FIGURES
KEY TO ABBREVIATIONS AND NOTATIONS
INTRODUCTION
PART I • THE BREAKTHROUGH TO THE TOPIC
1. Phenomenological Beginnings: The Hermeneutic Breakthrough
(1915-19)
Harbingers in the Habilitation
KNS 1919: The Idea of Philosophy and the Problem of Worldviews
SS 1919: Phenomenology and Transcendental Value-Philosophy
SS 1919: On the Essence of the University and Academic Studies
2. Theo-Logical Beginnings: Toward a Phenomenology of
Christianity
The Religious-Philosophical Itinerary (1915-22)
Religious Experience as a Phenomenological Paradigm (1917-19)
The Philosophical Foundations of Medieval Mysticism (August
1919)
Summary: A Religious Phenomenology?
3. The Deconstruction of Life (1919-20)
WS 1919-20: Basic Problems of Phenomenology
SS 1920: Phenomenology of Intuition and Expression: Theory of
Philosophical Concept Formation
"Critical Comments on Karl Jaspers's P.1ychology of Worldviews"
4. The Religion Courses (1920-21)
WS 1920-21: Introduction to the Phenomenology of Religion
SS 1921: Augustine and Neoplatonism
Conclusion: Two Religion Courses
PART II • CONFRONTING THE ONTOLOGICAL TRADITION
5. What Did Heidegger Find in Aristotle? (1921-23)
SS 1921: Phenomenological Practicum "Relating to" Aristotle's De
Anima
WS 1921-22: Phenomenological Interpretations to Aristotle:
Introduction to
Phenomenological Research: Einleitung
SS 1922: Phenomenological Interpretations to Aristotle: Ontology
and Logic
October 1922: The Einleitung to a Book on Aristotle
WS 1922-23: Seminar: "Phenomenological Interpretations to
Aristotle"
SS 1923: Ontology: Hermeneutics of Facticity
6. Aristotle Again: From Unconcealment to Presence (1923-24)
WS 1923-24: Introduction to Phenomenological Research
"Being-here and Being-true" (1923-24; December 1924)
SS 1924: Ground Concepts of Aristotelian Philosophy
WS 1924-25: Interpretation of Platonic Dialogues
PART III • THREE DRAFTS OF BEING AND TIME
7. The Dilthey Draft: "The Concept of Time" (1924)
"The Concept of Time" U uly 1924)
"The Concept of Time" (November 1924)
The Kassel Lectures (April 1925)
8. The Ontoeroteric Draft: History of the Concept of
Time (1925)
SS 1925: History of the Concept of Time
WS 1925-26: Logic (Aristotle) [The Question of Truth]
9. The Final Draft: Toward a Kairology of Being
Ontic Ontology
The Primacy of Possibility
Horizonal Schematizing: The Story Goes On
EROTETIC EPILOGUE 4
Appendixes*
B. Heideggers Lehrveranstaltungen I Heidegger's Teaching
Activities,
1915-30
C. A Documentary Chronology of the Path to the Publication of Being
and
Time, 1924-27
D. Genealogical Glossary of Heidegger's Basic Terms, 1915-27
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX OF NAMES
INDEX OF SUBJECT MATTER
INDEX OF GREEK TERMS
INDEX OF LATIN TERMS
* Note that there is no Appendix A. See Introduction for
explanation.
Theodore Kisiel is Professor of Philosophy at Northern Illinois University and translator of Martin Heidegger's History of the Concept of Time.
"[Kisiel] surveys the conceptual laboratory in which Heidegger in those years mixed his 'blasting powder.' The English reader can thus for the first time get acquainted in depth with the philosophical 'inside story.' The German reader is likewise indebted to Kisiel for many a surprise. . . . An impressive and important book."--Dieter Thoma, "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
"[Kisiel] surveys the conceptual laboratory in which Heidegger in those years mixed his 'blasting powder.' The English reader can thus for the first time get acquainted in depth with the philosophical 'inside story.' The German reader is likewise indebted to Kisiel for many a surprise. . . . An impressive and important book."--Dieter Thoma, "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
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