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        Acknowledgments
- 
            
            
        Richard Capobianco
        
 
                                    
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                                            Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
 - Contents vii
 - Introduction 1
 - 
                            PART I Studies
 - 1 Pindar’s “Gold” and Heraclitus’s “Kosmos” as Being Itself 7
 - 2 In the Black Notebooks: The “Turn” Away from the Transcendental- Phenomenological Positioning of Being and Time to the Thinking of Being as Physis and Aletheia 23
 - 3 Heidegger’s Manifold Thinking of Being: In Honor of Professor William J. Richardson, S.J. 36
 - 4 Athena, Art, and Overcoming the Egoity of Our Age 52
 - 5 Mythos, Being, and the Appropriation of a Religious Tradition 64
 - 6 On Heidegger’s Heraclitus Lectures: In Nearness of a Process Metaphysics? 71
 - 7 The Path through Heidegger’s Thought An Interview with Prof. Vladimír Leško for FILOZOFIA 78
 - 
                            PART II Translation
 - 1 Martin Heidegger’s Thinking and Japanese Philosophy 93
 - 
                            PART III Reflections and Impressions
 - 1 Heidegger and the Earliest Greeks 107
 - 2 Heidegger, Phenomenology, and Metaphysics 112
 - 3 Why “Phenomenology” Inevitably Slides toward Idealism/ Subjectivism/Constructivism 115
 - 4 Heidegger’s “Clearing” Is Not Identical with the Human Being 117
 - 5 Heidegger, Max Müller, and Metaphysics “Heidegger Remains a Metaphysician” 120
 - 6 Heidegger, Plato, and “Light” 123
 - 7 Hebel and the Inexhaustible Depth of “Things” 125
 - 8 Facticity Only in the Light of Eternity 128
 - 9 Another Suggestion on Thinking Heidegger and Whitehead 130
 - 10 Heidegger and C.G. Jung on Wholeness as the Telos of the Human Being 132
 - 11 Heidegger and C.G. Jung on “Opposites” 135
 - 12 Heidegger and Melville 140
 - 13 Heidegger and a Robert Frost Poem 143
 - 14 The Unspeakable Mystery of All Things 145
 - 15 A “Hermetic Saying” and the Hermetic Tradition 146
 - 16 Heidegger and Walt Whitman 151
 - 17 Heidegger and the Limit of Language – and Rumi 152
 - 18 Thomas Aquinas, “God,” and the “Godhead of God” 156
 - Afterword 159
 - A Note on the Text and Heidegger’s: Gesamtausgabe 161
 - Acknowledgments 167
 - Notes 169
 - Index 179
 
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
 - Contents vii
 - Introduction 1
 - 
                            PART I Studies
 - 1 Pindar’s “Gold” and Heraclitus’s “Kosmos” as Being Itself 7
 - 2 In the Black Notebooks: The “Turn” Away from the Transcendental- Phenomenological Positioning of Being and Time to the Thinking of Being as Physis and Aletheia 23
 - 3 Heidegger’s Manifold Thinking of Being: In Honor of Professor William J. Richardson, S.J. 36
 - 4 Athena, Art, and Overcoming the Egoity of Our Age 52
 - 5 Mythos, Being, and the Appropriation of a Religious Tradition 64
 - 6 On Heidegger’s Heraclitus Lectures: In Nearness of a Process Metaphysics? 71
 - 7 The Path through Heidegger’s Thought An Interview with Prof. Vladimír Leško for FILOZOFIA 78
 - 
                            PART II Translation
 - 1 Martin Heidegger’s Thinking and Japanese Philosophy 93
 - 
                            PART III Reflections and Impressions
 - 1 Heidegger and the Earliest Greeks 107
 - 2 Heidegger, Phenomenology, and Metaphysics 112
 - 3 Why “Phenomenology” Inevitably Slides toward Idealism/ Subjectivism/Constructivism 115
 - 4 Heidegger’s “Clearing” Is Not Identical with the Human Being 117
 - 5 Heidegger, Max Müller, and Metaphysics “Heidegger Remains a Metaphysician” 120
 - 6 Heidegger, Plato, and “Light” 123
 - 7 Hebel and the Inexhaustible Depth of “Things” 125
 - 8 Facticity Only in the Light of Eternity 128
 - 9 Another Suggestion on Thinking Heidegger and Whitehead 130
 - 10 Heidegger and C.G. Jung on Wholeness as the Telos of the Human Being 132
 - 11 Heidegger and C.G. Jung on “Opposites” 135
 - 12 Heidegger and Melville 140
 - 13 Heidegger and a Robert Frost Poem 143
 - 14 The Unspeakable Mystery of All Things 145
 - 15 A “Hermetic Saying” and the Hermetic Tradition 146
 - 16 Heidegger and Walt Whitman 151
 - 17 Heidegger and the Limit of Language – and Rumi 152
 - 18 Thomas Aquinas, “God,” and the “Godhead of God” 156
 - Afterword 159
 - A Note on the Text and Heidegger’s: Gesamtausgabe 161
 - Acknowledgments 167
 - Notes 169
 - Index 179