How is it that sounds from the mouth or marks on a page--which by themselves are nothing like things or events in the world--can be world-disclosive in an automatic manner? In this fascinating and important book, Lawrence J. Hatab presents a new vocabulary for Heidegger's early phenomenology of being-in-the-world and applies it to the question of language. He takes language to be a mode of dwelling, in which there is an immediate, direct disclosure of meanings, and sketches an extensive picture of proto-phenomenology, how it revises the posture of philosophy, and how this posture applies to...
How is it that sounds from the mouth or marks on a page--which by themselves are nothing like things or events in the world--can be world-disclosive i...
How is it that sounds from the mouth or marks on a page--which by themselves are nothing like things or events in the world--can be world-disclosive in an automatic manner? In this fascinating and important book, Lawrence J. Hatab presents a new vocabulary for Heidegger's early phenomenology of being-in-the-world and applies it to the question of language. He takes language to be a mode of dwelling, in which there is an immediate, direct disclosure of meanings, and sketches an extensive picture of proto-phenomenology, how it revises the posture of philosophy, and how this posture applies to...
How is it that sounds from the mouth or marks on a page--which by themselves are nothing like things or events in the world--can be world-disclosive i...