The volume examines the evolution of Martin Heidegger's thought in three main areas: life, praxis, and emotion. Heidegger's critique of Dilthey's philosophy of life is highlighted, emphasizing the importance of "factual life" in his initial phenomenological research. Although he later abandons this term, his reflection on the difference between human existence and that of living beings in general continues to influence his ontology. Heidegger's emphasis on praxis as a fundamental element of human experience is discussed, linking it to a creative appropriation of Aristotle's practical philosophy. Finally, the relevance of moods in Heidegger's philosophy is addressed, highlighting their methodological importance and their role in human understanding.

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.46605/xj.vol13.2024

Published: Mar 25, 2024

Forgetting as an event and forgetfulness as an ontological possibility in Heidegger

11-28 Irene Borges-Duarte

Understanding Existence. Heidegger Reader of Pascal

29-38 Luigi Panella

Between Fears and Hopes. Heidegger’s Contribution to a Conceptual History of Emotion

39-59 Nicolás Ferioli

Anxiety and Releasement. Spatiality as an Interpretive Basis of the Hermeneutic Transformation of the Disposedness in Heideggerian Thought

61-75 Christian Miranda Bascopé

Heidegger and Admiration in His Translation of Aristotle in the Summer Lectures of 1922

77-97 Francisco Gabriel Ruiz Sosa

Heideggerian Philosophy is not Anthropocentric. Peculiarity and the Introduction of Life into Morality

99-119 Eva Blaya Melchor

The Inheritance of the Philosophy of Life: An Approximation to Hermeneutics. Dilthey, Heidegger and Gadamer around experience

121-143 Jorge Benito Torres

False Concreteness, Praxis and Dwelling. Possible Responses from Heidegger to the Young Marcuse

185-207 César Alberto Pineda Saldaña

Temporality, World, and Praxis. The Influence of Heidegger’s Early Work on Arendtian Political Theory

145-165 Oscar Gracia Landaeta, Andrés Laguna Tapia, Pablo Rojo Salazar

Theory and Praxis in Heidegger’s Thought

167-184 José Castañeda Vargas