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Heidegger's Alleged Challenge to the Nazi concepts of Race

In James E. Faulconer & Mark A. Wrathall (eds.), Appropriating Heidegger. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 52 (2000)

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  1. Now is the “We-Time.” Heidegger’s ‘Black Notebooks’ read as self-critical reflection of Nazi involvement.Rastko Jovanov - 2021 - Filozofija I Društvo 32 (4):729-738.
    The article analyzes Heidegger?s relation to National Socialism based on his private writing in the?Black Notebooks,? published in their entirety this year. Although it is indisputable that Heidegger was an enthusiastic adherent of the National Socialist program between 1930 and 1934, his private writings show his avowed philosophical delusion that the National Socialist?revolution? in Germany was going to bring about a new beginning of philosophy beyond the metaphysical tradition. The article shows how Heidegger criticized National Socialism after 1934, and the (...)
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  • Resaying the Human : Levinas Beyond Humanism and Antihumanism.Carl Cederberg - unknown
    In this reading a notion of the human is developed through an engagement with the work of French philosopher Emanuel Levinas. The argument is that, with the help of Levinas, it is possible for the idea of the human to be understood anew, for the notion to be ‘resaid’. This resaying of the human is performed in a critical appropriation of the philosophical tradition: Levinas’s work is shown not to be a new variation of the complacent ideology of humanism; the (...)
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