de facto justice to a highly individualized aesthetic expression, which ultimately has little to do with politics. The first position is exemplified by Simon Critchley who proposes a formal theory of political activity inspired by Levinas' ethics.1 The second position is that of Gillian Rose, who perceives in Levinas' political writings the incompatibility of his formal ethics and a pragmatic secular politics.2 Neither commentator addresses prophecy at length as the generalization of ethical responsibility. However, they draw very different conclusions about the political implications of ethical enactment in Levinas. At the heart of their disagreement stands a specific understanding of ethical witness, or prophetism, in its relation to society and politics." /> The universalization of responsibility as a passage from ethics to a politics of questioning - Bergo Bettina | sdvig press

The universalization of responsibility as a passage from ethics to a politics of questioning

Simon Critchley's reading of Levinas

Bettina Bergo

pp. 241-257


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