Absurd Being

A place to take a moment to reflect on what it all means

Emmanuel Levinas 1906-1995
Existentialism

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Levinas

Portrait by Bracha L. Ettinger ©

Recommended Reading



Existence and Existents   Time and the Other   Totality and Infinity  

Summaries

->  Existence and Existents

->  Time and the Other

->  Totality and Infinity

The Man

Emmanuel Levinas was born on January 12, 1906 in Lithuania, into a middle class Jewish family. When he was around 10, his family moved to Ukraine, where they lived during the Russian revolutions of 1917. After returning to Lithuania in 1920, Levinas attended a Jewish gymnasium before leaving for the French University of Strasbourg in 1923 where he began his philosophical studies and became friends with French philosopher, Maurice Blanchot. In 1928, Levinas moved to the University of Freiburg where he studied phenomenology under Edmund Husserl and also met Martin Heidegger, whose treatise Being and Time, greatly impressed the young man. In 1930, he published his thesis entitled The Theory of Intuition in Husserl’s Phenomenology.

In 1932, Levinas married his childhood friend, Raissa Levi, before becoming a naturalised French citizen in 1939. When France declared war on Germany later that year, he enlisted in the French officer corps where he served as a translator of Russian and French. In 1940, Levinas’ military unit was captured and he was held as a prisoner of war for the remainder of the Second World War. Sent to a special barracks for Jewish prisoners, the only thing that saved him from the concentration camps was his status as a prisoner of war. During this time, his father and brothers were killed In Lithuania by German soldiers. Fortunately, Maurice Blanchot was able to keep his wife and daughter safe in a monastery during the War. He also ensured that Levinas and his family were able to keep in contact through letters and messages.

In 1947, Levinas published the essay Existence and Existents, which he had begun writing while in captivity. Time and the Other, which is a series of four lectures Levinas gave over 1946-7 was published the following year. After this, he taught at a private Jewish High School in Paris, the Ecole Normale Israelite Orientale, where he would later become director. In 1949, after their second daughter died, he and his wife had a son, Michael, who would go on to become a pianist and composer. He published his primary doctoral thesis, Totality and Infinity in 1961. In 1964, he became a professor in philosophy at the University of Poitiers before moving to the University of Paris at Nanterre in 1967. He accepted a position at the Sorbonne six years later. While working at the Sorbonne, Levinas published his second magnum opus, Otherwise than Being, or Beyond Essence.

He retired in 1979 but continued to write. His wife died in 1994 and he passed away a year later on Christmas day.


The Timeline

1906: Born January 12 in Lithuania

1914: Moved to Ukraine with his family

1920: Family returned to Lithuania

1923: Moved to Strasbourg where he studied philosophy. Met and befriended Maurice Blanchot

1928: Travelled to Freiburg to study with Husserl. Attended Heidegger’s seminar

1930: Published his French thesis, The Theory of Intuition in Husserl’s Phenomenology

1932: Married Raissa Levi

1939: Naturalised French. Enlisted in the French officer corps

1940: Captured by the Nazis and held as a POW

1947: Published Existence and Existents

          Became director at the Ecole Normale Israelite Orientale

1948: Published Time and the Other

1961: Published his doctoral thesis, Totality and Infinity

1964: Became professor at the University of Poitiers  

1967: Taught philosophy at the Nanterre campus of the University of Paris

1973: Accepted a position at the Sorbonne

1974: Published Otherwise than Being, or Beyond Essence

1979: Retired from teaching

1994: Wife died

1995: Died on December 25 in Paris

The Philosophy


Emmanuel Levinas was a truly original thinker in the existentialist tradition (although he wouldn’t have classified himself so, given the pains he took to illustrate how his thought differed from other existentialists), who took his cue, like his contemporary Sartre, from Husserl and critically responded to Heidegger’s Being and Time.

If Heidegger built his philosophy around Being, Levinas built his around the relation with other human beings (the Other). The relation with the Other is, for Levinas, a relation with a completely transcendent alterity forever beyond our grasp, but one through which, precisely because it is wholly transcendent, meaning and significance can be discovered.

The original lines of enquiry and remarkable insights in Levinas’ work don’t come easy but they are no less profound for this. If one were going to criticise him however, one might take issue with the way he corrals his (genuinely interesting) philosophical insights to legitimise and support Judaeo-Christian dogma. Although, it isn’t fully fleshed out in Totality and Infinity, he is clearly laying the groundwork for a relation (of some sort) with a transcendent God in the relation with the Other. In particular, he pushes credulity to the limit when he talks about Eros and Paternity with all of the references to things like “virginity”, the “Eternal Feminine”, “trans-substantiation”, and the Father-Son relationship. If you happen to be Christian, this might not be a bad thing (albeit Levinas’ version of religion definitely goes well beyond what you’ll hear about in Church); if you are atheist, however, you will just have to grin and bear the references and resist Levinas’ religious motivations and tendencies.

 

The following summary is limited to themes raised in three of Levinas’ works; two early essays (Existence and Existents (1947), Time and the Other (1948)) and his first major work, Totality and Infinity (1961). It therefore lacks later developments in Levinas’ thought, particularly from his second major work, Otherwise Than Being, or Beyond Essence (1974) and the collection, God Who Comes to the Idea (1982).          

 

Metaphysics and Ontology

Metaphysics, for Levinas, is rooted in transcendence, which importantly, can only take place before an Other that is “absolutely other”, or, as he calls it, alterity. Metaphysical Desire is a desire for this absolutely other, i.e. transcendence, but since the Other is, by definition, beyond our grasp, it is a desire which can never be satisfied.

Ontology, on the other hand, is grounded in knowledge which confronts the other and absorbs its otherness, reducing it to the same; i.e. a totality comprised of the subject and the object. This, Levinas calls ‘need’ and nostalgia, or a longing for return. This kind of desire has its origin in a void, or lack, in the subject, rather than coming from the other, as in metaphysical Desire. Ontology works through a third term to achieve the totality. Examples of this third term include the concept (being in general), sensation (the objective and the subjective), and Husserlian phenomenology (an existent in a horizon).

 

Being / Existence / Nothingness

 What would be left if all things, beings, and persons were to disappear? A pure nothingness which Levinas calls the there is. The there is, being neither subject nor object is both impersonal and anonymous. It is eternal since, without a subject, it lacks a starting point. Importantly, nothingness is not non-being but nor is it a particular being; on the contrary, it is pure Being. Levinas describes it with words like, “ambiguous” and “darkness”, calling it a “menace of pure and simple presence” in Existence and Existents.

Heidegger suggested that anxiety revealed Being (we are anxious not about this or that being, but about Being (existence) in general) and through this we could be brought to an authentic “being toward death”. Levinas rejects this, affirming that the apprehension of the there is arouses “horror”, not in the face of death or even pain, rather it is a horror of being itself, that anonymous, impersonal “condemnation to perpetual reality, to existence with no exits”, the horror of the night that is infinite. Our greatest fear turns out not to be death, the possibility of non-being, but life, the impossibility of non-being.

We get a glimpse of the there is in insomnia which, while not being a direct experience of nothingness, nevertheless shares some of the same features. In being unable to fall asleep, I experience the feeling of eternal being without reprieve, but with a wakefulness which, rather than being a personal consciousness, is more like the suspended non-state of anonymous being. I’m not me, conscious and clear; rather, I’m set adrift in a hazy, semi-conscious, almost anonymous vigilance I cannot break free of.    

 

Separation

Existents (Levinas’ term for conscious beings) come to be through an event he calls the psychism, which he describes in Time and the Other (there called the hypostasis) as a “rupture of the anonymous vigilance of the there is” and a “mastery over existing”. While he acknowledges that he can’t explain why the hypostasis happens (“There is no physics in metaphysics”), he can describe its significance and the subsequent relation existents have with the existence from which they were birthed (separated).

We start with two key terms; fatigue and indolence, which Levinas thinks are examples of attitudes prior to reflection and which therefore concern existence. Fatigue is a weariness, not of specific things, but of existence itself. It is a desire to refuse existence. Indolence also gets the existential treatment and reveals a “hesitation before existence, an indolence about existing... an impotent and joyless aversion to the burden of existence itself.” Fatigue occurs in effort because all effort contains within it the sense of being “yoked to our task” (which is, at this ontological level, existing), and effort is characterised by interruptions in the anonymous, continuous flow of the there is, as in when work is completed step by step. This “stoppage and a positing” of effort creates the instant, which is an ontological structure that has nothing to do with time, and is essentially a condemnation of existence. We now have a being which is suddenly “out of joint with itself… a being that is not joining up with itself in the instant” (because it is a refusal of it), and this creates a lag. It is this lag which comprises the interval which is the present. This ontological ‘distance’ (the present) is precisely the “upsurge [birth] of an existent” and is how the existent gains mastery over existence.

The act of separating itself from existence is what Levinas calls atheism. Levinas’ use of this term is obviously unconventional; rather than being a stance one might take towards the existence or non-existence of god, it is simply the accomplishment of separation from the there is and is therefore a natural, unavoidable feature of the cogito.

 

The Relation Between the I and the Self

In the psychism, the existent first becomes an existent. This relation is characterised by identity, or, as Levinas also calls it, the interiority of the same. The subject is identical to itself, and while this may sound tautological, compared to the anonymous sameness of the there is it arose from, this relation is a significant development. Moreover, this relation is unique in that while the I is identical with itself, it is also separate from itself because it is the nature of the cogito (consciousness) to posit a distance between itself and everything else, including itself.

One feature of this newly birthed existent Levinas describes in his earlier writings is the way it finds itself in solitude, which has nothing to do with other people. Solitude is the despair and abandonment the existent feels because it is now, for the first time, identical to itself. He goes on to describe this identity as an “enchainment to itself” and one which paradoxically limits the freedom of the free being, which is already no longer free because it is, and cannot not be, responsible for itself. Levinas calls this relation between Ego and Self, materiality. Ontologically speaking, materiality is not physical matter; rather, it is the weighing down of the Ego with itself, the heaviness that the existent takes on in coming into existence.

 

The Relation Between the I and the World / Economic Existence

Levinas rejects the idea that the world exists ‘out there’, completely divorced from the observer. The world is not merely “the sum of existing objects. The very idea of totality or of a whole is only intelligible where there is a being that can embrace it.” Nevertheless, things in the world do afford us an encounter with beings that aren’t us. How exactly does the existent relate to this world it is a part of and yet separate from? Heidegger considered the world a utilitarian ensemble of tools that referred back to the being of Dasein as care. Levinas disagrees, seeing in the world an “ensemble of nourishments… To stroll is to enjoy the fresh air, not for health but for the air.” Our relationship with things in the world is characterised by enjoyment, not usefulness. The thing in the world, as the end of an intention, is a goal, a limit, a value in and of itself. He compares beings in the world to Aristotle’s unmoved mover, which, without moving itself, nevertheless arouses beings around it to movement. This idea of nourishment Levinas calls a living from…. For Levinas, “life is an existence that does not precede its essence”; rather, its essence (the contents it lives from) make up its worth and this in turn constitutes existence (being). Life, as happiness, is already beyond ontology.

Enjoyment isn’t quite the ‘need’ we talked about earlier, where the object becomes drawn into a totality with the subject. The intentionality of enjoyment “determines the other while being determined by it” in what we have called “living from…”. In this, the alterity of the world is overcome but in such a way that it remains separated. It is this feature that allows us to be nourished by, and enjoy, objects in the world. Moreover, because we love our needs and thrive on them, the ‘need’ we experience here for objects in our world doesn’t derive from any lack in the subject.   

Although we naturally relate to the world through enjoyment, our relation with the world is also a sojourn, or a dwelling at home with oneself. What this means is that everything in the world can be grasped and tamed, or possessed by me. This grasping of the object is what Levinas calls labour. Labour submerses the objects in the world in a plan, a project, relating them to an end, a goal, centred on the individual, and in this, represents a movement, not towards transcendence, but towards oneself. Possession and labour take things and comprehend them, positing them as durable, as substance, as a support of qualities. The hand (which we use to grasp) comprehends because it does not approach the thing as a sense-organ through enjoyment, but rather through mastery and domination. It doesn’t consume the thing it grasps, but gathers it, “keeps it, puts it in reserve, possesses it in a home.” In labouring, possession reduces to the same what at first presented itself as other. Labouring and possession in the separated interiority is what Levinas calls economic existence.

 

Living in the world like this creates an “interval… between the ego and the self”, which we saw had become united in a materiality characterised by heaviness. The existence of the world frees the subject from its initial materiality because it “permits it [the subject] to exist at a distance from itself.” Instead of returning to ourselves (as we do in identity), our intention carries us outwards away from ourselves to be absorbed by the things we enjoy.

Nevertheless, this salvation, the reprieve from the burden of ourselves, is ultimately illusory, or at best, temporary. This is because in encountering things in the world, they never appear as strange and completely separated from us; rather, we encounter/understand/interpret/use them as things for us. In other words, they ultimately refer back to us, returning us to our solitude, back where we started. Reason and knowledge can never free the ego from its materiality. True salvation (or redemption) would require that we encounter “an event that stops [our] everyday transcendence from falling back upon a point that is always the same.”

 

One final aspect of our relation with the world worth mentioning is the milieu. This is the background which objects in the world emerge from. Levinas calls this background, the elemental, and examples include earth, sea, light, sky, etc. This is not a system of references; rather, it is a non-possessable “common fund or terrain” out of which we enjoy the object. Because the elemental lacks support (e.g. the earth upholds me without me worrying about what upholds the earth), it appears mythical and mysterious. Nevertheless, the element is not absurd (as in Camus) or alien (as in Heidegger’s thrownness). Any insecurity we feel here is disturbing because it shares a similarity with the anonymous, menacing background of the there is. Levinas is clear that any disquietude here doesn’t mar our happiness though. The reason for this is that the I doesn’t exist and then have enjoyment added to it; “only in enjoyment does the I crystallize.” Enjoyment therefore, isn’t something that can be taken from us; it is what it means to exist in the world, to live from….

 

The Relation Between the I and the Other / Ethics

The Other (which for Levinas means the other I, or other consciousness) is the first example of a complete alterity, or absolute other, we meet. The relation the I makes with this absolute alterity is one that cannot be reduced to a totality. As Levinas says, the Other is a Stranger, a being we cannot appropriate or completely know. The I is separated from itself but within a totality that is Ego/Self; the world retained a sense of alterity but even in this it referred back to the self; the Other however, is complete alterity. The relation with the Other is the first true instance of metaphysical Desire we have encountered.     

This relation with the Other is an “idea of infinity”. Infinity is a thing which always surpasses our idea of it; i.e. something we can never completely grasp because it always exceeds any mental concept or form we might try to make it understandable with. The Other is infinite in this way because it, being a cogito, like the I, is separate from itself. Since the appearance of the Other has nothing to do with the subject; but rather, appears on its own terms, Levinas calls this revelation, as opposed to disclosure (the way other beings appear before us). Interestingly, this relation is what Levinas takes to be religion.

 

Works (things the Other does) don’t disclose the Other. They are merely signs which need to be interpreted and ultimately give us a what in response to our questioning for a who. We ask who such and such is and are told she is the president of XYZ company. This doesn’t bring us any closer to who the Other is. The who we grasp in works is not actually expressed in the work, is not actually present. Rather, he or she is “simply signified in it by a sign in a system of signs…”

So, how can we establish a connection to the who of the Other? Through discourse. By discourse, Levinas doesn’t mean spoken words; rather, he means the “production of meaning”, which happens essentially through the face and expression. Because discourse which facilitates the “face to face” relation with the Other is authentic and honest, Levinas calls this justice. Discourse which approaches the Other obliquely is rhetoric, e.g. propaganda and flattery, and is injustice. In authentic speech, the signifier attends the signified; the Other is present in what they are saying.

 

In the face to face relation, the Other, as the idea of infinity, an alterity I can never grasp, calls into question the I. From on high, an infinite height I can never transcend, the Other calls me to account for myself. This is the moral summons and brings us to what Levinas calls ethics. Ethics is deeper than simply following moral prescriptions or maximising happiness; it is the face to face encounter with the Other in which my freedom is limited and I am revealed as “arbitrary, guilty, and timid”. The Other calls my freedom into question in two ways. First, as consciousness of failure (since I was unable to choose my own existence, I am unjustified), and second, as consciousness of guilt (the Other is a resistance to my powers, not by being stronger than me, but by revealing my spontaneity as impotent). I am ashamed before the Other because my freedom turns out, “instead of being justified by itself… to be arbitrary and violent.” It is a power which destroys its object by absorbing it into a totality. To justify our freedom (find a foundation for it), we must begin with shame before the Other; i.e. conscience, which is a submission in morality. The presence of the Other then, doesn’t clash with freedom, it invests it, by calling into question the self and inviting us to justice. We aren’t condemned to be free, we are “invested as freedom” by the Other.

The way the Other “puts into question the brutal spontaneity” of the same and imposes an order of responsibility upon me, all takes place prior to the disclosure of being in general (conceptual knowledge which aims at a totality) proving that the ethical plane precedes the ontological one. 

 

Contingency (that is, the irrational) consists in egoism, unjustified in itself. Our relation with the Other ends this contingency by introducing into me what was not in me. It therefore founds Reason. Since reason is grounded in the Other and the relation with the Other is produced through language (discourse), language precedes and conditions rational thought. The signs of language don’t produce meaning; rather, meaning (grounded in the face to face) makes the sign function possible.

In addition, our relation with the Other is the only way we can come to know the world. To a being completely alone, universal doubt would loom everywhere. The world would be “silent”. Descartes’ cogito is not a starting point for certitude because “the thinking subject which denies its evidences ends up at the evidence of this work of negation… at a different level from that at which it had denied.” [italics added] The I, alone and unjustified, cannot say yes.

The world can only be posited in a conversation “between two points which do not constitute a system… a totality.” The Other posits the world and stands ready, with discourse, to interpret it. This is teaching (placing in me the idea of infinity). The entry of beings into a proposition constitutes the original event of their taking on signification. Speech is a giving for Levinas, a giving from the Other who “gives by thematizing” and presenting the “phenomenon as given”. In doing so, what was merely apparition loses its phenomenality and becomes fixed as a theme, an object. “The proposition relates the phenomenon to the existent, to exteriority, to the Infinity of the other… The infinite, against which every definition stands out, is not defined, does not offer itself to the gaze, but signals itself, not as a theme but as thematizing”. “A meaningful world is a world in which there is the Other through whom the world of my enjoyment becomes a theme having a signification.”

 

Despite all of the above, Levinas describes our relation with the Other as “war”. This is because, in war, “beings refuse to belong to a totality, refuse community… affirm themselves as transcending the totality, each identifying itself not by its place in the whole, but by its self.” In short, war is a relation between beings exterior to totality, which is why it adequately captures the relation between the I and the Other.   

 

Eros, Paternity, and Filiality

Given the importance Levinas places on the human relationship, one might have thought that love would be a pinnacle of sorts, or ideal instance. This is not the case however. Love, Levinas states, requires that the Other appear as the object of a need while, at the same time, remaining an absolute alterity. The result is that in love, the Other appears, not in the open frankness of the face, but while remaining hidden. The primary movement in Eros is sensible in nature; namely, the caress. However, the caress is a sensibility which transcends the sensible in that it “seeks what is not yet”. The Beloved it seeks to possess is neither the “body-thing” of biology, nor the “lived body of the “I can””, nor the expression of the face. The Beloved, at once graspable but intact and beyond grasp in her nudity (being alterity), beyond object and face and thus beyond the existent, abides in what Levinas calls virginity (Levinas seems to only approach Eros from the male perspective – perhaps this is less surprising when one considers his Jewish faith). This is the “Eternal Feminine”, the “future in the present”, the ungraspable. The passion in the caress which cannot grasp the eternally possible feminine he calls voluptuousity. Profanation is the way the caress discovers the hidden as hidden. 

The metaphysical relation with the Other is accomplished in society and signification. The relationship with the feminine is realised in voluptuosity and is precisely the “very contrary of the social relation. It excludes the third party, it remains intimacy, dual solitude, closed society, the supremely non-public.” Voluptuosity thus “isolates the lovers, as though they were alone in the world.” Levinas’ final word on love is that ultimately love loves oneself in love and thus returns to oneself. Love is not a transcendence.

 

Paternity, becoming a father (again, what about maternity?), is a relation of transcendence, although this is one of trans-substantiation. Apparently looking to validate Judaeo-Christian dogma (specifically the relation of identity that supposedly characterised the relation between Jesus (the Son) and God (the Father)), Levinas sees the child as both the I (of the father) but also as an Other; “Paternity remains a self-identification, but also a distinction within identification.” Through the child, a relation with the future is established. Levinas calls this relation fecundity. It “denotes my future” but at the same time a future “which is not a future of the same.” The future Levinas is talking about here is actually an “absolute future, or infinite time”, in which the father lives forever. Fecundity, as Levinas says, “continues history without producing old age.” When Eros leads to fecundity, it ultimately delivers one from the encumberment of the self we talked about earlier, because in it, the I can find itself in the self of an Other.

This relation also neatly clarifies why metaphysical Desire can’t be sated; because Desire for the Other is a Desire for a Desire, a transcendence which transcends towards him who transcends.

 

In filiality (the father-son relation), the son is but without being on his own account. The father does not cause his son – rather he is his son. So, rather than being a break and a new beginning, taking on the past as if for the first time, the son recaptures the past as a “recourse”, or connection, through the father.

With all of the preceding, Levinas is clearly angling towards securing some kind of legitimacy for Biblical promises of salvation and eternal life.

 

Truth

Truth does not undo distance; rather, it depends on separation. Truth is a quest outwards to a being other than the same. We have already encountered this theme in metaphysical Desire. This is the opposite of existentialism which locates truth in Being, thereby overcoming the distance between the being and the other. “The truth of the will lies in its coming under judgment; but its coming under judgment lies in a new orientation of the inner life, called to infinite responsibilities.” Hence, truth lies only in the authentic, face-to-face encounter with the Other.

 

Reason

Levinas rejects the identification of the will with reason (as in Spinoza, Kant, and Hegel) because if individuals willed the universal or the rational, they would negate their own particularity. This would result in the loss of all discourse and loss of the Other. “The ideal of a being accomplished from all eternity, thinking only itself, can not serve as the ontological touchstone for a life”.

 

Death

For the existent itself death is not its end, simply because it cannot experience its own death. Death acquires its sense of menace or dread not through our knowledge of it but because it is imminent but unforeseeable. “The unforeseeable character of death is due to the fact that it does not lie within any horizon. It is not open to grasp.” Our relation to death is a war with a transcendence, an absolute alterity. It is therefore a relation with an Other. My relation with death is not the “fear of nothingness, but the fear of violence – and thus it extends into fear of the Other, of the absolutely unforeseeable.”

Given this, Levinas rejects the idea that death can “drain all meaning from my life.” Because death “threatens my from beyond”, because I am “exposed to a foreign will… who does not form a part of my world”, this will, already betrayed (by death) but postponing this betrayal, “exposed to death but not immediately, has time to be for the Other [the human being], and thus to recover meaning despite death… The Desire into which the threatened will dissolves no longer defends the powers of a will, but, as the goodness whose meaning death cannot efface, has its center outside of itself.” Our relation with the Other, grounding our existence in ethics, in something transcendent, gives us a source of meaning death cannot threaten.

 

Art

Levinas has an interesting view of art. We have seen how, ordinarily, objects refer to an inwardness (the I) which makes them parts of a world; our world. Art plucks them from this world by “interposing an image of the thing between us and the thing” thereby causing us to relate to the object indirectly through the intermediary of the picture. These objects no longer refer to the inwardness of the I; they have been freed from the subject. This gives them a “nakedness”, as abstractions. This nakedness Levinas calls their exoticism. The result is that the exteriority doesn’t take us to the worldly object, but rather leaves us “wandering about in sensation, in aesthesis”. Art restores to objects the character of “alterity” (otherness) and “returns to the impersonality of elements”.