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The World Unclaimed A Challenge To Heideggers Critique Of Husserl Lilian Alweiss

  • SKU: BELL-1673284
The World Unclaimed A Challenge To Heideggers Critique Of Husserl Lilian Alweiss
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The World Unclaimed A Challenge To Heideggers Critique Of Husserl Lilian Alweiss instant download after payment.

Publisher: Ohio University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.14 MB
Pages: 264
Author: Lilian Alweiss
ISBN: 9780821414644, 082141464X
Language: English
Year: 2003

Product desciption

The World Unclaimed A Challenge To Heideggers Critique Of Husserl Lilian Alweiss by Lilian Alweiss 9780821414644, 082141464X instant download after payment.

The World Unclaimed argues that Heidegger’s critique of modern epistemology in Being and Time is seriously flawed. Heidegger believes he has done away with epistemological problems concerning the external world by showing that the world is an existential structure of Dasein. However, the author argues that Heidegger fails to make good his claim that he has “rescued” the phenomenon of the world, which he believes the tradition of philosophy has bypassed. Heidegger fails not only to reclaim the world but also to acknowledge its loss. Alweiss thus calls into question Heidegger’s claim that ontology is more fundamental than epistemology. The World Unclaimed develops its powerful critique of Being and Time by arguing for a return to Husserl. It draws on Husserl’s insight that it is the moving and sensing body that discloses how we are already familiar with the world. Kinaesthesia provides a key for understanding our relation to the world. The author thus suggests that thinkers in the vein of Husserl and Kant -who, for Heidegger, epitomize the tradition of modern philosophy by returning to a “worldless subject”- may provide us with the resources to reclaim the phenomenon of the world that Being and Time sets out to salvage. Alweiss’s fresh and innovative study demonstrates that it is possible to overcome epistemological skepticism without ever losing sight of the phenomenon of the world. Moreover, Alweiss challenges us to reconsider the relation between Husserl and Heidegger by providing a forceful defense of Husserl’s critique of cognition.

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