Preface
Acknowledgments
Key to References
Introduction
1. Truth, Untruth, and Heidegger
2. Heidegger’s Texts on Truth
Part I: The Early Pathway of Thinking: Freiburg, December 1930
1. Heidegger’s Introduction: Questioning and the Public
2. Accordance of Statement and Thing: Section I(a)
3. Truth Prior to the Statement: Section I(b)
4. Freedom as Spontaneity: Section I(c)
5. Freedom as Letting-Be: Section II(a)(i)
6. Truth as Unconcealedness – The Greek Beginning: Section II(a)(ii)
7. Da-sein the Human Essence: Section II(a)(iii)
8. Truth and Concealedness – Attunement: Section II(b)(i)
9. Concealment: Section II(b)(ii)
10. Erring: Section II(b)(iii)
11. The End of the Pathway
(A) From Erring to Philosophy: A Fourth Arc
(B) Philosophy and the Academic Disciplines
Intermission: Political Storms
Part II: Later Work: The Pathway Rectified
(A) Unconcealedness and Correctness
1. The Plato Lectures
2. The Phenomenology of 1949: Experience in WW 2
3. The Standard and the Directive: WW 2.4–3.1
4. Presence and Being: WW 2.2
5. Freedom and Letting-Be: WW 4.1–4.4
6. Unconcealedness in the Later Heidegger: WW 4.3–4.5
(B) Governance and Certainty
7. Medieval Philosophy and Its Continuing Influence: WW 1.5–1.6
8. The Rational World-Order
9. Attunement in WW 5
(C) The Present Age: En-owning and Mystery
10. A Reversal of Thinking
11. The Concealment of Ale¯theia: WW 6.1
12. The Truth of Being: The Clearing for Its Concealment – WW 8 and 9
13. Philosophy among the Disciplines
Conclusion: Against Self-Expression
Notes
Index