Heideggers Anyone and Contemporary Social Theory
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Köp båda 2 för 1389 krThe collection includes original papers by established figures such as Hans Bernhard Schmid (Vienna), Mark A. Wrathall (Oxford), Dieter Thom (St. Gallen), and Kevin Thompson (DePaul), as well as by a range of emerging scholars. it is an excellent and timely collection, bringing renewed interpretative vigor to key sections of Heidegger's classic. (Dermot Moran, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, ndpr.nd.edu, July, 2018)
Hans Bernhard Schmid is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Vienna. He received his PhD (1998) and Habilitation (2005) from the University of Basel. His main research interests are Philosophy of Social Science, Social Ontology, Action Theory, Social and Sociological Theory, History of Philosophy (esp. Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy). He is the author of Subjekt, System, Diskurs: Edmund Husserls Begriff transzendentaler Subjektivitt in sozialtheoretischen Bezgen (2000), Wir-Intentionalitt: Kritik des ontologischen Individualismus und Rekonstruktion der Gemeinschaft (2005), Plural Action (2009), and Moralische Integritt: Kritik eines Konstrukts (2011). Gerhard Thonhauser studied philosophy and political science at the University of Vienna and Copenhagen University. He received his PhD in philosophy from the University of Vienna in 2015. He was the recipient of a DOC-fellowship of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in 2011-2012. His mainresearch interests are Phenomenology, Existential Philosophy, Political Philosophy, and Social Ontology. He is the author of ber das Konzept der Zeitlichkeit bei Sren Kierkegaard mit stndigem Hinblick auf Martin Heidegger (2011) and Ein rtselhaftes Zeichen. Zum Verhltnis von Martin Heidegger und Sren Kierkegaard (2016), and the editor of Perspektiven mit Heidegger (2017).
1. Who is the Self of Everyday Existence? (Mark Wrathall).- 2. Das Man and Everydayness: A New Interpretation (Charlotte Knowles).- 3. Heideggers Underdeveloped Conception of the Undistinguishedness (Indifferenz) of Everyday Human Existence (Jo-Jo Koo).- 4. The Status of Division One of Being and Time and the Sources of Authenticity (Gerhard Thonhauser).- 5. Becoming Accountable But for What? The Importance of Authenticity and the Unavoidability of Theory (Tobias Keiling).- 6. Unobtrusive Governance: Heidegger and Foucault on the Sources of Social Normativity ( Andreas Beinsteiner).- 7. The Inseparability of Anyone and Self, Production and Action: A Critical Proposal Between Heidegger and Arendt (Lucilla Guidi).- 8. Authenticity and Plurality: From Heideggers Anyone to Arendts Common Sense and Back Again (Ileana Bortun).- 9. Ambivalence of Power: Heideggers Anyone and Arendts acting in concert (Katrin Meyer).- 10. The Historicality of das Man: Foucault on Dolcility andOptimality (Kevin Thompson).- 11. How to change das Man? (Christian Schmidt).- 12. Social Authenticity: Towards a Heideggerian Analysis of Social Change (Martin Weichold).- 13. The Reiterating Parodist as a World Transformer: A Butlerian Reading of Heidegger on Social Change? (Gerhard Thonhauser).- 14. Authentic Role Play: A Political Solution to an Existential Paradox (Hans Bernhard Schmid).- 15. An I that is Anybody: Normativity and Freedom in Heidegger's Man (Dirk Setton).- 16. The Danger of Being Ridden by a Type: Everydayness and Authenticity in Context: Reading Heidegger with Henry James, Hegel, and Diderot (Dieter Thom).