Heidegger as Levinas’s Guide to Judaism ...
Type de document :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
DOI :
Titre :
Heidegger as Levinas’s Guide to Judaism beyond Philosophy
Auteur(s) :
Lapidot, Elad [Auteur]
Centre d'Études en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères - ULR 4074 [CECILLE]
Centre d'Études en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères - ULR 4074 [CECILLE]
Titre de la revue :
Religions
Pagination :
477
Éditeur :
MDPI
Date de publication :
2021-06-27
ISSN :
2077-1444
Mot(s)-clé(s) en anglais :
Levinas Emmanuel
Heidegger
Heidegger
Discipline(s) HAL :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Histoire, Philosophie et Sociologie des sciences
Résumé en anglais : [en]
This essay reflects on the way that Emmanuel Levinas stages the difference between Judaism and Philosophy, namely how he approaches Jewish thought as a concrete other of philosophy. The claim is that this mise en scène ...
Lire la suite >This essay reflects on the way that Emmanuel Levinas stages the difference between Judaism and Philosophy, namely how he approaches Jewish thought as a concrete other of philosophy. The claim is that this mise en scène underlies Levinas’s oeuvre not only as a discourse about the Other, but as a real scene of an actual encounter with otherness, namely the encounter of philosophy with the epistemic otherness of Judaism. It is in the turn to Jewish thought beyond Philosophy that the essay identifies Heidegger’s strongest influence on Levinas. The essay’s reflection is performed through a reading of Levinas’s first major philosophical work of 1961, Totality and Infinity. The encounter between Philosophy and Judaism is explored in this context both as an epistemic and as a political event.Lire moins >
Lire la suite >This essay reflects on the way that Emmanuel Levinas stages the difference between Judaism and Philosophy, namely how he approaches Jewish thought as a concrete other of philosophy. The claim is that this mise en scène underlies Levinas’s oeuvre not only as a discourse about the Other, but as a real scene of an actual encounter with otherness, namely the encounter of philosophy with the epistemic otherness of Judaism. It is in the turn to Jewish thought beyond Philosophy that the essay identifies Heidegger’s strongest influence on Levinas. The essay’s reflection is performed through a reading of Levinas’s first major philosophical work of 1961, Totality and Infinity. The encounter between Philosophy and Judaism is explored in this context both as an epistemic and as a political event.Lire moins >
Langue :
Anglais
Vulgarisation :
Non
Source :
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