Results for 'Bettina Bergo And Chloë Taylor'

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  1.  61
    Editorial Introduction.Bettina Bergo And Chloë Taylor - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (2).
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  2. Editorial Introduction.Bettina Bergo & Chloe Taylor - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (2):i-xii.
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  3.  27
    Editorial Introduction.Christiane Bailey And Chloë Taylor - 2013 - PhaenEx 8 (2).
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  4.  66
    Editorial Introduction.Chloë Taylor And Tracey Nicholls - 2011 - PhaenEx 6 (1).
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  5.  55
    Bodies, Genders and Causation in Aristotle’s Biological and Political Theory.Chloë Taylor Merleau - 2003 - Ancient Philosophy 23 (1):135-151.
  6.  65
    Editorial Introduction: Special Topics Issue on Other Animals.Lisa Guenther And Chloë Taylor - 2007 - PhaenEx 2 (2).
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  7.  72
    Between Disciplinary Power and Care of the Self: A Dialogue on Foucault and the Psychological Sciences.Cressida Heyes And Chloë Taylor - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (2):179-209.
    A Dialogue on Foucault and the Psychological Sciences.
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  8.  13
    Nietzsche and the Shadow of God.Bettina Bergo & Philippe Farah (eds.) - 2012 - Northwestern University Press.
    In Nietzsche and the Shadow of God, his study of Nietzsche’s integral philosophical corpus, Franck revisits the fundamental concepts of Nietzsche’s thought, from the death of God and the will to power, to the body as the seat of thinking and valuing, and finally to his conception of a post-Christian justice. The work engages Heidegger’s interpretation of Nietzsche’s destruction of the Platonic-Christian worldview, showing how Heidegger’s hermeneutic overlooked Nietzsche’s powerful confrontation with revelation and justice by working through the Christian body, (...)
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  9.  54
    The God of Abraham and the God of the Philosophers: A Reading of Emmanuel Levinas’s “Dieu et la Philosophie”.Bettina Bergo - 1993 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 16 (1):113-164.
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  10.  3
    Responses to Michael Kelly and Timothy Stock.Bettina Bergo - 2024 - Philosophy Today 68 (3):629-636.
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  11.  64
    A Site from which to Hope?Bettina Bergo - 2008 - Levinas Studies 3:117-142.
    We have now had some two decades of Levinas commentary. What remains to be said? Certainly one thing we have learned since Otherwise than Being is that Levinas’s philosophy and his talmudic and confessional writings nourish each other so profoundly that to approach Levinas without understanding the historyof Jewish philosophy — in its confrontations with neo-Platonism, Aristotle, Kant — is to risk misunderstanding Levinas. Insights into the interrelationships between Jewish thought and Levinas’s other humanism have been provided by thinkers like (...)
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  12.  7
    Levinas between Ethics and Politics: For the Beauty that Adorns the Earth.Bettina Bergo - 1999 - Springer Verlag.
    The act of thought-thought as an act-would precede the thought thinking or becoming conscious of an act. The notion of act involves a violence essentially: the violence of transitivity, lacking in the transcendence of thought... Totality and Infinity The work of Emmanuel Levinas revolves around two preoccupations. First, his philosophical project can be described as the construction of a formal ethics, grounded upon the transcendence of the other human being and a subject's spontaneous responsibility toward that other. Second, Levinas has (...)
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  13.  8
    The Unthought Debt: Heidegger and the Hebraic Heritage.Bettina Bergo (ed.) - 2006 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Drawing on Heidegger's corpus, the work of historians and biblical specialists, and contemporary philosophers like Levinas and Derrida, Zarader brings to light the evolution of an _impensé_—or unthought thought—that bespeaks a complex debt at the core of Heidegger's hermeneutic ontology. Zarader argues forcefully that in his interpretation of Western thought and culture, Heidegger manages to recognize only two main lines of inheritance: the "Greek" line of philosophical thinking, and the Christian tradition of "faith." From this perspective, Heidegger systematically avoids any (...)
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  14.  21
    “When I opened, he had gone”: Levinas’s Substitution as a Reading of Husserl and Heidegger.Bettina Bergo - 2014 - Discipline filosofiche. 24 (1):97-118.
    I propose to look at Levinas’ constellation of figures: recurrence, obsession, persecution, substitution and saying, in chapter IV of Otherwise than Being. This is the core of his 1974 work. I tarry with a remark that Levinas makes there, “Our analyses lay claim to the spirit of Husserlian philosophy […] But […] the present work ventures beyond phenomenology”. Substitution thus returns to Husserl’s passive syntheses, arguing that not everything about sensibility and affect is meaningful or enters into associations of intentions. (...)
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  15.  24
    Nietzsche and Levinas: "After the Death of a Certain God".Jill Stauffer & Bettina Bergo (eds.) - 2008 - Columbia University Press.
    The essays that Jill Stauffer and Bettina Bergo collect in this volume locate multiple affinities between the philosophies of Nietzsche and Levinas. Both philosophers question the nature of subjectivity and the meaning of responsibility after the "death of God." While Nietzsche poses the dilemmas of a self without a ground and of ethics at a time of cultural upheaval and demystification, Levinas wrestles with subjectivity and the sheer possibility of ethics after the Shoah. Both argue that goodness exists (...)
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  16.  11
    God, Death, and Time.Bettina Bergo (ed.) - 2000 - Stanford University Press.
    This book consists of transcripts from two lecture courses Levinas delivered in 1975-76, his last year at the Sorbonne. They cover some of the most pervasive themes of his thought and were written at a time when he had just published his most important—and difficult—book, _Otherwise than Being, or Beyond Essence._ Both courses pursue issues related to the question at the heart of Levinas's thought: ethical relation. The Foreword and Afterword place the lectures in the context of his work as (...)
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  17.  58
    And God Created Woman.Bettina Bergo - 2018 - Levinas Studies 12:83-118.
    This article reads Levinas’s “And God Created Woman” in light of its socio-political context, Mai soixante-huit. It explores themes from his “Judaism and Revolution,” in which he reframed concepts of revolution, exegesis, the revolutionary, and human alienation. Following these themes, which run subtly through his Talmudic remarks on women and indirectly on feminism, I examine his arguments about a “signification beyond universality” and the fraught relationship between formal equity in gender relations and the practice of justice, as embodied by the (...)
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  18. Weininger and the (political) problem of categories.Bettina Bergo - 2013 - In Daniel M. Price & Ryan J. Johnson (eds.), The movement of nothingness: trust in the emptiness of time. Aurora, Colorado: The Davies Group Publishers.
     
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  19. Evolution and Force: Anxiety in Kierkegaard and Nietzsche.Bettina Bergo - 2003 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 41 (2):143-168.
  20.  21
    Preface and Acknowledgements.Bettina Bergo & Diane Perpich - 1998 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 20 (2):3-12.
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  21. Emmanuel Levinas: essays on phenomenology, hermeneutics, and Jewish thought.Bettina Bergo - 2025 - Boston: Brill.
    These essays unfold a complex picture from phenomenology to Talmudic readings. It shows how radically Levinas expanded genetic phenomenology toward preconscious and intersubjective affectivity. It discusses Levinas' appropriation of Heidegger's early hermeneutics as secular revelation of what-is toward a phenomenology of the unseen, adapting Maimonides' conception of language. The book examines the sources of the ontological difference in Eckhart, and explores the Maimonidean source of negative theology. It then explores two strains of biblical hermeneutics: a Hassidic source, via Buber, and (...)
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  22. The four threads composing Levinas's thought.Bettina Bergo - 2024 - In Christian Lotz & Antonio Calcagno (eds.), _Reading Continental philosophy and the history of thought_, eds. Christian Lotz and Antonio Calcagno (Lanham, MD: Lexington/Rowman and Littlefield, 2024). Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  23.  15
    Of God Who Comes to Mind.Bettina Bergo (ed.) - 1998 - Stanford University Press.
    The thirteen essays collected in this volume investigate the possibility that the word “God” can be understood now, at the end of the twentieth century, in a meaningful way. Nine of the essays appear in English translation for the first time. Among Levinas’s writings, this volume distinguishes itself, both for students of his thought and for a wider audience, by the range of issues it addresses. Levinas not only rehearses the ethical themes that have led him to be regarded as (...)
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  24. Anxiety: A Philosophical History.Bettina Bergo - 2020 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    "This is a study of the unlikely 'career' of anxiety in 19th and 20th century philosophy, above all. Anxiety is an affect, something more subtle, sometimes more persistent, than an emotion or a passion. It lies at the intersectiona of embodiment and cognition, sensation and emotion. But anxiety also runs like a red thread through European thought beginning from receptions of Kant's transcendental project. Like a symptom of the quest to situate and give life to the philosophical subject, like a (...)
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  25.  25
    The Birth Pangs of the Absolute: Longing and Angst in Schelling and Kierkegaard.Bettina Bergo - 2011 - In Hagi Kenaan & Ilit Ferber (eds.), Philosophy's moods: the affective grounds of thinking. New York: Springer. pp. 105--121.
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  26. Ontology, transcendence, and immanence in Emmanuel Levinas' philosophy.Bettina Bergo - 2005 - Research in Phenomenology 35 (1):141-180.
    This essay studies the unfolding of Levinas' concept of transcendence from 1935 to his 1984 talk entitled "Transcendence and Intelligibility." I discuss how Levinas frames transcendence in light of enjoyment, shame, and nausea in his youthful project of a counter-ontology to Heidegger's Being and Time. In Levinas' essay, transcendence is the human urge to get out of being. I show the ways in which Levinas' early ontology is conditioned by historical circumstances, but I argue that its primary aim is formal (...)
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  27. The Face in Levinas: toward a phenomenology of substitution.Bettina Bergo - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (1):17-39.
    This is a study of the way in which Levinas approaches the experience of human expression from two perspectives: firstly, as a pre-thematic or pre-cognitive “experience,” which requires that he revisit Husserl's pre-objective intentionality and explore the relationship between the upsurge of sensation and its “intentionalization” as consciousness self-temporalizing. Thereafter, Levinas must contend with the implications of his own writing, which includes his claims for the face. This implies that he must grapple with criticism to the effect that he is (...)
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  28. Sigmund Freud on brain and mind.Bettina Bergo - 2018 - In Sandra Lapointe (ed.), Philosophy of mind in the nineteenth century. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francs Group.
     
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  29.  78
    What Is Levinas Doing? Phenomenology and the Rhetoric of an Ethical Un-Conscious.Bettina Bergo - 2005 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 38 (2):122-144.
  30.  34
    The Afrocentric ‘Copernican Revolution’.Bettina Bergo - 2019 - CLR James Journal 25 (1):39-58.
    This article summarizes the Afro-centric ‘Copernican Revolution’ of Cheikh Anta Diop between 1960 and 1974, the dates on which he defended his thesis on the African identity of Egypt and argued his thesis, with Théophile Obenga, before the UNESCO Cairo Conference on the “General History of Africa.” I discuss both the unhappy reception, by European Egyptologists and others, of Diop’s ground-breaking, multidisciplinary research, as well as its gradual spread, among others, to Diasporic thinkers. One such thinker, Marimba Ani took a (...)
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  31.  28
    Marlène Zarader’s The Unthought Debt.Bettina Bergo - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (1):117-127.
    This article is drawn from my translation of Zarader's *Heidegger et la dette impensée*. I explore both Zarader and J. Derrida's (De l'esprit) investigations into Heidegger's recourse to "Old Testament" and Judaic logics (including apophatics) in his quest for the origins of religiosity.
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  32.  45
    Remarks on Emmanuel Levinas's Contribution to Classical and “Situated” Justice.Bettina Bergo - 2002 - Theoria 49 (100):38-63.
  33.  42
    Mal D'Archive: Derrida, Freud, and the Beginnings of the Logic of the Trace in 1888.Bettina Bergo - 2014 - Derrida Today 7 (2):137-154.
    Starting from Mal d'archive and La bête et le souverain II, I explore what Derrida argues is the cleaved nature of Freud's concepts, and which he compares to the contradictory characteristics of every archive : to be revolutionary in its institution of the new and simultaneously to be or become conservative, even reactionary. For Derrida, Freud's later writing will tie the motivation to create an archive to the destructive logic of the death drive. An interesting example of Freud's cleaved concepts (...)
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  34.  63
    Judeities: questions for Jacques Derrida.Bettina Bergo, Joseph D. Cohen & Raphael Zagury-Orly (eds.) - 2007 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    The volume addresses these questions, contrasting Derrida's thought with philosophical predecessors such as Rosenzweig, Levinas, Celan, and Scholem, and tracing ...
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  35. Psychoanalytic: Freud's Debt to Philosophy and his Copernican Revolution.Bettina Bergo - 2004 - In Jennifer Radden (ed.), The Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Companion. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This is a study of Freud's debt to -- and ironically, his attempted modification of -- Kant's "Copernican Revolution." Beyond Kantian constructivism, Freud extends the idealist conception of mind to embodiment, both acculturated and mecanistic, thanks to influences as diverse as von Helmholtz and Brentano. His remark to P. Haberlin that the "unconscious" was the best candidate for Kant's "thing in itself," is not as improbable as it first appears.
     
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  36.  97
    A Story to Make You Sad: On Alexis Shotwell's Knowing Otherwise: Race, Gender, and Implicit Understanding.Bettina Bergo - 2013 - PhaenEx 8 (1):233-239.
  37.  18
    How many messiahs, how many alephs? Levinas’ talmudic “messianic texts” in three numbers, and André Neher’s biblical response.Bettina Bergo - 2023 - Revista Ética E Filosofia Política 1 (25):199-224.
    This article approaches Levinas’s 1963 Talmudic reading entitled “Messianic Texts” in light of the metaphoric numbers 0, 1, and 2. “Zero” will refer to unforeseen silences in the Talmudic text in question (here, Rabbi Eleazar’s sudden silence in the debate about the conditions of redemption, as well as commentator Rashi’s silence on Talmudic discussions about a certain “identity” of the messiah. The number “one” concerns a textual hapax: Rabbi Hillel’s historicist dismissal of the messiah as promise and open future—a position (...)
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  38. Editor's Introduction.Christiane Bailey & Chloë Taylor - 2013 - Phaenex. Journal of Existential and Phenomenological Theory and Culture 8 (2):i-xv.
    Christiane Bailey and Chloë Taylor (Editorial Introduction) Sue Donaldson (Stirring the Pot - A short play in six scenes) Ralph Acampora (La diversification de la recherche en éthique animale et en études animales) Eva Giraud (Veganism as Affirmative Biopolitics: Moving Towards a Posthumanist Ethics?) Leonard Lawlor (The Flipside of Violence, or Beyond the Thought of Good Enough) Kelly Struthers Montford (The “Present Referent”: Nonhuman Animal Sacrifice and the Constitution of Dominant Albertan Identity) James Stanescu (Beyond Biopolitics: Animal Studies, (...)
     
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  39.  86
    What Sujet de la folie? Gladys Swain and Marcel Gauchet’s Search for an Alternative History of Madness.Bettina Bergo - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (2):87-124.
    Inspired by three monographs of Gladys Swain and Marcel Gauchet, my presentation traces the rise of the new science of psychiatry in Revolutionary France, with Philippe Pinel and his student J.-E. Esquirol. As the directors of the division of the aliénés in the Hôpital Bicêtre (Paris), Pinel and Esquirol pioneered a therapeutic programme that spread out between their “traitement moral” (reasoning with the passions) and an “energetic repression,” wherever necessary. The discipline they created sought to gain autonomy from medicine treating (...)
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  40.  4
    Anxiety as Theme of an Alternative History of Philosophy: A Glimpse into the Monograph Anxiety: A Philosophical History.Bettina Bergo - 2024 - Symposium 28 (2):156-180.
    This article offers an overview of my 2020 study, Anxiety: A Philo-sophical History. I discuss the philosophers and theorists examined, and show how anxiety, understood in German as Angst (it has but one term for this affect), moved through Idealism from a largely noxious state (Kant) into the role of an emotion-adjuvant of reason (Hegel), into the sign of imminent birth—of nature (Schelling). I focus on the existential turn given anxiety, as a “state” prior to freedom in Kierkegaard, and draw (...)
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  41.  38
    On Learning to Hear Ethical Loneliness.Bettina Bergo - 2018 - Philosophy Today 62 (2):665-673.
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  42.  41
    (1 other version)The Future of Paradosis.Bettina Bergo - 2013 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 17 (2):178-203.
    This essay discusses Jean-Luc Nancy’s Dis-Enclosure: Deconstruction of Christianity (2008). Nancy’s engagement with Christianity in this work contrasts with the so-called theological turn in phenomenology. This raises probing questions regarding the name of God and the sense of the “divine” in a demythified world, as well as the question of the exhaustion of Christianity and its self-deconstruction. I address Nancy’s exploration of the overcoming of nihilism and the possibility, and “look,” of a faith that is not tied to a god (...)
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  43.  25
    Subjects and Simulations: Between Baudrillard and Lacoue-Labarthe.Gary E. Aylesworth, Bettina Bergo, Thomas P. Brockelman, Alina Clej, Damian Ward Hey, Drew A. Hyland, Basil O'Neill, Henk Oosterling, Stephen David Ross, Katherine Rudolph, Robin May Schott, Massimo Verdicchio, James R. Watson & Martin G. Weiss (eds.) - 2014 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    Subjects and Simulations presents essays focused on suffering and sublimity, representation and subjectivity, and the relation of truth and appearance through engagement with the legacies of Jean Baudrillard and Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe.
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  44.  21
    The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals.Chloë Taylor (ed.) - 2024 - Routledge.
    The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals is the first fully comprehensive reference volume to examine the intersections of gender studies and critical animal studies, and is an essential reference for students in Gender Studies, Sexuality Studies, Cultural Studies, Sociology, Geography and Environmental Studies.
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  45.  44
    Feminist Philosophies of Life.Hasana Sharp & Chloë Taylor (eds.) - 2016 - Chicago: Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    Much of the history of Western ethical thought has revolved around debates about what constitutes a good life, and claims that a good life is achievable only by certain human beings. In Feminist Philosophies of Life, feminist, new materialist, posthumanist, and ecofeminist philosophers challenge this tendency, approaching the question of life from alternative perspectives. Signalling the importance of distinctively feminist reflections on matters of shared concern, Feminist Philosophies of Life not only exposes the propensity of discourses to normalize and exclude (...)
  46. Anti-Carceral Feminism and Sexual Assault—A Defense.Chloë Taylor - 2018 - Social Philosophy Today 34:29-49.
    Most mainstream feminist anti-rape scholarship and activism may be described as carceral feminism, insofar as it fails to engage with critiques of the criminal punishment system and endorses law-and-order responses to sexual and gendered violence. Mainstream feminist anti-rape scholars and activists often view increased conviction rates and longer sentences as a political goal—or, at the very least, are willing to collaborate with police and lament cases where perpetrators of sexual violence are given “light” or non-custodial sentences. Prison abolitionists, on the (...)
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  47.  39
    Foucault, Feminism, and Sex Crimes: An Anti-Carceral Analysis.Chloë Taylor - 2018 - New York: Routledge.
    This book brings together Foucault's writings on crime and delinquency, on the one hand, and sexuality, on the other, to argue for an anti-carceral feminist Foucauldian approach to sex crimes. The author expands on Foucault's writings through intersectional explorations of the critical race, decolonial, critical disability, queer and critical trans studies literatures on the prison that have emerged since the publication of Discipline and Punishand The History of Sexuality. Drawing on Foucault's insights from his genealogical period, the book argues that (...)
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  48.  56
    Female Sexual Dysfunction, Feminist Sexology, and the Psychiatry of the Normal.Chloë Taylor - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (2):259-292.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 41, no. 2. © 2015 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 259 Chloë Taylor Female Sexual Dysfunction, Feminist Sexology, and the Psychiatry of the Normal It is really weird that doctors should be the reigning experts on sex. —Leonore Tiefer1 The first volume of Michel Foucault’s The History of Sexuality provides a compelling and influential critique of the “sciences of sex.” In this work, Foucault suggests that (...)
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  49. The four threads composing Levinas's thought.Bettina Bergo - 2024 - In Christian Lotz & Antonio Calcagno (eds.), _Reading Continental philosophy and the history of thought_, eds. Christian Lotz and Antonio Calcagno (Lanham, MD: Lexington/Rowman and Littlefield, 2024). Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  50.  74
    The Cause of Phenomenology. [REVIEW]Bettina Bergo - 1994 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 17 (1-2):351-376.
    The philosophical work of Jean-François Courtine suffers undeservedly from under-representation to English-speaking readers. Over the last fifteen years, his commentaries and translations have made available to French students of German idealism, significant works of Schelling and J. G. Hamann. Now the present collection of essays shows that Courtine is as much at ease in the universe of late idealism as he is before the fundamental ontology of Martin Heidegger. Heidegger et la Phénoménologie assembles articles and lectures published from 1978 through (...)
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