The Problem with Levinas

Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK (2015)
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Abstract

Levinas's idea of ethics as a relation of responsibility to the other person has become a highly influential and recognizable position across a wide range of academic and non-academic fields. Simon Critchley's aim in this book is to provide a less familiar, more troubling, and truer account of Levinas's work. He proposes a new dramatic method for reading Levinas, where the fundamental problem of his work is seen as the attempt to escape from the tragedy of Heidegger's philosophy and the way in which that philosophy shaped political events in the last century.

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Simon Critchley
The New School

Citations of this work

Emmanuel Levinas.Bettina Bergo - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
“In the Face, a Right Is There”: Arendt, Levinas and the Phenomenology of the Rights of Man.Nathan Bell - 2018 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49 (4):291-307.
Religious pluralism: a Habermasian questioning and a Levinasian addressing.Lars Rhodin & Xin Mao - 2017 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 16 (46):49-62.

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