The logical conception of truth: the logical prejudice and Lotze's concept of validity -- The phenomenological conception of truth: the critical confrontation with Husserl -- The hermeneutic understanding of truth: the critical appropriation of Artistotle's analysis of truth and assertions -- The timeliness of existential truth: disclosing the sense of being -- Disclosedness, transcendental philosophy, and methodological deliberation.
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Text of Note
"This New Study of Heidegger is the first to examine in detail the concept of existential truth that he developed in the 1920s. Daniel O. Dahlstrom critically examines the genesis, nature, and validity of Heidegger's radical attempt to rethink truth as the disclosure of time, a disclosure allegedly more basic than truths formulated in scientific judgments." "The book has several distinctive and innovative features. First, it is the only study that attempts to understand the logical dimension of Heidegger's thought in its historical context. Second, no other book-length treatment explores the breadth and depth of Heidegger's confrontation with Husserl, his erstwhile mentor, in seminars and lectures in the 1920s. Third, the book demonstrates that Heidegger's deconstruction of Western thinking occurs on three interconnected fronts: truth, being, and time." "Dealing with a crucial aspect of the philosophy of one of the great thinkers of the twentieth century, this book will be especially important to all scholars and students of Heidegger, whether in philosophy, theology, or literary studies."--Jacket.