enowning
Wednesday, January 04, 2017
 
In Philosophy Now, Roger Caldwell reviews S.M. Ewegen's Plato’s Cratylus: The Comedy of Language.
Ewegen’s direct references to Heidegger are few, but his text is imbued throughout with the language of the German master – not least in that ‘Being’ is never without its capital B. The problem is that Heidegger’s own readings of Greek thought (which by his own account are “violent”) are frequently forced, tendentious, and unpersuasive.
What's really cool about this issue of Philosophy Now is the seminar ad in the inside back cover.
 
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