Further and for Heidegger, most of what does comprise discourse is what we do and not what we think or say. — Arne
Discourse [Rede] is existentially equiprimordial with state-of-mind and understanding
He says:
Discourse [Rede] is existentially equiprimordial with state-of-mind and understanding — Fooloso4
"What does Heidegger mean when he says, as quoted above: "Discourse is the articulation of intelligibility."?"
↪Fooloso4
Why are you asking me? — Arne
And discourse is the process whereby our state-of-mind and our understanding are transformed into actions. — Arne
When I turn the oven to 425 degrees in order to bake a potato, I have just expressed my understanding of the appropriate temperature at which to bake a potato. Every act is an expression of an understanding and every such expression is discourse. — Arne
Discourse is tied to being-with: — Possibility
But this forum is not formal to the degree that I am going to write footnotes or necessarily delineate clearly between my interpretations of Heidegger per se and my own interpretations of being in light of the deficiencies in Heidegger’s work. — Arne
I am not so certain that “silence” as a form of discourse is as complex as your questions suggest. — Arne
But to keep silent does not mean to be dumb. On the contrary, if a man is dumb, he still has a tendency to 'speak'. Such a person has not proved that he can keep silence ; indeed, he entirely lacks the possibility of proving anything of the sort. And the person who is accustomed by Nature to speak little is no better able to show that he is keeping silent or that he is the sort of person who can do
so. He who never says anything cannot keep silent at any given moment. (164-165)
Keeping silent authentically is possible only in genuine discoursing. To be able to keep silent, Dasein must have something to say-that is, it must have at its disposal an authentic and rich disclosedness of itself. In that case one's reticence [Verschwiegenheit] makes something manifest, and does away with 'idle talk' ["Gerede"]. As a mode of discoursing, reticence Articulates the intelligibility of Dasein in so primordial a manner that it gives rise to a potentiality-for-hearing which is genuine, and to a Being with-one-another which is transparent (165).
Indeed, hearing constitutes the primary and authentic way in which Dasein is open for its ownmost potentiality-for-Being ... (163).
Simply put and for Heidegger, language is not front and center when it comes to rendering explicit our understanding of being-in-the-world. — Arne
Your opening post was about how Being and Time is misunderstood. If the text is to be understood we must attend to it. That is what I have been doing. It is what I thought you were doing. — Fooloso4
"Discourse" - as opposed to language (assuming I understand what you wrote) - can express, but there is no appreciation of expression except in language via memory. That is, language is exactly front, center, and all around. — tim wood
If you would like to do that, I am fine limiting my discussions with you to only Being and Time. — Arne
And I see no inconsistencies between my comments and examples regarding silence and your subsequent comments. — Arne
Returning to the example of my father, his own tendencies to silence had the effect of amplifying his words on the occasions when he did choose to speak. — Arne
It is not a question of limiting the discussion but of identifying whether you are interpreting BT, introducing other works by H., or addressing something that is not in the text. — Fooloso4
1. There is being-in-the-world.
2. There is the intelligibility of being-in-the-world.
3. There is an understanding rooted in the intelligibility of being-in-the-world.
4. There is an interpretation of an understanding rooted in the intelligibility of being-in-the-world.
5. There is a rendering explicit of an interpretation of an understanding rooted in the intelligibility of being-in-the-world.
6. There is language as a method (one of several) for rendering explicit an interpretation of an understanding rooted in the intelligibility of being-in-the-world. — Arne
Woke up
Fell out of bed
Dragged a comb across my head
Went downstairs and drank a cup. . .
A Day in Life is not a day in which "language is exactly front, center, and all around." In fact, it is quite the opposite. — Arne
"Discourse" - as opposed to language (assuming I understand what you wrote) - can express, but there is no appreciation of expression except in language via memory. That is, language is exactly front, center, and all around. — tim wood
discourse is comprised of anything and everything that we do — Arne
[Stambaugh translation]Its constitutive factors are: what discourse is about (what is discussed), what is said as such, communication, and making known. These are not properties that can be just empirically snatched from language, but are existential characteristics rooted in the constitution of being of Dasein which first make something like language ontologically possible. (162-163) — Fooloso4
[Macquarrie and Robinson translation]The items constitutive for discourse are : what the discourse is about (what is talked about) ; what is said-in the-talk, as such ; the communication; and the making-known. These are not properties which can just be raked up empirically from language. They are existential characteristics rooted in the state of Dasein's Being, and it is they that first make anything like language ontologically possible.
'Rede'. As we have pointed out earlier ... we have translated this word either as 'discourse' or 'talk', as the context seems to demand, sometimes compromising with the hendiadys 'discourse or talk'. But in some contexts 'discourse' is too formal while 'talk' is too colloquial ; the reader must remember that there is no good English equivalent for 'Rede'. (p.203)
He says nothing here about discourse being about anything other than what is said, what is talked about. — Fooloso4
I am not sure if you are taking issue with the claim that discourse is not about what we do, that it is not, for example, as Arne would have it, turning on the oven to bake a potato. — Fooloso4
And in that regard, one of the things I see in Heidegger is a continual refusal to frame issues in terms of opposites. Intentional silence is not the opposite of discourse (it is a comportment toward discourse), intentional solitude is not the opposite of daseining-with (it is a comportment toward daseining-with), and a lack of solicitude is not the opposite of care (it is a comportment toward care).
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