Heidegger’s Way to ‘Being and Time’ – The Centenary Workshops – Workshop 2

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Registration is now open for the workshop on Heidegger’s 1920-21 lecture courses on St Paul and St Augustine (17 November).

HEIDEGGER’S WAY TO ‘BEING AND TIME’ – THE CENTENARY WORKSHOPS
See – https://heideggersway.wordpress.com/

Workshop 2 – REGISTRATION NOW OPEN
The second workshop of this series will be held online on the afternoon of Wednesday 17th November. It will be devoted to Heidegger’s 1920-21 lecture courses on St Paul and St Augustine, published in ‘The Phenomenology of Religious Life’.

Programme (timings are GMT)
2:00 – Mark Wrathall (Oxford) ‘Phenomenological Method and the Temporality of Religious Life’. Respondent: Deborah Casewell (Bonn)
3:30 – Break
3:45 – Benjamin Crowe (Boston) ‘Heidegger and the Apocalypse of Phenomenology’. Respondent: Christos Hadjioannou (Cyprus)
5:15 – End

Registration
Attendance at the workshop is free but does require registration. To register, please email Tracy Storey ([email protected]) with your name and affiliation by Monday 15th November 2021. Please use ‘Heidegger’s Way Workshop 2 – registration’ as the subject line of your email.

About the series
With an eye to the 2027 centenary of its publication, this series of workshops will retrace Heidegger’s steps towards the writing of ‘Being and Time’, each workshop marking the centenary of key studies through which his thought progressed. We will track how, in the years following his return to teaching after World War One, Heidegger wrestled with, and questioned, the phenomenological outlook of his mentor, Husserl; he drew on themes in St Paul, St Augustine, Plato and Aristotle, repeatedly revisiting the latter; as time became a more prominent concern, he turned to the work of Dilthey, and then to Kant, an increasingly influential presence in Heidegger’s thought as he began to draft ‘Being and Time’ itself. The up-coming centenary offers the ideal opportunity to work systematically through this challenging but very rich material, setting ‘Being and Time’ in its true historical context and making possible a re-examination of the book’s philosophical motivation and a fresh evaluation of its importance.
The first workshop, having been postponed from March 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, was held online in March of this year. It was devoted to Heidegger’s 1919-20 phenomenology lecture courses (‘Towards the Definition of Philosophy’, ‘Basic Problems of Phenomenology’ and ‘Phenomenology of Intuition and Expression’). The third workshop, the date of which is to be confirmed, is provisionally scheduled to take place at Christ Church College, Oxford, and will be devoted to the ‘Phenomenological Interpretations of Aristotle’ and ‘Aristotle: Ontology and Logic’ lecture courses (1921-22), and the important essay, ‘Phenomenological Interpretations in Connection with Aristotle: An Indication of the Hermeneutical Situation’ (1922). The first three workshops in the series are generously supported by a grant from the British Academy and the Leverhulme Trust. Subject to further funding, further workshops will follow.

Denis McManus (Southampton) | Sacha Golob (KCL) | Joseph Schear (Oxford)