Death And Desire In Hegel, Heidegger And Deleuze by Mary Adkins
A comparative philosophical study tracing how central notions of death and desire are configured across Hegel, Heidegger, and Deleuze, arguing that each thinker offers a distinct account of finitude, subjectivity, and motivation: Hegel through dialectical negation and the movement of desire toward recognition, Heidegger through being-toward-death and existential authenticity, and Deleuze through an immanent, productive theory of desire that resists lack-centered teleology; the book reads canonical texts closely to reveal continuities and conflicts among these frameworks and draws out their implications for ethics, temporality, and the formation of the self.
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