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Levinas and Analytic Philosophy
Second-Person Normativity and the Moral Life
von Melis Erdur, Michael Fagenblat
Verlag: Routledge
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-032-33749-4
Erschienen am 13.06.2022
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 229 mm [H] x 152 mm [B] x 17 mm [T]
Gewicht: 460 Gramm
Umfang: 316 Seiten

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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

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

  1. Second-Person Reasons: Darwall, Levinas, and the Phenomenology of Reason
  2. Steven G. Crowell

  3. The Second Source of Normativity and its Implications for Reflective Endorsement: Levinas and Korsgaard
  4. Michael Barber

  5. Grounding and Maintaining Answerability
  6. Michael Fagenblat

  7. Buber, Levinas, and the I-Thou relation
  8. Patricia Meindl, Felipe León, and Dan Zahavi

  9. Commanding, Giving, Vulnerable: What is the Normative Standing of the Other in Levinas?
  10. James H. P. Lewis and Robert A. Stern

    Part II. Ethical Metaphysics

  11. The Concept of Truth in Levinas's Totality and Infinity
  12. Michael Roubach

  13. Levinas on the Second-Person Structure of Free Will
  14. Kevin Houser

  15. Personal Knowledge
  16. Sophie-Grace Chappell

    Part III. Ethics and moral philosophy

  17. Desire for the Good
  18. Fiona Ellis

  19. Levinas, Tomasello, Strawson, Wallace: Reflections on Sociality and Morality
  20. Michael Morgan

  21. Rethinking Vulnerability in a Levinasian Context
  22. Diane Perpich

  23. Between Virtue Theory and the Theory of Subjectivity: Noddings's Care, Levinas's Responsibility, and Slote's Receptivity
  24. Guoping Zhao

  25. Levinasian "Ethics as a First Philosophy" in Analytic Philosophy
  26. Melis Erdur

  27. Against a Clear Conscience: A Levinasian Response to Williams' Challenge

Søren Overgaard



This volume examines the relevance of Emmanuel Levinas's work to recent developments in analytic philosophy. Contemporary analytic philosophers working in metaethics, the philosophy of mind, and the metaphysic of personal identity have argued for views similar to those espoused by Levinas. Often disparately pursued, 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.
In metaethics, the volume shows how Levinas's moral phenomenology relates to recent work on the normativity of rationality and intentionality, and how it can illuminate a wide range of moral concepts including accountability, moral intuition, respect, conscience, attention, blame, indignity, shame, hatred, dependence, gratitude and guilt. The volume also tests Levinas's innovative claim that ethical relations provide a way of accounting for the irreducibility of personal identity to psychological identity. The essays here contribute to ongoing discussions about the metaphysical significance and sustainability of a naturalistic but nonreductive account of personhood. Finally, the volume connects Levinas's second-person standpoint with analogous developments in moral philosophy.