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Levinas on Absolute Other

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Levinas claims that an absolute other must necessarily be invisible. If the other is visible, I can at least "capture" and "grasp" and "encompass" him in my gaze, which is the first moment in a sequence that could lead to capturing, grasping, and encompassing and dominating him in other ways. An invisible other is beyond my gaze, and therefore absolutely beyond my control. We can "fix" someone with our gaze, but not an invisible other, for where shall we look? This seems to be a fruitful line of critique for iconolatry.

posted by Peter J. Leithart on Wednesday, September 17, 2003 at 04:26 PM

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