• tim wood
    8.7k
    I have, am reading, and recommend a short essay by Heidegger (trans. Stambough), called Metaphysics as History of Being.

    The overall proposition (it seems to me) is that there is a real something called Being, that there is a history of Being, discovered in part through an excavation/archaeology of language. That there are original understandings of Being, that they are lost, and that the fact that they're lost is hidden behind the "illusion..., which has long since become public property, that the fundamental concepts of metaphysics remain the same everywhere," (7). And that as a consequence there is a disconnect between ours and and ancient metaphysical understandings, with the corollary that the modern, to the extent they're based on the ancient, are error-ridden.

    The first question on this road is, is Being an artifact of language (i.e, in itself meaningless)? That is, as language is a kind of template laid over the world, does the excavation of Being really mean digging just and only in language, with the consequence that "Being" would have only a language-function that once understood can and should be discarded. Or is it more?

    We say, "It is," or "Things are." Each thing is, in some sense. Does each thing "be" in the exact same way? Or is Being (i.e., the Being of beings) a many, each being Being in its own way?

    At the moment I think answers that replace "Being" with "understanding" or "knowledge"; or attempts to convert to and base the question in terms of personality or psychology, to the end of declaring it all a matter of opinion based on perception: in short some kind of relativism, are simply Procrustean efforts to evade the question by failing to understand that it is a metaphysical question.
  • BlueBanana
    873
    as a consequence --- that the modern, to the extent they're based on the ancient, are error-ridden.tim wood

    This conclusion seems like a hasty one to make. Maybe the ancient one is the incorrect one.
  • MPen89
    18
    The first question on this road is, is Being an artifact of language (i.e, in itself meaningless)? That is, as language is a kind of template laid over the world, does the excavation of Being really mean digging just and only in language, with the consequence that "Being" would have only a language-function that once understood can and should be discarded. Or is it more?tim wood

    Well, this would suggest that without language you simply would not Be, which is of course not the case.

    Perhaps i'm not picking up what you're putting down.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Well. keep in mind the "to the extent they're based on the ancient." In particular, metaphysics (whatever exactly that is) is not science.

    An example of the kind of problem I think is involved here is the multi-step progression from (being)-present to presence-ing to being to Being of beings to absolute Being to God. God (not then so-called), then, is the the final (so far) step in a progression from specific phenomenon to general phenomenon to quality (i.e., of being) to logos to divine person - my listing here is only suggestive.

    Or, in short, if God is, as many claim, Absolute Being, then it's fair to ask what being (Being) is. That Being has a history suggests a human origin. If Being is a human "child," then how did that "child" become divine, become God? The concept of God, then, may be infected with metaphysical error, which with respect to this subject, is to say that it's plain wrong. That does not rule out a God grounded otherwise, perhaps in revelation. But if there is such a God, He/She/It/They are in no wise creatures of metaphysics, and it's no small mistake to think of it/them in such terms. Just as it is a mistake to think of a car, if you have one and drive one - as a car-in-itself - as a metaphysical construct instead of, say, a mechanical object.

    More generally, there comes into being an original set of beliefs about a set of things as the attempt to understand those things. The beliefs evolve, mutate, diverge and re-converge; some aspects fall away, some are added, all of these steps constituting a history - maybe dialectic - of the beliefs and their changes. And who will argue that in the "epiphany" of present understanding, that understanding the history of that understanding is a useless and unnecessary task?

    But I'm asking here, not telling.
  • Ciceronianus
    2.9k
    Ah, but the most important question is whether Being beings, as Heidegger said the Nothing nothings. If Being doesn't being, and the Nothing nothings, the Nothing will eventually nothing Being, which means that nothing will be, as the Nothing will in that case have nothinged.

    Sorry. Obviously, the issue of Being is one I find it hard to take seriously.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    If I want to know the length of something, I can measure it. Maybe it's so-many inches or so-many centimeters. Length is arguably an aspect of the thing I'm measuring. Quantification, as in so-many inches or centimeters, is no part of the something. Language here misleads us; we say, "It is 26 inches long." This is - can be - useful and it gets the world's work done. But clearly "26 inches long" has nothing to do with the thing, but is rather an idea, articulated and preserved in language, which of itself has little or no meaning. The question is, is Being like length, something the thing has, or is it just a useful linguistic fiction that having served its purpose requires to be set aside?

    The verdict of history seems to be that being/Being is a something, and further that the something that it is, is by no means simple in that it grounds "measurements" of various kinds, without at the same time being a proof of them.

    Investigating the history - the roots, the paths - of Being, to the end of understanding what it is, if it is anything in itself, is nothing more than good navigation, to find out where we may suppose we were, to see were we are, to determine how best to get where we're going.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Which is why Leibnitz said, "Nothing is, without a reason." His idea being that if nothing is easier and simpler than something, then there must be a reason for there being something.

    You're correct in one aspect. It is sometimes hard to take "the issue of Being" seriously. One can even mock it. It's unnecessary, for example, when buying beer.

    Perhaps you feel metaphysics is akin to science in that modern is (usually) better, righter, or even best and right; and that older ideas, unless they're in the direct descent of modern ideas, are merely quaint, of merely antiquarian interest.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Well, this would suggest that without language you simply would not Be, which is of course not the case.MPen89

    Excuse me butting in. There is on Heidegger's view in this essay a clear set of relations between being and language:

    ...in the breakaway of humanity into Being...language, the happening in which being becomes word, was poetry. Language is the primal poetry in which a people poetizes Being. — Heidegger Metaphysics

    His language often becomes tortured but the insight is sometimes worth digging for, I think. He argues that 'apprehension happens for the sake of Being' and that this what Parmenides, back at the start of this philosophical enterprise, understood. Humanity - Dasein in Heidegger's formulation - both illuminates and does violence to Being, the primitive state, through the emergence of logos, of making sense, through language.

    [using a different translator from tim wood]
  • Ciceronianus
    2.9k
    Perhaps you feel metaphysics is akin to science in that modern is (usually) better, righter, or even best and right; and that older ideas, unless they're in the direct descent of modern ideas, are merely quaint, of merely antiquarian interest.tim wood

    Well, I like being silly now and then.

    More seriously regarding "Being," if the question being asked is "Why is there something rather than nothing?" I think that's a question best addressed by science, unless we're content with the results of mere speculation. But it's important to determine just what it is that's considered the subject matter of metaphysics. First causes? "Being as such"? The "problem of Universals"?
  • _db
    3.6k
    The first question on this road is, is Being an artifact of language (i.e, in itself meaningless)? That is, as language is a kind of template laid over the world, does the excavation of Being really mean digging just and only in language, with the consequence that "Being" would have only a language-function that once understood can and should be discarded. Or is it more?tim wood

    Being is not a "thing" (an ontic entity), nor is it some transcendental realm beyond our understanding. Being is that which distinguishes the existent from the non-existent. Dasein is that which can understanding the ontological distinction, and for whom this distinction is important (because it produces anxiety).

    We say, "It is," or "Things are." Each thing is, in some sense. Does each thing "be" in the exact same way? Or is Being (i.e., the Being of beings) a many, each being Being in its own way?tim wood

    Heidegger goes to great lengths explaining how things "be" in different ways - at least, existence discloses itself to us (Dasein) in various ways. The most common way things present themselves to us is in terms of tool-use: things are "ready-at-hand".

    But another way things appears to us is what Heidegger called "present-at-hand", or "presence", where things seem to simply exist as a Cartesian-esque extended entity in space-time, with a certain set of qualities that are well represented by mathematics. Heidegger thought almost all of Western metaphysics was utterly obsessed with the present-at-hand and forgot about the ontological distinction, which the Pre-Socratics apparently recognized. He also thought that technology made it worse, as technology reduces everything to mere numbers, quantities, piles.

    Heidegger's analysis ultimately points to the identification of Being (in this case, Dasein's Being), with time.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    More seriously regarding "Being," if the question being asked is "Why is there something rather than nothing?" I think that's a question best addressed by science, unless we're content with the results of mere speculation. But it's important to determine just what it is that's considered the subject matter of metaphysics. First causes? "Being as such"? The "problem of Universals"? — "Ciceronianus

    Yes, if it's taken as a question to science. But it's a metaphysical question, and I'm by no means sure that a metaphysical question is automatically meaningless, or becomes a scientific question when it "grows up." But what kind of a question is a metaphysical question? My guess of an answer - that I think comes from Heidegger - is that it is neither a question as to how or why, but rather "what it means to be an x, as an x.

    But the topic of the essay is the history of Being, and it appears to have a history. My question is whether that history, properly understood, is a corrective that might expose fundamental errors in some belief, understanding, or knowledge that some person might hold. Or at least make clear how such beliefs, understandings, knowledge came to be. At the moment I think the history of Being does have such content, but it's not-so-easy to read it out of Heidegger. To get on the way to my question, I'm asking the preliminary question, whether Being is simply a semantic tool that allows language a way to refer to things, or if Being has some significance in itself beyond that. What do you say?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Being is that which distinguishes the existent from the non-existent. — "darthbarracuda
    Heidegger starts not by opposing existent with non-existent, but actual and non-existent. "As what is actual, Beings are 'actual,' that is, truly what-is" (1). The reason is that in a few paragraphs he wants to note an epoch, the beginning of the history of Being with the division in Being between 'thatness" and "whatness." "Being is divided into whatness and thatness" (2). Whatness (essence/quidditas) that-which-makes-something-what-it-is, whether it exists or not, is equated with possibility, not actuality (thatness). Which means that actual and existent are not quite the same thing.

    Essence/potentiality can (apparently) be existent, but it cannot by itself be actual.

    "Thus the beginning of metaphysics is revealed as an event that consists in a determination of Being, in the sense of the appearance of the division into whatness and thatness" (3).

    It would seem then, that at first Being is just the actual. The actual is taken as being active, capable of activity. Pretty quickly this becomes a question of causes. To be, a being must be actual. Does that bestow on the Being of beings an efficacy as a first cause, namely of itself, and through itself, all other beings? That sounds a lot like some versions of God. As metaphysics it's not too difficult (to swallow). But at some point the Being of beings becomes absolute Being, becames an existing God. How did that happen? Metaphysical error?

    But we're only at page three and already being/Being has become problematic and difficult
  • Galuchat
    809
    To get on the way to my question, I'm asking the preliminary question, whether Being is simply a semantic tool that allows language a way to refer to things, or if Being has some significance in itself beyond that. What do you say? — tim wood

    Being is an English language present participle (i.e., present tense verbal form used as an adjective) which refers to something that actually exists.

    Does each thing "be" in the exact same way? — tim wood

    Things may be a property, condition, context, action, event, process, interaction, or behaviour.
  • Ciceronianus
    2.9k
    To get on the way to my question, I'm asking the preliminary question, whether Being is simply a semantic tool that allows language a way to refer to things, or if Being has some significance in itself beyond that. What do you say?tim wood

    I tend to think the concept of Being has no significance whatsoever, frankly, except in the history of philosophy, and as an object lesson in the dangers of reification.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Being is an English language present participle (i.e., present tense verbal form used as an adjective) which refers to something that actually exists....
    Things may be a property, condition, context, action, event, process, interaction, or behaviour.
    Galuchat

    This is all very anti-metaphysical. Maybe that's where one ends up but I think it would be fairer to Heidegger, and to Tim, who is asking metaphysical questions, to acknowledge that there is a more complicated and yet primal place to start. What is this philosophical enterprise trying to address and understand?

    One pleasure I got from reading Heidegger is that, wordily strange as he is (and a Nazi and all the rest), he confronts this question head-on, What is philosophy about? And from the question, in quite a small space of 'Being and time' - which I know better than the Metaphysics - he unfolds/discloses how he sees human life and its place in the schema of Being. So he rapidly arrives at the notion of humanity, 'Dasein', 'thrown into life' as we are amid a zillion notions not our own - amid, as he initially characterizes stuff, more simply than you, two sorts of thing - the ready to hand, i.e. stuff that Dasein uses, and the present at hand, the rest of our context.

    So it is a systematic working outwards from Being, the elusive bedrock of everything, to human life and its concerns.

    It's interesting to me that when I've lately wanted to explore the philosophy of emotions and mood, I've found that even analytic philosophers writing about such matters find themselves going back to Heidegger, because there is a route-map there from the basic primitive of Being, through the basics of how we humans are in the world, to the complexity of all our actions and ideas.
  • Galuchat
    809
    It's interesting to me that when I've lately wanted to explore the philosophy of emotions and mood, I've found that even analytic philosophers writing about such matters find themselves going back to Heidegger... — mcdoodle

    You have my attention. Please elaborate upon the connection. Thanks.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    You have my attention. Please elaborate upon the connection. Thanks.Galuchat

    I'm not sure how elaborate I can be. I wrote a paper about mood earlier in the year (I was doing a graduate diploma) so I read a fair amount about that particular subject. An interesting example of the sort of person I mean is Matthew Ratcliffe, a Brit now teaching theoretical philosophy in Vienna. He's written a fair amount about depression, a philosopher working with psychiatric researchers, and his work about mood reached back originally to Heidegger, although more recent work has referenced Husserl more heavily. 'Being and time' of course related everything to angst, to fear/anxiety, but one can take the Heideggerian model of Dasein thrown into a world of bewilderment and conjure different ideas of what being in the world involves.

    What is it to 'be in the world'? The approach that links phenomenology, analytic phil and psychologists examines 'mood' as the foundation of emotions and cognition. Ratcliffe argues for the notion of 'deep mood', which manifests itself for instance in depression or bipolar disorder, as such problems are generally viewed as 'mood disorders', although we have little concept of what an orderly or ordered mood would be. Mood is a mental state that's hard to shift and not easily susceptible to analysis. Ratcliffe also uses the notion of 'existential feeling' to approach these deeper states.

    There is quite a lot of psychological work about 'moods' in a vaguer and more superficial sense, developing binary scales of positive/negative emotion, relating them to bodily states. The conceptual foundation of this work doesn't go down very deep, so there are many alternative models of day-to-day mood.
  • Galuchat
    809
    'Being and time' of course related everything to angst, to fear/anxiety, but one can take the Heideggerian model of Dasein thrown into a world of bewilderment and conjure different ideas of what being in the world involves. — mcdoodle

    Do you and/or Heidegger have a general definition of "(B/b)eing" that can be used as a starting point for conceptual development, and how does that relate to the historical "Categories of Being" proposed by Aristotle, Kant, Peirce, and others?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    It's interesting to me to find that the answers to what I posed as a metaphysical question (without at the same time taking on the burden of explaining what that means) are mainly non-metaphysical. As if some of us were deaf and blind to the notion of a metaphysical dimension, Or if not deaf and blind, then perhaps tone-deaf and colour-blind. I know this is so because I am in that condition. Without knowing ancient Greek, for example, still I hear the echoes of an immediacy in it that English mostly lacks.

    Heidegger, so it seems, heard them too, and made a career of presenting what he heard. But it's been my experience when I "hear" the Greek more fully, or make my gains in understanding poetry, that just as I have some feeling of accomplishment or "arrival," I realize that I've got exactly nowhere. And I think this was Heidegger's insight, that the endeavor never "arrives" but is always on the way. The experience of is always in and of the moment, elusive because always instantly gone. The notion, then, of an archaeology/excavation via language of memory to recover experience - and understanding - becomes reasonable, language broadly understood (to include, for example, art).

    Even though my question was metaphysical, my purpose was non-metaphysical in that I wanted a "tool" by which to test current understanding. That is, is there anything in the ancient understanding of Being that has been lost, which loss infects current understanding with error? So much for purposes!

    But we're called again to the recognition that sometimes the flaw, sometimes a fatal flaw, in questioning is to fail to prepare the ground for the question by approaching it in the right way. A question above is for "a general definition of B/being that can be used for a starting point...".

    I'm a strong believer in the value of defining term. But the utility of definitions is for making progress in arguments (for which the definitions stand as determinants). If it's not an argument, then definition has a quiet and passive, reserve, role. The specific problem here is that any definition is static, fixed, something "brought to a stand," which in itself both is without legitimacy and does violence to the idea - the question - of B/being..

    Notwithstanding the somewhat naive and practical reflexive response to B/being, that it is meaningless, without significance, even hazardous if misused, the fact is that B/being has been an issue pretty much since the dawn of this kind of thinking. We can say that philosophy is the history of philosophy; we can, arguably must, say that B/being is the history of B/being. It is, therefore, not something to be defined and "brought to a stand," but rather understood. It is not a question of what it is, instead it is the recovery of what it means, has meant, to be a B/being.

    I'm pretty sure the only way to move along this "way" is by a twofold approach which on one side is to research what has been said about B/being and on the other to subject the understanding to the personal test of experiencing that being. In short it's not science, and just minimal logic is required.

    B/being, then, is a something. It is a way of saying, and its saying is historical, meaning that how it's been understood has changed over time, and under different forms of scrutiny for different purposes. The only way to "define" - understand - that B/being is to recapitulate it in one's own being.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Do you and/or Heidegger have a general definition of "(B/b)eing" that can be used as a starting point for conceptual development, and how does that relate to the historical "Categories of Being" proposed by Aristotle, Kant, Peirce, and others?Galuchat

    Heidegger is pretty straightforward about this issue (there's a sentence I never thought I'd write). It's the difference between ontic and ontological. The categories of Being in other philosophical hands are about entities and are ontic. Heidegger's more fundamental ontological question is about what is even the basis for such ontically divisible aspects of being. What are the presuppositions?

    He then proposes that we can, in a long circle as it were, get at the presuppositions - at something about the ultimate nature of Being - by studying Dasein, which is humans' Being-in-the-world but also has, unique among aspects of Being, the ability to disclose Being to itself. So we come to phenomenology, as shaped by Husserl and redrafted by Heidegger.
  • Galuchat
    809

    Sorry, it's all clear as mud to me. But thanks for trying.
  • T Clark
    13k
    The first question on this road is, is Being an artifact of language (i.e, in itself meaningless)? That is, as language is a kind of template laid over the world, does the excavation of Being really mean digging just and only in language, with the consequence that "Being" would have only a language-function that once understood can and should be discarded. Or is it more?tim wood

    Discussions of "being" always immediately bog down in differences of definition expressed in convoluted language. It can be frustrating and pointless. In reading the responses to your post so far, you can see that different posters mean different things when they say the word.

    I won't jump into that fray except to respond to the quote above. In my opinion, yes, being is an artifact of language. It is human, not inherent in whatever is out there. I am partial to Lao Tzu's approach.

      [1] The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao.
      [2]The Tao is formless, meaningless. It can be experienced directly but not described.
      [3] Speaking brings "the ten thousand things" into existence out of the Tao.

    I haven't read Heidegger, so I don't know if that is the same as what he means. They probably have some connection.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Discussions of "being" always immediately bog down in differences of definition expressed in convoluted language. It can be frustrating and pointless. In reading the responses to your post so far, you can see that different posters mean different things when they say the word.T Clark

    Indeed they do! And being person with a modern, 21st century mind (more like 19th actually - at least my mind), my first reaction also is frustration. but that's not a failure so much as may be the only way to go, the only path, so to speak. To speak of B/being as a quality of an object is what a "scientist" does. And I agree, it's not there. But that's not the right question. It's looking in the wrong place and it's no accomplishment and very little progress to acknowledge that it's not there. On the assumption that B/being is someplace, let's look at the being that experiences B/being. Heidegger called it Dasein: da sein, here-there being, or, being here, being there. Or, way more informally, the being for whom B/being is an issue: people.

    But clearly if B/being is anything at all, it cannot be just in people; that implies that people create the world of B/being. Well, maybe B/being mediates (somehow) between (somehow) beings and the experience of beings. Hmm. We might call B/being the name for a mode of understanding. But "understanding" seems premature: maybe a mode of experiencing. Not a verbal, not a categorical, not a logical or dialectical experience, mainly because none of these is immediate, they're all mediate. Because B/being seems to be immediate, maybe all of the mediate modes of understanding don't work, and to force their application is destructive of and conceals exactly that being sought - B/being.

    One asks what it means to be. It appears that any attempt at an answer, excepting via the immediacy of poetry or other forms of art (i.e., a representational experience) must fail. What then?

    If B/being is the immediate mediation of beings and the beings that experience beings and if it's essentially unspeakable, it must seem as if any discussion of B/being is just visiting rabbit-holes - and I confess that when I go these ways I have to come up for air. But this too seems to be an artifact of looking for the wrong thing in the wrong place.

    This unspeakability of the experience of being - of beings - very plausibly gives rise to the voodoo like language of the shining, or the unconcealment, etc., of being.

    What's left, if it's all unspeakable? Isn't it all just a mirage floating in language? It's a topic that folks have thought important for most of 3,000 years - some mirage!

    If B/being names an experience in itself unspeakable, what's left is what is said about it. The history of B/being is just the history of the evolution of language - of descriptions - of B/being. But it is also a history, less accessible, of that experience itself. By digging in the language, one discerns the bones, as it were, of experiences no longer experienced, but that in some ways are recoverable - reexperienceable. And this reveals a history of being as a history of the evolution of understanding. (One must take care not to say ideas, because ideas are arguably something else, e.g., 2. The idea of 2, it sees to me, is immutable, unchangeable once you've got it.)

    It is, then, problematic at best and potentially plain wrong to suppose that through history understanding, especially of B/being, has remained static and unchanging - ahistorical - as if, say, Heraclitus or Thales had spoken the final word.
  • bloodninja
    272
    Do you and/or Heidegger have a general definition of "(B/b)eing" that can be used as a starting point for conceptual development, and how does that relate to the historical "Categories of Being" proposed by Aristotle, Kant, Peirce, and others

    The formal definition Heidegger uses as a starting point is that "being is that which determines entities as entities, that on the basis of which entities have always been understood no matter how they are discussed." (pg 6 in German text)

    In Being and Time Heidegger analysis three modes of being. In the order of primordility there's Existence, the being of dasein; the available, the being of equipment; and lastly there's occurrantness, the being of objects. How does this relate to Aristotle, Kant, Descartes? Well the claim is that their discussions of being are limited to the being of occurrantness, and for that reason they lack primordiality and constantly find themselves stuck in pseudo philosophical problems. E.g. the problem of the existence of the external world.
  • n0 0ne
    43

    Hi. I'd be curious about how you might unpack that definition of being. What is the gist of Heidegger in your own words? Do you find this gist significant? If so, why? I'm not completely ignorant about H. I've looked at some books. Being thrown and being stretched between the past and the future makes sense to me. I understand present-to-hand versus ready-to-hand. Supposedly being is time. If we are our own stretched lifeworlds, then that makes some sense.

    Wouldn't mind hearing a good "digested" interpretation apart from the lingo. I have the Stambaugh translation & frankly it disgusts me. I do think H had some good ideas. But this translation at least strikes me as obscene. Words like "occurantness." Are they really necessary? Is this book written scientistically to conceal its anti-philosophical or anti-metaphysical thrust?
  • bloodninja
    272


    If you're interested in reading a really good unpacking/discussion of Heidegger's above preliminary definition of being I would very highly recommend read the introduction to William Blattner's Heidegger's Temporal Idealism. He discusses this in great depth.

    Wouldn't mind hearing a good "digested" interpretation apart from the lingo.n0 0ne

    Okay well "that which determines entities as entities and that on the basis of which entities have always been understood no matter how they are discussed" seems to me to be the world. I read somewhere that Heidegger viewed his greatest philosophical accomplishment as his articulation of world. The claim is that Philosophy prior to him lacked any articulation of world/worldhood,etc.

    So the question becomes, what is world? That is rather complicated. I think I might stop while I'm ahead and let someone else speak. But quickly, and leaving the lingo aside, the world is basically the shared background practices that we take for granted. Why are they taken for granted. Because they are background practices, they have to be for the most part. As phenomenologically backgrounded what the practices "determine" to be in the phenomenological foreground are entities and as the entities they are, e.g., hammers, nails, carpenters, etc. So the foreground is made sense of on the basis of the background world (being).
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Here is a ditty I wrote on Heidegger a while back in response to a question (about the difference between the ontic and the ontological in Heidegger), which I quite like, so I kept it for recycling. It might help:

    One way to understand what's going on is to recognize the difference that time - or temporality, rather - plays in distinguishing between ontic and 'ontological' entities. What makes Dasein unique, as it were, is that it is constituted along a temporal horizon: Dasein, as a finite subject in time, is temporally orientated towards death (being-toward-death). Death, in this sense, functions as a horizon of our acts, loading them with significance; given the finite amount of time I have as a living being, I can only do so many things, which in turns means having to forego other things. The things that I do end up doing, must have significance for me in this regard - the limit that death places on my life means that I cannot be indifferent to the sort of life I live. For Heidegger, it is this temporal orientation that bestows ex-istence to Dasein. To ex-ist is to be temporally orientated, to be ex-centric to oneself such that Dasein does not exist as a sheer actaulity of the here and now, but pro-jects oneself forward according to the temporal horizon that gives meaning to my life: to exist in the mode of possibility.

    This is what Heidegger means by existence, and has nothing to do with our common use of it in debates about 'whether things exist or not'. To exist, for Heidegger, is to inhabit an existential structure orientated towards death. Heidegger's use of the 'world' moves along similar lines. 'World' in Heidegger carries with it existential weight, and is closer to the way in which 'world' is used when we say things like: "her world is coming down around her" or "his world was considerably brightened by her". To say that Dasein is being-in-the-world has nothing to do with being in 'the external world', so much as it has to do with occupying a meaningful or significant dimension of existence. To speak of Dasein being always-already in the world is to say that we live lives of significance (thanks to the temporal horizon afforded by our finitude), even if that significance is not of our choosing (this is what Heidegger means by our being 'thrown' into the world).

    This is why it makes no sense, for Heidegger, to speak about an 'external' world - it is simply a category error. The world is neither internal nor external; this is what the neologism 'being-in-the-world' is meant to capture, the fact that Dasein 'structurally' wedded to the world - no world, no Dasein, and inversely, no Dasein, no world. So one must be very careful not to conflate our common understanding of 'world' with what Heidegger means by it. Lastly, to say that ontic entities do not 'have Being' is just to say that ontic entities do not exist according to the temporal/existential structure outlined above. A 'thing' has does not project about itself a space of potentiality which it has to negotiate thanks it to temporally finite existential structure. It exists simply in there here and now, as is, in the weight of it's sheer actuality (and 'exist' is the wrong word, even). You have to remember that Heidegger's use of terms is phenomenologically motivated, and their semantic shadings are coloured by that background. Anyway, that's my extremely simplified Heidegger 101.

    -

    With respect to 'Being', basically this whole existential structure of time is what allows 'the determination of entities as entities', brings them forward into the clearing of 'the open', etc etc.
  • n0 0ne
    43
    the world is basically the shared background practices that we take for granted. Why are they taken for granted. Because they are background practices, they have to be for the most part.bloodninja

    Thank you. I truly appreciate that you humored me with the risk of a paraphrase. I actually am familiar with the concept of World through secondary sources, and I always liked it. Beings are revealed to us (brought "up" from the background) in terms of our projects? Sometimes they are invisible extensions of us. Sometimes we contemplate them isolated from use.The finitude thrust upon us by the consciousness that we must die shakes us from absorption in the They. We die alone. That we exist as possibility is arguably possible through desire alone. Hard to say what immortality would do to change things. If Dasein is only Dasein it if Dasein dies.

    So the mystery for me is why Being and Time was written the way it was. Why all the technical terms, divisions, the pompousness? It's as if the content and form are hellishly dissonant.
  • n0 0ne
    43
    This is why it makes no sense, for Heidegger, to speak about an 'external' world - it is simply a category error. The world is neither internal nor external; this is what the neologism 'being-in-the-world' is meant to capture, the fact that Dasein 'structurally' wedded to the world - no world, no Dasein, and inversely, no Dasein, no world.StreetlightX

    Thanks for the passage. Would you say that this is something like the revenge of common sense and/or emotional intelligence on the artificiality of epistemological tangles? Let's say that we further paraphrased your paraphrase into even simpler language. Would not the average person be tempted to agree? Did he just inject a worldly "emotional" intelligence into an otherwise arcane and dryly "theological" game? This is not intended to diminish the accomplishment, but only to try to specify it.
  • n0 0ne
    43
    In the general context of the thread, here's a different take on being, related in my mind to Wittgenstein and Heidegger. We can define being as the groundlessness of beings. It is the abyss over which beings shine.

    For Wittgenstein, for instance, it is not how but that the world exists that is "the mystical." Why is there something rather than nothing? Is this a "pseudo-question"? A lyrical "cry" of wonder that looks like a question? What answer could we hope to give that would not be itself subject to the question? If the answer is X, then why is there X rather than nothing?

    A second question: how is this "why" made possible? What is this recognition of contingency? Is this some deep part of our nature? A necessity? If human being is somehow essentially the recognition or projection of contingency (via the imagination?), then is the human world or world for humans necessarily "cracked" by our ability to zoom out from or negate the given? IMO, philosophy is especially this kind of recognition of contingency. The background assumption, the norm of the discourse, is brought forth to hover over the abyss of its non-necessity, its contingency.

    For instance, with Nietzsche perhaps the moral background of philosophy (Truth as an idol, etc.) is brought before the corrosive contingency-projection of reason --in the name of this same Truth.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Thanks for the passage. Would you say that this is something like the revenge of common sense and/or emotional intelligence on the artificiality of epistemological tangles? Let's say that we further paraphrased your paraphrase into even simpler language. Would not the average person be tempted to agree? Did he just inject a worldly "emotional" intelligence into an otherwise arcane and dryly "theological" game? This is not intended to diminish the accomplishment, but only to try to specify it.n0 0ne

    I'm super, super hesitant to concede that there is anything like a singular 'common sense' to begin with that Heidegger's views would align with. In fact, one of my favorite critiques of Hiedegger's phenomenological project in B&T comes from William Connolly, who suggests that the whole thing is a very idealized, 'serene' phenomenology which presupposes a whole set of unarticulated conditions about the kind of life it characterizes:

    "The links [Heidegger's phenomenology] forges between life and foreknowledge of death, individuality and connectedness, choice and foreclosure, individual and collective life in the present and projections of future prospects for both, presume, first, a close alignment between the identity the self seeks to realize and socially available possibilities of self-formation and, second, a shared sense of confidence in the world we are building, a confidence that links the present to the future through effort and anticipation at one time and memory and appreciation at another. If these connections, sentiments, and projections become severely attenuated, the serene phenomenology of freedom and finitude also becomes strained and anachronistic. To retain it would then be to cling insistently to a picture of the world belied by individual and collective experience... I think something like this is occurring today." (Connolly, Identity\Difference)

    Alphonso Lingis similarly criticizes the presumption that the 'world' of which Heidegger speaks is as unitary as he makes it out to be, and thus is not in accord with everyday experience, because of the discontinuity of experience. What Heidi misses for Lingis is the entire realm of the sensuous:

    "What, then, is new in Heidegger is not only positing a real experience of the world as a whole, but locating this experience in an agent become discontinuous and singular. But crucial moves in Heidegger's reasoning seem to us unintelligible ... Heidegger argues that the sense of the irreversible propulsion of a life toward its end precedes and makes possible every unilateral array of means toward particular ends and every determinate action. But can death, which has no front lines and no dimensions, assign a determinate direction to one's life, and thereby impart a unilateral direction to the connections in the instrumental field? ...Death is neither present nor future; it is imminent at any moment. How could death then fix the end and bring to flush the ends possible in the time that lies ahead?

    ... The authentic life that integrates its temporal trajectory from its birth to its death in each of its projects finds its own possibility traced out, Heidegger explains in Being and Time, and left for it by those who pursued their own paths to their own deaths. ... [But] about the few things that are really things with which we live - an old coffee mug, a carved and padded armchair, a violin, a pearl-oyster shell on the window sill - does not the wide world, the common world, break up into so many discontinuous spaces full of dreams and memories? Heidegger's analysis ... argues that things are essentially means; - each mundane end is a means in turn. The relay from implement to implement and to work being done returns to the manipulator. ...But does not the finality in things also come to an end in them? Water which one knows in the savoring and in the drinking, berries which one gathers and which melt in one' s mouth as one walks through the meadow do not catch our eye as refurbishments for our cells and muscles and means for our projects; they are substances in which sensuality glows and fades away" (Lingis, Sensation: Intelligibility in Sensibility).

    To these one may add the feminist critiques like those found in the work of Iris Marion Young (Throwing Like a Girl and Other Essays, speaking about the pregnant body, and so on and so fourth. Heidi is definitely not the last word when it comes to speaking about our everyday experiences - although he is a good start.
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