Dissertação
Heidegger e Kant: o projeto ontológico de Ser e Tempo e a interpretação fenomenológica da Crítica da Razão Pura
Fecha
2013-10-30Registro en:
SILVA, Jaderson Oliveira da. Heidegger and Kant: the ontological project of Being and Time and the phenomenological interpretation of Critique of Pure Reason. 2013. 106 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Filosofia) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2013.
Autor
Silva, Jaderson Oliveira da
Institución
Resumen
The goal of this work is to provide a reconstruction of Heidegger's
phenomenological interpretation of Critique of Pure Reason carried out in the
late twenties in light of the task of a destruction of the history of ontology on the
guideline of the problem of temporality. The reconstruction is focused on Kant
and the Problem of Metaphysics (1930) regarded in connection with textcourses
from the period around Being and Time, in particular The
Phenomenological Interpretation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (1927-28)
and The Fundamental Problems of Phenomenology (1927). After an
examination of the central methodological lines derived from the task of
phenomenological destruction of the history of ontology the work presents the
interpretation of Kant's thesis about being and the background in which it is
formulated the thesis according to which Kant's Critique must be understood as
a project to lay the foundations for metaphysics. By means of these
considerations the work is able to reconstruct the phenomenological
interpretation of Critique of Pure Reason as a laying of the foundation for
metaphysics which inquires into the problem about the fore ontological
understanding that enables entities to become manifest to finite human reason.
In light of central orientations provided by the general ontological project of
Being and Time the center of attention is the temporal nature of pure objectivity
horizon which is developed by means of interpretations of transcendental
schematism and transcendental deduction. Thus the work is intended to
illuminate Heidegger's claim according to which Kant is the first and only one
who traversed a stretch of the path toward the dimension of temporality .