Preface: A Master from Germany Chronology Abbreviations Translator's Note Childhood and School Idealism and Materialism: German Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century Career Planning and Career Problems The Outbreak of World War I: Habilitation, War Service, Marriage The Triumph of Phenomenology: Husserl and Heidegger, Father and Son Revolution in Germany and the Question of Being Parting with Catholicism and Studying the Laws of Free Fall while Falling Marburg University and Hannah Arendt, the Great Passion Being and Time: What Being? What Meaning? The Mood of the Time: Waiting for the Great Day A Secret Principal Work: The Metaphysics Lectures of 1929-30 Balance Sheets at the End of the Republic The National Socialist Revolution and Collective Breakout from the Cave Is Heidegger Anti-Semitic? Heidegger's Struggle for the Purity of the Movement Departure from the Political Scene The Age of Ideology and Total Mobilization: Heidegger Beats a Retreat The Philosophical Diary and Philosophical Rosary Heidegger under Surveillance Heidegger Faces the Denazification Committee: Barred from University Teaching What Do We Do When We Think? Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, and Karl Jaspers after the War Heidegger's Other Public Adorno and Heidegger: From the Jargon of Authenticity to the Authentic Jargon of the 1960s Sunset of Life Notes Works Cited Further Reading Index
Rüdiger Safranski studies German, philosophy, and history in Frankfurt and Berlin. He has worked in adult education and was co-publisher of the magazine Berliner Hefte. He is also the author of a widely acclaimed biography of E. T. A. Hoffman. Ewald Osers is the distinguished translator of numerous works of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction from German and Czech, including the correspondence of Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal.
Rüdiger Safranski’s evenhanded study, Martin Heidegger: Between
Good and Evil, is equally successful at illustrating its subject’s
pettiness and at displaying the vast power of his imagination. It
is the first comprehensive biography of the man, and supersedes
both Victor Farías’s Heidegger and Nazism and Hugo Ott’s Martin
Heidegger: A Political Life. It reports many facts that these books
did not, and it offers a detailed account of Heidegger’s
intellectual development—relating his twists and turns, with great
skill and remarkable concision, to German intellectual and
political life in the first half of this century.
*New York Times Book Review*
Rüdiger Safranski has written a remarkably detailed, full-scale
biography. Martin Heidegger: Between Good and Evil is a labor of
philosophic devotion, entering…deeply and appreciatively into the
thought and sensibility of Heidegger.
*Washington Post Book World*
Neither apologist nor accuser, Safranski treads a delicate winding
path through the Black Forest of the modern Germanic mind. The
result is impressively judicious, offering us a privileged glance
into that nation’s intellectual unconscious… Safranski’s biography
is brisk, lucid and illuminating. The manner in which he weaves
Heidegger’s thinking into the intrigues of his life makes for
fascinating reading… His book also gives an excellent account of
Heidegger’s ‘existential’ ideas, highlighting the inimitable
charisma surrounding both his writing and person. This is a
towering biography of a giant intellectual.
*The Independent [UK]*
A superb work of synthesis, the book places Heidegger’s thought and
life in the volatile context of 20th-century German and European
politics and philosophy… Although Safranski sees Heidegger as a
towering figure in 20th-century philosophy, this is a ‘warts and
all’ biography. The author leaves no doubt about Heidegger’s
self-centeredness, his intellectual arrogance, and his convenient
lapses of memory about his role in the Nazi years. But the book’s
primary merit is a superb explication of Heidegger’s thought, its
antecedents, and its place in the context of his political and
philosophical times. For an English-speaking audience, Safranski’s
treatment is easily the best introduction to Heidegger’s complex
philosophy… This [is] an important book, highly recommended for
anyone interested in the history of 20th-century Continental
philosophy and Martin Heidegger’s place in it.
*Boston Sunday Globe*
[A] thoughtful, sensitive and sympathetic biography.
*Times Literary Supplement*
This biography of Martin Heidegger is an impressive achievement,
and English-speaking readers are fortunate that it is now available
to them… Martin Heidegger is the first comprehensive biography of
one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century.
It offers a detailed view of Heidegger’s intellectual development
provided by no previous book, and it gives new information on his
involvement with the Nazis. Given the importance of Heidegger’s
thought for many celebrated left-wing thinkers, including Jacques
Derrida and Michel Foucault, Safranski’s careful consideration of
the relation between Heidegger’s right-wing politics and his
thought can help readers struggle with the much-debated question of
whether the contemporary leftists of the postmodern movement are
really cultural reactionaries in disguise… Safranski’s biography is
both the most authoritative and the most approachable of the recent
Heidegger books.
*Magill’s Literary Annual*
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