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CONTENTS zyx Acknozuledgrnents Pr@ace:Dialogue and Peace zyxwvut ix PARTI: THEIDEAOF DISCOURSE 1. The Impasse of Dialogue I. Dialogue as Din-logos: The Ontological Model 11. DialogueProblematized 2. Original Plurality: The Terms of Discourse I. Allergy and Separation 11. The Ethical Transcendence of the Other 111. The Separation of the Same as Enjoyment 3. Discourse as the Condition of Possibility for Dialogue I. The Relation of Discourse 11. Discourse Produces the Logos 111. The Economy of the Same and the Logos zyxw IV. Discourse Founds Dialogue PART11:THEPOSSIBLE IMPOSSIBILITY Inhoduction zyxwvuts to Purt 1 1 I. Conditions of Possibility and Impossibility 11. From “Discourse” to “The Saying” 4. The TwoAspects of Language: TheSaying and theSaid I. Language As the Said 11. Language As the Saying 5. The Two Directions in Language: The Reductive and the Re-constructive I. From the Said to the Saying: Reduction 11. Intermezzo: BetweenMovements 111. From the Saying to the Said: Re-construction xi 3 5 27 57 59 62 79 109 109 118 128 140 167 167 169 178 178 193 224 224 230 233 Vlll zyxwvutsrqpon ... zyxwvutsrq CONTENTS zyxwvu IV. The Saying in Justice: Inspiration and Betrayal V. Discourse: A Possible Impossibility 6. The Momentof Responsibility: Time and Eternity I. From Simultaneity to Postponement 11. From Postponement to Recurrence 111. A Temporaly Conclusion IV. At This Very Moment V. The Moment of Responsibility PART111: DISCOURSE, PHILOSOPHY, AND PEACE 7. Levinas’s Philosophical Discourse I. Levinas’s PhilosophyAs Discourse 11. Levinas’s Discourse As Philosophy 8. The Im/possibility of Peace I. Incredulities 111. Testimonies zyxwvu 11. Offerings zyxwvuts Bibliography zyxwvutsr Index 240 247 263 265 279 289 291 300 317 320 352 403 403 404 408 421 433 ...

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