A Phenomenology of Love as Event: Bultmann Beyond Heidegger
By (Author) Nikolaas Cassidy-Deketelaere
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
22nd January 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Philosophy of religion
Theology
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Rescuing Rudolf Bultmann from Heideggers shadow, Nikolaas Cassidy-Deketelaere presents a philosophical reading of his theology, which reveals his unique phenomenology of love as an event.
Bultmann (1884-1976) is widely regarded as a mere footnote to Heideggers philosophy: a theologian whose thought was principally built on the Heideggerian analytic of human finitude. Yet, by reading Bultmann anew, in light of other continental philosophers engagement with Heidegger from Jaspers and Levinas to Marion and Falque this book rejects this idea as a misunderstanding. Instead it contends that Bultmann radically develops and even improves Heideggers phenomenology.
Guiding the reader through his argument in a clear and compelling style, Cassidy-Deketelaere reveals how Bultmann understands the experience of love as not being limited to empirical occurrence but rather having a truly transcendental scope: what phenomenologists would now call event (vnement). With this, Bultmanns theology not only resolves the contemporary critique of Heideggers method as precluding the dynamic between the empirical and transcendental, but further provides a new alternative paradigm of human finitude based on love, and not death (Heidegger) or birth (Arendt).
Far more than a footnote, The Phenomenology of Love as Event uncovers Bultmanns significant contribution to philosophy. Through his theological writings, Bultmann shows us that love is a central experience to human existence, one that transforms the being of Dasein, despite Heidegger never allowing for it.
Nikolaas Cassidy-Deketelaere is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at KU Leuven and Visiting Professor at Thomas More University of Applied Sciences, Belgium. He is the co-editor of The Pulse of Sense: Encounters with Jean-Luc Nancy (2022) and The Emmanuel Falque Reader (Bloomsbury, 2024).