Abstract:
The main thrust of this thesis is the re-exploration of Friedrich Nietzsche's
"critique of nihilism" through the lenses of Gilles Deleuze. A Deleuzian reading
of Nietzsche is motivated by a post-deconstrnctive style of interpretation,
inasmuch as Deleuze goes beyond, or in between, henneneutics and deconstrnction.
Deleuze's post-deconstrnctive reading of Nietzsche is, however, only secondary to
the main aim of this thesis. The primary thrust of this study is the critique of a
way of thinking characterized by Nietzsche as nihilistic. Therefore, it should be
noted that this study is not about Deleuze's reading per se; rather, it is an
appraisal of Nietzsche's "critique of nihilism" using Deleuze's experimental
reading. We will accrue Nietzsche's critique and Deleuze's post-deconstrnctive
reading in order to appraise Nietzsche's critique itself. Insofar as we have
underscored Deleuze's purported experimentation of Nietzschean themes, this
study is also an experiment in itself. Through this experimentation, we will find
out whether it is possible to partly gloss Nietzsche's critique of nihilism through
Deleuzian phraseology. Far from presenting a mere exposition of Nietzsche's
text, we are, rather, re-reading, that is, re-evaluating Nietzsche's critique of
nihilism through Deleuze's experimentation. This is our way of thinking with
Nietzsche. Nihilism is the central problem upon which Nietzsche's philosophical
musings are directed; he deems nihilism as a cultural experience and, as such, a
phenomenon to be reckoned with. In our reconstruction of Nietzsche's critique
of nihilism, we locate two related elements which constitute the structure of the
prescription of a cure, Le., the ethics of affirmation and the ontology of becoming.
Appraising Nietzsche's ethics and ontology amounts to clarifying what
Deleuze thinks as the movement from the "dogmatic image of thought" to the
"new image of thought." Through this new image of thought, Deleuze makes
sense of a Nietzschean counterculture which is a perspective that resists
traditional or representational metaphysics. Deleuze takes the reversal of
Platonism or the transmutation of values to be the point of departure. We have
to, according to Deleuze, abandon our old image of the world in order to free
ourselves from the obscurantism of foundationalist or essentialist thinking. It is
only through the transmutation of values that we can make sense of Nietzsche's
ethics of affirmation and ontology of becoming. We have to think of Nietzsche's
ethics as an "ethics" and not a moral philosophy, and we have to think of his
ontology as 1/ ontology" and not as metaphysics. Through Deleuze, we are able
to avoid reading Nietzsche as a moral philosopher and metaphysician. Rather,
we are able to read Nietzsche as one espousing an ethical imperative through the
thought of the eternal return and one advocating a theory of existence based on
an immanent, as opposed to transcendent, image of the world.