
"Something in the World Forces Us to Think"
Gilles Deleuze reimagined what philosophy could do. Where most philosophers tried to represent the world, Deleuze wanted to create something new: concepts that make thought move differently. The rhizome, the body without organs, the virtual and the actual, deterritorialization, becoming. These are not descriptions of how things are but tools for thinking in ways that escape identity, hierarchy, and transcendence. Over three hours, this episode traces his entire philosophical project, from his radical readings of Nietzsche, Bergson, and Spinoza, through his collaboration with Felix Guattari on two of the most provocative books of the twentieth century, to his philosophy of cinema and his final reflections on what philosophy actually is. Beneath the difficulty of his writing lies one of the most consistent and ambitious philosophical visions of the last century, pointing always toward a single horizon: immanence, a world with no outside and no transcendent ground.



