Description

Book Synopsis
Presents 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 Denver

Table of Contents

Translator's Foreword
Preliminary Remarks

PART 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 guideline
Chapter Two. The question of cause and of foundation as a philosophical question

PART TWO. The Most Important Greek Thinkers: Their Questions and Answers

Section One. Philosophy up to Plato
Chapter One. Milesian philosophy of nature
Chapter Two. Heraclitus
Chapter Three. Parmenides and the Eleatics
Chapter Four. The later philosophy of nature: Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and atomism
Chapter Five. Sophistry and Socrates

Section Two. Plato's philosophy
Chapter One. Biography, secondary literature, and general characterization of Plato's questioning
Chapter Two. More concrete determination of the problem of Being in Plato's philosophy
Chapter Three. Interpretation of the dialogue, Theatetus: the connection between the question of the Idea of science and the question of Being
First definition
Second definition
Third definition
Chapter Four. Central concepts of Plato's philosophy in the context of the understanding of Being and the question of Being

Section Three. Aristotle's philosophy
Chapter One. On the problem of the development and of the adequate reception of Aristotle's philosophy
Chapter Two. The ontological problem and the idea of philosophical research
Chapter Three. The fundamental questioning of the problematic of Being
Chapter Four. The problem of motion and the ontological meaning of that problem.
Chapter Five. Ontology of life and of Dasein

APPENDICES
Supplementary Texts
Excerpts from the Mörchen Transcription
Bröcker Transcription
Editor's Afterword
Greek-English Glossary

Basic Concepts of Ancient Philosophy

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    A Hardback by Martin Heidegger, Richard Rojcewicz

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      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 12/11/2007
      ISBN13: 9780253349651, 978-0253349651
      ISBN10: 0253349656

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Presents 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 Denver

      Table of Contents

      Translator's Foreword
      Preliminary Remarks

      PART 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 guideline
      Chapter Two. The question of cause and of foundation as a philosophical question

      PART TWO. The Most Important Greek Thinkers: Their Questions and Answers

      Section One. Philosophy up to Plato
      Chapter One. Milesian philosophy of nature
      Chapter Two. Heraclitus
      Chapter Three. Parmenides and the Eleatics
      Chapter Four. The later philosophy of nature: Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and atomism
      Chapter Five. Sophistry and Socrates

      Section Two. Plato's philosophy
      Chapter One. Biography, secondary literature, and general characterization of Plato's questioning
      Chapter Two. More concrete determination of the problem of Being in Plato's philosophy
      Chapter Three. Interpretation of the dialogue, Theatetus: the connection between the question of the Idea of science and the question of Being
      First definition
      Second definition
      Third definition
      Chapter Four. Central concepts of Plato's philosophy in the context of the understanding of Being and the question of Being

      Section Three. Aristotle's philosophy
      Chapter One. On the problem of the development and of the adequate reception of Aristotle's philosophy
      Chapter Two. The ontological problem and the idea of philosophical research
      Chapter Three. The fundamental questioning of the problematic of Being
      Chapter Four. The problem of motion and the ontological meaning of that problem.
      Chapter Five. Ontology of life and of Dasein

      APPENDICES
      Supplementary Texts
      Excerpts from the Mörchen Transcription
      Bröcker Transcription
      Editor's Afterword
      Greek-English Glossary

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