Since its original publication in 1929, Martin Heidegger’s provocative
book on Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason has attracted much attention both
as an important contribution to twentieth-century Kant scholarship and
as a pivotal work in Heidegger’s own development after Being and Time.
This fifth, enlarged edition includes marginal notations made by
Heidegger in his personal copy of the book and four new
appendices—Heidegger's postpublication notes on the book, his review of
Ernst Cassirer's Philosophy of Symbolic Forms, Heidegger's response to
reviews by rudolf Odebrecht and Cassirer, and an essay "On the History
of the Philosophical Chair since 1866." The work is significant not only
for its illuminating assessment of Kant’s thought but also for its
elaboration of themes first broached in Being and Time, especially the
problem of how Heidegger proposed to enact his destruction of the
metaphysical tradition and the role that his reading of Kant would play
therein.
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