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Appropriating Heidegger

Appropriating Heidegger

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Mark A. Wrathall Edited by James E. Faulconer
Cambridge University Press, 9/14/2000
EAN 9780521781817, ISBN10: 0521781817

Hardcover, 226 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm
Language: English

Although Martin Heidegger is undeniably one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century, among the philosophers who study his work we find considerable disagreement over what might seem to be basic issues: why is Heidegger important? What did his work do? This volume is an explicit response to these differences, and is unique in bringing together representatives of many different approaches to Heidegger's philosophy. Topics covered include Heidegger's place in the 'history of being', Heidegger and ethics, Heidegger and theology, and Heidegger and Nazi concepts of race. More generally, the contributors also address their respective visions of the nature of philosophy and the presuppositions which guide their understanding of Heidegger.

1. Appropriating Heidegger James E. Faulconer
Part I. Thinking Our Age
2. Philosophy, thinkers, and Heidegger's place in the history of being Mark A. Wrathall
3. Night and day
Heidegger and Thoreau Stanley Cavell
4. Heidegger's alleged challenge to the Nazi concepts of race Robert Bernasconi
5. Heidegger and ethics beyond the call of duty Albert Borgmann
Part II. Heidegger in Context
6. People of God, people of being
the theological presuppositions of Heidegger's path of thought John D. Caputo
7. Heidegger for beginners Simon Critchley
8. The critique of anthropologism in Heidegger's thought Françoise Dastur
Part III. Reading Being and Time
9. In respectful contempt
Heidegger, appropriation, facticity Rudi Visker
10. Could anything be more intelligible than everyday intelligibility
reinterpreting Division I of Being and Time in the light of Division II Hubert L. Dreyfus
11. Another time John Sallis
12. Intentionality, teleology, and normativity Mark Okrent.