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Displaying: 1-15 of 15 documents

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1. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 30
Bernhard Radloff Preludes of Enowning in the First Beginning and in the Christian Tradition
2. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 31
George Kovacs The Hermeneutics of Be-ing-historical Thinking and Language
3. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 31
Klaus Neugebauer Vetter - Grundriss Wohltaten auch in den Fußnoten
4. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 32
George Kovacs Heidegger in Dialogue with Husserl
5. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 32
Bernhard Radloff Finite Transcendence and Historicity: Heidegger and Kant
6. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 34
Bernhard Radloff Contamination Narratives and Theatres of Subjectivity in the Reception of Martin Heidegger’s Black Notebooks
7. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 34
Frank Schalow New Frontiers in Heidegger’s Original Ethics: Hermeneutics and the Λόγος of the Environmentalist Argument
8. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 28
George Kovacs The Revolution of Thinking in Heidegger's Seminare: Hegel-Schelling (1927-1957), and Its Implications for the Study of His Thought
9. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 36
Daniele Nuccilli Edith Stein; Life, Death, and Empathy
10. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 36
Frank Schalow Being-Historical Thinking and the Task of Translation: Heidegger’s “Return” to Kant
11. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 36
Francesca Brencio Positioning. Technology, Language and Politics in Light of What Is Question-Worthy
12. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 35
Bernhard Radloff Questions Concerning the Consummation of Metaphysics in Matters of the Political, Justice, and Art
13. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 37
Bernhard Radloff Historicity and the Problem of Antisemitism
14. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 38
Brian Gregor Ontology and Revelation: Heidegger’s Influence on Bonhoeffer’s Theology
15. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 39
Bernhard Radloff The Truth of Being and the Historicity of the Earth
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This essay reads Graeme Nicholson’s Heidegger on Truth in conjunction with Frank Schalow’s Heidegger’s Ecological Turn. It calls for the appropriation of Heidegger’s understanding of Da-sein to elaborate a radically other, earth-based political order. Nicholson and Schalow independently draw the conclusion that the technocratic world order, founded in the metaphysics of presence, is incapable of adequate response to a hermeneutic situation defined by instrumental reason and ecological collapse. Schalow’s carefully elaborated contribution to eco-philosophy offers a creative adaption of Heidegger’s hermeneutic phenomenology and specifies how it is integrated into the project of the history of being.