Abstract
This book offers a phenomenologically informed reading of some fundamental positions of the philosophical tradition. Its objective is not that of giving an exhaustive account of the thinking of any single philosopher, much less of the trajectory of philosophy as a whole. rather, the aim is to retrace a few key moments in the course of philosophical enquiry, from its outset to its accomplishment in Nietzsche’s metaphysics, with a focus on the main motive of that enquiry: the always new attempt to establish a sufficient knowledge of the ultimate principle on which to build a human »ethos«.
Schlagworte
Heidegger Platon Abendländische Philosophie Parmenides Leibniz Phänomenologie Gottfried Wilhelm Philosophiegeschichte Hermeneutik Heraklit Friedrich Descartes Martin Nietzsche René Griechische Philosophie- 28–51 2. Introduction 28–51
- 85–117 4. Heraclitus 85–117
- 121–163 5. Parmenides 121–163
- 164–212 6. Plato 164–212
- 220–231 7. Aristotle 220–231
- 241–262 9. Descartes 241–262
- 266–294 10. Leibniz 266–294
- 295–311 11. Kant 295–311
- 315–355 12. Nietzsche 315–355
- 356–372 13. Heidegger 356–372
- 373–374 Greek Alphabet 373–374