Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 - Teacher of Fars P.N.University

2 Associate professor of University of Tabriz

Abstract

This article is going to re-interpret the concept of event of appropriation in the philosophy of Heidegger. We recognized the books Towards a Definition of Philosophy (1919), Contributions to Philosophy (From En-owning) (1936-1938) and Of Time and Being (1962) to achieve this purpose.
Heidegger interprets the meaning of event as a thing that is belongs to me immediately in Towards a Definition of Philosophy. He interprets this concept as reciprocity of Dasein and Being in Contributions to Philosophy. And translates it as a field that time and Being present there in Of Time and Being. This evolutionary approach of Heidegger guides us to the meaning of thinking that Heidegger expressed in 1951-52 lessons.
This article express that we can achieve a new interpretation of the concept of Heideggerian event, when we put all interpretation in the field of the meaning of thinking.

Keywords

Main Subjects

-        هایدگر، مارتین. (1390). چه باشد آنچه خوانندش تفکر؟، ترجمۀ سیاوش جمادی.تهران: انتشارات ققنوس.
-              Dreyfus, Hubert. (2005). Companion to Heidegger. Oxford: BlackWell PUB.
-              Emad, Parvis. (2007). On the Way to Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy. London: the University Of Wisconsin Press.
-              Heidegger, Martin. (1999). Contributions to philosophy (from Enowning), Trans by P.  Emad and K. Maly. Indiana: Indiana University Press.
-              -----------------------. (1972). On Time and Being, Trans by J. Stambaugh. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press.
-              -----------------------. (2002). Towards the definition of philosophy, Trans by T. Sadler. London: Continuum PUB.
-              -----------------------. (1996). Being and Time, Trans by J. Stambaugh. Albany: State University Of New York Press.
-              Inwood, Michael. (1999). A Heidegger Dictionary. Oxford: BlackWell PUB.
-              Scott, Charles E. (2001). Companion to Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy. Indiana: Indiana University Press.