ABSTRACT

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.

part I|121 pages

Second-Person Normativity

chapter 1|26 pages

Second-Person Reasons

Darwall, Levinas, and the Phenomenology of Reason

chapter 3|25 pages

Grounding and Maintaining Answerability

chapter 5|21 pages

Commanding, Giving, Vulnerable

What Is the Normative Standing of the Other in Levinas?

part II|67 pages

Ethical Metaphysics

part III|101 pages

Ethics and Moral Philosophy

chapter 9|17 pages

Desire for the Good

chapter 10|24 pages

On Sociality and Morality

Reflections on Levinas, Tomasello, Strawson, Wallace

chapter 12|16 pages

Between Virtue and the Theory of Subjectivity

Noddings’s Care, Levinas’s Responsibility, and Slote’s Receptivity

chapter 13|10 pages

Levinasian “Ethics as First Philosophy”

In Analytic Moral Philosophy
Edited ByMelis ErdurORCID Icon

chapter 14|13 pages

Against a Clear Conscience

A Levinasian Response to Williams’s Challenge