Books by Martin Heidegger

Portrait of Martin Heidegger

Martin Heidegger stands as one of the most influential and challenging philosophers of the twentieth century, whose work reshaped modern thought on existence, truth, and human understanding. His writings probe the fundamental question of Being, urging readers to reconsider the nature of reality and our place within it, and continue to inspire deep reflection across philosophy, literature, and the arts.

Drawing from phenomenology yet forging a path uniquely his own, Heidegger's prose demands careful reading and rewards those who engage with its depth and complexity. His legacy endures in debates on technology, language, and authenticity, marking him as a thinker whose insights remain vital to contemporary intellectual life.

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121 products


  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Martin Heidegger, Heraklit - 1. Der Anfang Des

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    £44.10

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Vorlaufiges I-IV: Schwarze Hefte 1963 -1970

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    £43.20

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Vorlaufiges I-IV: Schwarze Hefte 1963 -1970

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    £52.20

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Martin Heidegger, Gesamtausgabe. III. Abteilung:

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    £44.10

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Martin Heidegger, Gesamtausgabe: Holzwege

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    £44.10

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Martin Heidegger Gesamtausgabe III Abteilungen

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    £26.10

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Seminare: Kant-Leibniz-Schiller (Teil 2:

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    £118.15

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Was Ist Metaphysik?

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  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Martin Heidegger, Feldweg-Gesprache

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    £35.10

  • Klostermann Vittorio GmbH Die Kunst und der Raum LArt et lEspace Text

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    £12.80

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Martin Heidegger, Uberlegungen II-VI: (schwarze

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    £57.80

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Kant Und Das Problem Der Metaphysik

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    £22.90

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Phanomenologische Interpretationen Zu

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    £14.06

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Heraklit: Seminar Wintersemester 1966/67

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    £26.60

  • Verlag Vittorio Klostermann Zollikoner Seminare: Protokolle - Zwiegesprache -

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  • Klostermann Vittorio GmbH Vermächtnis der Seinsfrage

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    £43.20

  • Klostermann Vittorio GmbH Hegels Phänomenologie des Geistes

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    £35.10

  • De Gruyter Einführung in die Metaphysik

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    £32.85

  • Sein und Zeit

    Max Niemeyer Verlag GmbH & Co KG Sein und Zeit

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    £25.40

  • Karl Alber i.d. Nomos Vlg Gelassenheit

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    £10.00

  • Klett-Cotta Verlag Bauen Wohnen Denken

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    £38.40

  • Klett-Cotta Verlag Unterwegs zur Sprache

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    £36.00

  • The Event

    MH - Indiana University Press The Event

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisOffers the English-speaking reader intimate contact with one of the most basic Heideggerian conceptsTrade ReviewWhat is most remarkable about Richard Rojcewicz's translation is its timeliness. . . . As a translation, the volume is better than fine and it has no doubt benefitted from Rojcewicz and Vallega-Neu's translation of Beiträge zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis). * Continental Philosophy Review *The Event takes the reader who is willing to follow the intricacies of Heidegger's text, into dark and impenetrable dimensions of thought and experience at the limits of language and intelligibility. * Review of Metaphysics *Table of ContentsTranslator's IntroductionForewordsSophocles, Oedipus at Colonus, vv. 73-74.This "presentation" does not describe and reportThe destiny of beyng devolves upon the thinkersThe dispensation of beyng in the event toward the beginningNot only throughout all the worldIn regard to Contributions to Philosophy (Of the Event)I. The first beginningA. The first beginning B. C. AnaximanderD. Western thinkingReflexionDa-seynE. Under way toward the first beginningThe preparation for the thinking of beyng in its historicalitySo as to remain on the bridgeF. The first beginningG. The first beginningH. The advancement of the first beginning into the start of metaphysicsII. The resonatingA. The resonatingVistaB. The signs of the transitionThe passing byThe in-between of the history of beyngC. Modernity and the WestD. MetaphysicsE. The will to willingIII. The differenceIV. The twisting freeV. The eventVI. The eventVII. The event and the human beingVIII. Da-seynA. The human being as understood with respect to the history of being andDa-seyn (steadfastness)B. Da-seynTime-spaceDa-sein and "reflexion"Steadfastness and dispositionC. Disposition and Da-seinThe pain of the question-worthiness of beyngIX. The other beginningX. Directives to the eventA. The enduring of the difference (distinction)Experience as the pain "of" the departureB. The thinking of the history of beyngThe enduring of the difference (distinction)The care of the abyssThe timber trailThinking and the wordC. Toward a first elucidation of the basic words"Truth" (With regard to: The saying of the first beginning)The "essence" and the "essential occurrence"History and historialityXI. The thinking of the history of beyng(Thinking and poetizing)A. The experience of that which is worthy of questioningThe leapThe confrontationThe clarification of actionThe knowledge of thinkingB. The beginning and heedfulnessC. The saying of the beginningD. Thinking and knowingThinking and poetizingE. Poetizing and thinkingF. The poet and the thinkerG. "Commentary" and "interpretation"Editor's AfterwordGerman-English GlossaryEnglish-German Glossary

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    £31.50

  • Hölderlins Hymns Germania and The Rhine

    Indiana University Press Hölderlins Hymns Germania and The Rhine

    Book SynopsisComing at a crucial time in his career, this title illustrates Martin Heidegger's turn toward language, art, and poetry while reflecting his despair at his failure to revolutionize the German university and his hope for a more profound revolution through the German language, guided by Holderlin's poetry.Trade Review[This translation], including a clear and concise introduction and useful glossaries, attains both accuracy and clarity, rarely faltering in its choice of words. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *Translated with skill and precision, these lectures . . . not only present the most penetrating analysis of two of Hölderlin's most significant hymns but also constitute Heidegger's most illuminating and fully argued encounter with Hölderlin. . . . Recommended. * Choice *Table of ContentsTranslators' ForewordPreliminary RemarkIntroduction 1. Outline of the Beginning, Manner of Procedure, and Approach of the Lecture CoursePart One"Germania"Chapter OnePreliminary Reflections: Poetry and Language 2. Provisional Path of Approach to the Poem as a Piece of Text 3. Entering the Domain in which Poetry Unfolds its Power 4. Concerning the Essence of Poetry 5. The Question Concerning the 'We' in the Turbulence of the Dialogue 6. Determining the 'We' from out of the Horizon of the Question of Time 7. The Linguistic Character of PoetryChapter TwoThe Fundamental Attunement of Poetizing and the Historicality of Dasein 8. Unfolding the Fundamental Attunement 9. Historical Time and Fundamental Attunement 10. The Locale of Dasein Founded in "Germania" within the Horizon of the Heraclitean Thought11. Transitional Overview and Summary: Revisiting the Domains Opened Up Thus Far as a Way of Determining More Precisely the Intent of the Lecture CoursePart Two"The Rhine"Transitional RemarkThe Question Concerning What is 'Innermost' in a Poetic Work as a Question of the Opening Up and Founding of Beyng in the Each Time New Prevailing of its Fundamental AttunementChapter OneThe Demigods as Mediating Middle between Gods and Humans. The Fundamental Attunement of the Poem. The Beyng of the Demigods and the Calling of the Poet12. Thinking the Essence of the Demigods in the Founding Projection of the Poet13. Strophe I. The Point of Departure for the Telling, and the Composure through which it is Experienced. The Apprehending of a Destiny14. Strophes II and III. The River Rhine as Destiny. Hearing its Origin and Assuming its VocationChapter TwoA More Incisive Review. Poetizing and Historical Dasein15. The Task of the Lecture Course: Entering the Domain in Which Poetry Unfolds its Power, and the Opening Up of its Actuality16. The Fundamental Approach in which our Interpretation Moves, Taking "Germania" as our Point of Departure17. The Interpretation in Detail. The River Rhine as Demigod18. Interim Reflection on the Metaphysics of PoetizingChapter ThreeThat which has Purely Sprung Forth as Strife in the Middle of Beyng19. Strophe IV. The Enigma of what has Purely Sprung Forth and the Origin of Poetizing20. Strophes V to IX. Unfolding the Essence of what has Purely Sprung Forth in the Conflict between Springing Forth and Having Sprung-Forth21. Strophes X Through XIII. Thinking the Beyng of the Demigods Starting From the Gods and From Humans22. Strophe XIV. Retaining the Mystery. The Thinking of the Poet Grounded in the Poetizing of the Thinker23. Strophe XV. The Poet as the Other24. The Metaphysical Locale of Hölderlin's PoetizingEditor's EpilogueTranslators' NotesGlossaryEnglish—German German—English

    £35.10

  • The Beginning of Western Philosophy

    Indiana University Press The Beginning of Western Philosophy

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewA review cannot do justice to the entire richness of this lecture course . . . . The present course is thus in every sense a transition: harking back to the temporal analyses of Being from the period of 'Being and Time' and anticipating the increasing preoccupation with the Presocratics and with Greek tragedy that would mark Heidegger's work from the mid-1930s onward.10/4/16 * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *Table of ContentsContentsTranslator's Introduction The beginning of Western philosophy Interpretation of Anaximander and Parmenides Part One The dictum of Anaximander of Miletus, 6th-5th Century Introduction1. The mission and the dictum Chapter I The first phase of the interpretation A. The first section of the statement2. The theme of the dictum: beings as a whole B. The second section of the statement3. Beings in the relation of compliance and noncompliance C. The third section of the statement4. Being and time Chapter II The second phase of the interpretation5. The unitary content of the pronouncement on the basis of its central core Chapter III The other dictum6. The sovereign source of beings as the empowering power of appearance Part Two Interposed considerations7. Four objections to the interpretation8. The negative relation to the beginning9. Meditation on the "current situation"10. The grounding utterance of Being11. The actual asking of the question of Being12. Review of the linguistic usage13. The basic question of existence14. Commentary on our concept of existence15. The full rendering of the understanding of Being16. The liberation toward freedom17. Transition to Parmenides: the first explicit and coherent unfolding of the question of Being Part Three The "didactic poem" of Parmenides of Elea 6th-5th Century18. Introduction19. Interpretation of fragment 1. Preparation for the question of Being20. Interpretation of fragments 4 and 521. Interpretation of fragments 6 and 722. Interpretation of fragment 823. The fragments 9, 12, 13, 10, 11, 14, 16, 19 (in the order of their interpretation) Conclusion24. The inceptual question of Being; the law of philosophy AppendixDrafts and plans for the lecture courseEditor's afterwordGerman-English GlossaryEnglish-German Glossary

    £35.10

  • The History of Beyng

    Indiana University Press The History of Beyng

    Book SynopsisTrade Review[Heidegger's] account of the history of beyng is put to the test by its ability to provide insight into the most important social and political events of his day — including the rise of fascism and communism in Europe, the outbreak of global wars, and the horrific genocidal turn of anti-Semitic hostilities in Germany. This makes the book essential reading for anyone interested in Heidegger's later work. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *Overall, the updated translation showcases what is a central and often-overlooked text in Heidegger's oeuvre, with perspicuity and illumination. Maintaining a style that shows just why contemporary readers should return to this text for themes that are arguably as relevant, if not more so, to the modern world than they were at the time when Heidegger was writing. * Phenomenological Reviews *Table of ContentsTranslators' IntroductionThe History of Beyng (1938-40)The History of Beyng. Part II. The History of BeyngII. Contra-diction and RefutationIII. Passage. The History of BeyngIV. The Consummation of MetaphysicsBeing's AbandonmentV. To KoinonVI. The Sustainment. The Essence of PowerThe NecessaryVII. The Essence of History. "Commencement." "Beyng"VIII. Beyng and the Last GodIX. Essence of HistoryX. The OwnedThe History of Beyng. Part IIXI. The Configuration of SayingXII. The History of Beyng (Da-sein)XIII. Beyng-Historical ThinkingKoinonOut of the History of Beyng (1939-40)o Koivov. Out of the History of BeyngDraft for oivov. On the History of BeyngAppendixAdditional Materials for The History of Beyng (1938-40)Additional Materials for . Out of the History of Beyng (1939-40)Editor's EpilogueGerman—English GlossaryEnglish—German Glossary

    £31.50

  • Being and Truth

    Indiana University Press Being and Truth

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThe two lecture courses collected in the volume entitled Being and Truth were delivered during Heidegger's tenure as the first Nazi rector of the University of Freiburg and thus in his darkest hour as a philosopher. . . When reading Heidegger's political statements, which frame and punctuate his otherwise thought-provoking philosophical analyses . . . what is most striking, ultimately, is Heidegger's utter blindness with respect to the true nature of an odious and destructive worldview and his systematic yet delusional projection of a profound transformation of Europe's destiny and a new dawn into the darkest episode of German history.6/3/11 * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *Table of ContentsTranslators' ForewordTHE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION OF PHILOSOPHYSummer Semester 1933Introduction: The Fundamental Question of Philosophy and the Fundamental Happening of Our HistoryMain Part: The Fundamental Question and Metaphysics: Preparation for a Confrontation with HegelChapter One. The Development, Transformation, and Christianization of Traditional MetaphysicsChapter Two. The System of Modern Metaphysics and the First of Its Primary Determining Grounds: The MathematicalChapter Three. Determination by Christianity and the Concept of Mathematical-Methodological Grounding in the Metaphysical Systems of ModernityChapter Four. Hegel: The Completion of Metaphysics as Theo-logicConclusionON THE ESSENCE OF TRUTHWinter Semester 1933-1934Introduction: The Question of Essence as Insidious and UnavoidablePart One. Truth and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Allegory of the Cave in Plato's RepublicChapter One. The Four Stages of the Happening of TruthChapter Two. The Idea of the Good and UnconcealmentChapter Three. The Question of the Essence of UntruthPart Two. An Interpretation of Plato's Theaetetus With Regard to the Question of the Essence of UntruthChapter One. Preliminary Considerations on the Greek Concept of KnowledgeChapter Two. Theaetetus's Answers to the Question of the Essence of Knowledge and their RejectionChapter Three. The Question of the Possibility of Appendix INotes and drafts for the lecture course of Summer Semester 1933Appendix IINotes and drafts for the lecture course of Winter Semester 1933-1934Editor's AfterwordGerman-English Glossary

    £21.59

  • Country Path Conversations

    Indiana University Press Country Path Conversations

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewBret Ellis . . . provides a thoughtful, clear and highly readable translation of these conversations. He includes key German terms in the text and occasionally provides a brief discussion of the resonances of certain German terms likely to be unfamiliar to even those readers with second language German. His informative introduction places the work in the context of Heidegger's biography and philosophy as well as within the work's social and historical context. * Philosophy in Review *Table of ContentsTranslator's Foreword1. 'Aí: A Three-way Conversation on a Country Path between a Scientist, a Scholar, and a Guide2. The Teacher Meets the Tower Warden at the Door to the Tower Stairway3. Evening Conversation: In a Prisoner of War Camp in Russia, between a Younger and an Older ManEditor's AfterwordGlossaries

    £21.59

  • Ponderings VIIXI

    Indiana University Press Ponderings VIIXI

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsTranslator's IntroductionPonderings VIIPonderings VIIIPonderings IXPonderings XPonderings XIEditor's Afterword

    £45.00

  • Ponderings XIIXV  Black Notebooks 19391941

    Indiana University Press Ponderings XIIXV Black Notebooks 19391941

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewEssential. * Choice *For readers wishing to supplement their understanding of Heidegger during this prolific and difficult period of his thinking, or those wishing to find real-world articulations of his developing reflections on the essence of machination and technology, this volume will provide unique, often provocative, on occasion troubling, yet philosophically relevant insights into a challenging thinker's writing in and about challenging times. * Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal *Table of ContentsTranslator's IntroductionPonderings XIIPonderings XIIIPonderings XIVPonderings XVEditor's Afterword

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    £45.00

  • Hölderlins Hymn Remembrance

    Indiana University Press Hölderlins Hymn Remembrance

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"This faithful and readable translation by William McNeill and Julia Ireland serves as a critical orientation to interpreting Heidegger's later thought, which has become the focus of a great deal of scholarly interest. In Heidegger's own words, Hölderlin's poetry is 'absolutely essential' to understanding his later thought."—Christopher D. Merwin, Emory UniversityTable of ContentsTranslators' ForewordPRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONSPreparation for Hearing the Word of the Poetizing1. What the Lecture Course Does Not Intend. On Literary-Historiographical Research and the Arbitrary Interpretation of Poetry2. The Attempt to Think the Word Poetized by Hölderlin3. That Which is Poetized in the Word of Essential Poetizing 'Poetizes Over and Beyond' the Poet and Those Who Hear this Word4. The Essential Singularity of Hölderlin's Poetizing is Not Subject to Any Demand for Proof5. The Poetizing Word and Language as Means of Communication. Planetary Alienation in Relation to the WordReview 1) 'Thinking' That Which is Poetized2) Hearing That Which is Poetized is Hearkening: Waiting for the Coming of the Inceptual Word6. The Univocity of 'Logic' and the Wealth of the Genuine Word Out of the Inexhaustibility of the Commencement7. Remark on the Editions of Hölderlin's WorksMAIN PART"Remembrance"8. A Word of Warning about Merely Admiring the Beauty of the Poem9. Establishing a Preliminary Understanding About 'Content' and What is Poetized in the PoemReview1) The Wealth of the Poetizing Word2) Poetizing and Thinking as Historical Action3) The Transformation of the Biographical in That Which is Poetized10. That Which is Poetized in the Poetizing and the 'Content' of the Poem are Not the SamePart OneEntry into the Realm of the Poem as Word11. The Beginning and Conclusion of the Poem12. Concerning Language: The Poetizing Word and Sounding Words13. Language in Our Historical Moment14. Preliminary Consideration of the Unity of the PoemReview15. Poetizing and the Explanation of Nature in Modernity. On the Theory of 'Image' and 'Metaphor'16. "The Northeasterly blows." The Favor of Belonging to the Vocation of Poet17. The "Greeting." On the Dangerous Addiction to Psychological-Biographical Explanation18. Norbert von Hellingrath on "Hölderlin's Madness." Commemoration of von Hellingrath19. Hölderlin's De-rangement as Entering the Range of a Different Essential Locale20. The "Going" of the Northeasterly. The "Greeting" of the Poet's Going with ItReview21. Transition From the First to the Second Strophe. The Greeting Thinking-in-the-Direction-Of as the Letting Be of the Greeted. The Greeted Thinks Its Way To the Poet22. In the Unity of That Which is Greeted, Gathered by the Poet's Greeting, the Day's Work and Stead of Human Dwelling ArisePart Two"Holidays" and "Festival" in Hölderlin's Poetizing23. Preliminary Hints From Citing 'Passages' In the PoetryReview24. Celebrating as Pausing From Work and Passing Over into Reflection upon the Essential25. The Radiance of the Essential Within Celebration. Play and Dance26. The Essential Relation Between Festival and History. The "Bridal Festival" of Humans and Gods27. The Festive as Origin of Attunements. Joy and Mournfulness: The Epigram "Sophocles"Review1) Celebration as Becoming Free in Belonging to the Inhabitual2) Improbable Celebration in the Echo of What is 'Habitual' in a Day: The First Strophe of the Elegy "Bread and Wine"3) "The Festival" and the Appropriative Event. The Festival of the Day of History in Greece. Hölderlin and Nietzsche28. The Greeting of the Women. Their Role in Preparing the Festival. The Women of Southern France and the Festival that Once Was in GreeceReview29. Transition as Reconciliation and Equalization30. "Night": Time-Space of a Thinking Remembering the Gods that Once Were Transition in Receiving the Downgoing and Preparing the Dawn31. Gods and Humans as Fitting Themselves to What is Fitting. That Which is Fitting and Fate32. How Fate is Viewed Within the Calculative Thinking of Metaphysics, and "Fate" in Hölderlin's Sense33. The Festival as Equalizing the While for Fate34. The Transition from What Once Was in Greece into That Which is to Come: The Veiled Truth of the Hymnal PoetizingReview1) The Provenance of the Poetized Transition. The "Demigods" Called into the Transition. Hegel and Hölderlin2) What is Fitting for Humans and Gods is the Holy. The Fitting of the Jointure as Letting-be3) Fitting as Releasing into the Search for Essence and the Loss of Essence. Errancy and Evil4) The Temporal Character of the "While," and the Metaphysical Concept of Time35. "Lulling Breezes": Sheltering in the Origin, the Ownmost of Humans and Gods. "Golden Dreams"36. Interim Remark Concerning Scientific Explanations of Dreams37. The Dream. That Which Is Dreamlike as the Unreal or Nonexistent38. Greek Thought on the Dream. PindarReview39. The Dream as Shadow-like Appearing of Vanishing into the Lightless. Presencing and Absencing40. The Possible as Presencing of Vanishing from, and as Appearing of Arrival Within 'Reality' (Beyng)41. Hölderlin's Treatise "Becoming in Dissolution." Dream as Bringing the Possible and Preserving the Transfigured ActualPart ThreeThe Search for the Free Use of One's Own42. Hesitant Awe Before the Transition onto "Slow Footbridges"Review43. Greece and Germania: The Banks and Sides of the Transition Toward Learning What is Historically One's Own44. One's Own as the Holy of the Fatherland, Inaccessible to Theologies and Historiographical Sciences. The "Highest"45. The Transition From the Second to the Third Strophe. Grounding in the Homely46. Interim Remark Concerning Three Misinterpretations of Hölderlin's Turn to the "Fatherland"47. Learning the Appropriation of One's Own48. What is Their Own for the Germans: "The Clarity of Presentation"49. The Drunkenness of Higher Reflection and Soberness of Presentation in the Word50. "Dark Light": That Which is to be Presented in the Free Use of One's Own51. The Danger of Slumber Among Shadows. "Soulful" Reflection Upon the Holy in the FestivalPart FourThe Dialogue with the Friends as Fitting Preparation for the Festival52. "Dialogue" in the Commonplace Understanding and in Hölderlin's Poetic Word Usage53. The "Opinion" of the "Heart" in the Dialogue: The Holy54. Listening in the Dialogue to Love and Deed, which, as Celebration, Ground the Festival in Advance55. The Endangering of the Poetic Dialogue of Love and Deeds by Chatter56. The Poetic Dialogue as "Remembrance"57. The Question of Where the Friends Are, and the Essence of Future Friendship58. The Friends' Being Shy to Go to the Source59. "Source" and "River." The Wealth of the Origin60. The Initial Appropriation of "Wealth" on the Poets' Voyage Across the Ocean into the Foreign61. The "Year Long" Learning of the Foreign on the Ocean Voyage of a Long Time Without Festival62. The Singular Remembrance of the Locale of the Friends and of the Fitting that is to be Poetized63. The Word Regarding the River that Goes Backwards: The Shy Intimation of the Essence of Commencement and History64. The Passage to the Foreign, "Bold Forgetting" of One's Own, and the Return Home65. The Founding of the Coming Holy in the WordAPPENDIXThe Interpretive Structure for the Said PoemsEditor's EpilogueTranslators' NotesGerman—English GlossaryEnglish—German Glossary

    £35.10

  • Duns Scotuss Doctrine of Categories and Meaning

    Indiana University Press Duns Scotuss Doctrine of Categories and Meaning

    Book SynopsisDuns Scotus's Doctrine of Categories and Meaningis a key text for the origins of Martin Heidegger's concept of facticity. Originally submitted as a postdoctoral thesis in 1915, it focuses on the 13th-century philosopher-theologian John Duns Scotus. Heidegger first analyzes Scotus's doctrine of categories,then offers a meticulous explanation of theGrammatica Speculativa, a work of medieval grammar now known to be authored by the Modist grammarian Thomas of Erfurt. Taken together, these investigations represent an early foray into Heidegger's lifelong philosophical concerns, the question of being in the guise of the problem of categories and the question of language in the guise of the doctrine of meaning.This new and unique translation of one of Heidegger's earliest works offers an important look at his early thinking before the question of being became his central concern and will appeal to readers exploring Heidegger's philosophical development, medieval philosophy, phenomenological iTrade Review"Heidegger's early engagement with medieval philosophy via neo-Kantian logic foreshadows his later explorations of being, truth, and meaning. He concludes by challenging himself to grapple with "historical spirit." Bagchee and Gower's meticulous translation brings this formative phase of Heidegger's thought to English-speaking readers."—Richard Polt, Xavier University"Heidegger's Habilitationsschrift, submitted to the University of Freiburg in 1915, at the age of twenty-six, takes up themes central to scholastic ontology and logic: the categories of reality and the differentiations of meaning. Quite traditional topics, these are not themes that one might suspect would help open the way to the revolutionary work of 1927, Being and Time. And yet: here one sees the phenomenological gifts already at work in the young Heidegger. Here one finds the early formulations of the hermeneutics of facticity and the first hints of the notion of formal indication – one finds the earliest signs of the revolutionary work to come. Ably translated, this text offers insights into key problems of scholasticism as well as into the genesis of the philosophical revolutionary that Heidegger would soon become."—Dennis Schmidt, Western Sydney University"With this careful and scholarly translation of Heidegger's postdoctoral thesis, Bagchee and Gower have provided an indispensible resource for anyone seeking to understand the trajectory of Heidegger's early thinking. A splendid achievement."—William McNeill, DePaul UniversityTable of ContentsTranslator's PrefaceAcknowledgmentsForeword to the First Edition of Frühe Schriften (1972)Duns Scotus's Doctrine of Categories and Meaning ForewordIntroduction: The Necessity of Examining Scholasticism from the Perspective of the History of ProblemsPart I: The Doctrine of CategoriesFirst Chapter: The Unum: Mathematical, Natural, and Metaphysical RealitySecond Chapter: The Verum: Logical and Psychic RealityThird Chapter: Linguistic Form and Linguistic Content: The Domain of MeaningPart II: The Doctrine of MeaningFirst Chapter: Meaning and Meaning Function: Principles of the Doctrine of MeaningSecond Chapter: The Doctrine of the Forms of MeaningsConclusion: The Problem of CategoriesAuthor's NoticeBibliographical ReferencesEditor's AfterwordEnglish-German GlossaryGerman-English GlossaryIndex of NamesSubject Index

    £37.05

  • On Inception

    Indiana University Press On Inception

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Texts such as On Inception are among Heidegger's most difficult, owing in equal parts to the liminal and exacting character of his thinking therein and the experimental vocabulary with which he articulates such thinking. Hanly does a truly admirable job of rendering Heidegger's often abstruse German syntax into elegant English prose, without, however, doing violence to Heidegger's always difficult and sometimes terse manner of expression. Hanly capably threads the needle between fidelity to Heidegger's necessary opacity and a commitment to bringing the German text into comprehensible English."—S. Montgomery Ewegen, author of The Way of the Platonic SocratesTable of ContentsPrefaceI. The Incipience of Inception1. What Does "Inception" Say?2. The Incipience of Inception3. The Remoteness of Inception4. "Inception" and "Event"5. Beyng?6. Beyng? The Event of Inception as the Receding into the Parting7. The Parting8. Inception and Veiling and Event9. Inception and Uprising10. Beyng as Remaining11. The Inexplicability of Beyng12. The Event of Inception and the Location of the Essence of the Human13. Being and the Historically Human14. The Telling of Difference15. How Saying Becomes the Acknowledgment of the Event of Inception16. The Modern Essential Sojourn of Planetarism and Idiocy17. The Guide-words of Beyng18. The Essence of Beyng19. The Incipience of Inception20. The Remaining21. Inception is the Dignity of Beyng22. The Ultimate Step of Thinking23. Inception and Concealment24. "Concealment"25. Inception and Truth26. Beyng and Singularity and Truth27. The First Inception28. Inception29. Event30. Inception and Intimacy31. Beyng32. Inception and the Nothing33. Event and the Nothing34. Inception—Beyng—Beings35. Beyng Is Telling36. The Other Inception37. Inception and Άλήθεια38. The Inceptions39. Inception40. Of Inception41. Of Inception42. "Inception"43. The Inceptive Essence of Beyng44. Inception (Peculiar Property)45. Inception and Advancing-away46. Inception and Truth47. Inception and Truth48. The Inceptions49. Truth and Straying50. Unconcealment (Ἀλήθεια)51. The Inceptions52. The Inceptions53. The Inceptions54. The Inceptions55. The Inceptions56. Beyng as the Other InceptionThe Differentiation and the Difference57. The Differentiation58. The Differentiation59. Differentiation and Inception60. The Differentiation61. The Open That Is Unnamed in the Differentiation62. The Overcoming of Metaphysics is the Abandonment of the Differentiation63. The Differentiation and the "As"The Inception as Receding64. Receding65. Receding and Bestowal66. Inception and Receding67. Why and How Does Receding Belong to Inception?68. Receding and Beings69. The First Inception and the Receding70. Receding and the Other Inception Crossing and Receding71. RecedingII. Inception and Inceptive Thinking the Creative Thinking of Inception72. The Few Must Restore the Inception into the Inceptive73. Inception74. Onto-Historical Thinking75. The Onto-Historical Thinking of Inception76. The Claim of Onto-Historical Thinking77. From Inception78. Outline79. Outline of the Telling of Inception80. From Inception81. From Inception82. From Inception (The Belonging into the Clearing of Beyng)83. From Inception84. The Relation to Being85. From Inception86. Dialogue in the Inception87. Inception88. The Inception and the Distinctive Mark of Western History89. Onto-Historical Thinking90. Inceptive Thinking in the Crossing into the Other Inception91. The More Inceptive Questioning92. The Leap93. The Inceptiveness of Inception94. The Thinking ahead into the Inception95. Claim and Response96. Inception and the SimpleIII. Event and Being ThereA. The Event97. Event and BeingsB. Event and Dis-propriation98. The Beingless and Beings. Dis-propriation99. [Beings] as the BeinglessC. Being-There100. Being-There101. Being-There and Vibration102. Being and the Human103. Being-There104. Being-There105. Being-There106. Being-There107. Being-There108. Being-There and the Human109. The Other Inception110. Divinity in the Other Inception111. Event, Proper Domain, Indigence112. Being-There and Attunement113. Attunements and Beyng114. Attunement115. "Anxiety"116. Beyng—Being-There—the Disposition117. Awe118. The History of the Human119. The Human and Being as "Will"120. The Onto-Historical Essence of DeathD. Inter-venings121. Inter-venings122. The Recollective Thinking ahead into the Inception123. Inceptive Thinking124. Onto-Historical Thinking as Inceptive125. Sheltering Concealment and Being-There. Impulse126. Being and Time—Being-There127. "Analysis" and "Analytic of Dasein"IV. Interpretation and the PoetA. Remarks on Interpreting128. Interpretation129. The Interpreting130. The Interpreting131. Interpretation132. Interpretation133. The "Circle-structure" of Interpreting134. Approach to Interpretation135. Meaningfulness of Poetry and Ambiguity of InterpretationB. The Poet (Hölderlin) in the Other Inception136. Thinking ahead into the Inception137. Whither?138. The Holy and Beyng139. Towards the Interpretation of the Hymns140. Hölderlin141. Poet and Thinker142. Thinking and Poetizing143. The Claim of an InterpretationC. Hölderlin-Interpretation144. Towards the Interpretation of Hölderlin145. The "Interpretation"146. The Interpretation of Hölderlin's Hymns147. The Interpretation as Pledge-saying148. Interpretation Affirming the Saying and the Telling149. Hölderlin the Poet of Poets150. Hölderlin151. Interpretation (the "Circle")V. The History of Beyng152. The History of Beyng153. The History of Beyng154. Being "Is" Inception and thus History155. The History of Beyng156. The Abjection of the AgeHistory and Historiography157. The Fissure of the Incepting of the Inceptions158. The History of Being and "World"—History159. Being and History160. History161. History162. The Essence of History163. History and Historiography164. History and Historiography165. To What Extent "Encounter" Belongs to the Essence of Historical Beings166. History167. The Crossing (History and Inception)168. History Inceptuality and Historicity Decision of the Essence of Truth169. History170. History171. Inception—Advancing-away—Receding—CrossingVI. Being and Time and Inceptive Thinking as the History of Beyng172. Being and Time173. Onto-Historical Thinking and Absolute Metaphysics174. German Idealism and Onto-Historical Thinking175. Being and Time176. "Being and Time" and Inceptive ThinkingEditor's AfterwordGerman-English GlossaryEnglish-German Glossary

    £28.80

  • Introduction to Philosophy

    MH - Indiana University Press Introduction to Philosophy

    Book Synopsis

    £45.00

  • Phenomenological Interpretations of Aristotle

    Indiana University Press Phenomenological Interpretations of Aristotle

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn early articulation of Heidegger's philosophical methodTrade Review"This book is an indispensable resource for the study of Heidegger's thought because it provides a very early articulation of concepts that are central to Heidegger's philosophy, such as care, facticity, nothingness, and temporality." -Robert Metcalf, University of Colorado, Denver

    1 in stock

    £16.14

  • Phenomenological Interpretation of Kants Critique

    Indiana University Press Phenomenological Interpretation of Kants Critique

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAimed at students of Heidegger, Kant, modern philosophy, and contemporary phenomenology, this book develops the relation between philosophy, ontology, and fundamental ontology. It also demonstrates that objectification rests on the productive power of imagination, a process that involves temporality, which is the basic constitution of human being.

    1 in stock

    £29.70

  • Phenomenological Interpretations of Aristotle

    Indiana University Press Phenomenological Interpretations of Aristotle

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisElaborates a phenomenology of factical life. This book introduces a phenomenological interpretation of Aristotle. It contains discussions of phenomenological research, philosophical definition, formal indication, the relationship between philosophy and the sciences, facticity, the surrounding world, and questionability.Trade Review"This book is an indispensable resource for the study of Heidegger's thought because it provides a very early articulation of concepts that are central to Heidegger's philosophy, such as care, facticity, nothingness, and temporality." -Robert Metcalf, University of Colorado, Denver

    1 in stock

    £26.99

  • Indiana University Press Four Seminars

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA crucial work for understanding the full maturity of Heidegger's thoughtTrade ReviewThis highly influential collection of four seminars conducted between 1966 and 1973 was first published in French transcription in 1976, the year Heidegger died. Their influence on French philosophy and thinking during the late 1970s and 1980s cannot be exaggerated, for, at the moment when the work of Derrida, Foucault, Deleuze, and others was first coming to prominence, it now had access to Heidegger's clearest articulations of his later thinking. Much of deconstruction and poststructuralist thought bears the formative imprint of these seminars. Heidegger himself oversaw their German translation (published in 1977 and again in 1986, in a collected edition), from which this long-awaited English translation by Mitchell and Raffoul has been made. Their brilliant translation will prove indispensable for theory and criticism in English. Heidegger breathes new life into the ancient Greek meaning of presencing, which is the keynote of his call for the abandonment of all modern realisms, idealisms, and materialisms and for a return to an experience of consciousness that sees itself as part of phenomenal presencing, rather than as something separate and detached from the world. On Kant, Marx, and the meaning of technology, these seminars contain some of Heidegger's most thoughtful insights and arguments. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers; lower-level undergraduates through faculty. * Choice *Overall Four Seminars is essentially a glimpse into Heidegger's way of working with students. Its pages recount his effortless command of the sweep of the history of Western philosophy from Anaximander to Husserl and Wittgenstein, his modesty about the accomplishments of Being and Time fifty years after writing the book, his conviction about the fundamental philosophical importance of phenomenological method . . . . Genuine teaching, then, is the demonstration of listening and thinking, not the presentation of content.26.1 2005 * Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal *[This] brilliant translation will prove indispensable for theory and criticism in English. . . . On Kant, Marx, and the meaning of technology, these seminars contain some of Heidegger's most thoughtful insights and arguments. . . . Highly recommended. * Choice *Table of ContentsPreliminary Table of Contents: Translators' ForewordSeminar in Le Thor 1966Seminar in Le Thor 1968Seminar in Le Thor 1969Seminar in Zähringen 1973German Translator's Afterword to Vier SeminareMartin Heidegger, "The Provenance of Thinking"Martin Heidegger, "Parmenides..."German Editor's Afterword to Collected Works, volume 15Endnotes on the TranslationGlossary German-English English-German

    1 in stock

    £25.19

  • Basic Concepts of Ancient Philosophy

    Indiana University Press Basic Concepts of Ancient Philosophy

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisPresents a lecture course given by Martin Heidegger in 1926 at the University of Marburg. First published in German as volume 22 of the "Collected Works", this book provides Heidegger's most systematic history of Ancient philosophy beginning with Thales and ending with Aristotle.Trade Review"[A]n excellent resource for students and Continental thinkers... who make use of Heidegger's interpretation of ancient philosophy." -Robert Metcalf, University of Colorado at DenverTable of ContentsTranslator's ForewordPreliminary RemarksPART ONE. General Introduction to Ancient Philosophy Chapter One. Working out of the central concepts and questions of ancient philosophy, with the first book of Aristotle's Metaphysics as guidelineChapter Two. The question of cause and of foundation as a philosophical questionPART TWO. The Most Important Greek Thinkers: Their Questions and Answers Section One. Philosophy up to PlatoChapter One. Milesian philosophy of natureChapter Two. HeraclitusChapter Three. Parmenides and the EleaticsChapter Four. The later philosophy of nature: Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and atomismChapter Five. Sophistry and SocratesSection Two. Plato's philosophyChapter One. Biography, secondary literature, and general characterization of Plato's questioningChapter Two. More concrete determination of the problem of Being in Plato's philosophyChapter Three. Interpretation of the dialogue, Theatetus: the connection between the question of the Idea of science and the question of BeingFirst definitionSecond definitionThird definitionChapter Four. Central concepts of Plato's philosophy in the context of the understanding of Being and the question of BeingSection Three. Aristotle's philosophyChapter One. On the problem of the development and of the adequate reception of Aristotle's philosophyChapter Two. The ontological problem and the idea of philosophical researchChapter Three. The fundamental questioning of the problematic of BeingChapter Four. The problem of motion and the ontological meaning of that problem. Chapter Five. Ontology of life and of DaseinAPPENDICES Supplementary Texts Excerpts from the Mörchen Transcription Bröcker TranscriptionEditor's AfterwordGreek-English Glossary

    2 in stock

    £27.90

  • The Concept of Time

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Concept of Time

    Book SynopsisPresents the reconstructed text of a lecture delivered by Martin Heidegger to the Marburg Theological Society in 1924. This work offers an insight into the developmental years leading up to the publication, in 1927, of his magnum opus Being and Time, itself one of the most influential philosophical works this century.Trade Review"A valuable addition to our growing knowledge about Heidegger's path to Being and Time." Tijdschrift voor FilosofieTable of ContentsTranslator's Preface. The Concept of Time. Notes. Translator's Postscript. Nachwort des Herausgebers. Lexicon.

    £28.45

  • Letters to His Wife

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Letters to His Wife

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis''There is something absolute about the letters between you & me; The letter is a form of communion of the soul-spirit one that is faded & yet unimpeded, complete', wrote Martin Heidegger to his fiancée Elfride Petri shortly before their wedding. In the course of a marriage that lasted almost sixty years Martin and Elfride were often apart, and the letter thus remained a vital means of communication right through to the final years. The letters he sent her are snapshots of the ups and downs, the crises and everyday minutiae from Heidegger's life: their engagement, the building of the Cabin at Todtnauberg, the part he played in the two world wars, the difficulties of his early professional career, their financial problems, his dealings with women, and his constant concern with expounding his ideas. Apart from three letters now in the hands of the German Literature Archive in Marbach, Elfride Heidegger kept all of the countless letters and cards from her husband locked awayTrade Review"The letters reveal Heidegger as a whole in an unprecedented fashion, but also evoke the character and qualities of his wife." The Scientific and Medical Network "Heidegger's letters to his wife are a revelation. They offer privileged access to the innermost reaches of Heidegger's thought. Moreover, here, perhaps for the first time, Heidegger the fallible individual is fully on display. These fascinating letters reveal Heidegger's exalted sense of the world-historical mission of philosophy, as well as his own immodest estimation of his standing. This rich correspondence should be required reading for anyone interested in the vital intersection between biography and the history of ideas." Richard Wolin, City University of New York "Can a philosopher’s life illuminate his thinking? Heidegger is not encouraging, writing of Aristotle: 'He was born, worked, and died.' Yet in these letters to Elfride, his thinking, tribulations and passions bleed together, exploding any such parsimony. They bear intimate witness to everyday life chez Heidegger, and offer a riveting glimpse of an often unequal struggle with his wife over the meaning of marriage, love and truth." David Wood, Vanderbilt UniversityTable of ContentsPreface. Editor’s note. Letters 1915 – 1970. Afterword by Hermann Heidegger. Appendix:. Life of Elfride Heidegger. Life of Martin Heidegger. Heidegger Family Tree. Annotated Index of Names. Index. Acknowledgements

    2 in stock

    £49.50

  • Anthropos Editorial Identidad y diferencia Identität und Differenz

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £15.00

  • Abada Editores Experiencias del pensar 19101976

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisEl presente volumen agrupa un total de 33 escritos de Heidegger que fueron publicados de manera dispersa a lo largo de 66 años de trabajo intelectual. Entre ellos, el lector encontrará el primero y el último de los textos que el filósofo alemán publicó en vida, así como poemas, recuerdos personales, textos sobre literatura, música o pintura y varios escritos emblemáticos del filósofo de Meßkirch, como Por qué permanecemos en la provincia? (1933), Lenguaje y tierra natal (1960), La proveniencia del arte y la determinación del pensar (1967) o La falta de nombres sagrados (1974).

    1 in stock

    £19.00

  • Alianza Editorial Logica Logic La Pregunta Por La Verdad the

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £26.42

  • Alianza Editorial Los conceptos fundamentales de la metafísica

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHeidegger impartió en la Universidad de Friburgo, en el semestre de invierno de 1929/1930, las lecciones que se editan en este volumen. Estos textos son especialmente interesantes en dos sentidos: por una parte contienen un amplio análisis del aburrimiento, cuestión que sólo trata someramente en la lección inaugural pronunciada en la Universidad de Friburgo ?Qué es metafísica??; y, por otra, ofrece un tratamiento igualmente minucioso del organismo y de la vida, una temática que Heidegger sólo menciona en Ser y tiempo. De Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) Alianza Editorial ha publicado también: Conceptos Fundamentales, Ontología, La fenomenología del espíritu de Hegel, Caminos de bosque, Hitos, Lógica, Aclaraciones a la poesía de Hölderlin y Prolegómenos para una historia del concepto de tiempo.

    1 in stock

    £34.15

  • Alianza Editorial Carta sobre el humanismo

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisLa ?Carta sobre el humanismo? fue publicada por primera vez en 1947 a modo de apéndice a un escrito anterior sobre la doctrina platónica de la verdad. Si bien se inscribe en el panorama de una postguerra que, a la vista de las ruinas resultantes de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, se plantea un interrogante generalizado acerca de la responsabilidad de la cultura occidental ?de su ciencia, pero también de su literatura, de su música y, sobre todo, de su filosofía? en la catástrofe ocurrida, este texto de Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), al que no se tardó en atribuir cierto carácter programático, alcanzó rápidamente una gran acogida y despertó un interés que no ha cesado de incrementarse hasta el día de hoy.Versión de Helena Cortés y Arturo Leyte

    1 in stock

    £15.34

  • Alianza Editorial Qué es metafísica seguido de epílogo a Qué es

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisEl presente volumen reúne tres textos de Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) cuyo tema común es la ?pregunta por la metafísica?, preocupación cardinal que recorre la obra del filósofo alemán y sin la cual cabe dudar que se sostuviera su filosofía. Ordenados según un criterio cronológico -como explican en su ?Nota editorial? Arturo Leyte y Helena Cortés, traductores del volumen-, ?Qué es metafísica?? (1929) se presenta seguido de Epílogo a ?Qué es metafísica??, escrito catorce años más tarde (1943), y, finalmente, de Introducción a ?Qué es metafísica?? (1949). Más allá de la anecdótica coincidencia temática de sus títulos, estos tres textos, que guardan entre sí una independencia notable aunque graviten entorno a un eje común, reflejan en la superficie la profundidad de un personal trayecto filosófico.

    1 in stock

    £13.87

  • Herder Editorial Ejercitacin en el Pensamiento Filosfico

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisLa filosofía no se hace ni se aprende estudiando, sino pensando. Para ello Heidegger propone dos frases de Heráclito y de Nietzsche, y enseñando a pensar sobre ellas, hace ver hasta qué punto el pensamiento de estos filósofos está emparentado con la mecánica cuántica: ?Todos los pensadores piensan lo mismo?, afirmará. En este volumen se presentan por vez primera en castellano las lecciones que Heidegger dio a sus alumnos que comenzaban los estudios de filosofía en el invierno de 1941/1942. Ejercitación en el pensamiento filosófico enseña cómo pensar filosóficamente por uno mismo.

    1 in stock

    £18.81

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