Apply-Degger: A Podcast with Simon Critchley | Episode 2: World
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ธ.ค. 2024
- Apply-Degger: World with Simon Critchley
Apply-degger is a long-form, deep dive into the most important philosophical book of the last 100 years. Each episode of this podcast series will present one of the key concepts in Heidegger’s philosophy. Taken together, the episodes will lay out the entirety of Heidegger project for people who are curious, serious and interested, but who simply don’t have the time to sit down and read the 437 densely-written pages of the book. It is our hope that this series will show how Heidegger’s thinking might be applied to one’s life in ways which are illuminating, elevating and beneficial. We are asking the listener to slow down, take their time, open their ears and think deeply. What is said in these episodes will hopefully be clear and helpful, but not easy. We are not interested in easy. Let’s try something else for once.
“Apply-degger is not intended for everyone. I am not seeking to make philosophy simple or offer patronizing banalities about life. These are not Ted talks. In many ways, they are the opposite. They are slow, clear and intimate explorations of Heidegger’s ideas in Being and Time. It is my conviction that genuine philosophy can be explained simply and clearly. But it takes the time that it takes. And that can’t be rushed.” - Simon Critchley
Episode Two - World
What is the world and how does the world show up? - Avoiding all ideas of subjectivity - Against epistemology - There is no problem of perception - We are the worldhood of the world - Our inside is outside - Praxis not theory - Why nature and science do not describe the primary phenomenon of the world - Handiness and thrusting aside our interpretative tendencies - The pragmatics of stuff - The primacy of concern and environment - When the hammer breaks - Signs and Heidegger’s funny examples - Situation and the meaningfulness of the world - Wallace Stevens on the idea of order.
Introductory music: “Esse” by Zenon Marko. © 2019 Disreality. Included with permission
Thank you
brilliant
Που μπορούμε να ακούσουμε αυτό στα Ελληνικά;
Where is the Greek version?