The Philosophy of Heidegger
eBook - ePub

The Philosophy of Heidegger

  1. 240 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Philosophy of Heidegger

About this book

"The Philosophy of Heidegger" is a readable and reliable overview of Heidegger's thought, suitable both for beginners and advanced students. A striking and refreshing feature of the work is how free it is from the jargon and standard idioms of academic philosophical writing. Written in straightforward English, with many illustrations and concrete examples, this book provides a very accessible introduction to such key Heideggerian notions as in/authenticity, falling, throwness, moods, temporality, earth, world, enframing, etc. Organized under clear, no-nonsense headings, Watt's exposition avoids complicated involvement with the secondary literature, or with wider philosophical debates, which gives his writing a fresh, immediate character. Ranging widely across Heidegger's numerous writings, this book displays an impressively thorough knowledge of his corpus, navigating the difficult relationship between earlier and later Heidegger texts, and giving the reader a strong sense of the basic motives and overall continuity of Heidegger's thought.

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Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2014
Print ISBN
9781844652648
eBook ISBN
9781317548003
Continental European Philosophy
This series provides accessible and stimulating introductions to the ideas of continental thinkers who have shaped the fundamentals of European philosophical thought. Powerful and radical, the ideas of these philosophers have often been contested, but they remain key to understanding current philosophical thinking as well as the current direction of disciplines such as political science, literary theory, social theory, art history and cultural studies. Each book seeks to combine clarity with depth, introducing fresh insights and wider perspectives while also providing a comprehensive survey of each thinker’s philosophical ideas.
The Philosophy of Agamben
Catherine Mills
The Philosophy of Derrida
Mark Dooley and Liam Kavanagh
The Philosophy of Foucault
Todd May
The Philosophy of Gadamer
Jean Grondin
The Philosophy of Habermas
Andrew Edgar
The Philosophy of Heidegger
Michael Watts
The Philosophy of Hegel
Allen Speight
The Philosophy of Husserl
Burt C. Hopkins
The Philosophy of Kierkegaard
George Pattison
The Philosophy of Merleau-Ponty
Eric Matthews
The Philosophy of Nietzsche
Rex Welshon
The Philosophy of Schopenhauer
Dale Jacquette

The Philosophy of Heidegger

Michael Watts
Logo: Published by Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group, London and New York.

Contents

  • Preface
  • Abbreviations
  • 1. Heidegger’s life
  • 2. The meaning of life: the question of Being
  • 3. The central ideas in Being and Time
  • 4. Conscience, guilt and authenticity
  • 5. Being-towards-death
  • 6. Dasein’s primordial temporality
  • 7. The “truth of alētheia” and language
  • 8. Heidegger on poetry, poets and Hölderlin
  • 9. Heidegger on art
  • 10. Heidegger on technology
  • 11. Tao, Zen and Heidegger
  • 12. Heidegger’s politics
  • Glossary
  • Further reading
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Preface

No Western philosopher since Socrates has attracted such varied, often totally opposed, views as Heidegger. In a popular history of philosophy by Bertrand Russell, the entry on Heidegger comprises only one short paragraph. The first line reads: “Highly eccentric in its terminology, his philosophy is extremely obscure. One cannot help suspecting that language is here running riot” (1989: 303). The analytic philosopher A. J. Ayer once accused him of charlatanism (1984: 228); Roger Scruton, a contemporary conservative British philosopher, described Heidegger’s most important work Being and Time as “formidably difficult – unless it is utter nonsense, in which case it is laughably easy” (2001: 270). Against these dismissals, the American philosopher Richard Rorty (1981: 5) rates Heidegger as one of the three most important philosophers of the twentieth century, along with John Dewey and Wittgenstein.
Heidegger also, frequently, has been damned both as a man and as a thinker for his brief but enthusiastic support of the Nazis. This was symbolized by his acceptance of the post of rector of Freiburg University in 1933, where he proved a passionate advocate of subordinating the university to the new Nazi regime. Although he resigned the rectorship after only a year, and became increasingly critical of the direction taken by the Nazi party, he never uttered a full apology for his support of National Socialism, nor admitted guilt for having done so, during the thirty-one years he lived after 1945. If Heidegger could not, even with hindsight, accept that he had been wrong, many have questioned how much value should be placed on his work, particularly because his philosophy stresses the importance of a life lived as an experience in time and place, rather than as a collection of abstract theories.
For the English-speaker, such biographical problems are not the only drawbacks. Heidegger wrote a distinctive, notoriously dense prose that, when translated, can appear impenetrably Teutonic. Unsurprisingly, therefore, for a long time he was ignored in the Anglo-American world. But he was hailed as one of existentialism’s founding fathers in continental Europe from the 1940s. Since his death in 1976 he has become almost as famed in the anglophone world, despite further controversies over his links with the Nazis and over his exploitative relationship with Hannah Arendt when she was his student. Some critics have seen him as both a Nazi and an unscrupulous seducer of a vulnerable teenager; for others, he appears a covert critic of Nazism and an intellectual mentor to Arendt as well as her lover. Above all, he is now held to have had vital insights into the central problems of modern life, including the uses and abuses of technology, literature, poetry, theatre, sociology and even architecture.
Deeply concerned with the way that language shapes human thought, Heidegger made a vital contribution to the development of phenomenology, founded by his teacher Edmund Husserl. But Heidegger outstripped his mentor’s achievement, finally passing beyond phenomenology to create a wholly new approach to thinking that profoundly influenced German philosophers such as JĂŒrgen Habermas and Hans-Georg Gadamer, English-speaking philosophers such as Charles Taylor and Rorty, and French philosophers such as Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Indeed, he inspired Jean-Paul Sartre to create the twentieth century’s perhaps most famous philosophical school: existentialism. (This was despite Heidegger’s letter to Jean Beaufret in 1947 “Letter...

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Half Title Page
  3. Frontmatter 1
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Table of Contents
  7. Preface
  8. Abbreviations
  9. 1. Heidegger’s life
  10. 2. The meaning of life: the question of Being
  11. 3. The central ideas in Being and Time
  12. 4. Conscience, guilt and authenticity
  13. 5. Being-towards-death
  14. 6. Dasein’s primordial temporality
  15. 7. The “truth of alētheia” and language
  16. 8. Heidegger on poetry, poets and Hölderlin
  17. 9. Heidegger on art
  18. 10. Heidegger on technology
  19. 11. Tao, Zen and Heidegger
  20. 12. Heidegger’s politics
  21. Glossary
  22. Further reading
  23. Bibliography
  24. Index

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