In this Book

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The number of open and controversial questions in contemporary Heidegger research continues to be a source of scholarly dialogue. There are important questions that concern the development, as it were, of his thought and the diff­erences and similarities between his early main work Being and Time and his later so-called being-historical thought, the thinking of the event, or appropriation, of Being. There are questions that focus on his relation to important figures in the history of ideas such as the pre-Socratics, Plato, Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, Descartes, Leibniz, Kant, the German idealists, and Nietzsche. Other questions focus on his biography, on his rectorate and on his relation to politics in general and to National Socialism in particular or on his influence on subsequent philosophers.

The contributions to this volume, written by leading scholars in the field of Heidegger research, address many of these questions in close readings of Heidegger’s texts and thus provide sound orientation in the field of contemporary Heidegger research. They show how the di­fferent trajectories of Heidegger’s thought—his early interest in the meaning of Being and in Dasein, his discussion of, and involvement with, politics, his understanding of art, poetry, and technology, his concept of truth and the idea of a history of Being—all converge at one point: the question of Being. It thus becomes clear that, all di­fferences notwithstanding, Heidegger followed one very consistent path of thinking.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Half Title, Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Abbreviations
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Introduction
  2. Holger Zaborowski
  3. pp. 1-7
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  1. 1. Rethinking Difference
  2. Daniel Dahlstrom
  3. pp. 8-25
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  1. 2. Reaffirming Heidegger’s “The Truth of Being”
  2. Richard Capobianco
  3. pp. 26-48
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  1. 3. Heidegger on Aristotle: dunamis as Force and Drive
  2. Rudolf Bernet
  3. pp. 49-70
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  1. 4. Tracing technē: Heidegger, Aristotle, and the Legacy of Philosophy
  2. William McNeill
  3. pp. 71-89
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  1. 5. Heidegger’s Non-Idealistic Reading of Kant: A Kehre about Judgment
  2. Rudolf A. Makkreel
  3. pp. 90-105
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  1. 6. Drawing the Line: Political Thought in Heidegger’s Lecture Courses and Seminars of 1933–35
  2. Richard Polt
  3. pp. 106-142
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  1. 7. Political Philosophy and the Ontological Question: Preliminary Remarks on Heidegger and Strauss
  2. Richard Velkley
  3. pp. 143-164
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  1. 8. Technology, Truth, and Thinking: Martin Heidegger’s Reading of Ernst Jünger’s The Worker
  2. Holger Zaborowski
  3. pp. 165-183
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  1. 9. How Heidegger Resolved the Tension between Technological Globalization and Indigenous Localization: A Twenty-First-Century Retrieval
  2. Theodore Kisiel
  3. pp. 184-206
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  1. 10. Heidegger’s Poetic Measure: An Ethics of Haunting
  2. Charles Bambach
  3. pp. 207-224
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  1. Selected Bibliography
  2. pp. 225-232
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. 233-234
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  1. Index of Names
  2. pp. 235-236
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  1. Index of Subjects
  2. pp. 237-240
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