61.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Robert Bernasconi
Poets as Prophets and as Painters:
Heidegger’s Turn to Language and the Hölderlinian Turn in Context
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62.
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44
Scott Campbell
Dilthey, Destruction, and the Early Heidegger’s Philosophy of Life
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63.
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44
Jussi Backman
The Singularity of Being and the Fourfold in the Later Heidegger
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The paper studies the notion of the unique singularity (Einzigkeit, Einmaligkeit) of Being in Heidegger’s work, first and foremost in Contributions to Philosophy. I argue that whereas the Aristotelian metaphysical tradition regards Being as the most universal or “transcendental” notion that comprehends all instances of “to be,” Heidegger, by contrast, addresses Being in a “postmetaphysical” sense as the singularization of each meaningful situation into a unique configuration of a multidimensional meaning-context. I show that the theme of singularity was present in Heidegger’s thinking all the way from his 1915 dissertation on Duns Scotus and the notion of the singular instant (Augenblick) in Being and Time. Finally, I suggest an interpretation of the fourfold (Geviert) as Heidegger’s most developed articulation of the structure of this context-specific singularity of meaningfulness.
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64.
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44
Gregory Fried
Introduction to and Commentary on Christopher Ruth’s “Marx and Heidegger: The Question of the Human” and Robert Bernasconi’s “Poets as Prophets and Painters: Heidegger’s Turn to Language and the Hölderlinian Turn in Context”
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65.
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44
Robert C. Scharff
Commentary on Scott Campbell’s “Dilthey, Destruction, and the Early Heidegger’s Philosophy of Life”:
Did Heidegger Ever Have a “Philosophy of Life”?
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66.
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44
Daniela Vallega-Neu
Heidegger’s Poietic Meditations in Das Ereignis (GA 71)
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67.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Bret Davis
Horizon and Open-Region:
Epistemology in Heidegger’s Country Path Conversations (GA 77)
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68.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Pol Vandevelde
Commentary on Daniela Vallega-Neu’s “Heidegger’s Poietic Meditations in Das Ereignis (GA 71)”
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69.
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44
William McNeill
Buried Treasure:
Greeting and The Temporality of Remembrance in Heidegger’s Lectures on ‘Andenken’
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70.
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44
Cathy Leblanc
Commentary on Bret Davis’s “Horizon and Open-Region: Epistemology in Heidegger’s Country Path Conversation (GA77)”
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71.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Julia A. Ireland
“Learning in Dialogue”:
The Letter to Böhlendorff and Hölderlin’s Conception of History
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72.
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44
David Farrell Krell
The Swaying Skiff of Sea:
A Note on Heidegger’s—and Hölderlin’s—Andenken
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73.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Wayne Froman
Commentary on Sophie-Jan Arrien’s “Natorp and Heidegger: From Reconstruction to Deconstruction”
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74.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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44
Sophie-Jan Arrien
Natorp and Heidegger: From Reconstruction to Destruction
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75.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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9
Zygmunt Adamczewski
Questions in Heidegger's Thought About Being
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76.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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9
Thomas J. Sheehan
Heidegger's Interpretation of Aristotle:
Dynamis and Ereignis
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77.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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9
Theodore Kisiel
Heidegger (1907-1927): The Transformation of the Categorical
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78.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
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9
Richard E. Palmer
Heidegger's Contribution to a Postmodern Interpretive Self-Awareness
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79.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
9
Graeme Nicholson
The Vindication of Being in Heidegger's Essence of Truth
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80.
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Heidegger Circle Proceedings:
Volume >
9
Joan Stambaugh
An Inquiry into Authenticity and Inauthenticity in Being and Time
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