Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

A 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 Contents

Contents
Translator's Introduction

The beginning of Western philosophy
Interpretation of Anaximander and Parmenides
Part One
The dictum of Anaximander of Miletus, 6th-5th Century
Introduction
1. The mission and the dictum
Chapter I
The first phase of the interpretation
A. The first section of the statement
2. The theme of the dictum: beings as a whole

B. The second section of the statement
3. Beings in the relation of compliance and noncompliance

C. The third section of the statement
4. Being and time

Chapter II
The second phase of the interpretation
5. The unitary content of the pronouncement on the basis of its central core

Chapter III
The other dictum
6. The sovereign source of beings as the empowering power of appearance

Part Two
Interposed considerations
7. Four objections to the interpretation
8. The negative relation to the beginning
9. Meditation on the "current situation"
10. The grounding utterance of Being
11. The actual asking of the question of Being
12. Review of the linguistic usage
13. The basic question of existence
14. Commentary on our concept of existence
15. The full rendering of the understanding of Being
16. The liberation toward freedom
17. 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 Century
18. Introduction
19. Interpretation of fragment 1. Preparation for the question of Being
20. Interpretation of fragments 4 and 5
21. Interpretation of fragments 6 and 7
22. Interpretation of fragment 8
23. The fragments 9, 12, 13, 10, 11, 14, 16, 19 (in the order of their interpretation)

Conclusion
24. The inceptual question of Being; the law of philosophy

Appendix

Drafts and plans for the lecture course
Editor's afterword

German-English Glossary
English-German Glossary

The Beginning of Western Philosophy

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    A Hardback by Martin Heidegger, Richard Rojcewicz

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      View other formats and editions of The Beginning of Western Philosophy by Martin Heidegger

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 05/02/2015
      ISBN13: 9780253015532, 978-0253015532
      ISBN10: 0253015537

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      A 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 Contents

      Contents
      Translator's Introduction

      The beginning of Western philosophy
      Interpretation of Anaximander and Parmenides
      Part One
      The dictum of Anaximander of Miletus, 6th-5th Century
      Introduction
      1. The mission and the dictum
      Chapter I
      The first phase of the interpretation
      A. The first section of the statement
      2. The theme of the dictum: beings as a whole

      B. The second section of the statement
      3. Beings in the relation of compliance and noncompliance

      C. The third section of the statement
      4. Being and time

      Chapter II
      The second phase of the interpretation
      5. The unitary content of the pronouncement on the basis of its central core

      Chapter III
      The other dictum
      6. The sovereign source of beings as the empowering power of appearance

      Part Two
      Interposed considerations
      7. Four objections to the interpretation
      8. The negative relation to the beginning
      9. Meditation on the "current situation"
      10. The grounding utterance of Being
      11. The actual asking of the question of Being
      12. Review of the linguistic usage
      13. The basic question of existence
      14. Commentary on our concept of existence
      15. The full rendering of the understanding of Being
      16. The liberation toward freedom
      17. 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 Century
      18. Introduction
      19. Interpretation of fragment 1. Preparation for the question of Being
      20. Interpretation of fragments 4 and 5
      21. Interpretation of fragments 6 and 7
      22. Interpretation of fragment 8
      23. The fragments 9, 12, 13, 10, 11, 14, 16, 19 (in the order of their interpretation)

      Conclusion
      24. The inceptual question of Being; the law of philosophy

      Appendix

      Drafts and plans for the lecture course
      Editor's afterword

      German-English Glossary
      English-German Glossary

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