• Poetry and Survival : Lévinas, Valéry, Heidegger, Doty Stock, Timothy 2022 Philosophy Today , Vol. 66 , Issue 3 , S. 547 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 0031-8256 | 2329-8596 10.5840/philtoday2022322449 Abstract

    I propose a critique of Heidegger’s poetics, and show that poetic critique of Heidegger is also philosophical critique on Lévinasian lines. I identify an obsessional erasure of absence in Heidegger’s poetics, a neglect of the immemorial other. Lévinas frames this critique through Valéry’s Eupalinos, a dialogue of an immemorial Socrates, in Limbo after his own death, praising architecture over his own, lost, philosophy. Separating poetics from ontology, Lévinas’s immemorial acknowledges irrecuperable traces, murmurs, or echoes of alterity; poetry, as commemoration, marks the distance between loss and absence. This contrasts with Heidegger’s eulogy of Max Scheler and its echo in the Gedachtes, metaphysical (“metontological”) and poetic monuments that seek an incompletable divorce from sensation and persons. I present Mark Doty’s elegy Atlantis as an illustration of Lévinas’s central philosophical critique of Heidegger’s thinking of death and persons. Atlantis embodies the immemorial; architecture alive with sound, an impossible city populated by absence.

    Schlagwörter

    Catholic Tradition | Contemporary Philosophy | Continental Philosophy

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Stock, Timothy
Catholic Tradition
Contemporary Philosophy
Continental Philosophy

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