Abstract

Identity as traditionally conceived in mainstream Western thought is focused on theory, representation, knowledge, subjectivity and is centrally important in the works of Emmanuel Levinas. His critique of Western culture and corresponding notion of identity at its foundations typically raises the question of the other. Alterity in Levinas indicates existence of something on its own account, in itself independently of the subject’s will or consciousness. The objectivity of alterity tells of the impossible evasion of signs from their destiny, which is the other. The implications involved in reading the signs of the other have contributed to reorienting semiotics in the direction of semioethics. In Levinas, the I-other relation is not reducible to abstract cognitive terms, to intellectual synthesis, to the subject-object relation, but rather tells of involvement among singularities whose distinctive feature is alterity, absolute alterity. Humanism of the other is a pivotal concept in Levinas overturning the sense of Western reason. It asserts human duties over human rights. Humanism of alterity privileges encounter with the other, responsibility for the other, over tendencies of the centripetal and egocentric orders that instead exclude the other. Responsibility allows for neither rest nor peace. The “properly human” is given in the capacity for absolute otherness, unlimited responsibility, dialogical intercorporeity among differences non-indifferent to each other, it tells of the condition of vulnerability before the other, exposition to the other. The State and its laws limit responsibility for the other. Levinas signals an essential contradiction between the primordial ethical orientation and the legal order. Justice involves comparing incomparables, comparison among singularities outside identity. Consequently, justice places limitations on responsibility, on unlimited responsibility which at the same time it presupposes as its very condition of possibility. The present essay is structured around the following themes: (1) Premiss; (2) Justice, uniqueness, and love; (3) Sign and language; (4) Dialogue and alterity; (5) Semiotic materiality; (6) Globalization and the trap of identity; (7) Human rights and rights of the other: for a new humanism; (8) Ethics; (9) The World; (10) Outside the subject; (11) Responsibility and Substitution; (12) The face; (13) Fear of the other; (14) Alterity and justice; (15) Justice and proximity; (16) Literary writing; (17) Unjust justice; (18) Caring for the other.

Highlights

  • He loves law and fairness, the earth is full of his grace (Psalm 33, “In praise of divine justice”, trans. by Susan Petrilli)

  • The Greek tradition demands that we compare the incomparable; and the Bible tells us that comparison of incomparables, of singularities through the universalization of concepts and laws is justified and mitigated by mercy and compassion for the other, making for a system that can be perfected on the basis of love and care for the other, love for the other where the ethical dimension prevails over the passionate

  • Given the special bend of investigations on sign and language where the relationship between sign and value, language and value is central, the connection between such a tradition in semiotics studies and the work of Levinas is immediate. Another inevitable connection is that between “semioethics” and Levinas’s understanding of “ethics”: we have developed semioethics proceeding with Levinas, and beyond in dialogue with the scholars mentioned and others still who in chronological terms came before him and after

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Summary

Premiss

Let me begin by premising that this is not an essay on Emmanuel Levinas, nor is it classifiable under the formula “What has not yet been said about Levinas”. In any case what Levinas adds immediately after is of particular interest from the point of view of the topic treated in the present essay He meditates on the I-other relationship, the question of responsibility for the other, the importance of recognizing the other, greater he believes than to recognize the object itself. I valorize the contribution that may come to philosophical reflection from the science of signs, semiotics–for what concerns my interests in this essay, “semiotics of interpretation,” “semiotics of significance,” “global semiotics” ([86, 94, 95, 97], Calabrese et al [23]) Under this aspect, I refer the question of the relationship between respect of the law, the rights of identity and the rights of others to the works of Levinas, addressing as such is treated as a properly philosophical question. The Greek tradition demands that we compare the incomparable; and the Bible tells us that comparison of incomparables, of singularities through the universalization of concepts and laws is justified and mitigated by mercy and compassion for the other, making for a system that can be perfected on the basis of love and care for the other (see [78]), love for the other where the ethical dimension prevails over the passionate (see “The Other, Utopia and Justice”, 1988, ibid., pp. 223–234)

Sign and language
Dialogue and Alterity
Semiotic Materiality
Globalization and the Trap of Identity
Human Rights and Rights of the Other
Ethics
The World
10 Outside Subject
11 Responsibility and Substitution
12 The Face
13 Fear of the Other
14 Alterity and Justice
15 Justice and Proximity
16 Literary Writing
17 Unjust Justice
18 Caring for the Other
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