karl bühler digital

Home > Journal > Journal Issue > Journal article

Publication details

Publisher: Nijhoff

Place: The Hague

Year: 1990

Pages: 121-141

Series: Man and World

Full citation:

, "Marxist challenges to Heidegger on alienation and authenticity", Man and World 23 (2), 1990, pp. 121-141.

Marxist challenges to Heidegger on alienation and authenticity

pp. 121-141

in: Man and World 23 (2), 1990.

Abstract

From what has been argued, it should now be apparent how Heidegger's philosophy of the affect, its ontological disclosures and its relation to authenticity might be enlarged to meet certain marxist challenges. The most valuable instruction to be gained from these citicisms, I think, is that which Lukacs offers in the example of Szilasi's intuition of co-presence. Traditional phenomenology needs to enrich its investigations into the social and historical reality of situation. Kosik's point that Heideggerian authenticity lacks the crucial third step (revolutionary change of society) is also profound but again, not incompatiblein se with Heidegger's concept. Alternatively, one might as easily say that Critical Marxism or any Marxist Humanism can still be enriched by certain Heideggerian insights.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Nijhoff

Place: The Hague

Year: 1990

Pages: 121-141

Series: Man and World

Full citation:

, "Marxist challenges to Heidegger on alienation and authenticity", Man and World 23 (2), 1990, pp. 121-141.