Ponderings XII–XV
Black Notebooks 1939–1941
Martin Heidegger author Richard Rojcewicz translator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Indiana University Press
Published:7th Aug '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Ponderings XII–XV is third in a series of four "Black Notebooks" which Martin Heidegger composed in the early years of World War II. As always with Heidegger, the thoughts expressed here are not superficial reflections on current events, but instead penetrate deeply into them in order to contemplate their historical importance. Throughout his ponderings, Heidegger meditates on the call for an antidote to the rampant technological attitude which views all things with a dismissive consumer mentality. Although this volume caused quite a scandal when originally published in German due to references to World-Judaism, English readers with access to the full text can now judge for themselves what Heidegger means in his use of that term. In style, this notebook is less aphoristic and more sustained than the previous ones, but remains probing, challenging, and fascinating.
Essential.
* Choice *For readers wishing to supplement their understanding of Heidegger during this prolific and difficult period of his thinking, or those wishing to find real-world articulations of his developing reflections on the essence of machination and technology, this volume will provide unique, often provocative, on occasion troubling, yet philosophically relevant insights into a challenging thinker's writing in and about challenging times.
* Graduate Faculty Philosophy JournISBN: 9780253029317
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
238 pages