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Ernst Wolff

KU Leuven
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  • KU Leuven
    Institute of Philosophy
    Professor
  • All publications (63)
  •  172
    Aspects of technicity in Heidegger’s early philosophy: rereading Aristotle’s techné and hexis
    Research in Phenomenology 38 (3): 317-357. 2008.
    The article aims to advance our understanding of what the early Heidegger had in mind when he spoke about technics. Taking GA 18, Grundbegriffe der aristotelischen Philosophie, as a guiding text, Heidegger's “destructive” reading of the two notions most directly associated with Aristotle's presentation of technics—τεχνη and εξις—will be examined, especially with reference to the portrayal of technics in the Nicomachean Ethics. It will be argued that Aristotle already exaggerated the distinction …Read more
    The article aims to advance our understanding of what the early Heidegger had in mind when he spoke about technics. Taking GA 18, Grundbegriffe der aristotelischen Philosophie, as a guiding text, Heidegger's “destructive” reading of the two notions most directly associated with Aristotle's presentation of technics—τεχνη and εξις—will be examined, especially with reference to the portrayal of technics in the Nicomachean Ethics. It will be argued that Aristotle already exaggerated the distinction between virtue and skill and that, instead of insisting on their similarities (as will be argued to be desirable), Heidegger drove the two notions even further apart. This enabled him to form a warped picture of technical life, which he exploited as a counter image to develop an unrealistically non-technical notion of πρα;ξις, which Heidegger implicitly advocates.
    AristotlePhenomenologyMartin Heidegger
  •  34
    Chapter 8. Towards a post-Levinasian understanding of responsibility: the Weberian contribution of Apel
    In Political Responsibility for a Globalised World: After Levinas' Humanism, Columbia University Press. pp. 205-220. 2011.
  •  27
    Chapter 6. After Levinas: The risk of irresponsible responsibility
    In Political Responsibility for a Globalised World: After Levinas' Humanism, Columbia University Press. pp. 147-174. 2011.
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