ドゥルーズ 講義録「基礎づけるとは何か」英訳版目次
What is Grounding?
Translator’s Introduction– 1
1 From mythology to philosophy - 13
1.1 Natural ends and infinite tasks - 13
1.2 Will, value, ground - 16
2 The essential being a ground or reason – 21
2.1 Claims and rights – 21
2.2 Hume to Kant: formation of the idea of the transcendental – 24
2.3 Characteristics of the ground in the Critique of Pure Reason – 30
2.4 Heidegger after Kant – 37
2.5 Conclusion to the second chapter – 41
3 Ground and question – 43
3.1 Socrates and the question – 47
3.2 The question that silences: Kierkegaard and Shestov – 57
3.2.1 The most lyrical and the most simple – 57
3.2.2 Morality, duty, law, and power – 60
3.2.2 Essence and existence, quality and quantity – 66
3.2.3 Repetition – 72
3.2.4 Eternal Return in Nietzsche – 78
3.2.5 Intermediate conclusion I – 85
3.3 The question which yields a principle to solve all
3.3.1 problems: Leibniz – 86
3.3.2 Leibniz and the concept of expression – 96
3.3.3 Leibniz and principles – 105
3.3.4 Intermediate conclusion II – 108
3.4 The third type of question: the critical question – 110
3.4.1 / 3.4.2 The concept of error in philosophy – 110
3.4.3 Transformation of a doctrine of truth – 113
3.4.4 Critique of metaphysics – 115
3.5 Conclusion to the third chapter – 121
4 Ground and principle – 125
4.1 Method and system – 126
4.2 Principle on ground in the method – 136
4.2.1 Descartes, Spinoza, Kant – 136
4.2.2 Bacon and middle axioms – 139
4.2.3 Two senses of ‘principle’ – 144
4.3 System and Kantian critique – 147
4.3.1 Kant’s analytic – 149
4.3.2 Post-Kantian objections – 152
4.4 Finitude and ground – 159
4.5 Conclusion to the fourth chapter – 165
5 Conclusion to the seminar – 175