The place of holism in Maurice Merleau-Ponty's philosophy has long been a matter of dispute. Since the appearance of Adventures of the Dialectic (1955), commentators have divided between those who read this rupture as an abandonment of totalizing thought (Claude Lefort) and those who see it instead as a transformation or expansion of holism (Martin Jay). Both readings, however, remain insufficient. Merleau-Ponty neither simply renounced nor straightforwardly radicalized holism. This article argues that both positions capture partial truths yet oversimplify the trajectory of Merleau-Ponty's thought. His post-Adventures philosophy intensified a structural ambivalence that persisted across his career: a renewed anti-subjectivist, externalist holism coexisted with an anti-holistic resistance to coincidence, adequacy, and intellectual possession. His thought sustained a dynamic interplay between totality and irreducible non-coincidence—a holism continually disrupted from within.
Josep María Bech (Mon,) studied this question.
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