Stambaugh: Being and Time – Estrutura da Obra

INTRODUCTION

The Exposition of the Question of the Meaning of Being

Chapter One – The Necessity, Structure, and Priority of the Question of Being

1. The Necessity of an Explicit Repetition of the Question of Being

2. The Formal Structure of the Question of Being

3. The Ontological Priority of the Question of Being

4. The Ontic Priority of the Question of Being

Chapter Ττυο – The Double Task in Working Out the Question of Being: The Method of the Investigation and Its Outline

5. The Ontological Analysis of Dasein as Exposing the Horizon for an Interpretation of the Meaning of Being in General

6. The Task of a Destruction of the History of Ontology

7. The Phenomenological Method of the Investigation

A. The Concept of Phenomenon

B. The Concept of Logos

C. The Preliminary Concept of Phenomenology

8. The Outline of the Treatise

PART ONE

The Interpretation of Dasein in Terms of Temporality and the Explication of Time as the Transcendental Horizon of the Question of Being

DIVISION ONE

The Preparatory Fundamental Analysis of Dasein

Chapter One – The Exposition of the Task of a Preparatory Analysis of Dasein

9. The Theme of the Analytic of Dasein

10. How the Analytic of Dasein is to be Distinguished from Anthropology, Psychology, and Biology

11. The Existential Analytic and the Interpretation of Primitive Dasein: The Difficulties in Securing a “Natural Concept of World”

Chapter Two – Being-in-the-World in General as the Fundamental Constitution of Dasein

12. The Preliminary Sketch of Being-in-the-World in Terms of the Orientation toward Being-in as Such

13. The Exemplification of Being-in in a Pounded Mode: Knowing the World

Chapter Three – The Worldliness of the World

14. The Idea of the Worldliness of the World in General

A. Analysis of Environmentality and Worldliness in General

15. The Being of Beings Encountered in the Surrounding World

16. The Worldly Character of the Surrounding World Announcing Itself in Innerworldly Beings

17. Reference and Signs

18. Relevance and Significance: The Worldliness of the World

B. The Contrast Between Our Analysis of Worldliness and Descartes’ Interpretation of the World

19. The Determination of the “World” as Res Extensa

20. The Fundaments of the Ontological Definition of the “World”

21. The Hermeneutical Discussion of the Cartesian Ontology of the “World”

C. The Aroundness of the Surrounding World and the Spatiality of Dasein

22. The Spatiality of Innerworldly Hungs at Hand

23. The Spatiality of Being-in-the-World

24. The Spatiality of Dasein and Space

Chapter Four – Being-in-the-World as Being-with and Being a Self: The “They”

25. The Approach to the Existential Question of the Who of Dasein

26. The Dasein-with of Others and Everyday Being-with

27. Everyday Being a Self and the They

Chapter Five – Being-in as Such

28. The Task of a Thematic Analysis of Being-in

A. The Existential Constitution of the There

29. Da-sein as Attunement

30. Fear as a Mode of Attunement

31. Da-sein as Understanding

32. Understanding and Interpretation

33. Statement as a Derivative Mode of Interpretation

34. Da-sein and Discourse. Language

B. The Everyday Being of the There and the Falling Prey of Dasein

35. Idle Talk

36. Curiosity

37. Ambiguity

38. Falling Prey and Thrownness

Chapter Six – Care as the Being of Dasein

39. The Question of the Primordial Totality of the Structural Whole of Dasein

40. The Fundamental Attunement of Anxiety as an Eminent Disclosedness of Dasein

41. The Being of Dasein as Care

42. Confirmation of the Existential Interpretation of Dasein as Care in Terms of the Pre-ontological Self-interpretation of Dasein

43. Dasein, Worldliness, and Reality

a. Reality as a Problem of Being and the Demonstratability of the “External World”

b. Reality as an Ontological Problem

c. Reality and Care

44. Dasein, Disclosedness, and Truth

a. The Traditional Concept of Truth and Its Ontological Foundations

b. The Primordial Phenomenon of Truth and the Derivative Character of the Traditional Concept of Truth

c. The Kind of Being of Truth and the Presupposition of Truth

DIVISION TWO Dasein and Temporality

45. The Result of the Preparatory Fundamental Analysis of Dasein and the Task of a Primordial, Existential Interpretation of this Being

Chapter One – The Possible Being-a-Whole of Dasein and Being-toward-Death

46. The Seeming Impossibility of Ontologically Grasping and Determining Dasein as a Whole

47. The Possibility of Experiencing the Death of Others and the Possibility of Grasping Dasein as a Whole

48. What is Outstanding, End, and Wholeness

49. How the Existential Analysis of Death Differs from Other Possible Interpretations of this Phenomenon

50. A Preliminary Sketch of the Existential and Ontological Structure of Death

51. Being-toward-Death and the Everydayness of Dasein

52. Everyday Being-toward-Death and the Complete Existential Concept of Death

53. Existential Project of an Authentic Being-toward-Death

Chapter Two – The Attestation of Dasein of an Authentic Potentiality-of-Being and Resoluteness

54. The Problem of the Attestation of an Authentic Existentiell Possibility

55. The Existential and Ontological Foundations of Conscience

56. The Character of Conscience as a Call

57. Conscience as the Call of Care

58. Understanding the Summons and Guilt

59. The Existential Interpretation of Conscience and the Vulgar Interpretation of Conscience

60. The Existential Structure of the Authentic Potentiality-of-Being Attested to in Conscience

Chapter Three – The Authentic Potentiality-for-Being-a-Whole of Dasein, and Temporality as the Ontological Meaning of Care

61. Preliininary Sketch of the Methodological Step from Chatlining the Authentic Being-as-a-Whole of Dasein to the Phenomenal Exposition of Temporality

62. The Existentielly Authentic Potentiality-for-Being-Whole of Dasein as Anticipatory Resoluteness

63. The Hermeneutical Situation at Which We Have Arrived for Interpreting the Meaning of Being of Care, and the Methodological Character of the Existential Analytic in General

64. Care and Selfhood

65. Temporality as the Ontological Meaning of Care

66. The Temporality of Dasein and the Tasks of a More Primordial Repetition of the Existential Analysis Arising from it

Chapter Four – Temporality and Everydayness

67. The Basic Content of the Existential Constitution of Dasein, and the Preliminary Sketch of Its Temporal Interpretation

68. The Temporality of Disclosedness in General

a. The Temporality of Understanding

b. The Temporality of Attunement

c. The Temporality of Falling Prey

d. The Temporality of Discourse

69. The Temporality of Being-in-the-World and the Problem of the Transcendence of the World

a. The Temporality of Circumspect Taking Care

b. The Temporal Meaning of the Way in which Circumspect Taking Care Becomes Modified into the Theoretical Discovery of That Which is Present Within the World

c. The Temporal Problem of the Transcendence of the World

70. The Temporality of the Spatiality Characteristic of Dasein

71. The Temporal Meaning of the Everydayness of Dasein

Chapter Five – Temporality and Historicity

72. The Existential and Ontological Exposition of the Problem of History

73. The Vulgar Understanding of History and the Occurrence of Dasein

74. The Essential Constitution of Historicity

75. The Historicity of Dasein and World History

76. The Existential Origin of Historiography from the Historicity of Dasein

77. The Connection of the Foregoing Exposition of the Problem of Historicity with the Investigations of Dilthey and the Ideas of Count Yorck

Chapter Six – Temporality and Within-Timeness as the Origin of the Vulgar Concept of Time

78. The Incompleteness of the Foregoing Temporal Analysis of Dasein

79. The Temporality of Dasein and Taking Care of Time

80. Time Taken Care of and Within-Timeness

81. Within-Timeness and the Genesis of the Vulgar Concept of Time

82. The Contrast of the Existential and Ontological Connection of Temporality, Dasein, and World Time with Hegel’s Conception of the Relation between Time and Spirit

a. Hegel’s Concept of Time

b. Hegel’s Interpretation of the Connection between Time and Spirit

83. The Existential and Temporal Analytic of Dasein and the Fundamental Ontological Question of the Meaning of Being in General

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