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Paperback Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Heidegger and Being and Time Book

ISBN: 0415100933

ISBN13: 9780415100939

Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Heidegger and Being and Time

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Book Overview

The Routledge Guidebook to Heidegger's Being and Time examines the work of one of the most controversial thinkers of the twentieth century. Heidegger's writings are notoriously difficult, requiring... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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"Being" is a revealing way of seeing; it is world disclosive

I read this book for a graduate seminar on philosophy. Stephen Mulhall's book helps to illuminate one of the most influential philosophical books of the twentieth century, Martin Heidegger's "Being and Time," which deconstructs phenomenology. Heidegger's kind of phenomenology has to do with the idea of phenomenon, which means something that appears and shows itself. His criticism of traditional philosophy is that it gets started with categories, concepts, and notions, departing from the way human comprehension of this world first shows itself. This is Aristotelian and Aristotle is an enormous influence on Heidegger. Yet, there is something very radical going on here, and that is the idea of "being" is connected to meaning and negativity. In the history of philosophy, being has a positive concept, something that "is" thus, the opposite of being is none being. Heidegger wants to show how the meaning of being is distorted by this understanding of being as a purely positive concept, as a "thing" a full present entity. For Example, he also very much critiques in modern art, the modern conception of objectivity, the world is transformed into an object independent of art, of its significance, its meaning, or interest in it. This was due in large part because of modern science, and its strong sense of objectification converting nature into a set of mere objects, time, and space that are measurable and analyzable through scientific means. Meaning, importance, and significance for Heidegger equals value; science and nature have none of this as pure objects. Therefore, anything of meaning, and of significance would be transferred into the subject it would be simply the human estimation, nature itself has no meaning or significance in that respect. Heidegger critiques this scientific model. As he says in his phenomenology, "Well how is it that human existence first understands itself? Here he is talking about things that are very ordinary and complex. We are in a world that has significance, it is meaningful to us, it matters to us, it fits into our interests in such a way that we are absorbed into its significance. So, when we come across the world, first and foremost it is not a mere object that is standing apart from us or our mind, but rather it has significant elements of our environment that fit into our lives. Some things are significant, or they are useful, or dangerous, or satisfying, etc. What Heidegger wants to say in his phenomenology is we have to pay attention to this way of being. Therefore, first and foremost he says "being" matters, it matters to us. "Being" is a significance, it is not just a bare object or a bare fact. Heidegger doesn't accept this idea of subject on one side and object on the other side, that means that when humans have their understanding of the world, it is not just a human projection, it is not just a human construction. It is a revealing way of seeing; it is world disclosive. The meaning of

A helpful overview of "Being and Time"

I found Mulhall's work to be a helpful illustration of the main efforts of Heidegger's "Being and Time". I wouldn't, however, suggest this work to someone who is completely unfamiliar with Heidegger. Although I believe Mulhall has done a fine job of slowly articulating the path of Heidegger's great book, it is not an easy read. If you are looking for cliffnotes....look elsewhere. This book is for those looking to better understand Heidegger's thought; it is not for those looking to write a quick paper. If you are genuinely interested in getting a firm handle on the main points of Being and Time, I would suggest this book. Routledge has produced some great guidebooks...and this is one of them.
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