For example:As for "attributing to being a number of powers that go beyond the natural," what are you referring to? — Xtrix
Despite Heidegger’s own protestations against identifying Being with ‘the Supreme Being’ of metaphysical theology and against seeing it as in any way ‘personal’ like the theistic God, Löwith argued that it was virtually impossible not to compare Heidegger’s Being with the Judaeo-Christian God, periodically revealing Himself to mortals for purposes that are both inscrutable and, as yet, unfulfilled. Whereas in Being and Time, Being ‘is’ only as long as Dasein is, Dasein itself now exists only by the grace and favour of Being. — Pattison: The Late Heidegger, p. 195
The human being is rather "thrown" by being itself into the truth of being, so that ek-sisting in this fashion he might guard the truth of being, in order that beings might appear in the light of being as the beings they are. Human being do not decide whether and how beings appear, whether and how God and the gods or history and nature come forward into the clearing of being, come to presence and depart. The advent of beings lies in the destiny of being. — Heidegger: Letter on Humanism, Op. Cit. p. 252
"Being must be explained beyond intuition." Again, this really goes against everything Heidegger writes. — Xtrix
Thirdly, it is held that 'Being' is of all concepts the one that is self evident. Whenever one cognizes anything or makes an assertion, whenever one comports oneself towards entities, even towards oneself, some use is made of 'Being'; and this expression is held to be intelligible 'without further ado', just as everyone understands "The sky is blue', 'I am merry', and the like. But here we have an average kind of intelligibility, which merely demonstrates that this is unintelligible. It makes manifest that in any way of comporting oneself towards entities as entities-even in any Being towards entities as entities-there lies a priori an enigma.The very fact that we already live in an understanding of Being and that the meaning of Being is still veiled in darkness proves that it is necessary in principle to raise this question again. — Heidegger: B&T, p. 4/27
As I've been very honest about: I know Heidegger better than you. It's not because I'm smarter, it's because I've spent more time reading him. — Xtrix
And I've quoted MULTIPLE texts that demonstrate exactly the opposite of what you're saying. — Xtrix
[Again, the above quotation is Heidegger, not me. — Xtrix
I even linked you a video from Heidegger's own mouth about how he "does not mean by that anything negative." — Xtrix
Let me try this way. If Western metaphysics is "wrong" -- then what's "right"? Parmenides and Heraclitus? What were their interpretations of being? — Xtrix
I don't think Heidegger said anywhere that the "interpretations" of Parmenides and Heraclitus were correct. I believe that what he says is that the correct approach to Being was made by Parmenides and Heraclitus. One can say that they were in the right direction or that they unraveled the root of the problem. "Interpretation" is not the right word, I think.What was wrong was the interpretation of its key expressions by the later tradition. You put the question of translation on the back burner. No, not at all. Language is the "house of being" for Heidegger (Letter on Humanism p. 253,.) Any concealing or downgraded translation of Heraclitus and Parmenides in terms of substantia meant the loss of the right way of understanding Being. And this is what Plato and Aristotle did first, and the Western metaphysical tradition after them. That's why they falsified the whole (bottom up) question of Being. And this is the context.You've taken other words, like "falsified from the bottom up" (pertaining to translations, — Xtrix
As for "attributing to being a number of powers that go beyond the natural," what are you referring to? There's no way Heidegger "attributes" anything to Being, because being HAS NO attributes. It has no properties. It has no traits. It is not even an "it." — Xtrix
Leaving aside the fact that here another subject is raised that is not Western metaphysics. the text you quote would work against your argument! Or is being dangerous not negative?So there you go -- I've highlighted a bunch of "negative" words for you. — Xtrix
Heidegger offers no interpretation of being — Xtrix
"In the main they are wrong." You simply don't know what you're talking about. — Xtrix
I want to be clear that I consider Heidegger to be a great thinker and teacher, and that I've learned a great deal from his writings and interviews — Xtrix
The day that everyone agrees on ‘the nature of humanity and its place in the cosmos’ is the day philosophy is obsolete. — Possibility
I disagree, philosophy is not about reason and this fixation on reason causes people to misunderstand themselves. — Judaka
Methological, not metaphysical, materialism no doubt is the worst, least true, intellectual commitment made in human cultural history, — 180 Proof
If you don't mind being alone in the face of danger, go ahead. But Gary Cooper only wins in the movies.Kind of a weak appeal to authority. — Xtrix
Of course, you don't read what I write.He does not believe the latter is "wrong" -- but rather that an essential thing has been overlooked — Xtrix
Of course, you don't read what I write. Or you're manipulating what I say. That "completely" is an addition from you.Or maybe Heidegger thinks Plato and Aristotle and Descartes and Kant are all completely "wrong. — Xtrix
He doesn't say "get rid of," he says we must "free ourselves" from — Xtrix
I think I've explained this, but here we go.I don't think you're saying that necessarily...but think about it: if they're all "wrong" in their interpretation of being and beings and of time, then what value do they have? — Xtrix
Intriguing perspective. . . I wouldn't have thought to dive right into the semantic end but here we are. I've been more interested as of late into process philosophy which deals with this substance disagreement by dissolving it rather robustly. You on the other hand consider semantic considerations first which is a fairly wonderful take on this. — substantivalism
Notice your presuppositions here. They are exactly those of 'Enlightenment rationalism'. — Wayfarer
We can negatively judge all philosophy afterwards if we choose, but that's our business. No need to project it on to Heidegger -- he doesn't do this. He's simply pointing out that it's happened. — Xtrix
Thinking is l'engagement by and for the truth of being. The history of Being is never past but stands ever before us; it sustains and defines every condition et situation humaine. In order to learn how to experience the aforementioned essence of thinking purely, and that means at the same time to carry it through, we must free ourselves from the technical interpretation of thinking. The beginnings of that interpretation reach back to Plato and Aristotle. They take thinking itself to be a techné, a process of deliberation in service to doing and making. — Heidegger: Letter on Humanism.
You can't expect definitive answers to your questions. Remember that we are in the philosophical field.What is an ideal/physical entity? How far can you indulge in a form of realism before your idealism becomes nearly synonymous to physicalism (depending on the definition)? — substantivalism
n the West, a large number of philosophers discarded the basic presuppositions of the "perennial philosophy," and developed by contrast what for want of a better term we may call a "sciential" [we would say 'scientistic'] philosophy.
Quoting Camus is kind of nihilistic, as Camus, though not really a Nihilist, was kind of nihilistic. — thewonder
One does not discover the absurd without being tempted to write a manual of happiness. "What!---by such narrow ways--?" There is but one world, however. Happiness and the absurd are two sons of the same earth. They are inseparable. It would be a mistake to say that happiness necessarily springs from the absurd. discovery. It happens as well that the felling of the absurd springs from happiness. "I conclude that all is well," says Edipus, and that remark is sacred. It echoes in the wild and limited universe of man. It teaches that all is not, has not been, exhausted. It drives out of this world a god who had come into it with dissatisfaction and a preference for futile suffering. It makes of fate a human matter, which must be settled among men. — Camus: The Myth of Sisyphus, Chapter 4
Exactly how does wisdom develop in a society focused on technology but not wisdom? — Athena
So maybe the rest of the world was reacting as strongly to Martin Luther King and the whole civil rights movement, as it is reacting to our racism today, but we were just less informed than we are today? — Athena
Subtly biased? — Isaac
I do believe the whole world getting behind Black Lives Matter — Athena
What assumptions does Kant not make explicit? — David Mo
What assumptions does Kant make that are explicit? — A Seagull
Before 1958 education supported what you said and Christianity was not the problem it is today. — Athena
If we returned to liberal education and an understanding of what morals have to do with democracy and reason, we could realize a New Age that is better than our past. — Athena
The problem with Kant is that he does not make those assumptions explicit, nor does he make his arguments clear. — A Seagull
People didn't used to think that arguments for a flat earth was nonsense it was obvious the Earth was flat.
Your argument is solely one of popular agreement, (or at least a lack of dissension) — A Seagull
Well then your proof belongs to the same category as the proof that the Earth is flat. — A Seagull
This is much better, in my view, than what you've said before. — Xtrix
But I wonder why you say "perverted the question" — Xtrix
Reminds me of Dennett's book — 3017amen
That hardly constitutes a proof! — A Seagull
Also, to be completely honest, I have not done enough research to see if places like the one I am trying to describe exist, and if you (whoever reads this) know of any I'd appreciate it if you let me know. — Daniel
But you will only find the utmost respect for Aristotle and Descartes from Heidegger. — Xtrix
And of course there is no description of a "superman society", since "the goal of mankind cannot lie in its end, but in its highest specimens"- the overman is an individual who is defined, at least in part, by standing apart from the crowd and going their own way. — Enai De A Lukal
There may be discussions about isolated points, but the commentators I have read agree on the fundamentals.Although to say that Kant scholars dispute the meaning of what he wrote isn't saying much. — SophistiCat
One day, when he left work, he went into a bookstore. Having overcome his fear of being taken for an intruder (which he was), he took a random volume of philosophy and read a page from which he understood nothing. This must be the culture, he thought, so he bought the book, went home with it and started reading it on the sofa, in front of the mute TV. Within half an hour he was exhausted. Although the book was written in his own language, it had a multitude of words that he did not understand. After deciding that the next day he would buy a dictionary, he closed the volume and turned on the television, on whose screen the drugging caterpillars corresponding to the day and the hour began to flow at once. The man put his legs on the table and let himself be invaded by the sweet evil.
When he had been invaded he looked at the closed volume and had a revelation: the book, even if he did not understand it, was life, while the television, which he understood, was death, so he got up, took the device off the shelf and hid it under the sink, next to the dishwasher. Then he began to read those pages slowly, moving his tongue inside his mouth, without understanding anything. And the less he understood, the wiser he was. Who can explain it to him? — Juan José Millás
Because it lays the foundation for modern knowledge theory. I share in essence his critique of metaphysical thought.Why do you think that? For Kant meets the criteria for obscure and writing. — A Seagull
So you can score brownie points with your peers by coming up with a new interpretation of the text, duh. — darthbarracuda