Heidegger's Life and Thought: A Tarnished Legacy
By (Author) Mahon O'Brien
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
16th October 2019
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social and political philosophy
193
Hardback
140
Width 148mm, Height 214mm, Spine 15mm
295g
Martin Heidegger was a captivating and controversial philosopher, known for his highly original and challenging philosophical concepts, as well as his association with and sympathy for the Nazi Party during World War II.Providing an introduction to both the man and his philosophy, this book is a concise, jargon-free journey through his life and thought. The publication of Heideggers private Black Notebooks from the 1930s and 40s has led to renewed interest in the relationship between Heideggers philosophy and his political views and caused widespread confusion and condemnation. This short book puts many of these problems into context and offers an honest appraisal of Heideggers disturbing political views and how they might relate to some of the perennial themes that occupied his philosophical imagination. A fascinating portrait of a brilliant, complicated and often unattractive human being, the book will prove invaluable for students with some familiarity with Heideggers thought, students approaching Heideggers work for the first time and non-specialists looking to acquaint themselves with a great, yet problematic, twentieth century thinker.
While squarely facing Heideggers troubling political attitudes and personal flaws, Mahon OBrien shows that one of the most original and creative philosophers to have lived and worked in the twentieth century remains thought-provoking today. OBrien draws on letters, notebooks, and reminiscences as well as the canonical texts to create a stimulating introduction to Heideggers life, ideas, and legacies. -- Richard Polt, Professor of Philosophy, Xavier University
With exemplary clarity and a sure command of its subject, OBriens compendious introduction weaves together deeply appreciative and incisive glosses on the diverse yet also continuous pathways of Heideggers thought and its legacy and global reach with an unvarnished portrait of the philosophers difficult temperament, complete with often unflattering, alarming, and notorious details of his personal and public life. -- Daniel O. Dahlstrom, Professor of Philosophy, Boston University
Mahon O'Brien, is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Brighton. He is also the author of Heidegger, History and the Holocaust (2015) and Heidegger and Authenticity: From Resoluteness to Releasement (2013).