Chapter 3 Heidegger, Hölderlin, and the Dao
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: Taylor & Francis Routledge [Imprint] 2025Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (45 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781032557328
- 9781032564128
- The Arts
- The Arts: treatments and subjects
- History of art
- Philosophy and Religion
- Philosophy
- Topics in philosophy
- Philosophy: aesthetics
- A The Arts
- AG The Arts
- AGA History of art
- Buddhism
- Daoist
- Q Philosophy and Religion
- QD Philosophy
- QDT Topics in philosophy
- QDTN Philosophy
- Rachel Carson
- aesthetics
- art history
- carbon dioxide
- climate change
- collapse
- environment
- extinction
- extraction
- global
- global warming
- hermeneutics
- human
- logic
- metaphysics
- philosophy
- science
- technology
- thema EDItEUR
- treatments and subjects
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
George Smith argues that modern humanity suffers from a late-stage, pre-fatal addiction to scientific-technological thinking. Like most pre-fatal addictions, this one will most likely result in one of three ways: misery, extinction, or human transformation. The question remains, wherein lies the third way? According to Smith, mankind's chronic and as yet undiagnosed sickness originates in early Western metaphysics and has long been thoroughly globalized. explains unstoppable extractionism and its relentlessly increasing by-product, carbon dioxide. It also explains today's ever-increasing rate of species extinction and the increasingly likely collapse of the biosphere. Citing climate change tolerance and denial as symptomatic of pre-fatal addiction, Smith turns his analysis to Heidegger's "question concerning technology" and shows that even Heidegger had become "hooked" on scientific-technological thinking. Surrendering to his disease, Heidegger "steps back" into "meditative thought." This in turn opens Heidegger to an East-West mode of scientific-poetic consciousness, the thinking of artist-philosophers such as Laozi, Hölderlin, and Rachel Carson. For Heidegger, this way of thinking lays the path to mankind's transformative emancipation from an otherwise inescapable catastrophe. The book will be of interest to scholars of the arts and culture, histories of consciousness, and climate studies.
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eng
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