In the various phases of Heidegger’s life and work, the many voices of his “thelogical heritage” can be heard in all their variety. Already present in Heidegger’s early theological studies, the search for God first takes the form of a phenomenology of the religious life, then of an implicit appropriation of key concepts from the Judeo-Christian tradition, finally of an expectation of a “last” God. Despite the “atheistic” approach of Heideggerian thought, the question of God and the question of Being can be seen as intrinsically related and as guiding a confrontation with traditional theology that leads to the definition of an “other” logos, which should address God as well as Being more appropriately than metaphysics has done. The non-denominational sense of the divine, which permeates Heidegger’s meditation on the truth of Being, thus lays claim to a “thoughtful” existence within the broader context of the world, through and beyond our “desolate” time.
Una plurivoca “provenienza teologica” risuona in modo sempre diverso nel corso delle varie fasi della vita e dell’opera di Heidegger. La ricerca di Dio, già presente nei primi studi teologici, si manifesta in Heidegger dapprima nella forma di una fenomenologia della vita religiosa, poi nell’appropriazione implicita di concetti-chiave della tradizione ebraico-cristiana, infine nell’attesa di un “ultimo” Dio. Malgrado l’approccio “ateo” del pensiero heideggeriano, la questione di Dio e la questione dell’essere appaiono in esso intrinsecamente collegate e guidano un confronto con la teologia tradizionale che porta all’elaborazione di un “altro” logos, capace di indirizzarsi a Dio e all’essere in modo più appropriato della metafisica. Dal senso aconfessionale per il divino che permea la meditazione heideggeriana sulla verità dell’essere proviene pertanto l’appello a un esistere “coscienzioso” nel più vasto contesto del mondo, attraverso e oltre il nostro tempo “di povertà”.
(2024). Heidegger und die Gottesfrage . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/267510
Heidegger und die Gottesfrage
Marafioti, Rosa Maria
2024-01-01
Abstract
In the various phases of Heidegger’s life and work, the many voices of his “thelogical heritage” can be heard in all their variety. Already present in Heidegger’s early theological studies, the search for God first takes the form of a phenomenology of the religious life, then of an implicit appropriation of key concepts from the Judeo-Christian tradition, finally of an expectation of a “last” God. Despite the “atheistic” approach of Heideggerian thought, the question of God and the question of Being can be seen as intrinsically related and as guiding a confrontation with traditional theology that leads to the definition of an “other” logos, which should address God as well as Being more appropriately than metaphysics has done. The non-denominational sense of the divine, which permeates Heidegger’s meditation on the truth of Being, thus lays claim to a “thoughtful” existence within the broader context of the world, through and beyond our “desolate” time.File | Dimensione del file | Formato | |
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