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"The reason why our sentient, percipient and thinking ego is met nowhere within our scientific world picture can easily be indicated in seven words: because it is itself that world picture. It is identical with the whole and therefore cannot be contained in it as part of it. But of course here we knock agaist the arithmetical paradox; there appears to be a great multitude of these conscious egos, the world however is only one. ... There are two ways out of the number paradox, both appearing rather lunatic from the point of view of present scientific thought (based on ancient Greek thought and thus thoroughly "Western"). One way out is the multiplication of the world in Leibniz's fearful doctrine of monads: every monad to be a world in itself, no communication between them; the monad "has no windows", it is "incommunicado". That none the less they all agree with each other is called "pre-established harmony". I think there are few to whom this suggestion appeals, nay who would consider it as a mitigation alone of the numerical antinomy. There is obviously only one alternative, namely the unification of the minds or consciousness. Their multiplicity is only apparent, in truth there is only one mind". We observe that, both Leibniz and Schroedinger, in this juxtaposition of views, help us towards an awareness of the ultimate limits of the knowable.
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To do justice to Leibniz is to immerse oneself in this great labrynth of thought. Perhaps one day a Renaissance of Leibnizian studies will flourish on the account of this collection.
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The Fold falls somewhere in between the two as he wrote it so late in his life when most assumed he was done with history. We should be thankful that he wasn't. In order to get through this book, I'll just offer my opinion for those who it may affect: when I first picked it up, I read the first two chapters and almnost threw it across the room. I didn't pick the book up again because--presumptuous me--I thought the whole book was going to be like that. WRONG! As I said, Deleuze mixes it up here, and while you may not get every chapter, there will be those, like the short, almost curt, "What is an Event?" that will, um, blow your mind.
As for this being a discourse on Leibniz. Hard to say when we've read so little Leibniz, but Deleuze is willing to stick with his "compossible" world throughout all of the book until the end, which is pretty amazing---you know, since for Deleuze's world one of the first requirements is the reality of incompossibles. But it will give you a passion for Leibniz regardless, as the last reviewer made clear.
Finally, I think Deleuze here tries to answer some of the most difficult questions that faced him after years of expanding and 'deterritorializing' D&R and LofS. If you read the latter, for instance, did you have a sort of empty feeling when he got to the "Dynamic Genesis" and afterwards, as if his tying the incorporeals to the corporeals from the point of view of bodies wasn't as solid as from the point of view of sense? Deleuze will repay you here with interest, giving one of the most fascinating and detailed accounts of a body and its connection to monads I've ever read. It may not solve all of the problems for his materialism, but then again, it might. That's a judgment call and regardless of how you judge, this book will have riches for you.
10 stars.
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The Leibniz section is pretty straightforward and interesting. I read the book because I was curious about "monads", which are the metaphysical analog of mathematical points (well, sort of). Before Leibniz gets around to monads, he goes into his theory of predicates (every element of the universe is a predicate that goes toward describing ME), which I found pretty interesting. There's also some discussion of space and time that I liked. The last part of the Leibniz section contains some arguments for the existence of God, which is probably the weakest and least interesting part of his philosophy -- as Russell gleefully and exhaustively points out.
I didn't like the Russell section (2/3 of the book) much partly because he brings other philosophers like Hegel and Kant into the discussion (I'm not very familiar with either); and partly because he goes into such depth critiquing fine points in the Leibniz writings, that I completely lost interest in anything Russell has to say.
The author draws a sharp distinction between the concept of necessity, as understood by previous thinkers, e.g., by Thomas Hobbes, and as understood by Leibniz. Previous thinkers confused causation with necessity (a fallacy still in force to-day). The author presents a remarkably clear exposition of Leibniz's conception of necessity and contingency (see also the Amazon review on the book: "A selection of philosophical texts of Leibniz"). A distinction is made between absolute and hypothetical necessity, a distinction which, the author tells us, originates from the Scholastics and ultimately from Aristotle: a distinction identical with "necessity of the consequence and necessity of the consequent". The author mentions that "Leibniz's interest in the distinction between absolute and hypothetical necessity is due to the fact that he wanted to distinguish logical from causal or physical necessity". In this way the outstanding contribution of Leibniz to the question of free will vs determinism, is highlighted by the author in a remarkably clear and unambiguous manner. Leibniz is thus shown to be a pioneer thinker on this perennial question, to this present time.
This is an erudite work, lucidly presented. An outstanding work of scholarship.