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Thesis defences

MA Defence: Leah Edmonds, Philosophy


Date & time
Friday, September 9, 2022
12 p.m. – 2 p.m.
Speaker(s)

Leah Edmonds

Cost

This event is free

Where

S Annex
2145 Mackay
Room 201 or Contact Emma Moss Brender for Zoom Link

Wheel chair accessible

No

Poster on Concordia letterhead with the words "Leah Edmonds, MA Defence, Philosophy".

Heidegger, Funerary Practices, and the Fourfold

Leah Edmonds

Supervisor: Matthias Fritsch

ABSTRACT: Heidegger famously argues in Being and Time that to live well and honestly, we must face up to our own mortality. Within Being and Time, Heidegger is clear that neither exposure to the deaths of others, nor engagement in funerary practices, bring us closer to death in the proper—“authentic”—way. In this paper, I take up a hint offered by Johannes Niederhauser in his 2019 book On Death and Being that Heidegger amends his original position on funerary practices in his later work. My project is to affirm that this change indeed took place over the course of Heidegger’s career by highlighting his approving reference to the Totenbaum (that is, the coffin) in “Building, Dwelling, Thinking” and his remarks on Sophocles’ Antigone in his lecture course Hölderlin’s Hymn “The Ister”. In turn, I attempt to account for the change in Heidegger’s position by examining funerary practices in light of the thinking of the “fourfold”. Ultimately, I claim that funerary practices may be considered a form of poetry understood in the broad sense of “poetic dwelling”. In the final sections of the paper, I suggest, beyond Heidegger’s own words, but in line with his thinking (at least as I interpret it), that the death of others constitutes a potent and universal access point for reflection on Being qua Being, even amidst the profoundly desensitized era of Gestell.

 

If you would like to attend remotely, please contact philosophy.chairassistant@concordia.ca for the Zoom link.

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