Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations Used for Works by Heidegger
- A Note on the Notes (Redux)
- Introduction
- 1 Understanding Ontotheology, or “The History that We Are”
- 2 Heidegger's Critique of Modern Aesthetics
- 3 Heidegger's Postmodern Understanding of Art
- 4 “Even Better than the Real Thing”?
- 5 Deconstructing the Hero
- 6 The Philosophical Fugue
- 7 The Danger and the Promise of Heidegger, an American Perspective
- 8 Against Conclusions
- References
- Index
6 - The Philosophical Fugue
Understanding the Structure and Goal of Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy (From Enowning)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations Used for Works by Heidegger
- A Note on the Notes (Redux)
- Introduction
- 1 Understanding Ontotheology, or “The History that We Are”
- 2 Heidegger's Critique of Modern Aesthetics
- 3 Heidegger's Postmodern Understanding of Art
- 4 “Even Better than the Real Thing”?
- 5 Deconstructing the Hero
- 6 The Philosophical Fugue
- 7 The Danger and the Promise of Heidegger, an American Perspective
- 8 Against Conclusions
- References
- Index
Summary
All essential thinking calls for its thoughts and sentences to be mined, like ore, every time anew.
Heidegger (CP 15/GA65 21)After Chapter 3 explained Heidegger's postmodern view of ontological meaning as inexhaustibly plural or polysemic, Chapters 4 and 5 took this view as their philosophical point of departure for exploring two popular works of “postmodern” art. We will now return to the question of the nature and implications of Heidegger's own postmodernism by examining what is probably his most difficult and least well understood work, the much vaunted and vilified Contributions to Philosophy (From Enowning).
My thesis is that this notoriously difficult text is best understood as an innovative philosophical application of the musical art of the fugue. Recognizing Heidegger's Contributions as a fugal composition allows us to understand this esoteric text's basic structure and goal, and so to avoid several influential misreadings of the work, which allege that Contributions is Heidegger's second magnum opus, that it is Heidegger's attempt to write aphoristically (à la Nietzsche), or that it or that it has no structure and so is nothing but a failed “heap.” Undermining those misreadings, I shall instead suggest that in the Contributions Heidegger is “fuguing,” exploring his underlying subject – Ereignis or “enowning” – through a series of linked meditations whereby he seeks to elaborate and develop the inner philosophical possibilities and implications of this polysemic term of art that is so important to his later work.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Heidegger, Art, and Postmodernity , pp. 169 - 191Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011