Catalogue > Serials > Book Series > Edited Book

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1995

Pages: 15-640

Series: Phaenomenologica

ISBN (Undefined): 9780792335672

Full citation:

Babette Babich (ed), From phenomenology to thought, errancy, and desire, Berlin, Springer, 1995

From phenomenology to thought, errancy, and desire

Essays in honor of William J. Richardson, S.J.

Edited by
Babette Babich

pp. 15-640

Phaenomenologica | 133

Springer

1995

Abstract

For both continental and analytic styles of philosophy, the thought of Martin Heidegger must be counted as one of the most important influences in contemporary philosophy. In this book, essays by internationally noted scholars, ranging from David B. Allison to Slavoj Zizek, honour the interpretive contributions of William J. Richardson's pathbreaking Heidegger: Through Phenomenology to Thought. The essays move from traditional phenomenology to the idea of essential (another) thinking, the questions of translation and existential expressions of the turn of Heidegger's thought, the intersection of politics and language, the philosophic significance of Jacques Lacan, and several essays on science and technology. All show the influence of Richardson's first study. A valuable emphasis appears in Richardson's interpretation of Heidegger's conception of die Irre, interpreted as Errancy, set in its current locus in a discussion of Heidegger's debacle with the political in his involvement with National Socialism.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1995

Pages: 15-640

Series: Phaenomenologica

ISBN (Undefined): 9780792335672

Full citation:

Babette Babich (ed), From phenomenology to thought, errancy, and desire, Berlin, Springer, 1995