Heidegger spent the Great War reporting on the weather. Wittgenstein spent it volunteering for the most dangerous tasks to be found on the front line.
Heidegger talked about engaging with life. Wittgenstein engaged with life. — Banno
THe way they lived their lives shows much about their respective philosophies. — Banno
You won’t have the slightest idea how to interpret the way they lived their lives without some acquaintance with their philosophies. — Joshs
And you won’t have some acquaintance with their philosophies without the slightest idea of how to interpret the way they lived their lives.
Your point?
In so far as Heidegger "thinks of (meaning) in terms of the way that meanings are uniquely my own" he fails to recognise that meaning is embedded in life.
And that is exemplified in their respective biographies. I answered your question; but perhaps not in the way you wanted. — Banno
I'd count it as one of the lesser works of existential thought, far behind Sartre or Kierkegaard. — Banno
:up: Poseur & bricoleur, respectively.Heidegger spent the Great War reporting on the weather. Wittgenstein spent it volunteering for the most dangerous tasks to be found on the front line.
Heidegger talked about engaging with life. Wittgenstein engaged with life. — Banno
For Witty, understanding of the forms-of-life within which we undertake living is gained from, or enriched by, shared practices, which thereby undermines (lazy, passive) conformity. For Heidi, however, shared practices (somehow) "impoverish understanding" of "the meaning of ... temporality", suggesting a preference, or priority, for withdrawal from shared practices – the commons, or cosmopolity – into (the) "ownmost". IIRC, this 'solipsistic stance' is Heidi's ethical (Levinas, Adorno) failing compared to Witty's more 'cultural-pragmatic stance'.My participation in normative language practices thus amounts to an impoverished form of understanding.
What do you think? Do you agree, and if so, is this a weakness on Heidegger’s part or Wittgenstein’s ? — Joshs
IIRC, this 'solipsistic stance' is Heidi's ethical (Levinas, Adorno) failing compared to Witty's more 'cultural-pragmatic stance'. — 180 Proof
Do you suppose the increased interest in Heidi over the last few years is related to the rise of autocratic thinking? To the acceptance of obscure bullshit? — Banno
Witt’s notion of primary intersubjectivty — Joshs
Subjectivity is critiqued in PI; so suggesting the primacy of intersubjectivity strikes me as problematic.
So I wonder if there is anything in Heidi that talks of following rules. For Witti, this is a public activity. — Banno
what little of it that I can comprehend is misguided: "There’s no room for each participant to form slightly different interpretations of the same rules for everyone...". — Banno
If you like - for Witti the within-person dynamic is either going to be pubic, and hence a part of the between-person dynamic; or private, and hence outside of the discussion.
What do you make of that? — Banno
Here’s a paper I wrote about this:
https://www.academia.edu/1342908/Embodied_Perception_Redefining_the_Social — Joshs
how to interpret the way they lived their lives without some acquaintance with their philosophies. — Joshs
Ah, but see the title. I addressed it directly. — Banno
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