D3U@PSUVM.BITNET (03/13/85)
The article"Wittgenstein 001" mentions a secondary source for understanding Heidegger's philosophy. The article was posted to several groups, and I have relevant references for them. As a secondary source George Steiner's book is good. I think it's called "Martin Heidegger". Another secondary source is the couple pages on Heidegger and existential phe nomenology in Monroe C. Beardsley's book "Aesthetics from Classical Greece to the Present: A Short History", which is not so short (the relevant material is around pages 370 to 376). Books by Heidegger include: "Being and Time", his most famous "Poetry, Language, Thought" a collection of material on art, culture, free- dom, articulation, etc. "On the Way to Language" These books deal with different "The Question Concerning Technology" kinds of thinking and with human "Discourse on Thinking" and technologic interest. "Existence and Being" gets to all the topics mentioned for all the ones listed already. You can try this if you prefer to set aside Being and Time. "Neitzsche" vols. I-IV The third volume has not yet been translated, was originally divided into only two volumes. Excellent for someone familiar with Neitzsche, Kant, etc. I think that this bibliography is a good course on Heidegger and that these books are easier to understand, for the most part. A good bit of Being and Time may be difficult for the neophyte, but some later sections are surprisingly easy. "Poetr, Language, Thought" may be a good introduction. However, Heidegger uses a lot of hyphenated expressions that mean what they look like they should mean, yet are technical terms of particular significance. This language may make "Discourse on Thinking" seem more exotic than it is. "Existence and Being" explains the terms more clearly. Ray