaic religion, then to Christianity, but
What the weak or reactive life ultimately wants is the the latter was certainly weIl prepared by Greek phi-
negation of life. /ts will to power is a will to nothing- losophy, that is, by the degeneration of philosophy in
ness, as a condition of its triumph. Conversely, the Greece. More generally, Nietzsche shows how these
will to nothingness can only tolerate a life that is stages are also the genesis of the great categories of
weak, mutilated, reactive - states close to nothing. our thought: the Self, the World, God, causality, final-
Then is formed the disturbing alliance. Life is judged ity, and so on. But nihilism doesn't stop there and fol-
according to values that are said to be superior to life: lows a path that makes up our en tire history.
these pious values are opposed to life, condemn it, 4. The death if Gad: The moment of recuperation.
lead it to nothingness; they promise salvation only to For a long time, the death of God was thought to be
the most reactive, the weakest, the sickest forms of an inter-religious drama, a problem between the Jew-
life. Su ch is the alliance between God -N othingness ish God and the Christian God, to the point where
and Reactive-Man. Everything is reversed: slaves are we are no longer quite sure whether it is the Son
called masters; the weak are called strong; baseness is who dies out of resentment against the Father or the

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Father who dies so that the Son can be independent residue of reactive forces and the will to nothingness.
(and become "cosmopolitan"). But Saint Paul already That is why Nietzsche, in book IV of Zarathustra,
founded Christianity on the principle that Christ dies traces the great misery of those he calls "the higher
for our sins. With the Reformation, the death of God men!' These men want to replace God; they carry
becomes increasingly a problem between God and hum an values; they even believe they are rediscover-
man, until the day man discovers himself to be the ing reality, recuperating the meaning of affirmation.
murderer of God, wishes to see himself as such and to But the only affirmation of which they are capable is
carry this new weight. He wants the logical outcome the Yes of the donkey, Y-A, the reactive force that bur-
of this death: to become God himself, to replace God. dens itself with the products of nihilism and that
Nietzsche's idea is that the death of God is a grand thinks it says Yes each time it carries a no. (Two mod-
event, glamorous yet insufficient, for nihilism contin- ern works are profound meditations on the Yes and
ues, barely changing its form. Earlier, nihilism had the No, on their authenticity or their mystification:
meant depreciation, the negation of life in the name those of Nietzsche and James Joyce.)
ofhigher values. But now the negation of these higher 5. The la st man and the man who wants ta die: The
values is replaced by human values - aIl too human moment of the end. The death of God is thus an event
values (morals replace religion; utility, progress, even that still awaits its meaning and its value. As long as
history replace divine values). Nothing has changed, our principle of evaluation remains unchanged, as
for the same reactive life, the same slavery that had long as we replace old values with new ones that only
triumphed in the shadow of divine values now tri- amount to new combinations between reactive forces
umphs through human ones. The same carrier, the and the will to nothingness, nothing has changed; we
same donkey, who used to bear the weight of divine are still under the aegis of established values. We know
relies, for which he answered before God, now bur- full weIl that sorne values are born old and from the
dens himself on his own, as an auto-responsibility. We time of their birth exhibit their conformity, their con-
have even taken a further step in the desert of nihil- formism, their inability to upset any established order.
ism: wc daim to embracc aIl of reality, but we em- And yet with each step, nihilism advances further, in-
bracc ol1ly what the highcr values have left of it, the anity further reveals itself. What appears in the death

Xo
PURE IMMANENCE NIETZSCHE

of God is that the alliance between reactive forces Hence the Yes of the donkey, Y-A, becomes a false
and the will to nothingness, between reactive man yes, a sort of caricature of affirmation. N ow every-
and nihilist God, is in the process of dissolving: man thing changes: affirmation becomes the essence or
claimed he could do without God, be the same as the will to power itself; as for the negative, it sub-
God. Nietzsche's concepts are categories of the un- sists, but as the mode of being of one who affirms, as
conscious. What counts is how this drama is played the aggressivity that belongs to affirmation, like the
out in the unconscious: when reactive forces daim to lightning that announces and the thunder that fol-
do without a "will," they fall further and further into lows, what is affirmed -like the total critique that
the abyss of nothingness, into a world more and more accompanies creation. Thus Zarathustra is pure affir-
devoid of values, divine or even human. Following mation but also he who carries negation to its highest
the higher men there arises the last man, the one who point, making of it an action, an agency that services
says: all is vain, better to fade away passively! Better a he who affirms and creates. The Yes of Zarathustra is
nothingness of the will than a will of nothingness! But opposed to the Yes of the donkey, as creating is op-
thanks to this rupture, the will to nothingness turns posed to carrying. The No of Zarathustra is opposed
<tgainst the reactive forces, becomes the will to deny to the No of nihilism, as aggressivity is opposed to
reactive life itself, and inspires in man the wish to resentment. Transmutation signifies this reversaI in
actively destroy himself. Beyond the last man, then, the relation of affirmation-negation. But we can see
there is still the man who wants ta die. And at this that a transmutation is possible only at the close of
moment of the completion of nihilism (midnight), nihilism. We had to get to the last man, then to the
everything is ready - ready for a transmutation. 8 man who wants to die, for negation finally ta tUIn
The transmutation of aIl values is defined in the aBainst the reactive forces and become an action that
following way: an active becoming of forces, a tri- serves a higher affirmation (hence Nietzsche' s saying:
umph <if affirmation in the will ta power. Under the rule nihilism conquered, but conquered by itself. .. ).
of nihilism, negation is the form and the content of Affirmation is the highest power of the will. But
the will to power; <tffirmation is only sccOlHbry, sub- what is affirmed? The earth, life ... But what form do
ordinaicd io ncgatioll, gathcring and carrying its fruit. the carth and life assume wh en they are the objects of
NIETZSCHE
PURE IMMANENCE

affirmation? A form unbeknownst to we who inhabit Multiplicity is affirmed as multiplicity; becoming


only the desolate surface of the earth and who live in is affirmed as becoming. That is to sayat once that
states close to zero. What nihilism condemns and affirmation is itself multiple, that it becomes itself,
tries to deny is not so much Being, for we have known and that becoming and multiplicity are themselves
for sorne time that Being resembles N othingness like affirmations. There is something like a play of mirrors
a brother. It is, rather, multiplicity; it is, rather, be- in affirmation properly understood: "Eternal affirma-
coming. Nihilism considers becoming as something tion ... eternally 1 am your affirmation!" The second
that must atone and must be reabsorbed into Being, figure of the transmutation is the affirmation of the
and the multiple as something unjust that must be affirmation, the doubling, the divine couple Dionysus
judged and reabsorbed into the One. Becoming and and Ariadne.
multiplicity are guilty - such is the first and the last Dionysus can be recognized in aU the preceding
word of nihilism. That is why under its aegis, philoso- characteristics. We are far from the first Dionysus,
phy is motivated by dark sentiments: a "discontent," a the one that Nietzsche had conceived under the influ-
certain anguish, an uneasiness about living, an ob- ence of Schopenhauer, who had reabsorbed life into a
scure sense of guilt. By contrast, the first figure of the primaI ground and, forming an alliance with Apollo,
transmutation elevates multiplicity and becoming to had created tragedy. It is true that starting with The
their highest power and makes of them objects of an Birth if TraBedy, Dionysus was defined through his
affirmation. In the affirmation of the multiple lies the opposition to Socrates even more th an through his
practical joy of the diverse. Joy emerges as the sole alliance with Apollo; Socrates judged and condemned
motive for philosophizing. To valorize negative senti- life in the name of higher values, but Dionysus had
ments or sad passions - that is the mystification on the sense that life is not to be judged, that it is just
which nihilism bases its power. (Lucretius, then Spin- enough, holy enough, in itself. And as Nietzsche pro-
oza, already wrote decisive passages on this subject. gresses further in his work, the real opposition ap-
Before Nietzsche, they conceived philosophy as the pears to him: no longer Dionysus versus Socrates, but
power to affirm, as the practical struggle against mys- Dionysus versus the Crucified. Their martyrdom seems
tifications, as the expulsion of the negative.) the samc, but the interpretation, the evaluation of it
PURE IMMANENCE NIETZSCHE

are different: on one side, a testimony against life, a player makes of chance an object of affirmation: he
vengeance that consists in denying life; on the other, affirms the fragments, the elements of chance; from
the affirmation of life, the affirmation of becoming this affirmation is born the necessary number, which
and multiplicity that extends even in the very lacera- brings back the throw of the dice. We now see what
tion and scattered limbs of Dionysus. Dance, light- this third figure is: the play of the eternal return. This
ness, laughter are the properties ofDionysus. As power return is precisely the Being of becoming, the one of
of affirmation, Dionysus evokes a mirror within his multiplicity, the necessity of chance. Thus we must
mirror, a ring within his ring: a second affirmation is if
not make of the eternal return a return the sarne. To
needed for affirmation to be itself affirmed. Dionysus do this would be to misunderstand the form of the
has a fiancée, Ariadne ("You have sm aIl ears, you have transmutation and the change in the fundamental re-
my ears: put a clever word in them"). The only clever lationship, for the same does not preexist the diverse
word is Yeso Ariadne completes the set of relations (except in the category of nihilism). ft is not the sarne
that define Dionysus and the Dionysian philosopher. that cornes back, since the coming back is the original
Multiplicity is no longer answerable to the One, form of the same, which is said only of the diverse,
nor is becoming answerable to Being. But Being and the multiple, becoming. The same doesn't come back;
the One do more than lose their meaning: they take only coming back is the same in what becomes.
on a new meaning. Now the One is said of the multi- The very essence of the eternal return is at issue.
ple as the multiple (splinters or fragments); Being is We must get rid of aIl sorts of useless themes in this
said of becoming as becoming. That is the Nietzsch- question of the eternal return. It is sometimes asked
ean reversaI, or the third figure of the transmutation. how Nietzsche could have believed this thought to be
Becoming is no longer opposed to Being, nor is the new or extraordinary, because it was qui te common
multiple opposed to the One (these oppositions being among the ancients. But, precisely, Nietzsche knew
the categories of nihilism). On the contrary, what is full weIl that it was not ta be Jound in ancient philoso-
affirmed is the One of multiplicity, the Being of be- phy, either in Greece or in the Orient, except in a
coming. Or, as Nietzsche puts it, one affirms the piecemeal or hesitant manner and in a very different
necessity of chance. Dionysus is a player. The real sense from his own. Nietzsche already had the most
PURE IMMANENCE NIETZSCHE

explicit reservations about Heraclitus. And in putting only what can be affirmed cornes back, only joy re-
the eternal return in the mouth of Zarathustra, like a turns. AIl that can be negated, aIl that is negation, is
serpent in the gullet, Nietzsche meant only to impute expeIled by the very movement of the eternal return.
to the ancient figure of Zoroaster what Zoroaster We may fear that the combination of nihilism and
himself was the least able to conceive. Nietzsche ex- reaction will eternaIly come back. The eternal return
plains that he takes Zarathustra as a euphemism, or should be compared to a wheel whose movement is
rather as an antithesis and a metonymy, purposely endowed with a centrifugaI force that drives out every-
giving him new concepts that he himself could not thing negative. Because Being is affirmed of becom-
create. 9 ing, it expels aIl that contradicts affirmation, aIl the
It is also asked why the eternal return is so surpris- forms of nihilism and of reaction: bad conscience,
ing if it consists of a cycle, that is, of a return of the resentment ... we will see them only once.
whole, a return of the same, a return to the same. But Yet in many texts, Nietzsche conceives of the eter-
in fact it is not that at aIl. Nietzsche's secret is that nal return as a cycle where everything cornes back, or
the eternal return is selective. And doubly so. First as a the same cornes back, which amounts to the same.
thought, for it gives us a law for the autonomy of the But what do these texts mean? Nietzsche is a thinker
will freed from any morality: whatever 1 want (my who "dramatizes" ideas, that is, who presents them as
laziness, my gluttony, my cowardice, my vice as weIl successive events, with different levels of tension. We
as my virtue), 1 "must" want it in such a way that 1 have already seen this with the death of God. Simi-
also want its eternal return. The world of "semi- larly, the eternal return is the object of two accounts
wants" is thus eliminated: everything we want when (and there would have been more had his work not
we say "once, only once:' Even a cowardice, a lazi- been interrupted by madness, which prevented a pro-
ness, that would wish for its eternal return would be- gression that Nietzsche had explicitly planned). Of
come something other than a laziness, a cowardice; it the two accounts, one concerns a sick Zarathustra, the
would become an active power of affirmation. other, a Zarathustra who is convalescent and nearly
The eternal return is not only selective thinking cured. What makes Zarathustra sick is precisely the
but also selective Iking. Only affirmation COI11CS back, ide a of the cycle: the idea that everything cornes back,
PURE IMMANENCE NIFf/SCHE

that the same returns, that everything cornes back to Zarathustra ul1dnstands the equation "eternal return
the same. In this case, the eternal return is only a = selective Being." How can reaction and nihilism,

hypothesis, a hypothesis that is both banal and terrify- how can negation come back, sin ce the eternal return
ing: banal because it corresponds to a natural, animal, is the Being that is only said of affirmation, and be-
immediate, certitude (that is why, when the eagle and coming in action? A centrifugaI wheel, "supreme
the serpent try to console him, Zarathustra answers: constellation of Being, that no wish can attain, that no
you have made of the eternal return a tired refrain, negation can soi!:' The eternal return is repetition;
you have reduced the eternal return to a formula that but it is the repetition that selects, the repetition that
is common, aIl too common); 10 terrifying because, if saves. The prodigious secret of a repetition that is lib-
it is true that everything cornes back, and cornes back erating and selecting.
to the same, then small and petty man, nihilism and The transmutation thus has a fourth, and final,
reaction, will come back as weIl (that is why Zara- dimension: it implies and produces the Overman. In
thustra cries out his great disgust, his great contempt, his human essence, man is a reactive being who com-
and declares that he can not, will not, dares not, say bines his forces with nihilism. The eternal return
the eternal return). repels and expels him. The transmutation involves an
What happened when Zarathustra was convales- essential, radical conversion that is produced in man
cent? Did he simply decide to bear what he couldn't but that produces the Overman. The Overman refers
bear before? He accepts the eternal return; he grasps specifically to the gathering of an that can be affirmed,
its joy. Is this simply a psychological change? Of course the superior form of what is, the figure that repre-
not. It is a change in the understanding and the mean- sents selective Being, its offspring and subjectivity.
ing of the eternal return itself. Zarathustra recognizes He is thus at the intersection of two genealogies. On
that while he was sick, he had understood nothing of the one hand, he is produced in man, through the in-
the eternal: that it is not a cycle, that it is not the termediary of the last man and the man who wants to
return of the same, nor a return to the same; that it is die, but beyond them, through a sort of wrenching
not a simple, natural assumption for the use of ani- apart and transformation of human essence. Yet on
maIs or a sad moral pUllishment for the use of men. the other hand, although he is produced in man, he is

(JO
PURE IMMANENCE 1111 1

not produced by man: he is the fruit of Dionysus and representthc Ctl'I'I.II )('111111 .L".I 1111,:'. ,1 1III,!', \\1111111 !I\('
Ariadne. Zarathustra himself follows the first genea- ring, the engagl'llH'1I1 01' IIi(' .11\111<' '''"I,k 1)IOII\'~;tI~;
logicalline; he remains thus inferior to Dionysus, whose and Ariadne. Bul IIH'y (('Pl (',';('111 Il III .111 .I111111.1i \\'.Iy,
prophet or herald he becomes. Zarathustra caUs the as an immediate ccrlilll,k ni .1 II.III1I.tI .";~;I1I\1ll1inll.
Overman his child, but he has been surpassed by his (What escapes thcm is Il,,, ,'",,('11<'(' "ltll(' !'l''III.II
child, whose real father is Dionysus. Thus the figures return, that is, the ('ael Ih.1I il is s.. I('(1 ive, bolh as
of the transmutation are complete: Dionysus or affir- thought and as Being.) Thlls tlll'y 11I.lk,' or Ihl' ctcrnal
mation; Dionysus-Ariadne, or affirmation doubled; return a "babbling," a "rerr.lill." Wh.1I 's more: the
the eternal return, or affirmation redoubled; the Over- uncailed serpent reprcscnls wh.1I is illiolcrable and im-
man, or the figure and the product of the affirmation. possible in the eternal rdum whcll il is seen as a nat-
We readers of Nietzsche must avoid four potential ural certitude according 10 which "everything cornes
misinterpretations: (1) about the will to power (be- back:'
lieving that the will to power means "wanting to dom-
inate" or "wanting power"); (2) about the strong and Dankey and Caruel: They are beasts of the desert
the weak (believing that the most powerful in a social (nihilism). They carry loads to the heart of the desert.
regime are thereby the strong); (3) about the eternal The donkey has two flaws: his No is a false no, a no
return (believing that it is an old idea, borrowed from ofresentment. And moreover, his Yes (Y-A, Y-A) is a
the Greeks, the Hindus, the Babylonians ... ; believing false yeso He thinks that to affirm means ta carry, ta
that it is a cycle, or a return of the same, a return to burden. The donkey is primarily a Christian animal: he
the same); (4) about the last works (believing that carries the weight of values said to he "superior to
they are excessive or disqualified by madness). life:' After the death of God, he burdens himself, he
carries the weight of human values, he pur ports to
Dictionary of the Main Characters in deal with "the real as it is": he is thus the new god of
Nietzsche 's Work the higher men. From beginning to end, the donkey is
Eagle and Serpent: They are Zarathustra's animaIs. The the caricature of the hetrayal of Dionysus's Yes; he
serpent is coilcd around the caglc's Ileck. Roth thus affirms, but only the products of nihilism. His long

93
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PURE IMMANENCE

ears are also the opposite of the small, round laby- Tbe BtifJoon (Monkcy. Il,' 1.',1111 '.11
/)lFurj: O/' /)('/1/011):

rinthine ears of Dionysus and Ariadne. icature of Zarathuslr.l. 1k illlil.lI,'~; Ililll. 11111 ,1",11<,111
ness imitates lighllH'ss. Tlllls lit' Il'IlI''';''llh 11\1 ""1,',1
Spider (or Tarantula): It is the spirit of revenge or danger for ZarathllslLI: Ill\' 1... 11.1)' ..1 "l' ill< .1 .. ,111111
resentment. Its power of contagion is its venom. Its The buffoon is con1clllj)1 1I()11.~, bllt 0111 ,,1' I,'sntllill'iti.
will is a will to punish and to judge. Its weapon is the He is the spirit or he'\villt'ss. I.ik!' /',II.ltllll~,II,I. lit'
thread, the thread of morality. It preaches equality daims to go bcyond, tu OV('r('OIlH'. 1\111 10 ()\'('nOIII"
(that everyone become like it!). means for him eithcr to 1)(' c.IITi('(1 (to dilllb Oll 1I1.1I1's
shoulders, or even on Zarathllstr,I's) or to jlllllP ovn
Ariadne and Tbeseus: She is the anima. She was loved him. These represent the two possible misrcadings of'
by Theseus and loved him. But that was just when she the "Overman:'
hcld the thread and was a bit of a spider, a cold crea-
ture of resentment. Theseus is the hero, a picture of Christ (Saint Paul and Buddha): (1) He represents an
the higher man. He has an the inferiorities of the essential moment of nihilism: that of bad conscience,
higher man: to carry, to bear, not to know to unhar- after Judaic resentment. But it is still the same enter-
ness, to know nothing of lightness. As long as Ariadne prise of vengeance and animosity toward life, for
loves Theseus and is loved by him, her femininity re- Christian love valorizes only the sick and desolate as-
mains imprisoned, tied up by the thread. But wh en pects of life. Through his death, Christ seems to be-
1)ionysus-the-Bull approaches, she discovers true come independent of the Jewish God: He becomes
,IITirmation and lightness. She becomes an affirma- univers al and "cosmopolitan:' But he has only found a
tive anima who says Yes to Dionysus. Together they new way of judging life, of universalizing the con-
.IIT the couple of the ctcrnal rcturn and give birth to demnation of life, by internalizing sin (bad consci-
the ()yerman, for "it is only when the hero aban- ence). Christ died for us, for our sins! Such at least is
dOlls his soul that the ()yerman approaches as in a the interpretation of Saint Paul, and it is the one that
d re ,1111." has prevailed in the Church and in our history. Christ's
martyrdom is thus opposed to that of Dionysus: in

95
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1111 1 III

the first case, life is judged and must atone; in the sec- mains the S,\III\', ,,~; III<' Il.111'.111111.1111'11 11.1', 11<>1 1", Il
ond, it is sufficiently just in itself to justify every- effected, they 1>l'loII,:', l'IIII\' 1.. 11111111',111 ,111,1 ,II' ,1 .. ", 1
thing. "Dionysus against the Crucified:' to Zarathustr.1's hullo"ll 111,111 1" /',11 ,il 1111',1 1,1 111111'" Il
(2) But if beneath Paul's interpretation we seek They are "faikd," "w.l~;kd," ,111.1 1',11"\\ Il,,1 11<'\\ 1..
the personal type that is Christ, we can surmise that laugh, to play, 10 d.III('('. III l'',:',it,d ~;t'tlll<'Il<t', Illt'll
Christ belongs to nihilism in a very different way. He parade goes as follows:
is kind and joyful, doesn't condemn, is indifferent to 1. The Last POfle: 1le IUIOWS 111.ti (;"d i,s d(,,,d hui
guilt of any kind; he wants only to die; he seeks his believes that God sul'l'o(',i!('(1 hiIIIS(·II', "ul 01 pit y, 1)('
own death. He is thus weIl ahead of Saint Paul, for cause he could no IOllger sLlIlIl his lov,' l'()I' 1))('11. Th('
he represents the ultimate stage of nihilism: that of last pope has becol11c lll.lstlT-kss, yd IlC is Ilot l'l'CC;
the last man or the man who wants to die - the stage he lives on his mcmories.
closest to Dionysian transmutation. Christ is "the most 2. The Two Kings: They reprcsent the movement
intcresting of decadents," a sort of Buddha. He en- of the "morality of mores," which seeks to train and
ables a transmutation; the synthesis of Dionysus and form men, to create free men through the most vio-
Christ is now possible: "Dionysus-Crucified:' lent and restrictive means. Thus there are two kings:
one on the left for the means, one on the right for the
f)ionysus: There are many different aspects of Diony- ends. But before, as weIl as after, the death of God,
sus - in relation to Apollo, in opposition to Socrates, for the means as for the ends, the morality of mores
ill contrast with Christ, in complementarity with itself degenerates, trains and selects the wrong way,
!\riadne. falls in favor of the rabble (triumph of the slaves). The
two kings are the ones who bring in the donkey so
Fhe Higher Men: They are multiple but exemplify the that the higher men will turn into their new god.
,~,lI11(,
cndeavor: after the death of God, to replace 3. The Ugliest 1
Men: He is the one who killed
divillc values with human values. They thus represent God, for he could no longer tolerate his pity. But he is
1hl' bccol1ling of culture, or the attcmpt to put man in still the old man, uglier yet: instead of the bad con-
Ihl' pl.H'C of Cod. As the principlc of evaluation re- science of a god who died for him, he experiences the

97
PURE IMMANENCE NIETZSCHE

bad conscience of a god who died because of him; his death. Bad conscience is fundamentally a come-
instead of feeling God's pit y, he feels man's pit y, the dian, an exhibitionist. It plays every role, even that of
pit Yof the rabble, which is even more unbearable. He the atheist, even that of the poet, even that of Ari-
is the one who leads the litany of the donkey and en- adne. But it always lies and recriminates. When it says
courages the false Yeso "it's my fault," it wants to incite pit y, inspire guilt,
4. The Man with the Leech: He wants to replace even in those who are strong; it wants to shame every-
divine values, religion, and even morality with knowl- thing that is alive, to propagate its venom. "Your
edge. Knowledge must be scientific, exact, incisive, complaint is a decoy!"
whether its object be big or small; the exact knowl- 7. The Wandering Shadow: 1t is the enterprise of
edge of the smallest thing will replace our belief in culture that has sought everywhere to accomplish the
"grand," vague values. That is why this man gives his same goal (to free men, select and train them): under
arm to the leech and gives himself the task and the the reign of God, after his death, in knowledge, in
ideal of knowing a very small thing: the brain of the happiness, and so on. Everywhere it has failed, for this
leech (without going back to first causes). But the goal is itself a shadow. This goal, higher man, is also a
man with the leech doesn't know that knowledge is failure. 1t is the shadow of Zarathustra, nothing but
the leech itself and that it acts as a relay for morality his shadow, who follows him everywhere but disap-
and religion by pursuing the very same goals: cutting pears at the two important moments of the transmu-
up life, mutilating and judging life. tation: noon and midnight.
5. The Voluntary Beggar: He has given up on 8. The Soothsayer: He says "aIl is vain." He an-
knowlcdge. He believes only in hum an happiness; he nounces the last stage of nihilism: the moment when
sccks happiness on earth. But hum an happiness, dull as man, having measured the vanity of his effort to re-
il lll.\y be, cannot be found among the rabble, moti- place God, preferred not to wish at aIl rather than to
y,ltcd as it is by resentment and bad conscience. wish for nothing. The soothsayer thus announces the
IltlInan happiness can only bc found among cows. last man. Prefiguring the end of nihilism, he goes fur-
6.nlC Sorccrer: He is the man of bad conscience, ther than the higher men. But what escapes him is
who pcrsists under the rcign of God as weIl as aftcr what is beyond even the last man: the man who wants

99
PURE IMMANENCE 1111 1 1 III

ta die, the man who wants his own end. It is with him conditions ill ,,111111 111.111 0\('1 ('ollles himself and is
that nihilism truly cornes to an end, defeats itself: overcome ,111<1 ill ,,111,11 i/w 1.1011 IlCcomes Child.
transmutation and the Overman are near.

Zarathustra and the Lion: Zarathustra is not Dionysus, NOTES

but only his prophet. There are two ways of express- 1. "Why 11\111 ,')0 W,·,,· ... l, ill 1:((( Homo.

ing this subordination. One could first say that Zara- 2. In 1~7h, Ni,·I!."I,,· Il.,,1 1'){)I'0sed to a younger woman
thustra remains at No, though this No is no longer through his J'ri(,l1.1 1111.1'." 1011 S(,lIgn, who cventually married her.

that of nihilism: it is the sacred No of the Lion. It is 3. Lou Andre.ls S.doll"'" Friedrich Nietzsche (Vienna: C. Ko-
the destruction of aIl established values, divine and negen, 1894),
human, that constituted nihilism. It is the trans-nihilist 4. About Nidzsclll''s illn('ss, sec Erich Friedrich Podach's
No inherent to the transmutation. Thus Zarathustra TheMadness?j'Nic//sc!.e (N('.w York: Putnam, 1931).
seems to have completed his task when he sinks his 5. After 1950, (h(' 1ll,1Iluscripts were taken to the former
hands into the mane of the Lion. But in truth, Zara- building of thc Goethe-Schiller Archiv in Weimar.
thustra doesn't remain at No, even the sacred and 6. "Schopenhauer as Educator," vol. 3 of Untimely Medita-
transmutative No. He full y participates in Dionysian tions.
affirmation; he is already the idea of this affirmation, 7. "The Madman," Gay Science, book III, 125, is sometimes
the idea of Dionysus. Just as Dionysus is engaged to quoted as the first major version of the death of God. This is not
Ariadne in the eternal return, Zarathustra finds his the case: in The Wanderer and His Shadow, there is a wonderful
fiancée in the eternal return. Just as Dionysus is the tale called "The Prisoners." This text resonates mysteriously
/'ather of the Overman, Zarathustra calls the Over- with Franz Kafka.
man his child. N onetheless, Zarathustra is overtaken 8. This distinction between the last man and the man who
by his own children and is only the pretender to, not wants to die is fundamental in Nietzsche's philosophy: in Zara-
the constitutive clement of, the ring of the eternal th ustra , for example, compare the prediction of the soothsayer
rl'turil. He docsn't so much producc the ()yerman as ("The Soothsayer," book II) with the cali of Zarathustra (Pro-
CIlSUIT this productioll within man, by crcating all the logue,4 and 5).

100 lOI
PURE IMMANENCE

9. See "Why 1 Am a Fatality," 3, in Ecce Homo. In fact, it is


unlikely that the idea of the eternal return had ever been enter-
tained in the ancient world. Greek thought as a whole was reti-
cent on this theme: see Charles Mugler, Deux Thèmes de la cos-
mologie grècque: Devenir cyclique et pluralité des mondes (Paris:
Klincksieck, 1953). Specialists admit that the same is true of Chi-
nese, Indian, Iranian, and Babylonian thought. The opposition
between a circular time of the ancients and a linear time of the
moderns is facile and incorrect. In al! respects, we can, with
Nietzsche, consider the eternal return a Nietzschean discovery,
though with ancient premises.
10. "The Convalescent," 2, in Thus Spoke Zarathustra, book
III.

JO}

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