Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Modern Western philosophy, c 1600 to the present > Western philosophy, from c 1900 - > Phenomenology & Existentialism
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The Fate of Phenomenology - Heidegger's Legacy (Hardcover)
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The Fate of Phenomenology - Heidegger's Legacy (Hardcover)
Series: New Heidegger Research
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It can be easily argued that the radical nature and challenge of
Heidegger's thinking is grounded in his early embrace of the
phenomenological method as providing an access to concrete lived
experience (or 'factical life', as he calls it) beyond the
imposition of theoretical constructs such as 'subject' and
'object', 'mind' and 'body'. Yet shortly after the publication of
his ground-breaking work Being and Time, Heidegger appears to
abandon phenomenology as the method of philosophy. Why? Heidegger
is conspicuously quiet on this issue. Here William McNeill examines
the question of the fate of phenomenology in Heidegger's thinking,
and its transformation into a 'thinking of being' that regards its
task as that of 'letting be'. The relation between phenomenology
and 'letting be', McNeill argues, is by no means a straightforward
one. It poses the question of whether, and to what extent,
Heidegger's thought of his middle and late periods still needs
phenomenology in order to accomplish its task-and if so, what kind
of phenomenology. What becomes of phenomenology in the course of
Heidegger's thinking?
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