Innocence et puissance Heidegger face au principe de raison |
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Authors: | Pierre Caye |
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Affiliation: | 1. Centre d’histoire de la philosophie moderne, UPR 75 CNRS, 7 rue Guy-Moquet, BP 8, Bat. N, F-94801, Villejuif Cedex
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Abstract: | The principle of reason, that is accounting for all things by referring them to an unquestioned, fundamental principle, commands for Heidegger the total mobilization and universal computation of the world by the technical. The critique of this principle seems to lead Heidegger toward a thinking of the relinquishment of things and an epistemology of innocence, freed from any effect of metaphysical, political, or sociological power. That innocence is however ambiguous. It recalls the Heraclitean play of the child-king and announces the return of a mysterious sovereignty. The power of the technical is warded off for the benefit of another power, not less commanding and absolute, a “superpower” which in its turn could effectively mean, in a still more decisive way than the becoming-technical of thinking, the accomplishment and the end of metaphysics. |
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