Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

Repository | Journal | Volume | Article

257703

The Greek sources of Heidegger's Alētheia as primordial truth-experience

George Saad

pp. 157-191

Abstract

Heidegger develops his reading of a-lētheia as privative unconcealment (Unverborgenheit) in tandem with his early phenomenological theory of truth. He is not simply reinterpreting a word, but rather reading Greek philosophy as having a primordial understanding of truth which has itself been concealed in interpretation. After shedding medieval and modern presuppositions of truth as correspondence, the existential truth-experience shows itself, no longer left puzzlingly implicit in unsatisfactory conventional readings of Greek philosophy. In Sein und Zeit §44, Heidegger resolves interpretive difficulties in Parmenides through his interpretation of alētheia and philologically grounds this reading in Heraclitus’s description of the unconcealing logos. Although this primordial sense of the word has already been obscured in Plato and Aristotle, the structural gradation of their theories of truth conserves the primordial pre-Socratic sense of truth as the experience of unconcealment.

Publication details

Published in:

Polt Richard (2020) Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 10.

Pages: 157-191

Full citation:

Saad George (2020) „The Greek sources of Heidegger's Alētheia as primordial truth-experience“. Gatherings 10, 157–191.