People should read Heidegger all they like. I don't seek to ban his books. I myself am inclined to avoid whenever possible those who, inter alia, think and are determined to tell everyone that certain groups of people (including themselves) are distinctive in spirit, or have a special place in the world, are especially a part of or have a unique understanding of "Being" or who knows what else is said to qualify as the kind of mystical-religious-philosophical locus of ultimate reality some of us need to manufacture, which in any case cannot be defined or understood through the use of reason; who think reason itself is detrimental to attaining what's true or real, and believe that it should be replaced by something or other like dancing, or marching, exercising, working (because it makes us "free") or running about the mountains in lederhosen pretending to be a peasant. Particularly when they are, also, unrepentant Nazis. — Ciceronianus
It's always easier to moralize than it is to be moral. — Pantagruel
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"Do not judge, or you too will be judged.
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For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.
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"Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?
The Nazi death camps is not something that occurred two centuries ago and was not a widely embraced social norm. However reprehensible slavery was, to be a slave was not to be put to death. The rejection of slavery as a social norm was an acceptance of the inherent value of human life. — Fooloso4
a fine-grained sense of absolute moral right and wrong. — Pantagruel
I do feel like the man has some valuable insights. — Pantagruel
Lots of saints — Pantagruel
Does one's sense of right and wrong have to be fine grained and absolute to know that the extermination of human beings was wrong in the twentieth century? — Fooloso4
And Martin Heidegger wasn't personally culpable for that. — Pantagruel
He supported it though. The Fuhrer and the extermination of Jews and others was, in line with his Protestant provincialism, fated. It is the sending or giving of Being, to which the authentic Dasein must hearken. The German people are Heidegger's chosen people, doing God's work on Earth. — Fooloso4
Yes, your use of the term "support" is sufficiently vague to endorse what I've been saying. — Pantagruel
...any indication that his philosophy is polluted, which is the real issue. — Pantagruel
I see no contradiction between flawed or 'bad' people (however this is measured) who also produce innovative, prodigious work — Tom Storm
Not every philosophy purports to an ethical dimension. — Pantagruel
The danger is not [National Socialism] itself, but instead that it will be innocuous via sermons about the True, the Good, and the Beautiful. — Fooloso4
Basic to the philosophy of Plato and Aristotle is the desire for and pursuit of the good. This must be understood at the most ordinary level, not as a theory but simply as what we want both for ourselves and those we care about. It is not only basic to their philosophy but basic to their understanding of who we are as human beings.
For Heidegger consideration of the good is replaced with the call of conscience. The call of conscience is not about what is good or bad, it is the call for authenticity. Its primary concern is not oneself or others but Being. He sees Plato's elevation of the Good above being, that is, as the source of both being and being known, as a move away from, a forgetting of Being. — Fooloso4
That doesn't entail philosophical nihilism. — Pantagruel
To ignore the ethical dimension of human being is to make what he intends to make transparent opaque. We are not only social animals, we are ethical animals, even if we do not always speak or act that way. — Fooloso4
The problem is evident in the Introduction to Being and Time. Heidegger claims that the question of the meaning of Being is the fundamental question, the human question. H. says that we must make the inquirer, Dasein, transparent in his own Being. To ignore the ethical dimension of human being is to make what he intends to make transparent opaque. — Fooloso4
“Second, however, is the question of whether poststructuralism admits of an ethics at all. In a
discourse that emphasizes the local and the contingent, is there room for principles of evaluation that are, if they are not to be mere personal reactions to situations, universal in scope?”
Again, I think it depends on whether Heidegger's philosophy implicates the moral sphere. For an ethicist to produce a work of great import and then choose actions which are deeply flawed is incongruous. — Leontiskos
I’m sure your actions, from the vantage of a century or so hence, will come to be construed as deeply ethically flawed. — Joshs
But how many times does this poor argument need to be unmasked? Here are some places where it has already been done — Leontiskos
↪Joshs For the record, my personal view is that ethics is not Heidegger's primary focus. I concede its "relative absence" in the interest of ongoing discussion. Either way, I don't think it is central to the thesis of the OP. — Pantagruel
One cannot properly think responsibility and justice without an understanding of Being. The question of Being is in its essence an ethical question. — Joshs
you’re looking for a prescriptive ethics — Joshs
And then this gets into ↪Fooloso4's point about "philosophical nihilism." It is easy to swallow the idea that a logician, for instance, can produce work unrelated to the moral sphere. But Heidegger is doing and purporting to do something much more fundamental ("metaphysics"), and there is much more at stake in considering whether that fundamental sphere is amoral. — Leontiskos
Heidegger absorbs the anti-semitic tropes from his culture, — Joshs
For instance, he rejects the biological, racialized concept of jewry. — Joshs
The essence of a thing, including ethical values, is to be found in the contextual particularity↪Fooloso4 of our involvement with it. this precludes universalizing ethics. — Joshs
Greek ethical notions such as phronesis and areti are in opposition to universalizing ethics, and manage quite well without embracing Heidegger's destining of Being.
The essence of a thing is not the meaning of Being. Our involvement with it can take many forms, including building extermination camps — Fooloso4
I don't hold to a view that because someone may be problematic that this bleeds into all their activities. — Tom Storm
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