Kant: Synthesis and Time: Illes Eleuze
Kant: Synthesis and Time: Illes Eleuze
TRANSCRIBED BY WEBDELEUZE
TRANSLATED BY MELISSA MCMAHON
We are returning to Kant. May this be an occasion for you to skim, read or re-read The
Critique of Pure Reason. There is no doubt that a tremendous event in philosophy happens with
this idea of critique. In going into it, ourselves, or in going back into it, I had stopped reading
it a very long time ago and I read it again for you, it must be said that it is a completely stifling
philosophy. It’s an excessive atmosphere, but if one holds up, and the important thing above
all is not to understand, the important thing is to take on the rhythm of a given man, a given
writer, a given philosopher, if one holds up, all this northern fog which lands on top of us
starts to dissipate, and underneath there is an amazing architecture. When I said to you that a
great philosopher is nevertheless someone who invents concepts, in Kant’s case, in this fog,
there functions a sort of thinking machine, a sort of creation of concepts that is absolutely
frightening. We can try to say that all of the creations and novelties that Kantianism will bring
to philosophy turn on a certain problem of time and an entirely new conception of time, a
conception of which we can say that its elaboration by Kant will be decisive for all that
happened afterwards, which is to say we will try to determine a sort of modern consciousness
of time in opposition to a classical or ancient consciousness of time.
Why it is that it was Kant who created the philosophical concepts of this new
consciousness of time, making his philosophical expression possible, does not concern us or
in any case does not interest me, but what I would like to say is that it is indeed this sort of
consciousness of time which takes on a philosophical status in Kant, and which is completely
new. I will proceed by numbered points because I’m always working with the idea that to each
point corresponds a type of concept, and once again, I will be happy if you grant me at the
end of these lessons that philosophers are precisely this, that they are no less creative than
painters or musicians, simply that they create in a determinable domain that is the creation of
concepts.
Firstly, what does Kant understand by the a priori which he opposes to the a posteriori?
These are common terms. In some cases new words must be invented, and this happens with
Kant when he creates the notion of the transcendental, which is a very strange notion,
transcendental subject... no doubt you will tell me that the word existed before, but it was
rarely used and it marked no difference from the ordinary word transcendent, whereas Kant
gives it a very special sense: the transcendental subject, he almost created a word... in the case
of the a priori and the a posteriori he borrows a word, but he completely renews its sense.
A priori, in the first place, means: independent of experience, that which does not depend
on experience. In opposition to a posteriori which means: given or givable in experience. What
things are a priori? Note that I don’t ask myself: does the a priori exist, which is to say, are