"In the refreshingly lucid Origins of the Other, Samuel Moyn aptly characterizes Levinas's approach to ethics as 'crypto-theological.' By this term Moyn highlights Levinas's intrinsic ambivalence concerning the tension between his secular, phenomenological intentions and his covert eschatological aspirations. In response to the mood of profound cultural despair provoked by World War I, the 1920s witnessed a major theological revival. It is this phenomenon, Moyn contends, that formed the crucible for Levinas's distinctive approach to ethics. One of the virtues of Moyn's book is that he discovers the origins of Levinas's notion of Otherness where few before him have thought to look."—Richard Wolin, The Nation, 20 February 2006