Is the Existence of Truth Dependent upon Man?

Review of Metaphysics 35 (3):461 - 481 (1982)
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Abstract

IN Being and Time and elsewhere M. Heidegger asserts that there is no truth prior to the "discovering being" of man. According to this view, the truth of the Newtonian laws, for example, would have existed only since and through Newton's discoveries. Heidegger only spells out the logical consequences of this position when he asserts that the suicide extinguishes not only his "being-there," but also the truth.

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Josef Maria Seifert
Ludwig Maximilians Universität, München

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