Národní úložiště šedé literatury Nalezeno 2 záznamů.  Hledání trvalo 0.00 vteřin. 
Will to Power and Eternal Return: A critical Reading of Heidegger's Interpretation of Nietzsche
Guzun, Madalina ; Sepp, Hans Rainer (vedoucí práce) ; Nielsen, Cathrin (oponent)
The aim of this paper will be to propose a new interpretation of the Nietzschean notion of "eternal return", following the Heideggerian approach. Given that the hermeneutical situation that grounds Heidegger"s reading is the problem of technology, I will start by showing in what measure is it one and the same with the end of metaphysics. The accomplishment of the latter is to be found, for Heidegger, in Nietzsche"s philosophy, which transforms the becoming into an immutable, eternal being. If the will to power undergoes the same movement as the one developed by technology, it is because they are both a way of revealing that renders something present. The eternal return would consist, therefore, in the affirmation of this presence as a "now" that never goes past. Nevertheless, I will try to show that Heidegger"s reading is not limited to a perspective of time seen as a chain of equal "nows", but that it offers also another path for understanding the eternal return. The thought of the eternal return could be itself regarded as event within the circle, introducing thus as essential discontinuity. The interpretation I would like to offer, following this path, will come across the problem of the world and that of finitude, entering into a dialogue with Eugen Fink"s manner of treating these questions. If...
Will to Power and Eternal Return: A critical Reading of Heidegger's Interpretation of Nietzsche
Guzun, Madalina ; Sepp, Hans Rainer (vedoucí práce) ; Nielsen, Cathrin (oponent)
The aim of this paper will be to propose a new interpretation of the Nietzschean notion of "eternal return", following the Heideggerian approach. Given that the hermeneutical situation that grounds Heidegger"s reading is the problem of technology, I will start by showing in what measure is it one and the same with the end of metaphysics. The accomplishment of the latter is to be found, for Heidegger, in Nietzsche"s philosophy, which transforms the becoming into an immutable, eternal being. If the will to power undergoes the same movement as the one developed by technology, it is because they are both a way of revealing that renders something present. The eternal return would consist, therefore, in the affirmation of this presence as a "now" that never goes past. Nevertheless, I will try to show that Heidegger"s reading is not limited to a perspective of time seen as a chain of equal "nows", but that it offers also another path for understanding the eternal return. The thought of the eternal return could be itself regarded as event within the circle, introducing thus as essential discontinuity. The interpretation I would like to offer, following this path, will come across the problem of the world and that of finitude, entering into a dialogue with Eugen Fink"s manner of treating these questions. If...

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