The Absolute and the Event: Schelling after Heidegger

Emilio Carlo Corriero | 2020 | ISBN: 1350111430 | English | 192 pages | PDF | 5 MB
What does Heidr's controversial notion of the Event mean?
Can it be read as an historical prophecy connected to his political affinity with Nazism? And what has this concept to do with the possibility of a new bning for Western philosophy after Schelling and Nietzsche? This book highlights the theoretical affinity between the results of Schelling's speculations and Heidr's later theories. Heidr dedicated a sar to Schelling's Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom in 1927-28, immediately after the publication of his Sein und Zeit. He then returned to this work during the courses he taught in 1936 and again in 1941, with lectures dedicated to the Metaphysics of German Idealism. Heidr's introduction of the Event is riscent of Schelling's effort to think of "being" in its organic connection to , and is such a new form of Schelling's positive philosophy. Thanks to a concept of being intimately linked to that of , these latter of Heidr's theories culminate in a form of positive, historical philosophy as well as with a definition of a post-metaphysical Absolute that, in close connection with primal Nothingness, is beyond any form of onto-theology. It also reveals close connections to Nietzsche's introduction of the eternal recurrence, which rethinks being as a never-ending becoming.
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