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Basic Writings: Martin Heidegger [Paperback]

Martin Heidegger (Author), David Farrell Krell (Editor)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0415101611 978-0415101615 September 2, 1993 1
A concise introduction to this controversial and important twentieth-century philosopher. David Farrell Krell has improved this collection by adding The Way to Language and the complete version of The Origin of the Work of Art.

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Language Notes

Text: English (translation)
Original Language: German --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

About the Author

Born in southern Germany, Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) is the author of Being and Time. He taught philosophy at the University of Freiburg and the University of Marburg.

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (September 2, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0415101611
  • ISBN-13: 978-0415101615
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,188,523 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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41 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars this book is representative of Heidegger's thought, March 28, 2000
In 1928, Heidegger wrote in a letter: "Perhaps philosophy shows most forcibly and persistently how much Man is a beginner. Philosophizing ultimately means nothing other than being a beginner." This book is the definitive beginning for any English speaking philosopher who wishes to understand Heidegger's project. David Krell provides a fairly diligent introduction to such project, the question of Being (Seinsfrage) under the critical light of fundamental ontology. These eleven selections make Heideggerian thought accessible, not only to the scholar but the educated literati as well.

The first three essays (Joan Stambaugh's translation of the Introduction to Being and Time; "What is Metaphysics?"; and "On the Essence of Truth") collectively elucidate the early Heideggerian project of the deconstruction of the metaphysical tradition. The fourth essay ("The Origin of the Work of Art") represents his reflections on aesthetics. The fifth ("Letter on Humanism") was considered by Hannah Arendt as Heidegger's most splendid work (Prachtstueck) where he insists that authentic human existence goes beyond Cartesian solipsism; hence, his idea of humanism as factical. The next two essays ("Modern Science, Metaphysics, and Mathematics" and "The Question Concerning Technology") delve into Heidegger's probing critique of the essence of technology. The next three essays ("Building Dwelling Thinking," "What Calls for Thinking?," "The Way to Language") represent the later Heidegger, the reflections of which center around poetic thinking and authentic philosophizing. His influences in hermeneutics arise from these reflections as well. The last essay ("The end of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking") heralds the eschatological element in Heidegger's thought through the overcoming of metaphysics.

Clearly, this collection is essential to anyone interested in the phenomenon of thinking as well as contemporary philosophy.

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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable Edition, November 30, 2006
This volume, published by HarperCollins in the sixties and edited by translator David Farrell Krell serves as the perfect compendium to the thought of Martin Heidegger, one of the most significant thinkers of philosophy in the 20th century. Heidegger's methodology is necessarily difficult, as he is trying to remove himself from the `average-everyday' language we employ; and he is trying to approach the meaning of being concretely and originally. Therefore, stop complaining about the obscurity of his style and work your way through this text, for it will remain one of the major works of European thought.

The first essay is the introductory chapter to Heidegger's opus Being and Time. It is actually rather senseless to read it without going on to read the complete text. However, for those readers who simply want a taste of Heidegger's basic philosophic project and methodology, it is summarized here. He says at the outset: "This question has today been forgotten-although our time considers itself progressive in again affirming `metaphysics.' All the same we believe that we are spared the exertion of rekindling a gigantomachia peri tes ousias [a Battle of Giants concerning Being,' [Plato, Sophist]. But the question touched upon here is hardly an arbitrary one." (41). For Heidegger, philosophy has lost touched with the question `what is the meaning of being, as such?' However, in order to resolve the question of the meaning of Being, you must examine the Being of the questioner, (Dasein), leading us to do fundamental ontology.

The second essay in the collection is titled What is Metaphysics? It is an inaugural address the delimited many of the major ideas he would later expand in Being in Time. In it, Heidegger again examines the meaning of Being, but he also discusses the unheimlichkeit (the uncanny), and Dasein's confrontation with "the nothing" (100), and with attunement and Nihilism generally. This is a particularly famous, though cryptic essay, the major ideas in it are expanded at great lengths by Heidegger in his book `Introduction to Metaphysics,' published later in 1953.

The next essay is titled On the Essence of Truth, and it is particularly difficult. Heidegger begins with: "Our Topic is the essence of truth. The question regarding the essence of truth is not concerned with whether truth is a truth of practical experience or of economic calculation, the truth of a technical consideration or of political sagacity, or, in particular, a truth of scientific research or of artistic composition, or even the truth of thoughtful reflection or cultic belief. The question of essence disregards all this and attends to the one thing that in general distinguishes every `truth' as truth (115). Heidegger will later suggest in the essay that the essence of truth is freedom, or unconcealment. Heidegger does not adhere to radical skepticism, nor does he believe in eternal truths. He is interested in the essence of this question with regard to Da-Sein's `liberation' for `ek-sistence.'

The Origin of the Work of Art is unlike any essay in the history of aesthetic philosophy or criticism, because Heidegger is not at all concerned with the beauty of art, nor with the thinking of the artist. He is interested in the capacity for art to reveal worlds. He writes: "The temple-work, standing there, opens up a world and at the same time sets this world back again on earth, which itself only thus emerges as native ground. But men and animals, plants and things, are never present and familiar as unchangeable objects, only to represent incidentally also a fitting environment for the temple, which one fine day is added to what is already there" (168). Heidegger values the art of poetry more than any other. He says, "Art happens as poetry. Poetry is founding in the triple sense of bestowing, grounding, and beginning" (202), and he valued Holderlin, Trakyl, and Rilke above all other poets. Art is an origin, and it serves to preserve the historical existence of man.

One could go on and on. This volume also contains the Letter on Humanism, Modern Science, Metaphysics, and Mathematics, the Question Concerning Technology, Building, Dwelling, Thinking, What Calls for Thinking?, the Way to Language, and the End of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking. They will keep you busy for quite a while.
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40 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ek-sistence in the Poetic, March 10, 2004
This book is a collection of 10 + 1 essays (the + 1 being the Introduction to Heidegger's master-piece "Being and Time") by Martin Heidegger, who may very well be among the most controversial of 20th centurty philosophers. His controversy is, no doubt, due in part to his brief (10 month) affiliation with the Nazi party between 1933 and 1934; however, the majority of the controversy surrounding him probably has to do with the sheer density of his writing. Heidegger is not easy to comprehend (grasping the whole); reading him is the pursuit of apprehending (touching the surface).

Heidegger does exactly what it is that philosophers are supposed to do by clearing a place in which to ask the question asked long ago by Aristotle (but forgotten - that is, covered over - by "philosophers"): the question of what it means "to be". Part of the problem with reading Heidegger is that his language is almost mystical: constant talk of revealing and concealing within the place of clearing and the ekstasis - the being outside of one's self - of humans which allows for the asking of what it means "to be". While a background in philosophy might be helpful to understand Heidegger, it may be more helpful to have a background in religion and Christian mysticism. Without knowing something of the mystical, Heidegger is bound to appear far more difficult than he actually is.

It is worth noting that while Heidegger is dense, he is also a poet. His aesthetically written grace is much of what gives his contemplations about the question of being such weight and gentle force. The important thing about reading Heidegger is to do exactly what he counsels one do in observing a work of art: stand outside of yourself and into the clearing of the work of art. This is what Heidegger refers to as "ek-sistence": a combination of the words "ekstasis" and "existence". It is like a type of mystical silence that Heidegger invites the reader to: a listening *beyond* what one simply, immediately hears. This, then, is the key to reading Heidegger: not to read him (an action done first and foremost by the knowing-reading subject), but to simply let him be read - a letting him be in his being.

A note on Being: it is all too easy (and all too incorrect) to interpret Heidegger's writings about Being as if he were talking about some sort of subject. Being, however, is not God or some sort of primal force or the tao or any*thing* else: no, "Being" as such does not translate from the ancient Greek and Heidegger's constant referral to Being brings the reader to the edge of her/his conceptual limits and, in so doing, creates the clearing that allows for the asking of the question. Without this clearing, there can be no philosophizing - only the history of [bad] metaphysics (the asking of what reality is), which obscures this fundamental and original question.

Heidegger is well worth the time and the effort. Those that are interested in the simple questions and simple answers will be lost amidst Heidegger's densely poetic thoughts; those that are unwilling to be outside of themselves will find him endlessly frustrating. Of course, this refusing of ek-sistence into the realm of Being is the fundamental problem with so much of philosophy today: it is lost in [bad] metaphysics, having forgotten the primal question. If you let him, Heidegger will lead you to the edge of thought where that question can not only be heard, but can be asked again.

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First Sentence:
If it serves its purpose, this entire book will be an introduction to the question of Being in the thought of Martin Heidegger. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
propriative event, thingly feature, thingly substructure, thingly element, presentative statement, word bauen, thingly character, open comportment, workly character, essential provenance, essential unfolding, equipmental character, letting beings, medieval ontology, homo humanus, ancient ontology, mathematical project, simple oneness, open region, peasant shoes, more originally, sacrificial vessel, ego cogito, causa efficiens, primordial essence
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Martin Heidegger, New York, Basic Writings, Middle Ages, Indiana University Press, Van Gogh, Wilhelm von Humboldt, Building Dwelling Thinking, Edmund Husserl, Joan Stambaugh, Hannah Arendt, Logical Investigations, Black Forest, Franz Brentano, Albert Hofstadter, Freiburg University, Friedrich Nietzsche, Glenn Gray, Heinrich Rickert, Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, Max Niemeyer Verlag, Aristotle's Metaphysics, Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Hegel's Logic
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