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Basic Concepts Martin Heidegger

Basic Concepts By Martin Heidegger

Basic Concepts by Martin Heidegger


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Summary

Concise introduction to Heidegger's later thought.

Basic Concepts Summary

Basic Concepts by Martin Heidegger

Basic Concepts, one of the first texts to appear in English from the critical later period of Martin Heidegger's thought, strikes out in new directions. First published in German in 1981 as Grundbegriffe (volume 51 of Martin Heidegger's Collected Works), it is the text of a lecture course that Heidegger gave at Freiburg in the winter semester of 1941 during the phase of his thinking known as the turning. In this translation, Heidegger shifted his attention from the problem of the meaning of being to the question of the truth of being. In this lucid translation by Gary E. Aylesworth, Basic Concepts provides a concise introduction to Heidegger's later thought.

Basic Concepts Reviews

This translation . . . enlarges our historical view of the probing advances in Heidegger's thought.

* International Studies in Philosophy *

Heidegger's method is unmistakable in these lectures. . . . This is thinking that is alive, always green.

* Review of Metaphysics *

This translation is an excellent and accessible introduction to the later Heidegger. Published posthumously in 1981 as Grundbegriffe, this 1941 lecture series is an important marker in Heidegger's thinking and gives us access to his respelling out of the question of being and time. Here he sets forth eight guidewords that seem to be irresolvably contradictory assertions about being. The fact that being eludes modern reflection leads Heidegger to return to the beginnings of Western philosophical thought in search of the fateful decision about how being was to be thought-and by extension, how human being was to be defined. He asks, What if all previous answers to the questions of who we are were merely the repeated application of a [fatefully wrong] answer given long ago? While Heidegger spells out more fully his critique of humanist definitions of man in Letter on Humanism (1947), the present text shows us how his view there arises out of the quest for the meaning of being in the face of our modern forgetfulness of the ontological difference. In the second part of this work, Heidegger turns to two fragments from Anaximander, which, taken together in his interpretation, articulate at the very dawn of Western philosophy an initial saying of being and time together as timely emergence. Aylesworth's well-translated edition is essential for undergraduate libraries, recommended also for general readers, graduate students, faculty.June 1994

-- R. E. Palmer * MacMurray *

About Martin Heidegger

Gary E. Aylesworth teaches philosophy at Eastern Illinois University.

Table of Contents

Translator's Foreword
Introduction: The Internal Connection between Ground-Being-Inception
1. Elucidation of the title of the lecture Basic Concepts
Recapitulation
1. Our understnading of basic concepts and our relation to them as an anticipatory knowing
2. The decay of knowing in the present age: The decision in favor of the useful over what we can do without
3. The inception as a decision about what is essential in Western history (in modern times: unconditional will and technology)
4. Practicing the relation to what is thought-worthy by considering the ground
5. The essential admittance of historical man into the inception, into the essence of ground
Part One: Considering the Saying. The Differnce between Beings and Being
First Division: Discussion of the Is, of Beings as a Whole
2. Beings as a whole are actual, possible, necessary
3. Nonconsideration of the essential distinction between being and beings
4. The nondiscoverability of the is
5. The unquestioned character of the is in its grammatical determination-emptiness and richness of meaning
6. The solution of healthy common sense: Acting and effecting amoung beings instead of empty thinking about being (workers and soldiers)
7. Renouncing being-dealing with beings
Recapitulation
1. Consideration of beings as whole presupposes the essential inclusion of man in the difference betwen being and beings
2. Wealth and poverty of meanin in the is
3. Equating dealing with the actual with considering begins as a whole
4. The unthought residence of man in the distinction between being and beings
Second Division: Guidewords for Reflection upon Being
8. Being is the emptiest and at the same time a surplus
9. Being is the most common and at the same time unique
10. Being is the most intelligible and at the same time concealment
11. Being is the most worn-out and at the smae time the origin
12. Being is the most reliable and at the same time the non-ground
13. Being is the most said and at the same time a keeping silent
14. Being is the most forgotten and at the same time remembrance
15. Being is the most constraining and at the same time liberation
16. Unifying reflection upon being in the sequence of quidewords
Recapitulation
Guidewords about Being
1. Being is empty as an abstract concept and at the same time a surplus
2. Being is the most common of all and at the same time uniqueness (The sameness of being and nothing)
3. The meaning of the quidewords: Instructions for reflection upon the difference between being and beings
Third Division: Being and Man
17. The ambivalence of being and the essence of man: What casts itself toward us and is cast away
18. The historicality of being and the historically esstential abode of man
19. Remembrance into the first inception of Western thinking is reflection upon being, is grasping the ground
Recapitulation
1. The discordant essence in the relation of man to being: The casting-toward and casting-away of being
2. Remembrance into the first inception is placement into still presencing being, is grasping it as the ground
Part Two: The Incipient Saying of Being in the Fragment of Anaximander
20. The conflicting intentions of philological tradition and philosophical translation
21. Nietzsche's and Diels's renderings of the fragment as the standard for interpretations current today
Recapitulation
The remembering return into the inception of Western thinking-listening to the fragment of Anaximander
22. Reflection upon the incipient saying of being in the fragment of Anaximander
23. Excursus: Insight into the with the help of another word from Anaximander
24. The second sentence thinks being in correspondence with its essence as presencing, abiding, time
25. The relation of both sentences to one another: The fragment as the incipient saying of being
Editor's Epilogue
Glossary

Additional information

NLS9780253212153
9780253212153
0253212154
Basic Concepts by Martin Heidegger
New
Paperback
Indiana University Press
19980722
128
N/A
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