An edition of Enigmatic origins (1994)

Enigmatic origins

tracing the theme of historicity through Heidegger's works

Enigmatic origins
Hans Ruin, Hans Ruin
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Last edited by WorkBot
December 15, 2009 | History
An edition of Enigmatic origins (1994)

Enigmatic origins

tracing the theme of historicity through Heidegger's works

The preoccupation with the "historicity" of thought and existence is central to the hermeneutic-phenomenological branch of modern philosophy. Its foremost representative is Martin Heidegger, who in his main work Sein und Zeit (1927) developed a theory of historicity, according to which human beings not only exist in history, but are themselves historical. In subsequent writings Heidegger argued that not only man, but also truth and being, must be understood "historically" in a particular sense.

The meaning and the implications of Heidegger's "historicization" of philosophy are here analyzed along two parallel tracks: as a theory of the conditions of philosophical understanding; second, as an incentive to new ways of responding philosophically to these conditions. The study focuses on the sense of belonging which Heidegger assigns to historicity, as a dialogical relation to an enigmatic origin that cannot be exhaustively articulated, but to which understanding must nevertheless respond in repetition and critique. The idea of the "hermeneutic situation," and what it means to occupy such a situation, is shown to be central in this regard.

Heidegger's "historicization" of the philosophical territory is interpreted as an exemplary attempt to preserve philosophy as a quest for "origins" in the explicit recognition of the interminable historical mediation of thinking. His approach leads to a critical questioning of fundamental philosophical distinctions, such as the temporal and the eternal, the absolute and the relative, subject and object, and of truth as correspondence. Eventually he is led to question the ability of language to express the historicity of thought and of being, which can only be indicated by means of concepts such as "moment" (Augenblick) and "event" (Ereignis).

In seven chapters the theme of historicity is explored from different angles, which together provide a guide to Heidegger's path from a philosophy of life to a thinking of being in the "other beginning." The study covers the full range of his writings, but it emphasizes the development from the earliest lectures, over Sein und Zeit, to the second major work, Beitrage zur Philosophie (1938, published posthumously in 1989).

Publish Date
Publisher
Almqvist & Wiksell
Language
English
Pages
294

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Enigmatic origins
Cover of: Enigmatic origins
Enigmatic origins: tracing the theme of historicity through Heidegger's works
1994, Almqvist & Wiksell
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. [279]-291) and index.
Thesis (doctoral)--Stockholm University, 1994.

Published in
Stockholm
Series
Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis., 15

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
193
Library of Congress
B3279.H49 R85 1994

The Physical Object

Pagination
x, 294 p. ;
Number of pages
294

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL19282560M

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