Speaking Being : Werner Erhard, Martin Heidegger, and a New Possibility of Being Human by Bruce Hyde and Drew Kopp (2019, Trade Paperback)

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Th is a comparative analysis that demonstrates how Erhard's rhetorical project and the philosophical project of Martin Heidegger each illuminate the other. The purpose of this book is to show that this is actually accomplished in The Forum, and to demonstrate--with Heidegger's thinking presented in a series of "Sidebars" and "Intervals" alongside The Forum transcript --how Erhard did it in 1989.

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Product Identifiers

PublisherWiley & Sons, Incorporated, John
ISBN-101119549906
ISBN-139781119549901
eBay Product ID (ePID)20038454326

Product Key Features

Number of Pages576 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameSpeaking Being : Werner Erhard, Martin Heidegger, and a New Possibility of Being Human
Publication Year2019
SubjectLeadership, Knowledge Capital, Personal Success, Personal Growth / General, Individual Philosophers, Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Rhetoric
TypeTextbook
AuthorBruce Hyde, Drew Kopp
Subject AreaPhilosophy, Social Science, Language Arts & Disciplines, Self-Help, Business & Economics
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height1.3 in
Item Weight43.3 Oz
Item Length8.3 in
Item Width10.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN2019-020014
Dewey Edition23
Dewey Decimal128.092
Table Of ContentAbout the Authors ix Introduction 1 Day One: Session One 7 Talking about Being 8 Dasein 12 Two Theses 14 Ontological Dialogue 16 Being-in-the-World: Being-in 20 Mood 24 Interval: Hints: Ontological Distinctions 32 Day One: Session Two 34 Philosophy as Rhetorical Evocation 35 Getting It and Losing It 44 Authenticity 54 Interval: Dasein: Meaning and Mineness 58 Day One: Session Three 60 Interval: Yankelovich Study Results 62 Day One: Session Four 68 Concern 73 Already Always Listening 75 Interval: Jargon 78 Day One: Session Five 80 End of Day One Interval: Reflexion: The Cartesian Deficiency 86 Day Two: Session One 89 Being-in-the-World: Being-With 92 Giving and Reflexion 103 The They-Self 107 Interval: Hermeneutic Phenomenology 116 Day Two: Session Two 120 Thinking 121 Heidegger's Pedagogy 127 Solicitude of a Forum Leader 132 Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part One of Eight: Getting and Losing 136 Day Two: Session Three 138 Social Moods 156 Thrownness 159 Day Two: Session Four 166 End of Day Two Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Two of Eight: Questioning 168 Day Three: Session One 171 In-Order-To 172 Awakening Attunements 185 Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Three of Eight: Heidegger's Etymologies 196 Day Three: Session Two 198 Danger: Attunements and Moods 200 Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Four of Eight: The Pre-Socratics 208 Day Three: Session Three 212 Choice 217 The Violence of Meaning 226 The Same 237 God 259 Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Five of Eight: Physis 264 Day Three: Session Four 268 Waiting for the Leap 284 A Violent Way 292 End of Day Three Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Six of Eight: Saying Nothing 308 Day Four: Session One 311 Being-in-the-World: World 312 The Uncanny 319 The Call of Conscience 332 What is Said When Conscience Calls? 342 Nothing: Beyond Nihilism 358 Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Seven of Eight: Logos 372 Day Four: Session Two 376 The Three Levels of Truth 377 Primordial Metaphor: Clearing 397 The Drift 409 "Way of Being" and the "Nature of Being for Human Beings" 418 Interval: The Forgetting of Being, Part Eight of Eight: The Heart of the Matter 448 Day Four: Session Three 450 A Substance Ontology 472 Event Ontology 479 Technology 484 Techne 492 Enframing 499 The Oblivion of Oblivion 510 Transformation as Technology 519 End of Day Four Interval: Technology of Transformation 530 Afterword 532 by Michael E. Zimmerman References 543 Index 547
SynopsisSpeaking Being: Werner Erhard, Martin Heidegger, and a New Possibility of Being Human is an unprecedented study of the ideas and methods developed by the thinker Werner Erhard. In this book, those ideas and methods are revealed by presenting in full an innovative program he developed in the 1980s called The Forum--available in this book as a transcript of an actual course led by Erhard in San Francisco in December of 1989. Since its inception, Erhard's work has impacted the lives of millions of people throughout the world. Central to this study is a comparative analysis of Erhard's rhetorical project, The Forum, and the philosophical project of Martin Heidegger. Through this comparative analysis, the authors demonstrate how each thinker's work sometimes parallels and often illuminates the other. The dialogue at work in The Forum functions to generate a language which speaks being . That is, The Forum is an instance of what the authors call ontological rhetoric a technology of communicating what cannot be said in language. Nevertheless, what does get said allows those participating in the dialogue to discover previously unseen aspects of what it currently means to be human. As a primary outcome of such discovery, access to creating a new possibility of what it is to be human is made available. The purpose of this book is to show how communication of the unspoken realm of language-- speaking being --is actually accomplished in The Forum, and to demonstrate how Erhard did it in 1989. Through placing Erhard's language use next to Heidegger's thinking--presented in a series of "Sidebars" and "Intervals" alongside The Forum transcript--the authors have made two contributions. They have illuminated the work of two thinkers, who independently developed similar forms of ontological rhetoric while working from very different times and places. Hyde and Kopp have also for the first time made Erhard's extraordinary form of ontological rhetoric available for a wide range of audiences, from scholars at work within a variety of academic disciplines to anyone interested in exploring the possibility of being for human beings. From the Afterword: I regard Speaking Being as an enormously important contribution to understanding Heidegger and Erhard. The latter has received far too little serious academic attention, and this book begins to make up for that lack. Moreover, the book's analysis of Heidegger's thought is among the best that I have ever read. I commend this book to all readers without reservation. Michael E. Zimmerman, Professor Emeritus, University of Colorado, Boulder, Speaking Being: Werner Erhard, Martin Heidegger, and a New Possibility of Being Human is an unprecedented study of the ideas and methods developed by the thinker Werner Erhard. In this book, those ideas and methods are revealed by presenting in full an innovative program he developed in the 1980s called The Forum--available in this book as a transcript of an actual course led by Erhard in San Francisco in December of 1989. Since its inception, Erhard's work has impacted the lives of millions of people throughout the world. Central to this study is a comparative analysis of Erhard's rhetorical project, The Forum, and the philosophical project of Martin Heidegger. Through this comparative analysis, the authors demonstrate how each thinker's work sometimes parallels and often illuminates the other. The dialogue at work in The Forum functions to generate a language which speaks being . That is, The Forum is an instance of what the authors call ontological rhetoric : a technology of communicating what cannot be said in language. Nevertheless, what does get said allows those participating in the dialogue to discover previously unseen aspects of what it currently means to be human. As a primary outcome of such discovery, access to creating a new possibility of what it is to be human is made available. The purpose of this book is to show how communication of the unspoken realm of language-- speaking being --is actually accomplished in The Forum, and to demonstrate how Erhard did it in 1989. Through placing Erhard's language use next to Heidegger's thinking--presented in a series of "Sidebars" and "Intervals" alongside The Forum transcript--the authors have made two contributions. They have illuminated the work of two thinkers, who independently developed similar forms of ontological rhetoric while working from very different times and places. Hyde and Kopp have also for the first time made Erhard's extraordinary form of ontological rhetoric available for a wide range of audiences, from scholars at work within a variety of academic disciplines to anyone interested in exploring the possibility of being for human beings. From the Afterword: I regard Speaking Being as an enormously important contribution to understanding Heidegger and Erhard. The latter has received far too little serious academic attention, and this book begins to make up for that lack. Moreover, the book's analysis of Heidegger's thought is among the best that I have ever read. I commend this book to all readers without reservation. Michael E. Zimmerman, Professor Emeritus, University of Colorado, Boulder
LC Classification NumberBD450

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