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This highly original new book highlights the importance and
significance of Heidegger's engagement with the Greeks, the ways in
which his views are commensurate with ecofeminism, and the insights
that a study of that intersection provides for both the diagnoses
of our world's ills and possible curative prescriptions. Susanne
Claxton defends the thesis that a proper return to myth and art as
a means by which the transcendental realities that constitute the
phenomenology of our embodied existence may be better understood is
also the means by which we may come to truly dwell in the
Heideggerian sense and thus find solutions to the myriad global and
personal crises that plague us. By examining key concepts in
Heidegger's thinking and their role in ancient philosophy, Claxton
establishes an alternative conception of truth and explores what
that concept reveals. Employing the ecofeminist critique, Claxton
highlights the relevant intersections with Heidegger, and lays out
criticisms raised by Nietzsche, comparing the differences in
thought between Nietzsche and Heidegger in order to demonstrate the
supremacy of the ecophenomenological approach and show the ways in
which Nietzsche falls short. The book also explores the
mythological figure of Lilith and how the thought of Giorgio
Agamben, especially in regard to his concept of the state of
exception, provides further insight and an undeniable co-incidence
of relevant concepts which further solidify the common goals and
projects of both Heidegger and Ecofeminism.
This highly original new book highlights the importance and
significance of Heidegger's engagement with the Greeks, the ways in
which his views are commensurate with ecofeminism, and the insights
that a study of that intersection provides for both the diagnoses
of our world's ills and possible curative prescriptions. Susanne
Claxton defends the thesis that a proper return to myth and art as
a means by which the transcendental realities that constitute the
phenomenology of our embodied existence may be better understood is
also the means by which we may come to truly dwell in the
Heideggerian sense and thus find solutions to the myriad global and
personal crises that plague us. By examining key concepts in
Heidegger's thinking and their role in ancient philosophy, Claxton
establishes an alternative conception of truth and explores what
that concept reveals. Employing the ecofeminist critique, Claxton
highlights the relevant intersections with Heidegger, and lays out
criticisms raised by Nietzsche, comparing the differences in
thought between Nietzsche and Heidegger in order to demonstrate the
supremacy of the ecophenomenological approach and show the ways in
which Nietzsche falls short. The book also explores the
mythological figure of Lilith and how the thought of Giorgio
Agamben, especially in regard to his concept of the state of
exception, provides further insight and an undeniable co-incidence
of relevant concepts which further solidify the common goals and
projects of both Heidegger and Ecofeminism.
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