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Deleuze - Coggle Diagram
Deleuze
immanence
"existing or remaining within," generally offers a relative opposition to transcendence, that which is beyond or outside.
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immanence is substance, that is, immanent to itself.
all real distinctions (mind and body, God and matter, interiority and exteriority, etc.) are collapsed or flattened into an even consistency or plane, namely immanence itself, that is, immanence without opposition.
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a formless, univocal, self-organizing process which always qualitatively differentiates from itself.
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on the plane of immanence there are only complex networks of forces, particles, connections, relations, affects and becomings:
Concepts and representations may no longer be considered vacuous forms awaiting content (concept of x, representation of y) but become active productions in themselves
A life is the immanence of immanence, absolute immanence
virtual
an aspect of reality that is ideal, but nonetheless real
Marcel Proust defines a virtuality, memory as "real but not actual, ideal but not abstract".
"virtual" is not opposed to "real" but opposed to "actual", whereas "real" is opposed to "possible".
both the actual and the virtual are fully real—the former has concrete existence, while the latter does not, but it is no less real for that fact.
percepts: raw materials
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the landscape before man, in the absence of man
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affects
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Artists create affects and percepts, "blocks of space-time",
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