Glossary-Heidegger Being and Time
Glossary-Heidegger Being and Time
Glossary-Heidegger Being and Time
html#a
The glossary is primarily aimed at persons reading Being and Time in English,
consequently German terms are, for the most part, omitted. The primary
exception to this is the term "Dasein", which is familiar enough to English
readers of Heidegger. Needless to say, I apologise to any German readers - as
well as to Heidegger purists reading this! For those seeking translations of the
many Greek words and phrases in Being and Time, there is already and excellent
online resource dedicated to this at Pete's Ereignis site:
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Apophantic
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Appearance (as the appearance of something) does not mean something that
shows itself, but rather something that announces itself. Announcing can be
defined as a 'showing itself by not showing itself,' for example an illness
announces itself in its symptoms, which are, so to speak, its calling card. So, in a
sense, appearance is a not showing itself (Heidegger uses the term "not" here
with the caveat that it is not to be understood as meaning a negation, but as
indicating the presence of something unseen). Anything that never shows itself is
also something that can never seem. This is why appearance is different from
showing or seeming. All indications, presentations, symptoms and symbols have
this basic formal structure of appearing. Appearance has four distinct meanings.
The point to be made here is that if one defines phenomenon with the aid of a
conception of appearance which does not differentiate between these multiple
meaning, then confusion is bound to reign! [ref. ¶ 7, Page 52 - 53]
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Assignment
(See equipment)
Authentic Being is its own measure, in other words when it does not
have to justify it's existence as compared with anything else.
Authenticity and inauthenticity are what gives Dasein its definite character.
Dasein is either Authentic, which, in the sense of my Being, means that I can
chose and win myself, or conversely lose and never win myself [ref.¶ 9, Page
68], or Dasein is Inauthentic, which means fleeing in the face of my Being and
forgetting that I can chose and win myself [ref.¶ 9, Page 69-70]. Authenticity and
inauthenticity do not derive their meaning or value by comparison with anything
else, in this sense that they simply are what they are. This means that we cannot
speak of them as being determined by any prior considerations or influences, but
rather we should think of them as determining these things, since authenticity and
inauthenticity are the grounds on which a particular Dasein determines its own
possibilies. [ref. ¶12, page 78]
When a particular Dasein talks about its Being, it is in each case "my Being".
And because the essence of Dasein lies in its 'to be' it is also 'my to be'. Thus, we
talk about Dasein's Being in terms of possibility rather than actuality. But of
course describing something in terms of all of the potential ways that it can be, is
far more complex than describing it in terms of what it "is". [ref. ¶ 9, Page 67].
The decision as to which way the Being of Dasein is 'my to be,' is something that
a particular Dasein will have decided beforehand, based on the constraints
imposed upon it by experience (see historicality). The entity Dasein, who's Being
is an issue for it, comports itself towards its Being as its ownmost possibility. In
each case Dasein is its possibility and for that reason it can chose itself and win
itself, or conversely lose itself and never win itself, or perhaps only seem to do
so. But this choosing and loosing is defined only in the sense that it can be
essentially viewed by Dasein as Being authentic - that is as something which has
a reality value that is not relative to or measured by comparisons with anything
else. Authenticity stands alone: it is the way things are. [ref. ¶ 9, Page 68] An
authentic Being is its own measure, because it does not have to justify it's
existence by comparing it with anything else (indeed, how would it be possible
for people step outside of their own lives to do this?)
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thing that can be pointed at or talked about in the way we can talk about entities
which are not Dasein [ref. ¶ 9, page 67]. In order to talk about being at all we
have to talk about structures of Being. For example you cannot talk about the
Being of a particular Dasein because it is the sum total of all its possibilities, but
you can say of Dasein, generally speaking, that it is the sum total of its
possibilities and potentials (whatever they may be). This statement is structural
because it describes the structures in which Dasein inhabits. This then is what we
are looking at when we are analysing Being. The structural map to the territory
that is Being. By looking at the map, we can point to certain characteristics that
stand out, of which authenticity and inauthenticity are the primary ones.
Authenticity and inauthenticity of Dasein must be seen and understood in
Heidegger's analysis as being a priori (that is as coming before) Dasein's
understanding of itself and thus of its understanding of its own existence.
However, although not determined by anything prior, authenticity and
inauthenticity are themselves grounded upon a state of Heidegger calls Being-in-
the-world. [ref. ¶ 12, page 78] (see also inauthenticity)
Average Everydayness
In this history of philosophy, one gets the strong impression that thoughts about
existence have always emerged in the rarefied atmosphere of solitary
contemplation. As Heidegger quite rightly points out, this attitude is not typical
of the way people live their everyday lives. Much of our existence is not spend in
reflexive contemplation of our Being-in-the-world, but rather we are immersed in
the task of just getting on with our lives. This then is Dasein's mode of average
everydayness. However Heidegger considers this ordinary mode of Being,
despite being the most unconsidered, to be also the most important.
He argues that Dasein is, of course, close to us, (concern about our Being is
effectively the same thing as having an "us" inside out head that speaks to us) in
this sense, our Being and ourselves are the same thing. But but this also creates a
paradox, since Dasein is simultaneously also the thing which is furthest away
from us. The fact that Dasein is onto-ontologically prior (to its own thoughts
about itself), means that Dasein's own structure of Being is effectively concealed;
hidden from view. But, when we speak of it in terms of a pre-ontological
understanding, Dasein is hardly a stranger to us. [ref. ¶ 5, page 36 - 37]. This pre-
ontological understanding is Dasein's average everydayness. Thus Heidegger
argues that average everydayness should not be neglected in a philosophical
analysis and Heidegger tasks himself discovering various methods whereby we
can gain access to this kind of understanding. Here's what he has to say about
average everydayness.
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The averageness of Dasein makes up what is ontically proximal for this entity.
No doubt the reason that the averageness of Dasein has been passed over again
and again in philosophical explications of the human condition is because it is so
unremarkable. But this almost tautologically sounding statement in fact
underscores the truth in Heidegger's maxim, "what is closest to us ontologically
is at the same time the furthest away" [ref. ¶ 5, page 36]. In order to understand
that which, phenomenologically speaking, is the closest thing of all, it has to be
articulated in a way that means 'the closest thing' is not overlooked, but seen
rather in its positive characterisation. [ref. ¶ 9, Page 69]
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Being
Since the whole of Being and Time is an attempt to answer the question, "What is
Being?", it would be a little presumptions of me to attempt a summary here.
However, there are three preliminary remarks that can be extracted from the
ontological tradition in philosophy, that will help us initially to clarify the
question:
2/ Being is indefinable.
The term entity cannot be applied to Being because it cannot be defined using
traditional logic, (i.e. a technique for understanding which derives its terms either
from higher general concepts, or by recourse to ones of lower generality). In
other words, because Being is neither a thing nor a genus it follows that it cannot
be defined according to logic, whose job is to set out the rules that govern the
categorisation of phenomena and concepts.
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3/ Being is self-evident
Whenever one thinks about anything, or makes an assertion, or even asks a
question; some use is made of Being. But the intelligibility of Being, in this
sense, is only an average sort of intelligibility (common sense understanding).
This average intelligibility is also indicative of its scholarly unintelligibility, i.e.,
the way that the question: "what is Being?", is often ignored in philosophical
investigations. [ref. ¶ 1, page 22 - 23]
1/ Dasein is a Being who understands that it exists, and what is more the Being of
Dasein is, in part, shaped by that understanding.
3/ Dasein exists and moreover Dasein and existence are one. For example if
Dasein is 'the human Being' and existence is 'the world,' then Dasein and the
world are one. The consequence of this is that Dasein and existence cannot be
separated - even analytically separated.
4/ Dasein is also an entity which I myself am. In other words each one of us (as
human Beings) defines existence in terms of our own existence, a concept that
Heidegger terms Mineness. Therefore the only way that Being can be understood
is as My Being.' This applies even when Being and Dasein are considered in
general.
5/ Mineness belongs to any existent Dasein, in the sense that how I regard 'my
Being', creates the conditions that make authenticity and inauthenticity possible.
[ref. ¶ 12, page 78]
Being alongside
1/ in actuality, two separate things cannot 'touch' at all, because there is always
going to be a minute space between them, even if that space is perceived of as
nothing.
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closeness. In other worlds the very sense that belongs only to an entity like
Dasein. See also worldless [ref. ¶ 12 page 81]
Being in
Being-in-the-world
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together. In this sense, there is no subject and object, nor is there any division
between internal and external. However, structurally speaking, this does not
prevent us from talking about 'Being' and 'the world' separately, since the
structure of Being-in-the-world consists of items which actually may be looked at
in three distinct ways:
2/ In terms of Who - the entity which in every case has Being-in-the-world as the
way in which it exists is a "who."
[79] The ways in which Dasein's Being takes on a definite character, and they
must be seen and understood a priori as grounded upon that state of Being which
we have called "Being-in-the-world'. The compound expression 'Being-in-the-
world' stands for a unitary phenomenon.
First, inquiring into the ontological structure of the 'world' and defining the idea
of worldhood as such, Second seeking that which one inquires into when one
asks the question 'Who?' determined in the mode of Dasein's average
everydayness. Third emphasising that the others are emphasized along with it;
this means that in any such case the whole phenomenon gets seen.
[78]Dasein itself has a 'Being-in-space' of its own; but this in turn is possible
only on the basis of Being-in-the-world in general. Hence Being-in is not to be
explained ontologically by some ontical characterization-- Here we are faced
with the Being-present-at-hand
[84] Being-in is not a 'property' which Dasein sometimes has and sometimes does
not have ... Dasein is never 'proximally' an entity which is, so to speak, free from
Being-in, but which sometimes has the inclination to take up a 'relationship'
towards the world. Taking up relationships towards the world is possible only
because Dasein, as Being-in-the-world, is as it is ...This state of Being does not
arise just because some other entity is present-at-hand outside of Dasein ...
Nowadays there is much talk about 'man's having an environment ... but this says
nothing ontologically as long as this 'having' is left indefinite. In its very
possibility this 'having' is founded upon the existential state of Being-in. Because
Dasein is essentially an entity with Being-in, it can explicitly discover those
entities which it encounters environmentally, it can know them, it can avail itself
of them, it can have the 'world' ... even as an a priori condition for the objects
which biology takes for its theme, this structure itself can be explained
philosophically only if it has been conceived beforehand as a structure of Dasein.
Only in terms of an orientation
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operates not only in general but pre-eminently in the mode of everydayness, then
it must also be something which has always been experienced ontically. It would
be unintelligible for Being-in-the-world to remain totally veiled from view ...[88]
knowing is a mode of Being of Dasein as Being-in-the-world, and is founded
ontically upon this state of Being. But if, as we suggest, we thus find
phenomenally that knowing is a kind of Being which belongs to Being-in-the-
world, one might object that with such an Interpretation of knowing, the problem
of knowledge is nullified; for what is left to be asked if one presupposes that
knowing is already 'alongside' its world, when it is not supposed to reach that
world except in the transcending of the subject? ... Proximally, this Being-
already-alongside is not just a fixed staring at something that is purely present-at-
hand. Being-in-the-world, as concern, is fascinated by the world with which it is
concerned. If knowing is to be possible as a way of determining the nature of the
present-at-hand by observing it, then there must first be a deficiency in our
having-to-do with the world concernfully. When concern holds back from any
kind of producing, manipulating, and the like, it puts itself into what is now the
sole remaining mode of Being-in, the mode of just tarrying alongside
The fact that the answer to a general "What is Being?" question is that Being is "I
reside alongside", perhaps strikes us as rather strange since I reside alongside
seems like a very particular expression, and the temptation is to cut the "I"
completely out of the formulation and talk in terms of Being as a general residing
alongsideness. However in Heidegger's formulation of Being the "I" represents
the wholeness of Being and therefore 'I' is a general term. This is a paradox of
Heidegger's philosophy (in the literally sense of the Greek word paradox as
meaning against orthodoxy). The paradox is that the pronoun "I" is not to be
thought of as designating a singular or particular entity. This is because
everything is grounded on the wholeness of Being and general, and therefore
general ontological structures are described in the seemingly particular terms of
mineness. In order to grasp this we must set aside all associations between the "I"
of minenss and the "I" of Cartesian subjectivity, and indeed the "I" of the first
person singular also.
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reside alongside" and in this sense Heidegger conceives of Being as that which
we are familiar with. Therefore, the formal expression for the Being of Dasein
can be expressed as I reside alongside myself or I myself am. This formal
understanding has Being-in-the-world as its essential state. Although we must,
again, remind ourselves that looking at the structure of Being is not the same
thing as looking at Being itself. Here the distinction implied by "the map is not
the territory" very much applies! [ref. ¶ 12, page 80]
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Care
In making the Being of Dasein visible as care, care itself must be taken as an
ontological structural concept. In this sense, care has nothing to do with its
everyday significations of "trials and tribulations", or "being bound up in the
'cares of life'." Although, it is true that ontically we can come across these aspects
of care in every Dasein. And, like the opposite state of 'gaiety'-- which in its true
signification means 'a freedom from care'--they are only possible because Dasein
is synonymous with care when understood ontologically. [ref. ¶ 12, page 84]
Category
Entities present-at-hand within the world are understood ontically and their
characteristics can be arranged into categories. Dasein on the other hand is
understood ontologically and its characteristics are arranged into existentiale. The
difference between existentiale and category is both in the way they are used
(existentiale applies only to Dasein, category applies to entities within the world)
but in the different paradigmatic assumptions (the differences between an ontical
and ontological understanding) that underpin them.
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The use of categories is predicated on the assumption that reality can be studied
by slicing it into parts and grouping those parts into sets, based on some
perceived similarity between the parts. In the traditional philosophical paradigm,
this slicing is not seem in terms of doing violence to the 'wholeness of reality', for
the wholeness of reality is considered to be a mystery that needs to be taken apart
and analysed in order to be understood. In addition, one also has to bear in mind
that the violence of cutting up objects for study in this way in no way effects the
person who is studying them. Since this person, as a subject, is detached from the
objects of study and emotionally indifferent to them. However in Heidegger's
ontological paradigm, such distinctions collapse and therefore the assumptions
upon which are based also collapse.
HEIDEGGER'S DEFINITION
Heidegger argues, when we encounter entities in the world, we already address
ourselves to the question of their Being. This is meant in the sense of when a
child points at something and asking "what's that?" the gesture and the question
already implies that she is aware that there is a 'Being' there in need of a name.
Moreover, the "what's that" question also points to the fact that there is
'something' which is already distinguishable from the manifold of the world, in
other words which stands out from the rest in terms of its Being. According to
Heidegger, the action of addressing oneself to an entity's Being is what the
ancients understood by the term 'category'. Their use of category signifies
making a public accusation, in the sense of asking someone to account for their
actions in front of witnesses. When used ontologically, the term category has a
similar meaning - a kind of putting things on trial, but in this case what is made
to account for itself is the Being of entity itself. In other words, the particular
kind of language we use to determine a category lets everyone else see the object
in terms of its Being. When we use Language in this way it allows us to uncover
the "what's that?" of an object's Being that exists before it is named. The
Categories are therefore what are 'sighted' in words (the logos), which implies the
articulation of an explicit description of the Being of a given entity, rather than
the covering over of that Being of that entity with a name. [ref. ¶ 9, page 70]
Concern
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Covering up
1/ Hiddenness
In the sense that a phenomenon has not been discovered (in which case it is
neither known nor unknown).
2/ Burying
In the sense that a phenomenon can be buried over, i.e., it has been discovered
once, but has now lapsed back into obscurity. However, in this case, the burial is
hardly ever total. Something may still be visible if only as a semblance (but
nevertheless it is a semblance of the entity's Being).
3/ Disguise
In the sense that a phenomenon can be disguised as something else, with the
attendant possibilities of lies and deception which makes the discovery of the true
being of that phenomenon especially difficult.
ii/ Covering up which with the best of intentions gets 'lost in translation' when
immediate experience is represented in language.
In the latter case, the Being of the entity gets understood in an empty way
because its ownmost Being gets lost. [ref. ¶ 7, page 60 - 61]
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Dasein
Dasein is one of the core terms in Being and Time. It can be simply defined as
entity that is conscious of the meaning of its own existence. In practical terms,
this means the human being is Dasein, since, arguably, no other life-forms on the
planet are conscous of thier own existence. For example, it is argued that no other
animals buries their dead. Here are some passages which illustrate how
Heidegger's utilises the concept of Dasein.
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Dealings
De-severance
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[140] With the 'radio', for example, Dasein has so expanded its everyday
environment that it has accomplished a de-severance of the 'world' a de-
severance which, in its meaning for Dasein, is not yet visualised. De-severing
does not necessarily imply any explicit estimation of the farness of something
ready-to-hand in relation to Dasein. Above all, remoteness never gets taken as a
distance… We say that to go over yonder is "a good walk", "a stone's throw", or
'as long as it takes to smoke a pipe'. These measures express not only that they
are not intended to 'measure' anything but also that the remoteness here estimated
belongs to some entity to which one goes with concernful circumspection. …
What is ready-to-hand in the environment is certainly not present-at-hand for an
eternal observer exempt from Dasein: but it is encountered in Dasein's
circumspectively concernful everydayness. As Dasein goes along its ways, it
does not measure off a stretch of space as a corporeal Thing which is present-at-
hand; it does not 'devour the kilometres'; bringing-close or de-severance is
always a kind of concernful Being towards what is brought close and de-severed.
A pathway which is long 'Objectively' can be much shorter than one which is
'Objectively' shorter still but which is perhaps 'hard going' and comes [141]
before us' as interminably long. yet only in thus 'coming before us" is the current
world authentically ready-to-hand.… this knowledge is used only in and for a
concernful Being which does not measure stretches-a Being towards the world
that 'matters' to one.
Discourse
In the discourse, the 'that,' which is made manifest is discourse itself. This
underscores the fact that discourse is never a fiat (a fiat is an act of creation by
speaking, like in Genesis, Chapter 1, verse 3, when God said "let there be light"
and there was light). In reality however, the things one talks about are not
actually created or called into being merely by the talk. Discourse, in this sense,
is therefore 'just talk.' However, things which do not exist, (like ideas and myths)
can appear to be existent when announced in discourse, for example we can talk
of 'pink elephants' or 'pigs that fly'. In this sense discourse makes these things
manifest and seemingly real. For example, a person who is troubled by a problem
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is advised to get it out into the open by talking about it - "a problem shared is a
problem halved." But the reasoning behind such advice is predicated on a notion
that Heidegger is trying to articulate here. Namely that discourse objectifies
thoughts and presents them as things which show themselves and can therefore
be dealt with for straightforwardly as we deal with other existent things in the
world. [ref. ¶ 7, page 56]
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Entities
The term entities is used strategically throughout Being and Time, so that
Heidegger can avoid talking about "things". This is because the term "things"
already presupposes an understanding of their existence, which Heidegger thinks
is false and seeks to contest. As he points out, we are on dangerous ground even
by addressing entities as 'Things', for in doing so we have "tacitly anticipated
their ontological character". This was, in a nutshell, the mistake of Descartes and
his forebears. Heidegger argues if you talk about the world in terms of things, the
only "thing" you are ever going to uncover is the totally erroneous conception of
the "Thinghood and Reality." [ref. ¶ 15, page 95]
Environment
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Equipmentality
1. That the kind of Being which equipment has must be exhibitable in some way,
and
These assumptions will be our first clue in defining what turns an entity into an
item of equipment - in order to discover the entity's equipmentality. [ref. ¶ 15,
page 97]. However, we have to understand that in our dealing with equipment, its
equipmentality is not grasped thematically as a verb - we cannot understand what
a hammer does merely by miming the action of hammering in mid air, for to do
this would be to disregard the piece of wood, the nail, in other word, its
equipment structure.
Equipment Structure
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Everydayness
Exhibiting
Exhibiting is nothing else that the Being already at hand, in other words, the
being of existent things shows itself. Exhibiting is equivalent to our
understanding of Being as a "taking a look beforehand" - or the understanding we
take from things before we articulate that understanding back to ourselves as
thoughts [ref. ¶ 7, page 25] (see average everydayness). This 'showing' of
existence lies at the bottom of any procedure of addressing oneself to thoughts of
an entity, or in our discussing it. Additionally, in the context of apophantic
judgements, the logos in the mode of exhibiting can also become visible, in itself,
as a relation to something. [ref ¶ 7, page 58]. Exhibiting is absolutely necessary
for the for Heidegger's phenomenology, for to have such a science means to grasp
its objects in a way so that everything about them, which is up for discussion, is
both exhibited directly and demonstrated directly. [ref ¶ 7, page 59]
Existentiale (Existentalia)
Existentalia (plural) are certain characteristics of Dasein that are revealed by the
analysis of its existence. In Heideggerian terms, an existentiale (singular)
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concerns Dasein's residing alongside the world and its involvement with entities
within the world which is always expresses in terms of care and concern [ref. ¶
12, page 82]. Normally, if we were analysing anything entity other than Dasein
we would use the term category. But Heidegger forbids this, because Dasein is
not like any other entity (Dasein is, in fact, the ground upon which the perception
and conception of everything else rests) and therefore Dasein needs to be
analysed in a different way to other entities. The existence structure of Dasein
must be defined existentially. Heidegger therefore wants his 'existentalia' to be
sharply distinguished from the concept of 'category,' as it is ordinarily understood
[ref. ¶ 9, page 70]. 'Existentalia' and 'category' are the two basic possibilities for
characters of Being. The entities that correspond to them are these...
1/ Existentialia = Dasein
It is important to realise that these two terms require different kinds of primary
interrogation. In other words, any entity that is either a 'who' (existence) or a
'what' (present-at-hand) is treated differently. [ref. ¶ 9, page 71]
Using the existentiale we may discern some notable patterns in the manifold
impressions of Being. These patterns can be articulated into principles with
which we can define (broadly) the phenomenological manifestations of the Being
of Dasein. This is systematising and in this sense the existentiale is a conceptual
tool which allows us to form a certain hypotheses which also have a legislative
function qua Being. In other words, these hypotheses concerning the structure of
Being in general can be used to make predictions. Thus, the functions of the
existentiale (both systematising and legislative) are similar to the functions of the
traditional category in philosophy. Where they differ however is in the
philosophical assumptions one has to take on board before one applies them. [ref.
¶ 12, page 82]
Existentiell
For an individual Dasein, the question of existence never gets clarified except
through existing. The understanding of oneself that we acquire along the way
Heidegger calls "Existentiell". [ref. ¶ 4, page 33]
Extential
The question of existence is close to Dasein, but this does not mean that Dasein is
necessarily conscious of the question of existence. But the structuring of the
question "What is Being?" points the way for the formal analysis of what
constitutes existence. The context of such structuring we call "Existentality". But
its analytic has the character of an understanding which is not extentiell, i.e.
structure plus content. But extential: structure minus content. [ref. ¶ 4, page 33]
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Existentiality
The word existentiality is derived from existential, i.e., the formal understanding
of Being in general . By "existentiality" we understand the state of Being that is
constitutive for those entities that exist. But the idea of such a constitutive state
of Being already includes Being as its core component. And this is the reason
why we are prevented in working out the general answer to the question, "What
is Being?" before the question itself has been answered. [ref. ¶ 4, page 33]
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-F-
Factically
A Heideggerian term for which we can usually substitute "in fact" [ref. ¶ 2, page
27], but which also references the concept of facticity.
Facticity
Facticity is a term which stands for a definite way of Being, and it has a
complicated structure which cannot even be grasped by people who have a naive
ontological understanding. The concept of "facticity" implies that an entity
'within-the world' has Being-in-the-world so that it can understand itself and its
Being-in. That is it understands itself, as if it is bound up in its 'destiny' with the
Being of those entities which it encounters within the world.
The facticity of facts like the Beingness of being underscores the point that there
is a reflexive component to existence as I have already mentioned. This is
something which points to the existence of an interpreter, "myself," who is bound
up in the apprehending of the world and the self. In traditional philosophy the
adoption of the paradigm of objectivism makes us miss the fact that the
interpreter (subject) and interpreted (object) are bound up together in their Being.
Moreover, the traditional 'objective' paradigm denigrates the role of the
interpreter, because its perceptions of the world are described as being "merely
subjective".
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In Heidegger's ontological paradigm, however, the subject does not exist and
therefore there cannot be any subjectivity either. Although this is not to say
Dasein is not prone to error in perceiving the world, for that would deny the
ability of the world to surprise Dasein. Rather, what Heidegger's is saying, is that
there can be no facts that exist independent of people perceiving them as such.
[ref. ¶ 12, page 82]
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-G-
Grasping
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-H-
Hermeneutics
Therefore, in order to sort out the covering up of language from the truth of
language, we need a method of interrogating language which is both systematic
and reflexive enough to hopefully alert us to any potential covering ups. This
method is what Heidegger calls, "hermeneutics," or the business of interpretation.
As Heidegger asserts - our investigation will show that the meaning of
phenomenological description, as a method, lies in interpretation. It is therefore
through hermeneutics, as a systematising approach to interpreting, that the
authentic meaning of Being can be articulated. Language, in the form of words
(logos), when it represents the phenomenology of Dasein, always has the
character of hermeneutics. [ref. ¶7, page 61 - 62] There are three points about this
to bear in mind.
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simply and most primordially as the business of interpreting (although see point 3
for more clarification).
Because of the priority of Dasein over other entities for working out the
question of Being, it follows that, through the hermeneutics of Dasein, the
horizon for any further a ontological study will be revealed.
The ontical condition for the possibility of historiology contains the roots of
what can be called 'hermeneutic' only in its vaguest sense. When we think about
this in the context of the derivative sense of the methodology of those human
sciences which are historiological in character, it becomes clear that unless we
can articulate a hermeneutic of Dasein's historicity in an ontological way, it is not
a true hermaneutic. This reiterates the point that Hermeneutics when applied to
Dasein does not mean interpretation, in the sense that the two terms are precisely
synonymous, but rather that Hermeneutics should be consideres as a "science of
interpretation" in that it systematises the interpretation using a conscious method.
[ref. ¶7, page 61 - 62]
Historicality
Dasein, in terms of its my to be, is always orientated in its Being towards the
future. Being is always in this sense a "to be". But the concept of Historicity also
implies that Dasein views its future possibilities and potentialities as being a
territory which is delineated in terms of past experience and, moreover, this is
Heidegger claims actually where the notion of "past" comes from. [ref. ¶ 6, page
41]. In other words, past experiences are what set the boundaries for future hopes
and dreams. This is why the notion of the past is so important for Dasein. It takes
on an urgency because it is actually constitutive of Dasein's "to be." In this sense,
the notion of the past does not exist for us in the sense of being something 'dead
and buried'.
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Histrocity (Histrology)
A type of inquiry through which Dasein can discover its Historicality. Histrology
means the explicit study and preserving of tradition. The study of tradition can be
taken hold of as a task in its own right. In this way, Dasein inquires into its
history, but this kind of inquiring is only possible because historicality is in fact a
determining characteristic for Dasein itself [ref. ¶ 6, page 41—42].
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-I-
Inauthenticity
Inness
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person conjugation of the verb "to be"), This word is derived from the German
"ann" (again discussed in Grimm). 'Ann' is from the Latin colo, which also means
habitare - in other words the "an" (in English "am") has a similar meaning to
"inn". Ontologically speaking, habitare stands for "being accustomed" in the
sense of "I am familiarity with" and "I look after.... something'. [ref. ¶ 12, Page
82]
Interrogating
Investigating
-J-
-K-
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-L-
Logos
In ancient Greek, Logos meant "words," but in its modern conception, logos is
taken to mean words in the sense of language generally. There has been much
debate in modern philosophy as to whether the function of language is to name a
pre-existing reality or actually forms our conceptions of reality itself (see
Saussure, Wittgenstein etc). Heidegger's position in this debate is unusual in the
sense that he deliberately positions himself outside of a dualistic conception of
language vs. reality. Heidegger asserts rather that Language and reality, (by
which he means the phenomenal conception of things as being present in
themselves) should be conceived simply as different things. Language is itself a
phenomenon (possesses its own Being) which is different from the Being of the
phenomena it describes. However, the purpose of language is to grasp
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phenomena in the world, and language's ability to do this (is other words its
fidelity to things in the world themselves) is not really questioned or
problematised in Heidegger's analysis in the way that it is in, say, Wittgenstein's.
The function of the logos is simply letting something be seen, and for this reason
logos can itself signify reason. Moreover, because the logos is used, not only
with the signification of grasping (perception), but also as something which is
exhibited (showing), the logos can signify that the thing to which one addresses
oneself becomes visible in itself in the address. Logos, thus, acquires the
signification of both a relation and a relationship. This relationship and relation
are self supporting in the sense that one does not have to compare them to
anything else in order to perceive them. Heidegger therefore considers the
primary function of the logos is to exhibit the kind of relationships present in
apophantic discourse. [ref ¶ 7, page 58]
Even using the phenomenological method it is possible that entities which are
primordially within our grasp may become hardened into concepts that cover up
the presence of the entity. If this happens, the entity is no longer grasped in and
for itself, and therefore becomes an appearance of that entity. Heidegger points
out that this is the difficulty with this type of research, there is always the need to
be mindful of the possibility that language will cover up the Being of
phenomena, or has done so already, and thus phenomenologyical method must
always be self critical and interrogative. [ref ¶ 7, page 61]
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-M-
Mere appearance
Mere appearance is something that indicates the existence of that which does not
in fact appear, and never will appear. For instance, Kant's notion that space is
purely an idea is for Heidegger a mere appearence (see spatiality). This sense of
appearance can be defined as being tantamount to the "bringing forth" of
something which does not in fact constitute the real being of an entity. This then
is appearance in the sense of "mere appearance". In the case of mere appearance,
that which announces itself can be likened to an emanation of what it announces,
but in all cases the thing which is being announced is kept constantly veiled by
the announcement. [ref. page 53] However Heidegger asserts that, in every case,
the phenomenological conception of phenomena can be brought to show itself.
[ref. ¶ 7, page 54 - 55]
Mere semblance
See semblance
Mineness
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The Being of Dasein is the Being of each human individual. Thus for the
individual 'Dasein' we can say that the Being under investigation is in each case
mine As the translators of Being and Time note the reader must not get the
impression that there is anything solipsistic about this statement. Heidegger is
merely pointing out that the kind of Being which belongs to Dasein is the kind of
Being that each and every one of us relates to in terms our concept of the self.
This means that Dasein never thinks about Being in an abstract way, (that is a
mere appearance) but rather Being is delivered over to Dasein as an "I myself
am." In other words, when we talk of Dasein: your Being, his Being, her Being,
their Being, our Being is fundamentally understood in terms of my Being. [ref. ¶
9, page 67]
To designate Dasein, the personal pronouns "I" and "you" will always be used
and likewise, when Dasein is addressed, Heidegger will always say, "I am" or
"you are." Dasein is never to be taken as an instance or special case of some
entity (or genus of entities) which is present-at-hand because this would violate
the principle that Being is wholeness. In our pre-ontological understanding of our
ownmost Being, this fact is grasped before any other precepts can be inferred
and, for this reason, it cannot be violated retrospectively and cut up into
categorical distinctions like it is in traditional analysis. On the other hand, a kind
of categorisation is approapriate to the Being of entities that are not Dasein,
because their Being is a matter of indifference to them. [ref. ¶ 9, page 67-68]
Mood
[173] States-of-mind are so far from being reflected upon, that precisely what
they do is to assail Dasein in its unreflecting devotion to the 'world.' [176] A
mood assails us. It comes neither from 'outside' nor from 'inside', but arises out of
Being-in-the-world, as a way of such Being. Having a mood is not related to the
psychical and is not itself an inner condition which then reaches forth in an
enigmatical way and puts its mark on Things and persons. The mood has already
disclosed, in every case, Being-in-the-world as a whole, and makes it possible
first of all to direct towards something. [173] This is shown by bad moods. In
these, Dasein becomes blind to itself,' the environment with which it is concerned
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veils itself, the circumspection of concern gets led astray. Factically, Dasein can,
should, and must, through knowledge and will, become master of its moods. In
certain possible ways of existing, this may signify a priority of volition and
cognition. Only we must not be misled by this into denying that ontologically
mood is a primordial kind of Being for Dasein, in which Dasein is disclosed to
itself prior to all cognition and volition, and beyond their range of disclosure.
When we master a mood, we do so by way of a counter-mood; we are never free
of moods. In having a mood, Dasein is disclosed moodwise as that entity to
which it has been delivered over in its Being; having a mood brings Being to its
"there.”... However, to be disclosed" does not mean that the “there” is a known
destination: the pure 'that it is' shows might itself, but the "whence" and the
"whither" remain in darkness. (see thrownness)
When addressing Dasein, the personal pronouns: "I", "you" and "us" should
always be used (see Mineness), But in addition, we also need to be aware that
when a particular Dasein talks about Being, it is in each case "my Being".
However by saying "my Being," Heidegger is not implying that Being is a
property of Dasein, in the sense of designating one's ownership over one's Being.
But rather, Being is that from which Dasein is itself constituted [ref. ¶ 4, page
32]. Being, therefore, has 'belonged' to Dasein long before Dasein could think
about notions of ownership.
-N-
Nature
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-O-
Ontic (ontical)
Ontic inquiries are concerned with knowledge about entities that are not Dasein.
[ref. ¶ 3, page 30] In traditional philosophy, this can be conceived as as seeking
"facts about things." The term 'ontic' is used throughout Being and Time in a
more technical sense to distinguish Heidegger's assumptions about the Being of
entities from the paradigmatic assumptions underpinning traditional philosophy.
Thus, ontic is a way or articularing Dasein's understanding of the entities that are
not Dasein, but nevertheless matter to Dasein, as entities Dasein is concerned
with [ref. ¶ 4, page 32] (see also category, Being-alongside, care.)
Ontology
Onto-Ontological
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Ownmost
In the context of the human Being, our ownmost Being is the inner-
consciousness that constitutes the 'meness of me'. In the context of Being in
general it is however its most primordial and authentic aspect. Therefore "own",
when used in the sense that it is use here, is not meant as "belonging to Dasein",
that is to say it is "a property of," but rather it is something fundamentally
constitutive of the Being of Dasein itself. [ref. ¶ 4, page 32]
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-P-
Phenomena (phenomenon)
The ancient Greek expression phenomenon is derived from the verb "to show
itself". To show itself, in ancient Greek, also connoted "bringing something to the
light". In this sense, phenomenon signifies, "that which shows itself in itself."
This signification of phenomenon alludes to the fact that an entity can show itself
for itself in many ways, depending on the kind of access we have to it. Indeed it
is even possible for an entity to show itself as something it is not. The use of the
term "phenomena" is restricted in Heidegger's usage to designate only those
things that show themselves for themselves. Other forms of showing are given
the terms seeming and appearing . [ref. ¶ 7, Page 51]
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Heidegger supplies a few general pointers for how we should proceed towards a
formal conception of phenomena:
Being is not the Being of this or that entity, but the Being of all entities [ref. ¶ 2.
page 25]. However, this truth can be easily forgotten. However, when Being of
entities is treated phenomenologically its ownmost Being is revealed, and thus its
fundamental characteristics are revealed. In fact these are the very characteristics
that phenomenology attempts to grasp thematically as its object.
This is precisely why Heidegger argues that his investigation requires the
phenomenological method. Put succinctly, the phenomenological method
uncovers that which, proximally and for the most part, remains hidden in the
investigations of traditional philosophy. [ref. ¶ 7, page 54 - 55]
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primordial sense. The fact that phenomenology (as the science of phenomena)
seeks to question the self-evidential qualities of entities, also implies that it is
prepared to cast light upon the its own processes of investigation. Thus the
expression phenomenology signifies primarily a methodological conception, not
of the 'what ' an object is, but of the 'how' of the research - i.e., how do we form
an understanding which constitutes the 'what' of an object? [ref. ¶ 7, page 49 - 51]
Phenomenology designates neither the 'object matter' nor the 'subject matter' of
its study. The signification of phenomenon, as conceived of both formally and in
the manner in which it is ordinarily encountered, is such that any exhibiting of an
entity, as it shows itself in itself, may be called phenomenology. This neither
implies nor confirms a subject/object relation assumed by logic. In fact, such
dualistic distinctions collapse under the scrutiny of the phenomenological
method. This means that phenomenology (as a science of things) is intrinsically
different from the all the other sciences who designate their objects of study
according to their subject-matter.
To have a science of phenomena means to grasp its objects in such a way that
everything about them, which is up for discussion, must be treated by exhibiting
it directly and demonstrating it directly [ref. ¶ 7, page 59]. The way in which
Being and its structures are encountered in the mode of phenomenon is one
which must first of all be wrested from the objects of phenomenology. This is
actually the point of departure for the phenomenological inquiry. This places the
phenomenological method in direct opposition to a naive sense of immediately
and unreflectively beholding. [ref. ¶ 7, page 61]
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This uncovered- ness is confirmed when that which is put forward in the
assertion (namely the entity itself) shows itself 'as that very same thing.
"confirmation" signifies the entity's showing itself in its selfsameness. The
confirmation is accomplished on the basis of the entity's showing itself. This is
possible only in such a way that the knowing which asserts and which gets
confirmed is, in its ontological meaning, itself a Being towards Real entities, and
a Being that uncovers. To say that an assertion "is true" signifies that it uncovers
the entity as it is in itself. Such an assertion asserts, points out, 'lets' the entity 'be
seen' in its uncoveredness. The Being-true (truth) of the assertion must be
understood as Being-uncovering. Thus truth has by no means the structure of an
agreement between knowing and the object in the sense of a likening of one
entity (the subject) to another (the Object). Being-true as Being-uncovering) is in
turn ontologically possible only on the basis of Being-in-the-world. This latter
phenomenon, which we have known as a basic state of Dasein, is the foundation
for the primordial phenomenon of truth.
[283] Indisputably, the fact that one Dasein can be represented by another
belongs to its possibilities of Being in Being-with-one-another in the world. In
everyday concern, constant and manifold use is made of such represent-ability.
Whenever we go anywhere or have anything to contribute, we can be represented
by someone within the range of that 'environment' with which we are most
closely concerned. The great multiplicity of ways of Being-in-the-world in which
one person can be represented by another, not only extends to the more refined
modes of publicly being with one another, but is likewise germane to those
possibilities of concern which are restricted within definite ranges, and which are
cut to the measure of one's occupation, one's social status, or one's age. But the
very meaning of such representation is such that it is always a representation 'in'
something--that is to say, in concerning oneself with something. But proximally
and for the most part everyday Dasein understands itself in terms of that with
which it is customarily concerned. 'One is' what one does. In relation to this sort
of Being (the everyday manner in which we join with one another in absorption
in the 'world' of our concern) representability is not only quite possible but is
even constitutive for our [284] being with one another. Here one Dasein can and
must, within certain limits, 'be' another Dasein. However, this possibility of
representing breaks down completely if the issue is one of representing that
possibility-of-Being which makes up Dasein's coming to an end, and which, as
such, gives to it its wholeness. No one can take the Other's dying away from him.
Of course someone can 'go to his death for another'. But that always means to
sacrifice oneself for the Other 'in some definite affair'. Such "dying for" can
never signify that the Other has thus had his death taken away in even the
slightest degree. Dying is something that every Dasein itself must take upon itself
at the time.
Philosophy
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Praxis
Heidegger notes that praxis was the Greeks term for things (when pertaining to
our concernful dealings with them). But he remarks also that the Greeks left
undisclosed their specifically 'pragmatic' character, instead, thinking of them
more concretely as 'mere Things.' This is why Heidegger notion of
equipmentality and of assignments is not expressed in terms of praxis [ref. ¶ 14,
Page 96 - 97].
Pre ontological
Presence
The Being of entities can only truly be grasped in the present. Once we attempt to
re-present the immediacy of Being in through the mediation of language, the
'present' of an entity, becomes instead a 'presence' in language. However, this
conception of representation verses reality does not imply the usual critique of
representation found in modern epistemologies, such as semiotics. The semiotic
paradigm criticises 'mimesis', (or the Platonic idea that language and art is an
imitation of reality) as naive because it ignores the fact that things in the world
do not tell us what they are, in fact we have to invent names for them and
semioticians argue that the idea of the thing only emerges after it had been named
[see Saussure: 1983, 114]. But Heidegger does not seek to alert us to the
epistemological problems of 'presence' being a copy or otherwise of the 'present',
instead he merely emphasises that the two differ in terms of their Being.
However, this ontological distinction does not necessarily cast doubt on the
fidelity of language to represent reality.
The ancients, interpreted Being as orientated out towards the world and towards
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In the ontology of the ancients, existent entities--the kinds of things that one
simply comes across in the world such as rocks plants and animals--are taken as
the basic exemplers for the interpretation of Being. The ancients grasp this Being
of entities in the form of words. And this is considered the acceptable way to
grasp entities. But Heidegger cautions that the Being of those entities must be
grasped in a certain way, that is to say in a certain type of speech that lets
something be seen. This is the only way that the Being of a given entity can
become intelligible to us. The sighting of an entity in words also means that it
can have a kind of presence which can be recalled by language to stand for the
object in circumstances where the object itself is no longer present. This presence
can also be talked about, say, when we wish to interpret the object by elaborating
upon some aspect of it that was not apparent in the initial sighting. We can do this
because the original sighting in language has a fidelity to its object which can be
elaborated upon, so that aspects that were initally not remarked upon can be
legitimately discussed, even without the object being directly present. [ref. ¶ 9,
page 70],
Present-at-Hand
Heidegger's term for something that exists. There are three kinds of presence-at-
hand identified so far:
Primordial
Productive Logic
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example, in biology the concept of "life" defines all biological inquiries as well
as its fundamental categories. All positive investigation in the sciences is in face
guided by this principle. Here, the work of Plato and Aristotle is evidence enough
of how a systematic logic was elaborated, which later became the basis of the
scientific method. This laying the foundations can be described as a productive
logic, in Heidegger's words, it "leaps ahead into some area of Being and discloses
it for the first time." A productive logic is what gives us the conceptual tools to
understand certain things, which we might not have perceived had this systematic
way of looking at things not informed our understanding beforehand. In this
sense, the idea of a productive logic is akin to appreciating the advantages of a
systematic way of looking at things, as opposed to a more ad hoc approach. One
the appreciation of a systematic methodology is realised and formalised into a
scientific method. Real scientific progress is made because the systematic
(logical) approach is conducive to forming a cumulative understanding of
knowledge. This is an understanding to which each new discovery contributes to
[ref. ¶ 4, Page 32].
Proximate (Proximately)
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-Q-
Questioning
Heidegger defines questioning as "a cognisant seeking for an entity both with
regard to the fact that it is and with regard to its Being as it is." Heidegger
reminds us that the 'question of Being' is not just any question, it is the question,
in the sense that it belongs to every other question. To understand the question,
"What is Being?", we must uncover the commonalties in every question, so that
what is peculiar about questioning can be made transparent. Every inquiry is
seeking and the journey of seeking is guided beforehand by what is sought. [ref.
¶ 2, page 24 - 25]
-R-
Ready-to-Hand (Readiness-to-Hand)
The kind of Being which equipment possesses and the way in which it manifests
itself, Heidegger calls 'Readiness-to-Hand.' Readiness to hand does not merely
occur in the act of using equipment. But rather, equipment is only manipulatable
in the first place because it has this kind of 'Being, in itself'. However the
readiness-to-hand of an entity which leads us to consider it as a piece equipment
is only discovered by using it - never beforehand. This is the paradoxical nature
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of equipment, for no matter how long and diligently we stare at its outward
appearance, we will never be able to discover anything ready-to-hand about a
piece of equipment unless we actually take it up and use it. For example, it is
only when we take up a hammer, in order to hammer, that our primordial
relationship to the hammer's equipmentality becomes apparent . The act of
hammering itself (and the context in which this action occurs) is therefore what
uncovers the specific 'manipulability' of the hammer.
Resource Structure
Related to the notions of equipment structures and work and product structures is
resource structure. The work to be produced is not merely usable for something.
The production itself is a using of something for something (The work of the
tailor is the use of the equipment structures of tailoring to produce a shoe).
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-S-
Science
Heidegger employs the term science to designate any discipline engaged in the
systematic study of phenomena, not just the hard sciences. [ref. ¶ 3, page 29]
Science in general (that is science abstracted from any particular content) may be
provisionally defined as "the totally established through an interconnection of
true propositions." Although this definition does not really approach the true
meaning of science. As ways in which man behaves, sciences have the meaning
of Being which this entity—Man himself—possesses. [ref. ¶ 4, page 32]
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Semblance (Seeming)
Phenomenon announces itself through appearance which shows itself, but such
appearance can also take the variant form of 'mere semblance (deception). A
person can fake an illness, for example by coughing and sniffing. The appearance
of these symptoms announces the existence (the Being present-at-hand) of that
which isn't really there. [ref. ¶ 7, Page 54]
Spatiality
We will not be able to discover the world, if we take the view that the world has
spatiality as its grounding a priori condition, but rather spatiality itself can only
be discovered when we have first fixed the concept of worldhood in our minds.
This statement can be read as a critique of the transcendental aesthetic of Kant,
which regards space and time as being primary forms of pure knowledge. For
instance Kant asserted, by means of the external sense we represent to ourselves
objects as without us, and all of these are in space. Herein alone are their shape,
dimensions, and relations to each other determined or determinable. [Kant 1993,
p 49].
[421] The world is not present-at-hand in space; yet only within a world does
space let itself be discovered. The ecstatical temporality of the spatiality that is
characteristic of Dasein, makes it intelligible that space is independent of time;
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but on the other hand, this same temporality also makes intelligible Dasein's
'dependence' on space-a 'dependence' which manifests itself in the well-known
phenomenon that both Dasein's interpretation of itself and the whole stock of
significations which belong to language in general are ‘dominated through and
through by 'spatial representations'. This priority of the spatial in the Articulation
of concepts and significations has its basis not in some specific power which
space possesses, but in Dasein's kind of Being. Temporality is essentially falling,
and it loses itself in making present j not only does it understand itself
circumspectively in terms of objects of concern which are ready-at-hand, but
from those spatial relationships which making-present is constantly meeting in
the ready-to-hand as having presence, it takes its clues for Articulating that which
has been understood and can be interpreted in the understanding in general.
Subject
On page 72 of Being and Time, Heidegger makes a plea for our indulgence
concerning his obtuse use of language. He pleads that he is not being
"terminologically arbitrary" when he avoids using traditional grammatical forms
to explain his philosophy. The reason for this is he wants to get away from
conceptions of 'subject' and 'object', but unfortunately these conceptions are
already so inscribed in language that they schematise our thoughts into certain
patterns, which Heidegger wants to contest and overthrow. Ontologically every
idea of a 'subject'--unless refined by a previous logical determination of its basic
character--still posits what maybe called in Scholastic language the subjectum
(which Heidegger translates as "Being-already-at-hand"). This notion of the
subject possesses an what might be called "an essence," no matter how many
vigorous ontical protestations the advocates of this doctrine care to make against
the "soul substance" or the "reification of consciousness" etc. Heidegger argues
that such reification always going to happen in the arena of language - where
every Being becomes a "thing" and every thing becomes a name. In this
paradigm, Dasein becomes "I" and the world becomes a collection of predicates
which lie always outside of the "I". Only by using the phenomenological method
can the ontological origin of these terms be demonstrated and can this dogma be
contested. However such knowledge is certainly not available to any logical
proof (since logic itself is predicated on grammar and on language and these
ways of understanding the world and ourselves have already cut Being out of the
equation!) So if we are to manoeuvre ourselves into a position from where we
can ask the question, "What do we understand positively when with think of this
unreified Being that we have hitherto considered to be the subject, soul,
consciousness, spirit, person, etc?" we must do two things:
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2/ Be aware that this method cannot be employed unless we first take on board
the idea that the Being of these entities is what is being designated and not the
'thingness' of them.
[366] (ref Kant) The 'I' is a bare consciousness. accompanying all concepts. In
the 'I', 'nothing more is represented than a transcendental subject of thoughts'.
'Consciousness in itself (is) not so much a representation . . . as it is a form of
representation in general. The 'I think' is 'the form of apperception, which clings
to every experience and precedes it' ....[367] The subjectum is therefore
'consciousness in itself', not a representation but rather the 'form' of
representation. That is to say, the "I think" is not something represented, but the
formal structure of representing as such, and this formal structure alone makes it
possible for anything to have been represented. When we speak of the "form" of
representation, we have in view neither a framework nor a universal concept, but
that which, as [idea], makes every representing and everything represented be
what it is. If the "I" is understood as the form of representation, this amounts to
saying that it is the 'logical subject'.
Synthesis
Synthesis in the traditional logical sense is the positive result of the dialectic
between thesis and antithesis. In this context, synthesis means comparing one
proposition with another and arriving at a concluding judgement as to the
strengths and weaknesses of each. However Heidegger has a different conception
of synthesis where "everything depends on steering clear of any conception of
truth which is construed in the sense of being an agreement." The Being-true-of-
language derives its truth from saying as uncovering, that is the entities which
one is talking about must be taken out of their hiddenness in language. It is only
because the structure of language is uncovering, of letting something be seen that
the logos can have the structure of synthesis. This has nothing to do with their
being related to something else.
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For the Greeks (and Heidegger as well) truth (alethéia) means perceiving- i.e.,
the sheer sensory perception of something as true [ref. ¶ 7, page 57]. This can be
contrasted with Heidegger's definition of appearance, as denoting a relationship
between phenomena, which is always based on a referral of some kind or
another. The phenomenon of appearance also shows itself, but its Being is always
a reference masking some other kind of Being. [ref. ¶ 7, page 54]
When something no longer takes the form of just letting something be seen, but
is always harking back to something else, it thus acquires a synthesis-structure,
and with this is born the possibility of covering up [ref. ¶ 7, page 57].
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Temporality
Temporal determinateness
Temporal determinateness can be defined as that state in which Being and its
modes and characteristics have their meaning determined primordially.
Thrownness
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rather than something that merely exists (Heidegger, 1980, pp. 172-3).
Time
Time is primordially the horizon of the understanding of Being. Time exists as the
Being of Dasein, which understands itself through temporality.
The above italicised conception of time must be differentiated from the way time
is ordinarily understood. Here we must make it clear that the problem with this
'ordinary understanding of time' is that it has emerged out of temporality itself,
and moreover it is blind to this fact. Therefore Heidegger's task in his analysis is
to give his conception of time a sense of autonomy. [ref. ¶ 5, page 39]
[462] The manner in which the time we have 'allowed' 'runs its course', and the
way in which concern more or less explicitly assigns itself that time, can be
properly explained as phenomena only if, on the one hand, we avoid [463] the
theoretical 'representation' of a Continuous stream of "nows", and if, on the other
hand, the possible ways in which Dasein assigns itself time and allows itself time
are to be conceived of as determined primarily in terms of flow Dasein., in a
manner corresponding to its current existence, 'has' its time. In an earlier passage
authentic and inauthentic existing nave been characterized with regard to those
modes of the temporalizing of temporality upon which such existing is founded.
According to that characterization, the irresoluteness of inauthentic existence
temporalizes itself in the mode of a making-present which does not await but
forgets. He who is irresolute understands himself in terms of those very closest
events and be-fallings which he encounters in such a making-present and which
thrust themselves upon him in varying ways. Busily losing himself in the object
of his concern, he loses his time in it too. Hence his characteristic way of
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The work which we chiefly encounter in our concernful dealings has an essential
usability which belongs to it. The usability of work is that which allows us to
encounter (already) the "towards-which" for which the tool is usable. This is a
convoluted way of saying the meaning of the tool is only discovered in its use,
and in the wider context of what it is used for. A piece of equipment, therefore, is
definable only by its use (working with it) because this is where the assignment
context of entities (the equipment structure) is revealed. [ref. ¶ 15, page 99]
Tradition
Dasein in its average everydayness tends to fall back on upon the world that it is
in, and it interprets this world in terms of a reflected light, which means that it
simultaneously falls prey to a tradition. When tradition is seen as an immutable
edifice, opportunities for self guidance are blocked in the fundamental senses of
Dasein's inquiring and choosing. This is also true in respect of the way Dasein
understanding itself. The possibilities of developing that understanding, or
making it transparent ontologically, are therefore blocked by the dogma of
tradition.
When tradition becomes master, what it transmits seems to become distant so that
that information can no longer be grasped immediately. Therefore it is, in effect,
concealed. Tradition takes what has come down to us and treats it as self-evident.
This self-evident aspect blocks our access to the primordial sources from which
the categories and concepts of tradition have themselves emerged.
Dasein has had its historicity so thoroughly uprooted by tradition that it clings to
its axioms of received wisdom, if only to veil the fact that it has no grounds of its
own to stand on.
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Tradition differs from historicality because the latter is a fact of our being while
the latter can be imposed from outside. Tradition is received wisdom, it involves
some mediation. The facts presented by tradition are never grasped proximately
and in themselves, in fact tradition acts as a mask, covering these fact. In the case
of Dasein's historicity, this is something that is so much a part of Dasein that it is
constitutive of it. Yet an individual Dasein may not even be aware of the
authentic facts of its historicity. Presumably because it may be blinded by the
inauthentic facts of some tradition of other.
Transparent
Truth
For the Greeks (and Heidegger as well) truth (alethéia) means perceiving - i.e.,
the sheer sensory perception of something as true [ref. ¶ 7, page 57].
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Wholeness
Unlike other kinds of analysis, which are premised on cutting up objects up and
piecing them together again in new configurations, the structure of Dasein's
understanding is primordially (and constantly) a whole and will remain so.
However we are afforded various ways of looking at this 'wholeness' by
highlighting certain items which are constitutive of it. In other words, while we
should continually emphasise a) that the structure of Being in the world is
wholeness and b) that it comes before the appreciation of discreet phenomena,
we will find by using the phenomenological method of investigation that we can
show how certain items can be made to stand out [Part 1, Division 1 introduction,
page 65].
If we are to begin in the right way, this cannot mean that "Dasein" is to be
construed in terms of some concrete idea of existence, no matter how
provisionally that idea may be cast. At the outset it is particularly important that
Dasein should not be interpreted with the differentiated character of something
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which has some definite way of existing, but that it should be uncovered in its
undifferentiated character [ref. ¶ 8, page 65].
Heidegger argues that the way to discover "what man is," is not to categorise 'his'
surface attributes but to grasp the essential being in its wholeness [ref. ¶ 9, page
71].
Work
Dasein does not proximally dwell with the tools themselves , but with the work
the tools do. And because a piece of equipment always conceals an equipment
structure, it implies also that work bears with it that referential totality within
which the equipment is encountered. The work to be produced by the hammer,
Heidegger conceives of as the towards-which of the hammer. And this is what
has the kind of Being that belongs to equipment. Equipment is never an end in
itself. The end product of the labours of the tailor is not just a shoe, because the
shoe itself is produced for wearing; similarly, the clock is manufactured for
telling the time. And, as is clear in these examples, the towards which, although it
is a product of the work done, does not have to be a product solely in a material
sense. [ref. ¶ 15, page 99]
World
Historically, philosophical inquiries into the Being of the world have been
articulated in two sorts of conceptions, which have led to two sets of arguments:
Therefore, the conceptual choice people have faced in the past is either to deny
the world's phenomenological existence, or to describe it in metaphysical terms
(effectively mystifying it). In Heidegger's opinion, both theses views are
mistaken, precisely because they are grounded in the flawed paradigm of
traditional ontology, which privileges an objective view of the world. So, it is
perhaps not surprising that philosophers working in this tradition have developed
no concepts, nor any arguments to adequately describe the world as a
phenomenon. Consequently, despite a plethora of theories that attempt to account
for the phenomenon known as the world, none can account for the extra surplus
quality that the world seemingly has. The aim of Heidegger's analysis is to show
how these problem disappear, when the world is looked at ontologically.
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interpretation of their Being (in terms of examining only the entities we value) is
completely up to the task of describing the phenomenon that is "the world." The
problem is this notion of 'things'. No doubt then we will have to get away from
this tendency of objectifying entities within the world and focus on some other
aspect of their being.
Perhaps we should approach this inquiry from a different direction and ask
ourselves if it possible to address ourselves to the phenomenon of world,' directly
in terms of its being the determinate for the ontological meaning for all of the
entities within the world, and not just something which is determined by them as
hitherto assumed. As Heidegger points out, we always refer to things as being
"within-the-world", does this not suggest that we have a pre-ontological
understanding of a notion of the world, as coming before the notion of the things
which are manifest within it? In this case, rather than trying to escape the framing
problem, we would be embracing it? The world after all turns out to be the frame
our inquiry into the world. But the question remains, how is possible to describe
the world? The answer to this question is that in fact the world is not the ultimate
frame within which everything is conceived because the world also needs a
Being to perceive it, i.e. Dasein. Therefore approach would also involve us
having to concede that the 'world' is, in fact, also a part of Dasein's Being, i.e.,
something which dwells alongside Dasein in the same way that the entities of the
world dwell alongside Dasein [ref. ¶12, page 80].
However, if the latter contention is taken seriously, would it not imply that every
particular Dasein 'proximally' dwells within its own world? In other words, that
each Dasein's conception of the world as a phenomenon is ultimately going to be
a subjective one. If this is true, it is problematic because if the world is ultimately
subjective, how could there also be a 'common' world 'in' which all of Dasein all
collectively dwell? Resolving this paradox is going to be one of the major themes
of this inquiry.
Thus, to describe the 'world' phenomenologically will mean to exhibit the Being
of those entities which are present-at-hand within the world, and, in addition to
this, to fix that Being in concepts which are categorical.
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resource and product structures, that is to say, in things ready to hand. Yet only
by reason of something present-at-hand, 'is there' anything ready-to-hand. But
even if we join all the structures of readiness to hand we can think of, we still do
not get anything like the 'world' as their sum. Is there any avenue that will lead us
to exhibiting the phenomenon of the world? [ref. ¶ 15, 102]
Worldhood
Ontologically speaking, when we raise the question of the world, the object of
the inquiry is neither the objective world of collective experience, nor is it the
subjective world personal experience, but rather the worldhood of the world as
such. Worldhood therefore needs to be understood an umbrella term that
embraces the sense of the world that both is determinate and determines all the
other significations and modalities of the world. As Heidegger has already
pointed out (ref.), Being-in-the-world is the way in which Dasein's character can
be defined existentially. In this sense, worldhood, like the Being-in Heidegger
examined (re. part 1 division 2), must likewise exist as an existentiale.
Consequently, in order to understand the world ontologically, we have to include
an analytic of Dasein as a component of that understanding.
Worldless
Two entities which are merely present-at-hand are worldless. The term worldless
here stands for the unthinking existence that mere entities have. In the context of
Dasein's Being-alongside-the world, word 'touch' connotes a sense belonging to
Dasein. Entities present-at-hand within the world cannot touch, or be touched,
and since Dasein's "Being alongside" can only exists with its "Being-there" (this
phrase is significant for the German expression of Being there is "Da sein"). To
be able to touch something, a Being must have something like the world is
already in mind, so that another entity can manifest itself in the touching from
out of that world.
However, if we are talking about entities that have awareness of their own
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existence (Dasein in other words), the clause 'furthermore are worldless' must not
be left out. This is because Dasein are present-at-hand 'in' the world, or more
exactly can, with some right and within certain limits, be taken as merely
present-at-hand. To think of Dasein as merely present-at-hand, one must either
completely disregard, or just not see the existential state of Being-in. But there is
no law which compels us to see Being in this way (thus we have factical
conceptions of Dasein). For Dasein can be taken as something which is just
present-at-hand. However, regarding Dasein (plural) as present at hand should
not to be confused with a certain way of presence-at-hand which Dasein
(singular) has as its own present-at-handness. For this is presence at handness of
an altogether different kind, and therefore it should not be seen as being
accessible only if one disregards Dasein's specific structures, but rather by
understanding them in advance. [ref. ¶ 12, page 81]
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