You can help develop this site by passing on information about any pertinent Web sites you discover. Just drop me a note telling me of anything that you find relating to the topics of our course anywhere on the Internet.
Course-Related Links
Heidegger Sites
- “Martin Heidegger”—the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on Heidegger.
- “Martin Heidegger”—the Wikipedia article on Heidegger.
- “Martin Heidegger”—the Answers.com page on Heidegger; includes the Wikipedia article and a good deal more.
- A page on Heidegger at The Cry: A Cry Towards the Absurd—includes pictures, texts, and a good deal more. The whole site is worth looking at for its materials on Existentialism and Phenomenology.
- Ereignis—a big site with great deal of material on Heidegger and many links including links to articles on Heidegger on the Web. Maintained by Pete.
- Martin-Heidegger-Internetseiten— a site maintained by Burghard Heidegger, Martin Heidegger’s grandson, containing much useful information, including a superb bibliography. The site is in German.
Sites Specifically on Being and Time
- “Being and Time”—the (English-language) Wikipedia article on Being and Time.
- “Sein und Zeit”—the (German-language) Wikipedia article on Sein und Zeit.
- Being & Time Links—Pete’s list of links to Internet resources on Being and Time (from the Ereignis site). Lots of useful things here.
Things by Heidegger on the Web
- Here’s Sein und Zeit (Being and Time) in German (the 11th Niemeyer edition, 1967). Warning: this is a big .pdf file—one that runs to 2.6 MB.
- Various texts—the foregoing and others in English translation—Pete’s list of links to Heidegger texts available on the Web. The editorial quality of these materials is very uneven.
Other Sites Worth a Look—and Maybe More than a Look
- Here’s J.J. O’Donnell’s excellent site on Augustine—includes two different translations of his Confessions along with the Latin text and a close commentary thereupon by (as well as all sorts of other stuff by Augustine in case he captures your fancy). Probably the more accurate of the two translations of the Confessions is the Pusey translation. As O’Donnell says on his site, there’s still more at the Sant’Agostino – Augustinus Hipponensis site (previously the Nuova Biblioteca Augustiniana site. Book XI of the Confessions contains the analysis of time that Heidegger sees as a sort of precursor of his own.
- D. Anthony Storm’s Commentary on Kierkegaard—includes links to English translations of a number of Kierkegaard’s works. Kierkegaard’s Concept of Dread (or Concept of Anxiety) is particularly important as background for Being and Time. As far as I know, no online translations exist—except of the Introduction, which is hardly worth reading all by itself except, perhaps, as an appetizer.
Back to the PHIL 495-011 Web Site


