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Heidegger, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics.

Heidegger, Martin.

Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics. Translated with an Introduction by James S. Churchill. Foreword by Thomas Langan.

Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1962. 19,5 cm x 13 cm. XXV, 255 pages. Original Softcover. Very good condition with only minor signs of external wear. Some occasional underlining and some very few annotations by Prof. Parkes in fine pencil (erasable). From the library of philosopher Graham Parkes, with his name on the front free endpaper.

Includes for example the following essays: The Stages of the Realization of the Projection of the Intrinsic Possibility of Ontology / The Transcendental Imagination and the Problem of Human Pure Reason etc etc.

Martin Heidegger (26 September 1889 – 26 May 1976) was a German philosopher and a seminal thinker in the Continental tradition, particularly within the fields of existential phenomenology and philosophical hermeneutics. From his beginnings as a Catholic academic, he developed a groundbreaking and widely influential philosophy.

His best known book, Being and Time (1927), is considered one of the most important philosophical works of the 20th century. In it and later works, Heidegger maintained that our way of questioning defines our nature. He argued that Western thinking had lost sight of being. Finding ourselves as “always already” moving within ontological presuppositions, we lose touch with our grasp of being and its truth becomes “muddled”. As a solution to this condition, Heidegger advocated a change in focus from ontologies based on ontic determinants to the fundamental ontological elucidation of being-in-the-world in general, allowing it to reveal, or “unconceal” itself as concealment. (Wikipedia).

EUR 78,-- 

We ship per DHL Express

We ship per DHL Express

Heidegger, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics.