
Publication details
Verlag: Springer
Ort: Berlin
Jahr: 1981
Pages: 59-75
Reihe: Phaenomenologica
ISBN (Hardback): 9789400982246
Volle Referenz:
, "Descartes", in: Being and technology, Berlin, Springer, 1981


Descartes
the "beginning" of modern technology
pp. 59-75
in: , Being and technology, Berlin, Springer, 1981Abstrakt
The possibility and the grounds of the possibility of falling-away from the primordial Inception — which possibility is prefigured in the Platonic Interpretation of Being as (idelta varepsilon 'alpha) in accordance with which unconcealment, i.e. the truth Being, becomes "relative" to the subjective — asserts itself as the prevailing reality at the outset of modernity. It is "demanded" ("gefordert")1 of Descartes that man become the "subject" in an unprecedented sense in order to provide a new foundation for an equally novel determination of "freedom". Such an event, which is no less than decisive for traditional "Metaphysics", did not, however, come to pass overnight, but has its most immediate source in a tradition predominately influenced by the "Platonic-Aristotelian" way of thought. This proximate source, whose understanding is indispensable for Heidegger's Descartes-Interpretation, will be called the tradition of "reality" ("Wirklichkeit").2
Publication details
Verlag: Springer
Ort: Berlin
Jahr: 1981
Pages: 59-75
Reihe: Phaenomenologica
ISBN (Hardback): 9789400982246
Volle Referenz:
, "Descartes", in: Being and technology, Berlin, Springer, 1981