how else, for example, could one be a Father if Fathers were not a socially available possibility. However, Connolly is wrong to further claim that Heidegger presumes that we havea close alignment between the identity the self seeks to realize and socially available possibilities of self-formation — StreetlightX
Nothing Heidegger says in Being and Time suggests anything like this. On the contrary, Heidegger describes the world as something we are thrown into, not something we are building. The world is structured by angst, not appreciation. Connolly goes on to describe Heidegger's phenomenology asa shared sense of confidence in the world we are building, a confidence that links the present to the future through effort and anticipation at one time and memory and appreciation at another. — StreetlightX
This statement is blatantly false and misleading. I find it hard to believe that the author was actually referring to Heidegger when they were writing this because Heidegger was not interested in freedom at all.the serene phenomenology of freedom... — StreetlightX
Heidegger does suggest something like this of an authentic being toward death, but only something like this. It is not anything like a condition of possibility as the quotation implies. Moreover, I doubt Lingis even understands what Heidegger is getting at when he ontologises death. It seems to me that Lingis understands death in its everyday sense, which for Heidegger is denoted by the term demise, not death. Heidegger is not ontologising demise. Lingis is therefore misinformed.the sense of the irreversible propulsion of a life toward its end precedes and makes possible every unilateral array of means toward particular ends and every determinate action. But can death, which has no front lines and no dimensions, assign a determinate direction to one's life, and thereby impart a unilateral direction to the connections in the instrumental field? — StreetlightX
I'm super, super hesitant to concede that there is anything like a singular 'common sense' to begin with that Heidegger's views would align with. — StreetlightX
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