Johannes A. Niederhauser: "Heidegger on Death and Being"

Adolf Goebbels
Published on Nov 15, 2023
My book on Heidegger on death and being is out now. A journey of nearly ten years.
Link to the book: https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030513740

Get the Study Guide for my new 2023 course on Heidegger's seminal Being and Time here
https://www.halkyonguild.org/heidegger-being-and-time

Seminars begin mid January 2023.



The course is an invitation to think after the most fundamental phenomena of being and human existence. This course is ideal for anyone who wants to understand Heidegger but also if you want to articulate an exit from modernity. Heidegger's thought of concealment, withdrawal, and another beginning is specifically intended for this.

The course is ideal for everyone who wants to gain a deeper understanding of existentialism, phenomenology, the philosophy of technology, and modernity and its relationship with Antiquity.


I’m an independent scholar and your contributions make this work possible. Huge thanks to all my supporters! Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/classicalphilosophy
Support me via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/janiederhauser
Gift Bitcoin: 3JimXYdoLVPWVEtk3tPtiYcLqQsFmS5KmH

Book description:
The book is the first detailed and full exegesis of the role of death in Heidegger’s philosophy and provides a decisive answer to the question of being. It is well-known that Heidegger asked the “question of being”. It is equally commonplace to assume that Heidegger failed to provide a proper answer to the question. In this provocative new study Niederhauser argues that Heidegger gives a distinct response to the question of being and that the phenomenon of death is key to finding and understanding it.

The book offers challenging interpretations of crucial moments of Heidegger’s philosophy such as aletheia, the history of being, time, technology, the fourfold, mortality, the meaning of existence, the event, and language. Niederhauser makes the case that any reading of Heidegger that ignores death cannot fully understand those concepts.

The book argues that death is central to Heidegger’s “thinking path” from the early 1920s until his late post-war philosophy. The book thus attempts to show that there is a unity of the early and late Heidegger often ignored by other commentators. Niederhauser argues that death is the fulcrum of Heidegger’s ontology and the turning point of the history of being. Death resurfaces at the most crucial moments of the “thinking path” – from beginning to end.
The book is of interest to those invested in current debates on the ethics of dying and the transhumanist project of digital human immortality. The text also shows that for Heidegger philosophy means first and foremost to learn how to die.

This volume speaks to continental and analytical philosophers and students alike as it draws on a number of diverse Heidegger interpretations and appreciates intercultural differences in reading Heidegger.

Copyright: Johannes Achill Niederhauser

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