Livre | Chapitre
Heidegger and consciousness
pp. 91-108
Résumé
The topic of this paper concerns the nature of existential awareness, a topic which Heidegger has not developed with explicit thoroughness in his own philosophy. In this light, I should note at the beginning that at its best Heidegger's thought is not designed to encourage its own repetition. He has not attempted to create a school of philosophers who canonize his "teachings' or make a "system' out of what he has said, and by his own accounting he has not been concerned to discover a body of stated truths which disciples carefully repeat. My interest in this discussion is not to articulate what might be considered Heidegger's "doctrine' of consciousness.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Ballard Edward, Scott Charles E (1973) Martin Heidegger: in Europe and America. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 91-108
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1981-1_6
Citation complète:
Scott Charles E, 1973, Heidegger and consciousness. In E. Ballard & C.E. Scott (eds.) Martin Heidegger (91-108). Dordrecht, Springer.