"To go even further, even ancient tribesman probably thought more present-at-hand. They had relations to their surroundings for sure (themes of ready at hand), but they were constantly trying to figure out how to use those surroundings to fit their needs (present at hand)."
Using one's surroundings to fit one's needs, as you say, is a ready to hand relation with a tool. What would be present to hand about the situation would be extracting the tool-object from one's needs in the contextually meaningful surroundings and simply thinking of it as a contextless, purposeless 'thing', this tool with its properties and attributes. normally , we dont do that when we engage with objects, because we are busy making meaningful use of them. We dont even notice the tool until something goes wrong. Then the meaning of the tool is in what went wrong with its use, not as 'thing with properties'.
In Heideger's lecture 'What is a Thing', he says a commonly held assumption is that of the 'natural attitude' toward things, as if , beneath the changing fashions of theoretical definitions of objectiveness, there lies a universal, non-theoretical practical understanding of what a thing is.
Heidegger then goes on to skewer this assumption.He argues that there is no such thing a a natural, pre-theoretical notion of a thing.He believes the present -to-hand and the development of logic went hand in hand as Western inventions. A primitive tribesman would likely have a different notion of what we commonly call things and objects than via the present to hand.. And I think Heidegger foresaw an era to come when we would replace the idea of the present to hand with a different thinking, just as the present to hand emerged at some point in Western history. This would imply that a future empirical science would not have to base itself on the idea of present to hand.
In fact , one could argue that today's enactive embodied cognitive approaches replace objectivity with intersubjectivity, which might still fall under a Heideggerian critique , but goes a long away towards emancipation from the thinking of a mind-independent world, or a correspondence theory of truth, or the idea that we have ever have theoretical access to objects severed from a larger implicit context of interactive use and significance.
Now lets talk about getting shit done, the rock-bottom irreducibly physical-material thingly-bodily- corporeal-fleshly realer-than -real basics of surviving, the real shit. I'm thinking about how Silicon Valley's minions are spreading out over the earth, and how the closer we seem to get to the immediacy and hands-on-ness of the really real shit the more likely it is that such tasks are being given over to robots. Extrapolate forward 100 years, when a majority of humans will work at tasks in virtual' reality.
They will code, design, organize, plan, orchestrate. All kinds of stuff that involves creating, manipulating and interpreting language. But an almost complete elimination of tasks involving physical objects, excepts as housings for screens or implanted neural devices communicating image and text.
In the future the real may be completely virtual, bout wont it still mostly be about getting virtual shit done? About creating and maintaining tools? Of course, the writing and teaching of a book of philosophy is also the creating and maintaining of a tool, but what of your adjectives?
Heidegerrian thought is clealy not necessary, useful functional, repetitive minutiae mongering, or pragmatic tinkering, is it? Heidegger is on the side of complexity and richness. Real meaning is on the side of survival and getting shit done. A quick question. What if it were the case(and it isn't for most people) that reading Heidegger produced for everyone an extraordinary , lasting euphoric pleasure that was far superior to anything that 'getting shit done' could produce, would you still call minutia mongering more meaningful? In that case you're defining meaning in terms of a distinction between pleasure and survival. Of course, if my hypothetical were true, then many would sacrifice their lives to such pleasure(as they do now to euphoria-producing drugs).
There would then seem to be a constant battle among humankind between what gives pleasure and what is necessary for survival, with some arguing that true meaning is higher than mere survival, and others arguing a Darwinian position that pleasure is merely epiphenomal, a biproduct of adaptive brain structures those only meaning from an evolutionary standpoint is in their capacity to foster continued survival of species, gene or whatever.
In a way this is a variant of Rousseau's philosophy of the cultural as parasitic on the natural , which Freud picked up on in 'Civilization and its Discontents'.
One could point out here that the survival of a complex post-industrial service and information- based society would seem to be a survival with distinctly different features than the survival of an ant colony.
One might want to divide 'survival' into two components,1) the very sucess of self preservation and persistence, which would not differentiate between an amoeba and a philosopher, and 2)the level of complexity and , internal differentiation of a particular living system that happens to be surviving.
Let's say for the sake of argument that we say that meaning requires both components, such that the more complex and differentiated a human's life is, the more meaningful it is, and it is thus directly tied into human desire and motive.
This is kind of the 'complexity theory' of meaning. By this measure , all those grunts trying to simply 'get shit done' are striving not just for simple self-preservation, but are getting shit done for the sake of a motive for self-complexification(what people call personal growth or self-improvement).
In other words, getting shit done has an arc to it, a kind of developmental telos. Getting shit done always implies a motive toward getting shit done better, and getting shit done better naturally aims toward getting it done in a richer, more complex, more differentiated and integral way. This isnt what the grunt is thinking, but it is what underlies their sense of satisfaction and what it means to them to be doing a good job, or a better job. In situations whether one is just trying to get paid and doesn't find their work rewarding, this anticipatory sense making still applies, but in this case one has to follow what they are preferring to the work.
My favorite writers in psychology and philosophy(George Kelly, Jean Piaget, Heidegger and numerous others) see human experiencing as anticipatory. These writers do away with the distinctions between motive , affect and cognition. They see human beings as already in motion(not physical motion but in process of experiential change). So they don't have to posit extrinsic or internal movers, drives, pushers and pullers of human incentive. The only motive is sense making in a world that appears to us as always changing from moment to moment. Sense making is anticipatory, future oriented.
So motive is naturally aligned with being able to assimilate all variety of new experience.
I didn't mention the key component of their thinking. It is that thinking is hierarchically organized as an integral totality. That means that when we approach the world we interpret the meaning of experience globally. From the most mundane practical minutia to the most elevated, abstract spiritual or philosophical concerns, all of this functions in the background of each of our engagements with the world at every moment. So those lowest level pragmatic 'getting shit done' experiences imply , are authorized by , are understood in relation to and meaningful extend those most global, abstract and complex meanings by which we defined ourselves ethically, spiritually, socially. A human being is, from moment to moment, a single integrated worldivew in process of self-transformation, Getting shit done is our ways of preserving, extending and transforming that worldview. The 'getting shit done' pragmatic minutia mongerer of today in the tech world is extending his worldview, which , being a 21st century empirically sophisticated worldview, has internalized Plato, Aristotle, Descartes and liekly Knat, whether they have read a word of those authors or not. Each eyeblink and and sneeze
and intended action of getting shit done refers to, addresses and strengthens their Platonic-Aristotelain-Caretsian-Kantian construct system. So maybe you can see that, thinking about the real and tools the way that I do from this vantage, there is no conflict or separation between the most abstract and ephemeral meaning in our lives and the most supposedly 'real', 'getting shit done' meanings. each presupposes, feed back from and extends the other.
My working right this minute on soldering together these two circuit components is not just the isolated activity that it seems . Everything that led me to sitting down in this chair and doing everything necessary to begin the task , including deciding why i want or need to do it, what my goal is, etc. arise out of the global, integrated context of my construct system. When I lose myself in the details of my task, that global background is never absent but informs and directs my actions and motives.