Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

Haase and Sinclair render the German into a readable and fluent English. They make potentially clunky and jargon laden passages from the original seem natural, and also do a good job of dealing with the specific difficulties thrown up by this text. In particular, they confront well the problem of distinguishing between Historie, the study of the past, and Geschichte, which is the past in general, as it underpins reality.

* Phenomenological Reviews *

Table of Contents

Translators' Introduction
A. Preliminary Remarks
1. Remarks Preliminary to the Exercises
2. Title
3. The Appearance of our Endeavours

B. Section I. Structure. Preparation and Preview of the Guiding Question.
Historiology—Life
4. Historiology—The Historical
On the Unhistorical/Supra-historical and the Relation to Both
5. Section I. 1
6. Section I. 2
7. Section I
8. Comparing
9. The Determination of the Essence of the Human Being on the Basis of Animality
and the Dividing Line between Animal and Human Being
10. Nietzsche's Procedure. On the Determination of the Historical
from the Perspective of Forgetting and Remembering
11. 'Forgetting'—'Remembering'. The Question of 'Historiology' as the
Question of the 'Human Being'. The Course of our Inquiry. One Path among Others.
12. Questions Relating to Section I
13. Forgetting
14. Nietzsche on Forgetting
15. 'Forgetting' and 'Remembering'
16. Historiology and 'the' Human Being
17. 'The Human Being'. 'Culture'. The 'People' and 'Genius'
18. Culture—Non-Culture, Barbarism
19. Human Being and Culture and the People
20. Nietzsche's Concept of 'Culture'
21. The Formally General Notion of 'Culture'. 'Culture' and 'Art'
22. 'The' Human Being and a Culture—a 'People'
23. 'Art' (and Culture)
24. Genius in Schopenhauer
25. The People and Great Individuals
26. Great Individuals as the Goal of 'Culture', of the People, of Humanity
27. 'Worldview' and Philosophy

C. Section II. The Three Modes of Historiology 1. Monumental Historiology
28. The Question of the Essence of 'the Historical',
i.e. of the Essence of Historiology
29. Section II. Structure (7 Paragraphs)

D. Section III
30. The Essence of Antiquarian Historiology
31. Critical Historiology

E. Nietzsche's Three Modes of Historiology and the Question of Historical Truth
32. 'Life'
33. 'Life'. Advocates, Defamers of Life
34. Historiology and Worldview
35. How is the Historical Determined?
36. The Belonging Together of the three Modes of Historiology and Historical Truth
37. The Three Modes of Historiology as Modes of the Remembering Relation to the Past
38. Section II

F. The Human Being. Historiology and History. Temporality
39. Historiology—the Human Being—History (Temporality)
40. The Historical and the Unhistorical

G. 'Historiology'. Historiology and History. Historiology and the Unhistorical
41. 'The Unhistorical'
42. The Un-historical
43. The Un-historical
44. History and Historiology
45. Nietzsche as 'Historian'
46. Historiology and History
47. 'Historiology'
48. History and Historiology

H. Section IV
49. On Section IV ff., Hints
50. Section IV
51. Section IV (Paragraphs 1-6)

I. Section V
52. Section V
53. Section V, Divided into Five Parts
54. Oversaturation with Historiology and with Knowledge Generally

J. Concerning Section V and VI: Truth. 'Justice'. 'Objectivity'. Horizon.
55. Life—'Horizon'
56. Objectivity and 'Horizon'
57. Justice
58. Justice—Truth
59. Life—and Horizon
60. Beings as a Whole—the Human Being
61. 'Truth' and the 'True'
62. The True and Truth
63. Truth and the Human Being
64. Will (Drive) to 'Truth'
65. Nietzsche on the 'Will to Truth'

K. On Sections V and VI. Historiology and Science (Truth). (cf. J. Truth. 'Justice'. 'Objectivity'. Horizon)
66. The Human Being—The Gods
67. Why the Primacy of 'Science' in Historiology?
68. 'Positivism'
69. Historiology
70. Historiology and Science
71. The Impact of Historiology on the Past
72. Truth
73. Historiology as Science
74. 'Historiology' and 'Perspective' and 'Objectivity'

L. Section VI (Justice and Truth)
75. Section VI
76. Section VI (Paras. 1-7)
77. 'Objectivity' and 'Justice'
78. On the Structure of Section VI as a Whole
79. Nietzsche's Question of a 'Higher Justice'
80. Morality and Metaphysics
81. Justice—Truth—Objectivity—Life
82. Justice as 'Virtue'
83. Justice—Truth
84. Truth and Art (Cognition)
85. On Nietzsche's Treatise "On Truth and Lie in an Extra-Moral Sense"
86. Truth and 'Intellect'—Justice
87. Truth and 'Intellect'
88. Nietzsche's Conception of Truth
(Determined from the Ground Up by Western Metaphysics)
89. Justice and Truth
90. Truth, and Science Conditioned by Worldview
91. Truth and Science
92. Historiology Science Truth—Justice

M. Nietzsche's Metaphysics
93. Nietzsche's Metaphysics
94. 'Life' in the Two Senses of World and Human Being

N. 'Life'
95. Nietzsche's Projection of Beings as a Whole
and of the Human Being as 'Life'
96. Disposition
97. Recapitulation According to the Basic Questions
98. Concluding Remark
99. Nietzsche's Early Characterisation of his own Thinking
as 'Inversion of Platonism'
100. 'Life' (ego vivo)
101. The Philosophical Concept
102. On the Critical Meditation
103. Decisive Questioning
104. 'Life'

O. The Question of the Human Being: 'Language'. 'Happiness'. Language (cf. 15, 'Forgetting' and 'Remembering')
105. Language as Use and Using-Up of Words
106. Word and Meaning
107. 'Happiness' and Da-Sein
108. 'Happiness'

P. The Fundamental Stance of the Second Untimely Meditation
109. The Guiding Demand of the Meditation
110. Guiding Stance
111. Concept Formation in Philosophy and the Sciences
112. 'Life'
113. 'Life'
114. 'Life'
115. Nietzsche's Fundamental Experience of 'life' and Opposition to 'Darwinism'
116. Life
117. 'Life'
118. 'Life'
119. 'Life'
120. 'Life'
121. 'Life'
122. Life and 'adaptation'
123. Life—Health and Truth
124. Life as 'Dasein'
125. 'Life' and 'Death'

Q. Animality and Life. Animal—. The 'Living Body'. cf. Lectures of Winter Semester 1929/30
126. Milieu and Environment (World)
127. Soul—Living Body—Body
128. Embodying
129. The Animal has Memory
130. Animal (Questions)
131. Delimitation of the Essence of 'Life' (Animality)
132. Animality

R. The Differentiation of Human Being and Animal
133. The Un-historical and the Historical
134. The Unhistorical—(of the Human Being)
135. Animal and Human Being

S. 'Privation'
136. What Happens to us as 'Privation'
137. 'Privation'—Inter-ruption

T. Structure and Composition of the Second Untimely Meditation
138. On the Advantages and Disadvantages of History for Life

Addenda
I. Seminar Reports
II. Summary by Hermann Heidegger
III. Editorial Postscript

Interpretation of Nietzsches Second Untimely

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A Hardback by Martin Heidegger, Ullrich Haase, Mark Sinclair

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    View other formats and editions of Interpretation of Nietzsches Second Untimely by Martin Heidegger

    Publisher: Indiana University Press
    Publication Date: 12/09/2016
    ISBN13: 9780253022660, 978-0253022660
    ISBN10: 0253022665

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review

    Haase and Sinclair render the German into a readable and fluent English. They make potentially clunky and jargon laden passages from the original seem natural, and also do a good job of dealing with the specific difficulties thrown up by this text. In particular, they confront well the problem of distinguishing between Historie, the study of the past, and Geschichte, which is the past in general, as it underpins reality.

    * Phenomenological Reviews *

    Table of Contents

    Translators' Introduction
    A. Preliminary Remarks
    1. Remarks Preliminary to the Exercises
    2. Title
    3. The Appearance of our Endeavours

    B. Section I. Structure. Preparation and Preview of the Guiding Question.
    Historiology—Life
    4. Historiology—The Historical
    On the Unhistorical/Supra-historical and the Relation to Both
    5. Section I. 1
    6. Section I. 2
    7. Section I
    8. Comparing
    9. The Determination of the Essence of the Human Being on the Basis of Animality
    and the Dividing Line between Animal and Human Being
    10. Nietzsche's Procedure. On the Determination of the Historical
    from the Perspective of Forgetting and Remembering
    11. 'Forgetting'—'Remembering'. The Question of 'Historiology' as the
    Question of the 'Human Being'. The Course of our Inquiry. One Path among Others.
    12. Questions Relating to Section I
    13. Forgetting
    14. Nietzsche on Forgetting
    15. 'Forgetting' and 'Remembering'
    16. Historiology and 'the' Human Being
    17. 'The Human Being'. 'Culture'. The 'People' and 'Genius'
    18. Culture—Non-Culture, Barbarism
    19. Human Being and Culture and the People
    20. Nietzsche's Concept of 'Culture'
    21. The Formally General Notion of 'Culture'. 'Culture' and 'Art'
    22. 'The' Human Being and a Culture—a 'People'
    23. 'Art' (and Culture)
    24. Genius in Schopenhauer
    25. The People and Great Individuals
    26. Great Individuals as the Goal of 'Culture', of the People, of Humanity
    27. 'Worldview' and Philosophy

    C. Section II. The Three Modes of Historiology 1. Monumental Historiology
    28. The Question of the Essence of 'the Historical',
    i.e. of the Essence of Historiology
    29. Section II. Structure (7 Paragraphs)

    D. Section III
    30. The Essence of Antiquarian Historiology
    31. Critical Historiology

    E. Nietzsche's Three Modes of Historiology and the Question of Historical Truth
    32. 'Life'
    33. 'Life'. Advocates, Defamers of Life
    34. Historiology and Worldview
    35. How is the Historical Determined?
    36. The Belonging Together of the three Modes of Historiology and Historical Truth
    37. The Three Modes of Historiology as Modes of the Remembering Relation to the Past
    38. Section II

    F. The Human Being. Historiology and History. Temporality
    39. Historiology—the Human Being—History (Temporality)
    40. The Historical and the Unhistorical

    G. 'Historiology'. Historiology and History. Historiology and the Unhistorical
    41. 'The Unhistorical'
    42. The Un-historical
    43. The Un-historical
    44. History and Historiology
    45. Nietzsche as 'Historian'
    46. Historiology and History
    47. 'Historiology'
    48. History and Historiology

    H. Section IV
    49. On Section IV ff., Hints
    50. Section IV
    51. Section IV (Paragraphs 1-6)

    I. Section V
    52. Section V
    53. Section V, Divided into Five Parts
    54. Oversaturation with Historiology and with Knowledge Generally

    J. Concerning Section V and VI: Truth. 'Justice'. 'Objectivity'. Horizon.
    55. Life—'Horizon'
    56. Objectivity and 'Horizon'
    57. Justice
    58. Justice—Truth
    59. Life—and Horizon
    60. Beings as a Whole—the Human Being
    61. 'Truth' and the 'True'
    62. The True and Truth
    63. Truth and the Human Being
    64. Will (Drive) to 'Truth'
    65. Nietzsche on the 'Will to Truth'

    K. On Sections V and VI. Historiology and Science (Truth). (cf. J. Truth. 'Justice'. 'Objectivity'. Horizon)
    66. The Human Being—The Gods
    67. Why the Primacy of 'Science' in Historiology?
    68. 'Positivism'
    69. Historiology
    70. Historiology and Science
    71. The Impact of Historiology on the Past
    72. Truth
    73. Historiology as Science
    74. 'Historiology' and 'Perspective' and 'Objectivity'

    L. Section VI (Justice and Truth)
    75. Section VI
    76. Section VI (Paras. 1-7)
    77. 'Objectivity' and 'Justice'
    78. On the Structure of Section VI as a Whole
    79. Nietzsche's Question of a 'Higher Justice'
    80. Morality and Metaphysics
    81. Justice—Truth—Objectivity—Life
    82. Justice as 'Virtue'
    83. Justice—Truth
    84. Truth and Art (Cognition)
    85. On Nietzsche's Treatise "On Truth and Lie in an Extra-Moral Sense"
    86. Truth and 'Intellect'—Justice
    87. Truth and 'Intellect'
    88. Nietzsche's Conception of Truth
    (Determined from the Ground Up by Western Metaphysics)
    89. Justice and Truth
    90. Truth, and Science Conditioned by Worldview
    91. Truth and Science
    92. Historiology Science Truth—Justice

    M. Nietzsche's Metaphysics
    93. Nietzsche's Metaphysics
    94. 'Life' in the Two Senses of World and Human Being

    N. 'Life'
    95. Nietzsche's Projection of Beings as a Whole
    and of the Human Being as 'Life'
    96. Disposition
    97. Recapitulation According to the Basic Questions
    98. Concluding Remark
    99. Nietzsche's Early Characterisation of his own Thinking
    as 'Inversion of Platonism'
    100. 'Life' (ego vivo)
    101. The Philosophical Concept
    102. On the Critical Meditation
    103. Decisive Questioning
    104. 'Life'

    O. The Question of the Human Being: 'Language'. 'Happiness'. Language (cf. 15, 'Forgetting' and 'Remembering')
    105. Language as Use and Using-Up of Words
    106. Word and Meaning
    107. 'Happiness' and Da-Sein
    108. 'Happiness'

    P. The Fundamental Stance of the Second Untimely Meditation
    109. The Guiding Demand of the Meditation
    110. Guiding Stance
    111. Concept Formation in Philosophy and the Sciences
    112. 'Life'
    113. 'Life'
    114. 'Life'
    115. Nietzsche's Fundamental Experience of 'life' and Opposition to 'Darwinism'
    116. Life
    117. 'Life'
    118. 'Life'
    119. 'Life'
    120. 'Life'
    121. 'Life'
    122. Life and 'adaptation'
    123. Life—Health and Truth
    124. Life as 'Dasein'
    125. 'Life' and 'Death'

    Q. Animality and Life. Animal—. The 'Living Body'. cf. Lectures of Winter Semester 1929/30
    126. Milieu and Environment (World)
    127. Soul—Living Body—Body
    128. Embodying
    129. The Animal has Memory
    130. Animal (Questions)
    131. Delimitation of the Essence of 'Life' (Animality)
    132. Animality

    R. The Differentiation of Human Being and Animal
    133. The Un-historical and the Historical
    134. The Unhistorical—(of the Human Being)
    135. Animal and Human Being

    S. 'Privation'
    136. What Happens to us as 'Privation'
    137. 'Privation'—Inter-ruption

    T. Structure and Composition of the Second Untimely Meditation
    138. On the Advantages and Disadvantages of History for Life

    Addenda
    I. Seminar Reports
    II. Summary by Hermann Heidegger
    III. Editorial Postscript

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