This volume offers insights into a unique philosophical landscape and enriches current Heidegger studies by offering fresh perspectives on his philosophy that are based on the traditions of Arabic and Persian Islamic philosophy
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface: Fred Dallmayr
Introduction: Urs Gö sken, Josh Hayes, Kata Moser
Part I: Lines of Reception in the Islamicate World
1. Zeynep Direk: The Receptions of Heidegger in Turkey
2. Amir Nasri: Heidegger's Role in the Formation of Art Theory in Contemporary Iran
3. Nader El-Bizri: Levantine Pathways in the Reception of Heidegger
4. Sylvain Camilleri: The Eccentric Reception of Heidegger in Hanafi's "French Trilogy"
Part II: Heidegger and Islamicate Authenticity
5. Sevinç Yasargil: Anxiety, Nothingness and Time: Abdurrahman Badawi's Existentialist Interpretation of Islamic Mysticism
6. Monir Birouk: Taha Abderrahmane: Applying Heidegger as a Heuristic for Conceptual Authenticity
7. Mansooreh Khalilizand: On Nihilism and the Nihilistic Essence of European Metaphysics. Martin Heidegger and Daryush Shayegan
Part III: Heidegger and Islamicate Modes of Expression
8. Saliha Shah: The Question Concerning Poetry in Iqbal and Heidegger
9. Ahmad Ali Heydari: Heidegger, Hö lderlin-Fardid, Hafez
10. Khalid El Aref: Hospitality and Dialogue: On Fethi Meskini's Translation and Appropriation of Heidegger
Part IV: Heidegger and the Revival of Islamicate Philosophy
11. Ismail El Mossadeq: Against Heidegger-Orthodoxy in the Arab World
12. Seyed Majid Kamali: Heidegger's Aristotle: A Hermeneutic Retrieval of Islamic Philosophy in Iran
Part V: Challenging the Islamicate
13. Syed Mustafa Ali: Heidegger and the Islamicate: Transversals and Reversals
Appendix: Arabic, Persian, and Turkish Translations of Heidegger's Works (Urs Gö sken, Kata Moser, Erdal Y ld z)
Bibliography
Index
About the Contributors