The Rhenish Missionary Society

Evan Abla EAbla at nazarene.org
Fri Dec 17 09:24:46 CST 1999


Well, Derrida perhaps.  Levinas was more indebted to Husserl that to Heideggar.

Anybody up for some Monty Python.

Heideggar, Heiddegar was a filthy beggar
Who could think you under the table . . .

evan

Evan M. Abla
eabla at nazarene.org

"Outside of a dog a book is your best friend
   and inside a dog, it's too dark to read."
                                         --Groucho Marx

>>> "Evan Abla" <EAbla at nazarene.org> 12/17 9:16 AM >>>
mmmm, indeed.

evan

Evan M. Abla
eabla at nazarene.org 

"Outside of a dog a book is your best friend
   and inside a dog, it's too dark to read."
                                         --Groucho Marx

>>> Lorentzen / Nicklaus <lorentzen-nicklaus at t-online.de> 12/17 8:26 AM >>>

Evan Abla schrieb:

>  Emmanuel Levinas who,
>  by the way, was arguably the greatest influence on Derrida's work. 


 Both theories wouldn't exist without the way breaking work of Martin Heidegger.

               Sorry for being so penetrative regarding this issue! KFL

 PS: Heidegger once said, that Rilke's "Duineser Elegien" do express poetically 
 the same thing that he did philosophically with "Sein und Zeit".






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