A guide to Heidegger's Being and time /
Heidegger's Being and time
Magda King ; edited by John Llewellyn.
- xxvi, 397 pages ; 24 cm.
- SUNY series in contemporary continental philosophy .
- SUNY series in contemporary continental philosophy. .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
What Is the Question? -- Exposition -- A Formal Statement of the Question -- A Provisional Explanation of "Meaning" (Sinn): The Theme of Being and Time Restated -- Why Has Traditional Ontology Failed to Get to the Root of the Problem of Being? -- The Uniqueness of the Concept of Being: The Problem of Its Unity. Aristotle's "Unity of Analogy"--A Lead into Heidegger's Question -- How Is the New Inquiry into Being to Be Concretely Worked Out? Difficulties Arising from the Nature of the Problem Itself -- Basic Features and Problems of Being and Time -- The Being of Da-sein -- Existence, Everydayness and Da-sein -- Existence and Care, in Contrast with Reality -- The Two Basic Ways of Existing: Owned or Authentic and Disowned or Inauthentic Existence. The Undifferentiated Modality of Everydayness -- The Ontological-Existential Terminology of Being and Time -- A Discussion of the Meaning of Da-sein -- The Worldishness of World -- The Fundamental Existential Constitution of Da-sein: Being-in-the-World. Heidegger's Conception of World -- The Theoretical and Practical Ways of Taking Care of Things -- The Ontic Basis of the Ontological Inquiry into World: The Umwelt of Everyday Existence. The Meaning of Umwelt -- The Reality of Beings within the World -- Being-with-Others and Being-One's-Self -- The Basic Concept of Being-with -- The Everyday Self and the "They" -- The Publicity of Everydayness -- Discourse and Language: Everyday Discourse as Idle Talk -- The Everyday Way of Seeing: Curiosity -- Ambiguity -- Falling and Thrownness.