From Categories to Existentialia: The Programmed Destruction of Philosophy

Critical Horizons 19 (4):274-291 (2018)
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Abstract

ABSTRACTThis essay tracks Heidegger’s thought from 1919 forwards to the decisive years of his political engagement, on behalf of the Nazi movement. Part 1 tracks how the question concerning Being devolves into the implicitly identitarian question of who “we” are. Part 2 addresses the “existential” of Befindlichkeit which Heidegger in Sein und Zeit positions as prior to understanding, and examines his esoteric mode of writing as the means to cultivate a prerational Stimmung. Part 3 examines Heidegger’s response to his 1929–1930 questions of “What mood must we awaken?... Who are we, then?” in the decisive years of the Gleichchaltung, showing how Heidegger’s thinking elevates to ontological primacy a discriminatory and identitarian decision concerning who “we” are as the German volk. Part 4 examines in this light the Heideggerian “end of philosophy” in what the Black Notebooks talks of in terms of a “metapolitics ‘of’ the historical people”.

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References found in this work

On the essence of truth.Martin Heidegger - 1949 - In Martin Heidegger & Werner Brock (eds.), Existence and being. Chicago,: H. Regnery Co.. pp. 274-287.
On the Essence of Truth (Pentecost Monday, 1926).Martin Heidegger - 1998 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 9:274-287.
Conclusion.[author unknown] - 1926 - Archives de Philosophie 4 (3):112.

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