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Being and Time

Being and Time (German: Sein und Zeit) is the 1927 magnum opus of German philosopher Martin Heidegger and a key document of existentialism. Being and Time had a notable impact on subsequent philosophy, literary theory and many other fields. Though controversial, its stature in intellectual history has been compared with works by Kant and Hegel. The book attempts to revive ontology through an analysis of Dasein, or "being-in-the-world." It is also noted for an array of neologisms and complex language, as well as an extended treatment of "authenticity" as a means to grasp and confront the unique and finite possibilities of the individual.

Being and Time
Cover of the first edition
AuthorMartin Heidegger
Original titleSein und Zeit
Translator1962: John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson
1996: Joan Stambaugh
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
SubjectBeing
Published1927 (in German)
1962: SCM Press
1996: State University of New York Press
2008: Harper Perennial Modern Thought
Pages589 (Macquarrie and Robinson translation)
482 (Stambaugh translation)
ISBN0-631-19770-2 (Blackwell edition)
978-1-4384-3276-2 (State University of New York Press edition)
Followed byKant and the Problem of Metaphysics 

Background

Richard Wolin notes that the work "implicitly adopted the critique of mass society” epitomized earlier by Kierkegaard and Nietzsche.[1] "Elitist complaints about the "dictatorship of public opinion" were common currency to the German mandarins of the twenties," according to J. Habermas (1989).[2] Wolin writes that Being and Time is "suffused by a sensibility derived from secularized Protestantism” and its stress on original sin. The human condition is portrayed as "essentially a curse.”[1] Wolin cites the work's extended emphasis on “emotionally laden concepts” like guilt, conscience, angst and death.

The book is likened to a secularized version of Martin Luther's project, which aimed to turn Christian theology back to an earlier and more “original” phase. Taking this view, John D. Caputo notes that Heidegger made a systematic study of Luther in the 1920s after training for 10 years as a Catholic theologian.[3] Similarly, Hubert Dreyfus likens Division II of the volume to a secularized version of Kierkegaard's Christianity.[4] Almost all central concepts of Being and Time are derived from Augustine, Luther, and Kierkegaard, according to Christian Lotz.[5]

The critic George Steiner argues that Being and Time is a product of the crisis of German culture following Germany's defeat in World War I. In this respect Steiner compared it to Ernst Bloch's The Spirit of Utopia (1918), Oswald Spengler's The Decline of the West (1918), Franz Rosenzweig's The Star of Redemption (1921), Karl Barth's The Epistle to the Romans (1922), and Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf (1925).[6]

In terms of structure, Being and Time consists of the lengthy two-part introduction, followed by Division One, the "Preparatory Fundamental Analysis of Dasein," and Division Two, "Dasein and Temporality.” Heidegger originally planned to write a separate, second volume but quickly abandoned the project. The unwritten “second half” was to include a critique of Western philosophy.[7]

Summary

Dasein

Being and Time explicitly rejects Descartes' notion of the human being as a subjective spectator of objects, according to Marcella Horrigan-Kelly (et al.).[8] The book instead holds that both subject and object are inseparable. In presenting the subject, "being" as inseparable from the objective "world," "Heidegger introduced the term “Dasein” (literally being there), intended to embody a ‘‘living being’’ through their activity of ‘’being there’ and “being in the world” (Horrigan-Kelly).[8] Understood as a unitary phenomenon rather than a contingent, additive combination, being-in-the-world is an essential characteristic of Dasein, according to Michael Wheeler (2011).[9]

Heidegger's account of Dasein passes through an analysis of Angst, "the Nothing" and mortality, and of the structure of "Care" as such. He then defines "authenticity," as a means to grasp and confront the finite possibilities of Dasein. Moreover, Dasein is "the being that will give access to the question of the meaning of Being," according to Heidegger.[10]

Being

The work claims that ordinary and even mundane "being-in-the-world" provides "access to the meaning, or 'sense of being.' [Sinn des Seins]." This access via Dasein is also that "in terms of which something becomes intelligible as something."[11] This meaning would then elucidate ordinary "prescientific" understanding, which precedes abstract ways of knowing, such as logic or theory.[12]

Heidegger's concept of Being is metaphorical, according to Richard Rorty, who agrees with Heidegger that there is no "hidden power" called Being. Heidegger emphasizes that no particular understanding of Being (nor of Dasein) is to be valued over another, according to an account of Rorty's analysis by Edward Grippe.[13] This supposed "non-linguistic, pre-cognitive access" to the meaning of Being didn't underscore any particular, preferred narrative.

Thomas Sheehan and Mark Wrathall each separately assert that commentators' emphasis on the term "Being" is misplaced, and that Heidegger's central focus was never on "Being" as such. Wrathall wrote (2011) that Heidegger's elaborate concept of "unconcealment" was his central, life-long focus, while Sheehan (2015) proposed that the philosopher's prime focus was on that which "brings about being as a givenness of entities.")[14][15]Being and Time actually offers "no sense of how we might answer the question of being as such," writes Simon Critchley in a nine-part blog commentary on the work for The Guardian (2009). The book instead provides "an answer to the question of what it means to be human" (Critchley).[16] Nonetheless, Heidegger does present the concept: "'Being' is not something like a being but is rather "what determines beings as beings."[17]

Time

Heidegger believes that time finds its meaning in death, according to Michael Kelley. That is, time is understood only from a finite or mortal vantage. Dasein's fundamental characteristic and mode of "being-in-the-world" is temporal: Having been "thrown" into a world implies a "pastness" in its being. "The present is the nodal moment which makes past and future intelligible," writes Lilian Alweiss.[18] Dasein occupies itself with the present tasks required by goals it has projected on the future.[19]

Dasein as an intertwined subject/object cannot be separated from its objective "historicality," a concept Heidegger credits in the text to Wilhelm Dilthey. Dasein is "stretched along" temporally between birth and death, and thrown into its world; into its future possibilities which Dasein is charged with assuming. Dasein's access to this world and these possibilities is always via a history and a tradition—or "world historicality".

Methodologies

Phenomenology

Heidegger's mentor Edmund Husserl developed a method of analysis called "phenomenological reduction" or "bracketing," that emphasized primordial experience as its key element. Husserl used this method to define the structures of consciousness and show how they are directed at both real and ideal objects within the world.[20]

Being and Time employs this method but purportedly modifies Husserl's subjectivist tendencies. Whereas Husserl conceived humans as constituted by consciousness, Heidegger countered that consciousness is peripheral to Dasein, which cannot be reduced to consciousness. Consciousness is thus an "effect" rather than a determinant of existence. By shifting the priority from consciousness (psychology) to existence (ontology), Heidegger altered the subsequent direction of phenomenology.

But Being and Time misrepresented its phenomenology as a departure from methods established earlier by Husserl, according to Daniel O. Dahlstrom.[21] In this vein, Robert J. Dostal asserts that "if we do not see how much it is the case that Husserlian phenomenology provides the framework for Heidegger's approach," then it's impossible to exactly understand Being and Time.[22]

On publication in 1927, Being and Time bore a dedication to Husserl, who beginning a decade earlier, championed Heidegger's work, and helped him secure the retiring Husserl's chair in Philosophy at the University of Freiburg in 1928.[23][24] Because Husserl was Jewish, in 1941 Heidegger, then a member of the Nazi Party, agreed to remove the dedication from Being and Time (restored in 1953 edition).[25]: 253–258 

Hermeneutics

(see also "Heidegger" section in Hermeneutics)

Being and Time employed the "hermeneutic circle" as a method of analysis or structure for ideas. According to Susann M. Laverty (2003), Heidegger's circle moves from the parts of experience to the whole of experience and back and forth again and again to increase the depth of engagement and understanding. Laverty writes (Kvale 1996), "This spiraling through a hermeneutic circle ends when one has reached a place of sensible meaning, free of inner contradictions, for the moment."[26]

The hermeneutic circle and certain theories concerning history in Being and Time are acknowledged within the text to rely on the writings of Wilhelm Dilthey.[27] The technique was later employed in the writings of Jürgen Habermas, per "Influence and reception" below.

Destructuring

(See also: Deconstruction)

In Being and Time Heidegger briefly refutes the philosophy of René Descartes (in an exercise he called "destructuring"), but the second volume, intended as a Destruktion of Western philosophy, was never written. Heidegger sought to explain how theoretical knowledge came to be seen, incorrectly in his view, as fundamental to being. This explanation takes the form of a destructuring (Destruktion) of the philosophical tradition, an interpretative strategy that reveals the fundamental experience of being hidden within the theoretical attitude of the metaphysics of presence.[28]

In later works, while becoming less systematic and more obscure than in Being and Time, Heidegger turns to the exegesis of historical texts, especially those of Presocratic philosophers, but also of Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, Plato, Nietzsche, and Hölderlin, among others.[29]

Influence and reception

Upon its publication, reviewers credited Heidegger with "brilliance" and "genius".[30] The book was later seen as the "most influential version of existential philosophy."[31]Jean-Paul Sartre's existentialism (of 1943) has been described as merely "a version of Being and Time".[32] The work also influenced other philosophers of Sartre's generation,[33] and exerted a notable influence on French philosophy.[34]

Heidegger's work influenced the output of the Frankfurt School including Jürgen Habermas's hermeneutics and Herbert Marcuse's early and abortive attempt to develop "Heideggerian Marxism."[35][36] Theodore Adorno, in his 1964 book The Jargon of Authenticity, was critical of Heidegger's popularity in post-war Western Europe. Adorno accused Heidegger of evading ethical judgment by disingenuously presenting "authenticity" as a value-free, technical term—rather than a positive doctrine of the good life.[37] Heidegger influenced psychoanalysis through Jacques Lacan as well as Medard Boss and others.[38]Paul Celan, in his essays on poetic theory, incorporated some of Heidegger's ideas.[39] Being and Time also separately influenced Alain Badiou's work Being and Event (1988).[33] and also separately, the enactivist approach to cognition theory.[40][41]

Bertrand Russell dismissed Being and Time ("One cannot help suspecting that language is here running riot"). The analytic philosopher A. J. Ayer called Heidegger a charlatan. But the American philosopher Richard Rorty ranked Heidegger among the important philosophers of the twentieth century, including John Dewey and Wittgenstein.[42] The conservative British writer Roger Scruton called (2002) Being and Time a "description of a private spiritual journey" rather than genuine philosophy.[43] But Stephen Houlgate (1999) compares Heidegger's achievements in Being and Time to those of Kant and Hegel.[44] Simon Critchley writes (2009) that it is impossible to understand developments in continental philosophy after Heidegger without understanding Being and Time.[45]

Related work

Being and Time is the major achievement of Heidegger's early career, but he produced other important works during this period:

  • The publication in 1992 of the early lecture course, Platon: Sophistes (Plato's Sophist, 1924), made clear the way in which Heidegger's reading of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics was crucial to the formulation of the thought expressed in Being and Time.
  • The lecture course, Prolegomena zur Geschichte des Zeitbegriffs (History of the Concept of Time: Prolegomena, 1925), was something like an early version of Being and Time.[46]
  • The lecture courses immediately following the publication of Being and Time, such as Die Grundprobleme der Phänomenologie (The Basic Problems of Phenomenology, 1927), and Kant und das Problem der Metaphysik (Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics, 1929), elaborated some elements of the destruction of metaphysics which Heidegger intended to pursue in the unwritten second part of Being and Time.

Although Heidegger did not complete the project outlined in Being and Time, later works explicitly addressed the themes and concepts of Being and Time. Most important among the works which do so are the following:

  • Heidegger's inaugural lecture upon his return to Freiburg, "Was ist Metaphysik?" (What Is Metaphysics?, 1929), was an important and influential clarification of what Heidegger meant by being, non-being, and nothingness.
  • Einführung in die Metaphysik (An Introduction to Metaphysics), a lecture course delivered in 1935, is identified by Heidegger, in his preface to the seventh German edition of Being and Time, as relevant to the concerns which the second half of the book would have addressed.
  • Beiträge zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis) (Contributions to Philosophy [From Enowning], composed 1936–38, published 1989), a sustained attempt at reckoning with the legacy of Being and Time.
  • Zeit und Sein (Time and Being),[47][48] a lecture delivered at the University of Freiburg on January 31, 1962. This was Heidegger's most direct confrontation with Being and Time. It was followed by a seminar on the lecture, which took place at Todtnauberg on September 11–13, 1962, a summary of which was written by Alfred Guzzoni.[n 1] Both the lecture and the summary of the seminar are included in Zur Sache des Denkens (1969; translated as On Time and Being [New York: Harper & Row, 1972]).

References

Notes

  1. ^ "There is put to the thinking of Being the task of thinking Being in such a way that oblivion essentially belongs to it."—Alfred Guzzoni, 1972, p. 29

Citations

  1. ^ a b Wolin, R., "Martin Heidegger—German philosopher", Encyclopædia Britannica, November 18, 2009.
  2. ^ Habermas, Jürgen, and John McCumber. “Work and Weltanschauung: The Heidegger Controversy from a German Perspective.” Critical Inquiry, vol. 15, no. 2, The University of Chicago Press, 1989, pp. 431–56
  3. ^ Caputo, John D. (1978). The Mystical Element in Heidegger's Thought, Ohio University Press
  4. ^ Dreyfus, H. L. (1991). Being-in-the-world: A Commentary on Heidegger's Being and Time, División I, MIT Press
  5. ^ Luther’s influence on Heidegger. Encyclopedia of Martin Luther and the Reformation, ed. Mark A. Lamport and George Thomas Kurian, London: Rowman & Littlefield 2017
  6. ^ Steiner, George (1991). Martin Heidegger. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. pp. vii–viii. ISBN 0-226-77232-2.
  7. ^ Sein und Zeit, pp. 39–40.
  8. ^ a b Understanding the Key Tenets of Heidegger’s Philosophy for Interpretive Phenomenological Research Marcella Horrigan-Kelly , Michelle Millar , and Maura Dowling, International Journal of Qualitative Methods January–December 2016: 1–8 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1609406916680634
  9. ^ Wheeler, Michael (12 October 2011). "Martin Heidegger".
  10. ^ Glendinning, S., ed., The Edinburgh Encyclopedia of Continental Philosophy (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1999), p. 154.
  11. ^ "aus dem her etwas als etwas verständlich wird," Sein und Zeit, p. 151.
  12. ^ Sein und Zeit, p. 12.
  13. ^ Grippe, Edward, Richard Rorty (1931—2007) Internet Encyclopedia
  14. ^ Wrathall, Mark: Heidegger and Unconcealment: Truth, Language, and History, Cambridge University Press, 2011
  15. ^ see also, Sheehan, "Making sense of Heidegger. A paradigm shift." New Heidegger Research. London (England) 2015.
  16. ^ Critchley, S., "Heidegger's Being and Time, part 8: Temporality", The Guardian, July 27, 2009.
  17. ^ "...das Sein, das, was Seiendes als Seiendes bestimmt, das, woraufhin Seiendes, mag es wie immer erörtert werden, je schon verstanden ist,"Sein und Zeit, p. 6.
  18. ^ Alweiss, L., "Heidegger and 'the concept of time'", History of the Human Sciences, Vol. 15, Nr. 3, 2002.
  19. ^ Kelley, M., "Phenomenology and Time-Consciousness", Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  20. ^ On the Logical Investigations, see Zahavi, Dan; Stjernfelt, Frederik, eds. (2002), One Hundred Years of Phenomenology (Husserl's Logical Investigations Revisited), Dordrecht / Boston / London: Kluwer; and Mohanty, Jitendra Nath, ed. (1977), Readings on Edmund Husserl's Logical Investigations, Den Haag: Nijhoff
  21. ^ Daniel O. Dahlstrom, "Heidegger's Critique of Husserl", in Theodore Kisiel & John van Buren (eds.), Reading Heidegger from the Start: Essays in His Earliest Thought (Albany: SUNY Press, 1994), p. 244.
  22. ^ Robert J. Dostal, "Time and Phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger", in Charles Guignon (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Heidegger (Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 1993), p. 142.
  23. ^ Seyla Benhabib, The Reluctant Modernism Of Hannah Arendt (Rowman and Littlefield, 2003, p. 120.)
  24. ^ "Martin Heidegger Essay ⋆ Criminal Justice Essay Examples ⋆ EssayEmpire". EssayEmpire. 2017-05-29. Retrieved 2018-01-23.
  25. ^ Rüdiger Safranski, Martin Heidegger: Between Good and Evil (Cambridge, Mass., & London: Harvard University Press, 1998), pp. 253–258.
  26. ^ Laverty, Susann M. (2003). "Hermeneutic Phenomenology and Phenomenology: A Comparison of Historical and Methodological Considerations". International Journal of Qualitative Methods. 2 (3): 21–35. doi:10.1177/160940690300200303. S2CID 145728698.
  27. ^ Scharff, Robert C. (January 1997). "Heidegger's "Appropriation" of Dilthey before Being and Time". Journal of the History of Philosophy. Johns Hopkins University Press. 35 (1): 105–128. doi:10.1353/hph.1997.0021. S2CID 96473379. Retrieved September 19, 2020. In a word, I think the record shows that the Dilthey appropriation taught the young Heidegger how to philosophize.[127]
  28. ^ Diefenbach, K., Farris, S. R., Kirn, G., & Thomas, P., eds., Encountering Althusser: Politics and Materialism in Contemporary Radical Thought (New York: Bloomsbury, 2013), pp. 11–13.
  29. ^ Korab-Karpowicz, W. J., The Presocratics in the Thought of Martin Heidegger (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang Edition, 2017), p. 24.
  30. ^ Schmidt, Dennis J.; Heidegger, Martin (2010). Being and Time. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. xv, xviii. ISBN 978-1-4384-3276-2.
  31. ^ Wagner, Helmut R. (1983). Phenomenology of Consciousness and Sociology of the Life-world: An Introductory Study. Edmonton: The University of Alberta Press. p. 214. ISBN 0-88864-032-3.
  32. ^ Steiner, George (1991). Martin Heidegger. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. p. 5. ISBN 0-226-77232-2.
  33. ^ a b Scruton, Roger (2016). Fools, Frauds and Firebrands: Thinkers of the New Left. London: Bloomsbury. p. 181. ISBN 978-1-4729-3595-3.
  34. ^ Scruton, Roger (2016). Fools, Frauds and Firebrands: Thinkers of the New Left. London: Bloomsbury. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-4729-3595-3.
  35. ^ Lafont, Cristina (2018). "Heidegger and the Frankfurt School". The Routledge Companion to the Frankfurt School. pp. 282–294. doi:10.4324/9780429443374-20. ISBN 9780429443374. S2CID 186944412.
  36. ^ Benhabib, Seyla; Marcuse, Herbert (1987). Hegel's Ontology and the Theory of Historicity. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. xxxii, x, xl. ISBN 0-262-13221-4.
  37. ^ Gerry Stahl boundary 2 Vol. 3, No. 2 (Winter, 1975), pp. 489-498 (10 pages)
  38. ^ Lacan, Jacques (2006) [1953]. Fink, Bruce (ed.). "The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis". Ecrits: The First Complete Edition in English. New York: W. W. Norton & Company: 262, 792.
  39. ^ Anderson, Mark M. (1991). "The "Impossibility of Poetry": Celan and Heidegger in France". New German Critique (53): 3–18. doi:10.2307/488241. JSTOR 488241.
  40. ^ Ward, Dave & Stapleton, Mog (2012). Es are good. Cognition as enacted, embodied, embedded, affective and extended. In Fabio Paglieri (ed.), Consciousness in Interaction: The role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness.
  41. ^ Stendera, Marilyn (2015). Being-in-the-world, Temporality and Autopoiesis. _Parrhesia: A Journal of Critical Philosophy_ 24:261–284.
  42. ^ Watts, Michael (2012). "Preface". The Philosophy of Heidegger. pp. vii–ix. doi:10.1017/UPO9781844652655.001. ISBN 9781844652655.
  43. ^ Scruton, Roger (2002). A Short History of Modern Philosophy. London: Routledge. pp. 269–271, 274. ISBN 0-415-26763-3.
  44. ^ Houlgate, Stephen (1999). The Hegel Reader. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. p. ix. ISBN 0-631-20347-8.
  45. ^ Critchley, Simon (8 June 2009). "Being and Time, part 1: Why Heidegger Matters". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  46. ^ Kisiel, T., The Genesis of Heidegger's Being and Time (Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press, 1995), p. 568.
  47. ^ Heidegger, Martin (2002). "Time and Being". On Time and Being. Translated by Joan Stambaugh. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-32375-7.
  48. ^ Næss, Arne D. E. "Martin Heidegger's Later philosophy". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 28, 2013.

Bibliography

Primary literature
Secondary literature
  • Robert Bernasconi, "'The Double Concept of Philosophy' and the Place of Ethics in Being and Time," Heidegger in Question: The Art of Existing (New Jersey: Humanities Press, 1993).
  • William D. Blattner, Heidegger's Temporal Idealism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999).
  • Lee Braver. A Thing of This World: a History of Continental Anti-Realism. Northwestern University Press: 2007.
  • Richard M. Capobianco, Engaging Heidegger with a foreword by William J. Richardson. University of Toronto Press, 2010.
  • Taylor Carman, Heidegger's Analytic: Interpretation, Discourse, and Authenticity in "Being and Time" (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).
  • Cristian Ciocan (ed.),
  • Jacques Derrida, "Ousia and Gramme: Note on a Note from Being and Time," Margins of Philosophy (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
  • Hubert Dreyfus, Being-in-the-World: A Commentary on Heidegger's Being and Time, Division I (Cambridge, Massachusetts, & London: MIT Press, 1990).
  • Hubert Dreyfus,
  • Hubert Dreyfus,
  • Christopher Fynsk, Heidegger: Thought and Historicity (Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press, 1993, expanded edn.), ch. 1.
  • Michael Gelven, A Commentary on Heidegger's "Being and Time" (Northern Illinois University Press; Revised edition, 1989).
  • Magda King (2001). John Llewellyn (ed.). A guide to Heidegger's "Being and time". Albany, New York: SUNY Press. ISBN 9780791447994.
  • Theodore Kisiel, The Genesis of Heidegger's Being and Time (Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1993).
  • James Luchte, Heidegger's Early Thought: The Phenomenology of Ecstatic Temporality (London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2008).
  • Richard M. Mcdonough (2006). Martin Heidegger's "Being and Time". Bern: Peter Lang. ISBN 9780820455549.
  • William McNeill, The Glance of the Eye: Heidegger, Aristotle, and the Ends of Theory (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1999), ch. 3–4.
  • Jean-Luc Nancy, "The Decision of Existence," The Birth to Presence (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993), pp. 82–109.
  • William J. Richardson (1963). Heidegger. Through Phenomenology to Thought. Preface by Martin Heidegger. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.; 4th Edition (2003). New York City: Fordham University Press.

External links

being, time, sein, zeit, redirects, here, episode, files, sein, zeit, files, german, sein, zeit, 1927, magnum, opus, german, philosopher, martin, heidegger, document, existentialism, notable, impact, subsequent, philosophy, literary, theory, many, other, field. Sein und Zeit redirects here For the episode of The X Files see Sein und Zeit The X Files Being and Time German Sein und Zeit is the 1927 magnum opus of German philosopher Martin Heidegger and a key document of existentialism Being and Time had a notable impact on subsequent philosophy literary theory and many other fields Though controversial its stature in intellectual history has been compared with works by Kant and Hegel The book attempts to revive ontology through an analysis of Dasein or being in the world It is also noted for an array of neologisms and complex language as well as an extended treatment of authenticity as a means to grasp and confront the unique and finite possibilities of the individual Being and TimeCover of the first editionAuthorMartin HeideggerOriginal titleSein und ZeitTranslator1962 John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson1996 Joan StambaughCountryGermanyLanguageGermanSubjectBeingPublished1927 in German 1962 SCM Press1996 State University of New York Press2008 Harper Perennial Modern ThoughtPages589 Macquarrie and Robinson translation 482 Stambaugh translation ISBN0 631 19770 2 Blackwell edition 978 1 4384 3276 2 State University of New York Press edition Followed byKant and the Problem of Metaphysics Contents 1 Background 2 Summary 2 1 Dasein 2 2 Being 2 3 Time 3 Methodologies 3 1 Phenomenology 3 2 Hermeneutics 3 3 Destructuring 4 Influence and reception 5 Related work 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground EditRichard Wolin notes that the work implicitly adopted the critique of mass society epitomized earlier by Kierkegaard and Nietzsche 1 Elitist complaints about the dictatorship of public opinion were common currency to the German mandarins of the twenties according to J Habermas 1989 2 Wolin writes that Being and Time is suffused by a sensibility derived from secularized Protestantism and its stress on original sin The human condition is portrayed as essentially a curse 1 Wolin cites the work s extended emphasis on emotionally laden concepts like guilt conscience angst and death The book is likened to a secularized version of Martin Luther s project which aimed to turn Christian theology back to an earlier and more original phase Taking this view John D Caputo notes that Heidegger made a systematic study of Luther in the 1920s after training for 10 years as a Catholic theologian 3 Similarly Hubert Dreyfus likens Division II of the volume to a secularized version of Kierkegaard s Christianity 4 Almost all central concepts of Being and Time are derived from Augustine Luther and Kierkegaard according to Christian Lotz 5 The critic George Steiner argues that Being and Time is a product of the crisis of German culture following Germany s defeat in World War I In this respect Steiner compared it to Ernst Bloch s The Spirit of Utopia 1918 Oswald Spengler s The Decline of the West 1918 Franz Rosenzweig s The Star of Redemption 1921 Karl Barth s The Epistle to the Romans 1922 and Adolf Hitler s Mein Kampf 1925 6 In terms of structure Being and Time consists of the lengthy two part introduction followed by Division One the Preparatory Fundamental Analysis of Dasein and Division Two Dasein and Temporality Heidegger originally planned to write a separate second volume but quickly abandoned the project The unwritten second half was to include a critique of Western philosophy 7 Summary EditDasein Edit Being and Time explicitly rejects Descartes notion of the human being as a subjective spectator of objects according to Marcella Horrigan Kelly et al 8 The book instead holds that both subject and object are inseparable In presenting the subject being as inseparable from the objective world Heidegger introduced the term Dasein literally being there intended to embody a living being through their activity of being there and being in the world Horrigan Kelly 8 Understood as a unitary phenomenon rather than a contingent additive combination being in the world is an essential characteristic of Dasein according to Michael Wheeler 2011 9 Heidegger s account of Dasein passes through an analysis of Angst the Nothing and mortality and of the structure of Care as such He then defines authenticity as a means to grasp and confront the finite possibilities of Dasein Moreover Dasein is the being that will give access to the question of the meaning of Being according to Heidegger 10 Being Edit The work claims that ordinary and even mundane being in the world provides access to the meaning or sense of being Sinn des Seins This access via Dasein is also that in terms of which something becomes intelligible as something 11 This meaning would then elucidate ordinary prescientific understanding which precedes abstract ways of knowing such as logic or theory 12 Heidegger s concept of Being is metaphorical according to Richard Rorty who agrees with Heidegger that there is no hidden power called Being Heidegger emphasizes that no particular understanding of Being nor of Dasein is to be valued over another according to an account of Rorty s analysis by Edward Grippe 13 This supposed non linguistic pre cognitive access to the meaning of Being didn t underscore any particular preferred narrative Thomas Sheehan and Mark Wrathall each separately assert that commentators emphasis on the term Being is misplaced and that Heidegger s central focus was never on Being as such Wrathall wrote 2011 that Heidegger s elaborate concept of unconcealment was his central life long focus while Sheehan 2015 proposed that the philosopher s prime focus was on that which brings about being as a givenness of entities 14 15 Being and Time actually offers no sense of how we might answer the question of being as such writes Simon Critchley in a nine part blog commentary on the work for The Guardian 2009 The book instead provides an answer to the question of what it means to be human Critchley 16 Nonetheless Heidegger does present the concept Being is not something like a being but is rather what determines beings as beings 17 Time Edit Heidegger believes that time finds its meaning in death according to Michael Kelley That is time is understood only from a finite or mortal vantage Dasein s fundamental characteristic and mode of being in the world is temporal Having been thrown into a world implies a pastness in its being The present is the nodal moment which makes past and future intelligible writes Lilian Alweiss 18 Dasein occupies itself with the present tasks required by goals it has projected on the future 19 Dasein as an intertwined subject object cannot be separated from its objective historicality a concept Heidegger credits in the text to Wilhelm Dilthey Dasein is stretched along temporally between birth and death and thrown into its world into its future possibilities which Dasein is charged with assuming Dasein s access to this world and these possibilities is always via a history and a tradition or world historicality Methodologies EditPhenomenology Edit See also Phenomenology Heidegger s mentor Edmund Husserl developed a method of analysis called phenomenological reduction or bracketing that emphasized primordial experience as its key element Husserl used this method to define the structures of consciousness and show how they are directed at both real and ideal objects within the world 20 Being and Time employs this method but purportedly modifies Husserl s subjectivist tendencies Whereas Husserl conceived humans as constituted by consciousness Heidegger countered that consciousness is peripheral to Dasein which cannot be reduced to consciousness Consciousness is thus an effect rather than a determinant of existence By shifting the priority from consciousness psychology to existence ontology Heidegger altered the subsequent direction of phenomenology But Being and Time misrepresented its phenomenology as a departure from methods established earlier by Husserl according to Daniel O Dahlstrom 21 In this vein Robert J Dostal asserts that if we do not see how much it is the case that Husserlian phenomenology provides the framework for Heidegger s approach then it s impossible to exactly understand Being and Time 22 On publication in 1927 Being and Time bore a dedication to Husserl who beginning a decade earlier championed Heidegger s work and helped him secure the retiring Husserl s chair in Philosophy at the University of Freiburg in 1928 23 24 Because Husserl was Jewish in 1941 Heidegger then a member of the Nazi Party agreed to remove the dedication from Being and Time restored in 1953 edition 25 253 258 Hermeneutics Edit see also Heidegger section in Hermeneutics Being and Time employed the hermeneutic circle as a method of analysis or structure for ideas According to Susann M Laverty 2003 Heidegger s circle moves from the parts of experience to the whole of experience and back and forth again and again to increase the depth of engagement and understanding Laverty writes Kvale 1996 This spiraling through a hermeneutic circle ends when one has reached a place of sensible meaning free of inner contradictions for the moment 26 The hermeneutic circle and certain theories concerning history in Being and Time are acknowledged within the text to rely on the writings of Wilhelm Dilthey 27 The technique was later employed in the writings of Jurgen Habermas per Influence and reception below Destructuring Edit See also Deconstruction In Being and Time Heidegger briefly refutes the philosophy of Rene Descartes in an exercise he called destructuring but the second volume intended as a Destruktion of Western philosophy was never written Heidegger sought to explain how theoretical knowledge came to be seen incorrectly in his view as fundamental to being This explanation takes the form of a destructuring Destruktion of the philosophical tradition an interpretative strategy that reveals the fundamental experience of being hidden within the theoretical attitude of the metaphysics of presence 28 In later works while becoming less systematic and more obscure than in Being and Time Heidegger turns to the exegesis of historical texts especially those of Presocratic philosophers but also of Aristotle Kant Hegel Plato Nietzsche and Holderlin among others 29 Influence and reception EditUpon its publication reviewers credited Heidegger with brilliance and genius 30 The book was later seen as the most influential version of existential philosophy 31 Jean Paul Sartre s existentialism of 1943 has been described as merely a version of Being and Time 32 The work also influenced other philosophers of Sartre s generation 33 and exerted a notable influence on French philosophy 34 Heidegger s work influenced the output of the Frankfurt School including Jurgen Habermas s hermeneutics and Herbert Marcuse s early and abortive attempt to develop Heideggerian Marxism 35 36 Theodore Adorno in his 1964 book The Jargon of Authenticity was critical of Heidegger s popularity in post war Western Europe Adorno accused Heidegger of evading ethical judgment by disingenuously presenting authenticity as a value free technical term rather than a positive doctrine of the good life 37 Heidegger influenced psychoanalysis through Jacques Lacan as well as Medard Boss and others 38 Paul Celan in his essays on poetic theory incorporated some of Heidegger s ideas 39 Being and Time also separately influenced Alain Badiou s work Being and Event 1988 33 and also separately the enactivist approach to cognition theory 40 41 Bertrand Russell dismissed Being and Time One cannot help suspecting that language is here running riot The analytic philosopher A J Ayer called Heidegger a charlatan But the American philosopher Richard Rorty ranked Heidegger among the important philosophers of the twentieth century including John Dewey and Wittgenstein 42 The conservative British writer Roger Scruton called 2002 Being and Time a description of a private spiritual journey rather than genuine philosophy 43 But Stephen Houlgate 1999 compares Heidegger s achievements in Being and Time to those of Kant and Hegel 44 Simon Critchley writes 2009 that it is impossible to understand developments in continental philosophy after Heidegger without understanding Being and Time 45 Related work EditBeing and Time is the major achievement of Heidegger s early career but he produced other important works during this period The publication in 1992 of the early lecture course Platon Sophistes Plato s Sophist 1924 made clear the way in which Heidegger s reading of Aristotle s Nicomachean Ethics was crucial to the formulation of the thought expressed in Being and Time The lecture course Prolegomena zur Geschichte des Zeitbegriffs History of the Concept of Time Prolegomena 1925 was something like an early version of Being and Time 46 The lecture courses immediately following the publication of Being and Time such as Die Grundprobleme der Phanomenologie The Basic Problems of Phenomenology 1927 and Kant und das Problem der Metaphysik Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics 1929 elaborated some elements of the destruction of metaphysics which Heidegger intended to pursue in the unwritten second part of Being and Time Although Heidegger did not complete the project outlined in Being and Time later works explicitly addressed the themes and concepts of Being and Time Most important among the works which do so are the following Heidegger s inaugural lecture upon his return to Freiburg Was ist Metaphysik What Is Metaphysics 1929 was an important and influential clarification of what Heidegger meant by being non being and nothingness Einfuhrung in die Metaphysik An Introduction to Metaphysics a lecture course delivered in 1935 is identified by Heidegger in his preface to the seventh German edition of Being and Time as relevant to the concerns which the second half of the book would have addressed Beitrage zur Philosophie Vom Ereignis Contributions to Philosophy From Enowning composed 1936 38 published 1989 a sustained attempt at reckoning with the legacy of Being and Time Zeit und Sein Time and Being 47 48 a lecture delivered at the University of Freiburg on January 31 1962 This was Heidegger s most direct confrontation with Being and Time It was followed by a seminar on the lecture which took place at Todtnauberg on September 11 13 1962 a summary of which was written by Alfred Guzzoni n 1 Both the lecture and the summary of the seminar are included in Zur Sache des Denkens 1969 translated as On Time and Being New York Harper amp Row 1972 References EditNotes Edit There is put to the thinking of Being the task of thinking Being in such a way that oblivion essentially belongs to it Alfred Guzzoni 1972 p 29 Citations Edit a b Wolin R Martin Heidegger German philosopher Encyclopaedia Britannica November 18 2009 Habermas Jurgen and John McCumber Work and Weltanschauung The Heidegger Controversy from a German Perspective Critical Inquiry vol 15 no 2 The University of Chicago Press 1989 pp 431 56 Caputo John D 1978 The Mystical Element in Heidegger s Thought Ohio University Press Dreyfus H L 1991 Being in the world A Commentary on Heidegger sBeing and Time Division I MIT Press Luther s influence on Heidegger Encyclopedia of Martin Luther and the Reformation ed Mark A Lamport and George Thomas Kurian London Rowman amp Littlefield 2017 Steiner George 1991 Martin Heidegger Chicago The University of Chicago Press pp vii viii ISBN 0 226 77232 2 Sein und Zeit pp 39 40 a b Understanding the Key Tenets of Heidegger s Philosophy for Interpretive Phenomenological Research Marcella Horrigan Kelly Michelle Millar and Maura Dowling International Journal of Qualitative Methods January December 2016 1 8 https journals sagepub com doi pdf 10 1177 1609406916680634 Wheeler Michael 12 October 2011 Martin Heidegger Glendinning S ed The Edinburgh Encyclopedia of Continental Philosophy Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1999 p 154 aus dem her etwas als etwas verstandlich wird Sein und Zeit p 151 Sein und Zeit p 12 Grippe Edward Richard Rorty 1931 2007 Internet Encyclopedia Wrathall Mark Heidegger and Unconcealment Truth Language and History Cambridge University Press 2011 see also Sheehan Making sense of Heidegger A paradigm shift New Heidegger Research London England 2015 Critchley S Heidegger s Being and Time part 8 Temporality The Guardian July 27 2009 das Sein das was Seiendes als Seiendes bestimmt das woraufhin Seiendes mag es wie immer erortert werden je schon verstanden ist Sein und Zeit p 6 Alweiss L Heidegger and the concept of time History of the Human Sciences Vol 15 Nr 3 2002 Kelley M Phenomenology and Time Consciousness Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy On the Logical Investigations see Zahavi Dan Stjernfelt Frederik eds 2002 One Hundred Years of Phenomenology Husserl s Logical Investigations Revisited Dordrecht Boston London Kluwer and Mohanty Jitendra Nath ed 1977 Readings on Edmund Husserl s Logical Investigations Den Haag Nijhoff Daniel O Dahlstrom Heidegger s Critique of Husserl in Theodore Kisiel amp John van Buren eds Reading Heidegger from the Start Essays in His Earliest Thought Albany SUNY Press 1994 p 244 Robert J Dostal Time and Phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger in Charles Guignon ed The Cambridge Companion to Heidegger Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press 1993 p 142 Seyla Benhabib The Reluctant Modernism Of Hannah Arendt Rowman and Littlefield 2003 p 120 Martin Heidegger Essay Criminal Justice Essay Examples EssayEmpire EssayEmpire 2017 05 29 Retrieved 2018 01 23 Rudiger Safranski Martin Heidegger Between Good and Evil Cambridge Mass amp London Harvard University Press 1998 pp 253 258 Laverty Susann M 2003 Hermeneutic Phenomenology and Phenomenology A Comparison of Historical and Methodological Considerations International Journal of Qualitative Methods 2 3 21 35 doi 10 1177 160940690300200303 S2CID 145728698 Scharff Robert C January 1997 Heidegger s Appropriation of Dilthey before Being and Time Journal of the History of Philosophy Johns Hopkins University Press 35 1 105 128 doi 10 1353 hph 1997 0021 S2CID 96473379 Retrieved September 19 2020 In a word I think the record shows that the Dilthey appropriation taught the young Heidegger how to philosophize 127 Diefenbach K Farris S R Kirn G amp Thomas P eds Encountering Althusser Politics and Materialism in Contemporary Radical Thought New York Bloomsbury 2013 pp 11 13 Korab Karpowicz W J The Presocratics in the Thought of Martin Heidegger Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang Edition 2017 p 24 Schmidt Dennis J Heidegger Martin 2010 Being and Time Albany State University of New York Press pp xv xviii ISBN 978 1 4384 3276 2 Wagner Helmut R 1983 Phenomenology of Consciousness and Sociology of the Life world An Introductory Study Edmonton The University of Alberta Press p 214 ISBN 0 88864 032 3 Steiner George 1991 Martin Heidegger Chicago The University of Chicago Press p 5 ISBN 0 226 77232 2 a b Scruton Roger 2016 Fools Frauds and Firebrands Thinkers of the New Left London Bloomsbury p 181 ISBN 978 1 4729 3595 3 Scruton Roger 2016 Fools Frauds and Firebrands Thinkers of the New Left London Bloomsbury p 240 ISBN 978 1 4729 3595 3 Lafont Cristina 2018 Heidegger and the Frankfurt School The Routledge Companion to the Frankfurt School pp 282 294 doi 10 4324 9780429443374 20 ISBN 9780429443374 S2CID 186944412 Benhabib Seyla Marcuse Herbert 1987 Hegel s Ontology and the Theory of Historicity Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press pp xxxii x xl ISBN 0 262 13221 4 Gerry Stahl boundary 2 Vol 3 No 2 Winter 1975 pp 489 498 10 pages Lacan Jacques 2006 1953 Fink Bruce ed The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis Ecrits The First Complete Edition in English New York W W Norton amp Company 262 792 Anderson Mark M 1991 The Impossibility of Poetry Celan and Heidegger in France New German Critique 53 3 18 doi 10 2307 488241 JSTOR 488241 Ward Dave amp Stapleton Mog 2012 Es are good Cognition as enacted embodied embedded affective and extended In Fabio Paglieri ed Consciousness in Interaction The role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness Stendera Marilyn 2015 Being in the world Temporality and Autopoiesis Parrhesia A Journal of Critical Philosophy 24 261 284 Watts Michael 2012 Preface The Philosophy of Heidegger pp vii ix doi 10 1017 UPO9781844652655 001 ISBN 9781844652655 Scruton Roger 2002 A Short History of Modern Philosophy London Routledge pp 269 271 274 ISBN 0 415 26763 3 Houlgate Stephen 1999 The Hegel Reader Oxford Blackwell Publishers p ix ISBN 0 631 20347 8 Critchley Simon 8 June 2009 Being and Time part 1 Why Heidegger Matters The Guardian Retrieved 26 February 2015 Kisiel T The Genesis of Heidegger s Being and Time Berkeley Los Angeles London University of California Press 1995 p 568 Heidegger Martin 2002 Time and Being On Time and Being Translated by Joan Stambaugh Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 32375 7 Naess Arne D E Martin Heidegger s Later philosophy Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved June 28 2013 Bibliography Edit Primary literatureMartin Heidegger Sein und Zeit in Heidegger s Gesamtausgabe volume 2 ed F W von Herrmann 1977 XIV 586p Martin Heidegger 1962 Being and Time Translated by John Macquarrie amp Edward Robinson London SCM Press Martin Heidegger 1996 Being and Time A Translation of Sein und Zeit Translated by Joan Stambaugh 7th ed Albany New York SUNY Press ISBN 9780791426777 Martin Heidegger 2010 Being and Time Translated by Joan Stambaugh revised by Dennis J Schmidt Albany New York SUNY Press Secondary literatureRobert Bernasconi The Double Concept of Philosophy and the Place of Ethics in Being and Time Heidegger in Question The Art of Existing New Jersey Humanities Press 1993 William D Blattner Heidegger s Temporal Idealism Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 Lee Braver A Thing of This World a History of Continental Anti Realism Northwestern University Press 2007 Richard M Capobianco Engaging Heidegger with a foreword by William J Richardson University of Toronto Press 2010 Taylor Carman Heidegger s Analytic Interpretation Discourse and Authenticity in Being and Time Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 Cristian Ciocan ed Translating Heidegger s Sein und Zeit Studia PhaenomenologicaV 2005 Jacques Derrida Ousia and Gramme Note on a Note from Being and Time Margins of Philosophy Chicago University of Chicago Press 1982 Hubert Dreyfus Being in the World A Commentary on Heidegger s Being and Time Division I Cambridge Massachusetts amp London MIT Press 1990 Hubert Dreyfus podcast of Philosophy 185 Fall 2007 Heidegger UC Berkeley Hubert Dreyfus podcast of Philosophy 189 Spring 2008 Heidegger UC Berkeley Christopher Fynsk Heidegger Thought and Historicity Ithaca amp London Cornell University Press 1993 expanded edn ch 1 Michael Gelven A Commentary on Heidegger s Being and Time Northern Illinois University Press Revised edition 1989 Magda King 2001 John Llewellyn ed A guide to Heidegger s Being and time Albany New York SUNY Press ISBN 9780791447994 Theodore Kisiel The Genesis of Heidegger s Being and Time Berkeley amp Los Angeles University of California Press 1993 James Luchte Heidegger s Early Thought The Phenomenology of Ecstatic Temporality London Bloomsbury Publishing 2008 Richard M Mcdonough 2006 Martin Heidegger s Being and Time Bern Peter Lang ISBN 9780820455549 William McNeill The Glance of the Eye Heidegger Aristotle and the Ends of Theory Albany State University of New York Press 1999 ch 3 4 Jean Luc Nancy The Decision of Existence The Birth to Presence Stanford Stanford University Press 1993 pp 82 109 William J Richardson 1963 Heidegger Through Phenomenology to Thought Preface by Martin Heidegger The Hague Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 4th Edition 2003 New York City Fordham University Press External links EditNaess Arne D E Being and Time on Encyclopaedia Britannica Munday Roderick March 2009 Glossary of Terms in Being and Time Heidegger Being and Time Sein und Zeit 1927 An Index By Daniel Fidel Ferrer and Ritu Sharma German and English Free online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Being and Time amp oldid 1122806295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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