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Guide to Heidegger's Being and Time
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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2001-01-11
- Mått151 x 228 x 23 mm
- Vikt545 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieSUNY series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy
- Antal sidor413
- FörlagState University of New York Press
- ISBN9780791448007
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Born in Budapest in 1910, Magda King was educated there, in Vienna, and at Edinburgh. She contributed papers to The Human Context, to the Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology and conducted seminars on Heidegger at the University of Edinburgh. John Llewelyn is the author of many books including most recently, The HypoCritical Imagination: Between Kant and Levinas.
- Editor's Foreword Author's Foreword Acknowledgments Bibliography and Key to Abbreviations PART ONE. What Is The Question? Introductory Exposition 1. A Formal Statement of the Question2. A Provisional Explanation of "Meaning" (Sinn): The Theme of Being and Time Restated3. Why Has Traditional Ontology Failed to Get to the Root of the Problem of Being?4. The Uniqueness of the Concept of Being: The Problem of Its Unity. Aristotle's "Unity of Analogy"—A Lead into Heidegger's Question5. How Is the New Inquiry into Being to Be Concretely Worked Out? Difficulties Arising from the Nature of the Problem Itself PART TWO. Basic Features and Problems of Being and Time Introductory I. The Being of Da-sein 1. Existence, Everydayness and Da-sein (a) Existence and Care, in Contrast with Reality(b) The Two Basic Ways of Existing: Owned or Authentic and Disowned or Inauthentic Existence. The Undifferentiated Modality of Everydayness(c) The Ontological-Existential Terminology of Being and Time 2. A Discussion of the Meaning of Da-sein II. The Worldishness of World 1. The Fundamental Existential Constitution of Da-sein: Being-in-the-World. Heidegger's Conception of World2. The Theoretical and Practical Ways of Taking Care of Things3. The Ontic Basis of the Ontological Inquiry into World: The Umwelt of Everyday Existence. The Meaning of Umwelt III. The Reality of Beings within the World IV. Being-with-Others and Being-One's-Self 1. The Basic Concept of Being-with2. The Everyday Self and the "They"3. The Publicity of Everydayness (a) Discourse and Language: Everyday Discourse as Idle Talk(b) The Everyday Way of Seeing: Curiosity(c) Ambiguity 4. Falling and Thrownness V. The Basic Mood of Dread (Angst) and the Being of Da-sein as Care 1. The Disclosure of Being through Dread2. The Structure of Da-sein's Being as Care VI. Truth, Being, and Existence: Heidegger's Extential Interpretation of Truth VII. The Concept of Phenomenology VIII. A Preview of the Tasks and Problems of Division Two PART THREE. Division of Being and Time: Da-sein and Temporality Introductory IX. The Articulation, Language, and Method of Division Two 1. The Articulation of Division Two2. The Langauge of Division Two (a) Timeishness(b) The Tenses of "To Be"(c) Heidegger's Tautologies(d) Primordial Time (Ursprungliche Zeit)(e) The "Originality" of an Ontological Interpretation 3. The Method of Division Two X. Da-sein's Possibility of Being-a-Whole and Being-toward-Death 1. Can Da-sein be Experienced as a Whole?2. Experiencing the Death of Others3. Incompleteness, End, and Wholeness4. The Existential Analysis of Death in Contrast with all Other Kinds of Interpretation5. A Preliminary Sketch of the Existential Structure of Death6. Being-Toward-Death and Everydayness7. Everyday Being Toward an End and the Full Existential Concept of Death8. The Existential Structure of an Owned, Authentic Way of Being-Toward-Death XI. Witness to an Owned Existence and Authentic Resolution 1. Conscience as the Call of Care2. Understanding the Call and Owing3. Interpolation: Ground-Being and Nothing4. Owing, Guilt, and Morality: The Authentic Hearing of the Call of Conscience and the Existenial Structure of Owned or Authentic Experience XII. Authentic Ability-to-Be-a-Whole and Temporality as the Meaning of Care 1. Anticipatory Forward-Running Resoluteness as the Authentic Way of Being-a-Whole2. Justification of the Methodical Basis of the Existential Analysis3. Care and Selfhood4. Temporality as the Ontological Meaning of Care5. A Primordial Repetition of the Existential Analysis Arising from the Temporality of Here-Being [Da-sein] XIII. Temporality and Everydayness 1. The Temporality of Disclosedness in General (a) The Temporality of Understanding(b) The Temporality of Attunement(c) The Temporality of Falling(d) The Temporaltiy of Discourse 2. The Temporality of Being-in-the-World and the Problem of the Transcendence of the World (a) The Temporality of Circumspect Taking Care(b) The Temporal Meaning of the Way in Which Circumspect Taking Care Becomes Modified into the Theoretical Discovery of Things Objectively Present in the World(c) The Temporal Problem fo the Transcendence of the World 3. The Temporality of the Roominess Characteristic of Here-Being4. The Temporal Meaning of the Everydayness of Here-Being XIV. Temporality and Historicity 1. The Vulgar Understanding of History and the Occurence of Here-Being2. The Essential Constitution of Historicity3. The Historicity of Here-Being and World History XV. Temporality and Within-Timeness as the Origin of the Vulgar Concept of Time 1. The Incompleteness of the Foregoing Analysis of the Temporality of Here-Being2. The Temporality of Here-Being and the Taking Care of Time3. Time Taken Care of and Within-Timeness4. Within-Timeness and the Genesis of the Vulgar Concept of Time5. The Contrast of the Existential and Ontological Connection of Temporality, Here-Being, and World-Time with Hegel's Interpretation of the Relation between Time and Spirit (a) Hegel's Concept of Time(b) Hegel's Interpretation of the Connection between Time and Spirit XVI. Conclusion: An Attempt to Outline Heidegger's Answer to the Question Asked at the Beginning of Being and Time Notes Glossary of German Expressions Index
"Originally published in the early sixties as one of the first English-language commentaries on Heidegger's Being and Time, Magda King's masterful Guide has now been vastly expanded to cover the whole of Being and Time, its renderings of Heidegger's German terms revised to correspond to Joan Stambaugh's new translation of Being and Time, and its discussions of Heidegger's later texts supplemented with references to his recently published earliest texts before Being and Time. In this expanded and revised edition prepared by John Llewelyn, King's Guide is now the best companion volume to use with Stambaugh's new translation of Being and Time." — John van Buren, author of The Young Heidegger: Rumor of the Hidden King"Of all the studies of Being and Time with which I am familiar, Magda King's is the most direct, the simplest, and the clearest. Remarkably, the simplicity and clarity are achieved without loss of detail or accuracy and without dodging difficult interpretive problems. This makes her book an extraordinarily effective guide to a complex work and thus a virtually perfect companion text for use with Being and Time." — Joseph P. Fell, J. H. Harris Professor Emeritus, Bucknell University