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DOI: 10.1177/0953946805054804 © 2005 SAGE Publications A Transcendental Hangover: Lévinas, Heidegger and the Ethics of AlterityThis paper examines two claims currently made of Heidegger and Lévinas: (1) that Heidegger, work and man, had no adequate ethics; and (2) that Lévinas draws attention to this both in his own work and in the ground for ethics that he sought to give through the assertion of an explicitly Platonic ethics of transcendence to the Good beyond Being. The paper takes as a statement of Lévinas ethics his text Alterity and Transcendence and shows, by relating what he says to Plato, Aristotle and Heidegger, that Lévinass ethics are themselves shaped by a commitment to intersubjectivity which fails to achieve a genuine orientation to the other of contemporary discourse, and that results only in the self-positing of the subject. Finally it examines Heideggers own discussions of alterity, ethics and being-with-one-another to show how Heideggers work does in fact point to what an ethical discourse of the other is seeking to achieve.
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