As I understand Heidegger, Dasein is always a doing, but doing for Heidegger means a meaningful involvement with others in the world.which is at the same time a praxis, an understanding, an attunement and a discoursing. Discourse serves the same purpose for Heidegger that language does for Derrida and other post-structuralists. Rather than being a secondary phenomenon in relation to perception, it is intrinsic to all forms of experiencing. — Joshs
IF a primary purpose (perhaps the primary purpose) of Being and Time is to capture the average everyday involvement of being-in-the-world — Arne
That entity which in its Being has this very Being as an issue, comports itself towards its Being as its ownmost possibility. In each case Dasein is its possibility, and it 'has' this possibility, but not just as a property [eigenschaftlich], as something present-at-hand would. And because Dasein is in each case essentially its own possibility, it can, in its very Being, 'choose' itself and win itself; it can also lose itself
and never win itself; or only 'seem' to do so. But only in so far as it is essentially something which can be authentic-that is, something of its own -can it have lost itself and not yet won itself. (42-43)
IF much (perhaps most) of the average everyday involvement of being-in-the-world is comprised of what would be typically described as non-verbal acts (mowing the lawn, driving to the store, baking a potato) — Arne
IF State-of-Mind, Understanding, and Discourse are equiprimordial and comprehensively constitutive of being-in-the-world.
THEN: Discourse must include those acts typically described as non-verbal OR Heidegger fails (MISERABLY) at capturing the average everyday involvement of being-in-the-world. — Arne
Though language might well be "front, center, and all around" when dealing with expressions intended for public consumption and evaluation, — Arne
It does not follow from the equiprimordiality of state-of-mind, understanding, and discourse that discourse must include such things as mowing the lawn and baking potatoes. Their equiprimordiality means that none of them is primary, that they do not derive one from another. Our active involvement in the world is not reducible to discourse. — Fooloso4
Or put another way, you cannot capture the average everyday involvement of being-in-the-world without accounting for those acts typically described as non-verbal. — Arne
Equi-primordiality means that all of them are equally primary ... — Joshs
Their equiprimordiality means that none of them is primary, that they do not derive one from another. — Fooloso4
Thus, discourse must include such things as mowing the lawn and baking potatoes. These activities are experienced, and as experiences they are signifiications. — Joshs
In the act of understanding [ Verstehen], which we shall analyse more thoroughly later (Compare Section 3 I), the relations indicated above must have been previously disclosed; the act of understanding holds them in this disclosedness. It holds itself in them with familiarity ; and in so doing, it holds them before itself, for it is in these that its assignment operates. The understanding lets itself make assignments both in these relationships themselves and of them. The relational character which these relationships of assigning possess, we take as one of signifying. In its familiarity with these relationships, Dasein 'signifies' to itself: in a primordial manner it gives itself both its Being and its potentiality-for-Being
as something which it is to understand with regard to its Being-in-the world. The "for-the-sake-of-which" signifies an "in-order-to" ; this in turn, a "towards-this"; the latter, an "in-which" of letting something be
involved ; and that in turn, the "with-which" of an involvement. These relationships are bound up with one another as a primordial totality; they are what they are as this signifying [Be-deuten) in which Dasein gives itself beforehand its Being-in-the-world as something to be understood. The relational totality of this signifying we call "significance". (87)
That which can be Articulated in interpretation, and thus even more primordially in discourse, is what we have called "meaning" [significance, German Bedeutung]. That which gets articulated as such in discursive Articulation, we call the "totality-of-significations" [Bedeutungsganze]. (161)
The intelligibility of Being-in-the-world-an intelligibility which goes with a state-of-mind -expresses itself as discourse. (161)
The totality-of-significations of intelligibility is put into words. To significations, words accrue. But word-Things do not get supplied with significations.
The way in which discourse gets expressed is language. (161)
Discourse is the articulation of meaning . The meaning of the activity of mowing the lawn or baking a potato is what is articulated in discourse. The activity of mowing or baking is not discourse, but is taken up in discourse as part of the totality of involvement and totality of signification. — Fooloso4
The primary purpose is to once again ask the question of the meaning of being. The everyday mode of existence is the starting point for his explication of Dasein. The everyday is not Dasein's mode of being for in everyday existence our concern is not the question of the meaning of being, that is, what it is for us to be. Dasein is: — Fooloso4
This is what Heidegger calls involvement with equipment, the 'ready to hand'. We can talk about ovens and baking potatoes, but that does not mean that talking about ovens and baking potatoes and lawn mowers and mowing the lawn are a priori conditions for using ovens and lawn mowers or that the activities are discursive. — Fooloso4
It does not follow from the equiprimordiality of state-of-mind, understanding, and discourse that discourse must include such things as mowing the lawn and baking potatoes. Their equiprimordiality means that none of them is primary, that they do not derive one from another. Our active involvement in the world is not reducible to discourse. — Fooloso4
A person is performing an activity alone. Where does discourse, in your view, come into play here? — Joshs
Do other people have to be involved in a communication for discourse to take place, or does the person performing the activity have to undergo a modification , translation, elaboration, articulation of the experience to themselves in a second step? — Joshs
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. (162-163)
If the activity of mowing or baking is not discourse , is it something else? — Joshs
Does it have a meaningful existential status or is it a meaningless notion without discourse? — Joshs
Being taken up in discourse would have to be primary, just as being affected by mood, or taken into understanding . — Joshs
So if mowing or baking are 'taken into' discourse, this cannot be a second step or development in relation to some supposed prior being of these activities. — Joshs
If all he wanted to do was tell us the meaning of being, he could have stopped after page 26 of the M&R translation of B&T. — Arne
the ready to hand and equipment are not synonymous — Arne
The kind of Being which equipment possesses-in which it manifests itself in its own right-we call "readiness to-hand" (69).
at no point did I suggest that talking about anything is an a prior condition for using anything — Arne
If the 'as' is ontically unexpressed, this must not seduce us into overlooking it as a constitutive state for understanding, existential and a priori.
But if we never perceive equipment that is ready-to-hand without already understanding and interpreting it, and if such perception lets us circumspectively encounter something as something, does this not mean that in the first instance we have experienced something purely present-at-hand, and then taken it as a door, as a house ? This would be a misunderstanding of the specific way in which interpretation functions as disclosure. In interpreting, we do not, so to speak, throw a 'signification' over some naked thing which is present-at-hand, we do not stick a value on it; but when something within-the-world is encountered as such, the thing in question already has an involvement which is disclosed in our understanding of the world, and this involvement is one which gets laid out by the interpretation. (149-150)
The point being is that interpretations (the rendering explicit of understanding) are done for the purpose of acting upon the interpretation. And rendering explicit (interpreting) my understanding of the proper heat at which to bake a potato is done for the purpose of setting the oven to the appropriate temperature. And the act of setting the oven to the appropriate temperature is a non-verbal expression of my interpretation (explicit understanding) of how to bake a potato. — Arne
The intelligibility of something has always been articulated, even before there is any appropriative interpretation of it. Discourse is the Articulation of intelligibility. Therefore it underlies both interpretation and assertion. (161)
The primary issue is not the definition of equiprimordial. Instead, the issue is whether when taken together these primoridials constitute the existential whole of Dasein. — Arne
Please see B&T (M&R) at page 224 — Arne
It would be strange indeed if Heidegger laid out the “existential whole of Dasein” and it accounted for the expressions of interpretations made by Dasein except for the expressions of interpretations at the very heart of Heidegger’s originality, i.e., non-verbal acts expressing our interpretations (explicit understandings) of how to use (not talk about) equipment (such as ovens and lawn mowers). And if you think that is what Heidegger has done, then you are wrong. And I can live with that. — Arne
Discourse may not come in at all. That it does not come into play is not the result of being alone but of performing the activity — Fooloso4
The activity that Heidegger is calling our attention to is not whatever we do, but the doing of something specific that is, if not unique, essential to Dasein. This is why he goes through the history of logos. He wants to get back behind that development already under way in which Aristotle's claim that man alone of the animals has logos, is understood to as man is the rational animal. Man talks. This essential feature of our being is lost when every activity of thought to be discourse. — Fooloso4
Mowing the lawn or baking a potato are not "notions", they are activities. There are a variety of ways in which they may be meaningful - they may serve some purpose or get taken up in discourse and shown to play a role in a totality of significations. The activities are not, however, the articulation of meaning, their meaning must be brought to light in discourse. — Fooloso4
.Again, discourse or talk is always about something. In this case talk about mowing or baking. It is not a second step or development. — Fooloso4
According to this reading, all of the equi-primordial dimensions that Heidegger mentions, including discourse, always come into play in every experience. — Joshs
The reason that man talks is that man has temporality. — Joshs
He says this call, this summons is a mode of discourse. — Joshs
How can that be? Because discourse has to do with the way every experience communicates to us, calls us out of the previous. — Joshs
... the basic a priori structure of discourse in general as an existentiale. (165-166)
But the in-order-to and the for-the-sake-of-which that organizes our heedful involvement with things is a form of talking for Heidegger, but not as a secondary function in relation to passively perceiving the world or being involved in an activity. — Joshs
Discourse is the articulation of intelligibility (161).
There is our State-of Mind, there is our Understanding, and there is what we do.
Discourse is what we do! — Arne
Discourse is the articulation of intelligibility (161).
I take this to mean that the a priori structure of discourse articulates in the sense of things being phenomenally distinct, that is, particular. There can be no intelligibility without things being distinct one from the other. Thus, he says, we do not hear pure noise but a wagon or motorcycle (164). — Fooloso4
It 's interesting that you used the word 'is'. You said "That does not mean that the activity IS those things."it does not follow that mowing the lawn is discourse. There may be all kinds of things that come into play with any activity but that does not mean that the activity is those things that come into play. — Fooloso4
The point Heidegger is trying to make here ... — Joshs
It 's interesting that you used the word 'is'. — Joshs
... discourse is what we do and not what we think or say. — Arne
Put differently, what ever sense of .mowing' I experience right now is interpreted, signified, conceptualized, This is a discursive move. — Joshs
In an earlier post you wrote " Man talks. This essential feature of our being is lost when every activity of thought to be discourse." Does this mean you distinguish Heidegger from writers like Derrida. Does this mean you distinguish Heidegger from writers like Derrida ... — Joshs
This discursive move will not get the grass cut. The lawnmower has to move. I can talk about it, but talking about it, disclosing its significance is not mowing the lawn. — Fooloso4
I get that ‘for the sake of which’ can apply to discourse, but I can’t see how it applies in this case, except perhaps in writing/saying “I turn the oven to 425 degrees” - which of course defeats the purpose as an example of non-linguistic discourse. — Possibility
Is there for you any sense of the meaning of or existence of a lawnmower, grass and cutting apart from how they are interpreted in the context of your actual involvement at a particular point in time in the world ? Are you arguing for an Independence of things from our concepts of them? Is there a reality independent of our relevant circumspective contextual dealing in the world? — Joshs
Of course only as long as Dasein is (that is, only as long as an understanding of Being is ontically possible), 'is there' Being. When Dasein does not exist, 'independence' 'is' not either, nor 'is' the 'in-itself'. In such a case this sort of thing can be neither understood nor not understood. In such a case even entities within-the-world can neither be discovered nor lie hidden. In such a case it cannot be said that entities are, nor can it be said that they are not. But now, as long as there is an understanding of Being and therefore an understanding of presence-at-hand, it can indeed be said that in this case entities will still continue to be. (212)
Mowing the lawn can be interpreted within the totality of our involvement with the world but that does not reduce mowing the lawn to discourse. — Fooloso4
The traditional concept of reality for Heidegger (being in the sense of the pure, objective presence of things) is ontologically inadequate. So is the phenomenal concept of reality that Husserl advances, since it distinguishes indication from expression and posits a pure living present.As I read him, reality is phenomenal: — Fooloso4
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