1 Heidegger on Affect-I: Befindlichkeit and Stimmung2 The Decisionist Model; 3 Heidegger on Affect-II: Disclosive Submission to a World That Matters; 4 Criticism of the Decisionist Model Reframed; 5 The Standpoint Model; 6 Normative and Emotional Pluralism; 7 The All-Things-Considered Judgment Model; 8 Owning Emotions and All Things Considered; References; 7 Finding Oneself, Called; 1 Existentiell Self-Disclosing: Finding Myself Called to Be Me; 2 Existential Self-Disclosing: Finding Oneself Called to Be Dasein; 3 Discovering: Finding Myself Called by Solicitings
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4 Angst as Evidence: Shifting Phenomenology's Measure1 Introduction; 2 Phenomenology as a Foundationalist Project: Grounding Knowledge/Interpretation in Evidence; 3 Husserl's Conception of Evidence; 3.1 Originary Intuition and Apodictic Certainty; 3.2 Husserl's Mentalist Evidentialism; 4 Heidegger's Critique of Husserl and the Notion of Evidence in Being and Time; 4.1 Heidegger's Alternative Beginning: Affective Evidence vs. Intuitive Evidence; 4.2 Heidegger's Critique of Husserlian Evidence; 4.2.1 Care for Certainty: Science, Knowledge and Purification
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4 World-Disclosing: Finding the World as a Possibility Space5 Modes of Finding; References; 8 Is Profound Boredom Boredom?; 1 Boredom: A Primer; 2 Heidegger's Boredom; 2.1 Becoming Bored by Something; 2.2 Being Bored with Something; 2.3 Profound Boredom; 3 Understanding Profound Boredom; 3.1 State Boredom Is Not Profound Enough; 3.2 Trait Boredom Is Too Negative, Too Personal; 3.3 Profound Boredom as Sui Generis; 4 Locating Profound Boredom; References; 9 Truth, Errancy, and Bodily Dispositions in Heidegger's Thought; 1 Truth, Errancy, and Attunements; 2 Attunement and the Body
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4.2.2 Criteria for Truth: Clarity and Distinctness4.2.3 The Mangling of Evidence; 4.3 Evidence in Being and Time; 4.4 Angst: The Authentic Certainty of Resoluteness; 5 Angst and Mentalist Evidentialism; 6 Concluding Remark; References; 5 Missing in Action: Affectivity in Being and Time; 1 The Essentialness of Affectivity; 2 Missing Modes of Affectivity; 2.1 Gleichursprünglichkeit (Equiprimordiality); 2.2 Begleitphänomenen (Accompanying Phenomena); 3 Angst-Bereit (Angst-Preparedness); 4 Concluding Remark; References; 6 Affect and Authenticity: Three Heideggerian Models of Owned Emotion