Abstract

Martin Heidegger is one of the most influential thinkers of modern philosophy. However, against the backdrop of his engagement for the NS dictatorship, it is debated until this day whether his philosophy has national-socialistic or totalitarian tendencies. Views on this issue range from the opinion that his ideological beliefs were only private and are to be separated from his philosophical ideas to the opinion that his philosophy in its core was fascist. This paper deals with this question from a legal perspective and undertakes to examine whether Heidegger’s legal thinking was influenced by the Nazi ideology.

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