Course
Heidegger: Being and Time

BISR
BISR

Goethe-Institut New York

What is the meaning of being? Martin Heidegger, one of the most influential thinkers of the 20th century, believed that this central question of ontology had been abandoned, even forgotten, by philosophy. Heidegger devoted his entire intellectual life to attempting to answer it. His earliest attempt takes the form of what he calls a “fundamental ontology.” Heidegger claims that the only access to the meaning of being in general must be through an investigation of “the meaning of the being for whom being is an issue”, that is, “the being each of us is”—the human being. Human beings, in his view, are the only beings that are concerned about their being. So fundamental ontology must take the form of an analysis of human existence, or in Heidegger’s parlance, the “ontological constitution of finite subjectivity in its finitude.”

This course will survey the main components of fundamental ontology in Heidegger’s early magnum opus, Being and Time. We will consider and grapple with the core concepts of being-in-the-world; readiness-to-hand and presence-to-hand; being-with; being-towards-death; authenticity; and historicity.

All participants will receive a free copy of Being and Time at the first class, courtesy of Harper Perennial.

Instructor: Michael Robert Stevenson

Michael Robert Stevenson teaches philosophy at Columbia University. He earned a BA from the University of Pennsylvania and an MPhil and a PhD from Columbia University. He specializes in the German philosophical tradition, especially Kant, post-Kantian Idealism, and 20th-century phenomenology.

Details

Goethe-Institut New York

30 Irving Place
New York, NY 10003

Language: English
Price: $315

info@thebrooklyninstitute.com
Part of series Brooklyn Institute for Social Research