Speaking of Being: Language, Speech, and Silence in Being and Time

Journal of Speculative Philosophy 30 (2):204-231 (2016)
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Abstract

Much of the English-language reception of Heidegger’s early thinking about language and speech —at least among readers influenced by the tradition of analytic philosophy—is organized around two interpretive devices. The first device is a distinction between “instrumental” and “constitutive” conceptions of language.1 An instrumental conception of language treats words as means by which humans represent fundamentally independent facts. According to this view, individual speech acts involve the use of conventional signs as tools for representing the world and expressing mental states. The constitutive conception of language, by contrast, views language as in some manner conditioning or determining...

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Reticence.David Batho - 2018 - European Journal of Philosophy 26 (3):1012-1025.
Heidegger’s way to poetic dwelling via Being and Time.Onur Karamercan - 2021 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 1 (10):268-285.

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