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Heidegger's Being and Time

Paraphrased and Annotated, Volume 1

Thomas Sheehan

This important new work, comprised of two volumes, paraphrases and annotates the entirety of Heidegger's magnum opus Being and Time. Leading Heidegger scholar Thomas Sheehan renders the text in reader-friendly language that avoids the worst of the Heideggerese that persists in the wider scholarship. He helpfully outlines each of the chapters of Being and Time and, in turn, each of the eighty-three individual sections of the book, providing critical and insightful annotations that draw on Heidegger’s comments on Being and Time throughout his career. The book also includes commentary and guidance on the terminology, scope, arguments, achievements, and limitations of Being and Time. This reader's guide is an essential resource for students, scholars and anyone engaging with Heidegger's complex work.

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  • Author
  • TOC
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  • Reviews
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Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 456 • Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-78661-340-0 • Hardback • May 2025 • $170.00 • (£131.00)
978-1-78661-341-7 • Paperback • May 2025 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Series: New Heidegger Research
Subjects: Philosophy / Movements / Phenomenology, Philosophy / Continental Philosophy, Philosophy / Metaphysics
Courses: Philosophy; Continental & European, Philosophy; Phenomenology, Philosophy; Metaphysics

Thomas Sheehan is professor emeritus of religious studies at Stanford University and of philosophy at Loyola University Chicago. His many publications include Making Sense of Heidegger: A Paradigm Shift, Becoming Heidegger, and translations of Heidegger's Logic: The Question of Truth and Husserl's Psychological and Transcendental Phenomenology, and the Confrontation with Heidegger.

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

I.

THE PARAPHRASE

Heidegger’s Preface to the Seventh Edition (1953)

The Untitled Exergue (1927)

General Introduction

to the Whole of Being and Time

THE QUESTION OF HOW BEING IS UNDERSTOOD

Chapter 1: The necessity, structure, and priority of this question

§1 Necessity: the need to reopen this question

§2 Structure: formulating the question

§3 The ontological priority of ex-sistence

§4 The ontic priority of ex-sistence

Chapter 2: The two-fold task, the method, and the outline of Being and Time

§5 SZ I: Fundamental ontology

§6 SZ II: Dismantling the history of ontology

§7 Method: Phenomenology

§8 Outline of the book

SZ, PART ONE

FUNDAMENTAL ONTOLOGY

DIVISION ONE: THE PREPARATORY ANALYSIS OF EX-SISTENCE

Preface to SZ I.1

Chapter 1: The task of a preparatory analysis of ex-sistence

§9 Introduction to the analysis of ex-sistence

§10 Ex-sistential analysis vs. other approaches

§11 So-called “primitive ex-sistence” and the need for “a natural conception of meaning”

Chapter 2: Involved in meaning

§12 Our involvement in meaning: a preliminary sketch

§13 Subject-object thinking

Chapter 3: The meaning-giving world

§14 Introduction

Subdivision A:The practical world of meaning

§15 How we encounter useful things

§16 How a world of praxis shows up

§17 Signs: A special kind of useful thing

§18 The structure of a world of praxis

Subdivision B:Descartes’ interpretation of “world”

Preface

§19 Descartes: The being of material things is extension in space

§20 Descartes: The “world” is comprised of extended substances

§21 Descartes’ ontology of “world”: a hermeneutical discussion

Subdivision C: The spatiality of worlds of praxis and of ex-sistence

Preface

§22 The spatiality of useful things

§23 The spatiality of ex-sistence

§24 The spatiality of the world and of ex-sistence. The ontology of space

Chapter 4Who I am in everyday living

Preface

§25 The question of who I usually am

§26 Sociality: my own and that of other people

§27 My crowd-self

Chapter 5: Involvement as such

§28 Involvement itself (In-Sein): An overview

Subdivision A: The field of intelligibility: its ex-sistential structure

§29 Affect holds open intelligibility

§30 Fear is a mode of affect

§31 Aheadness holds open intelligibility

§32 Working out the projectedmeaning

§33 Declarative sentences

§34 Ex-sistence as logos

Subdivision B: The field of intelligibility: its absorbed modes

Preface

§35 Casual talk

§36 Curiosity

§37 Ambiguity

§38 Absorption and movement

Chapter 6: Ex-sistence as engaged

§39 Introduction to ex-sistence as a unified whole

§40 Experiencing ex-sistence through dread

§41 Engaged in making sense

§42 A fable about cura

§43 Realness

§44 Ex-sistence and “truth”

II.

THE ANNOTATIONS

Heidegger’s Preface to the Seventh Edition (1953)

The Untitled Exergue (1927)

General introduction to the whole of Being And Time: The question of how being it understood

Chapter 1: The necessity, structure, and priority of this quesrtion

§1 Necessity: the need to reopen this question

§2 Structure: formulating the question

§3 The ontological priority of ex-sistence

§4 The ontic priority of ex-sistence

Chapter 2: The two-fold task, the method, and the outline of Being and Time

§5 SZ I: Fundamental ontology

§6 SZ II: Dismantling the history of ontology

§7 Method: henomenology

§8 Outline of the book

SZ, PART ONE: FUNDAMENTAL ONTOLOGY

Division One: The Preparatory Analysis of Ex-Sistence

Preface to SZ I

Chapter 1: The task of a preparatory analysis of ex-sistence

§9 Introduction to the analysis of ex-sistence

§10 Ex-sistential analysis vs. other approaches

§11 So-called “primitive ex-sistence” and the need for “a natural conception of meaning”

Chapter 2: Ex-sistence is involved in meaning

§12 Our involvement in meaning: a preliminary sketch

§13 Subject-object thinking

Chapter 3: The meaning-giving world

§14 Introduction

Subdivision A: Practical worlds of meanings

§15 Useful things

§16 How a world of praxis shows up

§17 Signs: A special kind of useful thing

§18 The structure of a world of praxis

Subdivision B: Descartes’ interpretation of “world”

Preface

§19 Descartes: The being of material things is extension in space

§20 Descartes: The “world” is comprised of extended substances

§21 Descartes’ ontology of “world”: A hermeneutical discussion

Subdivision C: The spatiality of worlds of praxis and of ex-sistence

Preface

§22 The spatiality of useful things

§23 The spatiality of ex-sistence itself

§24 The spatiality of the world and of ex-sistence. The ontology of space

Chapter 4Who I am in everyday living

Preface

§25 The question of who I usually am

§26 Sociality: my own and that of other people

§27 My crowd-self

Chapter 5: Involvement as such

§28 Involvement itself (In-Sein): An overview

Subdivision A: The field of intelligibility: its ex-sistential structure

§29 Affect holds open intelligibility

§30 Fear is a mode of affect

§31 Aheadness holds open intelligibility

§32 Working out the projected meaning

§33 Declarative sentences

§34 Ex-sistence as logos

Subdivision B: The field of intelligibility: its absorbed modes

Preface

§35 Casual talk

§36 Curiosity

§37 Ambiguity

§38 Absorption and movement

Chapter 6: Ex-sistence as engaged

§39 Introduction to ex-sistence as a unified whole

§40 Experiencing ex-sistence through dread

§41 Engaged in making sense

§42 A fable about cura

§43 Realness

§44 Ex-sistence and “truth”

APPENDICES

Bibliographies

1. Heidegger’s German Texts and Their English Translations 307

1.1 Texts within the Gesamtausgabe

1.2 Texts outside the Gesamtausgabe

2. Other Texts Cited

Terminology

German to English

English to German

Index

Sheehan’s invaluable 'paraphrase' pays rigorous attention to the text, its time, and Heidegger’s commitment to phenomenology. Even more important is Sheehan’s interpretation of Heidegger’s question of being as the question of intelligibility, the way things mean or matter to us. I know no more helpful guide to Heidegger’s masterpiece.


— Robert B. Pippin, Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor, University of Chicago, author of The Culmination: Heidegger, German Idealism, and the Fate of Philosophy


Thomas Sheehan’s monumental study of Being and Time includes a paraphrase that eschews Heideggerian jargon; a copiously annotated commentary; and an argument about sense-making. Beginners will relish the illuminating paraphrase; scholars will benefit from the erudite annotations; and anyone will benefit from engaging with the argument. Comprehensive, congenial, controversial: unavoidable.


— Steven Crowell, Mullen Professor of Humanities and Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, Rice University


Thoughtful and judicious as only the product of more than a half-century of nonpareil, often contrarian interpretations of Germany’s most controversial philosopher can be, Sheehan’s work is a genuine 'guide for the perplexed,' immediately becoming the go-to resource for anyone trying to come to grips with Heidegger’s timeless masterpiece.


— Daniel O. Dahlstrom, John R. Silber Professor of Philosophy, Boston University


Thomas Sheehan’s book is a tour de force, an ingenious reading of Heidegger’s Being and Time that in effect translates Heidegger’s difficult German into a section-by-section paraphrase. Drawing on decades of teaching and research, Sheehan’s text gives you the sense of attending an incisive seminar given by a master teacher.


— Lawrence J. Hatab, Louis I. Jaffe Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Old Dominion University


Heidegger's Being and Time

Paraphrased and Annotated, Volume 1

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
Summary
Summary
  • This important new work, comprised of two volumes, paraphrases and annotates the entirety of Heidegger's magnum opus Being and Time. Leading Heidegger scholar Thomas Sheehan renders the text in reader-friendly language that avoids the worst of the Heideggerese that persists in the wider scholarship. He helpfully outlines each of the chapters of Being and Time and, in turn, each of the eighty-three individual sections of the book, providing critical and insightful annotations that draw on Heidegger’s comments on Being and Time throughout his career. The book also includes commentary and guidance on the terminology, scope, arguments, achievements, and limitations of Being and Time. This reader's guide is an essential resource for students, scholars and anyone engaging with Heidegger's complex work.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 456 • Trim: 6 x 9
    978-1-78661-340-0 • Hardback • May 2025 • $170.00 • (£131.00)
    978-1-78661-341-7 • Paperback • May 2025 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
    Series: New Heidegger Research
    Subjects: Philosophy / Movements / Phenomenology, Philosophy / Continental Philosophy, Philosophy / Metaphysics
    Courses: Philosophy; Continental & European, Philosophy; Phenomenology, Philosophy; Metaphysics
Author
Author
  • Thomas Sheehan is professor emeritus of religious studies at Stanford University and of philosophy at Loyola University Chicago. His many publications include Making Sense of Heidegger: A Paradigm Shift, Becoming Heidegger, and translations of Heidegger's Logic: The Question of Truth and Husserl's Psychological and Transcendental Phenomenology, and the Confrontation with Heidegger.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Foreword

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    Abbreviations

    I.

    THE PARAPHRASE

    Heidegger’s Preface to the Seventh Edition (1953)

    The Untitled Exergue (1927)

    General Introduction

    to the Whole of Being and Time

    THE QUESTION OF HOW BEING IS UNDERSTOOD

    Chapter 1: The necessity, structure, and priority of this question

    §1 Necessity: the need to reopen this question

    §2 Structure: formulating the question

    §3 The ontological priority of ex-sistence

    §4 The ontic priority of ex-sistence

    Chapter 2: The two-fold task, the method, and the outline of Being and Time

    §5 SZ I: Fundamental ontology

    §6 SZ II: Dismantling the history of ontology

    §7 Method: Phenomenology

    §8 Outline of the book

    SZ, PART ONE

    FUNDAMENTAL ONTOLOGY

    DIVISION ONE: THE PREPARATORY ANALYSIS OF EX-SISTENCE

    Preface to SZ I.1

    Chapter 1: The task of a preparatory analysis of ex-sistence

    §9 Introduction to the analysis of ex-sistence

    §10 Ex-sistential analysis vs. other approaches

    §11 So-called “primitive ex-sistence” and the need for “a natural conception of meaning”

    Chapter 2: Involved in meaning

    §12 Our involvement in meaning: a preliminary sketch

    §13 Subject-object thinking

    Chapter 3: The meaning-giving world

    §14 Introduction

    Subdivision A:The practical world of meaning

    §15 How we encounter useful things

    §16 How a world of praxis shows up

    §17 Signs: A special kind of useful thing

    §18 The structure of a world of praxis

    Subdivision B:Descartes’ interpretation of “world”

    Preface

    §19 Descartes: The being of material things is extension in space

    §20 Descartes: The “world” is comprised of extended substances

    §21 Descartes’ ontology of “world”: a hermeneutical discussion

    Subdivision C: The spatiality of worlds of praxis and of ex-sistence

    Preface

    §22 The spatiality of useful things

    §23 The spatiality of ex-sistence

    §24 The spatiality of the world and of ex-sistence. The ontology of space

    Chapter 4Who I am in everyday living

    Preface

    §25 The question of who I usually am

    §26 Sociality: my own and that of other people

    §27 My crowd-self

    Chapter 5: Involvement as such

    §28 Involvement itself (In-Sein): An overview

    Subdivision A: The field of intelligibility: its ex-sistential structure

    §29 Affect holds open intelligibility

    §30 Fear is a mode of affect

    §31 Aheadness holds open intelligibility

    §32 Working out the projectedmeaning

    §33 Declarative sentences

    §34 Ex-sistence as logos

    Subdivision B: The field of intelligibility: its absorbed modes

    Preface

    §35 Casual talk

    §36 Curiosity

    §37 Ambiguity

    §38 Absorption and movement

    Chapter 6: Ex-sistence as engaged

    §39 Introduction to ex-sistence as a unified whole

    §40 Experiencing ex-sistence through dread

    §41 Engaged in making sense

    §42 A fable about cura

    §43 Realness

    §44 Ex-sistence and “truth”

    II.

    THE ANNOTATIONS

    Heidegger’s Preface to the Seventh Edition (1953)

    The Untitled Exergue (1927)

    General introduction to the whole of Being And Time: The question of how being it understood

    Chapter 1: The necessity, structure, and priority of this quesrtion

    §1 Necessity: the need to reopen this question

    §2 Structure: formulating the question

    §3 The ontological priority of ex-sistence

    §4 The ontic priority of ex-sistence

    Chapter 2: The two-fold task, the method, and the outline of Being and Time

    §5 SZ I: Fundamental ontology

    §6 SZ II: Dismantling the history of ontology

    §7 Method: henomenology

    §8 Outline of the book

    SZ, PART ONE: FUNDAMENTAL ONTOLOGY

    Division One: The Preparatory Analysis of Ex-Sistence

    Preface to SZ I

    Chapter 1: The task of a preparatory analysis of ex-sistence

    §9 Introduction to the analysis of ex-sistence

    §10 Ex-sistential analysis vs. other approaches

    §11 So-called “primitive ex-sistence” and the need for “a natural conception of meaning”

    Chapter 2: Ex-sistence is involved in meaning

    §12 Our involvement in meaning: a preliminary sketch

    §13 Subject-object thinking

    Chapter 3: The meaning-giving world

    §14 Introduction

    Subdivision A: Practical worlds of meanings

    §15 Useful things

    §16 How a world of praxis shows up

    §17 Signs: A special kind of useful thing

    §18 The structure of a world of praxis

    Subdivision B: Descartes’ interpretation of “world”

    Preface

    §19 Descartes: The being of material things is extension in space

    §20 Descartes: The “world” is comprised of extended substances

    §21 Descartes’ ontology of “world”: A hermeneutical discussion

    Subdivision C: The spatiality of worlds of praxis and of ex-sistence

    Preface

    §22 The spatiality of useful things

    §23 The spatiality of ex-sistence itself

    §24 The spatiality of the world and of ex-sistence. The ontology of space

    Chapter 4Who I am in everyday living

    Preface

    §25 The question of who I usually am

    §26 Sociality: my own and that of other people

    §27 My crowd-self

    Chapter 5: Involvement as such

    §28 Involvement itself (In-Sein): An overview

    Subdivision A: The field of intelligibility: its ex-sistential structure

    §29 Affect holds open intelligibility

    §30 Fear is a mode of affect

    §31 Aheadness holds open intelligibility

    §32 Working out the projected meaning

    §33 Declarative sentences

    §34 Ex-sistence as logos

    Subdivision B: The field of intelligibility: its absorbed modes

    Preface

    §35 Casual talk

    §36 Curiosity

    §37 Ambiguity

    §38 Absorption and movement

    Chapter 6: Ex-sistence as engaged

    §39 Introduction to ex-sistence as a unified whole

    §40 Experiencing ex-sistence through dread

    §41 Engaged in making sense

    §42 A fable about cura

    §43 Realness

    §44 Ex-sistence and “truth”

    APPENDICES

    Bibliographies

    1. Heidegger’s German Texts and Their English Translations 307

    1.1 Texts within the Gesamtausgabe

    1.2 Texts outside the Gesamtausgabe

    2. Other Texts Cited

    Terminology

    German to English

    English to German

    Index

Reviews
Reviews
  • Sheehan’s invaluable 'paraphrase' pays rigorous attention to the text, its time, and Heidegger’s commitment to phenomenology. Even more important is Sheehan’s interpretation of Heidegger’s question of being as the question of intelligibility, the way things mean or matter to us. I know no more helpful guide to Heidegger’s masterpiece.


    — Robert B. Pippin, Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor, University of Chicago, author of The Culmination: Heidegger, German Idealism, and the Fate of Philosophy


    Thomas Sheehan’s monumental study of Being and Time includes a paraphrase that eschews Heideggerian jargon; a copiously annotated commentary; and an argument about sense-making. Beginners will relish the illuminating paraphrase; scholars will benefit from the erudite annotations; and anyone will benefit from engaging with the argument. Comprehensive, congenial, controversial: unavoidable.


    — Steven Crowell, Mullen Professor of Humanities and Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, Rice University


    Thoughtful and judicious as only the product of more than a half-century of nonpareil, often contrarian interpretations of Germany’s most controversial philosopher can be, Sheehan’s work is a genuine 'guide for the perplexed,' immediately becoming the go-to resource for anyone trying to come to grips with Heidegger’s timeless masterpiece.


    — Daniel O. Dahlstrom, John R. Silber Professor of Philosophy, Boston University


    Thomas Sheehan’s book is a tour de force, an ingenious reading of Heidegger’s Being and Time that in effect translates Heidegger’s difficult German into a section-by-section paraphrase. Drawing on decades of teaching and research, Sheehan’s text gives you the sense of attending an incisive seminar given by a master teacher.


    — Lawrence J. Hatab, Louis I. Jaffe Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Old Dominion University


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