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Being and Time: A Study of Being, Existence, and the Meaning of Time (Harper Perennial Modern Thought) [Heidegger, Martin] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Being and Time: A Study of Being, Existence, and the Meaning of Time (Harper Perennial Modern Thought) Review: All roads lead to (or from) Being and Time... - Being and Time is, obviously a ground-breaking work but it is also a work that frustrates many readers. It is not a book that one should try to read without the necessary background (some knowledge of phenomenology) and, ideally, without some guidance (i.e. a class in Heidegger). There are a number of books that attempt to make Being and Time more accessible. Unfortunately a number of them are very problematic. Personally I would recommend A Guide to Heidegger's Being and Time (Suny Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy) by Magda King. It is not the easiest or most accessible of the commentaries on Being and Time but it is one of the more accurate in my opinion. It also focuses more on the second division which is really the more important division though it is also the more difficult division and for precisely that reason it often gets less attention in the secondary literature. I should say a word about this particular translation. I do not read German but I have read both this translation and the new Stambaugh/Schmidt translation so I have a few comments about their relative virtues. As I said in my review of the Stambaugh/Schmidt translation I really like the Macquarrie/Robinson translation partly because it is the first translation I read so I got used to the terminology and partly because Macquarrie and Robinson give, I think, a better sense of the German by choosing slightly awkward translations (like ready-to-hand and present-at-hand, etc.). The fact is that Heidegger is introducing neologisms so I like the fact that Macquarrie and Robinson invent their own neologisms to translate many of Heidegger's most important terms. They also have extremely detailed notes throughout the book relating to the translation. Those are two definite virtues of this particular translation. There are two main virtues of the Stambaugh/Schmidt translation in my opinion. First, the translation is smoother and probably a bit more accessible for first time readers. The main advantage, however, is that Schmidt has put in brackets for all the major 'sein' words which indicate precisely what German word Heidegger is using. This overcomes to a large degree the need for different translations/capitalizations/hyphens, etc. (Being, be-ing, beings, entities, etc.) for all the different 'sein' terminology (it is important to realize that this only applies to the new Stambaugh/Schmidt translation; as far as I know the original Stambaugh translation does not include these bracketed terms). The bottom line is I think anyone who is serious about Being and Time should own and read both translations particularly if you are like me and do not read German. I should probably say a few words about the content of Being and Time. It seems a little ridiculous to write about a book that has achieved such status but my conscience will not let me post a review without saying anything about the contents of a book. Heidegger is, of course, primarily interested in the question of Being as he makes clear in his two introductions. Heidegger believes that Being is something that Dasein understands. We understand what it is for something 'to be' but we understand it in a vague way. Heidegger wants to make this vague understanding explicit but to do so he must understand the being that understands, i.e. Dasein. Most of Being and Time is taken up with an analysis of Dasein and its manner of being. The first division lays out what Heidegger calls the existentials of Dasein. They are like the categories that are applied to beings other than Dasein, the existentials are the a priori's of the being of Dasein. In the second division he grounds all these existentials temporally, specifically, on the three temporal ecstases of the having-been, the present, and the to-come. For Heidegger Dasein is essentially futural meaning the future has precedence. Dasein is its possibilities. This might seem strange but it makes perfect sense. Everything we do has reference to the future and to projects. I read Being and Time because I have projected a future in which I become a philosophy professor, etc. (the father in Cormac McCarthy's novel The Road (Oprah's Book Club) discovers this essential truth when he is looking through a bookcase at the end of the world and realizes that books make no sense when there is no future; their very being as books is predicated on a future. There is no reason to read after the apocalypse when there is no future because there are no human possibilities). McCarthy is being very Heideggerians since one of Heidegger's basic insights is that it is on the basis of the future, a thrown project, that Dasein is able to exist meaningfully in the world and make sense out of inner-worldly beings. This review is merely the barest skeleton of an outline of a few themes from Being and Time. Ultimately it is impossible to write a summary of such an epoch-making book. It might have been better to simply avoid trying to summarize it at all but I wanted to say at least something about the book. Heidegger has completely altered our understanding of our own being as well as the meaning of Being in general. Heidegger's influence on Continental philosophy is incalculable. All roads into Continental philosophy lead through Heidegger. There are many who seem to think, due to the difficulty of Heidegger's text, that it is in fact non-sense, a giant prank, and that Heidegger is not really saying anything (this is an extreme view I know but it is not all that different from the critiques leveled at Heidegger by prominent philosophers like Rudolf Carnap). For now I will simply offer my assurances to the reader: Heidegger's text is difficult, there is no doubt about that, but if you are truly interested in understanding it and you have the patience to work through it over many years (it will take many years) then I promise you Heidegger's book does make sense! Whether you will agree with Heidegger's positions is another question but it is my honest opinion that anyone who truly desires to understand this book can if they are willing to put in the work. Review: Necessary Reading for those Studying Continental Philosophy &/or for Hippies from the Late 60s - Ideally, Heidegger's Being & Time is not one's first foray into reading Philosophy. Indeed, I would say a ~4th Yr Philosophy Student at University would have a sufficient background to approach the text, BUT! There are no Philosophy Students anymore...so, that doesn't help... Without trying to name drop a bunch of obscure Philosophers &/or esoteric writings (maybe a few), I'll name a few basic Philosophers & other Writings/Information one would do well to first become familiar with before approaching Heidegger — the suggestions are not absolute, certainly not necessary; in fact, Heidegger was quite popular with the hippie crowds in the 1960's US reading Hindu & Buddhist religious texts. So, there's always that route; however, the route that doesn't involve illegal psychedelic narcotics & countless STDs would probably include familiarity with: – Socrates (via) Plato, Plato, & Aristotle – The Book of Job, OT, definitely (just as a secular reading, no need to convert to any religion, or do...I don't care); also, it wouldn't hurt to be familiar with the 5 Books of Moses, Ezekiel, Daniel, the Gospels, The Book of Revelation, & The Book of Enoch – Jakob Boehme (ok, a bit esoteric; but, he was a German cobbler that had a vision & developed a unique understanding of a knowledge above God that reminded me a lot of Heidegger) – Rene Descartes & Immanuel Kant – Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Marx, & Sigmund Freud (the 3 Philosophers that delivered the 20th Century) – The Dictionary – The Translation feature on Google Lens (many of Heidegger's quotes are not translated) – & The Teaching Company has a lecture series recorded by the late Rick Roderick of Duke; if you could locate his lecture on Heidegger, then you will be absolutely set to take down Heidegger. If not, no worries; it's just calming listening to an Academic with a strong West Texas accent talk about Heidegger prior to reading Heidegger. I'm sure there are plenty of other people from West Texas happy to oblige if you search the internet. Anyhow, that's what I would recommend becoming familiar with prior to reading Being & Time. Heidegger just uses so many references, offers so much obscurity without a lot of examples, & he creates his own words (they're German words, but he's re-appropriating them). It's all there to trip you up & his work will start slow. If he makes a reference you don't understand, it's probably a good idea to pause & look it up the best you can. Once you get used to his writing, your pace will start to pick up...still, don't expect to read this all at once. Give it time — I was a Senior Philosophy Student in 2008 when I first purchased Being & Time; I didn't finish the book until my 3rd year in Graduate School (one, I didn't have a lot of time; but, two, it's a really difficult book). Once you finally figure out what he's trying to say, it will be rewarding, it might seem obvious, but it's not trivial & the profound will be in the undertaking in its own right. I recommend Heidegger's Being & Time; it's an important work in Philosophy, & its sheer difficulty offers a sense of accomplishment in its own right once you've finished it.
| Best Sellers Rank | #22,873 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #5 in Phenomenological Philosophy #6 in Modern Western Philosophy #8 in Philosophy Metaphysics |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (809) |
| Dimensions | 5.62 x 1.22 x 8.38 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0061575593 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0061575594 |
| Item Weight | 1.2 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 608 pages |
| Publication date | July 22, 2008 |
| Publisher | Harper Perennial Modern Classics |
B**.
All roads lead to (or from) Being and Time...
Being and Time is, obviously a ground-breaking work but it is also a work that frustrates many readers. It is not a book that one should try to read without the necessary background (some knowledge of phenomenology) and, ideally, without some guidance (i.e. a class in Heidegger). There are a number of books that attempt to make Being and Time more accessible. Unfortunately a number of them are very problematic. Personally I would recommend A Guide to Heidegger's Being and Time (Suny Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy) by Magda King. It is not the easiest or most accessible of the commentaries on Being and Time but it is one of the more accurate in my opinion. It also focuses more on the second division which is really the more important division though it is also the more difficult division and for precisely that reason it often gets less attention in the secondary literature. I should say a word about this particular translation. I do not read German but I have read both this translation and the new Stambaugh/Schmidt translation so I have a few comments about their relative virtues. As I said in my review of the Stambaugh/Schmidt translation I really like the Macquarrie/Robinson translation partly because it is the first translation I read so I got used to the terminology and partly because Macquarrie and Robinson give, I think, a better sense of the German by choosing slightly awkward translations (like ready-to-hand and present-at-hand, etc.). The fact is that Heidegger is introducing neologisms so I like the fact that Macquarrie and Robinson invent their own neologisms to translate many of Heidegger's most important terms. They also have extremely detailed notes throughout the book relating to the translation. Those are two definite virtues of this particular translation. There are two main virtues of the Stambaugh/Schmidt translation in my opinion. First, the translation is smoother and probably a bit more accessible for first time readers. The main advantage, however, is that Schmidt has put in brackets for all the major 'sein' words which indicate precisely what German word Heidegger is using. This overcomes to a large degree the need for different translations/capitalizations/hyphens, etc. (Being, be-ing, beings, entities, etc.) for all the different 'sein' terminology (it is important to realize that this only applies to the new Stambaugh/Schmidt translation; as far as I know the original Stambaugh translation does not include these bracketed terms). The bottom line is I think anyone who is serious about Being and Time should own and read both translations particularly if you are like me and do not read German. I should probably say a few words about the content of Being and Time. It seems a little ridiculous to write about a book that has achieved such status but my conscience will not let me post a review without saying anything about the contents of a book. Heidegger is, of course, primarily interested in the question of Being as he makes clear in his two introductions. Heidegger believes that Being is something that Dasein understands. We understand what it is for something 'to be' but we understand it in a vague way. Heidegger wants to make this vague understanding explicit but to do so he must understand the being that understands, i.e. Dasein. Most of Being and Time is taken up with an analysis of Dasein and its manner of being. The first division lays out what Heidegger calls the existentials of Dasein. They are like the categories that are applied to beings other than Dasein, the existentials are the a priori's of the being of Dasein. In the second division he grounds all these existentials temporally, specifically, on the three temporal ecstases of the having-been, the present, and the to-come. For Heidegger Dasein is essentially futural meaning the future has precedence. Dasein is its possibilities. This might seem strange but it makes perfect sense. Everything we do has reference to the future and to projects. I read Being and Time because I have projected a future in which I become a philosophy professor, etc. (the father in Cormac McCarthy's novel The Road (Oprah's Book Club) discovers this essential truth when he is looking through a bookcase at the end of the world and realizes that books make no sense when there is no future; their very being as books is predicated on a future. There is no reason to read after the apocalypse when there is no future because there are no human possibilities). McCarthy is being very Heideggerians since one of Heidegger's basic insights is that it is on the basis of the future, a thrown project, that Dasein is able to exist meaningfully in the world and make sense out of inner-worldly beings. This review is merely the barest skeleton of an outline of a few themes from Being and Time. Ultimately it is impossible to write a summary of such an epoch-making book. It might have been better to simply avoid trying to summarize it at all but I wanted to say at least something about the book. Heidegger has completely altered our understanding of our own being as well as the meaning of Being in general. Heidegger's influence on Continental philosophy is incalculable. All roads into Continental philosophy lead through Heidegger. There are many who seem to think, due to the difficulty of Heidegger's text, that it is in fact non-sense, a giant prank, and that Heidegger is not really saying anything (this is an extreme view I know but it is not all that different from the critiques leveled at Heidegger by prominent philosophers like Rudolf Carnap). For now I will simply offer my assurances to the reader: Heidegger's text is difficult, there is no doubt about that, but if you are truly interested in understanding it and you have the patience to work through it over many years (it will take many years) then I promise you Heidegger's book does make sense! Whether you will agree with Heidegger's positions is another question but it is my honest opinion that anyone who truly desires to understand this book can if they are willing to put in the work.
J**N
Necessary Reading for those Studying Continental Philosophy &/or for Hippies from the Late 60s
Ideally, Heidegger's Being & Time is not one's first foray into reading Philosophy. Indeed, I would say a ~4th Yr Philosophy Student at University would have a sufficient background to approach the text, BUT! There are no Philosophy Students anymore...so, that doesn't help... Without trying to name drop a bunch of obscure Philosophers &/or esoteric writings (maybe a few), I'll name a few basic Philosophers & other Writings/Information one would do well to first become familiar with before approaching Heidegger — the suggestions are not absolute, certainly not necessary; in fact, Heidegger was quite popular with the hippie crowds in the 1960's US reading Hindu & Buddhist religious texts. So, there's always that route; however, the route that doesn't involve illegal psychedelic narcotics & countless STDs would probably include familiarity with: – Socrates (via) Plato, Plato, & Aristotle – The Book of Job, OT, definitely (just as a secular reading, no need to convert to any religion, or do...I don't care); also, it wouldn't hurt to be familiar with the 5 Books of Moses, Ezekiel, Daniel, the Gospels, The Book of Revelation, & The Book of Enoch – Jakob Boehme (ok, a bit esoteric; but, he was a German cobbler that had a vision & developed a unique understanding of a knowledge above God that reminded me a lot of Heidegger) – Rene Descartes & Immanuel Kant – Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Marx, & Sigmund Freud (the 3 Philosophers that delivered the 20th Century) – The Dictionary – The Translation feature on Google Lens (many of Heidegger's quotes are not translated) – & The Teaching Company has a lecture series recorded by the late Rick Roderick of Duke; if you could locate his lecture on Heidegger, then you will be absolutely set to take down Heidegger. If not, no worries; it's just calming listening to an Academic with a strong West Texas accent talk about Heidegger prior to reading Heidegger. I'm sure there are plenty of other people from West Texas happy to oblige if you search the internet. Anyhow, that's what I would recommend becoming familiar with prior to reading Being & Time. Heidegger just uses so many references, offers so much obscurity without a lot of examples, & he creates his own words (they're German words, but he's re-appropriating them). It's all there to trip you up & his work will start slow. If he makes a reference you don't understand, it's probably a good idea to pause & look it up the best you can. Once you get used to his writing, your pace will start to pick up...still, don't expect to read this all at once. Give it time — I was a Senior Philosophy Student in 2008 when I first purchased Being & Time; I didn't finish the book until my 3rd year in Graduate School (one, I didn't have a lot of time; but, two, it's a really difficult book). Once you finally figure out what he's trying to say, it will be rewarding, it might seem obvious, but it's not trivial & the profound will be in the undertaking in its own right. I recommend Heidegger's Being & Time; it's an important work in Philosophy, & its sheer difficulty offers a sense of accomplishment in its own right once you've finished it.
D**U
Martin Heidegger's Being and Time has been one of the most challenging books to read that I have ever come across. Not only was it because this was a translation from the original German into English (albeit excellently done by John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson), but because Heidegger's own use of German words and his coining of new terms and phrases were difficult for both German- and English-speaking readers. The subtleties of his thought and the nuances in his original German were not just a challenge for our translators, but also a challenge to readers of any excellent translation of his work. Having said that, it is important to emphasise that Heidegger's book is original and quite brilliant, and it is not at all surprising to discover that his book has had a deep influence on twentieth-century philosophy, and even theology. The book is divided into two Divisions, one on `Being' and the other on `Time'. Both Divisions form what Heidegger calls Part 1 of a two-part work. Sadly, the second Part was never published (was it even written?). My first reaction to this book (this is the first work by Heidegger that I have read) is that the first Division on `Being' was the more difficult of the two, in large part because so many new items of specialist Heideggerian terms were introduced here, and hence produced a more demanding read as one tried to accommodate oneself to his way of thinking and expressing himself. The second Division on `Time' was a (slightly) easier read because one already had most of the `vocabulary' in hand, even though new terminology and concepts (such as the `temporalising of temporality') were also introduced. And, of course, the key term - Dasein - figured prominently in both Divisions because Heidegger wanted to use this term for his existential-ontological entity (in ordinary language `human being') as a means of approaching the fundamental philosophical question `What is Being?' In a sense, Heidegger wants to invert Descartes's cogito ergo sum (`I think, therefore I am') into sum ergo cogito (`I am, therefore I think'). For him, human existence in its `thrownness' into `the world' and its `fallenness' and `inauthentic existence' are primordial constituents of Dasein, `prior' (or `anterior') to human conceptualising about its condition. Two concepts which I found particularly striking and important to assess were his views on Dasein as being primordially a `Being-towards-Death' and of having a sense of Time which includes a past, present and future but which are not based on an everyday use of `clocks'. Heidegger's view of `authentic' existence and of `temporality' challenges the ordinary intuitive understandings of what `real' living and experience of `time' mean for the majority of us most of the time. This is because (according to Heidegger) the average everyday existence of Dasein is not controlled by the true Self (the genuine `I') but by the `They', i.e. the public norms of what is acceptable thinking and behaving. Heidegger believes that we are `fleeing' from our true Selves and `authentic' existence by `falling' into the `world' of everyday activity which takes up our time and our lives. A genuine existential coming to terms with the `temporality' of our `Being-towards-Death' is possible in `moments of vision' when the true Self calls to the true Self and releases us from the `They'. Heidegger confronts the ideas of Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Kant and Hegel when it comes to fundamental ontology and the deepest ontological question about `Being', although recognising that his `analytic' of Dasein, despite providing the way and right phenomenological method, has not yet allowed us to answer the fundamental question `What is Being?' Perhaps this would have received an (i.e. his) answer if the second Part had been written/published, where he would have dealt more extensively with Descartes and Kant. None the less, however ambitious Heidegger's ontological project was (Being and Time was originally published in German in 1927, with our English translation appearing only in 1962!), there can be no doubt that this major book on ontology provides a penetrating and, at times, intriguing contribution to the big questions about life. Having now read Being and Time in its entirety for the first time and having formed an initial view of the work, I am conscious of the need to read the critical reviews of this book by experts in the field and to discover how Heidegger's views have influenced other key philosophers in their own thinking and contributions. Is 488-page Being and Time a book for relative beginners in the field of philosophy, much like myself? Hardly, I would say. However, it does repay the hard work done in reading this book carefully, and even `beginners' who `have a go' may benefit much.
K**H
This book is absolutely essential if you are into continental philosophy. It is not a an easy read in fact this book will need years to slowly digest, and appreciate. One of the pinnacles of modern philosophy, irrespective of heideggers own political affiliations
灰**ヒ
これは商品紹介でペーパーバック版とされているもの(ISBN 978-0-06-157559-4、Harper perennial modern thoughtの1冊)に対する速報レビューです。 到着したばかりでざっと眺めただけですし、ドイツ語の原書ならともかく良質な邦語訳がある現在、英訳本を通読することはないでしょう。 で、本文ですが、確かに巻末の原著注などは小さい活字ではありますが(印刷のことに詳しくないので何ポイントということが言えません)印刷は鮮明であり、買い直さねばならないような商品では全くありません。 最近よく見かけるディジタルデータを基に日本で印刷したものでも無いようです。(そういう書籍も印刷不鮮明だった経験はありません) このような重要文献が日本の文庫本のような分冊ではなく、ハンディな1巻本で手に入る諸外国をやや羨ましく思います。 なお詳しい方はご存じでしょうが、本文の訳は1962年のもので、Taylor Carmanによる8ページ余りのForewordのみが2008年に追加されたものです。
M**S
Não sei se algum dia conseguirei avaliar pois não sei se algum dia vou ter coragem de ler, as estrelas são pela importância do filosofo.
R**M
huge book but worth it. many pages written really small, but with time and patience you get it done.
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