This volume examines the relevance of Emmanuel Levinas's work to recent developments in analytic philosophy. It shows how Levinas's account of "ethics as first philosophy" affords a way of connecting these respective enterprises and showing how moral normativity enters into the structure of rationality and personal identity.
Michael Fagenblat is Senior Lecturer at the Open University of Israel. He is the author of A Covenant of Creatures: Levinas's Philosophy of Judaism (2010), editor of Negative Theology as Jewish Modernity (2017), and other publications in phenomenology and the philosophy of religion.
Melis Erdur received her Ph.D. in Philosophy from New York University in 2013. She has held several postdoctoral fellowships in Israel, and published articles in the area of moral philosophy, including "A Moral Argument Against Moral Realism", Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, 19 (3), 591-602, 2016, and "Moral Realism and the Incompletability of Morality", The Journal of Value Inquiry, 52 (2), 227-237, 2018.
Preface: Analyzing Levinas
Michael Fagenblat
Part I. Second-Person Normativity
Steven G. Crowell
Michael Barber
Michael Fagenblat
Patricia Meindl, Felipe León, and Dan Zahavi
James H. P. Lewis and Robert A. Stern
Part II. Ethical Metaphysics
Michael Roubach
Kevin Houser
Sophie-Grace Chappell
Part III. Ethics and moral philosophy
Fiona Ellis
Michael Morgan
Diane Perpich
Guoping Zhao
Melis Erdur
Søren Overgaard