Results for 'Miles Groth'

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  1.  3
    The voice that thinks: Heidegger studies with a bibliography of English translations, 1949-1996.Miles Groth - 1997 - Greensburg, PA: Eadmer Press.
    A series of essays on Martin Heidegger's thought. An early iteration of the author's comprehensive bibliography of Heidegger translation in English.
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  2.  6
    Translating Heidegger.Miles Groth - 2004 - Amherst, N.Y.: Humanity Books.
    Part one : early translations of fundamental words -- Introduction -- Mistranslations in the early critical literature (1929-1949) -- The first Heidegger in English -- Part two : hermeneutics and philosophy of translation -- Elements of a theory of translation -- Paratactic method : translating parmenides, fragment VI -- Bibliography -- Part I : works by Heidegger cited in the text -- Part II : other sources -- A research bibliography of Heidegger in English translation.
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  3.  6
    Basic Questions of Philosophy. Selected.Miles Groth - 1995 - Review of Metaphysics 49 (2):411-413.
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  4.  7
    Heidegger, Martin. Supplements: From the Earliest Essays to.Miles Groth - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (1):149-151.
  5. Heidegger's Philosophy of Translation.Miles Groth - 1997 - Dissertation, Fordham University
    Translation is an early and ongoing, but as yet for the most part unexamined, theme of Heidegger's lecture courses and essays. According to Heidegger, translation became a central philosophical issue in the Western tradition soon after its beginnings when a number of the basic words of the early Greek thinkers were sometimes mistranslated into Latin and that, as a result, the thought of the pre-Socratics and the classic Greek philosophers, especially Aristotle, has remained obscure. ;For Heidegger, because of the relation (...)
     
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  6.  4
    Laing's Presence.Miles Groth - 2001 - Janus Head 4 (1):4-1.
    An encounter with R.D. Laing at a lecture he gave towards the end of his life in New York. The personality of this existential psychotherapist was powerful even in a large venue. His approach to psychotherapy is discussed.
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  7.  6
    Supplements: From the Earliest Essays to “Being and Time” and Beyond. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (1):149-150.
    As the editor notes, the importance of this collection of “Heidegger’s early experimental essays” is considerable for an appreciation and understanding of the formative period of Heidegger’s thought, including his early lecture courses, Being and Time, and even the transitional reflections from the late 1930s gathered under the title Contributions to Philosophy. Modestly entitled “supplements,” these texts are illuminating documents of the formative period of perhaps the twentieth century’s most important philosopher.—Miles Groth, Wagner College.
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  8.  14
    Pietersma, Henry. Phenomenological Epistemology. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (4):936-938.
  9.  17
    Phenomenological Interpretation of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Studies in Continental Thought. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1998 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (2):455-457.
    Fewer than half of the fifty-two courses Martin Heidegger gave between 1915 and 1956 have now been translated into English. Twelve of them have not yet appeared in the first Gesamtausgabe of his works. The present volume, which was first published in German in 1977, is the translation of a course given during the winter semester of 1927–8, at Marburg University. As the translators note, with its publication, all of Heidegger’s published texts on Kant are now available in English. The (...)
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  10.  18
    Polt, Richard, and Gregory Fried, eds. A Companion to Heidegger’s Introduction to Metaphysics. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (2):452-455.
  11.  11
    Polt, Richard. Heidegger: An Introduction. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (2):471-473.
  12.  19
    Reading Heidegger from the Start. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1996 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (1):162-164.
    This volume is comprised of twenty-two essays on the early writings of Martin Heidegger, including a number of lecture courses he gave at Freiburg University and Marburg University from 1919 until the publication of Sein und Zeit in 1927. Four of the essays have already been published in another form. Seven have been translated for the volume, two of them by the authors. In recently published studies, the editors have been responsible in great part for bringing to light the influence (...)
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  13.  4
    Seeing the Self: Heidegger on Subjectivity. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (4):946-947.
    There are by now a number of detailed expositions of Being and Time and very many studies in which the basic argument of Heidegger's best known work is reconstructed. Seeing the Self is among the latter. As elsewhere in the recent secondary literature, the extreme novelty of Being and Time is challenged. Øverenget goes so far as to say “[i]t may very well be that for the most part there is nothing really new in Heidegger apart from his investigations of (...)
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  14.  34
    Thing and Space. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (4):948-950.
  15.  9
    Thing and Space. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (4):948-950.
    With the publication of these lectures, given in the summer semester of 1907 at the University of Göttingen, all of Husserl’s course on the “Main Parts of the Phenomenology and Critique of Reason” is now available. They were preceded by the publication in 1964 of a translation of the first five lectures of the course under the title The Idea of Phenomenology, which was first published in German in 1950. As Husserl wrote in a private notebook, the themes of the (...)
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  16.  40
    The Essence of Truth. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2005 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (4):900-901.
    Most of Heidegger’s readings of early and classical Greek texts are unconventional by traditional philosophical and philological standards. The present reading of Plato is no exception. Heidegger suggests that the “essence of truth is what first allows the essence of man to be grasped” and “the man whose liberation is depicted in the allegory is set out into the truth.” But since such “setting out” is the very “mode of his existence, the fundamental occurrence of his Dasein,” the allegory is (...)
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  17.  19
    The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1997 - International Philosophical Quarterly 37 (1):109-110.
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  18.  13
    The Other Heidegger. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1995 - Review of Metaphysics 48 (3):651-652.
    This book is "a series of [eight] philosophical-political essays in which the boundary between philosophy and politics remains hazy and the discussion shifts readily across this disciplinary divide". Four of the essays, all written since 1989, have already appeared in print, and two of those have been revised for this book. Fred Dallmayr, who is Dee Professor of Political Theory at Notre Dame, finds in Heidegger's writings after 1933 "a prolonged struggle to expel or subdue the virus" of fascism, to (...)
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  19.  15
    The Phenomenology of Religious Life. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (2):442-445.
    The present volume is a translation of Volume 60 of the Collected Edition of Heidegger’s works, Phänomenologie des religiösen Lebens, which was first published in 1995 edited by Matthias Jung, Thomas Regehly and Claudius Strube. It consists of three parts: an “approximation of the train of thought and articulation” of a course of lectures Heidegger gave in the winter semester 1920–21 entitled “Introduction to the Phenomenology of Religion,” edited by Jung and Regehly; the actual text of his summer semester 1921 (...)
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  20.  8
    Towards the Definition of Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (3):651-652.
    The volume under review contains manuscript-based texts of two courses offered by Martin Heidegger, “The Idea of Philosophy and the Problem of Worldview” and “Phenomenology and Transcendental Philosophy of Value,” as well as a student’s transcript of a third course given by Heidegger, “On the Nature of the University and Academic Study,” for which there is no extant autograph manuscript. All of the courses were given in 1919, Heidegger’s first year as a teacher at the University of Freiburg, where he (...)
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  21.  3
    To Work at the Foundations: Essays in Memory of Aron Gurwitsch. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (1):161-162.
    Today, too little is heard about Aron Gurwitsch, who was one of the clearest expositors of Edmund Husserl’s later philosophy and who, like Maurice Merleau-Ponty, brought together in fruitful synthesis the findings of phenomenology and Gestalt psychology. It is therefore timely that the present set of essays should be published. The collection is comprised of versions of papers, most of them by friends and former students of Gurwitsch, given on November 7–9, 1991, at the New School for Social Research, where (...)
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  22.  25
    The Will to Technology and the Culture of Nihilism. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2005 - Review of Metaphysics 59 (2):435-437.
    It may seem remarkable that Professor Kroker also cites with nearly equivalent reverence Bill Gates’s Business @ the Speed of Thought, but the incongruity is eased when one realizes that, for the author, Gates is the living clue to the Heidegger–Marx/heidegger–nietzsche connections he identifies. In Kroker’s analysis, Gates plays the role of both heroic visionary and subtly sinister harbinger of the end of the fully human. Moreover, “[w]hat is disclosed in [Gates’s] book is nothing less than a general political philosophy” (...)
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  23.  16
    The Young Heidegger. Rumor of the Hidden King. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1995 - Review of Metaphysics 49 (2):445-447.
    This book is both an intellectual biography and a thematic analysis of Martin Heidegger's "youthful writings" from 1910 to the appearance of Sein und Zeit in 1927. It is nearly contemporaneous with the publication in the first Heidegger Gesamtausgabe of the texts of the lecture courses he gave during his first period at the University of Freiburg and while he taught at the University of Marburg, courses which figure prominently in the book. Van Buren's analysis covers early articles Heidegger wrote (...)
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  24.  18
    Øverenget, Einar. Seeing the Self: Heidegger on Subjectivity. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (4):946-948.
  25.  27
    Basic Questions of Philosophy. Selected "Problems" of "Logic.". [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1995 - Review of Metaphysics 49 (2):411-413.
    This is the ninth volume of translations of major works by Martin Heidegger to be published by Indiana University Press. It is the second translation of one of his lecture courses by the late Andre Schuwer and Richard Rojcewicz. No other thinker who wrote in German brings to the fore more seriously the problems of the translation of his texts into English than Martin Heidegger. In a certain sense, one of the major themes of his work is translation. In a (...)
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  26.  36
    A companion to continental philosophy by Simon Critchley and William R. Schroeder (eds.). Oxford: Blackwell, 1998, pp. XV + 680, £65 or US$84.95. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Philosophy 74 (2):282-295.
  27. A Companion To Continental Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Philosophy 74 (2):282-295.
     
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  28.  10
    A Companion to Heidegger’s Introduction to Metaphysics. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (2):452-454.
    The coterie of commentators represented in the present volume include some of the clearest voices for Heidegger’s way of thinking among the second and third generations of American Heidegger scholars. Two of the contributors, who are also the volume’s editors, have just published a new translation of Einführung in die Metaphysik, an event that would appear to be one of the reasons for the project published here. Its thirteen essays are organized under three headings: the question of being, Heidegger and (...)
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  29.  7
    Aristotle’s Metaphysics Θ 1-3. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1996 - International Philosophical Quarterly 36 (4):492-493.
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  30.  6
    Aristotle’s Metaphysics Θ 1-3. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1996 - International Philosophical Quarterly 36 (4):492-493.
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  31.  8
    Being and Time. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 51 (2):421-424.
    This is the much anticipated publication of Joan Stambaugh’s translation of Martin Heidegger’s major work. As the translator notes in her preface: “This translation was begun some time ago and has undergone changes over the years as colleagues have offered suggestions”. An earlier version of the translation was privately circulated among scholars during the nearly twenty years that passed before SUNY Press was able to make available the work, which is based on the seventh edition of Sein und Zeit. The (...)
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  32.  29
    Basic Concepts. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1994 - Review of Metaphysics 48 (2):406-408.
    During the summer semester of 1941 Martin Heidegger gave a course of lectures on Grundbegriffe at the University of Freiburg. The German text was first published in 1981 as volume 51 of the Gesamtausgabe of Heidegger's writings. Each of the first five lectures is followed by a "review" which further illuminates the lecture itself. The titles of the subsections of the work have been provided by the editor, Petra Jaeger.
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  33.  15
    Comay, Rebecca, and John McCumber, eds. Endings: Questions of Memory in Hegel and Heidegger. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (1):127-129.
  34.  20
    Cristin, Renato. Heidegger and Leibniz: Reason and the Path. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (3):692-693.
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  35.  15
    Crowell, Steven Galt. Husserl, Heidegger, and the Space of Meaning. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (3):622-624.
  36.  2
    Contributions to Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (3):656-657.
    Announced by its translators as Heideggers second major work after Being and Time, Contributions to Philosophy was written in the years 19368. The text appeared in German only in 1989, however, to mark the centenary of Heideggers birth. Although the translators are at pains to assure the reader that Heideggers musings are not notes or aphorisms, in many cases the entries are clearly drafts or rough sketches.
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  37.  27
    Empathy and Agency. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (3):663-665.
    Some of the interest of philosophers of mind in the results of recent research in the social sciences, including especially cognitive science and developmental psychology, is reflected in this anthology of eleven essays on the long-standing discussion about how minds understand other minds. In a few of the essays, enthusiastic and often seemingly uncritical acceptance of the empirical findings of contemporary psychological research may cause some readers well-warranted concern. Taken together, these essays are welcome additions to the discussion of an (...)
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  38.  4
    Ethics and Finitude: Heideggerian Contributions to Moral Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (4):918-919.
    In the late 1940s, a young French philosopher, Jean Beaufret, asked Martin Heidegger when he would write an ethics to complement his ontology of human existence. Now, in Ethics and Finitude, Lawrence Hatab, who teaches philosophy at Old Dominion University, sets out to show that even though Heidegger never published an ethics, “his manner of thinking is well suited to moral philosophy”. Professor Hatab believes it is possible “to speak from the atmosphere of Heidegger’s thinking with the hope of making (...)
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  39.  41
    Evans, J. Claude, and Robert S. Stufflebeam, eds. To Work at the Foundations: Essays in Memory of Aron Gurwitsch. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (1):161-162.
  40.  5
    Endings: Questions of Memory in Hegel and Heidegger. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (1):127-128.
    The eleven essays collected here include three papers, written in the 1980s, on the influence of Hegel on Heidegger’s thinking by Jacques Taminiaux, Dominique Janicaud, and Michel Haar, respectively; a paper on Heidegger’s several readings of Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit by Robert Bernasconi ; two papers on Hegel’s aesthetics by Martin Donougho and John Sallis; a paper on Hegel’s philosophy of history by David Kolb; two papers on Hegel, Heidegger, and Antigone by Dennis J. Schmidt and Kathleen Wright; an essay (...)
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  41.  10
    Four Seminars. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (1):181-183.
    The present volume consists of the protocols of twenty séances held between 1966 and 1973 in which Heidegger was the central figure. They occurred as four seminars, the first three of which were given in Provence, the last one having taken place in Heidegger’s home in Zähringen, a suburb of Freiburg im Breisgau, three years before his death in 1976. Appended to the protocols are two brief texts, the first written in the winter of 1972–73 on part of Parmenides’ Fragment (...)
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  42.  8
    Heidegger: An Introduction. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (2):471-472.
    Among several recent short introductions to the thought and work of Martin Heidegger, this is perhaps the best, especially for beginning students, since for the most part it faithfully represents Heidegger’s thought while remaining free of excessive German terminology. The author stays close to the standard translations of Heidegger’s basic words, but also sometimes offers fresh versions of key terms that shed light on Heidegger’s thought in ways that will stimulate specialists; for example, “minding” for Sorge and “facing up [to]” (...)
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  43.  4
    Heidegger and Leibniz: Reason and the Path. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 53 (3):692-692.
    The present study compares the philosophy of Leibniz with Heidegger’s thought, in particular his analysis of the principium reddendae rationis sufficientis, the so-called principle of reason: nihil est sine ratione. Early on, the author notes that this version of what Leibniz referred to, in 1686, in a letter to Antoine Arnauld as “my great principle” was for Leibniz merely a “vulgar axiom,” the fundamental form of which “[is that] whereby one can always account for why something has happened this way (...)
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  44.  10
    Husserl, Heidegger, and the Space of Meaning: Paths toward Transcendental Phenomenology. Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (3):622-623.
    The essays collected here are divided into two parts. The first group primarily considers the influence of Emil Lask’s philosophy of transcendental logic on Husserl and Heidegger. The second group focuses mostly on Heidegger’s thought, and its relation to Husserl and phenomenology. Overall, the book “argues that transcendental phenomenology is indispensable to the philosophical elucidation of the space of meaning”, which the author characterizes variously as the “transcendental field of inquiry” of any kind, “the intelligibility that is presupposed in all (...)
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  45.  19
    Heidegger’s Hidden Sources. East Asian Influences on His Work. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 51 (2):432-433.
    Heidegger scholars have sometimes assumed that Heidegger’s experience of thinking was unprecedented and that the peculiarity of his idiom was related to the novelty of that experience. Reinhard May’s study suggests that Heidegger’s thought is fundamentally indebted to his early familiarity with Zen Buddhist ideas and to his reading of Taoist classics, including the Tao te Ching of Lao Tse and the works of Chuang Zu, in German translations Heidegger knew by Victor von Strauss, Martin Buber and Richard Wilhelm, and, (...)
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  46.  13
    Hatab, Lawrence J. Ethics and Finitude: Heideggerian Contributions to Moral Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (4):918-920.
  47.  15
    Heidegger’s Later Philosophy. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (4):910-912.
    This is the third and final volume of the author’s “attempt to understand and communicate the insights of Martin Heidegger... the most important philosopher of modern times”. It is a discussion of the “later Heidegger” or “‘finished’ Heidegger,” which Julian Young defines as texts written after 1936 and characterizes as a “complementary mingling of both meditative and poetic thinking, a happy marriage of the two”. He comments: “The ground from which [the texts] spring lies, not in any product of ratiocination, (...)
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  48.  8
    Heidegger, Martin. Contributions to Philosophy (Of the Event). [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2012 - Review of Metaphysics 66 (2):368-369.
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  49.  39
    Heidegger, Martin. Contributions to Philosophy (From Enowning). [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (3):656-657.
  50.  29
    Heidegger, Martin. Supplements: From the Earliest Essays to "Being and Time" and Beyond. [REVIEW]Miles Groth - 2003 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (1):149-151.
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