Logic, the Question of Truth
Book •
Heidegger's 'Logic, the Question of Truth' collects lectures from 1925–26 in which he examines psychologism, the nature of logos, and the Greek notion of aletheia (unconcealment), developing themes later central to Being and Time.
The text functions as a partial first draft for aspects of Being and Time, especially Heidegger's rethinking of truth, meaning, and temporality.
It includes close readings of Aristotle and Kant and anticipates Heidegger's later work on schematism and time as the horizon for disclosure.
Thomas Sheehan's recent English translation and commentary make this difficult course more accessible and illuminate Heidegger's conceptual development in the mid-1920s.
The text functions as a partial first draft for aspects of Being and Time, especially Heidegger's rethinking of truth, meaning, and temporality.
It includes close readings of Aristotle and Kant and anticipates Heidegger's later work on schematism and time as the horizon for disclosure.
Thomas Sheehan's recent English translation and commentary make this difficult course more accessible and illuminate Heidegger's conceptual development in the mid-1920s.
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as his recent translation of Heidegger's 1925–26 lectures that relate closely to Being and Time.

Thomas Sheehan

Thomas Sheehan on Heidegger’s Being and Time


