This book is an important contribution to the understanding of Heidegger’s ambivalent relation to transcendental philosophy.
Heidegger on Transcendence maps the deep ambivalences that attend Heidegger's lasting commitment to the transcendental tradition, construed here broadly to include not only phenomenological but also modern, medieval, and ancient predecessors.
Heidegger on Transcendence maps the deep ambivalences that attend Heidegger's lasting commitment to the transcendental tradition, construed here broadly to include not only phenomenological but also modern, medieval, and ancient predecessors.
Why is God hidden? How might God be pointed out? Drawing on phenomenology, philosophy of language, and medieval thought, Chad Engelland explores these questions, arguing that if the God in question is the ultimate source of all things, then hiddenness is, in fact, necessary.
Why is God hidden? How might God be pointed out? Drawing on phenomenology, philosophy of language, and medieval thought, Chad Engelland explores these questions, arguing that if the God in question is the ultimate source of all things, then hiddenness is, in fact, necessary.