Martin Heidegger, probably the most exotic, headstrong, lost and in every respect brilliant philosopher was brought out of the shadowy existence of ontological philosophy with the nuclear phase-out decided by the black and yellow government ten years ago and ennobled as a pioneer of the energy transition.

When Martin Heidegger radicalized his criticism of modernity and technology in the light of the approaching economic miracle in the late 1940s and early 1950s, the philosopher who likes to live and think in remote wooden huts longed for a happy ending.

The "rule of the frame", as he called the dictates of engineers and technology over the world spirit, was to be ended by a "turn". Heidegger saw this turn as the most unlikely event in the world.