Contributions to Philosophy (From Enowning)

Εξώφυλλο
Indiana University Press, 1999 - 369 σελίδες

"[Heidegger's] greatest work . . . essential for all collections." —Choice

" . . . students of Heidegger will surely find this book indispensable." —Library Journal

Contributions to Philosophy (From Enowning), written in 1936-38 and first published in 1989 as Beiträge zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis), is Heidegger's most ground-breaking work after the publication of Being and Time in 1927. If Being and Time is perceived as undermining modern metaphysics, Contributions undertakes to reshape the very project of thinking.

 

Περιεχόμενα

Translators Foreword
xv
Acknowledgments
xlv
Preview
1
Contributions to Philosophy and the Essential Heading
3
Saying from Enowning as the First Response to the Question of Being
5
From Enowning
7
For the Few and the Rare
9
The GroundingAttunement
15
Being and a Being
192
Life
194
Life
195
Cleavage
196
Cleavage and Modalities
197
Cleavage
198
BeingtowardDeath
199
BeingtowardDeath
200

From Enowning
17
From Enowning
20
A Glance
21
From Enowning
22
Enowning and History
23
Reservedness
24
Philosophy and Worldview
26
Philosophy as Philosophy of a People
29
Philosophy
31
The Necessity of Philosophy
32
The Powerlessness of Thinking
33
Who Are We?
34
The Beginning and Inceptual Thinking
38
Inceptual Thinking ProjectingOpen
39
Inceptual Thinking
40
The Wayward Claim on Inceptual Thinking
42
Historicity and Being
43
Inceptual Thinking Concept
44
The Immeasurability of Inceptual Thinking as Finite Thinking
45
Inceptual Thinking The Question of What Is Ownmost
46
The Style of Inceptual Thinking
48
Enthinking Being and Language
54
Being and Decision
60
The Decision
66
Echo
73
Distress
79
The Epoch of Total Lack of Questioning and Enchantment
86
What Is Not Ownmost to Being ང
91
Machination and LivedExperience
92
Machination and LivedExperience
93
The Gigantic
94
The Gigantic
96
Abandonment of Being and Science 98 886
98
Total Mobilization as Consequence of Originary Abandonment of Being
100
ExpeririExperientiaExperimentumExperiment έµлεɩρí ExperienceProbe
110
Experiri έμлερíα Experiencing
111
Exact Science and Experiment
114
PlayingForth
117
PlayingForth
119
The View of All Metaphysics on Being
120
What the History of Metaphysics Keeps Ready and Thus Plays Forth as Still Unyielded and Unrecognizable by This History
122
History of the First Beginning History of Metaphysics
123
Crossing to the Other Beginning
124
Negation
125
Setting into Perspective the First and the Other Beginning
130
The Great Philosophies
131
The First Beginning
132
The Inceptual Interpretation of Being as púσLS
133
Projecting Beingness Open unto Constant Presence
134
Being and Becoming in Inceptual Thinking
135
The First Beginning
136
From Early on Must Clearly and in a Secure Light
138
On the Notion of German Idealism
141
German Idealism
142
Contention between the First and the Other Beginning
143
Responding to the GuidingQuestion and the Form of Traditional Metaphysics
144
The Basic Metaphysical Positions within the History of the GuidingQuestion and the Interpretation of TimeSpace That Belongs to Each of Them
145
The A priori and úσ
155
ἰδέα and οὐσία
156
Leap
159
The GuidingAttunement of the Leap
161
Leap
162
Leap
163
The Leap into Preparation by Asking the GroundingQuestion
164
Leap
166
Being and Beings
168
Leap The Thrown ProjectingOpen
169
Leap
170
Being and Time
171
Being and a Being and Gods
172
Being and Man
173
The Essential Sway of Being
174
The Overflow in the Essential Sway of Being SelfSheltering
176
The Essential Sway of Being
177
The Relation of Dasein and Being
178
The Essential Swaying of Being as Enowning The Relation of Dasein and Being
179
Being
180
Being
182
Truth and TimeSpace
183
The Essential Swaying of Being
184
The Essential Sway of Being
185
Being and the Originary Strife Being or NotBeing in the Essential Sway of Being Itself
186
Being and Nothing
187
Being and NotBeing
188
The Essential Swaying of Being Its Finitude
189
Beingness of Beings Differentiated According to tí έotiv and ὅτι ἔστιν
190
The Origin of Differentiation of the What and the That of a Being
191
The Essential Swaying of Being
201
Essential Sway as Essential Swaying
202
Advancing into Essential Swaying
203
Grounding
205
a Dasein and Projecting Being Open 168 Dasein and Being
207
Dasein
208
Dasein and Inabiding
210
Dasein and Beings in the Whole
211
BeingAway
212
Dasein Exists for the Sake of Itself
213
Leap
214
The Question of Being as Question Concerning the Truth of Being
215
b Dasein 187 Grounding
216
Dasein
217
On Dasein
218
Dasein
219
Dasein and Man
220
Man and Dasein
222
Dasein and Man
223
Dasein and the People
224
Grounding of Dasein as Engrounding
226
Dasein
227
ProjectingOpen and Dasein
228
c The Essential Sway of Truth 204 The Essential Sway of Truth
229
The Open
230
From άλývɛiα to Dasein
231
Truth
232
On the History of the Essential Sway of Truth
233
The Crisis of Its History in Plato and Aristotle the Last Emanation and Total Collapse
234
Truth as Certainty
235
What the Question of Truth Is About
237
The Essential Swaying of Truth
239
The Announcement of the Essential Swaying of Truth
240
The Jointure of the Question of Truth
241
Truth as Essential Swaying of Being
242
What Is Ownmost to Truth What Is Not Its Ownmost
243
The Essential Sway of Truth
244
Clearing of ShelteringConcealing and άλývɛiα
245
On the Essential Sway of Truth
247
The Essential Sway of Truth Is UnTruth
249
Truth and Correctness
250
The Question of Truth as Historically Mindful Deliberation
251
The Question Concerning Truth Nietzsche
253
Truth and Genuineness
256
Truth
257
d TimeSpace as Abground 238 TimeSpace
259
Their Actuality and Source
262
Space and TimeTimeSpace
263
TimeSpace as Abground
264
e The Essential Swaying of Truth as Sheltering 243 Sheltering
271
Truth and Sheltering
273
Grounding Dasein and Trajectories of Sheltering Truth
274
The Ones to Come
275
The Ones to Come
277
The Ones to Come
278
What Is Ownmost to a People and to Dasein
279
Dasein and the Ones to Come Who Belong to the Last God
280
The Last
283
The Last
285
Turning in Enowning
286
The Last God
288
Being
295
Being
297
Philosophy
299
The Gigantic
310
The Opinion about Being
312
ProjectingOpen Being and Being as ProjectingOpen
314
Every ProjectingOpen Is a Thrown One
318
Projecting Being Open and Understanding of Being
320
Enthinking of Being
321
Being and Ontological Difference Differentiation
327
Being Enowning
330
Being Differentiation
336
Being
338
The Essential Sway of Being The Essential Swaying
341
Dasein
343
Man
345
History
346
A Being and Calculation
348
A Being
349
Being and Language
350
Metaphysics and the Origin of the Work of Art
354
Origin of the Work of Art
356
What about Gods?
357
The Question of Crossing
358
Editors Epilogue
363
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Martin Heidegger was born in Messkirch, Baden, Germany on September 22, 1889. He studied Roman Catholic theology and philosophy at the University of Frieburg before joining the faculty at Frieburg as a teacher in 1915. Eight years later Heidegger took a teaching position at Marburg. He taught there until 1928 and then went back to Frieburg as a professor of philosophy. As a philosopher, Heidegger developed existential phenomenology. He is still widely regarded as one of the most original philosophers of the 20th century. Influenced by other philosophers of his time, Heidegger wrote the book, Being in Time, in 1927. In this work, which is considered one of the most important philosophical works of our time, Heidegger asks and answers the question "What is it, to be?" Other books written by Heidegger include Basic Writings, a collection of Heidegger's most popular writings; Nietzsche, an inquiry into the central issues of Friedrich Nietzsche's philosophy; On the Way to Language, Heidegger's central ideas on the origin, nature and significance of language; and What is Called Thinking, a systematic presentation of Heidegger's later philosophy. Since the 1960s, Heidegger's influence has spread beyond continental Europe and into a number of English-speaking countries. Heidegger died in Messkirch on May 26, 1976.

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