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8 - Heidegger’s Mortal Phenomenology of Existential Death and the Postmetaphysical Politics of Ontological Pluralism

from Part II - Rethinking Death after Heidegger

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2024

Iain D. Thomson
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico
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Summary

Proposition 67 of Spinoza’s hyper-rationalistic Ethics proudly proclaims that: “A free man thinks of nothing less than of death.” Well, in this book I have thought a great deal about existential death, and a good bit about the “noth-ing of the nothing” that such death discloses. Still, I have probably thought of noth-ing less than of death, so Spinoza might have to count me “free” on a technicality. There are, at any rate, worse things than being freed on a technicality. One can be convicted on a technicality, for example, or even convicted by technicality. Indeed, the later Heidegger suggests that we have all been convicted by technicality, technicity, or technologicity, that is, by “the essence of technology.” According to his view of our late modern age of technological enframing, we have all been thrown by Western history into the prison city-state (or polis) of nihilistic technologicity.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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