Eternal Return Hermeneutics in Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Derrida

Author:

Braver Lee1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Philosophy, University of South Florida , Tampa , FL , United States

Abstract

Abstract Nietzsche’s Eternal Return (ER) is interpreted in many ways, including by him. I present it as a hermeneutic device, a way of reading texts, especially those whose influence threatens one’s authorial autonomy and/or are later difficult to take ownership of due to philosophical growth. It returns past texts with new interpretations, similar to the way ER leads one to embrace one’s past without changing anything, which radically changes everything from a resented painful burden into a celebrated enhancement of freedom and power. I show how he could have derived the idea from Schopenhauer, his own embarrassing past, by performing the technique on Schopenhauer. The same attitude toward past texts of recreating them according to one’s present interests and concerns simultaneously releases one’s present texts for future readers to impose their readings onto them, just as Zarathustra tells his followers not to follow him. Heidegger takes the idea up in a far more nuanced account than he is usually given credit for and applies it, among other places, to the history of philosophy. All philosophers say the same as it keeps returning. Derrida then recreates this as iterability, the deconstruction of the no/change dichotomy that Nietzsche began.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Philosophy

Reference45 articles.

1. Braver, Lee. “How to Say the Same Thing: Heidegger’s Vocabulary and Grammar of Being.” The Review of Metaphysics 75, no. 3 (2022), 525–58. 10.1353/rvm.2022.0006.

2. Braver, Lee. “Introduction: Why (Heidegger) Scholarship Is Generational.” Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 11 (2021), 1–19. 10.5840/gatherings2021113.

3. Braver, Lee. “Nothing Matters: Heidegger on Nietzsche on Nihilism.” In The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Existentialism, edited by Kevin Aho, Megan Altman, and Hans Pedersen. Routledge, 2023.

4. Davey, Nicholas. “Hermeneutics and Nietzsche’s Early Thought.” In Nietzsche and Modern German Thought, edited by Keith Ansell-Pearson, 88–188. New York: Routledge, 2002.

5. Derrida, Jacques. Of Grammatology. Corrected Edition. Trans. Gayatri Chakravotry Spivak. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976, 1997.

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