"Finitude is clearly a central notion in Heidegger's thought, but its meaning has never been elucidated in the context of his entire work. Stambaugh tackles this difficult issue, and she does it with insight and elegance." — Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame<br /><br />"This book shows great insight into the main thrust of Heidegger's complex body of work, provides many clarifying examples, offers helpful parallels with the thought of other philosophers. And, perhaps most important of all, Stambaugh shows that her topic transcends narrow scholarly concerns, addressing the age-old and perennially vital question of the nature and limits of human knowledge and power.<br /><br />"The author has a first-class reputation as a translator of several of Heidegger's important works, and is the author of two significant studies of Nietzsche's philosophy. She had numerous conversations with Heidegger during the last ten years of his life, in the course of which she was able to obtain detailed help from him concerning difficult aspects of his thinking and problems in translating key terms in this thinking into English. In this book, she is able to draw on this background in interpreting several of Heidegger's later and posthumous publications, focusing on an absolutely central, and very difficult, notion (the finitude of being) in Heidegger's thought. The book incorporates the first scholarly study of one of the most important of Heidegger's works, the long-awaited and posthumously published (1989) Beiträge zur Philosophie." — Joseph P. Fell, Bucknell University

1. The Problem 2. Concealment as Preservation 3. Concealing as Strife with Unconcealing 4. Concealing as Distortion 5. Concealment as Process: Nihilism as the History of Being 6. Framing 7. The Open, the Opening 8. The Open in Heidegger's Conception 9. Appropriation 10. Return to the Problem 11. Schelling's Treatise on Human Freedom 12. Appropriation and Concealment: Concealment as Process and as Structure 13. The Fourfold 14. Nature 15. Mortals and the Godlike Ones 16. The Pure Draft 17. The In-finite Relation (Verhaltnis) 18. The Mirror-Play of the Fourfold 19. Beitrage 20. Conclusion Epilogue Notes Index
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"Finitude is clearly a central notion in Heidegger's thought, but its meaning has never been elucidated in the context of his entire work. Stambaugh tackles this difficult issue, and she does it with insight and elegance." — Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame"This book shows great insight into the main thrust of Heidegger's complex body of work, provides many clarifying examples, offers helpful parallels with the thought of other philosophers. And, perhaps most important of all, Stambaugh shows that her topic transcends narrow scholarly concerns, addressing the age-old and perennially vital question of the nature and limits of human knowledge and power."The author has a first-class reputation as a translator of several of Heidegger's important works, and is the author of two significant studies of Nietzsche's philosophy. She had numerous conversations with Heidegger during the last ten years of his life, in the course of which she was able to obtain detailed help from him concerning difficult aspects of his thinking and problems in translating key terms in this thinking into English. In this book, she is able to draw on this background in interpreting several of Heidegger's later and posthumous publications, focusing on an absolutely central, and very difficult, notion (the finitude of being) in Heidegger's thought. The book incorporates the first scholarly study of one of the most important of Heidegger's works, the long-awaited and posthumously published (1989) Beiträge zur Philosophie." — Joseph P. Fell, Bucknell University
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780791411063
Publisert
1992-07-01
Utgiver
Vendor
State University of New York Press
Vekt
299 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
200

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Joan Stambaugh is Professor of Philosophy at Hunter College of City University of New York and The Graduate Center. She is the author of The Real is Not the Rational, also published by SUNY Press.