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Traces of Identity in Deleuzes Different PDF
Traces of Identity in Deleuzes Different PDF
International Journal of
Philosophical Studies
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To cite this article: Gavin Rae (2014) Traces of Identity In Deleuze’s Differential
Ontology, International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 22:1, 86-105, DOI:
10.1080/09672559.2013.861003
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International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 2014
Vol. 22, No. 1, 86–105, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09672559.2013.861003
This third sense is important for Deleuze’s differential ontology because hav-
ing anything in common with another multiplicity at the onto-genetic level
undermines his insistence that: (a) each multiplicity is irreducibly different; and
(b) identity is secondary to difference. While my underpinning contention is
that the success of Deleuze’s affirmation of a radical differential ontology
depends on him overcoming identity in the senses of the identical and same
and severing all forms of ontological commonality between entities, the argu-
ment developed maintains, that, although Deleuze’s ontology forcibly chal-
lenges the notion of identity in the senses of the identical and same, he
recognises transcendental features, such as the virtual-actual movement that
produces multiplicities, the transcendental features common to acts of philo-
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sophical thinking, and the echo that resonates throughout different forms of
thinking, that, while producing different multiplicities, share common struc-
tures. While Lutz Ellrich (1996: p. 484) maintains that these forms of identity
indicate that Deleuze’s thinking operates on two distinct levels, an ontological
level constituted by difference that breaks into identity at the experiential level,
Levi Bryant (2008: p 43) disagrees and suggests the common transcendental
features of his ontology of being mean aspects of identity are inherent to the
primordial ontological level of his analysis. I follow the general direction of
Bryant’s conclusion but differ from him because, whereas he distinguishes
between sameness and commonality and reduces identity to sameness to claim
that Deleuze’s reliance on common transcendental features successfully allows
him to undermine the notion of identity, I suggest we need a more nuanced
notion of identity that does not reduce it to sameness. Identity must also be
thought in terms of commonality with the result that, while Deleuze’s differen-
tial ontology offers a stringent critique of identity in the senses of the identical
and same, its reliance on transcendental features common to the onto-genetic
level of each multiplicity means a form of identity continues to inform the
ontological level of Deleuze’s differential ontology. Although it may be tempt-
ing to conclude that such slippages fatally undermine his attempt to affirm dif-
ference contra identity, I follow Deleuze’s strategy of reading philosophers
affirmatively rather than critically to suggest that distinguishing between iden-
tity in the senses of the identical, same, and common not only reveals the diffi-
cult pathway ontologies of difference must traverse if difference as difference
is to be affirmed, but also prepares the way for a rethinking of the identity-dif-
ference relationship.
Being as Becoming
Deleuze starts his analysis with the claim that there has only ever been one
ontological proposition: being is univocal (DR: p. 35). Univocity emanates
from, and so returns us to, medieval Scholasticism and, more specifically, the
difference between ‘being as univocal’ and ‘being as equivocal’. Equivocity
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means that being is affirmed in different ways ‘in’ each thing (substances,
modes, attributes, etc.) and that these have no common measure (E: pp.
162–3). In other words, God, man, and animal are imbued by different senses
of being.
By contrast, to say that being is univocal […] means that being has only
one sense, and is said in one and the same sense of everything of which
it is said, whether it be God or man, animal or plant. (Smith, 2001:
p. 169)
The univocity of being refers, therefore, to the idea that the being of each thing
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the univocity of being signifies that being is voice that it is said, and that
it is said on one and the same ‘sense’ of everything about which it is
said. That of which it is said is not at all the same, but being is the same
for everything about which it is said. (LS: p. 179)
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Becoming as Multiplicity
With this, Deleuze is trying to describe a process whereby being becomes in a
number of different ways simultaneously without this becoming being con-
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be reduced to one another’ (PAD: p. 310). As ‘the real element in which things
happen’ (OP: p. 146), the unity of identity does not precede or create multi-
plicities, ‘unifications are in fact processes which are produced and appear in
multiplicities’ (PITP: p. 315). As the configuration of the multiplicity alters as
a result of being’s different/ciation, so too does the subject, totality, and iden-
tity that result from that particular multiplicity. Multiplicities are not closed
totalities, but are open, flexible amalgamations of different and distinct compo-
nent parts.
These are significant statements relating to Deleuze’s rejection of identity
and, as such, need more attention. To do so, I want to return to the notion of
identity to distinguish between different senses of identity and, more specifi-
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cally, to distinguish between, what I will call, identity in the senses of the
identical and the same as a precursor to showing how Deleuze’s notion of mul-
tiplicity criticises both. This will then set up the discussion, later in the paper,
of the third sense of identity, to be termed identity of the common, to suggest
that Deleuze combats the first two senses of identity by relying on the third.
Identity in the sense of the identical describes the idea that there is a closed,
unified totality that precedes and is, therefore, the primordial ‘thing’ that gener-
ates difference. In short, this unified totality, which has often been thought to
be transcendent, is the undifferentiated focal point that is subsequently differen-
tiated into different entities. As a consequence, identity in the sense of the
identical tends to maintain a two-realm metaphysics based on a primordial
undifferentiated realm of identity and a secondary, empirical realm of
difference. As such, difference is downgraded to a second-order phenomenon.
Deleuze’s notion of multiplicity forcibly rejects this by rejecting the notion that
being is: (1) split into two realms; and (2) foundationally unified, with differ-
ence resulting from this unity. Deleuze’s notion of multiplicity is clear that: (a)
at no point does difference emanate from a closed, fixed unity; and (b) any
momentary unity that appears emanates from the different components of the
multiplicity coalescing to form a temporary unity before dissolving into
another configuration. There is no actual, closed, fixed unity, only the tempo-
rary configuration of unity as a consequence of difference.
This brings us to the second sense of identity: identity of the same. Whereas
identity in the sense of the identical posits a foundational, unified entity from
where difference emanates, identity in the sense of the same starts from differ-
ence and suggests this difference culminates in unity. In short, this sense of
identity collects a primordial difference at the end of a particular process and,
in so doing, reduces difference to the same. Deleuze’s notion of multiplicity
rejects this because, for him, while identity may appear, any identity: (1)
appears from difference, thereby confirming that difference is primary; and (2)
is not final, but continues to become, thereby once again re-establishing the
primacy of difference. For Deleuze, being’s different/citation has no teleology,
end-point or goal (B: p. 106), nor is there any ‘preformed logical order to be-
comings and multiplicities’ (ATP: p. 277). Being’s different/ciation entails a
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point towards common features: (1) difference; and (2) the virtual-actual move-
ment. Starting with difference, Deleuze’s insistence on the relationship between
univocity and difference has left more than one commentator confused. Most
famously, it led Alain Badiou to insist that the univocity of being undermines
the difference of each multiplicity to the extent that Deleuze’s thinking reduces
difference to the One of Platonism; a position that, depending on how Badiou’s
comments are interpreted, seems to conclude that Deleuze’s ontology affirms
identity in the senses of, what I have called, the identical or the same (see
Badiou 2000: pp. 10, 16, 25). Badiou’s interpretation has, however, been forc-
ibly challenged by, amongst others, Nathan Widder (2001: p. 43) who explains
that, by being’s univocity, Deleuze is not ‘concerned with establishing a unity
among differences, but rather with linking differences through their difference’.
Rather than disclosing unity through difference, Widder insists that Deleuze’s
notion of univocity merely means the only ‘thing’ multiplicities have in com-
mon is that: (a) they are different; and (b) difference is constitutive of their
ontological structures. In other words, while being is expressed through the
same voice throughout all multiplicities, this voice is difference, meaning it is
‘said’ differently across all entities.
Given this reveals that difference, by virtue of always being different, is not
and cannot be that which is common to all multiplicities, my suggestion is that
it is the virtual-actual movement that reveals that common features continue to
exist in Deleuze’s onto-genetic account of being. With this, I am claiming that,
along with multiplicity, difference, and immanence, virtuality (and its relation-
ship to actuality) is one of the cornerstones of Deleuze’s differential ontology.
While there is not sufficient space to undertake a detailed engagement with this
concept and its relationship to actuality, let me just say that, on my understand-
ing, virtuality accompanies and operates, if only implicitly, throughout all Del-
euze’s analyses.2 The scope of these writings and the time that passes between
them indicates the central role it plays and continues to play in Deleuze’s
thinking, a centrality that emanates from the way it binds difference, multiplic-
ity, and becoming ‘together’ to allow Deleuze to propose a coherent, system-
atic, but differentiated, ontogenetic account of being.3 For example, as we have
noted, in Difference and Repetition, Deleuze maintains that difference is
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TRACES OF IDENTITY IN DELEUZE’S DIFFERENTIAL ONTOLOGY
Whereas identity in the senses of the identical and same posit a closed,
undifferentiated unity as the source or culmination of difference respectively,
identity in the sense of the common entails a thinking of difference as differ-
ence that, however implicitly, continues to maintain common structures across
all entities that are expressed differently through each manifestation of this dif-
ference. My suggestion is that, while Deleuze claims the virtual-actual relation-
ship is inherently differential, in so far as each virtual Idea is differentiated,
each virtual-actual movement is differenciated, and the actual multiplicity pro-
duced is differenciated and continues to different/ciate, the mere existence of
this common virtual-actual movement points to the conclusion that, no matter
how particular the movement, all multiplicities are structured around this com-
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from difference, Deleuze must sever any internal onto-genetic unifying linkage
between multiplicities to think difference as difference. As such, to succeed,
Deleuze’s affirmation of difference must not only overcome the notion of iden-
tity in the senses of the identical and same, but must also overcome identity in
the sense of commonality so as to truly remove all forms of unity from the
onto-genesis of being. To reiterate, my suggestion is that, while Deleuze’s dif-
ferential ontology overcomes identity in the senses of the identical and same, it
often implicitly relies on transcendental features common to entities to show
how multiplicities become. As such, it is questionable whether each multiplic-
ity, at the primary, ontological level, is as radically distinct and different as
Deleuze’s affirmation of difference maintains. To show this, I will focus on
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losophy aims to continuously and freely create concepts that explore the chaos
of being, and science creates functions to chart the variations of being within
fixed points of reference, artistic creation aims to capture and express being’s
infinity in finite form (WP: p. 197).
This all too brief summary reveals that philosophy creates concepts, with
this creation emanating from a plane of immanence which is limitless, invents
conceptual personae, and entails a process of pure differential self-generation;
science occurs through functions which refer to specific planes of reference
that delineate the parameters of experiments observed by an observer who
charts the observed variations as these refer to the constants of its plane of ref-
erence; and art occurs through sensations that emanate from a plane of compo-
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sition that creates figures that resemble a preconceived image or idea. The
important point to highlight is that, for Deleuze, ‘thinking is thought through
concepts, or functions, or sensations and no one of these thoughts is better than
another, or more fully, completely, or synthetically “thought”’ (WP: p. 198).
Philosophy, science, and art are equal forms of thought that are, nonetheless,
different in kind to each other. However, in a number of texts, Deleuze points
towards an alternative conclusion. In particular, he maintains that, while philos-
ophy and art are distinct forms of thought, concepts are not opposed to per-
cepts and affects; concepts have perceptual and affectual significance (OP:
p. 137, RBS: p. 164). As such, philosophy and art ‘often pass into each other
in a becoming that sweeps them both up in an intensity which co-ordinates
them’ (WP: p. 66). Similarly:
While Deleuze leaves it to scientists to determine the exact ways in which sci-
ence has need of philosophy, he clearly thinks it is a symbiotic relationship
and so suggests a reciprocal relationship between philosophy and science (WP:
p. 162). With this, Deleuze is pointing towards some form of inter-relationship
between the disciplines.
While Deleuze points towards an external alliance in the English Preface to
Difference and Repetition, insisting that, despite their irreducible methods, con-
tents, and purposes, the various disciplines can combine their independent anal-
yses, his most developed thinking on the inter-relationship between the
disciplines occurs in the 1985 essays, Mediators, where he claims that,
although philosophy, science, and art entail different forms of thinking, there
are ‘echoes and resonances between them’ (M: p. 123). The notion of echo
points towards an intimate, internal relationship between the three disciplines
that overcomes their difference in kind. The echo is not an external
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relationship wherein each discipline hears the call of another and applies its
perspectives to its mode of thinking, but entails an internal relationship where
the content of the various disciplines infiltrates and shapes the content of oth-
ers. The way each shapes the others is never singular, or linear, but develops
and occurs along ‘separate melodic lines in constant interplay with one
another’ (M: p. 125). The echo reverberates through the disciplines at the pre-
reflective level, thereby allowing each to spontaneously shape and impact on
the conclusions and mode of thinking of the others (M: p. 125). As a conse-
quence, and despite having claimed that the various disciplines are distinct
from one another, Deleuze appears to subsequently claim that each interacts
with, shapes, defines, and determines the content and structure of the others.
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Far from being irreducibly different to one another, Deleuze’s notion of echo
indicates a common thread that connects and runs through the various modes
of thinking.
Concluding Remarks
It appears, therefore, that there are, at least, three separate moments where the
identity of the common slips into Deleuze’s affirmation of difference: the vir-
tual-actual movement, the structure of the various modes of thinking, and the
inter-relationship between the various modes of thinking. The question now
becomes: where do these moments of unity reside within Deleuze’s thinking?
For Lutz Ellrich (1996), for example, they disclose that Deleuze’s thinking
operates on two distinct and contradictory levels. Whereas the first is purely
logical and allows Deleuze to successfully affirm an ontology of radical differ-
ence, the second is observational and takes its cue from empirical reality.
According to Ellrich (1996: p. 484), it is on the second level that Deleuze’s
radical ontology of difference breaks down with the result that his analysis
‘must admit identity’. Once Deleuze starts to enter the world of observation
and practice, Ellrich maintains he must start to introduce moments of identity
into his analysis so as to account for the moments of common identity, such as
language, ethics, and norms, observed. The movement from a logic of pure dif-
ference to empirical observation accounts for the moments of identity found in
Deleuze’s differential ontology. While it is true Ellrich uses this explanation to
account for why moments of identity can be found in Deleuze’s thinking as a
precursor to arguing that Deleuze fails to affirm difference as difference,
Ellrich’s (1996) conclusion, one I support, is reached through arguments that I
think are suspect. In particular, Ellrich claims Deleuze fails in his attempt to
affirm difference as difference because, while he successfully offers a logic of
difference as difference, once this logic enters the empirical, moments of iden-
tity enter his analysis. But this conclusion is based on a misunderstanding of
what Deleuze is aiming for. Deleuze never claims there is no such thing as
identity; he claims any identity that arises is only temporary, and is based in a
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Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank Emma Ingala and two anonymous reviewers for their
helpful, challenging, and insightful comments on earlier versions of this paper.
Notes
1 Referencing Deleuze’s Bergson book requires that I explain my passing off of this
commentary as Deleuze’s own thoughts. While it may be tempting to separate Dele-
uze’s commentaries on others from his ‘independent’ philosophical works, I appeal
to Deleuze’s insistence that ‘the history of philosophy is the reproduction of philoso-
phy itself’ (DR: p. xxi), to suggest that his commentaries give insights into his own
philosophy. Far from excluding Deleuze’s commentaries, I maintain they are crucial
to understanding his ‘own’ philosophy.
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2 For example, besides Difference and Repetition and his writings on Bergson, Deleuze
employs it in ‘The Method of Dramatization’ (MD: pp. 101, 110); ‘How Do We Rec-
ognize Structuralism’ (HRS: pp. 178–9); ‘Doubts about the Imaginary’ (DI: p. 66);
Dialogues (DII: pp. 112–15); Cinema 2 (C2: pp. 68–70, 79–81, 273); The Logic of
Sense (LS: pp. 48, 67, 304); Anti-Oedipus (AO: pp. 140–41, 145, 270, 277, 392); A
Thousand Plateaus (ATP: pp. 104–10, 153, 396, 445, 549, 561); What is Philoso-
phy? (WP: pp. 40, 118, 121–3, 140, 153–61, 177, 181, 210, 217, 228–9), and his last
published piece, ‘Immanence: A Life’ (IAL: p. 392).
3 Admittedly, the virtual takes on a specific role and function in Anti-Oedipus where
Deleuze and Guattari temporarily critique and abandon the notion of virtuality
because of the tendency to see it as being wholly related to ideality (= symbolic or
imaginary). This abandonment is, however, temporary and ultimately clarificatory, in
so far as it allows their later thinking to recognise and affirm that virtuality (a) is nec-
essary for their system; and (b) cannot be thought in purely ideal or real terms, but
must be thought in terms of ideality and reality. As a consequence, and while it may
be thought this temporary abandonment contradicts my insistence that the virtual is a
fundamental component of Deleuze´s differential ontology, I would suggest that
Deleuze and Guattari’s flirtatious abandonment of virtuality in Anti-Oedipus and sub-
sequent reintroduction of it in A Thousand Plateaus, the second volume of Capital-
ism and Schizophrenia, reaffirms my point regarding the central role it plays in
Deleuze’s differential ontology.
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References
Ansell-Pearson, K. (1999) Germinal Life: The Difference and Repetition of Deleuze,
New York: Routledge.
Badiou, A. (2000) Deleuze: The Clamour of Being, trans. Louise Burchill, Minneapolis,
Downloaded by [American University in Cairo] at 05:26 10 February 2014
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