<p><strong>R&eacute;sum&eacute; :</strong> Les diff&eacute;rentes formes de rapprochements entre disciplines sont g&eacute;n&eacute;ralement pr&eacute;sent&eacute;es comme des moyens ambitieux de contester les barri&egrave;res jug&eacute;es arbitrairement plac&eacute;es entre certains types de savoirs. Si ces perspectives semblent souvent heuristiques, elles peuvent courir n&eacute;anmoins le risque d&rsquo;amalgamer des r&eacute;flexions &agrave; diff&eacute;rents niveaux sans r&eacute;elle coh&eacute;rence. Les relations entre philosophie et sociologie, deux disciplines qui se sont construites &agrave; la fois &agrave; proximit&eacute; et en rupture, peuvent constituer un exemple de dialogue fructueux si sont respect&eacute;es certaines conditions &eacute;pist&eacute;mologiques. L&rsquo;hypoth&egrave;se que nous explorons est que c&rsquo;est, historiquement, autour de l&rsquo;utilisation des concepts que l&rsquo;alliance entre la philosophie et la sociologie a &eacute;t&eacute; la plus pr&eacute;gnante. De mani&egrave;re plus prospective, nous analysons la fa&ccedil;on dont le &laquo;&nbsp;structuralisme des passions&nbsp;&raquo;, d&eacute;velopp&eacute; par Fr&eacute;d&eacute;ric Lordon en faisant dialoguer les &oelig;uvres de Bourdieu et Spinoza, constitue un rapprochement interdisciplinaire f&eacute;cond.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Mots-cl&eacute;s :</strong> Interdisciplinarit&eacute;, sociologie, philosophie, Bourdieu, Spinoza</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">&nbsp;</p> <p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Abstract :</strong> The various forms of connection between disciplines are generally presented as ambitious ways of challenging the arbitrary barriers between certain types of knowledge. If these perspectives often seem heuristic, they can nevertheless run the risk of mixing reflections at different kinds of thinking without real coherence. The links between philosophy and sociology, two disciplines which have been built in close proximity but also that drifted away, can be an example of a productive dialogue under the condition that epistemological guidelines are taken into account. The hypothesis that we explore is that, in a historical perspective, the alliance between philosophy and sociology has been most significant with relation to the use of concepts. More prospectively, we analyze the way in which the &laquo;&nbsp;structuralism of passions&nbsp;&raquo;, developed by Fr&eacute;d&eacute;ric Lordon, can be a prolific interdisciplinary alliance by bringing together the works of Bourdieu and Spinoza.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Keywords :</strong> Interdisciplinarity, sociology, philosophy, Bourdieu, Spinoza</p>