The article examines Gilles Deleuze's critique of Ludwig Wittgenstein as a key event for the self-definition of modern philosophy. This conflict is a clash of two incompatible modes of thought. Wittgenstein is characterized by a "therapeutic" model that confines thinking within the boundaries of language games and forms of life. Deleuze, on the other hand, sees this as "policing," suppressing creativity. His project is a philosophy after Wittgenstein, where the goal is not to describe rules but to invent new concepts and deterritorialize meaning. Ultimately, Deleuze offers an alternative ontology of thought based on the capacity to transcend any system of rules towards the eventfulness of meaning. This confrontation defines one of the key metaphilosophical divisions of the 20th century, opposing the protective function of thought to its creative, rule-breaking power. The research methodology is based on a strategy of conceptual confrontation. The rejection of linear comparison allows for the reconstruction of the opposition between Deleuze and Wittgenstein as an ontological clash between the therapy of boundaries and the creativity of deterritorialization. The confrontation of their key concepts ("language game" / "desiring machine") reveals how the debate about language becomes a radical divergence in the understanding of meaning, power, and existence. The result of the work is a map of fundamental incompatibility. Its construction demonstrates not only the relevance of both thinkers but also the internal irreducible heterogeneity of the task of philosophy itself, which unfolds in the conflict between protective therapy and creative deterritorialization. The relevance of the work is determined by the fact that the digital age, with its algorithmic language games and platform "forms of life," makes the issues raised by Wittgenstein more urgent than ever while simultaneously exposing their normative limitations. Deleuze's critical project offers key tools for analyzing and resisting these new forms of control. It allows for a rethinking of linguistic and social norms not as given frameworks but as a "battlefield" open to practices of "hacking codes" and creating lines of flight. This perspective enables a reevaluation of the political potential of philosophy, its ability to respond to the challenges of digital society not by adapting to rules but by creating new ways of existing and thinking, activating concepts such as Deleuze and Guattari's "desiring machines" and "rhizome" in the context of contemporary discussions about power, language, and freedom.
Vladislav Olegovich Sayapin (Sun,) studied this question.