Being and Freedom: a Phenomenological Critique of Transcendental Philosophy and a Defense of Heidegger’s Ontology of Freedom

dc.contributor.advisorBekele Gutema (PhD) and Jonathan Tigg(PhD)
dc.contributor.authorAmon Bekele
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-06T06:04:42Z
dc.date.available2025-08-06T06:04:42Z
dc.date.issued2025-02-01
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation undertakes a phenomenological critique of transcendental philosophy's conception of freedom and advances a defense of Martin Heidegger’s ontology of freedom. Rooted in the phenomenological method, it explores the viability of a phenomenological ontology and interrogates how freedom is conceptualized through transcendental subjectivity. The study contends that the dominant discourses on freedom—ranging from classical liberal to postmodern frameworks—remain deeply embedded in notions of mastery, control, and subject object dualism inherited from transcendental philosophy. These paradigms, rather than emancipating the subject, subtly reinforce structures of domination and exclusion. By contrast, Heidegger’s ontological approach to freedom offers a radically different path: one that grounds freedom not in agency or autonomy but in the primordial openness of Being itself. This ontological freedom is examined as the essence of human existence (Dasein), revealing its ethical and existential implications. Further, the dissertation interrogates whether contemporary liberation movements, especially in subaltern contexts, adequately reflect or obscure the deeper ontological structures that underpin freedom. Through this analysis, the study argues that only a phenomenologically grounded ontology of freedom can overcome the limitations of transcendental frameworks and open the way to a more authentic, non-dominative understanding of human liberation. Keywords: Being, Dualism, Inter-subjectivity, Ontology of Freedom, Phenomenology, Transcendental Philosophy, violence,
dc.identifier.urihttps://etd.aau.edu.et/handle/123456789/6069
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherAddis Ababa University
dc.subjectBeing
dc.subjectDualism
dc.subjectInter-subjectivity
dc.subjectOntology of Freedom
dc.subjectPhenomenology
dc.subjectTranscendental Philosophy
dc.subjectviolence
dc.titleBeing and Freedom: a Phenomenological Critique of Transcendental Philosophy and a Defense of Heidegger’s Ontology of Freedom
dc.typeThesis

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