Experience and Speech raises, in an original way, the question of the nexus between experience and speech from Heidegger, thus moving away from the typical ontological approaches that have been made until now by the philosopher.
About Heidegger, a lot has been written. However, there is a facet of the German thinker that has been little treated and that is not included as one of his usual themes: in the transcendental plane from which the human experience is described, Heidegger seems to suggest the need to question the origin of the discourse , its forms, its changes through time, and how it could be built in its current forms and in its historical and systematic limits.
Experience and speech maintains an unusual approach to Heidegger. By avoiding directly addressing the great ontological themes to focus on anthropological issues -which may seem, at first sight, margina...read more