Eddo Evink

Transcendence and Inscription

Jacques Derrida on Ethics, Religion and Metaphysics

libri nigri, Band 72

Inhaltsverzeichnis


Introduction

1. HIGH-FLOWN AMBITIONS – ON METAPHYSICS, TRANSCENDENTAL PHILOSOPHY, PRETENSIONS AND LIMITATIONS

1.1 Classical metaphysics

1.1.1 The classic metaphysical intention

1.1.2 Hubris

1.1.3 Augustine and Thomas Aquinas

1.1.4 Kant and Hegel

1.2 Nietzsche’s radical critique of metaphysics

1.3 Phenomenology and philosophies of difference

1.3.1 Heidegger

1.3.2 Levinas

1.4 Religiously inspired critique of metaphysics

1.4.1 Reformational Philosophy

1.4.2 Duintjer

1.5 What is metaphysics? Or: the inevitability of hubris

2. ICARUS’ WAX – DERRIDA’S QUASI-TRANSCENDENTAL (CRITIQUE OF) METAPHYSICS

2.1 Metaphysics, logocentrism, phonocentrism

2.2 Writing, trace, play

2.3 Original supplement

2.4 Deconstruction

2.5 Quasi-transcendental differences

2.6 At the limit of metaphysics

2.6.1 The “closure” of metaphysics

2.6.2 Beyond “Kant vs. Hegel”

2.6.3 Beyond “Heidegger vs. Levinas”

2.6.4 The community of the question

2.6.5 Derrida and the classic metaphysical intention

3. ETHICS IN DECONSTRUCTION

3.1 The ethical dimension in Derrida’s work

3.2 Law and justice

3.3 Laws and justice

3.4 Responsibility and decision

3.5 Gift and economy

3.5.1 Giving

3.5.2 Forgiveness

3.5.3 Hospitality

3.6 Politics in deconstruction

3.6.1 Between legacy and eschaton

3.6.2 The coming democracy, a community without community

3.6.3 Messianic Marxism

3.6.4 Enlightened European openness

4. FAITH IN DECONSTRUCTION

4.1 The name of confusion

4.2 Negative theology – Approaching God

4.2.1 Negative theology as language

4.2.2 Promise

4.2.3 Prayer

4.2.4 Secret

4.2.5 Place

4.3 Universal apophatics

4.3.1 Every other is wholly other

4.3.2 Revelation and revealability

4.3.3 The messianic

4.3.4 Khôra

4.4 Faith, politics, rationality

4.4.1 Politics and religion

4.4.2 Faith and reason

4.5 Ethics, sacrifice, economy

4.5.1 Religion and responsibility

4.5.2 Binding Isaac: sacrifice and economy

4.5.3 God sees into the invisible: sacrifice and economy

4.6 A “Jewish” philosophy

5. DAEDALUS’ WINGS – QUASI-TRANSCENDENTAL CRITIQUE, METAPHYSICS AND HUBRIS

5.1 Derrida’s critics

5.1.1 Habermas

5.1.2 Gadamer

5.1.3 Searle and Graff

5.2 Quasi-transcendental metaphysics

5.2.1 Derrida’s metaphysics…

5.2.2 …as testimony

5.3 Quasi-transcendental metaphysics and ethics

5.3.1 Ethics and ethnicity

5.3.2 Accountability

5.3.3 Counter-productive consequences

5.3.4 From infinite to finite responsibility

5.4 Quasi-transcendental metaphysics and religion

5.4.1 Religion, rationality and pluralism

5.4.2 “Jewish” philosophy and its alternatives

5.5 Icarus and Daedalus – finitude and potential of philosophy

Bibliodiscography

Abbreviations

Works by Jacques Derrida

Interviews and debates

Other cited works


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