Difference between revisions of "What is a Thing?"

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(Created page with "Martin Heidegger is the author of the book titled:"What is a Thing". In the paper under the same name, Heidegger was quoted: From the range of the basic questions of metaphys...")
 
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Martin Heidegger is the author of the book titled:"What is a Thing". In the paper under the same name, Heidegger was quoted:
Martin Heidegger is the author of the book<ref>{{:Book/What is a Thing?}}</ref> titled:"What is a Thing". In the paper<ref>{{:Paper/What is a Thing?}}</ref> under the same name, Heidegger was quoted:
  From the range of the basic questions of metaphysics we shall here ask this one question: What is a thing? The question is quite old. What remains ever new about it is merely that it must be asked again and again.
  From the range of the basic questions of metaphysics we shall here ask this one question: What is a thing? The question is quite old. What remains ever new about it is merely that it must be asked again and again.

Revision as of 15:15, 24 February 2022

Martin Heidegger is the author of the book[1] titled:"What is a Thing". In the paper[2] under the same name, Heidegger was quoted:

From the range of the basic questions of metaphysics we shall here ask this one question: What is a thing? The question is quite old. What remains ever new about it is merely that it must be asked again and again.
  1. Heidegger, Martin (1967). What is a Thing?. local page: Regenery/Gateway. 
  2. Döring, A.; Isham, C. (2010). "What is a Thing?". local page: 753–937. ISBN 978-3-642-12821-9.