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Transcending Reason

Heidegger on Rationality
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The received view of Martin Heidegger's work is that he leaves little room for reason in the practice of philosophy or the conduct of life. Citing his much-scorned remark that reason is the "stiff-necked adversary of thought", critics argue that Heidegger's philosophy effectively severs the tie between reason and normativity, leaving anyone who adheres to his position without recourse to justifying reasons for their beliefs and actions. Transcending Reason is a collection of essays by leading Heidegger scholars that challenges this view by exploring new ways to understand Heidegger's approach to the relationship between reason, normativity, and the philosophical methodology that gives us access to these issues. The volume points to Heidegger's novel approach to reason understood in terms of what he calls Dasein's 'transcendence'-the ability to occupy the world as a space of normatively structured meanings in which we navigate our striving to be. By examining the strengths and weaknesses of this new and innovative take on Heidegger's philosophy, this collection considers the possibility that he does not sever but rather reconceives the relation between reason and normativity.
Matthew Burch is a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Essex. He works on issues at the intersection of phenomenology, moral psychology, and the social sciences. He is a coeditor of Normativity, Meaning, and the Promise of Phenomenology (2019), and his work has appeared in multiple journals, including Inquiry, The European Journal of Philosophy, The Journal of Applied Philosophy, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, and The International Journal of Law and Psychiatry. Irene McMullin is professor of philosophy at the University of Essex. She specializes in the existential phenomenological tradition, especially as it pertains to ethics. She is the author of Time and the Shared World: Heidegger on Social Relations (2013), and Existential Flourishing: a Phenomenology of the Virtues (2019). She is also a coeditor of Normativity, Meaning, and the Promise of Phenomenology (2019). Her work on Husserl, Heidegger, Arendt, and Sartre has appeared in journals such as the European Journal of Philosophy, Continental Philosophy Review, and Philosophical Topics.
Part One: Normativity and Reasons 1. Steven Crowell 'Transcending Reason Heidegger's Way' 2. Daniel O. Dahlstrom 'Freedom and Justification: Heidegger on the Essence of Ground' 3. Sacha Golob 'What does it Mean to 'Act in Light of' a Norm? Heidegger and Kant on Commitments and Critique' 4. Matthew Burch 'Giving a Damn about Getting it Right: Heideggerian Constitutivism and Our Reasons to be Authentic' Part Two: Practical Deliberation and the Unity of Agency 5. Denis McManus 'Heidegger and Aristotle on Reason, Choice, and Self-Expression: On Decisionists, Nihilists and Pluralists' 6. Patrick Londen 'Heidegger on Deliberation' 7. Chad Engelland 'Grice and Heidegger on the Logic of Conversation' 8. Irene McMullin 'Rational Ideals and the Unity of Practical Agency: Kant's Postulates of Practical Reason and their Heideggerian Reconceptualization' Part Three: Method 9. Burt Hopkins 'What Did Edmund Husserl's Phenomenology Want to Accomplish? And What Now?' 10. Jered Janes and Sebastian Luft 'Die angebliche Frage nach dem 'Sein des Seienden': An Unknown Husserlian Response to Heidegger's 'Question of Being'' 11. Thomas Sheehan 'Phenomenology Rediviva' 12. Jeff Malpas and Ingo Farin 'Heidegger's Philosophy of Science'
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