A Site of Disclosure Heidegger, Wood, and the Unconcealment of Being. What is to Dwell?

£25.00

This book does not offer an argument. It offers an encounter. The images that follow explore wood, fallen trunks, exposed rings, fractured grain, not as subjects to be documented, nor as symbols to be decoded, but as sites in which something comes into presence. They do not illustrate Heidegger’s thought, nor does philosophy serve as their explanation. Rather, both image and reflection move along bordering paths, sometimes converging, sometimes diverging, always remaining incomplete.

This book does not offer an argument. It offers an encounter. The images that follow explore wood, fallen trunks, exposed rings, fractured grain, not as subjects to be documented, nor as symbols to be decoded, but as sites in which something comes into presence. They do not illustrate Heidegger’s thought, nor does philosophy serve as their explanation. Rather, both image and reflection move along bordering paths, sometimes converging, sometimes diverging, always remaining incomplete.