en
Книги
Jeff Collins

Introducing Heidegger

Martin Heidegger — philosophy's 'hidden king', or leading exponent of a dangerously misguided secular mysticism. Heidegger has been acclaimed as the most powerfully original philosopher of the twentieth century. Profoundly influential on deconstruction, existentialism and phenomenology, he stands behind all major strands of post-structuralist and postmodern thought. Heidegger announced the end of philosophy and of humanism, and was a committed Nazi and vocal supporter of Hitler's National Socialism. Was Heidegger offering a deeply conservative mythology or a crucial deconstruction of philosophy as we have known it? “Introducing Heidegger” provides an accessible introduction to his notoriously abstruse thinking, mapping out its historical contexts and exploring its resonances in ecology, theology, art, architecture, literature and other fields. The book opens up an encounter with a kind of thinking whose outlines might still not yet be clear, and whose forms might still surprise us.
304 печатни страници
Притежател на авторското право
Bookwire
Оригинална публикация
2015
Година на публикуване
2015
Издател
Icon Books
художник
Howard Selina
Вече чели ли сте я? Какво мислите за нея?
👍👎

Цитати

  • Elena Akaevaцитирапреди 3 години
    And a darker hint is his known admiration for the totalitarian social doctrines of the novelist Ernst Jünger (b. 1895), an acquaintance and correspondent.
  • Elena Akaevaцитирапреди 3 години
    But his later texts carry some hints – a sense of fundamental crisis, of anarchistic individualism as the only way that humans can transcend the situations into which they are thrown.
  • Elena Akaevaцитирапреди 3 години
    René Descartes (1596–1650) had proposed a distinction between SUBJECT and OBJECT: the “knowing subject” was identified with the conscious, rational mind – the Ego – whose own processes of reasoning offered the assured knowledge of the “objects” of the world, “out there” beyond it.

На лавиците

fb2epub
Плъзнете и пуснете файловете си (не повече от 5 наведнъж)