ABSTRACT

This book reexamines the concept of the animal on the plane of immanence, as opposed to the traditional viewpoint founded on the plane of transcendence.

Following Deleuze and Guattari’s notion that philosophy is a discipline of creating concepts, this book traces how the concept of the animal was created in the history of philosophy through re-reading the works of Descartes, Kant, Heidegger, Derrida and Levinas. Their theories show that the concept of the animal was constructed on the "plane of transcendence" as subservient to the self-serving human, who represents the animal as a negative entity devoid of reason, ethics, the ability to enter into political alliances or even die. With this perspective and a range of theories from thinkers such as Spinoza, Nancy, Haraway and Braidotti as the groundwork, a new positive concept of the animal, operating on the plane of immanence, is sketched out, compelling a reappraisal of the relationships between body and thought, ethics and politics, or life and death.

With comprehensive interpretations of the views of several key philosophers, from Kant and Heidegger to Deleuze, Derrida and Agamben, this book will be valuable for scholars of theoretical animal studies and continental philosophy interested in the philosophical significance of the animal question.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Philosophical zoology

Why philosophers still believe in the human–animal caesura

chapter 2|14 pages

Polemology

The animal as a philosophical concept and how that influences infra- and interdisciplinary discussion

chapter 3|10 pages

Anatomy

What is the concept of man made of?

chapter 4|24 pages

Anthropology

Several instances of how the concept of the human has been established on a plane of transcendence

chapter 5|12 pages

False immanence

Why philosophy presents a negative vision of the animal

chapter 6|42 pages

Radical immanence

Recreating the concept of the animal

chapter 7|10 pages

Uses of immanence

Conclusions and remarks on practice