Otherwise than Ontology: Derrida, Levinas, Heidegger

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Abstract

In the interview conducted with Giovanna Borradori, after the attack on the World Trade Centre, in September 2001, Jacques Derrida is pressed to specify connections between his own thinking, Heidegger's deployment of the term 'event', and the use of the term 'event' to pick out the unprecedented character of that attack. Derrida intimates that the attack is, perhaps, not as unprecedented, not the 'wholly other' which it has been framed as being. His reading of that event is to move it from a naive status, as 'wholly other', to a philosophically inflected thinking of the political, in the mode of the 'wholly otherwise', that is, in a sense to be made out here, whereby politics takes precedence over physics, as the originator of the basic components to be thought, and whereby the future takes precedence over the past, as the site at which what is arrives. The principal aim of this article is to consider how to think this counter-factual ontology, in the mode of a future anteriority.

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APA

Hodge, J. (2010). Otherwise than Ontology: Derrida, Levinas, Heidegger. Derrida Today, 3(1), 37–55. https://doi.org/10.3366/drt.2010.0004

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