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Table of Contents
Cover
Titelei
Impressum
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Introduction
2. Martin Heidegger - Ethics of the Self
2.1 The Ontological Difference as Difference
2.2 Being and Time
2.2.1 Dasein by Existence in the World
2.2.2 Authenticity via Anxiety …
2.2.3 … as Death …
2.2.4 … in vertical Time
2.2.5 Being in Time
2.3 "Humanism in the extreme case" - an Originary Ethics?
2.4 Beyng as Saying
3. Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Lévinas: Ethics by the Other
3.1 Leaving Heidegger
3.2 Early Affinities: Higher Realism and Ultrastructuralism
3.3 The Ethical Difference before Ontology
3.4 The First Violence: Transcendental Violence via Nihilation
3.5 The Face of the Other
3.6 Responsibility: Relation(s) to the Other
3.6.1 Heteronomy before Autonomy
3.6.2 Faith and Knowledge - the Reasonable
3.6.3 Religion
3.7 Self-Difference in Divine Violence
3.8 Of War and Peace
4. Ernesto Laclau - Democracy without Foundation
4.1 From Philosophy to Political Theory
4.2 The Theory of Hegemony as a Political Ontology
4.2.1 Discourse
4.2.2 Antagonism: A Lumpenproletariat Against the Order of Immanence
4.2.3 Hegemony
5. Conclusion
Bibliography.
Titelei
Impressum
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Introduction
2. Martin Heidegger - Ethics of the Self
2.1 The Ontological Difference as Difference
2.2 Being and Time
2.2.1 Dasein by Existence in the World
2.2.2 Authenticity via Anxiety …
2.2.3 … as Death …
2.2.4 … in vertical Time
2.2.5 Being in Time
2.3 "Humanism in the extreme case" - an Originary Ethics?
2.4 Beyng as Saying
3. Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Lévinas: Ethics by the Other
3.1 Leaving Heidegger
3.2 Early Affinities: Higher Realism and Ultrastructuralism
3.3 The Ethical Difference before Ontology
3.4 The First Violence: Transcendental Violence via Nihilation
3.5 The Face of the Other
3.6 Responsibility: Relation(s) to the Other
3.6.1 Heteronomy before Autonomy
3.6.2 Faith and Knowledge - the Reasonable
3.6.3 Religion
3.7 Self-Difference in Divine Violence
3.8 Of War and Peace
4. Ernesto Laclau - Democracy without Foundation
4.1 From Philosophy to Political Theory
4.2 The Theory of Hegemony as a Political Ontology
4.2.1 Discourse
4.2.2 Antagonism: A Lumpenproletariat Against the Order of Immanence
4.2.3 Hegemony
5. Conclusion
Bibliography.