Comments

  • Martin Heidegger
    Wittgenstein has some similarities, especially in terms of “average everydayness,” but I see little similarity with Heidegger’s conception of being-in-the-world.Mikie

    later Wittgenstein does say that the world is everything. I also think Heidegger's and Wittgenstein's notion of "background" and its importance are similar to understanding how one gets around in the "world."
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    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:180 Proof

    Thank you for proving my point. Your credibility regarding your position rests upon having read and understood Heidegger.

    Keep up the good work.
  • Does God exist?
    I'm flagging the thread for deletion.Wayfarer

    So you are taking it upon yourself to have deleted everything everyone else has to say? How philosophical.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    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

    Heidegger was not a good person for several reasons, with his Nazism foremost among them. However, I have no desire to either prosecute or defend his absurd politics.

    But I have long been interested in the nature of being. And anyone interested in the nature of being would be a fool to ignore Heidegger, particularly Being and Time.
  • Currently Reading
    William Blattner's guide to Being and Time.
  • Martin Heidegger
    I'd like to ask the Forum what they think of Mr. Heidegger's thought.Mikie

    I think Heidegger's "being-in-the-world" as a unitary mode of being is revolutionary.
  • Plato’s allegory of the cave
    All of reality is a prison. The question is, what is outside of that prison?an-salad

    why do you presume there is an outside?
  • The hard problem of matter.
    Without consciousness matter doesn’t have a home. No consciousness of which to be an object. I’m doubtful matter is enough by itself. How can non-extension emerge from extension? Can something with only spatial properties give rise to non-space.
  • What does "real" mean?
    it enables some to feel more secure.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    My original point was not that anything Nazi-Warpig said was true or not, but that his philosophy can be dismissed as invalid, and exctract that which can be shown to not be compatible with the destruction of human life.Garrett Travers

    You are flailing in the wind. You cannot possibly extract anything from Heidegger's work if you do not read it. And even if you do read it, you cannot possibly extract anything from it if you do not understand it. And people misunderstand what is mistakenly referred to as the introduction to Being and Time as written.

    You are the one who chose the word "care" without providing a definition. I don't "care" about Heidegger's ontological views any more than I "care" about the rocket engineering principles of S.S. Officer Werner von Braun. But I will use Heidegger's views to reach a deeper understanding of the nature of being just as rocket engineers will use the views advanced by Braun.

    And you may rest assured I do not "worship" Heidegger or any other being. I don't even worship God.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    But don’t forget, it isn’t just the objectively present objects of empirical study that Heidegger considers inauthentic.Joshs

    That is incorrect. Inauthentic, undifferentiated, and authentic are temporal modes of Dasein's being that have no application to entities other than Dasein. To say that something ready to hand (such as a hammer) is authentic or inauthentic makes no more sense than to say that something ready to hand (such as a hammer) is happy or sad.

    And most of the time we spend making our way through the world is spent in an undifferentiated mode of being rather than in an inauthentic mode of being. And the only difference between inauthentic and authentic is choice. And the hammer has no choice.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Nobody should give a shit what a Nazi said.Garrett Travers

    If you want to prosecute Heidegger, I certainly will make no objection. He was not a good person for many reasons with his Nazism being foremost among them. If you expected me to defend Heidegger, then you were mistaken. If the court were to order me to defend Heidegger, I would turn in my law license and go and grind lenses.

    But Heidegger is dead. It is no punishment of him or any other Nazi to ignore what he had to say regarding the nature of being. Instead and for a serious philosopher, ignoring Heidegger because he was a bad person is self-flagellation.

    I wish you nothing but the best.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Scientific thematization and objectification have their place for Heidegger, albeit distinctly circumscribed as regional ontologies.Joshs

    If wayfarer wants to throw out words such as "objectification" and fail to clarify that he is using it as a synonym for the "scientific method", then isn't he "covering up" at least as much as he may be "uncovering"? Though Heidegger indeed has a significant amount of respect for the scientific method, the scientific method is derivative of being-in-the-world and has no use in the absence of world.

    And in Heideggerian terms, isn't the real issue the degree to which a scientific mode of being can be an authentic mode of being? And if so, then the scientific mode of being is inauthentic insofar as it leads Dasein to mistakenly live as if Dasein were outside the world looking in. You cannot be more "in" the world than Dasein.

    Though Heidegger embraces the subject/object observer/observed dualisms as useful to understanding the universe, he unequivocally rejects them to the degree they are rooted in Cartesian substance dualism. For Heidegger, transcendence is from Dasein to the world, not from subject to object.
  • Are we responsible for our own thoughts?
    Far more than anyone else.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Which is why I'm considering that the real obstacle is 'objectification'.Wayfarer

    In some sense, "objectification" is the end of philosophy.

    It serves no meaningful purpose.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Authentic Dasein does not feel at home in the world. The older I get, the more comfortable I am not feeling at home in the world.
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?
    What if they (the mortgages) are created at the same time (and taken out by the same person)?Daniel

    Time is one method that non-spatial entities could be differentiated. I never said it was the only method nor did I say it was a perfect method.

    I suspect you are just as capable as I at answering your question.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    I would have, but I don't agree with the statement about the introduction. It is not a mistake to refer to it as such. I hope you now concede that.Xtrix

    I absolutely do not concede that. I suspect that if Heidegger had continued with the work, the next publication would not have been called Being and Time with any sort of suffix and would likely have been called Time and Being.

    It is not as if the binding or the cover page of Being and Time as published reads Being and Time, Divisions 1 and 2. How could the publications of subsequent divisions have the same title without further compounding the confusion?

    He submitted a manuscript entitled Being and Time with two divisions and no introduction. He was told he needed to write an introduction and he used the opportunity to point beyond the submitted manuscript. Thereafter, the publisher adjusted table of content headings accordingly. Had he not been required to write an introduction to an already submitted manuscript, then we would not be having this discussion.

    Heidegger published what he needed to publish to get what he wanted to get. Had he not been forced to publish and under hurried circumstances, we would not even know his name. It is sloppy and students of Heidegger deserve better.

    Going forward, our time would be better spent on substantive discussions of Being and Time. I greatly appreciate your knowledge of the subject matter. It is difficult finding people who have such knowledge. After all, this ain't Europe.

    Few American universities teach Heidegger and those I attended did not. All knowledge I have of Heidegger and his work was acquired post-formal education and out of desire. I read Heidegger and then I listen to lectures by Dreyfus, Kelly, or Carmen and then I read Heidegger and then I listen to lectures by Dreyfus, Kelly, or Carmen and then I read Heidegger. . .

    Until our paths cross again. . .
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    For my part, I see the later writings as clarifications and further articulations of the earlier project , but found little additional enlightenment in Heidegger’s post-Being and Time work.Joshs

    I agree. I am not a Heidegger disciple. It would matter not to me if Heidegger unequivocally renounced Being and Time. I would still read at least 10 pages a day as I have done for many years now. Had Heidegger not published Being and Time, we wouldn't even know who he was.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Of course. But who doesn't see that? Is anyone out there thinking that because there's an introduction to the entire outlineXtrix

    Undergrads by the thousands are unable to tell you that the primary goal of the only 2 divisions of which Being and Time is comprised are about the fundamental analysis of Dasein and Dasein and Temporality and that is in part because the introduction written for a 6 part treatise of which the entire contents of Being and Time comprises just 2 parts repeatedly sets the goal at the revelation of the meaning of being.

    And besides, if you agreed with me, then all you had to do was say so and we could have been doing other things.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Well we agree on that at least. :ok:Xtrix

    I am right and you are wrong and I can live with that.

    :smile:
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Most of Being and Time, including the parts not finished, were eventually published in different works and were an outgrowth of lecture courses Heidegger gave in the 1920s. So both before and after 1927, you have plenty of material.

    So it's not quite that simple, no.
    Xtrix

    We are clearly not going to agree. I find The History of the Concept of Time (pre) and The Problems of Phenomenology (post) to be useful in understanding Being and Time.

    Mulholland also argues that Heidegger's complete body of work is sufficient to consider the project complete. Taylor Carmen leans that way. I do not disagree.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Given that this is true, my statement stands: it is in no way a "mistake" to refer to the introduction of Being and Time as exactly that. Why? Because that's exactly what it is.Xtrix

    And even if you want to stand on that, people who wish to understand Being and Time should still be aware that what is labeled as an introduction is clearly intended to be an introduction to a larger body of work.

    Surely you can see that?
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Being and Time is most certainly not complete. It consisted of 2 parts with 6 divisions. Only two divisions were written -- both of part 1.Xtrix

    Seriously? He needed to provide a name for the completed parts so they could be published (the publish or die of academia.). He named the 2 completed parts Being and Time. It really is that simple.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    There are points of convergence between Heidegger and Eastern nondualist philosophy.Wayfarer

    This does not surprise me. Heidegger was raised Catholic, converted to Protestantism, and in his old age began to sound quite pantheistic.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    That's a crucial difference.Xtrix

    I was not quoting Heidegger. I was stating my favorite mantra. And that is a crucial difference.

    And I am teasing you and I stand corrected. Though changing the contents of a mantra can be a difficult undertaking, I will do what I can.

    :smile:
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    The introduction is indeed an introduction to Being and Time. The fact that the book wasn't completed doesn't negate this. Why? Because in the introduction -- and not elsewhere, since it wasn't written -- you have a discussion of what was to be the second part: the "destruction" of the history with time as a clue, in Kant, Descartes, and Aristotle. He discusses this in the introduction. He also discusses the 3rd Division of Part 1, "Time and Being," in the introduction.

    So the introduction is very valuable indeed. If you want to fill out Being and Time, then Basic Problems of Phenomenology and Introduction to Metaphysics will do so.

    The primary goal of Being and Time is, indeed, about the meaning of being. That is the goal. What I see as being mistaken is that many people assume he gives a definition or an interpretation of "being" himself. He most emphatically does not. So that is a common error. But to argue it's an error to think his goal is what he repeatedly says it is, is itself an error -- in my view.
    Xtrix

    1. Being and Time is complete. The 6 part project of which Being and Time is just 2 parts is incomplete.

    2. At no point did I suggest that there is no value in the what is mistakenly referred to as the introduction to Being and Time. I only cautioned against mistaking it as an introduction to Being and Time when it is clearly an introduction to a much more ambitious 6 part project of which Being and Time comprises just 2 parts..

    3. Your emphatic insistence notwithstanding, Heidegger defines being as ". . . that on the basis of which entities are already understood." (M&R at 25-26, 6 in the German.). I am always surprised by the number of people who miss that.

    The below is from the last page of what is mistakenly referred to as the introduction to Being and Time. As you can see, the last page of what is mistakenly referred to as the introduction to Being and Time makes clear the introduction is to a 6 division project of which Being and Time comprises only the first 2 divisions. Surely you can see that.

    If I can be any further assistance in clarifying the matter for you, then please consider me to be at your disposal.

    eaoku1152n3p71gd.jpg portio
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    N can be difficult . . . and his writings are quite clear180 Proof

    Thus Spake 180 Proof

    :smile:
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?
    Asfar as I'm concerned change happens to properties (colors, shapes, temperature, weight, etc.)Agent Smith

    Insofar as an entity must have mass, then mass is a property of that entity.

    Insofar as an entity must change, then change is a necessary property of that entity.

    Your concerns notwithstanding, there is no way out.
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?
    Numerals have spatial presenceMetaphysician Undercover

    Numerals are symbols and as such they are especially useful when that for which they stand has no spatial existence.

    If you would have spent a tad more time reading the last full paragraph of the comment you clearly spent a significant amount of time criticizing, you would see that I already addressed the possibility that even if we accept for sake of discussion that there are non-spatial entities, wouldn't they necessarily have to refer to an entity that is or was a spatial entity.

    And if you choose not to accept for the sake of discussion, then we have nothing to discuss. And I good with that.
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?
    I don't think it's very useful to "accept for the sake of discussion" a phraMetaphysician Undercover

    "If we accept for the sake of discussion" is used in place of "if".

    And I use it because I am tired of having to point out that "if" indicates that I do not necessarily agree with what follows but that I would nonetheless like to discuss its implications in the event it is true. I guess I was spoiled by the Philosophy Department's universal acceptance and understanding of the conditional nature of "if".

    As for the rest of my post, I was clear that I was working with the examples and questions as already given by others. Perhaps your criticisms of their examples could be addressed to them? I am sure they would appreciate them as least as much as I. Though perhaps you could spare them the ad hominems.

    But thank you for taking the time.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Or maybe not if I've only read into SuZ my own concerns and missed H's point(lessness).180 Proof

    I have never heard anyone say Heidegger is easy. And it is definitely hard to determine what his primary goal is. And that is the primary purpose of the post.

    Failing to recognize that the primary goal (revealing the meaning of being) set forth in what is mistakenly referred to as the introduction to Being and Time causes many to presume the primary goal of Being and Time is to reveal the meaning of being. Instead, the goal of Being and Time is much less ambitious than and "preparatory" to revealing the meaning of being. As such, its primary goal is to describe the being who questions the meaning of being. And it is from there that one should be off and running.

    So in that sense, what is possibly an inherently confusing subject to begin with (the nature of being) becomes ever more confusing beginning at page one.

    I have been reading Heidegger for years and still have to orient myself from time to time by reminding myself that, in Heideggerian terms, I am being-in-the-world or I am an understanding of the world or I am an attunement to the world.

    But my all time favorite orienting mantra is being is that on the basis of which being is already understood.

    I have wasted many a fine summer hour smoking a cigar while trying to understand what the hell that means.

    :smile:
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Being-there as being-in-the-world is primarily governed by logos…Coming into the world, one grows into a determinate tradition of speaking, seeing, interpreting. — Heidegger

    That is good stuff. It would be great to have a citation if it is easily available. I am not asking you to go and track it down. But I like it.
  • Misunderstanding Heidegger
    Sartre's overly-Cartesian and derivative B&N might as well be re-titled 'Body and Nobody' to clearly advertise its differences from H's opus.180 Proof

    Hebert Dreyfus essentially called Being and Nothingness a masterful misinterpretation of another philosopher (Heidegger).
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?
    I'm facing problems treating change as a property.Agent Smith

    If we accept for the sake of discussion that some entities have necessary properties, then an entity with necessary properties cannot exist in the absence of a necessary property.

    If we accept for the sake of discussion that some entities must change, then why wouldn't change be a necessary property of such entities?

    Is it possible for change to be an entity having properties in some situations and to be a property of an entity in other situations?

    We are so binary.
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?
    I think both space and objects are properties (i.e. events) of change180 Proof

    An entity having necessary properties cannot exist independent of its necessary properties and properties have no existence independent of that of which they are a property. So your formulation suggests that there can be no change in the absence of space and objects. And if we accept for the sake of discussion that change necessarily implies (and may be synonymous with) time, then there can be space and no objects and no change in the absence of time.

    So in the end, isn't it likely that space, objects, and time are all necessary properties of each other and none of them can exist independent of the others? Perhaps that is why Einstein called it the space/time continuum rather than the space and the time continua?

    Simply put, I think you are 2/3rds right.