this issue
next article in this issue

Document Details :

Title: Het spatium
Subtitle: Deleuze en Leibniz over ruimte en uitgebreidheid
Author(s): VERMEIREN, Florian
Journal: Tijdschrift voor Filosofie
Volume: 81    Issue: 1   Date: 2019   
Pages: 3-27
DOI: 10.2143/TVF.81.1.3286542

Abstract :
This paper aims to show that Deleuze’s ideas on space and extension are heavily endebted to Leibniz. The focus is on chapter five, 'the Asymmetrical Synthesis of the Sensible', of Difference and Repetition. Concepts such as 'intensive magnitude', 'distance', 'order' and most importantly 'spatium' are shown to have their origin in Leibniz’s philosophy. In order to argue this, the article starts with Leibniz’s critique on Cartesian mechanics, and the way this leads Leibniz to a conception of space that goes beyond the Cartesian concept of extension. The latter lacks difference, potentiality and individuality. Leibniz argues that the Cartesian homogeneous plenum should therefore be grounded in a deeper, more substantial space: the spatium. Understood as such, space is not an absolute substance but a structure of relations between substances. Although Leibniz’s texts offer enough to understand this spatium, they do not explain the genesis of extension. It is on this point that Deleuze offers a fruitful interpretation of Leibniz, conceptualizing such a genesis in terms of difference. Extension is understood as a homogenization and externalization of the internal and pure differences in space. In the end, Leibniz helps us to understand Deleuze’s theory, while Deleuze offers us an enriching interpretation of Leibniz and succeeds where authors such as Yvon Belaval and Martial Gueroult have failed.

Download article