ABSTRACT

Mohamed Moulfi takes up the difficult question of revolution. In “Geophilosophy and Revolution in Gilles Deleuze”, Moulfi indicates that his interest in the problem of geophilosophy—as articulated around the questions of territorialization and deterritorialization, of geo-history, of rhizomes, etc.—is oriented by the vision of Deleuze and Guattari, according to which philosophy deploys along the orders of transcendence and immanence. The first order is determined by its Greek origins. If the origin is not determinative, philosophy cannot help but hold a constitutive relation with non-philosophy. This shows the necessity of thinking of the other order in which geophilosophies are situated, as the meeting up of philosophy with various cultures. Moulfi asks if this indicates that the becoming of philosophy is only the effect of an immanent axiomatic, from which arises a Bestimmung, as the destination of philosophy, Greek at birth, and as the determination of a historical and cultural variation of its cultural expression.