Book contents
- Heidegger and His Jewish Reception
- Heidegger and His Jewish Reception
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Herkunft and Zukunft: Heidegger, Christianity, and Secularization
- 2 Kant’s Legacy and New Thinking: Heidegger, Cassirer, and Rosenzweig
- 3 A Christian Anthropology? Early Jewish Readings of Sein und Zeit
- 4 Dwelling Prophetically: Martin Buber’s Response to Heidegger
- 5 The Destruktion of Jerusalem: Leo Strauss on Heidegger
- 6 God, Being, Pathos: Abraham Joshua Heschel’s Theological Rejoinder to Heidegger
- 7 Uprooting Paganism: Emmanuel Levinas Faces Heidegger
- Conclusion Which God Will Save Us? Heidegger and Judaism
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - Uprooting Paganism: Emmanuel Levinas Faces Heidegger
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2020
- Heidegger and His Jewish Reception
- Heidegger and His Jewish Reception
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Herkunft and Zukunft: Heidegger, Christianity, and Secularization
- 2 Kant’s Legacy and New Thinking: Heidegger, Cassirer, and Rosenzweig
- 3 A Christian Anthropology? Early Jewish Readings of Sein und Zeit
- 4 Dwelling Prophetically: Martin Buber’s Response to Heidegger
- 5 The Destruktion of Jerusalem: Leo Strauss on Heidegger
- 6 God, Being, Pathos: Abraham Joshua Heschel’s Theological Rejoinder to Heidegger
- 7 Uprooting Paganism: Emmanuel Levinas Faces Heidegger
- Conclusion Which God Will Save Us? Heidegger and Judaism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Emmanuel Levinas is arguably the most famous Jewish student of Martin Heidegger (alongside, perhaps, Hannah Arendt). Levinas’s philosophical effort could be summarized, somewhat succinctly, as the attempt to put to the fore the idea of “ethics as first philosophy.” Levinas seeks to dethrone what he takes to be philosophy’s prioritization of ontology and establish that undergirding ontology is infinite and asymmetrical responsibility for the other person. Often the ethical encounter is portrayed as a relation to the other’s (Autrui) face, an “infinite,” overabundant excess conditioning the finite; a relation beyond the horizon of being, through which the trace of the divine Other shines through. The revelation of the face does not manifest itself as, nor is it mediated through, concepts or representations, but rather as the demand and command of ethics. Intersubjectivity is not contingent on the self, but precedes and conditions it. I am obligated to the other person before comprehension. The insight of “ethics as first philosophy” is expressed with typical hyperbole: my responsibility to the other includes a responsibility for the other’s responsibility, even for my oppressor and prosecutor; I am demanded to substitute for the other, to death. Throughout the course of Western thought, Levinas claims, Otherness
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- Heidegger and His Jewish Reception , pp. 243 - 289Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020