University of Chicago Press (
2002)
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Abstract
_On Time and Being_ charts the so-called "turn" in Martin Heidegger's philosophy away from his earlier metaphysics in _Being and Time_ to his later thoughts after "the end of philosophy." The title lecture, "Time and Being," shows how Heidegger reconceived both "Being" and "time," introducing the new concept of "the event of Appropriation" to help give his metaphysical ideas nonmetaphysical meanings. _On Time and Being_ also contains a summary of six seminar sessions that Heidegger conducted on "Time and Being," a lecture called "The End of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking," and an autobiographical sketch of Heidegger's intellectual history in "My Way of Phenomenology." "This collection may well vie with Vom Wesen des Grundes and Identität and Differenz as definitive statements of Heidegger's ontology."—_Library Journal _ "The title of the English translation is that of the lead essay, the highly celebrated lecture which Heidegger gave in 1962 and which bears the same title as the never published 'third division' of the 'first half' of _Being and Time_. This lecture is perhaps the most significant document to be added to the Heideggerian corpus since the _Letter of Humanism_.... Stambaugh's translation is superb."—Stanley O. Hoerr and staff, _The Review of Metaphysics _