Transcendental Idealism and Metaphysics: Husserl's Critique of Heidegger. Volume 2

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The book offers a systematic reconstruction of the disagreement between Husserl and Heidegger from the former's point of view, but without falling into any form of Husserlian apologetics. The main thesis is that Husserl's critique of Heidegger's existential analytics as a form of philosophical anthropology entails a deeper fundamental thesis, namely, that Heidegger confuses the subject matter of first philosophy (the transcendental subject) with metaphysics (in the Husserlian sense of the expression). At stake in Husserl's critique of Heidegger's philosophy in Being and Time is the refusal to transcendentalize the irrational aspects of our human existence. This second volume focuses on the question of being, clarifying the distinction between ontology and metaphysics in Husserl's thought. In fact, contrary to a long-standing and established interpretive tradition, according to which Husserl's phenomenology is metaphysically neutral, the book shows to what extent Husserl always understood as the ultimate goal of his philosophizing the positive foundation of a metaphysics. This volume appeals to students and researchers.

Author(s): Daniele De Santis
Series: Contributions to Phenomenology
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: xv; 255
City: Cham
Tags: Transcendental Philosophy; Idealism-Realism Controversy; Transcendental Idealism; Monadology and philosophy; Suffering and philosophy; Edmund Husserl; Martin Heidegger; Husserl and Heidegger

Part I Being and Beings
1 Heidegger on Region, Dasein, and Being 3
2 Dasein, Determination Judgments and the Essence 41
CODA.1—Remarks on Agamben’s Remark on Heidegger 68
3 Husserl and the Regions of Beings 73
CODA.2—Husserl, Heidegger and Two Interpretations of Aristotle:
A Reading Hypothesis 104
CODA.3—Phaenomenologia Sub specie Regionis:
A Geography Yet to Be Written 108
Part II Metaphysics or, of Last Philosophy
4 Husserl Metaphysicus 119
5 The Sea of Suffering 159
6 Forms-of-Life and the Reform(s) of Philosophy 199
Conclusion (Notes for Future Research) 243
Index 253