ABSTRACT

In one of the Four Seminars that have now become accessible in Japanese, Heidegger makes a brief remark which, if correctly understood, tells one how his entire work should be read. In order to avoid misapprehensions about his very starting point, he writes, “after Being and Time (my) thinking replaced the expression ‘meaning of being5 with ‘truth of being*. And so as to avoid any misapprehension about truth, so as to exclude its being understood as conformity, ‘truth of being* has been elucidated as ‘locality of being’—truth as the locus-character of being. That presupposes, however, an understanding of what a locus is. Hence the expression topology of being.”1