I am simply concerned that people are intimidated and afraid of German culture. Mysticism is usually seen as a great thing but if it's in Heidegger suddenly it's bad..? — Gregory
https://epochemagazine.org/26/revisiting-adornos-jargon-of-authenticity-1964/The rhetoric function of using the apparent archaism of language to uncover the true meaning of words directly relates to a philosophical conception of truth as something that has to be rediscovered after being ‘buried’ by modernity (as Dasein needed to be retraced from the wrong tracks of ontology in Being and Time). Concepts of authenticity are marked precisely by such lines of argument, by rhetorics of return and rediscovery. It is the political aspect of such ideas that interested Adorno, the functions that such reasoning fulfils. — link
https://lists.srcf.net/pipermail/theory-frankfurt-school/2003-May/002345.htmlSome sense of the 'aura' communicated by the jargon of authenticity may also
contribute to understanding how it supports the fascist state. The aura is
partially communicated by the fact that the words employed by the jargon don't
have any specific conceptual content, but create the impression that something
meaningful is being said just because these words are being used. The 'aura'
created by the use of this language is specifically the impression that
something of the speaker's very 'essence' or 'being,' something of the
speaker's very self, is conveyed through his or her words. Once this
impression has been conveyed, that is sufficient to satisfy credibility demands
regardless of the actual conceptual content of the speech. But it is the very
lack of specific conceptual content that causes the aura of an authentic self
associated with these words to submit to decay. The individual is robbed of
his or her individuality by the jargon. The speaking subject is virtually
eradicated since the language used to convey the speaker's 'self' is itself
empty of specific content (15-16).
Adorno begins his direct attack on Heidegger from this point. Heidegger's
speech about existence (the Da) in terms of immanence and the immediacy of
life, with its theological undertones, essentially 'whisks away' the boundary
between the natural and the supernatural. Transcendence is tamed and brought
into close reach for everyone. This bringing of transcendence close to home
via a widely disseminated form of speech imposes a generic 'person' upon
everyone using the speech, a mass-consumption person not unlike the
'interchangeable persons' posited in Adorno and Horkheimer's Dialectic of
Enlightenment. The jargon itself disseminates the very 'they-self' that
Heidegger condemned in Being and Time. The jargon's political and economic
functions consist in the fact that by it the 'formal gesture of autonomy
replaces the content of autonomy' (18). Adherence to a mass, socially imposed
self creates the illusion of participation in a homogenous middle class by the
lower and working classes. The language implies a social contract without
actually providing one, and masks the fact that it has done this by the very
act of forbidding specific content to be attached to the notion of the self.
Doing so, according to Adorno's account of Heidegger, would reduce
existentialism to 'anthropology, sociology, psychology' (28).
— link
German words are wicked. — coolazice
What do you mean by this?I've often pondered that this may be the case. There is a strong overlap - dukkha - suffering, pain, stress, unease. Is there a text that articulates dukkha/discomfort with more of a psychological perspective? — Tom Storm
Watts wasn't a Buddhist, mind you.Pretty sure there was something great by Alan Watts on this but can't remember where I read it.
I've started Kierkegaard's 'Concept of Anxiety', but can't shake the feeling that anxiety/angst/dread is simply what the Buddha terms dukkha. — Wayfarer
/.../ Saṁvega was what the young Prince Siddhartha felt on his first exposure to aging, illness, and death. It’s a hard word to translate because it covers such a complex range—at least three clusters of feelings at once: the oppressive sense of dismay, terror, and alienation that comes with realizing the futility and meaninglessness of life as it’s normally lived; a chastening sense of our own complicity, complacency, and foolishness in having let ourselves live so blindly; and an anxious sense of urgency in trying to find a way out of the meaningless cycle.
Thanissaro Bhikkhu: Affirming the Truths of the Heart. The Buddhist Teachings on Saṁvega & Pasāda
https://www.dhammatalks.org/books/NobleStrategy/Section0004.html
But does Kierkegaard offer anything that would resemble pasada? — baker
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