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OverviewThis book aims to transform logic into a reflection on the nature of language. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Martin Heidegger , Wanda Torres Gregory , Yvonne UnnaPublisher: State University of New York Press Imprint: State University of New York Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.263kg ISBN: 9781438426747ISBN 10: 1438426747 Pages: 177 Publication Date: 06 August 2009 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Translators' Foreword Introduction: Structure, Origin, Meaning and Necessary Shaking Up of Logic 1. The inner structure of logic a) Analysis b) Assembly c) Regulation alpha) The self-sameness of what is represented ss) Non-contradiction gamma) The ordering of reason and consequence d) Form consideration 2. Logic as preparatory school for all thinking. Grammar and logic. Logic history 3. The three common standpoints of the judgment about meaning, usefulness, and value of logic 4. The necessary task of a shaking up of logic Recapitulation First Part: The Question Concerning the Essence of Language as Fundamental and Guiding Question of All Logic 5. Objections against the procedure of taking the question concerning the essence of language as directive and guiding principle for the question concerning logic a) Language as object of the philosophy of language c) The secondary ranking of language: Language as means d) The grasping of language-preformed through logic 6. The two manners of questioning. The character of the question of the essence as fore-question and the three respects of the question of the essence Recapitulation First Chapter: The Question Concerning the Essence of Language 7. Language-preserved in the dictionary 8. Language as event in the dialogue 9. Language-determined from the kind of being of the human being. The answer of metaphysics Second Chapter: The Question Concerning the Essence of the Human Being Recapitulation 10. The right launching of the fore-question. What- and who-question 11. The human being as a self a) The I-determined through the self, not conversely Recapitulation b) The [plural] You and We-determined through the self, not through the mere plurality c) Is the self the species of the I, You, We, [plural] You? Recapitulation 12. The self and self-forlornness a) The mis-questioning-conditioned by the self-forlornness of the human being b) Does a preeminence of the We lie in the question ""Who are we ourselves?"" c) Outer and inner identification of the We Recapitulation 13. ""'We' are the Volk"" by virtue of decision 14. Reply to the first interposed question: What is that, a Volk? Recapitulation a) Volk as body b) Volk as soul c) Volk as spirit 15. Reply to the second interposed question: What does decision mean? a) Decision and decisiveness b) Resoluteness as engagedness of the human being in the happening that is forthcoming Third Chapter: The Question Concerning the Essence of History 16. The determination of the essence of history is grounded in the character of history of the respective era. The essence of truth-determined by the historical Dasein 17. The ambiguity of the word ""history"" a) ""History"" as entering into the past. Natural history b) ""History"" as entering into the future 18. Human happening as carrying itself out and remaining in knowing and willing: lore Recapitulation 19. The relationship of history, lore of history (historiography) and science of history Recapitulation 20. History in its relationship with time a) History as that which is bygone and as that which has been b) The preeminence of the characterization of history as past alpha) Christian world-conception and Aristotelian time-analysis ss) That which is bygone as that which is completed, ascertainable, causally explicable c) The objectification of history by the science of history. Time as present-at-hand framework 21. The being of the human being as historical a) ""Are"" we historical? b) The worthiness of question of the being of the human being. Becoming and being c) Being-historical as a deciding that is continually renewing Recapitulation d) That which has been is as future of our own being Second Part: The Original Time as the Ground of All Questions Hitherto and the Resumption of the Question-Sequence in Reversed Direction 22. The transformation of our being in its relation to the power of time. Responsibility 23. Rejection of two misunderstandings a) No politics of the day position, but awakening of an original knowing b) That which is to be found out by questioning does not let itself be settled immediately Recapitulation First Chapter: The Historicity of the Human Being is Experienced from a Transformed Relationship with Time 24. The experience of time through the experience of our determination a) Mandate and mission b) Labor c) The being-attuned-through by the mood 25. Original and derived experience of being and of time. Temporality and within-timeness. Recapitulation 26. Discussion of the concern that time becomes something subjective through the newly won determination a) Do animals have a sense of time? b) The question concerning the subject-character of the human being alpha) The modern change of meaning of ""subject"" and ""object."" The threefold detachment of the human being Recapitulation ss) The new metaphysical fundamental position of the human being in Descartes' prima philosophia c) The modern determination of the human being as being-thing in the sense of the mere being-present-at-hand Second Chapter: The experience of the essence of the human being from his determination 27. The in-one-another of mood, labor, mission, and mandate a) Mood. The relationship of mood and body b) Labor c) Mission and mandate 28. The blasting of the being-subject through the determination of the Volk a) Original manifestness of beings and scientific objectification. Contrasting of the animal life with the historical Dasein b) The happening of history is in itself lore of the disclosedness of beings. Historiographical knowledge as degradation of the great moments that are disclosive c) The historical Dasein of the human being as the resoluteness toward the moment d) Human being as care: Exposedness in beings and delivery over to being. Rejection of the misinterpretation of care: Care as freedom of the historical self-being e) The State as the historical being of a Volk Third Chapter: Being-human and language 29. Language as the ruling of the world-forming and preserving center of the historical Dasein of the Volk 30. Logic as still not comprehended mandate of the human-historical Dasein: care about the ruling of the world in the event of language 31. Poetry as original language Editor's Epilogue Lexicon Notes"ReviewsThis translation is crafted with careful attention to nuance and detail. One of its principal strengths is the propinquity of the English to the original German. - Theodore D. George, author of Tragedies of Spirit: Tracing Finitude in Hegel's Phenomenology """This translation is crafted with careful attention to nuance and detail. One of its principal strengths is the propinquity of the English to the original German."" - Theodore D. George, author of Tragedies of Spirit: Tracing Finitude in Hegel's Phenomenology" Author InformationWanda Torres Gregory is Professor of Philosophy at Simmons College and the coeditor (with Donna Giancola) of World Ethics. Yvonne Unna is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Seton Hall University. Together, they translated Heidegger's On the Essence of Language: The Metaphysics of Language and the Essencing of the Word Concerning Herder's Treatise On the Origin of Language, also published by SUNY Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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