Search
Main Menu
Home Lexikon  Lexikon C  C chronos chronos
Lexikon

 Browse by letter 
 | 0  | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  |  A  |  B  |  C  |  D  |  E  |  F  |  G  |  H  |  I  |  J  |  K  |  L  |  M  |  N  |  O  |  P  |  Q  |  R  |  S  |  T  |  U  |  V  |  W  |  X  |  Y  |  Z  |

chronos

Definition:
χρόνος, chronos (time), 421, 423, 427, 432 n. 30 [BTJS] Heidegger argues that the so-called “temporal” character of οὐσία can be gathered from Plato’s designation of the “really real” (ὄντως ὄν) as ἀεὶ ὄν and ἀΐδος οὐσία (usually “eternal being”), although Heidegger argues that “the more sharply οὐσία is grasped and associated with the [Aristotelian] ‘categories,’ the more the relation to time gets shrouded.” In fact, Heidegger’s own notion of “time” differs radically from what he found in the Greeks. The classical philosophy of time (χρόνος) worked out in Aristotle’s Physics, for example, was of no use to Heidegger in his search for the source of being, because Book IV of that treatise focuses on time as a continuous series of “nows” and considers time as a thing that is. Thus the Physics is caught up in the classical question about the being of things rather than about being taken for itself. [SheehanMSH]
Reference: chronos
Related site: https//ereignis.hyperlogos.info/spip.php?mot656

Submitted on 01.03.2022 12:45
This entry has been seen individually 78 times.

Bookmark to Fark  Bookmark to Reddit  Bookmark to Blinklist  Bookmark to Technorati  Bookmark to Newsvine  Bookmark to Mister Wong  Bookmark to del.icio.us  Bookmark to Digg  Bookmark to Google  Share with friends at Facebook  Twitter  Bookmark to Linkarena  Bookmark to Oneview  Bookmark to Stumbleupon Bookmark to StudiVZ