tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8052308.post8189037087965864251..comments2024-01-24T06:50:01.683-06:00Comments on Samizdat Blog: Rimbaud NotebookArchambeauhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17273511539172747550noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8052308.post-50493038925683091272010-11-27T16:14:12.765-06:002010-11-27T16:14:12.765-06:00I like that. Will have to give that essay a look....I like that. Will have to give that essay a look. Thanks. <br /><br />BobArchambeauhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17273511539172747550noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8052308.post-91473398822918888832010-11-27T03:13:52.375-06:002010-11-27T03:13:52.375-06:00Gille Deleuze also mentions "on me pense"...Gille Deleuze also mentions "on me pense" in his essay "How Jarry's pataphysics opened the way for phenomenology." Pataphysics is conceived of as a philosophical movement that surpasses and makes obsolete metaphysics, and according to Deleuze it becomes apparent in relation to modern philosophical contexts: God is dead, the Human is dying, and, a something "other", which is "conceived as a force already at work in human subjectivity, but hiding in it, and also destroying it. (cf. Rimbaud's "Something thinks me.")" For Deleuze, then, this phrase is indicative of a new type of subjectivity, or at least the destruction of the classical, Cartesian subject. This new movement posits that any number of unknown "others" create and manifest a subject, they are even responsible for thought which we attribute to ourselves. "Je est un autre" could be seen as embracing the fact that our selves are constituted by the being and activity of infinite and unknown "others".Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com