Does Levinasian Ethics Shatter Hegelian Totality?

Does Levinasian Ethics Shatter Hegelian Totality?

From The Philosophy Channel by Robbert Veen

March 4, 2026 · 24 min

About this episode

This episode explores the philosophical clash between Emmanuel Levinas and G.W.F. Hegel regarding ethics and totality.

In this episode, we dive into one of the sharpest confrontations in modern philosophy: the clash between Emmanuel Levinas and G.W.F. Hegel. The debate centers on one essential question: can ethics truly break the totalizing force of the system, or does even the most radical ethical thought eventually get absorbed by it? We explore Levinas’s famous idea that the encounter with the face of the Other generates an irreducible ethical demand—one that, according to him, precedes all systems, all politics, and all ontology. But we also examine the counterargument: the moment Levinas introduces the third party—justice, society, institutions—his ethics seems to fall back into a Hegelian logic of mediation, comparison, and totality.The conversation touches on major themes: the tension between individual vulnerability and universal law, whether language can ever escape totalization, and whether Levinas’s ethical “interruption” truly stands outside the system, or instead becomes a new moment within Hegel’s dialectic. Whether Levinas really breaks through the Hegelian black hole remains an open question. But one thing becomes clear: their confrontation forces us to rethink responsibility…

People in this episode

Host: Robbert Veen

Topics covered

  • Levinasian ethics
  • Hegelian totality
  • philosophical debate
  • ethical demand
  • justice
  • responsibility

Keywords

  • Levinas
  • Hegel
  • ethics
  • totality
  • philosophy
  • justice
  • responsibility
  • systematic thought

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