CONCEPT
Infinity vs. Totality
The architectonic distinction of Levinas's philosophy: <em>totality</em> is the closed system that claims to encompass everything; <em>infinity</em> is the excess the system cannot contain—and the large language model is the most sophisticated totality ever constructed.
A totality is a system that claims to encompass everything—a framework within which all phenomena find their place, all questions find their answers, all differences are resolved into unity. Totality is comprehension achieved, the Same triumphant. Infinity is what breaks through totality from outside: the face the category does not capture, the question the framework cannot answer, the demand the system was not designed to meet. Infinity is not opposed to totality as one system opposes another. Infinity reveals totality as totality by presenting something the system cannot integrate. The Other is infinite not because one's understanding is limited but because the Other, as Other, exceeds every horizon of the Same. This distinction is perhaps the most diagnostically precise tool Levinas's philosophy provides for the AI moment, because the large language model is a totality of unprecedented comprehensiveness—an accumulated statistical representation of human expression that invites the belief that nothing of significance exceeds its reach.
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