Abstract

Translator's Foreword Foreword Jacques Rolland Part I. Death and Time: Initial Questions What do we know of death The death of the other [D'Autrui] and my own An obligatory passage: Heidegger The analytic of Dasein Dasein and death The death and totality of Dasein Being-toward-death as the origin of time Death, anxiety, and fear Time considered on the basis of death Inside Heidegger: Bergson The radical question: Kant against Heidegger A reading of Kant (continued) How to think nothingness? Hegel's response: the science of logic Reading Hegel's science of logic (continued) From the science of logic to the phenomenology Reading Hegel's phenomenology (continued) The scandal of death: from Hegel to Fink Another thinking of death: Starting from Bloch A reading of Bloch (continued) A reading of Bloch: Toward a conclusion Thinking about death on the basis of time To conclude: Questioning again Part II. God and Onto-Theo-Logy: Beginning with Heidegger Beginning and meaning Being and world To think God on the basics of ethics The same and the other The subject-object correlation The question of subjectivity Kant and the transcendental ideal Signification as saying Ethical subjectivity Transcendence, idolatry, and secularization Don Quixiote: bewitchment and hunger Subjectivity as an-archy freedom and responsibility The ethical relationship as a departure The extra-ordinary subjectivity of responsibility The sincerity of the saying Glory of the infinite and witnessing Witnessing and ethics From consciousness to prophetism In praise of insomnia Outside of experience: the Cartesian idea of the infinite A God 'transcendent to the point of absence' Postscript Jacques Rolland Notes.

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