For your amusement, below. And don’t forget Light on the Hill, tonight at 7:30 at the amphitheater on Old Main Hill.
Review of book on Levinas
Some of you understand and like Levinas, and there’s a recent book on his view of time, reviewed here. Representative quote:
If the instant is often understood as a liberating hiatus from the flux of time, only achievable internally by the self-present subject, then Levinas is original in claiming that the instant is more akin to captivity and powerlessness (50). The instant is a timeless present, without motion and without hope for the future; this point is disclosed readily in the experience of insomnia. For Levinas, this entails a distinct privation of time, a riveting to immanence. It is the very lack of transcendence (61). Given this reading of the instant, Severson shows, through a compelling interpretation of the unusual ideas that fill Existence and Existents, how Levinas positions himself to argue later for an “eschatological redemption of the instant” (61), which casts time as “a gift from the other” (63). Only the other, Levinas will argue, can deliver the insomniac from the terror of the night and set time in motion again. Hope, at this point, becomes the foundation of Levinas’s philosophy of time.
Enjoy!
Micah Morris
I am very sorry to relay that philosophy major Micah Morris, who graduated this past spring, was killed in a motorcycle accident last weekend. Micah had taken a break from his degree to become certified as a mortician, and then returned to his philosophy classes armed with a kind of specialized knowledge and humane temperament that made him a wonderful partner in conversations. His funeral will be in Provo on Friday morning; there will follow a graveside service Friday afternoon in Samaria, Idaho. Please send me a note if you would like details.
Welcome back!
Welcome back to school! The Philosophy Club will join in the college’s “Light on the Hill” ceremony on the evening of August 26th, 7:30 p.m. Look for us on the hill above the old amphitheater. Anyone who wants to help set up our booth should arrive around 7.
Cool Leibniz material
Check out Stephen Wolfram’s blog, which has a post documenting his fascination for Leibniz. It includes many photographs of Leibniz’s notes and diagrams, and the mechanical calculator Leibniz designed – very interesting!
