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FORGETFULNESS IN A WORLDLESS WORLD

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Title: FORGETFULNESS IN A WORLDLESS WORLD


1
FORGETFULNESS IN A WORLDLESS WORLD
2
  • 1. THE HORIZON OF THE BLACK FOREST
  • What is Heidegger's concept of philosophy?
  • 2. BEING-TOWARD-DEATH
  • How to conceive of Being-in-the- World?
  • 3. ART AND SCIENCE
  • Which attitude should one prefer in times of
    modern technology?

3
1. THE HORIZON OF THE BLACK FOREST
4
MARTIN HEIDEGGER (1889-1976)
  • BIOGRAPHICAL NOTIONS
  • 26 September 1889 born in Messkirch (Germany)
  • 1909 starts to study theology and philosophy.
  • 1922 Professor at the University of Marburg.
  • 1927 publication of Sein und Zeit.
  • 1928 Professor at the University of Freiburg.
  • April 1933- February 1934 Rector of the
    University of Freiburg.
  • 1945-1951 prohibited to teach because of the
    de-Nazification rules.
  • 1951-1967 Honorary Professor.
  • 26 May 1976 death.

5
IMPORTANT PUBLICATIONS
  • Sein und Zeit (1927)
  • Was ist Metaphysik? (1929)
  • Vom Wesen der Wahrheit (1943)
  • Holzwege (1950)
  • Vorträge und Aufsätze (1954)
  • Zur Sache des Denkens (1969)

6
THE SPIRIT OF THE AGE
  • Neo-Kantianism (Rickert, Hartman)
  • Phenomenology (Husserl)
  • Hermeneutics (Dilthey)
  • Philosophy of the will (Nietzsche)
  • Philosophy of life (Bergson)

7
ON THE ROAD
  • The road (question) is more interesting than the
    end (answer).
  • Titels of his work indicate that Holzwege ,
    Der Feldweg, Unterwegs zur Sprache and
    Wegmarken.
  • Philosophers are often triggered to think when
    they get off the track.
  • New horizons.
  • Philosophy is universal phenomenological
    ontology, taking its departure from the
    hermeneutic of Da-sein, which, as an analysis of
    existence, has fastened the end of the guideline
    of all philosophical inquiry at the point from
    which it arises and to which it returns.
  • Philosophy as the criticism of metaphysics and a
    new way of thinking.

8
CONSTANT ASPECTS OF HEIDEGGERS STYLE OF
PHILOSOPHY
  • Everyday life as point of departure for his
    writings.
  • The texts are rather hermetic.
  • The use of a lot of neologisms.

9
2. BEING-TOWARD-DEATH
10
TIME
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein, in his Philosophical
    Investigations (par. 89), refers to Augustines
    question What is time? Something that we know
    when no one asks us, but no longer know when we
    are supposed to give an account of it, is
    something that we need to remind ourselves.
  • We have forgotten the question of the meaning of
    Being
  • What is self-evident is not often questioned.
  • Central question what is the meaning of Being?
  • Answer Time as the possible horizon for any
    understanding whatsoever of being.
  • Always when we use the word Being we are
    involved in a temporal determination.

11
A RETRIEVE OF THE QUESTION OF BEING
  • Reclaiming the question of being.
  • Three prejudices
  • 1. Being is the most universal concept of all
  • 2. This concept is indefinable
  • 3. It is a self-evident concept.
  • Thus to retrieve the question of being means
    first of all to work out adquately the
    formulation of the question.

12
THE FORMAL STRUCTURE OF THE QUESTION OF BEING
  • Elements of the question of Being
  • 1. Being.
  • 2. Da-sein (existence) gt This being which we
    ourselves in each case are and which includes
    inquiry among the possibilities of its being..
  • 3. The meaning of Being.

13
THE ONTOLOGICAL PRIORITY OF THE QUESTION OF BEING
  • Why the question of Being?
  • Answer the crisis of the sciences.
  • It is a crisis of its basic concepts.
  • All ontology, no matter how rich and tightly
    knit a system of categories it has at its
    disposal, remains fundamentally blind and
    perverts its innermost intent if it has not
    previously clarified the meaning of being
    sufficiently and grasped this clarification as
    its fundamental task.

14
THE ONTIC PRIORITY OF THE QUESTION OF BEING
  • Ontological priority gt basic concepts.
  • Ontic priority gt a specific way of being Dasein.
  • Da-sein itself is distinctly different from other
    beings.
  • Existenz the very being to which Da-sein can
    relate in one way or another, and somehow always
    does relate.
  • Existentiell gt the fact that we come to terms
    with the question of existence only through
    existence itself.
  • Existentiality gt the structures of the existence
    that have to be analyzed.
  • Ontologies gt the ways of being studied by the
    sciences.
  • Fundamental ontology gt the existential analysis
    of Da-sein.

15
THE ONTOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF DA-SEIN AS THE
EXPOSURE OF THE HORIZON FOR AN INTERPRETATION OF
THE MEANING OF BEING IN GENERAL
  • Da-sein it ontically nearest to itself and
    ontologically farthest away.
  • The meaning of the being that being we call
    Da-sein proves to be temporality Zeitlichkeit.

16
THE DESTRUCTION OF THE HISTORY OF ONTOLOGY
  • The plan for the second part of the book.
  • The temporality of Being manifests itself as
    history.
  • The analysis of the history of different
    conceptions of time, i.e. in the writings of
    Kant, Descartes and Aristotle.
  • Destruction gt construction of new horizons.

17
THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL METHOD OF THE INVESTIGATION
  • The maxim of the phenomenological method To the
    things themselves.
  • The concept of phenomenon gt that what shows
    itself in itself.
  • The concept of logos gt the discourse that makes
    manifest what one is talking about in ones
    discourse truth is a question of aletheia
    de-tection, i.e. uncovering entities in their
    Being.
  • Phenomenology gt to let what shows itself be
    seen from itself, just as it shows itself from
    itself.
  • Phenomenological description gt hermeneutics gt
    interpretation.

18
THE TASK OF A PRIMORDIAL EXISTENTIAL
INTERPRETATION OF THIS BEING
  • After the analysis of Dasein follows the
    existential interpretation of Dasein.
  • An ontological interpretation focuses on the
    totality of the beings.
  • If the interpretation of the being of Da-sein is
    to become primordial as a foundation for the
    development of the fundamental question of
    ontology, it will have to bring the being of
    Da-sein in its possible authentic and total
    existentially to light beforehand.

19
GRASPING AND DETERMINING DA-SEIN AS A WHOLE
  • Is the whole of Dasein accesible at all in its
    being?
  • The impossibility of experiencing Da-sein
    ontically as an existing whole.
  • The death of other persons doesnt give us access
    to the wholeness of Dasein.
  • Death gt the lost of the being of the there.
  • Our own death is a border for the intepretation
    and the articulation.

20
OUTSTANDING, ENDING AND TOTALITY
  • Three theses
  • 1. As long as Da-sein is, a not-yet belongs to
    it, something that is constantly outstanding.
  • 2. The coming-to-its-end of what is
    not-yet-at-an-end has the character of
    no-longer-being-there.
  • 3. Coming-to-an-end implies a mode of being in
    which the actual Da-sein absolutely cannot be
    represented by someone else.
  • The theses correspond to outstanding, ending and
    totality.
  • The ending that we have in view when we speak of
    death, does not signify a being-at-an-end of
    Da-sein, but rather a being toward the end of
    this being. Death is a way to be that Dasein
    takes over as soon as it is.

21
THE EXISTENTIAL ANALYSIS OF DEATH
  • Beyond an ontic analysis.
  • Beyond methaphysical questions.
  • Towards an existential analysis of death.
  • Death gives the opportunity to reveal the
    character of possibility of Da-sein.
  • What is the ontological structure of the
    being-toward-the-end of Da-sein?

22
THE EXISTENTIAL AND ONTOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF DEATH
  • With death, Da-sein stands before itself in its
    own most potentiality-of-being. In this
    possibility, Da-sein is concerned about its
    being-in-the world absolutely.
  • The Dasein is thrown into this possiblity.
  • This thrownness reveals itself in the attunement
    of anxiety.

23
BEING-TOWARD-DEATH AND THE EVERDAYNESS OF DA-SEIN
  • The idle talk in everyday life doesnt reveal
    what being-toward-death means.
  • In the everyday life we try to get rid of the
    death.
  • We need a courageous attitude towards death.

24
AUTHENTICITY
  • Everyday of inauthenticity gt Dasein is lost to
    itself.
  • To achieve authenticity gt Dasein must find
    itself.
  • The voice of conscience bears witness to this
    possibility for Dasien.
  • Conscience gives us something to understand, it
    discloses.
  • Heidegger is interested in the ontological or
    existential foundation of conscience gt something
    that asks us to be authentic.

25
CONSCIENCE
  • Conscience reveals the possibilities of bein
    complete.
  • Conscience is a call from the situation of
    falling prey to become oneself.
  • Conscience discloses gt belongs to the scope of
    the existential phenomena which constitute the
    being of the there as disclosedness.

26
CONSCIENCE AS A CALL
  • Who is called? Dasein!
  • To what is one summoned? To ones own self?
  • The call does not say anything, does not give any
    information about events of the world, has
    nothing to tell.
  • Conscience speaks solely and constantly in the
    mode of silence.

27
THE CALL OF CARE
  • The call is precisely something that we ourselves
    have neither planned nor prepared for nor
    willfully brought about gt the call comes from me,
    and yet over me.
  • Conscience reveals itself as the call of care
    the call is Da-sein, anxious in throwness about
    its potentiality of being.
  • The structural moments of care
  • 1. Throwness.
  • 2. Potentiality-of-being.
  • 3. Falling Prey

28
GUILT
  • All concepts of conscience have one thing in
    common gt conscience reveals guilt.
  • Vulgar concept of guilt gt having debts and giving
    someone something back.
  • The existential idea of guilty as
    being-the-ground for a being which is determined
    by a not that is, being-the-ground of a nullity.

29
THE AUTHENTIC POTENTIALITY-OF-BEING ATTESTED IN
CONSCIENCE
  • Resoluteness gt the most primordial truth of
    Da-sein has been reached, because it is
    authentic.
  • For the they, however, situation is essentially
    closed off. The they knows only the general
    situation loses itself in the nearest
    opportunities, and settles its Da-sein by
    calculating the accidents which it fails to
    recognize, deems its own achievements and passes
    off as such

30
DOES IT MAKE SENSE TO TALK IN TERMS OF
(IN)AUTHENTICITY?
  • The They gt people lose themselves in the nearest
    opportunities.
  • Authentic life gt resoluteness to live the
    lifetime in a conscious way.
  • Nevertheless people hide themselves behind the
    They.

31
3. THE QUESTION OF BEING
32
THE THEORETICAL PRACTICE OF DEATH
  • A concentration on the existential structure of
    specific moods and states of mind, like anxiety.
  • Being-toward-death gt with death, Da-sein stands
    before itself in its own most potentiality-of-bein
    g.
  • This possibility shows that Da-sein is concerned
    about its being-in-the-world.
  • The Dasein is thrown into this possibility.

33
STYLISTIC CHANGES
  • Till 1935 analysis of the Dasein.
  • After 1935 analysis of the Being via an
    analysis of the presocratic philosophers,
    Nietzsche and literature.
  • Till 1935 more or less a classical
    philosophical style mixed with an analysis of
    everyday experiences.
  • After 1935 evocative style with an analysis of
    literature and technology.

34
NEW PATHS
  • Truth is not a question of the Logos, i.e. making
    a judgment, but a question of Being.
  • Aletheia gt that what is not hidden.
  • This concept refers to two things
  • 1. The Being shows itself.
  • 2. Activity of the human being gt deconstruction
    of the way we think.

35
FORGETFULNESS OF BEING
  • The whole history of philosophy hides the Being gt
    forgetfulness of Being.
  • Therefore we have to deconstruct this history.
  • We need a new kind of language.
  • Someone like Hölderlin provides such a language.

36
THE TRUTH OF ART
  • Art has a truth-function.
  • Good art gt world disclosure.
  • Criticism of instrumental reason.
  • Technology embodies instrumental reason.

37
SUBJECT AND OBJECT
  • Philosophy is preoccupied with control.
  • The reason is the subject-object model of
    philosophy.
  • Metaphysics has a theological element
    ontotheology.
  • The technological age is also preoccupied by this
    metaphysical way of thinking.
  • The correct attitude Gelassenheit (stay cool) gt
    accept to a certain extent your fate.

38
HEURISTIC VALUE
  • Existentialism (Jean-Paul Sartre).
  • Post-Structuralism (Michel Foucault).
  • Deconstructivism (Jacques Derrida).
  • Hermeneutics (Hans-Georg Gadamer).
  • Neo-Marxism (Herbert Marcuse)
  • Theology (Rudolf Boltmann).
  • Literary Criticism (Paul de Man).
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