Hamed Movahedi reconstructs a Deleuzian concept of continuity and event through comparative readings of The Fold, Difference and Repetition and Logic of Sense. His analysis of The Fold in dialogue with Leibniz opens a new conceptual space for continuity, one that entails both irreducible heterogeneity and ontological inseparability. This concept, which challenges conventional notions of continuity and discontinuity, discloses its implicit yet decisive presence in Deleuze's philosophy of genesis in Difference and Repetition and the genesis of language in Logic of Sense. Deleuze's story of genesis, preoccupied with the conditions of formation across various fields, is recounted in terms of continuity, which turns out to be a poetics, a prelude to art and politics.
By:
Dr Hamed Movahedi
Imprint: Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
ISBN: 9781399550666
ISBN 10: 1399550667
Series: Plateaus - New Directions in Deleuze Studies
Pages: 384
Publication Date: 31 December 2025
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Acknowledgment List of Abbreviations Introduction: Problem of Continuity Continuity of Nature, Nature of Continuity Part I: Continuity qua Fold: The Fold CHAPTER 1: Proliferation of Folds: A Baroque Image 1.1 The New: Impossibility of the Repetition of Past; The Repetition of an Impossible Past 1.2 The Fold, And, A Baroque Leibniz 1.3 The Baroque Proliferation of Folds 1.3.1 The Folds of Inorganic Matter 1.3.2 The Organic Folds of Matter 1.3.3 Birth, And, Death 1.3.4 Leibniz’s Law of Continuity 1.4 Second Floor of the Baroque House CHAPTER 2: A Metaphysical Ten(or)sion: From Inflection to Inclusion 2.1 Leibniz’s Universe: An Infinite Interlaced Fabric 2.2 The Folds in the Soul: From Inflection to Inclusion 2.3 The Metaphysical Tension CHAPTER 3: Proliferation of Events: Affirmation of Bifurcation And Divergent Continuity 3.1 Towards a Logic of Events 3.2 Substance and Unity in a World-Event 3.3 Genesis of Worlds: Compossibility and Incompossibility 3.4 Affirmation of Bifurcation and Divergence 3.5 Complication of Divergent Series: The Chaosmos CHAPTER 4: Constellation of Continuity as Logic: Leibniz, Peirce, Blanchot 4.1 Reconcilability of Principles: The Identity of Indiscernibles and Continuity 4.2 Incarnation in a Body 4.3 Actualization and Realization 4.4 Event: A Deleuzian Dialogue with Blanchot and Peirce Part II: Genesis and Continuity: Difference and Repetition CHAPTER 5: Ideas and Divergent Continuity 5.1 Transcendental Field 5.2 Problematization of Ontology 5.3 Ideality of the Virtual 5.4 Biological Idea 5.5 Proliferation of Continuity: Anger Face and Love Face of Ideas CHAPTER 6: Torsional Continuity: Dramatization and Poeticization of Ideas 6.1 Ideas of Society 6.2 Ideas of Art 6.2.1 Erewhon: The Non-Localizable Locus of the Artist 6.3 Dramatizing the Obscure Ideas 6.4 Poeticization: The Poeticity of Ideas CHAPTER 7: Intensive Continuity 7.1 The Critical and Creative Faces of Ideas: Art and the Political 7.2 Intensity qua “Who” of Expression 7.3 Intensive Continuity: A Leibnizian Image, Intensities Enveloping and Enveloped 7.4 Torsional Continuity: Intensities and Ideas 7.5 An Embryonic Heteroverse Part III: Genesis of Language and Continuity: Logic of Sense CHAPTER 8: Logic of Sense and Continuity 8.1 Philosophizing at the Surface: The Stoic Incorporeals 8.2 Sense: The Fourth Dimension and the Possibility of Language 8.3 Inherent Dualities and Paradoxes of the Structure 8.4 The Mobile Decentered Paradoxical Element Chapter 9: Nonsense, Event, Continuity 9.1 Problematization of Series 9.2 Nonsense and Static Genesis 9.3 Continuity, Aion, Chronos 9.4 Dedekind Cut, Point-Fold, False-Divergent Continuity 9.5 Ethics of the Event, Counter-Actualization of the Actor-Dancer 9.6 Univocity, Poeticity, Continuity Conclusion: Heteropoietic Continuity Continuity and Genesis: Four Continuities Continuity, Ethics, Dramas, and Poeticity Continuity, Event, Linguistic Actualization Appendix: Continuity and the History of Calculus: Leibniz’s Predecessors Aristotle’s Conception of Continuity Calculus and its Historical Development Baroque Curves: Archimedes Baroque Motions: Galileo and Kepler Calculus and Algebra Leibniz and the Development of Calculus References
Hamed Movahedi is a Lecturer and Postdoctoral Fellow at McGill University and a Postdoctoral Fellow at Pennsylvania State University. His research centers on the metaphysics of genesis and the new across social, artistic and biological fields. He has published articles in Continental Philosophy Review, Deleuze and Guattari Studies, Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, Philosophy Today, Parrhesia, and Dialogue.
Reviews for Continuity and Event in Leibniz and Deleuze: Poetics of the Fold
Event and Continuity in Leibniz and Deleuze: Poetics of the Fold is a tour de force that ranges through philosophy, mathematics, art, and politics. Movahedi compellingly shows how the unthematized concept of continuity is the key that unlocks not only Deleuze's reading of Leibniz but also Difference and Repetition and The Logic of Sense.--Brent Adkins, Professor of Philosophy, Roanoke College