Funny— I’ve offered to explain (and have done so) Heidegger several times. — Xtrix
There’s no code to break. It’s not a mysterious thesis. — Xtrix
Talk about Heidegger being a Nazi is boring. Don’t like it? Fine— go do something else. — Xtrix
And I'm afraid I'm also different from you in that I view capitalism as a disease, and this was one of the points that your much beloved Nazi philosopher also propounded (although of course, he wasn't the first). — Janus
There’s no code to break. It’s not a mysterious thesis.
— Xtrix
It must be me, then. — Ciceronianus
Yes, that someone is a Nazi means less to some of us than others, I know. De gustibus non est disputandum. — Ciceronianus
Could you point me to where he discusses capitalism? I'd be very interested to take a look — Xtrix
I agree, my astute friend. I agree. And I hope Epicurus, and the the dicoveries of that tradition do find a way to come in and lead us. I fear that such is our only hope as a society moving forward. Great chat, bud. Think about that Dirigisme thing for me, if you would. It's important, if you follow the trail. — Garrett Travers
He's saying that since the Greeks, entities have been interpreted in terms of the present (ousia), which is a particular human state (the "present at hand"). That's the thesis. Not particularly difficult, but with interesting implications. — Xtrix
Seems obvious enough. So much for Heidegger, then. — Ciceronianus
Well that’s obviously a very broad summary, but I did so to show that it’s not that mysterious. — Xtrix
:shade: Big whup.He's saying that since the Greeks, entities have been interpreted in terms of the present (ousia), which is a particular human state (the "present at hand"). That's the thesis. — Xtrix
:up:Seems obvious enough. So much for Heidegger, then. — Ciceronianus
:smirk:Hehahah. Gotta love that NAzi profundity. — Garrett Travers
Not that remarkable, either — Ciceronianus
Not that remarkable, either . — Ciceronianus
:shade: Big whup. — 180 Proof
Stop whining. Your synopsis is spot-on, it's just that H's "thesis" is unoriginal and uninteresting – Laozi, Buddha ... Schopenhauer, Bergson, Dewey et al say more or less the same thing far less obscurely. Xtrix, you're hypnotized by H's oracular sophistry and, because we're not, you trollishly call us "trolls". :sweat:Those who know that they are profound strive for clarity. Those who would like to seem profound to the crowd strive for obscurity. For the crowd believes that if it cannot see to the bottom of something it must be profound. — The Gay Science
Those who know that they are profound strive for clarity. Those who would like to seem profound to the crowd strive for obscurity. For the crowd believes that if it cannot see to the bottom of something it must be profound.
— The Gay Science
↪Xtrix H's "thesis" is unoriginal and uninteresting – Laozi, Buddha ... Schopenhauer, Bergson, Dewey et al say more or less the same thing far less obscurely. — 180 Proof
Your synopsis is spot-on, it's just that H's "thesis" is unoriginal and uninteresting – Laozi, Buddha ... Schopenhauer, Bergson, Dewey et al say more or less the same thing — 180 Proof
trix, you're hypnotized by H's oracular sophistry and, because we're not, you trollishly call us "trolls". :sweat: — 180 Proof
IMO, "misunderstanding" Heidegger isn't possible because there really isn't anything to understand that hasn't already been said more clearly elsewhere. — _db
doorstep of Heidegger’s project. — Joshs
The one bearing the words "Arbeit Macht Frei"? Perhaps that was another doorstep, though, and the project of other Nazis.
Fol de rol — Ciceronianus
A small and relatively insignificant corner of his philosophy. If you find that part the most interesting, then by all means read that, and refrain from troubling yourself about the other 99% which remains incomprehensible to you, or perhaps inaccessible on account of your poisoned feelings.. — Janus
This is true only of someone who, IME, hasn't already studied e.g. Laozi-Zhuangzi, Epicurus-Lucretius, Spinoza, Schopenhauer, Wittgenstein, Karl Jaspers or P.W. Zapffe ... thinkers who have much more cogent things to say about "the nature of being" than Herr Rektor-Führer. :eyes:And anyone interested in the nature of being would be a fool to ignore Heidegger, particularly Being and Time. — Arne
Karl Jaspers or P.W. Zapffe ... thinkers who have much more cogent things to say about "the nature of being" than Herr Rektor-Führer. :eyes: — 180 Proof
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