I can't comment on the later Heidegger. I will reiterate that his style is direct and clear in the lectures that led up to the writing of Being and Time. — plaque flag
:up:The most insidious part is that one's lack of understanding never reaches the surface. — Fooloso4
I agree. The same is true of some of the lectures immediately following Being and Time as contained in Basic Problems of Phenomenology. — Arne
This is iffy. It's either a tautology or missing the point. Preverbal competence ! Toolbeing. In the beginning was animal skill. In the beginning was the deed, the handshake, the welltimed fart.The background can be sketched, as simply and clearly as possible. — Fooloso4
But Being and Time is the famous book, so everyone grabs that. To me it's not the best introduction. A little Heidegger Reader might be better. — plaque flag
This is iffy. It's either a tautology or missing the point. — plaque flag
Always a fair request, no matter the dense philosopher... — plaque flag
His lectures were published at his leisure while Being and Time was rushed. Both the History of the Concept of Time and Basic Problems of Phenomenology were first published in the 1970s. Being and Time was a classic by then. — Arne
Idle talk is the possibility of understanding everything without any previous appropriation of the matter. Idle talk, which everyone can snatch up, not only divests us of the task of genuine understanding, but develops an indifferent intelligibility for which nothing is closed off any longer. — plaque flag
But then tell me I am missing the point? — Fooloso4
The background can be sketched, as simply and clearly as possible. — Fooloso4
“In Being and Time, Being is not something other than time: "Time" is a preliminary name for the truth of Being, and this truth is what prevails as essential in Being and thus is Being itself.”(What is Metaphysics)
— Joshs
What does it mean for time to be the preliminary name for the truth of Being? — Fooloso4
The unitary structure of the three ecstasies, future-present-having been, determines the ‘is’, the essence, the Being of being as this structure of transit. — Joshs
As Dreyfus might put, there are assumptions too deep for tears, which aren't even articulate, so that 'assumptions' is a metaphor for something 'stupider' like a competence. — plaque flag
The unitary structure of the three ecstasies, future-present-having been, determines the ‘is’, the essence, the Being of being as this structure of transit. — Joshs
Would also be interested in you translating this out of Heideggerese. — fdrake
The unitary structure of the three ecstasies, future-present-having been, determines the ‘is’, the essence, the Being of being as this structure of transit.
— Joshs
Now the first statement can and should be explained simply and clearly. The second does not do that, and no attempt to clarify it is made — Fooloso4
The being of Dasein or human existence is care. Heidegger's definition of care: "to be already ahead oneself in (the world) as Being-alongside (the entities encountered within the world)" p. 191. This has a very "temporal feel" in it. That's why Heidegger argues that the sense (Sinn) of the being (of human existence) is time or temporality. In a more formal level the temporality can then be expressed as the unitary structure of the three ecstasies, future-present-having been. In B&T, right after the last chapter ("Care as the being of Dasein") of the first division ("Preparatory fundamental analysis of Dasein") begins the second and last division entitled "Dasein and temporality". — waarala
The past remains present insofar as our language and conceptual frameworks were here before us and we think within and strive to think beyond them. — Fooloso4
The past remains present insofar as our language and conceptual frameworks were here before us and we think within and strive to think beyond them. — Fooloso4
Temporality is the unfolding of Being, of what is present and what remains concealed in and through the space or openness of time. It is not simply the linear sequence of moments from what was but no longer is to what is to what will be but is not yet.
In what is present and what is thought there remains something that does not yet come to presence and is not thought.
The future is present in the sense of possibilities. We are oriented to the future in that we plan and act and hope for what might come to be. — Fooloso4
I speak Joshese. — frank
It is good to have Josh-whisperer. Sometimes I think I also speak that dialect, but maybe not always. — plaque flag
Just riff on Hegel and it's usually right. — frank
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