File spoon-archives/heidegger.archive/heidegger_2001/heidegger.0103, message 57


Date: Fri, 23 Mar 2001 12:32:12 +0100
From: artefact-AT-t-online.de (Michael Eldred)
Subject: Re: time


Cologne 23-Mar-2001

Rene de Bakker schrieb  Wed, 21 Mar 2001 14:37:06 +0100:

> At 02:50 21-3-01 +0100, Michael wrote:
> >our Jud is really going buddhist<
>
> Or trapped in the eternal return of the same.

BS Mark II wot? Wilful amathia.

> Nietzsche is the first modern philosopher who takes
> time for real. Hegel (and Kant) didn't: when Adalbert Stifter,
> the author, whom Heidegger likes so much, was
> travelling together with Hegel, and he complained,
> that they lived in terrible times, Hegel said: there
> is no time, only eternity. (as told by Poeggeler)
> What appears to us as a fleeting, in the end is
> hold in a dialectical process of thinking.
>
> But for Nietzsche, thinking, is the result of something
> 'earlier', instinct or body (das leibende Leib).
> Its becoming cannot be traced back to a beginning,
> not even an absolute one (Hegel: Logik). But this is
> already the eternal return! Although it is nearly
> unfathomable, it is real like hell.
>
> Nietzsche thought of the ER as the prospective point
> of decision: either one will be able to live in it, or
> one perishes. Or, of course, one closes an eye and
> finds happiness. Like the whole of analytical philosophy,
> which was so alive 20 years ago and now is completely vanished.
> Where has it gone? Into the computer. The type-writer
> of Quine, which had no room for the questionmark sign.
> As he said, he didn't need it, he dealt only in certainties.

A friend of mine, enamoured of AP, tells me proudly of the German
Analytical Philosophy Association, which has a burgeoning membership.
All wandering somewhere in the terrain cast over three hundred years ago
between Descartes and Leibniz. But they don't look three hundred years
old.

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_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ Dr Michael Eldred -_-_-
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> Ren
>
> Heidegger: Im Denken wird jeglich Ding einsam und langsam.
>
> -----------------------------------
> drs. Ren de Bakker
> Universiteitsbibliotheek Amsterdam
> Afdeling Catalogisering
> tel. 020-5252368
>
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