This essay argues that Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari operate in the apocalyptic mode. Their major concepts — Body without Organs, War Machine, Rhizome, Plane of Immanence, Lines of Flight, Deterritorialization — are not argued positions but stable visionary loci: conceptual-visual hybrids that arrive without logical derivation and function as navigation points for perception. This places their work in the lineage of Ezekiel, Daniel, and Revelation rather than Kant, Hegel, or Heidegger. The thesis has not been recognized because the academy has no category for philosophy-as-revelation. Six decades of secondary literature — from Badiou's ontological critique to Hallward's charge of otherworldliness, from Massumi's affect theory to Žižek's split Deleuze — have read Deleuze and Guattari as post-structuralists, political philosophers, anti-psychoanalysts, ontologists of difference, or aestheticians of sensation. None of these categories can recognize the apocalyptic mode. The essay supplies the missing category, distinguishes genre (ancient apocalyptic) from mode (transhistorical visionary knowledge production), traces the lineage through Heraclitus, Plato, Spinoza, Blake, and Nietzsche, provides close readings of the Rhizome opening, War Machine axiom, and BwO warning as exemplary apocalyptic prose, and argues that the 'difficulty' of Deleuze and Guattari is not jargon but the difficulty of seeing. Published in Grammata: Journal of Operative Philology.
Lee Sharks (Thu,) studied this question.