The Great Philosophers
Season 1, Episode 12: Husserl, Heidegger and Modern Existentialism
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In contrast to empiricist and rationalist traditions, existentialism proposes and orderless world, vaguely hostile, where people choose their character goals, have an obligation only to "authentic," and may only observe the truth (reality) in moments of anxiety. In this program, University of California, Berkeley philosopher Herbert Dreyfus traces the roots of existentialism from Edmund Husserl's School of Phenomenology, to his pupil Martin Heidegger's theories of das Sein, the threefold structure of activity, authenticity, and nihilism. Dreyfus relates the philosophies of both en to present-day schools of thought.
All Episodes - Season 1
Episode 1
Plato
Episode 2
Aristotle
Episode 3
Medieval Philosophy
Episode 4
Descartes
Episode 5
Spinoza and Leibniz
Episode 6
Locke and Berkeley
Episode 7
Hume
Episode 8
Kant
Episode 9
Hegel and Marx
Episode 10
Schopenhauer
Episode 11
Nietzsche
Episode 12
Husserl, Heidegger and Modern Existentialism
Episode 13
The American pragmatists
Episode 14
Frege, Russell and Modern Logic
Episode 15
Wittgenstein