Event and Time
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Claude Romano
About this book
Contemporary philosophy, from Kant through Bergson and Husserl to Heidegger, has assumed that time must be conceived as a fundamental determination of the subject: Time is not first in things but arises from actions, attitudes, or comportments through which a subject temporalizes mtime, expecting or remembering, anticipating the future or making a decision. Event and Time traces the genesis of this thesis through detailed, rigorous analyses of the philosophy of time in Plato, Aristotle, and Augustine, ultimately showing that, in the development of metaphysics, the understanding of the temporal phenomenon as an inner-temporal phenomenon has made possible time’s subjectivization. The book goes on to argue that time is in fact not thinkable according to metaphysical subjectivity. Instead, the guiding thread for the analysis of time must shift to the eventual hermeneutics of the human being, first developed in Event and World, and now deepened and completed in Event and Time. Romano’s diptych makes a compelling, rigorous, and original philosophical contribution to the thinking of the event.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
ix -
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Preface to the Second French Edition
xi -
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Translator’s Note
xvii -
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Introduction
1 -
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PART 1. THE METAPHYSICS OF TIME
9 -
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PART 2. TIME
95 -
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PART 3. TEMPORALITY
149 -
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Notes
241 -
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Index
267