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Deleuze did not invent virtuality

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The introduction "Virtuality is a concept in philosophy elaborated by French thinker Gilles Deleuze." is misleading - it sounds as if the concept of virtuality was somehow invented by Deleuze. The reference for this claim is a link to the Deleuze entry in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy where this claim is not corroborated. The misunderstanding probably occurs from the sentence "In Bergsonism (1966), Deleuze develops the ideas of virtuality and multiplicity that will serve as the backbone of his later work." This means Deleuze develops his concept of virtuality, not the concept of virtuality. Virtuality is - at least - known since Platon (see for example https://www.researchgate.net/publication/284710493_Virtuality_and_Reality-Toward_a_Representation_Ontology).

2A01:C23:BC0A:DA00:89D6:6EAA:16E6:5E49 (talk) 19:09, 19 August 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Deleuze references

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I've added some inline citations for the Deleuze section, and some fact tags. I haven't encountered the version of the virtual (the first version) explained there in Deleuze, but I've left it in for the time being to give the opportunity for some inline citations to be added before I delete it. I've expanded a little on the relationship to Bergson's philosophy. Citations formatted in MLA author-date system. There was also an argument about virtual = "in principle" that I've removed. It seems to misconstrue the argument on p.106 of Bergsonism, where Deleuze is describing a relationship between life, duration, freedom, and memory. DionysosProteus (talk) 11:49, 10 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

dempsey

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Moved this section here for now because a) the concept described seems sufficiently different from the rest of the article to warrant a new page, b) the passage seems lifted from a dissertation abstract, c) it is questionable from the perspective of notability, and d) the page for the author is similarly questionable.

--Quadalpha (talk) 04:56, 27 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]


==Dempsey's Theory of Virtuality Culture== A [[theory of virtuality culture]] was developed by cultural and media theorist [[J. Camille Dempsey]] in 2014. Her work was a theoretical expansion of [[Walter Ong]]'s [[literacy]] and [[orality]] culture model. It investigates the ubiquitous and multimodal nature of the virtuality cultural phenomenon that is mediated by contemporary technology and not explained by pre-existing cultural conventions. Through examining the theoretical underpinnings of [[orality]] and [[literacy]] culture, the dissertation explores the cultural shift that is just beginning to restructure human consciousness through the ways that society is connecting, exploring and communicating. Further, this dissertation examines the contrasts between [[virtuality culture features]] and those related to traditional literacy and orality types, including the gap between the theory of [[secondary orality]] and [[virtuality culture]]. This dissertation also proposes three ways that contemporary technology creates human presence related to virtuality culture. See [[technology and human presence]]. Finally, this dissertation describes the broad implications for the evolution of virtuality culture in areas such as education, technology, literacy, philosophy, politics, linguistics, ethics, history, the arts and cultural studies. <ref>*[[Dempsey, J. Camille]]. (2014, May). Virtualizing the word: Expanding Walter Ong's theory of orality and literacy through a culture of virtuality (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/pqdtopen/doc/1526011460.html?FMT=ABS.</ref> *[[Dempsey, J. Camille]]. (2014, May). Virtualizing the word: Expanding Walter Ong's theory of orality and literacy through a culture of virtuality (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/pqdtopen/doc/1526011460.html?FMT=ABS.