Routledge philosophy guidebook to Heidegger and Being and time
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Bibliographic Information
Routledge philosophy guidebook to Heidegger and Being and time
(Routledge philosophy guidebooks)
Routledge, 2005
2nd ed
- : hbk
- : pbk
- Other Title
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Heidegger and Being and time
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Note
Originally published 1996
Bibliography: p. [214]-215
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Heidegger is one of the most controversial thinkers of the twentieth century. His writings are notoriously difficult; they both require and reward careful reading. Being and Time, his first major publication, remains to this day his most influential work.
Heidegger and Being and Time introduces and assesses:
* Heidegger's life and the background to Being and Time
* the ideas and text of Being and Time
* Heidegger's continuing importance to philosophy and his contribution to the intellectual life of our century.
In this second edition, Stephen Mulhall expands his treatment of scepticism, revises his discussion on death, and reassesses the contentious relationship between the two parts of Being and Time with a focus on the notion of authenticity.
This guide will be vital to all students of Heidegger in philosophy and cultural theory.
Table of Contents
Preface to the Second Edition. Introduction: Heidegger's Project. The Question of Being. Reclaiming the Question. The Priority of Dasein. Philosophy, History and Phenomenology. Conclusion: Heidegger's Design. 1. The Human World: Scepticism, Cognition and Agency The Cartesian Critique. The Worldhood of the World. 2. The Human World: Society, Selfhood and Self-Interpretation Individuality and Community Passions and Projects. 3. A Language, Truth and Reality Language: Assertions and Discourse Reality and Truth 4. Conclusion to Division One: The Uncanniness of Everyday Life Falling into the World Anxiety and Care. Anxiety, Scepticism and Nihilism. 5. Theology Secularized: Mortality, Guilt and Conscience Death and Mortality. Excursus: Heidegger and Kierkegaard Guilt and Conscience. The Attestation of Being and Time. 6. Heidegger's (re)visionary Moment: Time as the Human Horizon Mortality and Nullity: The Form of Human Finitude Philosophical Integrity and Authenticity. The Temporality of Care: Thrown Projection. The Temporality of Care: Being in the World Repetition and Projection. 7. Fate and Destiny: Human Natality and a Brief History of Time History and Historicality. The Lessons of History. On Being within Time. 8. Conclusion to Division Two: Philosophical Endings - the Horizon of Being and Time Human Being and the Question of Being in General. Bibliography
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