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E-grāmata: Refreshing and Rethinking Retrieval of Greek Thinking

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A Refreshing and Rethinking Retrieval of Greek Thinking presents a rereading and rethinking of Greek philosophy in an attempt to retrieve an essential thread in Greek thinking that has been covered over for many centuries – beginning with the late Greeks, then Christianity, and then rationalism from the seventeenth century onward – and misrepresented by mistranslations in the nineteenth century. Using Heidegger's work with Greek thinking as a springboard, the book shows how the covering over of this essential thread happened.

Kenneth Maly provides a frame by which those not trained in philosophy and phenomenology of experience can grasp the wider import of this rethinking of Greek philosophy. The book delves deep into key questions, preparing readers for extensive and more technical work with the key Greek words and their meanings, hidden for centuries. It includes a significant investigation of how this task requires a different way of language, how early Western thinking mirrors non-Western Daoism and Buddhism, and how quantum physics gets to the same place in its "philosophy," with an emphasis on the work of David Bohm. In doing so, the book reveals how Daoism, Buddhism, the quantum potential of quantum physics, and Heidegger's being-beyng are all mirrored in Greek philosophy, above all in early Greek thinking.



A Refreshing and Rethinking Retrieval of Greek Thinking presents a rereading and rethinking of Greek philosophy in an attempt to retrieve an essential thread in Greek thinking that has been covered over for many centuries – beginning with the late Greeks, then Christianity, and then rationalism from the seventeenth century onward – and misrepresented by mistranslations from then on. Using Heidegger’s work with Greek thinking as a springboard, the book shows how the covering over of this essential thread happened.

Kenneth Maly provides a frame by which those not trained in philosophy and phenomenology of experience can grasp the wider import of this rethinking of Greek philosophy. The book delves deep into key questions, preparing readers for extensive and more technical work with the key Greek words and their meanings, hidden for centuries. It includes a significant investigation of how this task requires a different way of language, how early Western thinking mirrors non-Western Daoism and Buddhism, and how quantum physics gets to the same place in its “philosophy,” with an emphasis on the work of David Bohm. In doing so, the book reveals how Daoism, Buddhism, the quantum potential of quantum physics, and Heidegger’s being-beyng are all mirrored in Greek philosophy, above all in early Greek thinking.



This book presents a rethinking of Greek philosophy to offer the West a path to a more holistic and less conceptual understanding of the way things are.

Suggestions, Guidelines
Preamble: Telling the Story of This Book
Interlude: Heidegger’s Words Da-sein and Sein-Seyn-Ereignis


Part 1: Shaking Up the Established Views


a. A First Look: What Is at Stake
b. The Starting: Movement and Change
c. The Two Ways of Thinking
d. Entering the Way
e. Beacons to Guide Us
f. First Glimpses
g. The Example of Nietzsche
h. The Oracle of Delphi
i. Word-Images as Guideposts and Openings
j. Transition: An Invitation


Part 2: Enacting the Retrieval from “Here” to “There”


a. Markers to Help along the Way
b. Using David Bohm to Retell the Story of This Book: The Road from Here to There and from There to Here
c. From Bohm to Heidegger: How to Go beyond Dualism, Conceptualism, Stasis – into the Dynamic of the Immeasurable Radiant Emptiness
d. Poi-etic Language: Saying as Showing
e. Dao as Measure and Opening for Our Work, in Its Saying Power


Part 3: Retrieving, by Refreshing, What the Greek Words Say and in Saying Show, Shaped by Heidegger


a. ἀπορία/aporia
b. The Greek Words That Say Beyng as “Radiant Emptiness”
i. ἄπειρον/apeiron, along with χώρα/chora
ii. ἀλήθεια/aletheia
iii. φύσις/physis
iv. ἐόν/eon
v. λόγος/logos, along with ἓν/hen
vi. ψυχή/psyche
vii. νόος, νοῦς / noos, nous


Part 4: Bringing the Book to a Close


a. From Saying Consciousness to Saying Awareness
b. How to Think and Experience and Say “It”: Meanderings
c. Next Steps: Understanding Expanding Horizons
d. Coda


Notes
Bibliography
Index

Kenneth Maly is a professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.