
Emmanuel Levinas - Totality and Infinity
Oct 7, 2024
A dense dive into Levinas’s Totality and Infinity and its roots in phenomenology. They trace how war, bodily vulnerability, and imprisonment shaped his turn from ontology to ethics. Conversations probe infinity, the irreducible other, language as gift, and the political risks of assimilation and domination.
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Levinas Bridges Phenomenology And Ethics
- Levinas helped import Husserl and Heidegger into France and used phenomenology to rethink ethics after WWII.
- He frames philosophy's priority shift from ontology to an ethics centered on the Other's face.
War And Imprisonment Shaped His Thought
- Levinas served in WWII, was imprisoned, and began writing major work during and after captivity.
- His wartime experience shapes his critique of mass politics and violence in philosophy.
Revelation Replaces Heideggerian Disclosure
- Levinas contrasts Heidegger's disclosure with his own notion of revelation and the 'there is' as horrifying background.
- He relocates the idea of infinity from Cartesian theology into the ethical encounter with the Other.






