Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, a member of the Kluwer Academic Publishers Group
1987
(xvi, 345 pages)
Martinus Nijhoff philosophy library, v. 23.
One: Ontological Roots of the Phenomenon of Death: A Heideggerean Interpretation --;One: Individuation and Temporality --;Two: Temporality as the Meaning of Being-Towards-Death --;Three: Death, Time and Appropration --;Four: A Project Beyond Heidegger --;Two: Death as an Ontic E-Vent: Coming to terms with the phenomenon of death as a determinate possibility --;One: Reflecting on One's own Death --;Two: The Death of the Other --;Three: The Phenomenon of Immortality --;Three: Ontic/Ontological Implications --;One: Ontology as Concrete --;Two: Is Phenomenology still too Metaphysical? --;Key to abbreviations.
Building upon the "preliminary conception of Phenomenology" introduced by Heidegger in section II of the Introduction to Sein und zeit,l one may say that a phenomenology of death would mean: "to let death, as that which shows itself, be seen from itself in the very way in which it shows itself from itself.