A Critical Guide
Buch, Englisch, 319 Seiten
Reihe: Cambridge Critical Guides
ISBN: 978-1-108-49600-1
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
Martin Heidegger's Being and Time, published in 1927, is widely regarded as his most important work and it has had a profound influence on twentieth-century philosophy. This Critical Guide draws on recently translated and published primary sources as well as the latest developments in Heidegger scholarship to provide a series of in-depth studies of this influential text. Twelve newly-written essays examine the unity of Being and Time; the nature of human communication; truth as a catalyst of cultural transformation; feminist approaches to Being and Time; the essence of authenticity; curiosity as an epistemic vice; the nature of rationality; realism and idealism; the ontological difference; the origin of time; the possibility of death; and the failure of the Being and Time project. The volume will be particularly valuable to students and scholars interested in phenomenology, existentialism, hermeneutics, metaphysics, epistemology, feminism, and ethics.
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Introduction: the circle of understanding Aaron James Wendland and Tobias Keiling; 1. Being and time as a whole Denis McManus; 2. The trouble with the ontological difference Katharine Withy; 3. Heidegger's evenhanded approach to realism and idealism David Cerbone; 4. Discourse as communicative expression Taylor Carman; 5. On curiosity as an epistemic vice Irene McMullin; 6. Rethinking being and time as a resource for feminist philosophy Charlotte Knowles; 7. Authenticity, truth, and cultural transformation Aaron James Wendland; 8. What does authenticity do in being and time? Sacha Golob; 9. Why ask why? Retrieving reason in being and time Steven Crowell; 10. Time's origin Daniel Dahlstrom; 11. The possibility of death Mark Wrathall; 12. Heidegger on the failure of being and time Tobias Keiling; Bibliography; Index.