Inspired by Levinas, but in constant dialogue with Heidegger, Feron considers death to be within the reach of phenomenology. The act of the other's death is a decease, a break affecting the identity. It forces man to consider the fundamental intersubjectivity inscribed in his temporality.
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Inspired by Levinas, but in constant dialogue with Heidegger, Feron considers death to be within the reach of phenomenology. The act of the other's death is a decease, a break affecting the identity. It forces man to consider the fundamental intersubjectivity inscribed in his temporality.
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