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2016 | 28/1 |

Article title

Levinasian perspective of political value commitment: antidote to African emancipation

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Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
This paper has the sole objective to critically examine the implications of Levinas’ ethics as applied political philosophy. This involves a critical examination of the concept of dialogue in African political value and African emancipation, from the purview of Levinas’ moral obligation as the debt we owe to the Other. Levinas’ ethics is the philosophy of Otherness; the humanism of the other human person. It is radical humanism or radical openness of our socio-political world. Freedom is not just the absence of impediments or constraints but obedience to the universal law of reason. This paper shall analyze the notions of Levinas’ political theory relative to the face of the other and the politics of difference and otherness. This paper appreciates and appropriates the deep logical insight offered by Levinas’ contemporary political philosophy into African emancipation, ethics, politics, African political value, the problems of the ethics of global peace which has been distorted by violence. Violence has been antithetical to global order and it disrupts the projects of our humanity. We have lose every sense of our humanity which has put our contemporary social world at a cross road. Africa, as a continent is not immune from the current global violence and crises facing the world. Levinas’ ethics is the ethics of the good life. Levinas’ ethics is ethical metaphysics and it reminds us of human moral universe; it reflects on the fact that we as humans are inextricably governed by the web of network of cosmic order and social order. Levinas’ ethics reveals the crucial importance of ethics, politics, history, culture to human society. Africa can learn from this Levinasian tradition of the cosmic network of social process.

Year

Volume

Physical description

Dates

published
2016

Contributors

References

  • Critchley S. and Bernasconi R., (2002): The Cambridge Companion to Levinas, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Habermas., Jurgen., (1996): Between Facts and Norms: Contribution to the Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy, trans. William Regh, Cambridge Mass.: The MIT Press.Habwermas.
  • Habermas, Jurgen, (1979): Communication and the Evolution of Society, trans. Thomas McCarthy, Boston: Beacon Press.
  • Fleurdeliz R. Altez (2007): Banal and Implied Forms of Violence in Levinas’ Phenomenological Ethics, Kritike Volume One (June): Pp. 52-70.
  • Silvano Petrosino (2006): Levinas Concept of First Philosophy, Catholic University of Milan in Piacenza, Department of Semiotic and Moral Philosophy, Athena, (2006): Pp. 29-42.
  • Jack Reynolds., (2007): The Other of Derridarean Deconstruction: Levinas, Phenomenology, and the Question of Responsibility, Minerva – An Internet Journal of Philosophy, Volume 5: Pp.31-62.
  • Alfred I. Tauber (1998): Outside the Subject: Levinas’s Jewish Perspective on Time, Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal, Volume 20, Number 2 – Volume 21, Number 1: p. 442
  • Roger S. Gottlieb, (1994): Ethics and Trauma: Levinas, Feminism, and Deep Ecology, Faculty of Humanities, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Department of Mass Communication, Cross Currents Summer 94, Volume 44 Issue 2: Pp 1-10.
  • Alford., C. Fred., (2007): Levinas and the Limits of Political Theory, in Marinos Diamantides, (Ed,), (2007), Levinas, Law and Politics, London and New York: Routledge Cavendish.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11320/5521

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.hdl_11320_5521
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