Positive Nihilism: My Confrontation with Heidegger

Positive Nihilism: My Confrontation with Heidegger

Positive Nihilism: My Confrontation with Heidegger

Positive Nihilism: My Confrontation with Heidegger

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Overview

A German writer's aphoristic, poetic, and difficult reflections on Heidegger's Being and Time.

There is a beyond of reason and unreason. It is the human psyche.
Positive Nihilism

Like many German intellectuals, Hartmut Lange has long grappled with Heidegger. Positive Nihilism is the result of a lifetime of reading Being and Time and offers a series of reflections that are aphoristic, poetic, and (appropriately, considering his object of study) difficult. Lange begins with an abyss (“There is an abyss of the finite. It is temporality”) and proceeds almost immediately to extremity: “The twentieth century was governed by psychopaths. They collapsed the boundaries of moral reason and refuted Kant's analysis of consciousness.” He reflects further: “But who shall punish whom? One man's virtue is another man's crime. Thus Hitler could feel unwaveringly, as he wiped out entire populations, the starry sky above him and the moral law within him, as stipulated by Kant.” He considers the concept of civilization (“misleading”; “how should one oppose the remedies of civilization to the egomania, the murderous appetites of such outright psychopaths as Stalin or Pol Pot?”), the act of thinking (a fata morgana), the psyche, and Heidegger's Dasein.

Positive Nihilism can be considered a pocket companion to Being and Time. “Heidegger's understanding of Being is nihilistic,” Lange writes, and then explains his assertion. He draws on Kant, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Shakespeare's Othello for supporting arguments and illustrations. “Everyone is possessed of the courage to have angst about death. The question is whether this courage necessarily secures those vital advantages Heidegger alleges”–that “self-understanding [is] the mental anticipation of death.” Lange wrestles with Heidegger's position, calling on Tolstoy, Georg Trakl, Herman Bang, and Heinrich von Kleist to argue against it.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262534260
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 10/06/2017
Series: Untimely Meditations , #6
Pages: 96
Sales rank: 963,890
Product dimensions: 4.40(w) x 6.80(h) x 0.30(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Hartmut Lange, born in 1937, is a German writer of prose, essays, and plays. He was the recipient of the 2003 Italo Svevo Prize and the 2004 Prize of the LiteraTour Nord.

What People are Saying About This

Endorsement

Hartmut Lange speaks both with and against Heidegger in this haunting and personal confrontation with—some might even say the very soul of—Heidegger's earlier thinking, in a dialogue deserving a wide audience. Adrian Nathan West's powerful translation now opens the door to that for English readers everywhere.

Laurence Hemming, Lancaster University; author of Heidegger and Marx: A Productive Dialogue over the Language of Humanism

From the Publisher

Hartmut Lange speaks both with and against Heidegger in this haunting and personal confrontation with—some might even say the very soul of—Heidegger's earlier thinking, in a dialogue deserving a wide audience. Adrian Nathan West's powerful translation now opens the door to that for English readers everywhere.

Laurence Hemming, Lancaster University; author of Heidegger and Marx: A Productive Dialogue over the Language of Humanism

Laurence Hemming

Hartmut Lange speaks both with and against Heidegger in this haunting and personal confrontation with—some might even say the very soul of—Heidegger's earlier thinking, in a dialogue deserving a wide audience. Adrian Nathan West's powerful translation now opens the door to that for English readers everywhere.

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