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The Fourfold : Reading the Late Heidegger /

"Heidegger's later thought is a thinking of things, so argues Andrew J. Mitchell in The Fourfold. Heidegger understands these things in terms of what he names "the fourfold"--A convergence of relationships bringing together the earth, the sky, divinities, and mortals--and Mitchel...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Mitchell, Andrew J., 1970-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Evanston, Illinois : Northwestern University Press, 2015.
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro; Contents; Acknowledgments; A Note on Abbreviations and Conventions; Introduction- The Fourfold: On the Relationality of Things; 1. The Technological Challenge to Things; 1. Machination as Representational Objectification; 2. World War II; 3. The Standing Reserve and the End of the Object; a. The Standing Reserve Is Available; b. The Standing Reserve Is Immediate; c. The Standing Reserve Is Orderable; 4. Positionality as Circulative Replacement; a. Circulation, Rotation, Recurrence; b. Replacement and Consumption; 5. The Atomic Bomb; 2. Earth, Bearing and Fructifying.
  • 6. Abyssal Bearing7. Fruition of the Sensible; 8. The Nature of the Earth; a. Stones (Gestein); b. Waters (Gewässer); c. Plants (Gewächs); d. Animals (Getier); 3. Sky, Weathering Medium of Appearance; 9. The Dimension between Earth and Sky; a. The Between; b. The Dimension; 10. The Sky as Medium of Appearance; a. Weather, Storms, and Lightning; b. Aether; c. Blue; d. Clouds; 11. The Time of the Sky; a. "Natural" Time; b. The Hours of the Day; c. The Night, Its Stars, the Moon; d. The Seasons of the Year; 4. Divinities, Hinting Messengers of Godhood; 12. The Hint; a. Etymology.
  • B. The Hints of the Last God: From Representation to Belongingc. The Extra-Linguistic: Hint and Gesture; 13. Messengers; a. Hermeneutics from Facticity to Understanding; b. A Messengerial Ontology; 14. Godhood; a. The Holy; b. The Hale; c. The God(s); 15. The Meaning of the Divine; 5. Mortals, Being-in-Death; 16. The Metaphysical Completion of the Animal Rationale; a. The Worker (Jünger); b. The Angel (Rilke); c. The Übermensch (Nietzsche); 17. The Ability, the Capacity, to Die; a. Being-toward-Death; b. Being-in-Death; 18. The Shrine of the Nothing, the Refuge of Being.
  • A. The Shrine of the Nothingb. The Refuge of Being; c. The Secret of Being; 19. Language and Mortality; 20. Dwelling in Death, Residing amidst Things; 6. The Slight and Abiding Thing; 21. Mirror-Play and Speculation (Hegel); 22. The Slightness of Things; a. The Round Dance; b. The Slight (das Geringe); 23. The Thing Abides; a. The While of the Festival (Hölderlin); b. Abiding Each Time Together (Anaximander); c. Abiding, Appropriating, Essencing; 24. Thing as Gesture of World; a. Gesture and Granting; b. Differentiation and In-finitude; Conclusion: There Have Never Been Things; Notes.