This long-awaited volume of The Collected Writings of John Sallis presents his lectures on Martin Heidegger’s monumental Being and Time.
The lectures were presented during the 1985–86 academic year at Loyola University of Chicago and during the fall semester of 1999 at Pennsylvania State University. The fourteen years separating the beginning of the two courses is significant in that numerous additional volumes appeared in the Gesamtausgabe and influenced Sallis’s interpretation of Being and Time.
This book is a synthesis of the manuscripts of the two separate lecture courses. This volume makes Being and Time accessible to students, while the most advanced scholars will also profit from it.
قائمة المحتويات
Key to the Citations of Heidegger’s Works
Introduction
1. The Untitled First Page to Being and Time
2. The First Introduction to Being and Time: The Necessity of an Explicit Renewal (Wiederholung) of the Question of Being
3. The Second Introduction to Being and Time: The Double Task in Working Out the Question of Being: The Method of the Investigation and Its Outline
Division I: The Preparatory Fundamental Analysis of Dasein
1. The Exposition of the Task of a Preparatory Analysis of Dasein
2. Being-in-the-World in General as the Fundamental
3. The Worldhood of the World
4. Being-in-the-World as Being-with and Being a Self: The ‘They’
5. Being-in as Such
6. Care as the Being of Dasein
Division II: Dasein and Temporality
1. The Possible Being-a-Whole of Dasein and Being-toward-Death
2. The Attestation of Dasein of an Authentic Potententiality-of-Being and Resoluteness
3. The Authentic Potentiality-for-Being-a-Whole of Dasein, and Temporality as the Ontological Meaning of Care
4. Temporality and Everydayness
5. Temporality and Historicity
6. Temporality and Within-Timeness as the Origin of the Vulgar Concept of Time
Conclusion
Appendix
Editor’s Afterword
Index
عن المؤلف
John Sallis is Frederick J. Adelmann Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He is author of more than twenty books, including Chorology, Songs of Nature, and Kant and the Spirit of Critique. Jeffrey Powell is professor of Philosophy at Marshall University. He is the editor of Heidegger and Language and coeditor of Aesthetic Reason and Imaginative Freedom: Friedrich Schiller and Philosophy. He is cotranslator of Heidegger’s The History of Beyng.