This important new book condenses and rephrases, paragraph by paragraph, the entirety of Heidegger's magnum opus Being and Time.
This important new book condenses and rephrases, paragraph by paragraph, the entirety of Heidegger's magnum opus Being and Time. Leading Heidegger scholar Thomas Sheehan renders the text in reader-friendly language that avoids the worst of the Heideggerese that persists in the wider scholarship. He helpfully outlines each of the six chapters and, in turn, each of the eighty-three individual sections of the book, providing a critical and insightful commentary that draws on Heideggerβs comments on Being and Time throughout his career. The book also includes commentary and guidance on the terminology, scope, arguments, achievements, and limitations of Being and Time. This reader's guide is an essential resource for students, scholars and anyone engaging with Heidegger's complex work.
Sheehan's invaluable 'paraphrase' pays rigorous attention to the text, its time, and Heidegger's commitment to phenomenology. Even more important is Sheehan's interpretation of Heidegger's question of being as the question of intelligibility, the way things mean or matter to us. I know no more helpful guide to Heidegger's masterpiece.--Robert B. Pippin, Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor, University of Chicago, USA, and author of The Culmination: Heidegger, German Idealism, and the Fate of Philosophy
Thomas Sheehan's book is a tour de force, an ingenious reading of Heidegger's Being and Time that in effect translates Heidegger's difficult German into a section-by-section paraphrase. Drawing on decades of teaching and research, Sheehan's text gives you the sense of attending an incisive seminar given by a master teacher.--Lawrence J. Hatab, Louis I. Jaffe Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Old Dominion University, USAy
Thomas Sheehan's monumental study of Being and Time includes a paraphrase that eschews Heideggerian jargon; a copiously annotated commentary; and an argument about sense-making. Beginners will relish the illuminating paraphrase; scholars will benefit from the erudite annotations; and anyone will benefit from engaging with the argument. Comprehensive, congenial, controversial: unavoidable.--Steven Crowell, Mullen Professor of Humanities and Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, Rice University, USA
Thomas Sheehan is professor of religious studies at Stanford University and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University Chicago.
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