At the origin of this volume, a simple question: what to make of
that surprisingly monotonous series of statements produced by our
societies and our philosophers that all converge in one theme - the
importance of difference?
To clarify the meaning of the difference at stake here, we have
tried to rephrase it in terms of the two major and mutually
competing paradigms provided by the history of phenomenology only
to find both of them equally unable to accommodate this difference
without violence. Neither the ethical nor the ontological approach
can account for a subject that insists on playing a part of its own
rather than following the script provided for it by either Being or
the Good. What appears to be, from a Heideggerian or Levinasian
perspective, an unwillingness to open up to what offers to deliver
us from the condition of subjectivity is analysed in these pages as
a structure in its own right. Far from being the wilful,
indifferent and irresponsive being its critics have portrayed it to
be, the so-called 'postmodern' subject is essentially finite, not
even able to assume the transcendence to which it owes its
singularity. This inability is not a lack - it points instead to a
certain unthought shared by both Heidegger and Levinas which sets
the terms for a discussion no longer our own. Instead of blaming
Heidegger for underdeveloping 'being-with', we should rather stress
that his account of mineness may be, in the light of contemporary
philosophy, what stands most in need of revision. And, instead of
hailing Levinas as the critic whose stress on the alterity of the
Other corrects Heidegger's existential solipsism, the problems into
which Levinas runs in defining that alterity call for a different
diagnosis and a corresponding change in the course that
phenomenology has taken since. Instead of preoccupying itself with
the invisible, we should focus on the structures of visibility that
protect us from its terror.
The result? An account of difference that is neither ontological
nor ethical, but 'me-ontological', and that can help us understand
some of the problems our societies have come to face (racism,
sexism, multiculturalism, pluralism). And, in the wake of this, an
unexpected defence of what is at stake in postmodernism and in the
question it has refused to take lightly: who are we? Finally, an
homage to Arendt and Lyotard who, if read through each other's
lenses, give an exact articulation to the question with which our
age struggles: how to think the 'human condition' once one realizes
that there is an 'inhuman' side to it which, instead of being its
mere negation, turns out to be that without which it would come to
lose its humanity?"
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