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Encyclopedia > Emmanuel Levinas

Emmanuel Levinas (January 12, 1906 - December 25, 1995) was a Jewish philosopher originally from Kaunas in Lithuania, who moved to France where he wrote most of his works in French. He was naturalized in 1930.


Levinas was deeply influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, whom he met at the university of Freiburg, as well as by Jewish religion. He was one of the first intellectuals to introduce to France the work of Heidegger and Husserl, by translations (for example of Husserl's 'Cartesian Meditations') and original philosophical tracts.


During the German invasion of France in 1940, Levinas was reactivated with his military unit, which was quickly surrounded and forced to surrender. Initially sent to a prisoner of war camp in France, he was soon transferred to a camp on German soil near Hannover, where he remained until the end of the war. Although protected by the Geneva Convention from deportation to a concentration camp, Levinas was segregated in special barracks for Jewish prisoners, who were forbidden any forms of religious worship. Life in the camp was as difficult as might be expected, with Levinas often forced into wood-chopping duties. Other prisoners report seeing him make frequent jottings in a notebook, which would later be shaped into his breakthrough treatises "De l'Existence ŕ l'Existant," a landmark appreciation and criticism of the philosophy of Heidegger, and "Le Temps et l'Autre" (both 1948). In the meantime, his wife was shielded from deportation through the efforts of the philosopher Maurice Blanchot. Other family members were not so lucky: his mother-in-law was deported and never heard from again, while his father and brothers were murdered in Lithuania by the SS.


After the war, Levinas became a leading thinker in France, emerging from the circle of intellectuals surrounding Jean Wahl. His work is based on the ethics of the Other. The Other is not knowable and cannot be made into an object, as is done by traditional metaphysics (called ontology by Levinas). Some of his work is rather hard to understand, but one could say that Levinas prefers to think of philosophy as the 'knowledge of love' rather than the love of knowledge. In his arrangement, an ethics of responsibility precedes any 'objective searching after truth'. Levinas derives the primacy of his ethics from the experience of the encounter with the Other. For Levinas, the face-to-face encounter with another human being is a privileged phenomenon in which the other person's promixity and distance are both strongly felt. The encounter makes clear the other person's unknowable difference, a fact which, for Levinas, compels us to respond to them: the encounter leads to a call of responsibility.


Among the many works of Levinas, key texts include Totalité et infini: essai sur l'extériorité (1961) and Autrement qu'etre ou au-dela de l'essence (1974). Both works have been translated into English by the American philosopher Alphonso Lingis.


See Also

The Other


Authenticity


Golden Rule


External links

See a webpage giving brief details of his life and writings (http://home.pacbell.net/atterton/levinas/)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Emmanuel LĂ©vinas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (928 words)
For Levinas, the irreducible relation, the epiphany, of the face-to-face, the encounter with another, is a privileged phenomenon in which the other person's proximity and distance are both strongly felt.
Levinas spent the rest of WWII as a prisoner of war in a camp near Hannover in Germany.
Espacethique : Emmanuel Levinas and the ethic of responsibility.
Emmanuel Levinas and Phenomenology of Eros I (3297 words)
This event is the relation with the Other who welcomes me in the Home, the discreet presence of the Feminine.´ (Levinas: 170.) The presence of woman brings with her familiarity and intimacy, gentleness and homeliness: the room, reserved for the separated being and his possessions, is not merely a storehouse or a stock.
And Levinas explicitly denounces the comparing of the body to property, even in the form of seeing the body as one's own property: `- - the body as naked body is not the first possession; it is still outside of having and not having.
The human conscience, for Levinas, is not awakened by the `call of Being´, as was the case in Heidegger´s philosophy; it is awakened by the suffering face of the Other, which delivers the subject from his egoism.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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