Full name | Albert Hofstadter |
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Born | 1910 |
Died | Jan. 26, 1989 |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | American Philosophy |
School | continental philosophy, phenomenology |
Main interests | philosophy of art, philosophy in literature |
Albert Hofstadter (1910 - January 26, 1989) was a twentieth century American philosopher.
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Hofstadter taught at Columbia University (1950–67), the University of California at Santa Cruz (1968–75) and the New School for Social Research (1976–78).[1]
As a Heidegger scholar, Hofstadter contends that Heidegger is able to shape and use language in keeping with his basic insight that language is the house of Being, i.e., where humans dwell. "It is by staying with the thinking the language itself does that Heidegger is able to rethink, and thus think anew, the oldest, the perennial and perenially forgotten thoughts."[2] One of these is the Being of beings in the sense of aletheia. Hofstadter praises Heidegger's project to free human beings from alienated ways of relating to things, "letting us find in it a real dwelling place instead of the cold, sterile hostelry in which we presently find ourselves."[3]