Review article
https://doi.org/10.21464/mo.27.2.5
Topic of university in Martin Heidegger’s Black Notebooks
Saša Radojčić
orcid.org/0000-0001-5838-4885
; Faculty of Fine Arts, University of Belgrade, Serbia
Abstract
The notes that Martin Heidegger made in the so-called Black Notebooks stimulated, immediately after publication, intense discussions, especially on the issue of anti-Semitism and National Socialism. Does Heidegger’s personal fondness for these ideologies reflect on his philosophical work? In this essay, one important topic related to these issues in Black Notebooks is discussed – the topic of university. It became more frequent on three occasions, marked by significant events in Heidegger’s professional biography: taking over as rector of the University of Freiburg (1933), leaving that position (1934), and exclusion from teaching as part of the postwar denazification of Germany (1945). It turns out that the understanding of the university in the Black Notebooks corresponds to the ideas presented in Heidegger’s rector’s speech, and that this understanding is not equally National Socialist, but expresses the philosopher’s “populist” thinking. Although he possesses some elements of vocabulary that were present in Nazi propaganda, Heidegger integrates his views on the reality and future of the university with his other ideas – a critique of reducing knowledge to technical aspects, a critique of isolating science into independent fields, and a critique of Western thought.
Keywords
Martin Heidegger; university; National Socialism; science; critique of technology
Hrčak ID:
247953
URI
Publication date:
16.12.2020.
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