Dear Father Richardson: It is with some hesitation that I attempt to answer the two principal questions you posed in your letter of March I, 1962. The first touches on the initial impetus that determined the way my thought would gO. l The other looks for information about the much discussed "reversal" [in my development]. I hesitate with my answers, for they are necessarily no more than indications [of much more to be said]. The lesson of long experience leads me to surmise that such indications will not be taken as directions for the road of independent reflection on the matter pointed out which each must travel for himself. [Instead they] will gain notice as though they were an opinion I had ex­ pressed, and will be propagated as such. Every effort to bring what has been thought closer to prevailing modes of (re)presen­ tation must assimilate what-is-to-be-thought to those (re)presen­ tations and thereby inevitably deform the matter. 2 This preamble is not the lament of a man misunderstood; it is rather the recognition of an almost insurmountable difficulty in making oneself understood. The first question in your letter reads: "How are we properly to understand your first experience of the Being-question in 1 [Translator's note. With regard to the translati~ of Denken, see below, p. 16, note 43. ] I [Translator's note. For the translation of VorsteUung by "(re)presentation," see below, p. 108, note 5. ] VORWORT Sehr geehrter Herr P.
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Dear Father Richardson: It is with some hesitation that I attempt to answer the two principal questions you posed in your letter of March I, 1962. For the translation of VorsteUung by "(re)presentation," see below, p.
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I: From There to Being.- I. Being and Time.- II. Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics.- III. The Essence of Ground.- IV. What is Metaphysics?.- II: Reversal.- I. On the Essence of Truth.- II. The Self-assertion of the German University.- III. Introduction to Metaphysics.- IV: From Being to There.- Section A. The De-volution of Thought 299.- I. Plato.- II. Aristotle.- III. Descartes.- IV. Hegel.- V. Nietzsche.- VI. Logic.- VII. Humanism.- VIII. Transition: Rilke.- Section B. The Re-trieve of Thought.- I. The Origin of a Work of Art, Hölderlin and the Essence of Poetry.- II. The Time of World-as-Picture.- III. “As when upon a day of rest…”.- IV. Nietzsche’s Word “God is dead”.- V. “Homecoming,” “Recollection”.- VI. What is Metaphysics: Epilogue.- VII. ’’???????.- VIII. ?????.- IX. Towards an Analysis of Release, Nihilism.- X. The Saying of Anaximander.- XI. Whereunto the Poet?.- XII. Letter on Humanism.- XIII. Interlude.- XIV. What is Metaphysics ?: Introduction. The Essence of Ground: Prologue.- XV. The Thing.- XVI. Language.- XVII. Working, Dwelling, Thinking.- XVIII. “…Poetically doth man dwell…”.- XIX. What E-vokes Thought?.- Conclusion.- Outlines.- Appendix: Courses, Seminars and Lectures of Martin Heidegger.- Bibliography:.- I. Heidegger’s Works.- A. Order of Publication.- B. Order of Composition.- II. Other Works Cited.- III. Selective Bibliography.- IV. English Translations.- Indexes:.- I. Index of Texts Cited.- II. Index of Proper Names.- II. Index of Greek Terms.- IV. General Index.
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Springer Book Archives

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9789401019781
Publisert
2011-12-09
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Forfatter
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