Levinas was never within my radar. What is so significant about his philosophy? If there is anything worthwhile, I'll take a look into them
-- Updated July 20th, 2012, 3:10 am to add the following --
Yeah. But, alas, the best philosophy is the hardest. He is very hard. Iam reading totality and Infinity and I have a guide and I am looking into many resources, lectures. This actually makes him intelligible, but it does require some Husserl and Heidegger understanding. Phenomenology needs some background; Kant is essential. But you cn do this as you go. For me, since I am deeply interested in the way our limited empirical world reveals to us suggestions or intimations of the original, if you will, conditions of Being. For me, the question hinges on value. I want to know the logic of suffering; tht is, the meaning of value, joys, sorrows, terrible physical suffering, blissful emotional states---what are these? Why are they here? Why does Being do this, again, if you will, to itself? or to us; to that poor bastard who was tortured at a gulag; that innocent who was abused, strangled. These are questions I want to know about. They say T.S. Eliot could not forgive god for not existing. When I heard that, I knew that this was me. Levinas is about the other, the face of the other and how this moral experience, to witness the hunger in the face of the starving, say, is an imposition that issues from beyond the totality of western theory that informs the given moment (with such audacity). I am still breaking ice with this philosopher. Soon. He is Kierkegaardian in my thinking, so far.