Anti-semitismo
Heidegger
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"In 1946, a denazification committee at the University of Freiburg, reviewing Heidegger’s decision to join the Nazi Party, and his activities as the university’s rector between 1933-1934, decided to ban him from teaching. Perhaps the most damning witness was the philosopher Karl Jaspers, who had reluctantly concluded that his former friend’s manner of thinking was “unfree, dictatorial and incapable of communication.” (One wonders if, as he wrote this letter, Jaspers recalled the conversation he had with Heidegger soon after Hitler came to power. When Jaspers demanded to know how someone as “uneducated” as Hitler could rule Germany, Heidegger replied: “It’s not a question of education; just look at his marvelous hands.”)" (...) In a letter to a colleague in 1935, he deplored the presence of “Jewish
and half-Jewish students” in his classes, and in his seminars declared
that “Semitic nomads” were impervious to the German spirit, which
moreover was threatened by what he called the process of “Jewification.” (The Forward)
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