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Heidegger and Plato: Toward Dialogue: Topics In Historical Philosophy

Editat de Catalin Partenie, Tom Rockmore
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 aug 2005
For Martin Heidegger the "fall" of philosophy into metaphysics begins with Plato. Thus, the relationship between the two philosophers is crucial to an understanding of Heidegger--and, perhaps, even to the whole plausibility of postmodern critiques of metaphysics. It is also, as the essays in this volume attest, highly complex, and possibly founded on a questionable understanding of Plato.

As editors Catalin Partenie and Tom Rockmore remark, a simple way to describe Heidegger's reading of Plato might be to say that what began as an attempt to appropriate Plato (and through him a large portion of Western philosophy) finally ended in an estrangement from both Plato and Western philosophy. The authors of this volume consider Heidegger's thought in relation to Plato before and after the "Kehre" or turn. In doing so, they take up various central issues in Heidegger's Being and Time (1927) and thereafter, and the questions of hermeneutics, truth, and language. The result is a subtle and multifaceted reinterpretation of Heidegger's position in the tradition of philosophy, and of Plato's role in determining that position.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780810122321
ISBN-10: 0810122324
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Northwestern University Press
Seria Topics In Historical Philosophy


Notă biografică

Catalin Partenie is a fellow in the Department of Philosophy, University of Quebec at Montreal. He is editor of Plato: Selected Myths (Oxford, 2004).

Tom Rockmore is professor of philosophy at Duquesne University and the author of many books, most recently Marx after Marxism (Blackwell, 2002). He is also co-editor with Daniel Breazeale of New Essays on Fichte's Later Jena Wissenschaftslehre (Northwestern, 2002).

Cuprins

Introduction
1.On the Purported Platonism of Heidegger's Rectoral Address, by Theodore Kisiel
2.Plato's Legacy in Heidegger's Two Readings of Antigone, by Jacques Taminiaux
3.Imprint: Heidegger's Interpretation of Platonic Dialectic in the Sophist Lectures (1924-25), by Catalin Partenie
4.Truth and Untruth in Plato and Heidegger, by Michael Inwood
5.Heidegger and the Platonic Notion of Truth, by Enrico Berti
6.Amicus Plato magis amica veritas. Reading Heidegger in Plato's Cave, by Maria del Carmen Paredes
7.Heidegger on Truth and Being, by Joseph Margolis
8.With Plato into the Kairos and the Kehre: On Heidegger's Different Interpretations of Plato, by Johannes Fritsche
9.Remarks on Heidegger's Plato, by Stanley Rosen
10.Heidegger's Use of Plato and the History of Philosophy, by Tom Rockmore

Descriere

For Martin Heidegger the "fall" of philosophy into metaphysics begins with Plato. Thus, the relationship between the two philosophers is crucial to an understanding of Heidegger--and, perhaps, even to the whole plausibility of postmodern critiques of metaphysics. It is also, as the essays in this volume attest, highly complex, and possibly founded on a questionable understanding of Plato.