From Nietzsche's pronouncement that 'God is dead' to Camus'
argument that suicide is the fundamental question of philosophy,
the concept of death plays an important role in existential
phenomenology, reaching from Kierkegaard to Heidegger and
Marcel.
This book explores the phenomenology of death and offers a
unique way into the phenomenological tradition. Paul Fairfield
examines the following key topics:
- the modern denial of death
- Heidegger's important concept of 'being-toward-death' and its
centrality in phenomenological ideas, such as authenticity and
existence
- the philosophical significance of death rituals: what explains
the imperative toward ritual around death, and what is its purpose
and meaning?
- death in an age of secularism
- the philosophy and ethics of suicide
- death as a mystery rather than a philosophical problem to be
solved
- the relationship between hope and death.
"
Death: A Philosophical Inquiry" is essential reading for
students of phenomenology and existentialism and will also be of
interest to students in related fields such as religion and
anthropology and also those in medical humanities.
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