In Martin Heidegger's booklet The Origin of the Work of Art the German philosopher attempts to answer the question of the origin of the work of art which he places on an equal footing with the issue of the essence of art.

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                                                                                                                           Alan Pejkovic

                                                                                                                           710131-3372

In Martin Heidegger's booklet The Origin of the Work of Art the German philosopher attempts to answer the question of the origin of the work of art which he places on an equal footing with the issue of  the essence of art. To Heidegger, these two questions are interwoven. What is very problematic for the reader is the fact that Heidegger begins his investigation with a hermeneutic circle. The phrase 'hermeneutic circle' refers to the circle of interpretation involved when understanding some work of art. According to this reasoning, it is not possible to really understand any part of a work until you understand the whole, but it is not possible either to understand the whole without understanding all of the parts. Heidegger starts by defining what to examine. In other words, we must identify something as a work of art. Only then it will be possible to infer what art is from the investigated work. But, to do that, Heidegger continues in a hermeneutic circle, we must already know which things are works of art and which are not. Further, if we can do this successfully, we must already know what art is. Heidegger's reasoning is complicated and can be seen as a logical problem but his intention is to get the reader to think in different orbits, to try not to get around the circle but to break into it in a way that is not completely clear to me.

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     Heidegger asserts that one of a work's more obvious features is its thingly character. Any work of art is a thing. First, Heidegger investigates three traditional interpretations of 'thing'. A thing can be analyzed as a substance to which various qualities are attached, as a bundle of sensations and as a formed matter. All three of these definitions are, according to Heidegger, wrong and misleading. Still, he lingers on the notion of formed matter which he connects to the concept of equipment. Heidegger sees equipment as an intermediate between thing and work and he states that the equipmental ...

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