141475

University of Toronto Press, Toronto

2017

314 Pages

ISBN n/a

Translating Heidegger

Miles Groth

Despite Martin Heidegger's influence on twentieth-century philosophy, understanding his way of thinking is difficult if one relies solely on the English translations of his work. Since Gilbert Ryle misjudged his work in a 1929 review of Sein und Zeit, Heidegger's philosophy has remained an enigma to many scholars who cannot read the original German texts. In Translating Heidegger, Groth points to mistranslations as the root cause of misunderstanding Heidegger. Translators have not achieved clarity regarding Heidegger's fundamental words, an understanding ofwhich is crucial to gaining access to his thought. Having been mistranslated from the ancient Greek into Latin and then into modern European languages, Heidegger's philosophies have largely been obscured for two millennia. In this unique study, Groth examines the history of the first English translations of Heidegger's works and reveals the elements of Heidegger's philosophy of translation, showing it at work in Heidegger's radical translation of Parmenides, Fragment VI.

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Groth, M. (2017). Translating Heidegger, 2nd edn., University of Toronto Press, Toronto.

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M. Groth, Translating Heidegger

2018

von der Luft Eric

Phenomenological Reviews 4