Derrida as Mystic
In my opinion, Jacques Derrida was comparable to Walter Benjamin, Emmanuel Levinas, and others (perhaps Martin Buber? Gershom Scholem?). That is to say, he was a mystic. And that's fine. I have no problem with mystics. Of course, Derrida managed to finesse this mysticism into a very successful academic career, wearing clean, pressed, unbuttoned shirts and expensive designer suits to match his famously coifed hair, and wound up in films - indeed, films were made about him. He was a movie star. So that's one difference between him and Walter Benjamin. Walter Benjamin was no movie star. Perhaps, had Walter Benjamin lived a little later, he would have been a movie star. But to me, Derrida's famous statement that "There is nothing outside of the text" is a slight variation on the statement from Be'ur Eser S'firot 3, that "There is nothing outside of God." Anyone who studies sacred scripture deeply enough, having reached the level in which t