As the only full-length treatment in English of spatiality in
Martin Heidegger's work, this book makes an important contribution
to Heidegger studies as well as to research on the history of
philosophy. More generally, it advances our understanding of
philosophy in terms of its "exilic" character, a sense of alterity
that becomes apparent when one fully engages the temporality or
finitude essential to conceptual determinations.
By focusing on Heidegger's treatment of the classical difficulty
of giving conceptual articulation to spatiality, the author
discusses how Heidegger's thought is caught up in and enacts the
temporality it uncovers in Being and Time and in his later
writings. Ultimately, when understood in this manner, thought is an
"exilic" experience--a determination of being that in each case
comes to pass in a loss of first principles and origins and,
simultaneously, as an opening to conceptual figurations yet to
come. The discussion engages such main historical figures as Plato,
Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, and indirectly Husserl, as well as
contemporary European and American Continental thought.
General
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