Topologie, topology, topologia, topología
Topology (topologie) is the “saying of place” (a meaning that can be derived directly from the two contained terms, topos, meaning “place,” and logos). “Topology” figures only in Heidegger’s later writings and then rarely. The term appears in Heidegger’s exchange with Ernst Jünger where topology (there distinguished from topography, Topographie) is described as a “discussion (Erörterung) locating that locale which gathers being and nothing into their essence” (GA9:412/311). In the “Le Thor Seminar,” Heidegger seems to suggest that topology is the fundamental mode for the thinking of being – “topology of beyng” (Topologie des Seyns) thus addresses the “question of the place of beyng” (Frage dem Ort oder der Ortschaft des Seyns) (GA15:335/41, 344/47). The first occurrence of “topology,” which is also the first occurrence of “topology of being,” is in Heidegger’s Notebooks from 1946 (GA97:201–02), where “place” (Ort/Ortschaft) and “place of beyng” (Ortschaft des Seyns) also figure. (CHL)
VIDE: (topologia->http://hyperlexikon.hyperlogos.info/modules/lexikon/search.php?option=1&term=topo)