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This book offers the first edited volume to thematically foreground Heidegger's complex relation to "the life of reason" and its relation to normativity. Authored by world-class phenomenologists and Heidegger scholars, it presents cutting-edge, convention-challenging scholarship on Heidegger's relationship to the phenomenological traditions.
List of contents
Introduction, Matthew Burch, Jack Marsh, and Irene McMullin / Part I: Normativity / 1. Transcending Reason Heidegger's Way: Meaning, Normativity, and the Indispensability of Phenomenology", Steven Crowell / 2. Norm and Ideal, Irene McMullin / 3. On Authenticity, Selfhood, and Norms of One's Own, Denis McManus / 4. Normativity and the Role of Authenticity in Early Heidegger, Sacha Golob / Part II: Reason / 5. Primacy of Practice vs. Primacy of Theory, Heidegger vs. Husserl?, Sonja Rinofner-Kreidl / 6. Ground, Background, and Reason, William Blattner / 7. Expressive Control: Heidegger on What Makes Actions Properly Agential, Matt Burch / 8. Ode to Joy: Diesen Kuß der ganzen Welt!, Jack Marsh / Part III: Method / 9. Renewing Phenomenology: Heidegger and the Reduction(s), Thomas Sheehan / 10. Phenomenon in Husserl and Heidegger, Burt Hopkins / 11. Die angebliche Frage nach dem 'Sein des Seienden': An Unknown Husserlian Response to Heidegger's 'Question of Being', Sebastian Luft / 12. Heidegger's Understanding of the Distinctive Nature of Philosophy or Thought in Relation to Science, Naturalism, and Historicism, Jeff Malpas and Ingo Farin / Index
About the author
Irene McMullin is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Essex, UK. She Time and the Shared World: Heidegger on Social Relations (2013), and Existential Flourishing: A Phenomenology of the Virtues (forthcoming). Her work on Husserl, Heidegger, Arendt, and Sartre has appeared in journals such as The European Journal of Philosophy, Continental Philosophy Review, and Philosophical Topics.
Matthew Burch is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Essex, UK. He has published in Inquiry, The European Journal of Philosophy, and The Journal of Applied Philosophy.
Summary
This book offers the first edited volume to thematically foreground Heidegger's complex relation to "the life of reason" and its relation to normativity. Authored by world-class phenomenologists and Heidegger scholars, it presents cutting-edge, convention-challenging scholarship on Heidegger's relationship to the phenomenological traditions.