Heidegger: Being and Time
Martin Heidegger's philosophy seeks to revive the ancient science of ontology (the study of Being) by turning inward to human existence, or 'Dasein'. This project de-theologizes traditional religious structures into a secular duty of 'authenticity'—confronting human finitude, guilt, and death.
Understanding Heidegger is essential because his concepts of authenticity, existential anxiety, and Dasein laid the structural foundation for 20th-century continental philosophy, existentialism, and modern theology.
Section summaries
Introduction & Heidegger's Theological Background
watchEstablishes his intellectual background as a Jesuit seminarian and student of Edmund Husserl, key context for his later thoughts.
The Ontological Project
watchDefines Heidegger's primary ambition to revive the pre-Socratic study of Being (capital B) over beings (small b).
Dasein and Its Three-Fold Structure
watchExplains 'Dasein' and its components: understanding, mood, and discourse, contrasting it with analytic philosophy.
Volume 1 of Being and Time: Facticity & Forfeiture
watchDetails our pre-reflective, inauthentic state ('thrownness' and the crowd) and our call to individuality.
Volume 2: Authenticity, Time, and Death
watchCrucial segment explaining how time as a finite horizon and the confrontation with death shape authentic human existence.
Care, Anxiety, and Existential Guilt
watchBreaks down 'Sorge' (care/worry) and how projecting into the past, present, and future yields cosmic guilt.
Heidegger's Nazism & His Later Philosophy
watchAddresses his political actions, betrayal of Husserl, his linguistic chauvinism, and post-war focus on the pre-Socratics.
Critique: Obscurity, Nihilism, and Legacy
optionalSummarizes standard critiques of his wordplay, potential for nihilism, and his heavy influence on modern theology.
Key points
- The Quest for Being (Capital B) — Heidegger seeks to revive ontology—the science of Being itself—which he argues has been neglected since the pre-Socratics. He distinguishes Being (capital B), which allows objects to be disclosed to us, from everyday beings (small b) like tables, chairs, and individual objects.
- Dasein and Its Three-Fold Structure — Dasein, meaning human being-in-the-world, is defined by its finitude and contingency. Its basic structure is comprised of three elements: understanding (contextualizing the world), mood (psychic states like anxiety), and discourse (language as constitutive of our being).
- The Pre-Reflective State vs. Authenticity — Most humans live in an inauthentic state of forfeiture ('fair fallen'), distracted by the trivialities of small 'beings' and conforming to the crowd ('dasman'). Authenticity requires turning inward to confront our inescapable 'thrownness' (facticity) and our eventual death.
- De-Theologized Theology — Heidegger's philosophy can be read as a secularized, de-divinized version of his early Jesuit theological training. The call to abandon trivialities for Being parallels religious devotion, 'forfeiture' mirrors original sin, and 'guilt' represents the debt of unrealized possibilities.
“To be human is to confront the world the way it is... to be a grown-up adult that is willing to deal with human life as it is rather than getting distracted or sidetracked by any of the various cul-de-sacs that life might offer us.” — The Lecturer
“What profiteth the man that he should gain the whole world and lose his soul... many of the ideas of Heidegger's honest or authentic confrontation of being are philosophical, highly abstract Jesuit theology de-theologized or de-divinized.” — The Lecturer
AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.
[Music]
martin heidegger
is one of the most influential and
enigmatic of 20th century philosophers
and this is in part because of the fact
that he writes in a particularly obscure
style
and is a philosopher that engages in
many
verbal tricks and maneuvers which are
unique to heidegger
and to his project and which somehow to
some extent determine
the outcome and form that his
philosophical project takes
and it's worth encountering and thinking
about heidegger because he was the
source of so many
movements in 20th century uh
intellectual life
existentialism in some respects is a
sort of god child of heidegger
heidegger perhaps borrows some of the
main ideas from kierkegaard but he's the
one who reformulates many of these
concerns
in a 20th century idiom which turns out
to inform things like sartre
or camus or murlou ponti and a whole
variety of french and german thinkers in
particular
who will be relatively inaccessible
unless you look at heidegger first
now heidegger himself has a very
interesting background which
tells us a great deal about the sort of
intellectual activity that he undertakes
in the first case he starts out in his
intellectual career as a jesuit
seminarian
which tells you a great deal about the
cast of his mind
which tells you a great deal about his
early intellectual habits and much of
this will have i mean
influence later on we will see it come
out in a sort of transformation
um i may be the only person that
believes this but i may not be uh
that growing up as a jesuit seminarian
definitely has
telling effects later on in life if you
ever met any i believe you will find
this to be true well martin heidegger
is that in spades and when he makes a
philosophical move
it is absolute and it is an attempt to
go as far as a particular line of
thought can take it
perhaps characteristic of that whole
tradition
in addition to starting out as a
seminarian which is interesting in its
own way
he wrote his doctrinal dissertation on
dun scotus
now any of you at home who've read some
scholastic philosophy who know who duns
scotus is
know how difficult and recondite and
intimidating forbidding
a doctoral dissertation like that is and
it indicates not only something of the
cast of his mind but also
the intellectual ambition of someone who
feels like he can cut the gordian knot
i myself would never consider even
reading much less writing a dissertation
on done scotus
so if someone is going to take a project
like that this is a person
for whom very little is intellectually
intimidating
now his first and perhaps greatest work
or
the work that got him the most noticed
was published in 1927
it's called sign on site which means a
being in time and he was a student of
husserls
and it was published in husserl's
phenomenological
yearbook and it was dedicated to edmund
husserl so there's a definite
you know student pupil relation a pupil
teacher relationship
and a sort of conceptual relationship
between the phenomenology of husserl
and the phenomenal phenomenological
existentialism that heidegger develops
now heidegger himself claims not to be
an existentialist but he is
in a historical rather than a conceptual
sense rather than in a philosophical
sense it's clear that he does
influence people like sartre or camus
and despite his protestations his
influence has been greatest in the
philosophy of existence
as opposed to his unique and somewhat
idiomatic philosophical project of
developing an ontology
now ontology goes back to the greek term
maybe you've seen some of the lectures
on plato
and you know that ontology the science
of being or the logos of being
statements about being well one of the
early philosophical attempts one of the
kind of foundational philosophical
enterprises of the greek tradition
and heidegger wants to revive that
enterprise which is a particularly
intimidating and i don't know impressive
intel
uh intellectual ambition regardless of
whether he achieves it or not
to go back to the science of being to go
back to being itself with a capital b
well i i don't know if that's a
persuasive or even a possible thing in
the 20th century
the fact that heidegger thinks that he
can do that that he wants to take that
project seriously
is a tribute to his great intellectual
ambition regardless of how it ends up
turning out
so he thinks of himself primarily as an
ontologist now this leads us to all
kinds of difficulties
first of all talking about being is like
trying to bite your teeth
in other words what can you say about
being how can we come to know being
what sort of procedure do you engage in
to find out about being
well this maybe or discloses his
connection to husserl
you're not going to find out about being
by investigating tables
into individually in chairs individually
and christmas trees individually or even
inspecting the outside world
for its regular law like behavior the
way you're going to find it about being
is some process of introspection
this is one of the things that holds the
the continental tradition together
they tend to be more concerned with that
which is inside than they are about that
which is outside
there is a decidedly anti-scientistic
tendency to this and i will come back to
that problem
but what heidegger wants to do is find
out about being
and he's very familiar with greek
philosophy as a matter of fact he thinks
that
pretty much it's all been downhill since
aristotle
right that christianity the romans the
enlightenment didn't make much of a
contribution to the history of thought
um after aristotle it's all downhill and
the real high point was even before
plato was
in the pre-socratics and what he wants
to do
is to force us back to the original
sophisticated naivete of pre-socratic
thought
which is a very funny way of thinking
about it but he does think that we have
actually
decreased our understanding of ourselves
and the world around us by bracketing or
eliminating this problem of ontology
the problem of being and instead
investigating beings
particular elements in the world so he
wants to move away
from that practical concrete tangible
sort of inquiry
into something a great deal more
abstract and also more nebulous
now another thing to think about when we
deal with heidegger and his ontological
hopes
is what plato said about uh being
and it's an interesting thought plato
says in the myth of the cave when he
talks about the divided line that a
being is not like the other beings in
the world when we get up into the realm
of the forms
being is like light that discloses the
things in the world to us but it is not
one of those things that gets disclosed
so being allows us to know about the the
being that the small be being of
tables and chairs and podiums and
carpets and things like that
and we all have a kind of intuitive
everyday knowledge of what it means to
say that the grass
is green or the podium is made of wood
or the cup
is blue all those uses of the word is we
kind of feel like we have an idea of
what's going on there
but there's a problem even though we
know these local and particular uses of
the word is
we don't know what being is on the whole
we don't know what being capital b
is what it is that holds all these
little beings together the small be
beings
and that's because being itself is not
like any of the beings that being
discloses are you following this so far
in other words light is not like the
objects that we see in the room
it's a unique kind of a thing and here i
just mean it metaphorically because i
don't know how to literally talk about
this in any kind of sensible way
but the metaphor discloses the idea
roughly speaking that somehow being is
different from all the other stuff
of our experience heidegger says before
we
bother with trivialities like this
particular entity or that particular
entity
we have to do is leave all that stuff
out in a way bracket it for now
and let's talk about what it is to be
how we know being what being tells us
about itself
now the question is how are we going to
do this and what is being
well in the first case heidegger does
not want to
have a conception of being which is
abstract
formal he wants to connect it to the
experience of everyday life
and this is the kind of the husserlian
turn or perhaps the whole continental
turn
he says think of it from the perspective
of a human being from your perspective
now
rather than constructing a set of
abstractions which later on you you will
use to tailor your experience of the
world start now with your experience
and remove from your experience the
things that are irrelevant the dross
so that you get the pure gold of
ontological knowledge later on
now uh the way in which he does this is
to
create a theory of what human existence
is and he calls this uh
this human existence design which
doesn't translate out of german
one of the things that heidegger does
all the time human being what is it like
to be a human being design
is human being in the world it is finite
it is contingent it is uncertain
it is a collection of psychic states
like worry
guilt anxiety and
this constellation
of human qualities or human entities
is not like anything else in the world
it is the way in which or the vehicle in
which
the matrix in which being is disclosed
to us in other words you can only find
out what being is
from the perspective or in the way that
a human being finds out about what being
is and that's by
being a human being i know how now can
you see how this is going to get awfully
circular and strange and that
we're going to have whole chapters and
perhaps whole volumes of
being talks to itself and projects
itself into the future of being you're
going to get a lot of what appears to be
circular reasoning
on account of the fact that we're stuck
within
the internality the what i call the
intracosm and it's very hard to break
out
from the intracosm into the exorcism
it's one of the characteristic flaws
it's perhaps the achilles heel of
continental philosophy
so what we're going to do is investigate
design investigate what it is to be a
human being
and we're going to do that by being a
human being and we're going to do that
in an authentic way
and what that means that we have to
remove our illusions
and remove our
distraction by the events the little
trivial events in the world
focus yourself and turn inward
and what you will find is your true self
and your true being
you will move from a pre-reflective
state of inauthenticity of concern with
beings small b
beings to an authentic state of
concern with being itself and apparently
the only imperative or
what i can discern and hide again the
only imperative that human beings have
the only thing left that we ought to do
that we somehow have a responsibility to
do
is to authentically be capital b to
confront the reality of human life
despite the fact that we may find it
unpleasant or difficult or trying
and it may well be that once we do that
we have moved to another level of
experience and conceptualization of the
world
and if that turns out to be the case
then he will have contributed something
to our self-knowledge
and if you remember that i said that
heidegger wants us to drive us back to
the pre-socratic
primordial kind of a state and the
delphic oracle told socrates told
socrates and the rest of the greeks that
they must know themselves
well the continental prog project
involves
knowing yourself turning inward and
finding out what it is like to be a
human being
now when we look at design at human
existence in its contingency and its
finitude
we find that it has a three-fold
structure one
and that structure is understanding mood
and discourse
now understanding means that we have to
accept
dozen as offering us as creating a
context in other words to be a human
being
is to contextualize the world around you
and to attribute meanings to it to
to organize the experiences that you
have into a sort of a gestalt a whole
and in order to be a human being you
have to contextualize the world
a second thing that's necessary for
design is mood
and here it means something kind of not
unambiguous and fairly straightforward
happiness
sadness things like that i mean the
psychic states of our moods
and think about this for a second can
you imagine an anglo-american empiricist
telling us that one of the really
important things you have to think about
in the course of philosophical
development is the idea of mood very
foreign to that scientific
approach to reality whereas for
heidegger it's a fact of life it is
perhaps one of the facts of life which
we
only ignore at our peril at the peril of
abstracting and making inauthentic your
conception of yourself and the world
and the third element in design is the
idea of discourse
language is constitutive of design
things can be
can be formulated in speech and can be
understood or things can only be
understood when they are formulated in
speech and then
made subject to our moods so everyday
depoeticized language
doesn't uncover a design it numbs us it
makes us anesthetized to the true facts
of being
and causes us to be caught up with
trivialities
do any of you know ts eliot's for
quartets where he says
that the it's not the hollow man but
some example of inauthenticity
or inauthentic men are distracted from
distraction by distraction
isn't that a beautiful and lovely poetic
line well to a great extent
that's what heidegger is driving us
towards he's saying i'm calling you back
to yourselves
i'm asking you not to be distracted from
distraction by distraction
do not let the little beings of the
world deprive you of the big being
and may i suggest that the big being has
an uncomfortably
strong homology to god remember he
starts out as a german
theologian all right give that some
thought or a jesuit theologian
well this search after being which is
enigmatic and discloses itself in some
very peculiar ways
may well be the depersonalized form of
god in the 20th century
now heidegger's stance towards being
i mean to take this idea a little bit
further reminds me of the gospel story
of the rich young man
a rich young man who's very virtuous
comes to jesus and says
how do i really become good how do i
really become virtuous
and jesus says go sell all you have and
follow me
is saying something remarkably like that
he is saying go
forsake all of beings with a small b all
the trivialities of your experience
and sell all you have and follow me not
follow heidegger but follow being itself
follow authenticity it is the only
obligation left
for the conscious human being in the
20th century this is a
very closely sanded down version of
theology i suspect
now his great work being in time
is uh a very difficult piece of work
because it wasn't all published
in one whole chunk he published it for
various kind of academic contingencies
in 27
and the idea behind it is that freedom
has to be earned
it's not something you get given it's
something you work towards as a response
to design
and you earn your freedom you become a
human being you
make yourself by your confrontation with
the real facts of human existence
of design and here are some of the parts
the first volume
is the sort of hermeneutics of being the
first are the two volumes in
being in time and the first volume is an
analysis of what we might call the
unreflective
state of being of a man or a woman
that's caught up with
this being small b and that being small
b that is still distracted from
distraction by distraction
and the problem that he's going to raise
is that we are lying to ourselves we
delude ourselves we get ourselves all
caught up with little things that really
don't matter to us
and then we ignore what we really are
and
god knows we are offered little enough
in this dozen in this world of
contingent finitude and minimally we
have an obligation
to ourselves to become what we can now
uh in this first volume he analyzes this
pre-reflective state before we actually
connect or con confront dazan and it
turns out that uh
that human being has three related
aspects or the design is
a three-fold structure the first is
facticity
in german govorfan height to be thrown
into the world
we didn't ask for this right no one
consulted us
you know before we were born or before
we became conscious asking us if we
would like a kind of spatio-temporal
world
full of people and things and objects
and questions and
issues like that we're stuck with it you
know this is not a disease it's not a
problem it's just it is what it is
you don't like it that's tough deal with
it so facticity
the fact that we are cast into a world
not of our own making and that we busy
ourselves with little irrelevant things
right that's a given the second element
in existence is existentiality
and this idea entails appropriating the
world for our own purposes
we take knowledge we take objects we
take food
we take things of utility to us and we
manipulate them in practical ways
right practical utilities very pragmatic
sense of how human beings
interact with the world around them and
the final
quality of human being particularly this
pre-reflective quality
is the quality of uh in german it's fair
fallen
but the best translation index is
probably something like
there's something wrong with us there's
something there's a sort of radical
deprivation of the human condition
as it starts this is what gives
heidegger something to do
he wants to start with his
pre-reflective kind of unconscious human
state
and drive us towards consciousness of
ourselves he doesn't guarantee this is
going to be pretty
he doesn't guarantee this is going to be
easy and it doesn't guarantee this is
going to be readily intelligible
but on the other hand whatever it is you
are engaged in that isn't that
relatively unimportant what profiteth
the man
that he should gain the whole world and
lose his soul i think that this has
at least one foot in christian theology
and i think that many of the
ideas of heidegger's honest or authentic
confrontation of being
are philosophical highly abstract jesuit
theology
de-theologized or de-divinized you hold
on to the structure you leave the
content
things are going to get very weird all
right
so we have facticity extension
existentiality and forfeiture
this condition of being fair fallen of
being caught up in a web of maya
a web of illusions the world of beings
this booming buzzing confusion out there
is essentially not real our reality
is in being capital b not in any of
these trivialities these distractions
that we're forced to confront
just from being a human being if you
always live your life
in this condition of being fair fallen
in this condition of forfeiture
you have forfeited your claim to being
really human
to be human is to confront the world the
way it is not it's it's to be
a grown-up adult that is willing to
deal with human life as it is rather
than yet
then getting distracted or sidetracked
by any of the various
cul-de-sacs that life might offer us
and if you think about what this leads
to uh these
men or the vast majority of human beings
apparently are
caught up in this inauthentic mode of
existence and that is the source
in the 20th century of the thing called
the mass man
heidegger calls it dasman but what it
means is uh it's the opposite
of being an individual it's being a herd
creature not reflective
not thinking not encountering the world
on your own
and the best he can do you know perhaps
the great tradition of german
romanticism
is to force us to become individuals if
you remember the great philosopher
kierkegaard
who is certainly one of the formative
influences on on hegel
um or on uh on heidegger sorry thank you
um one of the formative influences um uh
kierkegaard wanted his tombstone to say
soren kierkegaard and his date of birth
and date of death and then below that he
wanted to say
that individual which is a beautiful and
profound epitaph well what heidegger
calls upon us to do
is to follow kierkegaard but to follow
him
in that respect in an individual way you
confront being on your own become what
you might possibly be
you might also deserve to be called an
individual if you work really hard at it
if you cultivate your inner life and you
find
some authentic confrontation with things
that you'd rather not think about
and in volume two of heidegger's work
we find that he does try and sketch out
what an authentic being would be like
how we really confront dazine and
what what it will entail and what it
will do for us
and in addition to that he goes through
the history of philosophy and with
considerable detail and
in a very kind of idiomatic way and the
point of his going through the history
of philosophy
is to construct a philosophical history
of ontology
and to do a phenomenological destruction
of prior conceptions
of ontology so that he can clear the
ground to erect his own new building
essentially he says i'm going to only
hold on to the pre-socratic legacy
most of platonism and some of aristotle
but after aristotle's all downhill i
don't want to talk about their
conception of being or ontology it's a
waste of time
we have gone down an inauthentic
cul-de-sac human beings
almost without exception have not been
authentic since we began to separate
ourselves
from being in particular he's concerned
with nietzsche's charge that it's not
even possible to talk about being
anymore
so we'll talk about that in a little
later but the idea is that heidegger
wants to force us back
to an earlier pristine state this
sounds remarkably like going back to the
garden of eden i could be mistaken
this condition of being fair fallen
sounds to me an awful lot like sin
and since it's so universal it strikes
me as an awful lot like original sin
but i may be mistaken professor
heidegger tells us that it's not
original sin he explicitly says so but
i have my doubts well we
construct this phenomenological
destruction of the history of of
ontology
and in its place instead of looking at
the world
sub species eternitatus we're going to
look at the world
subspecies temporalis in other words
we're going to look at human being the
way it really is rather than some
than from the god's eye view we're going
to look at it from the human being's eye
view
and we're going to find that the world
discloses itself and being discloses
itself
that's a very peculiar matrix of things
most of which are not very pleasant
in the first case if you want to really
confront dazine that's what we get from
volume 2 you're going to have to get
used to the idea of amorphati
or acceptance of fate particularly
acceptance of your own death
death anxiety worry care
fear are the main themes of heidegger's
second work and this is the good side
remember this is the upside
you're better off with this rather than
dwelling on all the other things that
might distract you from these businesses
and in addition conscience is going to
be an important element in this second
volume in other words in order to come
to our authentic being in order to be
truly human which apparently so few
people do
we must confront death we must recognize
that we have a conscience and it is an
ineliminable
and we must do what we can to sacrifice
all else to sell all we have to follow
being
now death is an interesting and
important problem and
unlike most philosophers heidegger seems
to be under the impression that he has
some intelligent things to say about
death
my personal feeling is that although
death is a fear fearsome reality
and it is the kind of thing that a
conscious person will inevitably at some
point or
perhaps at all points uh come into
contact with and think about
um having thought about it myself i'm
not able to think of
or say anything intelligent about this
topic perhaps you are
i apologize but i'm not able to do that
there's not a lot you can say about
death
on the other hand heidegger wants to
talk about that as the horizon of human
existence
if any of you've read ernest becker's
book the denial of death that's a sort
of
popularization of one heideggerian
problem
we all try and persuade ourselves in all
the everyday activities of life
of life is that uh that i'm gonna last
forever i'm gonna last forever i'm gonna
last forever
time goes on into an infinite horizon
nay that is being small b
you are lying to yourself nay in fact we
all have to realize that time is not an
infinite horizon
to view time as time sub 1 times sub 2
times sub t
3 time sub n going on forever that's to
view time from the perspective of god
that's also to pursue to
view time from the perspective of our
scientific friends
the only difficulty is is that no human
life experiences time like that
we experience it in a radically
different way we experience it as the
horizon of our possibilities
so time is here to stay now can you see
why he titles his book
being and time he wants to study being
and then he wants to study some
essential foundational groundwork for
the human experience of being
and that turns out to be the fact that
we are temporal
right if you think of t.s elite in the
rose garden time present and time passed
right um it's surprising how the eliot
is so overtly christian and this denies
its christianity or it seems to be
indifferent to it but i think there are
powerful christian themes
underlying this so temporality the fact
that we must confront our own death
surely one of the great themes of
christianity as well
comes out as being the one imperative i
would almost be tempted to say
that this demand made upon us by
conscience because
one of the important elements in volume
2 is that heidegger talks about the
human conscience and says look you want
to be a human being
listen to your conscience because there
is a real thing conscience is
one of the ore facts of human life and
you know what your conscience tells you
to do
sell all you have and follow me don't
get caught up with little trivialities
do not become distracted by beings
search out the final the real the
ultimate being
so conscience forces us into
authenticity conscious
kind of conscience accuses us of being
inauthentic and being concerned with
beings
and what he is or what uh heidegger
thinks he is here is
the voice of conscience to no small
extent he
moves from being a philosopher to being
a prophet with surprising agility
and when he calls you to be yourself
when he calls you to hear
heed the voice of your own conscience he
sounds
more like jeremiah than he does sar but
i could be wrong here
now authenticity this confrontation of
our own finitude
is the the one state that would actually
reduce or would we
take us out of this pre-philosophical
not quite human state
and what this discloses is a number of
important issues but one of the most
important of them is the idea of guilt
and care and worry and
i would be inclined to say that like
elliott um heidegger thinks that the
human condition is one of radical
deprivation we are not what we should be
we are not what we could be
and once we confront our own finitude we
confront the fact that we have
obligations to ourselves which we can
never meet
think about let's think this through in
the first case
when we confront dozyn and we
find ourselves in being capital b not
just small b
the response on the part of the
conscious agent is
what is in german called zorga and in
english that would be called
care or worry or concern and there are
at least three things about which we are
concerned and here comes the temporal
element
first case we are concerned about the
future and that means that design
conscious human being projects itself
into the future
right in other words the way we
experience the world we experience
ourselves not just here and now but we
project ourselves into the future
and we also project ourselves into our
own past
projecting ourselves into our future
causes angst
worry almost
almost a terminal frightfulness because
we must confront the fact that
we come to an end and we don't know how
to avoid that we can't avoid that
we project ourselves into the earlier
parts of our life and an interesting
fact is that we cannot avoid the
experience of guilt
and i would be tempted to say that guilt
is the uncomfortable certainty
that we are not what we could have been
it's true and heidegger is right about
that
and not only is he right about that but
that is an ineliminable part of being a
human being
and any scientific theory which either
fails to talk about this or tells us we
can't talk about it
is just unacceptable that's right
so we project ourselves into the future
we project ourselves into the past
and we confront darzan in the present
and what we find out about ourselves
when we confront our design in the
present
is that we have a potential for freedom
from being small b
which we have not completely realized
what this means is the following
we look into our past we realize we have
not
been what we could have been we look at
the present and we realize
we are not as free and as knowledgeable
about being as authentic as we could be
and we look into the future and we
realize that there is a definite
temporal horizon
think about this now we see our own
death coming in the future
and this death and we don't know when it
will happen
it extinguishes all our possibilities
right but it does not exhaust all our
possibilities
in other words between now and the time
we die there is a great variety of
choices we could make of context we
could
construct of projects we could undertake
and the problem is that we will not
undertake all of them we will not do all
these things
so that means between now and then
you've got to make some choices about
what you're going to do with your life
and the problem is that you will not be
able to do all the things you might wish
to do or that you
could do if you were an eternal being
all right and that means that you will
not realize some of your possibilities
and that means you owe yourself a debt
that you can never repay
and that is a sort of cosmic guilt may i
suggest this is the
echo of original sin when it gets
de-theologized
it is the human condition and we cannot
escape it if we try and escape
it by truncating off reality by adopting
some sort of human or positivistic
position
so don't worry about guilt don't worry
about your inter the internal facts of
your psyche
the result is is that you concern
yourself with beings you lapse back into
that pre-authentic
pre-philosophical state that heidegger
says you ignore at your parent oh that
you engage in extra peril
if you want to be human then get a soul
and you want to get a soul
then face the fact that there are
certain inelimitable parts of your
experience
which you have to confront in order to
be human
and there are certain questions that you
have to ask in order to be human
the difficulty is and the tension of
being human is that you are forced to
ask some questions
for which there are no answers you can't
get around it you must ask the question
of being
even though it's not at all clear
exactly what that means and also it's
not at all clear
what the answer is and if the answer
would have come up and shake you by the
hand it's not at all clear that you
would recognize it
so for a great many reasons this is
obscurity piled upon obscurity piled
upon obscurity
combined with a certain obvious and
honest confrontation of the realities of
human life
i think this is a that sort of funny
combination of obscurity and obvious
kind of literary or psychic truthfulness
is one of the characteristic
amalgams of 20th century continental
philosophy
now let's look back at the question of
conscience
design demands that we face either we
that we live our life
facing death rather than denying it and
that means that
ethics kind of not implodes
so that the only real obligation that we
have left is that we should be authentic
and that ends up meaning that it's not
so important what you do in life is how
you do it
right in other words between now and the
time you die it's not so important what
projects you undertake as it is that you
should be conscious of the fact that
you're not going to take all of them
and that you have to decide which are
better the difficulty here
is that this very easily shades off into
straightaway nihilism
heidegger after all became a nazi
heidegger
was advanced due to his political
connections to national socialism
heidegger who um his greatest workers
first great published work being in time
was in husserl's yard book and husserl
was his teacher and it was dedicated to
husserah
but alas for sure was a jew and so when
huster was
moved out of academic life starting in
1933 uh
heidegger publicly disassociated himself
from husserl
and heidegger ended up taking husserl's
chair at the university of freiburg
this sounds to me like the phenomenology
of careerism but i could be wrong
all right it is a particular a
particularly unhappy circumstance
or when philosophers at least those
philosophers who claim to have a
particularly deep
or profound or important insight into
life should let us down in such an
egregious way
there is something not only
disconcerting about it but something
which
makes me want to put the rest of his
statements in italics
and be very careful about how i read
them in some ways we are
if if being in this pre-philosophical
state of denying design
gets us to behave well i would be
inclined to say well i'd rather be
stupid
that perhaps that's just me now in
addition to
confronting design through the
vehicle of conscience and through the
vehicle of existence
the historicity of human beings is of
course of great concern to heidegger
we are in some particular context at
some particular time
and we must always be oriented towards
the future
in particular when we are oriented
towards the future and our own demise
and our own
end we have to do what heidegger calls
thinking about
nothing now in the english translations
of heidegger
nothing gets a capital n but alas in the
german language all nouns are
capitalized so
we don't have quite that that way out
and thinking about nothing is one of the
most trying things you can try and do i
mean there are long sections i know it
sounds like
almost a joke but there are long
sections which we discuss are
encountered with nothing
and it means that nothing is not quite
negation but the source of negation
i have no clear conception of what that
means and what
what's involved in thinking about
nothing i have tried working through it
and
it runs us into all kinds of logical
problems and heidegger will say well
so much the worst for you and for your
logic confront being as it really is
i can see why positivistic guys like
carnap and the vienna circle find this
so trying
lush ambiguity and elaborate
self-indulgence
it's one of the things that i think we
would justifiably want to avoid in any
philosophical construct
now after uh during the nazi years he
produced some of his most
important work and that nazism should be
hospitable to philosophy is well
apparently the case
is quite influential and well it's
perhaps not
fair to judge a man's philosophical
output by his life it depends on how you
look at philosophy
but i might be inclined to say that he
is influenced by the cultural chauvinism
of the time
he has some very peculiar ideas about
language apparently and i'm not joking
here
he holds the view that philosophy can
only be done in german
that is not a joke i know that may sound
funny it may sound and i can imagine
wittgenstein in his grave turning over
and over and over
saying nine right no no in any language
no all right philosophy can be done in
any language that's not correct but
heidegger has
what i would end up being describing as
a sort of mystical or magical view of
language which i think
becomes more apparent in his late work
and which makes it that much more
difficult
which makes an obscure and difficult
philosophy doubly difficult later on
um german is perhaps the only
language philosophy could be conducted
and maybe greek when he's in a good kind
of
a feel-good or a kind of generous mood
he willing to love that perhaps
philosophy could be done in greek in
greece but that's about it you have to
do it in greek
and what he's trying to do
in this later work is to meet
nietzsche's
objections about ontology if you
remember that nietzsche at the end of
the 19th century
said that look our ideas about being
have faded away into vapor and mist
well heidegger in his introduction to
metaphysics says no
actually nietzsche is a sort of
seismograph who sees the intrinsic
depravity and mistakes in the western
tradition
and he sees that it leads up to this
idea that we can't talk about being at
all
what he does is show us the
inauthenticity of all the history of
philosophy
since the greeks all right so what he's
going to do is drive us back
beyond the niche and impasse back to the
pre-socratics
an admiration that he shares with
nietzsche of course because nietzsche
loved the priest of critics as well
in the post-war years heidegger's work
continued to be difficult
and almost impenetrable and he spent
most of his time analyzing the
pre-socratics
um there's a very interesting set of
essays called uh
uh what's what's the german uh name
pulse vega which means wood trails
and what is interesting about wood
trails the reason why i chose that kind
of odd title is that
in german wood trails have the idea of
cul-de-sacs in other words
you take a walk into the woods and there
are various trails but they don't lead
anywhere
they lead towards nothing they lead
towards an impasse you've written a set
of essays
that are the logical or psychic
analogues of cul-de-sacs blind alleys
would be a way of
translating holtz vega in a sensible way
and
this is where we find most of his
treatment of the pre-socratics there's
an
amazing and long detailed essay on
anaximander
and i mean he's one of the the ionian
physicists
and it's amazing how much mileage you
can get from one line
since after all we only have one
surviving line of anaximander
and he's easily able to kick out both 50
70 pages on that
and this the most elaborate and
implausible and
uh self-referential kind of treatment so
his later work is even more difficult
than the earlier work but in many
respects it's an extrapolation from the
earlier work and it's concerned with
being
and these sources of being back in that
pre-socratic tradition
in some ways by the end of his life the
great example of a philosophical
enterprise
is no longer plato's dialogues it has
become parmenide's
poem about being i don't imagine many of
you at home or many of you here
have gotten around to reading
parmenide's poem about being let me see
if i can help you with that
um what parmenides says is that we must
think and say that being is
from the other way i debar you what he
means is
that ontology is the first and primary
and fundamental concern of human beings
all else follows from that heidegger is
trying to drive us back to that
pre-socratic state of innocence
and the great exemplar of that will be
parmenides the forbidding
difficult um completely abstract
founder of ontology now
there are lots and lots of problems with
this it's all it's hard to know exactly
where to start but
let's take a couple of cracks at this
in the first case heidegger is so
impenetrable
that he often comes close to being
self-parody
when he talks about nothing and thinking
about nothing and
nothing knots rather than nothing
negates
i have no clear idea of what this
nothing is i found out that it's not
negation
and i find out a lot about what
heidegger's ideas are not
i often have a difficulty in finding out
how to attach some sensible predicate to
an idea about
like nothing what can you think about
nothing what can you say about nothing
heidegger appears to suggest you can say
quite a bit but beats me what it amounts
to
many of heidegger's ideas or
many many parts of his writings are
elaborate puns
and plays on words let me give you an
example from the german
um he says that our feeling uh with
regard to
our encounter with design is uncanny and
in german that's unheimlich
and he says that this uncanny feeling of
not knowing our way around in the world
amounts to not feeling at home in the
world now in german the word for home is
haim
and so when we have this uncanny feeling
we feel on heimlich which means unhomely
which means we don't feel at home in the
world
so he kind of makes the idea of
uncanniness and uncertainty
and kind of anxiety and the kind of
being and the feeling of being sort of
homesick
of longing for a connection with being
well he kind of merges them all together
in a kind of
messy mushy kind of linguistic
overlap and it we might be tempted to
think that that's a big
problem with heidegger but i might be
tempted to say that that's also
the source of his richness in other
words the fact that that he's more
concerned
in many respects with connotations than
denotations the fact that he likes this
messy overlap this linguistic
um word play this play these plays on
words these puns
and also he's famous for his elaborate
and very implausible etymologies
when he doesn't know the actual
historical source of a word i think he
usually makes it up
and then provides some quote
philosophical argument
to account for why only he understands
the real source of this word the rest of
the lexicographers in the world
do not this happens all the time with
the treatment of greek it also happens
to time all the time with this treatment
of german
another problem that comes up is the
problem of
morality mysticism and nihilism and
here's where i would like to take a
a sort of crack at the continental
tradition i'd like to offer kind of
foundational criticism
when you start talking about interiority
when you move from the realm of public
discourse about stuff out there
beings with a small bee to whatever it
is you've got going on inside you
all right the difficulty is first of all
that it's very hard to put words on this
to talk about this in any kind of
intelligible way
the danger here is that you end up
talking to yourself
right which is the opposite of the
philosophical enterprise
a second problem is that nihilism
is always a possibility because we might
want to say almost a definition of
nihilism
is a speech that's indistinguishable
from silence
and i've often thought that this
discussion of nothing and what it does
and how we encounter nothing
is a very sophisticated way of not
saying anything
right but that may be just me uh my
sense is though
that this is uh that he's trying to do
the impossible linguistically
too much of the time and my final
difficulty with heidegger and i think
this is the most interesting and
important difficulty with at least from
my perspective it is
is that this nebulous collection of
insights and tautologies
and unintelligibilities and neologisms
right
are a kind of transformation
of theology in other words it seems to
me
that what heidegger's being is what this
ontological search is
is theology with the god left out right
and we worship ourselves and we have
obligations to ourselves
instead of obligations to the deity and
our one obligation to ourselves is to be
ourselves
okay i mean this comes very close not
just to solipsism
but to self-worship i mean what else is
that worship there's only me
solipsism is the great danger that
recurs in all of these systems why
because they're beginning from the
inside and working out and most of never
get out
that's the big difficulty generally
speaking and this is i mean i think
tells us something about this kind of
philosophy it's had rather little
influence
certainly in the anglo-american
philosophical world a karnap wrote a
scathing treatment of some of heidegger
in which he said this is a particularly
unpleasant example of what happens
to metaphysics or what happens to your
brain when you do metaphysics
this is the high point of unintelligible
gibberish and karnap was
published a very unkind treatment of
this and you can kind of see why you
would
scientific guys are not going to want to
hear about dread and death and stuff
tables and chairs atoms and physics and
that kind of stuff well
where has it been influential this is
worth noting in theology
paul tillich the great systematic
theologian
heidegger right turned into theology
think about it i mean he makes his debt
to heidegger quite explicit
those of you that know the work of
rudolph bolton demythologized
christianity this is
all heidegger heidegger redux he's back
to haunt us again
they just transformed the old
theological problem into heideggerianism
and then heideggerianism
into what is alleged to be a new
theological problem
may i suggest then that this enigmatic
being
so central to heidegger's thought is in
fact
easily interpreted as the silence of god
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