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  1. Simple truths, hard problems: Some thoughts on terror, justice, and self-defence.Noam Chomsky - 2005 - Philosophy 80 (1):5-28.
    Among the most elementary of moral truisms is the principle of universality: we apply to ourselves the same standards we do to others, more stringent ones if we are serious. A near-universal principle of intellectual culture is the rejection of this truism, sometimes explicitly. Rejection of this and similar moral truisms has severe human consequences, and yields what are regarded as “hard problems”—hard in no small measure because truisms are rejected. Illustrations range from establishment of “norms” for international behavior to (...)
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  • To the Other. An Introduction to the Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas.A. Peperzak - 1995 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 57 (2):371-372.
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  • Dialogues with Contemporary Continental Thinkers: The Phenomenological Heritage.R. KEARNEY - 1984
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  • Violence and the Vulnerable Face of the Other: The Vision of Emmanuel Levinas on Moral Evil and Our Responsibility.Roger Burggraeve - 2002 - Journal of Social Philosophy 30 (1):29-45.
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  • Time and the Other.C. S. Schreiner, Emmanuel Levinas & Richard Cohen - 1989 - Substance 18 (3):117.
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  • America's Strategy in World Politics.Nicholas John Spykman - 1942 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 3 (2):236-241.
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  • The primacy of ethics: Hobbes and Levinas. [REVIEW]Cheryl L. Hughes - 1998 - Continental Philosophy Review 31 (1):79-94.
    At several points in his writings, Levinas is implicitly critical of Hobbes's view that the political order is required to restrict violent conflict and competition and make morality possible. This paper makes Levinas's criticisms explicit by comparing Hobbes's descriptions of human nature and human relations with Levinas's radically different descriptions of the ethical relation of responsibility and the consequent kinship of the human community. I use insights from Levinas to argue that ethics cannot be reduced to politics and that the (...)
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  • Emmanuel Levinas' theory of commitment.Roland Paul Blum - 1983 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 44 (2):145-168.
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  • Levinas's beginnings: ethics, politics, and origins.Nancy Levene - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (1):43-54.
    It is commonplace in philosophy, political theory, and theology to speak of the other and the problem of the identity of the West. No one has done as much to foreground the language of the other in recent years as Emmanuel Levinas, whose works have sparked a renewed interest in ethics across the humanities. Moreover, few have advanced as forceful a critique of European otherness, not only its exclusivity (whereby the other is marginalized) but also its hegemony (whereby the other (...)
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  • The Levinas Reader.Seàn Hand - 1990 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 180 (2):419-419.
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