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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2004

Pages: 439-467

Series: Continental Philosophy Review

Full citation:

Iain Thomson, "Heidegger's perfectionist philosophy of education in "Being and time"", Continental Philosophy Review 37 (4), 2004, pp. 439-467.

Heidegger's perfectionist philosophy of education in "Being and time"

Iain Thomson

pp. 439-467

in: Irigaray on Merleau-Ponty's "Eye and Mind", Continental Philosophy Review 37 (4), 2004.

Abstract

In Heidegger on Ontotheology: Technology and the Politics of Education, I argue that Heidegger's ontological thinking about education forms one of the deep thematic undercurrents of his entire career, but I focus mainly on Heidegger's later work in order to make this case. The current essay extends this view to Heidegger's early magnum opus, contending that Being and Time is profoundly informed – albeit at a subterranean level – by Heidegger's perfectionist thinking about education. Explaining this perfectionism in terms of its ontological and ethical components (and their linkage), I show that Being and Time's educational philosophy seeks to answer the paradoxical question: How do become what we are? Understanding Heidegger's strange but powerful answer to this original pedagogical question, I suggest, allows us to make sense of some of the most difficult and important issues at the heart of Being and Time, including what Heidegger really means by possibility, death, and authenticity.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2004

Pages: 439-467

Series: Continental Philosophy Review

Full citation:

Iain Thomson, "Heidegger's perfectionist philosophy of education in "Being and time"", Continental Philosophy Review 37 (4), 2004, pp. 439-467.