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    The self is inhabited by alterity, which is distinct from... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→It is the inhabitation of a self by alterity, not being, that forms the sensuous conditions of possibility of speech

    The self is inhabited by alterity, which is distinct from being

    Consciousness & MindPhilosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of LanguageConsciousness & Mind

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    It is the inhabitation of a self by alterity, not being, that forms the sensuous...Language as words addressed passes through both the lapse and transcendence-in-i...This inhabitation by alterity — not being — constitutes what makes speech possib...

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    The second chapter approaches Heidegger’s discussion of language as the way in which being becomes, the way it temporalizes (he-BT: §68).[28] Levinas revisits Heidegger’s argument that the logos gathers up being and makes possible its unveiling (alētheia). He will argue that the lapse of time between lived immediacy and its reflective representation is never fully gathered by the logos. Therefore, the temporal lapse poses a challenge to language understood as Heidegger’s gathering and it falls

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