Who or what is the being for whom Being is a question for Heidegger?












4















Did a quick search of Dasein on Google and found this:




In Being and Time, Heidegger investigates the question of Being by
asking about the being for whom Being is a question. Heidegger
names this being Dasein (see above), and he pursues his investigation
through themes such as mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and
historicity.




My question is who is the being for whom Being is a question? Is the being human beings in general?










share|improve this question







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frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 2





    "Being and Time is a long and complex book."

    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    Apr 13 at 15:52
















4















Did a quick search of Dasein on Google and found this:




In Being and Time, Heidegger investigates the question of Being by
asking about the being for whom Being is a question. Heidegger
names this being Dasein (see above), and he pursues his investigation
through themes such as mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and
historicity.




My question is who is the being for whom Being is a question? Is the being human beings in general?










share|improve this question







New contributor




frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 2





    "Being and Time is a long and complex book."

    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    Apr 13 at 15:52














4












4








4


1






Did a quick search of Dasein on Google and found this:




In Being and Time, Heidegger investigates the question of Being by
asking about the being for whom Being is a question. Heidegger
names this being Dasein (see above), and he pursues his investigation
through themes such as mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and
historicity.




My question is who is the being for whom Being is a question? Is the being human beings in general?










share|improve this question







New contributor




frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Did a quick search of Dasein on Google and found this:




In Being and Time, Heidegger investigates the question of Being by
asking about the being for whom Being is a question. Heidegger
names this being Dasein (see above), and he pursues his investigation
through themes such as mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and
historicity.




My question is who is the being for whom Being is a question? Is the being human beings in general?







heidegger phenomenology






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frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







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frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






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asked Apr 13 at 15:34









frbsfokfrbsfok

1314




1314




New contributor




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New contributor





frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






frbsfok is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 2





    "Being and Time is a long and complex book."

    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    Apr 13 at 15:52














  • 2





    "Being and Time is a long and complex book."

    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    Apr 13 at 15:52








2




2





"Being and Time is a long and complex book."

– Mauro ALLEGRANZA
Apr 13 at 15:52





"Being and Time is a long and complex book."

– Mauro ALLEGRANZA
Apr 13 at 15:52










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















6














"Being and Time is a long and complex book."



We may say that Heidegger's aim in his work is to discover what is common (more fundamental) to various different questions (inquiries) about the existence of objects/entities:




Does the table that I think I see before me exist? Does God exist? Does mind, conceived as an entity distinct from body, exist?




All these questions presuppose that we already know what ‘to exist’ means. But Heidegger raises the more fundamental question: what does ‘to exist’ mean? This is Heidegger's question of the meaning of Being.



The word ‘Being’ is translated from the original German Sein, and Dasein ("being-there") is translated to the English word "existence":




One proposal for how to think about the term ‘Dasein’ is that it is Heidegger's label for the distinctive mode of Being realized by human beings.




Thus, from questions about the existence of particular entities (being) to the inquiry about the meaning of Being in general, to the peculiar way of human beings: mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and historicity.






share|improve this answer

































    4














    According to Wikipedia this being "for whom Being is a question for Heidegger" would be ourselves:




    Dasein ... is a German word that means "being there" or "presence" (German: da "there"; sein "being"), and is often translated into English with the word "existence". It is a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger, particularly in his magnum opus Being and Time. Heidegger uses the expression Dasein to refer to the experience of being that is peculiar to human beings. Thus it is a form of being that is aware of and must confront such issues as personhood, mortality and the dilemma or paradox of living in relationship with other humans while being ultimately alone with oneself.






    Wikipedia contributors. (2019, January 19). Dasein. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:58, April 13, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dasein&oldid=879242099






    share|improve this answer































      4















      "Ontological inquiry is indeed more primordial, as over against the ontical inquiry of the positive sciences."



      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




      Heidegger is an ontologist. To define or translate "Being" as "you" or "an entity" is sloppy and incomplete. Heidegger is not talking about the person, the literal being or entity. Rather, he's talking about the ontological difference between Being and being(s). The capitalization is significant there. His entire point is that there is a crucial distinction between a "being" (lowercase, referring to the entity) and "Being" (uppercase, referring to on ontological status).



      This is his project of fundamental ontology, a reinterpretation of phenomenology that arose out of Heidegger's collaboration with Edmund Husserl (cf. "Logical Investigations"). In order to interrogate fundamental ontologies, he had to develop new language and/or use existing language in a naturally confusing way. On the very first page of Being and Time, Heidegger states:




      "Our aim in the following treatise is to work out the question of the sense of being and to do so concretely."




      Traditional concepts could not be used to articulate the argument that a phenomenon is the essence of a thing, because this distinction had not been previously made. For Heidegger, "Being" implies not only "subject" and "object", but also "body", "spirit", "consciousness", and "reality". Each of these concepts alone were inadequate and insufficient for his inquiry.




      "'Being' is not something like a being. [… Rather, 'Being' is] what determines beings as beings, that in terms of which beings are already understood."



      [ ... ]



      "The question of Being aims…at ascertaining the a priori conditions not only for the possibility of the sciences which examine beings as beings of such and such a type, and, in doing so, already operate with an understanding of Being, but also for the possibility of those ontologies themselves which are prior to the ontical sciences and which provide their foundations. Basically, all ontology, no matter how rich and firmly compacted a system of categories it has at its disposal, remains blind and perverted from its ownmost aim, if it has not first adequately clarified the meaning of Being, and conceived this clarification as its fundamental task."



      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




      In some ways, "Being" can be understood—especially by the layman— as "essence", but that is problematic, too, since Heidegger is problematizing earlier views of "essence", which had situated "essence" as being located and observable in "phenomenon". Husserl had introduced a distinction between "phenomenon" and "occurrence"—a difference between representation in the world "as it is reflected in consciousness", and the essence of a thing "as it is in itself". Heidegger brought ontology into phenomenology, broadening the focus of Being beyond mere "consciousness".



      This is why "Being" is primary. If one is unwilling to address things directly (zur Sache selbst), then no meaningful intellectual inquiry is possible. "Being" is present in a multiplicity of forms—me, other people, and other objects—all of which have their own subjective essences. "Being" is what makes beings (entities) intelligible as beings. It is itself something special, not just another "being" among beings, which is the mistake that Heidegger accuses Western philosophy of having made since Plato.



      As always, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has an excellent treatment of this topic, specifically in Section 1 of the entry on Martin Heidegger's Being and Time, but the entire article is worth a read. It moves onto explain the related concepts of "Dasein" (the being for whom Being is not a "what" but a "who"), "being-in-itself", "being-in-the-world", and "being-with".



      Also, you really should read Being and Time. It's dense and certainly confusing, but at least it contains almost everything you need to understand Heidegger's argument within itself. It's one of those rare cases where you don't need a library's worth of background knowledge to understand the argument.






      share|improve this answer


























      • "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

        – rexkogitans
        Apr 14 at 6:09













      • Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

        – Cody Gray
        Apr 14 at 6:13













      • For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

        – rexkogitans
        Apr 14 at 6:39












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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      6














      "Being and Time is a long and complex book."



      We may say that Heidegger's aim in his work is to discover what is common (more fundamental) to various different questions (inquiries) about the existence of objects/entities:




      Does the table that I think I see before me exist? Does God exist? Does mind, conceived as an entity distinct from body, exist?




      All these questions presuppose that we already know what ‘to exist’ means. But Heidegger raises the more fundamental question: what does ‘to exist’ mean? This is Heidegger's question of the meaning of Being.



      The word ‘Being’ is translated from the original German Sein, and Dasein ("being-there") is translated to the English word "existence":




      One proposal for how to think about the term ‘Dasein’ is that it is Heidegger's label for the distinctive mode of Being realized by human beings.




      Thus, from questions about the existence of particular entities (being) to the inquiry about the meaning of Being in general, to the peculiar way of human beings: mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and historicity.






      share|improve this answer






























        6














        "Being and Time is a long and complex book."



        We may say that Heidegger's aim in his work is to discover what is common (more fundamental) to various different questions (inquiries) about the existence of objects/entities:




        Does the table that I think I see before me exist? Does God exist? Does mind, conceived as an entity distinct from body, exist?




        All these questions presuppose that we already know what ‘to exist’ means. But Heidegger raises the more fundamental question: what does ‘to exist’ mean? This is Heidegger's question of the meaning of Being.



        The word ‘Being’ is translated from the original German Sein, and Dasein ("being-there") is translated to the English word "existence":




        One proposal for how to think about the term ‘Dasein’ is that it is Heidegger's label for the distinctive mode of Being realized by human beings.




        Thus, from questions about the existence of particular entities (being) to the inquiry about the meaning of Being in general, to the peculiar way of human beings: mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and historicity.






        share|improve this answer




























          6












          6








          6







          "Being and Time is a long and complex book."



          We may say that Heidegger's aim in his work is to discover what is common (more fundamental) to various different questions (inquiries) about the existence of objects/entities:




          Does the table that I think I see before me exist? Does God exist? Does mind, conceived as an entity distinct from body, exist?




          All these questions presuppose that we already know what ‘to exist’ means. But Heidegger raises the more fundamental question: what does ‘to exist’ mean? This is Heidegger's question of the meaning of Being.



          The word ‘Being’ is translated from the original German Sein, and Dasein ("being-there") is translated to the English word "existence":




          One proposal for how to think about the term ‘Dasein’ is that it is Heidegger's label for the distinctive mode of Being realized by human beings.




          Thus, from questions about the existence of particular entities (being) to the inquiry about the meaning of Being in general, to the peculiar way of human beings: mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and historicity.






          share|improve this answer















          "Being and Time is a long and complex book."



          We may say that Heidegger's aim in his work is to discover what is common (more fundamental) to various different questions (inquiries) about the existence of objects/entities:




          Does the table that I think I see before me exist? Does God exist? Does mind, conceived as an entity distinct from body, exist?




          All these questions presuppose that we already know what ‘to exist’ means. But Heidegger raises the more fundamental question: what does ‘to exist’ mean? This is Heidegger's question of the meaning of Being.



          The word ‘Being’ is translated from the original German Sein, and Dasein ("being-there") is translated to the English word "existence":




          One proposal for how to think about the term ‘Dasein’ is that it is Heidegger's label for the distinctive mode of Being realized by human beings.




          Thus, from questions about the existence of particular entities (being) to the inquiry about the meaning of Being in general, to the peculiar way of human beings: mortality, care, anxiety, temporality, and historicity.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 14 at 1:30









          Cody Gray

          4,84113341




          4,84113341










          answered Apr 13 at 16:00









          Mauro ALLEGRANZAMauro ALLEGRANZA

          29.9k22066




          29.9k22066























              4














              According to Wikipedia this being "for whom Being is a question for Heidegger" would be ourselves:




              Dasein ... is a German word that means "being there" or "presence" (German: da "there"; sein "being"), and is often translated into English with the word "existence". It is a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger, particularly in his magnum opus Being and Time. Heidegger uses the expression Dasein to refer to the experience of being that is peculiar to human beings. Thus it is a form of being that is aware of and must confront such issues as personhood, mortality and the dilemma or paradox of living in relationship with other humans while being ultimately alone with oneself.






              Wikipedia contributors. (2019, January 19). Dasein. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:58, April 13, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dasein&oldid=879242099






              share|improve this answer




























                4














                According to Wikipedia this being "for whom Being is a question for Heidegger" would be ourselves:




                Dasein ... is a German word that means "being there" or "presence" (German: da "there"; sein "being"), and is often translated into English with the word "existence". It is a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger, particularly in his magnum opus Being and Time. Heidegger uses the expression Dasein to refer to the experience of being that is peculiar to human beings. Thus it is a form of being that is aware of and must confront such issues as personhood, mortality and the dilemma or paradox of living in relationship with other humans while being ultimately alone with oneself.






                Wikipedia contributors. (2019, January 19). Dasein. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:58, April 13, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dasein&oldid=879242099






                share|improve this answer


























                  4












                  4








                  4







                  According to Wikipedia this being "for whom Being is a question for Heidegger" would be ourselves:




                  Dasein ... is a German word that means "being there" or "presence" (German: da "there"; sein "being"), and is often translated into English with the word "existence". It is a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger, particularly in his magnum opus Being and Time. Heidegger uses the expression Dasein to refer to the experience of being that is peculiar to human beings. Thus it is a form of being that is aware of and must confront such issues as personhood, mortality and the dilemma or paradox of living in relationship with other humans while being ultimately alone with oneself.






                  Wikipedia contributors. (2019, January 19). Dasein. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:58, April 13, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dasein&oldid=879242099






                  share|improve this answer













                  According to Wikipedia this being "for whom Being is a question for Heidegger" would be ourselves:




                  Dasein ... is a German word that means "being there" or "presence" (German: da "there"; sein "being"), and is often translated into English with the word "existence". It is a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger, particularly in his magnum opus Being and Time. Heidegger uses the expression Dasein to refer to the experience of being that is peculiar to human beings. Thus it is a form of being that is aware of and must confront such issues as personhood, mortality and the dilemma or paradox of living in relationship with other humans while being ultimately alone with oneself.






                  Wikipedia contributors. (2019, January 19). Dasein. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:58, April 13, 2019, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dasein&oldid=879242099







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Apr 13 at 16:00









                  Frank HubenyFrank Hubeny

                  10.5k51558




                  10.5k51558























                      4















                      "Ontological inquiry is indeed more primordial, as over against the ontical inquiry of the positive sciences."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      Heidegger is an ontologist. To define or translate "Being" as "you" or "an entity" is sloppy and incomplete. Heidegger is not talking about the person, the literal being or entity. Rather, he's talking about the ontological difference between Being and being(s). The capitalization is significant there. His entire point is that there is a crucial distinction between a "being" (lowercase, referring to the entity) and "Being" (uppercase, referring to on ontological status).



                      This is his project of fundamental ontology, a reinterpretation of phenomenology that arose out of Heidegger's collaboration with Edmund Husserl (cf. "Logical Investigations"). In order to interrogate fundamental ontologies, he had to develop new language and/or use existing language in a naturally confusing way. On the very first page of Being and Time, Heidegger states:




                      "Our aim in the following treatise is to work out the question of the sense of being and to do so concretely."




                      Traditional concepts could not be used to articulate the argument that a phenomenon is the essence of a thing, because this distinction had not been previously made. For Heidegger, "Being" implies not only "subject" and "object", but also "body", "spirit", "consciousness", and "reality". Each of these concepts alone were inadequate and insufficient for his inquiry.




                      "'Being' is not something like a being. [… Rather, 'Being' is] what determines beings as beings, that in terms of which beings are already understood."



                      [ ... ]



                      "The question of Being aims…at ascertaining the a priori conditions not only for the possibility of the sciences which examine beings as beings of such and such a type, and, in doing so, already operate with an understanding of Being, but also for the possibility of those ontologies themselves which are prior to the ontical sciences and which provide their foundations. Basically, all ontology, no matter how rich and firmly compacted a system of categories it has at its disposal, remains blind and perverted from its ownmost aim, if it has not first adequately clarified the meaning of Being, and conceived this clarification as its fundamental task."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      In some ways, "Being" can be understood—especially by the layman— as "essence", but that is problematic, too, since Heidegger is problematizing earlier views of "essence", which had situated "essence" as being located and observable in "phenomenon". Husserl had introduced a distinction between "phenomenon" and "occurrence"—a difference between representation in the world "as it is reflected in consciousness", and the essence of a thing "as it is in itself". Heidegger brought ontology into phenomenology, broadening the focus of Being beyond mere "consciousness".



                      This is why "Being" is primary. If one is unwilling to address things directly (zur Sache selbst), then no meaningful intellectual inquiry is possible. "Being" is present in a multiplicity of forms—me, other people, and other objects—all of which have their own subjective essences. "Being" is what makes beings (entities) intelligible as beings. It is itself something special, not just another "being" among beings, which is the mistake that Heidegger accuses Western philosophy of having made since Plato.



                      As always, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has an excellent treatment of this topic, specifically in Section 1 of the entry on Martin Heidegger's Being and Time, but the entire article is worth a read. It moves onto explain the related concepts of "Dasein" (the being for whom Being is not a "what" but a "who"), "being-in-itself", "being-in-the-world", and "being-with".



                      Also, you really should read Being and Time. It's dense and certainly confusing, but at least it contains almost everything you need to understand Heidegger's argument within itself. It's one of those rare cases where you don't need a library's worth of background knowledge to understand the argument.






                      share|improve this answer


























                      • "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:09













                      • Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

                        – Cody Gray
                        Apr 14 at 6:13













                      • For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:39
















                      4















                      "Ontological inquiry is indeed more primordial, as over against the ontical inquiry of the positive sciences."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      Heidegger is an ontologist. To define or translate "Being" as "you" or "an entity" is sloppy and incomplete. Heidegger is not talking about the person, the literal being or entity. Rather, he's talking about the ontological difference between Being and being(s). The capitalization is significant there. His entire point is that there is a crucial distinction between a "being" (lowercase, referring to the entity) and "Being" (uppercase, referring to on ontological status).



                      This is his project of fundamental ontology, a reinterpretation of phenomenology that arose out of Heidegger's collaboration with Edmund Husserl (cf. "Logical Investigations"). In order to interrogate fundamental ontologies, he had to develop new language and/or use existing language in a naturally confusing way. On the very first page of Being and Time, Heidegger states:




                      "Our aim in the following treatise is to work out the question of the sense of being and to do so concretely."




                      Traditional concepts could not be used to articulate the argument that a phenomenon is the essence of a thing, because this distinction had not been previously made. For Heidegger, "Being" implies not only "subject" and "object", but also "body", "spirit", "consciousness", and "reality". Each of these concepts alone were inadequate and insufficient for his inquiry.




                      "'Being' is not something like a being. [… Rather, 'Being' is] what determines beings as beings, that in terms of which beings are already understood."



                      [ ... ]



                      "The question of Being aims…at ascertaining the a priori conditions not only for the possibility of the sciences which examine beings as beings of such and such a type, and, in doing so, already operate with an understanding of Being, but also for the possibility of those ontologies themselves which are prior to the ontical sciences and which provide their foundations. Basically, all ontology, no matter how rich and firmly compacted a system of categories it has at its disposal, remains blind and perverted from its ownmost aim, if it has not first adequately clarified the meaning of Being, and conceived this clarification as its fundamental task."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      In some ways, "Being" can be understood—especially by the layman— as "essence", but that is problematic, too, since Heidegger is problematizing earlier views of "essence", which had situated "essence" as being located and observable in "phenomenon". Husserl had introduced a distinction between "phenomenon" and "occurrence"—a difference between representation in the world "as it is reflected in consciousness", and the essence of a thing "as it is in itself". Heidegger brought ontology into phenomenology, broadening the focus of Being beyond mere "consciousness".



                      This is why "Being" is primary. If one is unwilling to address things directly (zur Sache selbst), then no meaningful intellectual inquiry is possible. "Being" is present in a multiplicity of forms—me, other people, and other objects—all of which have their own subjective essences. "Being" is what makes beings (entities) intelligible as beings. It is itself something special, not just another "being" among beings, which is the mistake that Heidegger accuses Western philosophy of having made since Plato.



                      As always, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has an excellent treatment of this topic, specifically in Section 1 of the entry on Martin Heidegger's Being and Time, but the entire article is worth a read. It moves onto explain the related concepts of "Dasein" (the being for whom Being is not a "what" but a "who"), "being-in-itself", "being-in-the-world", and "being-with".



                      Also, you really should read Being and Time. It's dense and certainly confusing, but at least it contains almost everything you need to understand Heidegger's argument within itself. It's one of those rare cases where you don't need a library's worth of background knowledge to understand the argument.






                      share|improve this answer


























                      • "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:09













                      • Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

                        – Cody Gray
                        Apr 14 at 6:13













                      • For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:39














                      4












                      4








                      4








                      "Ontological inquiry is indeed more primordial, as over against the ontical inquiry of the positive sciences."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      Heidegger is an ontologist. To define or translate "Being" as "you" or "an entity" is sloppy and incomplete. Heidegger is not talking about the person, the literal being or entity. Rather, he's talking about the ontological difference between Being and being(s). The capitalization is significant there. His entire point is that there is a crucial distinction between a "being" (lowercase, referring to the entity) and "Being" (uppercase, referring to on ontological status).



                      This is his project of fundamental ontology, a reinterpretation of phenomenology that arose out of Heidegger's collaboration with Edmund Husserl (cf. "Logical Investigations"). In order to interrogate fundamental ontologies, he had to develop new language and/or use existing language in a naturally confusing way. On the very first page of Being and Time, Heidegger states:




                      "Our aim in the following treatise is to work out the question of the sense of being and to do so concretely."




                      Traditional concepts could not be used to articulate the argument that a phenomenon is the essence of a thing, because this distinction had not been previously made. For Heidegger, "Being" implies not only "subject" and "object", but also "body", "spirit", "consciousness", and "reality". Each of these concepts alone were inadequate and insufficient for his inquiry.




                      "'Being' is not something like a being. [… Rather, 'Being' is] what determines beings as beings, that in terms of which beings are already understood."



                      [ ... ]



                      "The question of Being aims…at ascertaining the a priori conditions not only for the possibility of the sciences which examine beings as beings of such and such a type, and, in doing so, already operate with an understanding of Being, but also for the possibility of those ontologies themselves which are prior to the ontical sciences and which provide their foundations. Basically, all ontology, no matter how rich and firmly compacted a system of categories it has at its disposal, remains blind and perverted from its ownmost aim, if it has not first adequately clarified the meaning of Being, and conceived this clarification as its fundamental task."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      In some ways, "Being" can be understood—especially by the layman— as "essence", but that is problematic, too, since Heidegger is problematizing earlier views of "essence", which had situated "essence" as being located and observable in "phenomenon". Husserl had introduced a distinction between "phenomenon" and "occurrence"—a difference between representation in the world "as it is reflected in consciousness", and the essence of a thing "as it is in itself". Heidegger brought ontology into phenomenology, broadening the focus of Being beyond mere "consciousness".



                      This is why "Being" is primary. If one is unwilling to address things directly (zur Sache selbst), then no meaningful intellectual inquiry is possible. "Being" is present in a multiplicity of forms—me, other people, and other objects—all of which have their own subjective essences. "Being" is what makes beings (entities) intelligible as beings. It is itself something special, not just another "being" among beings, which is the mistake that Heidegger accuses Western philosophy of having made since Plato.



                      As always, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has an excellent treatment of this topic, specifically in Section 1 of the entry on Martin Heidegger's Being and Time, but the entire article is worth a read. It moves onto explain the related concepts of "Dasein" (the being for whom Being is not a "what" but a "who"), "being-in-itself", "being-in-the-world", and "being-with".



                      Also, you really should read Being and Time. It's dense and certainly confusing, but at least it contains almost everything you need to understand Heidegger's argument within itself. It's one of those rare cases where you don't need a library's worth of background knowledge to understand the argument.






                      share|improve this answer
















                      "Ontological inquiry is indeed more primordial, as over against the ontical inquiry of the positive sciences."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      Heidegger is an ontologist. To define or translate "Being" as "you" or "an entity" is sloppy and incomplete. Heidegger is not talking about the person, the literal being or entity. Rather, he's talking about the ontological difference between Being and being(s). The capitalization is significant there. His entire point is that there is a crucial distinction between a "being" (lowercase, referring to the entity) and "Being" (uppercase, referring to on ontological status).



                      This is his project of fundamental ontology, a reinterpretation of phenomenology that arose out of Heidegger's collaboration with Edmund Husserl (cf. "Logical Investigations"). In order to interrogate fundamental ontologies, he had to develop new language and/or use existing language in a naturally confusing way. On the very first page of Being and Time, Heidegger states:




                      "Our aim in the following treatise is to work out the question of the sense of being and to do so concretely."




                      Traditional concepts could not be used to articulate the argument that a phenomenon is the essence of a thing, because this distinction had not been previously made. For Heidegger, "Being" implies not only "subject" and "object", but also "body", "spirit", "consciousness", and "reality". Each of these concepts alone were inadequate and insufficient for his inquiry.




                      "'Being' is not something like a being. [… Rather, 'Being' is] what determines beings as beings, that in terms of which beings are already understood."



                      [ ... ]



                      "The question of Being aims…at ascertaining the a priori conditions not only for the possibility of the sciences which examine beings as beings of such and such a type, and, in doing so, already operate with an understanding of Being, but also for the possibility of those ontologies themselves which are prior to the ontical sciences and which provide their foundations. Basically, all ontology, no matter how rich and firmly compacted a system of categories it has at its disposal, remains blind and perverted from its ownmost aim, if it has not first adequately clarified the meaning of Being, and conceived this clarification as its fundamental task."



                      – Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, §3.




                      In some ways, "Being" can be understood—especially by the layman— as "essence", but that is problematic, too, since Heidegger is problematizing earlier views of "essence", which had situated "essence" as being located and observable in "phenomenon". Husserl had introduced a distinction between "phenomenon" and "occurrence"—a difference between representation in the world "as it is reflected in consciousness", and the essence of a thing "as it is in itself". Heidegger brought ontology into phenomenology, broadening the focus of Being beyond mere "consciousness".



                      This is why "Being" is primary. If one is unwilling to address things directly (zur Sache selbst), then no meaningful intellectual inquiry is possible. "Being" is present in a multiplicity of forms—me, other people, and other objects—all of which have their own subjective essences. "Being" is what makes beings (entities) intelligible as beings. It is itself something special, not just another "being" among beings, which is the mistake that Heidegger accuses Western philosophy of having made since Plato.



                      As always, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has an excellent treatment of this topic, specifically in Section 1 of the entry on Martin Heidegger's Being and Time, but the entire article is worth a read. It moves onto explain the related concepts of "Dasein" (the being for whom Being is not a "what" but a "who"), "being-in-itself", "being-in-the-world", and "being-with".



                      Also, you really should read Being and Time. It's dense and certainly confusing, but at least it contains almost everything you need to understand Heidegger's argument within itself. It's one of those rare cases where you don't need a library's worth of background knowledge to understand the argument.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Apr 14 at 2:08

























                      answered Apr 14 at 2:01









                      Cody GrayCody Gray

                      4,84113341




                      4,84113341













                      • "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:09













                      • Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

                        – Cody Gray
                        Apr 14 at 6:13













                      • For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:39



















                      • "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:09













                      • Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

                        – Cody Gray
                        Apr 14 at 6:13













                      • For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

                        – rexkogitans
                        Apr 14 at 6:39

















                      "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

                      – rexkogitans
                      Apr 14 at 6:09







                      "It's dense and certainly confusing" My advice to philosophy newbies: Hands away from Heidegger.

                      – rexkogitans
                      Apr 14 at 6:09















                      Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

                      – Cody Gray
                      Apr 14 at 6:13







                      Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem. :-) Postmodernism is altogether different, and requires a different way of looking at the world. Or at least a willingness to bend one's mind beyond the traditional analytical backdrop. I personally found Heidegger much easier reading (in English translation) than Wittgenstein and Godel, but had admittedly more postmodern background from reading Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida, and Levinas first, among others. @rex (Edit: Oh, I see you edited your comment. Yeah...agreed, 'degger is not a gentle intro to philosophy.)

                      – Cody Gray
                      Apr 14 at 6:13















                      For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

                      – rexkogitans
                      Apr 14 at 6:39





                      For those who just wonder why you said, "Having studied analytical philosophy was, perhaps, your problem.". Before I edited and truncated my post, it said, that IMHO Gödel and Wittgenstein were easier to understand than Heidegger.

                      – rexkogitans
                      Apr 14 at 6:39










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