
The Emergency of Being
On Heidegger's "Contributions to Philosophy"
Richard Polt(Author)
Cornell University Press
Published on 12. July 2013
296 pages
978-0-8014-6994-7 (ISBN)
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"The heart of history, for Heidegger, is not a sequence of occurrences but the eruption of significance at critical junctures that bring us into our own by making all being, including our being, into an urgent issue. In emergency, being emerges."-from The Emergency of Being
The esoteric Contributions to Philosophy, often considered Martin Heidegger's second main work after Being and Time, is crucial to any interpretation of his thought. Here Heidegger proposes that being takes place as "appropriation." Richard Polt's independent-minded account of the Contributions interprets appropriation as an event of emergency that demands to be thought in a "future-subjunctive" mode. Polt explores the roots of appropriation in Heidegger's earlier philosophy; Heidegger's search for a way of thinking suited to appropriation; and the implications of appropriation for time, space, human existence, and beings as a whole. In his concluding chapter, Polt reflects critically on the difficulties of the radically antirationalist and antimodern thought of the Contributions.
Polt's original reading neither reduces this challenging text to familiar concepts nor refutes it, but engages it in a confrontation-an encounter that respects a way of thinking by struggling with it. He describes this most private work of Heidegger's philosophy as "a dissonant symphony that imperfectly weaves together its moments into a vast fugue, under the leitmotif of appropriation. This fugue is seeded with possibilities that are waiting for us, its listeners, to develop them. Some are dead ends-viruses that can lead only to a monolithic, monotonous misunderstanding of history. Others are embryonic insights that promise to deepen our thought, and perhaps our lives, if we find the right way to make them our own."
The esoteric Contributions to Philosophy, often considered Martin Heidegger's second main work after Being and Time, is crucial to any interpretation of his thought. Here Heidegger proposes that being takes place as "appropriation." Richard Polt's independent-minded account of the Contributions interprets appropriation as an event of emergency that demands to be thought in a "future-subjunctive" mode. Polt explores the roots of appropriation in Heidegger's earlier philosophy; Heidegger's search for a way of thinking suited to appropriation; and the implications of appropriation for time, space, human existence, and beings as a whole. In his concluding chapter, Polt reflects critically on the difficulties of the radically antirationalist and antimodern thought of the Contributions.
Polt's original reading neither reduces this challenging text to familiar concepts nor refutes it, but engages it in a confrontation-an encounter that respects a way of thinking by struggling with it. He describes this most private work of Heidegger's philosophy as "a dissonant symphony that imperfectly weaves together its moments into a vast fugue, under the leitmotif of appropriation. This fugue is seeded with possibilities that are waiting for us, its listeners, to develop them. Some are dead ends-viruses that can lead only to a monolithic, monotonous misunderstanding of history. Others are embryonic insights that promise to deepen our thought, and perhaps our lives, if we find the right way to make them our own."
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Language
English
Place of publication
Ithaca
United States
Product notice
Reflowable
ISBN-13
978-0-8014-6994-7 (9780801469947)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
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07/2013
Cornell University Press
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05/2006
Cornell University Press
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Person
Richard Polt is Professor of Philosophy at Xavier University, Cincinnati. He is the author of Heidegger: An Introduction, also from Cornell.
Content
<pre>
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: Thinking the Esoteric
The Esoteric Turbulence of the Contributions
Reading the Contributions
1. Toward Appropriation
The Giving of the Given
Givenness and Belonging in Early Heidegger
The Contributions on Being and Time
Be-ing as Appropriation
2. The Event of Thinking the Event
Be-holding, Representing, and the Identity of
Knower and Known
Other than the Present Indicative
Bethinking as Be-ing-historical Thinking
Inceptive Thinking
Telling Silence
The Juncture and the Quarry
3. Straits of Appropriation
Be-ing: The Withdrawal, the Abyss, and the
Fissure
Being-there: The Happening of Ownness
Time-space: Evoking the Momentous Site
Be-ing and Beings: Simultaneity and Sheltering
The Gods: The Ultimate Apocalypse
4. Afterthoughts
A Philosophy of Possibility?
Liberalism and Modernity
Reason and Logos
From Beings to Be-ing and Back
Bibliography
Index
</pre>
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