To follow das Man is to swim only on well beaten paths, when there are endless other possibilities, even though, of course if we are to remain human, we must, even in the extremes of so-called madness, swim in that ocean as there just is no other medium. — Janus
It's not really a metaphysical issue. It's psychological. — frank
It's kind of like this: — frank
The reality is that each follower follows in a different way. — Joshs
OK, but I wasn't suggesting with that analogy that it is a metaphysical issue, rather that it is a phenomenological one. You could also say 'psychological' if you like, but I think 'phenomenological' indicates that we are speaking about something that is more general. — Janus
I would say that religion as it is commonly understood and practiced is a paradigm case of the dominance of das Man — Janus
I disagree. The religious follower adheres to God's commands. A humanist adheres to das Man for lack of any objective moral truth (or as a substitute for it). True? — frank
How many religious followers have "understanding"? — Janus
so, who says we need an "anchor"? — Janus
Das Man provides meaning too, but it is mediocre meaning or the meaning of mediocrity, which certainly may be sand! Or sleep...("I am the Sandman"). It is not really a matter of "either/ or"! — Janus
But the existentialist forecast was that the disintegration of religion in the west would result in a profound psychic challenge. Were they right? — frank
One existentialist theme is that an encounter with death can snap a person out of adherence to das Man and set them on a path to authentic expression of the self. I've found that to be true. I was very ill a few years back and my priorities changed a lot. Do you know what I mean? Das Man is embraced by people who apparently think they're going to live forever. — frank
The atheist with sand-covered head is living as if she thinks she'll live forever. — frank
So what do you do with das Man? Do you wrestle with it? Hide from it? Use it creatively? Is there some aristocracy that finally graduates from it? And if so, what does that really mean? — frank
Authenticity is a different way of being attuned, open, or disclosed to the world. And we can talk about that.
— Dan123
What are your thoughts on that? I enjoyed your post. — frank
I'm thinking Das man pertains directly to being-with -others and not also to the being-at-hand or present-at-handness of things, even if those things have to do with human concerns(and most things do). — Joshs
The latter is to say that authenticity is a derivative phenomenon that depends on inauthenticity for its possibility. My sense is that this is closer to what Heidegger is saying. — Dan123
My death is mine in a radical sense; it is the moment at which all my relations to others disappear. Heidegger captures this non-relationality by using the term ‘ownmost’. And it is the idea of death “as that possibility which is one's ownmost” (Being and Time 50: 294) that engages the second transition highlighted above. When I take on board the possibility of my own not-Being, my own being-able-to-Be is brought into proper view. Hence my awareness of my own death as an omnipresent possibility discloses the authentic self (a self that is mine). Moreover, the very same awareness engages the first of the aforementioned transitions too: there is a sense in which the possibility of my not existing encompasses the whole of my existence (Hinman 1978, 201), and my awareness of that possibility illuminates me, qua Dasein, in my totality. — SEP article on Heidegger
Think of a person who rarely eats what she wants. She eats what one is supposed to eat. In all things, wearing clothing, picking friends, picking lovers, even in private moments cleaning the kitchen sink: it’s always done by a set of rules she imagines are right and praiseworthy. She’s getting something out of this. Horney suggests the exchange is related to coping mechanisms set up in childhood. She’s receiving a sense of belonging, approval, the promise of well-being. Nietzsche and Kierkegaard both picked the image of pawning. She’s pawned herself. She’s given up what she wants to eat, who she really likes, what she wants to wear and the right to paint the stove with gold paint. For all practical purposes, she’s gone. All there is to her is das Man. — frank
You wrote: "Das Man pertains to all of Dasein's encounters and situations" . It pertains in the sense that it belongs to a mode that is equiprimordial with Being-in-the-world. But it is of a different kind than ready to hand or present to hand things and isnt encountered directly through those modes of interpretation. That is to say, it is not thematically encountered. — Joshs
So, authenticity, for Heidegger is not a true self beneath the inauthentic self, but a whole different mode of being-open. — Dan123
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