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    Slavoj Žižek proposed an ethic of respect for the fantasy space of another. Under "fantasy" Jacques Lacan borrowed from Claude Lévi-Strauss the notion of a "private myth." But this fantasy is, Žižek says, illusionary, fragile, and helpless. Fantasy is the way everyone, each in a particular way, conceals the impasse of his desire. Psychoanalytic practice can be criticized as a radical destitution of the fundamental fantasy of the patient. The author argues that what Žižek analyzes as fantasy is a…Read more
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    Subjectification
    Continental Philosophy Review 40 (2): 113-123. 2007.
    For Martin Heidegger the death that comes singularly for each of us summons us to exist on our own and speak in our own name. But Gilles Delueze and Félix Guattari argue that it is a specific social machinery that summons us to speak in our own name and answer for what we do and are. This summons is a death sentence. They enjoin us to flee this subjectification, this subjection. They do recognize that the release of becomings in all directions can become destructive and self-destructive. There a…Read more
  • An Infinite Time of One's Own
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    The Metaphysics of the Face
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    Perversity and Ethics (review)
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    Sade, or the Philosopher-Villain
    with Pierre Klossowski
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    Death drive
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    We Mortals
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    The Imperative
    Indiana University Press. 1998.
    Ò. . . a more compelling reading of Kant than any I have ever seen.Ó ÑDavid Farrell Krell In this provocative book, Alphonso Lingis argues that not only our thought is governed by an imperative, as Kant had maintained, but, rather, our ...
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    Bodies that Touch Us
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    To Die With Others
    Diacritics 30 (3): 106-113. 2000.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 30.3 (2000) 106-113 [Access article in PDF] To Die With Others Alphonso Lingis One dies as one dies—as anyone, everyone dies, as all that lives dies. Do we not know that when we lie dying—when, bedridden, hospitalized, removed from our home and workplace, we no longer exercise our skills, launch initiatives, are depersonalized, and can do nothing but wait for the end in increasing passivity and prostration? Did we not lear…Read more
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    This Article does not have an abstract
  • Hyletic Data
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    Six Problems in Levinas's Philosophy
    PhaenEx 7 (1): 30-40. 2012.
    Levinas’s constitutive analysis conflicts with his phenomenological descriptions. There are problems in his essential theses: Recognizing alterity is recognizing wants and needs. These are said to be unending, infinite. The wholly Other—God—is constitutive of the alterity of the other human. Ethics originates in Jewish religious history. Ethical absoluteness conflicts with political responsibility
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    Authentic Time
    In Ronald Bruzina & Bruce W. Wilshire (eds.), Crosscurrents in phenomenology, Martinus Nijhoff. pp. 276--296. 1978.
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    Fetishes and Rarities
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    Return of the First-Person Singular: The Science of Subjectivity and the Sciences
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    Abuses
    University of California Press. 1995.
    Part travelogue, part meditation, _Abuses_ is a bold exploration of central themes in Continental philosophy by one of the most passionate and original thinkers in that tradition writing today. A gripping record of desires, obsessions, bodies, and spaces experienced in distant lands, Alphonso Lingis's book offers no less than a new approach to philosophy—aesthetic and sympathetic—which departs from the phenomenology of Levinas and Merleau-Ponty. "These were letters written to friends," Lingis wr…Read more
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    Differance in the eternal recurrence of the same
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    The doctrine of eternal recurrence in Nietzsche is an essentially ecstatic doctrine. It is also strangely incommunicable. Here the ecstasy that reveals singularizes. The essential revelation closes the one to whom it is given in his own singularity ; only a singularity opens to the abysses and the Dionysian truth. Heidegger could then see in it an ontological doctrine. And an authentifying-singularizing-doctrine. Not, though, the same as his own. For Heidegger could suggest that the time horizon…Read more
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    Objectivity and of justice: A critique of Emmanuel Levinas' explanations (review)
    Continental Philosophy Review 32 (4): 395-407. 1999.
    For Emmanuel Levinas objectivity is intersubjectively constituted. But this intersubjectivity is not, as in Merleau-Ponty, the intercorporeality of perceivers nor, as in Heidegger, the active correlation of practical agents. It has an ethical structure; it is the presence, to each cognitive subject, of others who contest and judge him. But does not the exposure of each cognitive subject to the wants and needs of others result in the constitution of a common practical field, which is not yet the …Read more
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    Contact: Tact and Caress
    Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 38 (1): 1-6. 2007.
    Through words and gestures we communicate with one another about the outlying environment, and we also form representations of one another. But we also make contact with one another. Through tact we make contact with the anxieties, rage, shame, shyness, and secrecy of another. In caresses we make contact with the pleasure of the other. Our caresses are moved by the other, by the spasms of torment and pleasure in the other
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    The word of honor
    In Jurate Baranova (ed.), Contemporary philosophical discourse in Lithuania, Council For Research in Values and Philosophy. pp. 4--291. 2005.
  • Language and Persecution
    In Paul Patton & John Protevi (eds.), Between Deleuze and Derrida, Continuum. pp. 169--82. 2003.