The storm around Heidegger's legacy rages on unabated. At stake is the fate of philosophy and its power to influence the fate of a world seized by the enigmatic essence of technology. In this remarkable intervention, McNeill (DePaul Univ.) chronicles Heidegger's role in bringing philosophy to an end by twisting phenomenology (philosophy's last word) free from Husserl's effort to establish a rigorous philosophical science. Heidegger radicalized phenomenology's critique of science and technology by stepping back into a more elemental engagement with Dasein's "being-in-the-world." Phenomenology persisted as Heidegger's watchword for the dismantling of metaphysics' delusory notions of originary ground and signaled the need to affirm and await a still unthinkable origin. McNeill tracks Heidegger's alternating proximity to and distance from the word phenomenology as a way of questioning whether Dasein's quasi-transcendental experience of a world was anything but error and affirming the need "to let Being be," to step back into a pre-phenomenological poetic thinking. To survive in a nocturnal clearing, confronted by phenomenality's concealed essence, demands phenomenophasis, Heidegger's last word for preserving the remnants of Dasein's world through words that name the unnamable that lies beyond and before ontological difference. Summing Up: Essential. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.
— Choice Reviews
More than anyone working in Heidegger studies today, Will McNeill exhibits his grasped of the entirety of Heidegger’s writings. The Fate of Phenomenology traces Heidegger’s complex relation to phenomenology from his very earliest to his very last writings. McNeill is one of Heidegger’s best interpreters, but what also shines in this book is McNeill’s own originality. This will be an original source in Heidegger studies for a long time to come.
— Jeffrey Powell, Professor of Philosophy, Marshall University
The Fate of Phenomenology provides a fresh perspective on Heidegger’s radical transformation of phenomenology beyond his apparent abandonment of it in 1928. McNeill provides a complex yet precise account of all the twists and turns of Heidegger’s thought from his early Freiburg lectures to his 1973 Zähringen seminar to situate all the critiques, reformulations, and ambivalences into a broader scope of what phenomenology can be. — Rebecca A. Longtin, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, SUNY New Paltz
What is for Heidegger the matter of thinking itself? In this well-researched and tightly argued text, McNeill answers this question while offering a fresh and convincing interpretation of the place of phenomenology in Heidegger’s thinking. With fascinating new readings of Being and Time, “The Origin of the Work of Art,” and the later thought, The Fate of Phenomenology offers much for seasoned Heidegger scholars to consider. It also serves as an introduction to the trajectory of Heidegger’s philosophy, early to late, that will be of great value to younger scholars and to those with a general interest in Heidegger and phenomenology.
— Scott M. Campbell, professor and chairperson in philosophy, director of the American Studies Graduate and Undergraduate Programs in Arts & Sciences, Nazareth College
The most comprehensive study to date on Heidegger’s complex relationship to phenomenology.... There are many paths to be explored for future research that The Fate of Phenomenology has opened up.
— David C. Abergel; Human Studies