"THE FACE OF THE OTHER"

LEVINAS, EMMANUEL.

Totalité et infini. Essai sur l'extériorité.

La Haye, Nijhoff, 1961. Royal 8vo. Original blue full cloth with gilt lettering to spine, and in the original blue dust-jacket. Cloth with a white spot to spine, from removal of some sort of label. Front board a tiny bit bended towards corners. Dust-jacket unusually clean and fine with just a few tears with almost no loss, and with a bit of loss to upper layer of paper, from removal of some sort of label (exactly the same place as on cloth-spine). XVIII, 284 pp.


The rare first edition of this absolute masterpiece of 20th century philosophy and a towering achievement of philosophical ethics, Levinas' main work, in which he introduced the concepts "the face of the other" and "radical alterity".

The French-Lithuanian philosopher Emmanuel Levinas was among the first French academic philosophers to come to Freiburg to study phenomenology with Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger and subsequently introduced this philosophical methodology in France, among others to Jean-Paul Sartre who would, a few years later, go to Germany to study phenomenology himself.

"Totalité et Infini", Levinas' first major work, grew out of his experience of the Second World War which he survived as a prisoner of war in Germany. It revolves around the possibility of ethics in a world dominated by the will to power and the inescapable reality of war. The prominence, which it rapidly attained through its enthusiastic reception by contemporaries such as Paul Ricoeur, is tied to the originality and urgency of its reflection on the foundation of ethics - and the ethical foundation of philosophy itself. This is at the heart of Levinas' claim that ethics must be understood as the primary form of philosophy.

The concepts which "Totalité et Infini" introduced into philosophy (the face of the Other, radical alterity) now form part of the grammar of modern ethical reflection. In these years, the work is also finding reception in aesthetics, in part, through the writings of Levinas' close friend Maurice Blanchot.

Order-nr.: 41446


DKK 10.000,00