These ponderings attempt to let themselves be appropriated by the event. (Beiträge zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis), Martin Heidegger, 1936–38/1989)
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Bremen and Freiburg Lectures: Insight Into That Which Is and Basic Principles of Thinking (Martin Heidegger. Indiana University Press, 2012)
This volume consists of two lecture series given by Heidegger in the 1940s and 1950s. The lectures given in Bremen constitute the first public lectures Heidegger delivered after World War II, when he was officially banned from teaching. Here, Heidegger openly resumes thinking that deeply engaged him with Hölderlin's poetry and themes developed in his earlier works. In the Freiburg lectures Heidegger ponders thought itself and freely engages with the German idealists and Greek thinkers who had provoked him in the past. Andrew J. Mitchell's translation allows English-speaking readers to explore important connections with Heidegger's earlier works on language, logic, and reality. (amazon) (accessible via scribd and questia)
One of the more legitimate games played by Heidegger scholars is to guess which of the philosopher’s works deserves to be called his second magnum opus (no one doubts that Being and Time is his first). Many conservative Heideggerians nominate Contributions to Philosophy as their candidate for the second masterpiece, a judgment with which I cannot agree. Rüdiger Safranski, the most detailed biographer of Heidegger so far, nominates the 1929–30 lecture course on boredom and animal life. But however fascinating that course may be, it is more a lovely unfinished symphony than a true masterpiece.
For my own part, I have no doubt that the second great work of Heidegger is the seventy-page lecture Einblick in das, was ist (Insight Into What Is), first delivered in Bremen on December 1, 1949. The reader is advised that this is a minority view; indeed, I have never heard even one other person suggest it. Nonetheless, I am willing to place heavy bets that mainstream opinion will gradually come around to the same view. For this reason, Being and Time and Insight Into What Is are the only two works that I have given entire chapters of their own in this book, and I have even made sure to write the two chapters simultaneously. Although these works are separated by more than two decades, they belong together, just as the distant Everest and K2 are coupled in the fantasy life of mountaineers.
Harman, Graham. Heidegger Explained: From Phenomenon to Thing (Ideas Explained) (p. 127). Open Court. 2007, Kindle edition.
For Heidegger as for most Germans of his era, 1945 was a natural breaking point, splitting his life into before and after. Insight Into What Is counts as Heidegger’s first piece of serious philosophy from the “after” period. To his credit, he had weathered the storms of the postwar period well enough to give us something truly new in his thinking. Many of Heidegger’s best later essays (“The Thing,” “Building Dwelling Thinking,” and “The Question Concerning Technology”) stem directly from this eerie 1949 lecture, which remained unpublished until 1994, and is still not available in full in English. (ibid, p. 128)