Putting an End to “Man”: Nature and the Human in Hegel, Becoming-Animal and Abolitionism Cover Image

Putting an End to “Man”: Nature and the Human in Hegel, Becoming-Animal and Abolitionism
Putting an End to “Man”: Nature and the Human in Hegel, Becoming-Animal and Abolitionism

Author(s): Joanna Bednarek
Subject(s): Philosophy, Social Philosophy
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: anthropocentrism; Hegel; Deleuze and Guattari; Man; nature

Summary/Abstract: The article attempts to reconstruct the difference between the ontologies of Hegel and Deleuze. The question of nature and Man (as different from the human animal) in both philosophies can provide crucial insight into the funda-mental ontological disparity between the two philosophies. Nature, according to Hegel, is truly external to the idea and (as such) is at the same time a moment in the movement of the concept becoming what it is. Deleuze, in contrast, goes back to pre-Kantian ontology without abandoning the trans-cendental level of analysis. This enables him to bestow upon nature real externality and to transform the dialectic into a mechanism of opening to the inexhaustible outside, not of confirming the primacy of the concept. The case of beco-ming-animal demonstrates the political implications of this ontological choice: it can be understood as a way of putting an end to “Man,” an enterprise compatible with abolitionist postulates.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 43
  • Page Range: 31-61
  • Page Count: 31
  • Language: English