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Philosophical debates, many of them involving the appropriation of modern Western philosophical doctrines, are a crucial element shaping the intellectual and practical behaviour of many thinkers in the Islamicate world and their audiences. One Western philosopher currently receiving a particularly lively reception throughout the Islamicate world is Martin Heidegger. This book explores various aspects of the reception of Heidegger’s thought in the Arabic, Iranian, Turkish, and South Asian intellectual context. Expert Heidegger scholars from across the Islamicate world introduce and discuss approaches to Heidegger’s philosophy that operationalize, recontextualize, or review it critically in the light of Islamic and Islamicate traditions. In doing so, this book imparts knowledge of the history and present situation of Heidegger's reception in the Islamicate world and suggests new pathways for the future of Heidegger Studies – pathways that associate Heidegger’s thought with the challenges presently faced by the Islamicate world.
Kata Moser is Assistant Professor of Oriental and Islamic Studies at Ruhr-University Bochum.Urs Gösken is Lecturer of Arabic Language and Literature at the University of Zurich.Josh Hayes is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Alvernia University.
Preface: Fred DallmayrIntroduction: Urs Gösken, Josh Hayes, Kata Moser Part I: Lines of Reception in the Islamicate World1. Zeynep Direk: The Receptions of Heidegger in Turkey2. Amir Nasri: Heidegger’s Role in the Formation of Art Theory in Contemporary Iran 3. Nader El-Bizri: Levantine Pathways in the Reception of Heidegger 4. Sylvain Camilleri: The Eccentric Reception of Heidegger in Hanafi’s “French Trilogy”Part II: Heidegger and Islamicate Authenticity 5. Sevinç Yasargil: Anxiety, Nothingness and Time: Abdurrahman Badawi’s Existentialist Interpretation of Islamic Mysticism6. Monir Birouk: Taha Abderrahmane: Applying Heidegger as a Heuristic for Conceptual Authenticity 7. Mansooreh Khalilizand: On Nihilism and the Nihilistic Essence of European Metaphysics. Martin Heidegger and Daryush Shayegan Part III: Heidegger and Islamicate Modes of Expression 8. Saliha Shah: The Question Concerning Poetry in Iqbal and Heidegger 9. Ahmad Ali Heydari: Heidegger, Hölde
Heidegger is a radical Abrahamic thinker who spoke a Greek language. When the Muslims lost their own thinking apparatus, they did not find better than Heidegger’s secularized Christian concepts to learn about their new self-experience. Heidegger in the Islamicate World is a high-quality conceptual and spiritual experimentation workshop for the encounter between Abraham's descendants but in a post-secular horizon where colonialism can become a metaphysical parody.