Heidegger
Heidegger
(1889-1976)
Introduction
As Thomas Sheehan tells us there are two incontestable facts
about Martin Heidegger: first, that he remains one of the
centurys most influential philosophers and, second, that he
was a Nazi.1 Heideggers influence on the development of
20th century Continental philosophy is immense
And yet Heidegger was very definitely a Nazi, a dues-paying member of the National Socialist
Party from 1933-1945. He used his considerable reputation to lend support to the Nazis in the
early 30's when the Party was just coming into power, and, as Rector of the University of
Freiburg in 1933-34, he actively participated in the Nazi suppression of Jews and other
opponents of the Party from the university. So what do we make of Heideggers philosophy?
Does his political activity undermine and discredit the philosophy? This would obviously be
much too simple a response. Why otherwise would Hannah Arendt, a Jew whose own work
focused on the darkness of the Nazi regime, play such a significant role in the resurrections of
Heideggers academic reputation after the war? Certainly it was a respect for his philosophy and
not some vestige of feeling from their personal relationship. Then there is the case of Derrida,
also a Jew, whose writings are also deeply indebted to Heidegger.
1
Thomas Sheehan, Heidegger and the Nazis. The New York Review of Books, 35: 10 (June 16,
1988), pp. 37-48.
2
John D. Caputo, Heidegger, in A Companion to Continental Philosophy, Simon Critchley
and William Schroeder, eds. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), pp. 223-233.
Existentialism Heidegger2
The debate over Heideggers thought, and the dark shadow cast over his thought by his political
life, is a very heated debate in contemporary Continental philosophy. Is it possible to read and
learn from Heidegger without either condoning or making light of his involvement with the
Nazis? There is no way to begin to respond to these questions without first attempting to come to
grips with Heideggers thought.
Heideggers thought is generally considered to consist of two periods: the early Existentialist
thought marked most significantly by Being and Time, and a later thought marked by a turn
(kehre) in his thinking. When exactly this turn takes place is a matter of debate. Some point to
the 1947 Letter on Humanism, while others suggest the turn was already underway in The
Origin of the Work of Art and the lectures on Nietzsche from the 1930's.
Writing in the late 1950's while Heidegger was still producing his later work, William Barrett did
not see a turn in Heideggers thinking. What seemed to mark a turn was an obvious shift in the
topic of Heideggers writings, from the dramatic and moving descriptions of human existence,
of death, care, anxiety, guilt, etc. in Being and Time, to the later work with its focus on poetry,
art, language and the problem of technology. Barrett argues that it is a mistake to see such a
turn:
. . . for the singleness and continuity of Heideggers thinking is such that all his later writings can
be considered as commentaries and elucidations of what was already in germ in his Being and
Time. He has never ceased from that single task, the repetition of the problem of Being: the
standing face to face with Being as did the earliest Greeks. And on the very first pages of Being
and Time he tells us that this task involves nothing less than the destruction of the whole history of
W estern ontology that is, the way the W est has thought about Being.3
In a sense there is something to what Barrett says, as Heideggers thought, early and late, is
concerned with the question of Being and with overcoming the history of Western metaphysics
or ontology (ontology is branch of metaphysics, it is the discipline that investigates what it is to
exist). This attempt to question the whole history of Western philosophy, to open up a new path
of thinking beyond the history of metaphysics, is certainly a theme that Heidegger shared with
Nietzsche (consider the History of an Error from Twilight of the Idols).
3
William Barrett, Irrational Man: A Study in Existential Philosophy (New York: Doubleday
Anchor Books, 1962), p. 211.
Existentialism Heidegger3
However, there is also something to the notion of a turn in Heideggers thought. Though he
remains constant in his questioning of Being and seeking a pathway of thinking beyond the
history of metaphysics, the point of access to the question of Being does shift, and the turn does
seem to be a turning away from Existentialism. Being and Time was initially recognized as a
landmark text in Existentialism and is still read as a major work in Existentialism; yet in the
Letter on Humanism Heidegger explicitly distances himself and even Being and Time from
Existentialism. Clearly for the most part this distancing of himself from Existentialism
is a distancing himself from Sartre. Since Sartre so clearly embraced the label Existentialism,
Heidegger would distance himself from Existentialism. From Heideggers point of view,
Sartre was still too close to Descartes, and thus also to the history of metaphysics from which
Heidegger sought to break free. Derrida and other more recent French philosophers are more
influenced by the later Heidegger and thus also distance themselves from Sartre. It is for this
reason that Sartre has not remained as important a thinker as Heidegger in contemporary
Continental philosophy.
Suffice it to say that there is a continuity to Heideggers thought and also something of a turn in
his thinking. There is an element of Heideggers thought that is Existentialist and also
something that influences more recent postmodern developments. We shall attempt to have
some grasp of both the continuity and the turn, both the existentialist and postmodern elements of
Heideggers thought.
The Origin of the Work of Art, complete in Poetry, Language, Thought and abridged in Basic
Writings [Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes, 1960.] [A Lecture given in 1935 and 1936]
Nietzsche. Volume I: The Will to Power as Art. Translated by David Farrell Krell. New York:
Harper & Row, 1979. [Nietzsche, 2 vols., 1961.] [Lectures on Nietzsche given from
1936-1940]
Nietzsche. Volume II: The Eternal Recurrence of the Same. Translated by David Farrell Krell.
New York: Harper & Row, 1984. [Nietzsche, 2 vols., 1961.] [Lectures on Nietzsche given
from 1936-1940]
Nietzsche. Volume III: The Will to Power as Knowledge and as Metaphysics. Translated by Joan
Stambaugh, David Farrell Krell, and Frank A. Capuzzi, Edited by David Farrell Krell.
New York: Harper & Row, 1987. [Nietzsche, 2 vols., 1961.] [Lectures on Nietzsche given
from 1936-1940]
Nietzsche. Volume IV: Nihilism. Translated by Frank A. Capuzzi, Edited by David Farrell Krell.
New York: Harper & Row, 1982. [Nietzsche, 2 vols., 1961.] [Lectures on Nietzsche given
from 1936-1940]
Letter on Humanism. Translated by Frank A. Capuzzi and J. Glenn Gray, in Basic Writings.
[Brief ber den Humanismus in Wegmarken, 1967.] [Heidegger wrote the Letter on
Humanism as a response to Sartres Existentialism Is a Humanism in 1947]
Nietzsches Word: God is Dead. Translated by William Lovitt in The Question Concerning
Technology and Other Essays. [Nietzsches Wort Gott ist tot from Holzwege, 1950.]
Early Greek Thinking. Translated by David Farrell Krell and Frank A. Capuzzi. New York:
Harper & Row, 1975. [Der Spruch des Anaximander from Holzwege, 1950, pp. 296-
343; Logos (Heraklit, Fragment B 50), Moira (Parmenides VIII, 34-41), and
Aletheia (Heraklit, Fragment B 16) from Vortrge und Aufstze, 1954, pp. 207-282.]
An Introduction to Metaphysics. Translated by Ralph Manheim. Garden City, New York:
Doubleday-Anchor Books, 1961. [Einfhrung in die Metaphysik, 1953]
What Is Called Thinking? Translated by Fred D. Wieck and J. Glenn Gray. New York: Harper &
Row, 1968. [Was heisst Denken? 1954]
The Question Concerning Technology. Translated by William Lovitt in The Question
Concerning Technology and Other Essays. [Die Frage nach der Technik from
Vortrge und Aufstze, 1954.]
The Question of Being. A bilingual edition. Translation by William Kluback and Jean T. Wilde.
New Haven, Connecticut: College & University Press, 19958. [Zur Seinsfrage, 1956.]
What is Philosophy? A bilingual edition. Translation by William Kluback and Jean T. Wilde.
New Haven, Connecticut: College & University Press, 19958. [Was ist dasdie
Philosophie? 1956.]
Discourse on Thinking. Translated by John M. Anderson and E. Hans Freund. New York: Harper
& Row, 1966. [Gelassenheit, 1959.]
On the Way to Language. Translated by Peter D. Hertz and Joan Stambaugh. New York: Harper
& Row, 1971. [Unterwegs zur Sprache, 1959.]
What Is a Thing? Translated by W. B. Barton, Jr. And Vera Deutsch. Chicago: Henry Regnery
Company, 1967. [Die Frage nach dem Ding, 1962.]
On Time and Being. Translated by Joan Stambaugh. New York: Harper & Row, 1972. [Zur
Sache des Denkens, 1969.]
Existentialism Heidegger5
Husserls aim and starting point is thus still very much Cartesian: he would start with a
methodical doubt in order to reach a point completely free of all presuppositions (and thus try to
take this even further than Descartes who had all sorts of hidden presuppositions). Husserl also
accepts the Cartesian starting point of modern epistemology: that our only certain knowledge is
the contents of consciousness. If Descartes had the correct starting point, Kants transcendental
idealism came closest to the correct method. Kant also accepts the Cartesian starting point that
we can only have direct knowledge of a phenomenal world, the world as it appears as a
phenomenon of consciousness. But Kants radical insight was that the contents of consciousness
must be organized by the mind. Experience must be organized in terms of the categories
(causality and substance for example) in order for experience to make any sense. For Kant we
know that we inhabit a world of causally interrelated objects in space and time because we
simply must experience the world in that way. What Kant derives from this, however, is an
argument for the necessity of the structure of the objective world discovered by natural science.
In the end Husserls ambitious hopes for grounding the human sciences more rigorously on the
phenomenological method proved to be unfulfilled; however, his idea of going back to the things
4
David West, An Introduction to Continental Philosophy (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1996), p.87.
Existentialism Heidegger6
themselves, back to things as they are experienced before the analysis of science and philosophy
proved influential. Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908-1961), for example, employs this
phenomenological method, though not in the hopes of solving Husserls ambitious project, but in
trying to explore a pre-conceptual level of perception. Merleau-Ponty thus develops interesting
philosophical discussions on the body, perception, sexuality, and gender. It is in Heideggers
work, however, that Husserls phenomenological method found its most influential development.
In raising the Question of Being Heideggers task in Being and Time is one of fundamental
ontology. This was the task Aristotle set out in the book that came to be known as the
Metaphysics. In that book Aristotles broadest and deepest question demanded an account
(logos) of the Being of beings (onta), and thus this question became known as the question of
ontology. In the Metaphysics Aristotle states: All human beings by nature reach out for
understanding. For Aristotle, it is natural for humans to try to understand how things add up or
what things are all about. Thus metaphysics is defined as the attempt to make sense of what
things are in the broadest sense. Thus metaphysics involves ontology, trying to understand what
these things are, to understand their Being.
The reference to the battle of the giants concerning being is to Platos Sophist. There Plato is
referring to the battle between Heraclitus and Parmenides over the question of whether reality, or
the Being of beings, is changing or unchanging. Heideggers thesis is that since Plato the battle
of the giants has been considered to have already been decisively won by Parmenides. According
to Heidegger, the whole question of Being has been forgotten ever since and thus the whole
history of philosophy (the history of metaphysics) since Plato has developed out of a
forgetfulness of the question of the meaning of Being. Heideggers project in Being and Time is
thus to restate this question, and thus to reopen this ancient battle of the giants. Heideggers
project from the very outset thus bears a resemblance to Nietzsches view expressed in Twilight
of the Idols that the whole history of philosophy since Plato has been a History of an Error.
5
Charles Guignon and Derek Pereboom. Existentialism: Basic Writings, 2nd ed. (Indianapolis:
Hackett Publishing, 2001), p. 183.
6
Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, trans. John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson (New York:
Harper & Row, 1962.), p. 21. (Existentialism: Basic Writings, p. 211)
Existentialism Heidegger7
We are told that the question of the meaning of Being is the most basic question we can ask; yet
most of us will feel that nothing we have ever thought about or studied can prepare us for it.
What does the word Being refer to? What is it to ask about the meaning of Being? What is the
ontological difference between being and Being?
7
Irrational Man, pp. 211-212.
Existentialism Heidegger8
Heideggers thought here is that we can best get access to the broader question of Being
by asking the question concerning what it means to be as a human being
his analysis, however, will not start by trying to determine the essence of human being
but rather, with trying to understand the existence of human beingDasein
As Being and Time sets out to do an existential analysis of human existence,
it is obvious why it was immediately recognized to be a work of Existentialism
One of the key themes of Existentialism is that existence precedes essence
we exist as human beings first
essence is not given but is something determined through the process of existing
thus, Being and Time sets out to do an analysis of what it means to exist as a human being
and the basic idea of Being and Time, as Simon Critchley puts it, is extremely simple:
. . .being is time. That is, what it means for a human being to be is to exist temporally in the stretch
between birth and death. Being is time and time is finite, it comes to an end with our death.
Therefore, if we want to understand what it means to be an authentic human being, then it is
essential that we constantly project our lives onto the horizon of our death, what Heidegger calls
being-towards-death.8
Why does Heidegger seek to raise the more general question of Being through inquiring into the
question of what it means to be as a human being?
like Aristotle, Heidegger finds the question of Being to be the basic determinant of human
existence: Dasein is an entity that does not just occur among other entities. Rather it is ontically
distinguished by the fact that, in its very Being, that Being is an issue for it (Existentialism:
Basic Writings, p. 213)
or as he emphasizes a few lines later:
Understanding of Being is itself a definite characteristic of Daseins Being (Existentialism:
Basic Writings, p. 214)
in other words, we human beings already have some understanding of the Being of entities
and yet we are all trying to get a better, clearer understanding of what things in general are
because it is our nature to ask the question of Being
the project of working out a fundamental ontology
a basic overall account of the Being of entities in general
is merely a more rigorous version of what we are doing all the time
8
Simon Critchley, Being and Time, part 1: Why Heidegger matters
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2009/jun/05/heidegger-philosophy)
Existentialism Heidegger9
thus a tendency to think that people exist in the same sense as rocks:
both are objects with various properties
objects that are present-at-hand (vorhanden)
as continuously existing things occupying positions in space
a conception of Being as the enduring presence of things
this follows from Parmenides view that reality is unchanging
this is the conception of Being at the root of different conceptions of substance
according to Heidegger, when philosophers have asked about Being
they have tended to answer the question with some version of a substance ontology
Heidegger is well aware this objectified view of reality has been a tremendous cultural
achievement: it opened innumerable doors to technological advances
would be a mistake to think of Heidegger as anti-science
but he does think the modern understanding of reality inherited from modern science
has generated a number of problems for contemporary life
Heidegger rejects Husserls view that the source of these modern problems was naturalism
the view of reality given by modern natural science
Heidegger suggests the problems has a much older origin in the forgetfulness of Being
the outlook of modern science is itself just a modern version of an age-old tendency
to see the world from a point of view that gives us a distorted and concealed understanding
the real problems is not naturalism but the tendency to focus on how things show up for us
when we adopt a theoretical attitude toward to the world
when we adopt a detached, theoretical stance toward things
Existentialism Heidegger11
trying to be dispassionate and disinterested in the way that both Plato and Descartes recommend
Heidegger thinks that such a theoretical outlook is only one specialized view among others
one regional way of looking at thingswith no privileged access to the truth about reality
this theoretical outlook gives us a one-sided and distorted view of reality that is out of touch with
concrete, lived realities of everyday life
the dominance of this worldview in contemporary life reflects a deep-seated tendency toward
forgetfullness or concealment in humans
we lose sight of the background conditions (what Heidegger calls worldhood)
which make it possible to encounter anything at all
suggests that the pre-Platonic Greeks had some insight into worldhood
in their understanding of Being as physis
which Heidegger renders as coming-into-presence or emerging-into-Being
we today have lost sight of this older way of understanding Being
the only way to overcome this forgetfulness is to recover a more basic understanding of the world
and our place within it which has concealed by the objectified view of modernity
this recovery of a more basic understanding of the world and our place within it is the aim of the
question of the meaning of Being
Heidegger thus sets out to ask how things in general come to show up for us as mattering in
determinate wayshow they come to mean something to us in relation to our lives
but we need to start not with the detached reflection of the theoretical attitude
thus Heidegger employs Husserls phenomenological method
a starting point prior to theory and abstract reflection
he attempts to describe without obscuring preconceptions what it means to be
Heidegger takes the word phenomenon back to the Greek sense of revealing or
that which reveals itself
Heidegger sees the aim of phenomenology as looking for the hidden ground and meaning
of what ordinarily shows up in the world of everydayness
this phenomenology of everydayness raises fundamental questions about the dominant view of
reality in our contemporary world
in Being and Time Heidegger attacks the subject-object model, and mind-matter dualism
in criticizing dualism does not try to show that the mental is reducible to matter
tries to show instead that the whole assumption to understand reality in terms of substances
either mental or material is suspect
his account of being-in-the-world calls into question the mind-body dualism
from the standpoint of Heideggers new view of the Being of entities
the problems created by the modern worldview seem to dissolve
in this respect Heideggers thought shares some vary basic affinities with other 20th century
thinkers (Wittgenstein and Dewey) who try not to solve the fundamental problems of modern
philosophy, but dissolve or get over them
Existentialism Heidegger12
G&P note that this description of the world of everydayness is one of Heideggers most original
contributions to philosophy
in this analysis Heidegger emphasizes the background that is overlooked
that makes it possible for us to encounter entities in any specific way
they also note a similarity to Wittgenstein:
The aspects of things that are most important for us are hidden because of their simplicity and
familiarity (Philosophical Investigations 129) (Existentialism: Basic Writings, p. 190)
Heidegger is trying to call attention to features of the world that are so familiar and all-pervasive
that they are hardly ever noticed
his basic claim is that the world we encounter, the world that is the fabric of my existence, is not
the world of present-at-hand objects that is the result of theoretical reflection, but rather a
world of handy and useful objects we encounter as equipment
This is what Heidegger means by readiness-to-hand (Zuhandenheit)
Again, as Critchley puts it: My proximal encounter with the table on which I am writing these
words is not as an object made of a certain definable substance (wood and iron, say) existing in a
geometrically ordered space-time continuum. Rather, this is just the table that I use to write and
which is useful for arranging my papers, my laptop and my coffee cup. (Being and Time, part
3: Being-in-the-world)
the everyday life wold presents itself initially (but generally unnoticed)
in a context of significance that is not reducible to mere present-at-hand things
9
Irrational Man, p. 217.
Existentialism Heidegger13
the plausibility of Heideggers novel view is our getting a feel for his detailed descriptions
of our everyday practical involvements
his own example is the sense of things a skilled craftsman has in his workshop
think of what it is like when working at some activity you are quite familiar with
when equipment is genuinely ready-to-hand in this way, things are normally unobtrusive
only when there is a breakdown in the smooth flowwhen the hammer breaks or the nail bends
to we begin to explicitly attend to items in the work context
only then do we begin to pay attention to what is in front of us
only then do we begin to see things as present-at-hand
the view so central to traditional philosophy, that what has been there all along
has been mere present-at-hand things existing independent of us
because the present-at-hand obtrudes and captures our attention
we begin to think that what is most basic in the world is mere present-at-hand objects
but this is an illusion that comes only as a result of the breakdown
of smoothly flowing contexts of activity
what Heidegger calls the disworlding of the world
to say that the ready-to-hand is more primordial than present-at-hand it to make two claims:
1) our ability to encounter present-at-hand things is derivative from and parasitic
on our prior ways of dealing with contexts of what is ready-to-hand
2)that there is no way to account for ready-to-hand solely in terms of what is present-at-hand
if this is right then it follows that the view of reality we get from modern natural science
the view that the world at the most basic level consists of inherently meaningless objects
that we humans come to endow with significance and value
does not reveal the most basic way of Being of entities
on the contrary the world at the most basic is initially and most fundamentally
a meaning-filled context
in order to simplify Heideggers complex account of human existence G&P present his view as a
series of interrelated claims:
1) the first claim is that humans are beings who care about what they are
we care about what our lives are amounting to, and because of that
we care about our surroundings and what happens to us
Existentialism Heidegger15
2) the second claim is that because humans care about who and what they are
they have always taken some stand on their lives
in living out our lives we have all seized upon some set of roles, personality traits, lifestyles
it is through taking a stand that we come to have an understanding of Being
in Heideggers special sense of the term
3) the third claim is that humans just are the stands they take in living out their lives
humans are what they do
no fixed human essence given to us in advance
Heidegger makes this key Existentialist point:
1. The essence of this being lies in its to be. Its Being-what-it-is (essentia) must, so far
as we can speak of it at all, be conceived in terms of its Being (existentia). . . . The
essence of Dasein lies in its existence. . . . (Existentialism: Basic Writings, p. 220)
this conception of the being of the self as defined by concrete agency in the world
leads to a way of understanding action that is different from traditional conceptions
contrasts with standard view accepted by most philosophers today
on this standard view, action is understood as physical movement caused by inner impetus
inner mental causethe agents intentions or motives
strong distinction between mental and physical, inner and outer
Heideggers view is radically opposed to some of the deepest assumptions of the modern outlook
modern thought tends to assume that recourse to the mental is always necessary
if we are to understand human phenomena
Heideggers view rejects this
questions about what is really going on in ones mind arise and make sense
only when there are breaks in the otherwise smooth flow of behavior
Heidegger is not denying that mental events occur or that they are sometimes very important
but he does want to say that our being as subjects with minds or fields of consciousness
is only one specialized way of being for humans among others
and that it is parasitic on a more primordial way of being as being-in-the-world
5) The fifth claim is that human existence has a distinctive temporal structure
there are two main temporal structures of Daseins existence
the first of these is thrownness (Geworfenheit)
Dasein always finds itself thrown into a particular cultural setting
with certain choices is has already made and obligations it has undertaken
this thrownness into specific situations is encountered as a task that I must take up
we are delivered over to ourselves as something we must be
our facticity is revealed to us in particular moods that tune us in to the world in specific ways
the German word for mood (Stimmung) also means being in tune
these moods color the way the world show up for us
they determine how entities will show up as mattering for us
thrownness defines Daseins Being as already in a world
it makes up the temporal dimension of pastness, of having been
the second temporal structure of Daseins temporal Being determines the element of futurity
the future-directedness of Daseins life story
we are always already ahead of ourselves to the extent that each of us
has taken a stand on our thrownness, and through our actions, is accomplishing something
each of my actions points toward a realization
in everything I do I am moving toward a final realization of my identity
our directedness toward the future Heidegger calls projection
Existentialism Heidegger17
our futurity as agents in the world lets our pasts become meaningful
as resources for our current activities
also lets entities in the world stand out as significant in relation to our projects
our projection toward the future opens a leeway (Spielraum) or clearing
in which things can stand forth as counting for us in some determinate way or other
6) the sixth claim about human existence is that the temporal unfolding of a life
is always embedded in a wider communal context
from which it draws its possibilities of self-interpretation and self-assessment
we are participants within a shared context
it is by becoming initiated into the contexts of shared practices circulating in our public world
that we pick up both our sense of how things count for our community
and our grasp of what is at stake in living in the world
an example is our sense of modesty, our attitude towards our bodies and public nudity
it is a cultural trait and not natural
consider also our response to cases of cruelty to animals or children
this is so deeply ingrained that it seems natural and we are appalled when we learn
that other cultures do not share our sensibilities
it is the practices of the social world in general that define how things can count
Existentialism Heidegger18
and what sorts of self-interpreting activities will make sense for a people
the content that we take over for our lives
are all taken over from the pool of possibilities circulating in the public
Authenticity
one of most influential aspects of Being and Time for existentialism
the notion of authenticity is spelled out in second half of the work
Heideggers ideal is a matter not so much of being in touch with oneself
as of becoming more intensely engaged in the world of ones historical culture
this is where Heideggers Nazism comes into focus
Heidegger also suggests this absorption in a social world can have a pernicious effect
getting lost in the rituals and mundane chores of the they
resulting in a dimming down of the possible as such
becoming engrossed in latest fads, drifting along with the crowd
becoming so engrossed in what is directly in front of us
that we are blind to the larger background that makes our actions possible
as Barrett points out, Heideggers analysis of death is one of the most powerful and celebrated
passages in Being and Time
Barrett says this passage reveals in thought the truth brought out in Tolstoys story
The Death of Ivan Ilyich, which he regards as perhaps the most powerful description in any
literature of what it means to face death
the anxiety that comes with the confrontation with our finitude
forces us to confront the fact that we alone are responsible for making something of our own
lives
anxiety is characterized by uncanniness (unheimlich, literally homelessness)
as the world loses is familiarity and at-home-ness
we confront our own naked Dasein as something we have to take over as being-in-the-world
this confrontation with finitude might not change the content of ones life
no reason to think that one necessarily has to change ones career or lifestyle
may not entail any change in what you do
it could transform the way you live
seems to involve a capacity for self-focusing that is lacking in everyday falling
once anxiety makes us realize we are delivered over to ourselves
and that it is up to us alone to make something of our lives
Existentialism Heidegger20
Heidegger often criticized for not giving any specific information on how we ought to act
or what choices we should make
the picture of authenticity seems to be consistent with any number of concrete lifestyles
including many that we would see as profoundly immoral
a number of critics have taken this as an indication of something
pernicious or immoral about Heideggers conception of authenticity
it is certainly true that this concept of authenticity does not entail any particular moral position
suggests that even though Heidegger does not make any pronouncements about morality
a closer look at his concept of authenticity suggests it might have some substantive things to say
about what constitutes a good life
first, it points to certain character traits and individual must have to be authentic
necessary traits for making coherent, meaningful choices
about what sort of person one wants to be
authenticity is said to require such traits as
resoluteness, clearsightedness, steadfastness, integrity, openness to change
as well as courage, the willingness to take a stand despite the uncertainties of life
a person who is authentic would thus be less likely to slip into the kinds of self-deception and
dishonesty involved in hiding behind roles
or thinking that ones actions are justified just because they are what one does
there is also the deep sense of indebtedness to the wider community
a second way that the ideal of authenticity can define higher ideals for us is found
in Heideggers concept of historicity
this idea arises from the description of human existence as an unfolding life course
or happening that is enmeshed in the wider drama of a communitys history
authentic historicity a mode of existence that bring about a transformed
understanding of ones historical context
one grasps the past of ones community as a heritage or legacy
that is a sending that is filled with promise and potential
brings with it a sense of our future as a shared destiny
Existentialism Heidegger21
how shared? Did Heidegger see his destiny as shared with the Jews?
Heidegger holds that we need to have some notion of a shared historical purpose
if we are to have any basis for criticizing and reforming the practices of today
sees as an example Martin Luther Kings attempt to recover an appreciation of the biblical ideals
central to American culture in order to achieve equality for all humans
idea of authenticity points to an alternative to what Heidegger saw as the flattened out life of
modernity
it is a matter of being more fully and lucidly engaged in the shared co-happening of ones
historical community
becoming an authentic individual is being a committed participant in the wider social and
historical context
this is a crucial part of the ideal he has in mind in echoing Nietzsches phrase when he says
become what you are