Description
"[Heidegger's] greatest work . . . essential for all collections." -Choice
" . . . students of Heidegger will surely find this book indispensable." -Library Journal
Contributions to Philosophy (From Enowning), written in 1936-38 and first published in 1989 as Beitrage zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis), is Heidegger's most ground-breaking work after the publication of Being and Time in 1927. If Being and Time is perceived as undermining modern metaphysics, Contributions undertakes to reshape the very project of thinking.
The long-awaited English translation of Heidegger's ground-breaking work of 1936-38, Beitrage zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis)
About the Author
Parvis Emad is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at DePaul University and the founding coeditor (with Kenneth Maly) of Heidegger Studies. With Kenneth Maly he has translated Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and Phenomenological Interpretation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason by Martin Heidegger and Encounters with Martin Heidegger by Heinrich Wiegand Petzet.
Kenneth Maly is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and coeditor (with John Sallis) of Heraclitean Fragments.
Reviews
Publication of this volume is the most important event in Heidegger scholarship in English since the 1962 publication of the first English translation of Sein und Zeit. Although a new translation of Being and Time has appeared (CH, Mar'97), it is difficult to imagine that this inventive and highly readable translation of Beitrage (Beitrage) zur Philosophie (vom Ereignis), by Emad (emer., DePaul Univ.) and Maly (Univ. of Wisconsin-LaCrosse), will ever be superseded. Indeed, Being and Time appears almost conventional in light of the global transformation of ordinary language that characterizes Contributions to Philosophy. Emad and Maly acknowledge that the German original itself is not readily accessible to German readers. Since the 1989 posthumous publication of the Beitrage (Beitrage) , the relation of this 1936-38 manuscript to Heidegger's thinking has become a major topic. Contributions is about the turn toward Seyn (be-ing-the archaic spelling of Sein-being), which implies a turn toward the resistant enigma of another origin. The major decisions in this translation (e.g., Ereignis as enowning instead of appropriation; Wesung as swaying instead of essencing) make Heidegger's thinking more accessible to English speakers. This translation will contribute greatly to establishing Contributions as Heidegger's second masterpiece and his greatest work. Essential for all collections. General readers; upper-division undergraduates and above.July 2000
-- N. Lukacher * University of Illinois at Chicago *[T]he new Contributions to Philosophy is an impressive achievement. The vast majority of passages are no more opaque than the original, most of the translators' choices are very defensible, and the helpful appendices include German, Greek, and Latin glossaries as well as a bibliography of other writings by Heidegger to which he refers in this text.
* Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *Book Information
ISBN 9780253336064
Author Martin Heidegger
Format Hardback
Page Count 424
Imprint Indiana University Press
Publisher Indiana University Press
Weight(grams) 898g