Transcendence in Heidegger’s Early Thought Toward Being as Event

It is a significant and novel contribution to Heidegger studies: cogent, clear, and yet true to the complexity and nuance of Heidegger's thinking, which is not always easy to achieve in English. --Krzysztof Ziarek, University at Buffalo This book demonstrates how Heidegger's departure from...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kuravsky, Erik
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Palgrave Macmillan 2023, 2023
Edition:1st ed. 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Transcendence in Heidegger’s Early Thought  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Toward Being as Event  |c by Erik Kuravsky 
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300 |a XIX, 311 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a Part I. Problematizing Transcendental Subjectivity: The Genesis of Heidegger’s “Transcendence” -- 1. The Early Neo-Kantian Origins and the Problem of Encounter -- 2. The Transcendence of Life as an Event of Experience -- Part II. Heidegger’s Transcendental Phenomenology as the Philosophy of Transcendence -- 3. The Transcendental Logic of Dasein -- 4. Transcendence as Being-in-the-World -- 5. The Transcendental Performativity of Existence -- 6. The Temporal Structure of Transcendence -- Part III. Transcendental Freedom and Beyng as Event. 7. The Metontological Side of Transcendence -- 8. Authenticity as Explicit Transcendence -- 9. Transcendence as the Quasi-Agency of Beyng -- 10. Transcendence as the Task of Philosophy 
653 |a Philosophy of the 20th century 
653 |a Continental Philosophy 
653 |a Phenomenology  
653 |a Phenomenology 
653 |a Philosophy, Modern / 20th century 
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520 |a It is a significant and novel contribution to Heidegger studies: cogent, clear, and yet true to the complexity and nuance of Heidegger's thinking, which is not always easy to achieve in English. --Krzysztof Ziarek, University at Buffalo This book demonstrates how Heidegger's departure from ontotheology occurs initially as a preparation for the concept of Dasein's transcendence and subsequently as its explicit development and overcoming. Dasein's transcendence is revealed as the foundation for the subsequent concept of Beyng as an Event, which stands in contrast to all ontotheological perspectives that assert a singular a priori foundation of the universe attributed to beings, God, consciousness, or even an independent "process" of Being that doesn't rely on Dasein. The book illustrates that transcendence is not an attribute of human consciousness or a connection to something external to it.  
520 |a Instead, as a "primal act," transcendence paves the way for a non-representational dwelling in the essence of a historically unfolding Being, a contemplative recollection of the truth of Beyng. Throughout the book, there is a gradual progression towards an understanding of transcendence as an active engagement, wherein we "do" transcendence. This process involves a reconstruction of the ontological significance of action, emphasizing its performative embeddedness in existence and its inseparability from Beyng. Erik Kuravsky has a PhD. and an MA in Philosophy from the university of Tel Aviv. Currently he is a Minerva Stiftung Post-doc fellow in the University of Erfurt. He has published both on early and late Heidegger as well as on the philosophy of Merab Mamardashvili 
520 |a Kuravsky reminds us how for Heidegger it is transcending that lies at the basis of the “worlding of world”, and how our being-transcended opens the possibility for understanding life itself." --"Laurence Hemming is an Honorary Professor at Lancaster University (UK), and author of Heidegger and Marx: A Productive Dialogue over the Language of Humanism." Kuravsky offers an interesting discussion of the understanding of philosophy itself as "transcendence" in Heidegger and investigates the interlacing of transcendence with temporality, which eventually leads Heidegger to abandon the term and focus on spatio-temporalizing unfolding "of" the event and put the emphasis on the "between."The book persuasively contextualizes Heidegger's early approach to transcendence with regard to neo-Kantianism, especially Rickert and Lask, in order to illustrate why and how Heidegger "evolves" Husserl's phenomenological approach.  
520 |a "This important and accessible book is a welcome invitation to return to the unity of Heidegger’s thought, and the question of what persists across his oeuvre.