Yea the deleuzian second part! (I like your Levina series also but he is to complexes for me to comment on I admit)
It’s so interesting, and in a sense I understand that he didn’t saw Hegel’s shadow in his work. He (Deleuze) though of those ideas as Hyppolit’s or just so prevalent in French philosophy already, that they were the basis of philosophy itself. Like grammar (as yourself compared it to language).
On a non related note, I also saw that you don’t really interact on substack with others. It is the way to grow your readership and I think your posts, being of great quality, could interest others. But maybe you don’t want to use your substack like that and just see it as a way to show your work to people you know irl?
If not I can recommend you to find others philosophy substack to interact with. There’s @westering @romaricjannel for exemple who I think have a body of work you could be interested in.
I'm still trying to familiarize myself with Substack as a platform, and learn how the social aspect functions. I'm also trying to balance my time spent on here and writing posts (and engaging with social media in general elsewhere) on top of my studies and all that.
There's also the initial difficulty of finding similar anything when you get into something - a new genre of music, a literary milieu, etc. - you know? I remember starting my Instagram account years back and it taking me a couple years to find a number of people I had a solid amount of similarities with in terms of taste and interest. So I appreciate the recommendations; I'll look into them, and try to be more active on here in general outside of publishing posts.
Yea I know the struggle of finding the right community. Still trying to find it myself. I’m betting on new cultural groups emerging from here but yet have to find them.
Yea the deleuzian second part! (I like your Levina series also but he is to complexes for me to comment on I admit)
It’s so interesting, and in a sense I understand that he didn’t saw Hegel’s shadow in his work. He (Deleuze) though of those ideas as Hyppolit’s or just so prevalent in French philosophy already, that they were the basis of philosophy itself. Like grammar (as yourself compared it to language).
On a non related note, I also saw that you don’t really interact on substack with others. It is the way to grow your readership and I think your posts, being of great quality, could interest others. But maybe you don’t want to use your substack like that and just see it as a way to show your work to people you know irl?
If not I can recommend you to find others philosophy substack to interact with. There’s @westering @romaricjannel for exemple who I think have a body of work you could be interested in.
I'm still trying to familiarize myself with Substack as a platform, and learn how the social aspect functions. I'm also trying to balance my time spent on here and writing posts (and engaging with social media in general elsewhere) on top of my studies and all that.
There's also the initial difficulty of finding similar anything when you get into something - a new genre of music, a literary milieu, etc. - you know? I remember starting my Instagram account years back and it taking me a couple years to find a number of people I had a solid amount of similarities with in terms of taste and interest. So I appreciate the recommendations; I'll look into them, and try to be more active on here in general outside of publishing posts.
Yea I know the struggle of finding the right community. Still trying to find it myself. I’m betting on new cultural groups emerging from here but yet have to find them.