Cristian Ciocan, “Heidegger and Levinas on the Phenomenology of the Hand: Between Work and Gesture”, The Southern Journal of Philosophy, 2025.
This article explores how Heidegger and Levinas develop distinct phenomenological accounts of the hand. Both thinkers refuse to treat the hand as merely an anatomical organ, instead viewing it as an essential dimension of human existence. Yet their interpretations diverge sharply. In the first section, I show how Heidegger grounds the function of the hand in deeper existential structures: in Being and Time, the hands are oriented by spatiality and practical involvement, while later writings link the hand to language, thinking, and the essence of humanity. In contrast, Levinas, in Totality and Infinity, reorients the analysis by rooting the hand in the embodied relation to the elemental—a level marked by enjoyment, need, labor, and the formation of a home. He then traces how this relation gives rise to ethical and erotic gestures, such as giving and caressing. Across both approaches, I highlight a recurring tension between the “working hand” and the “gesturing hand,” revealing a broader field of phenomenological possibilities where pragmatic manipulation and expressive openness intertwine.