- Alphonso Lingis
Alphonso Lingis (born
November 23 ,1933 inCrete ,Illinois ) is an Americanphilosopher ,writer andtranslator , currently Professor Emeritus of Philosophy atPennsylvania State University . His areas of specialization include phenomenology,existentialism ,modern philosophy , andethics .Career
Lingis attended Loyola University in
Chicago , then pursued graduate study at the storiedUniversity of Leuven inBelgium . His doctoral dissertation, written under distinguishedscholar Alphonse de Waelhens , was a discussion of the French phenomenologistsMerleau-Ponty andSartre . Returning to theUnited States , Lingis joined the faculty atDuquesne University in Pittsburgh, quickly gaining a reputation as the preeminent English translator ofMerleau-Ponty andLevinas . In the mid-1960s he moved toPenn State University , where he worked diligently at his translation projects and published numerous scholarly articles on the history of philosophy. During this period, he also began the habit of wide-ranging world travel that leaves a deep stamp on all of his work.His debut as a book author came in 1982, with "Excesses". It combined anthropological scenes with numerous references to the history of philosophy, and marks the emergence of his mature writing style, which alternates between lyrical and dark. In "The Imperative" (1998), his most systematic book, Lingis offers his own original criticism of phenomenology. In his view, phenomenology is excessively dominated by
holism , overemphasizing the interconnectedness of all regions and objects in the world. By contrast, Lingis holds that the world is made up of numerous self-contained and mutually external levels, to which humans must adjust their perceptions and ideas. He also argues that phenomenology is dominated by theGestalt psychology model of figures appearing against a background. Fusing Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology of perception with the ethics of Levinas, Lingis contends that ethical imperatives come not only from other humans, but also from animals, plants, and even inanimate objects.Lingis has had wide success as a public lecturer due both to his captivating style of writing and also the
performance art atmosphere of his lectures.Fact|date=April 2007 During public talks he generally appears in costume or speaks amidst strange background music or recorded screams, often in total darkness.Fact|date=April 2007 Throughout his years at Penn State, he was also well known as a classic college town cult celebrity, welcoming students to a strange home filled with rare birds, dangerous fish and insects, and numerous third world artifacts.Fact|date=April 2007 In this period his travels shifted increasingly from Europe to the developing world, with especial bases inBangkok andRio de Janeiro , and most recentlyAfrica . In recent years he has also renewed contact with his ancestral heritage, reaching a certain degree of prominence inLithuania . Now retired from Penn State, Lingis lives nearBaltimore , where he continues to write books similar to his earlier works. His books have been translated into French and Turkish, among other languages. In the spring of 2004 the first college course on Lingis was offered at Towson University in Towson, Maryland, taught by Wolfgang W. Fuchs co-editor of "Encounters with Lingis" (2003).Works
* "Excesses: Eros and Culture" (1982)
* "Libido: The French Existential Theories" (1985)
* "Phenomenological Explanations" (1986)
* "Deathbound Subjectivity" (1989)
* "The Community of Those Who Have Nothing in Common" (1994)
* "Abuses" (1994)
* "Foreign Bodies" (1994)
* "Sensation: Intelligibility in Sensibility" (1995)
* "The Imperative" (1998)
* "Dangerous Emotions" (1999)
* "Trust" (2004)
* "Body Transformations" (2005)
* "The First Person Singular" (2007)
* "Violence and Splendor" (forthcoming )Translated the following key texts into English:
* Levinas, "De l'existence à l'existant" (1948)
* Levinas, "Totalité et infini: essai sur l'extériorité" (1961)
* Levinas, "Autrement qu'être ou au-delà de l'essence" (1974)
* Merleau-Ponty, "Le visible et l'Invisible" (1945)
* Pierre Klossowski, "Sade, mon prochain" (1947)External links
* [http://philosophy.la.psu.edu/faculty/profiles/lingus.shtml Pennsylvania State University Department of Philosophy]
* [http://www.citypaper.com/news/story.asp?id=8556 Mortal Thoughts, an article on Lingis' philosophy]
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