State University of New York, Stony Brook
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1980
Buffalo, New York, United States of America
Areas of Interest
17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  27
    In Proximity: Emmanuel Levinas and the Eighteenth Century
    with Melvyn New and Robert Bernasconi
    Texas Tech University Press. 2001.
    In a world in which everything is reduced "to the play of signs detached from what is signified," Levinas asks a deceptively simple question: Whence, then, comes the urge to question injustice? By seeing the demand for justice for the other—the homeless, the destitute—as a return to morality, Levinas escapes the suspect finality of any ideology.Levinas’s question is one starting point for In Proximity, a collection of seventeen essays by scholars in eighteenth-century literature, philosophy, his…Read more
  •  59
    Responses to Fleishman and Sauer
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 4 (4): 21-25. 1997.
    I want first to thank Professor Charles Harvey for his kindness and his efforts in putting together today's session of the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World on my book, Elevations, which is to say, on the ethics of Levinas and Rosenzweig. It is fitting too. Ethics more than any area of philosophy, it seems to me, speaks to the purpose of our Society, which is to gather in friendship for intelligent discussion about our contemporary world with a view to its improvement and our own.
  •  292
    Levinas: thinking least about death—contra heidegger
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1-3): 21-39. 2007.
    Detailed exposition of the nine layers of signification of human mortality according to Emmanuel Levinas's phenomenological and ethical account of the meaning and role of death for the embodied human subject and its relations to other persons. Critical contrast to Martin Heidegger's alternative and hitherto more influential phenomenological-ontological conception, elaborated in "Being and Time", of mortality as Dasein's anxious and revelatory being-toward-death.