Critchley (2002) - Enigma Variations - An Interpretation of Heidegger's Sein and Zeit (Ratio)
Critchley (2002) - Enigma Variations - An Interpretation of Heidegger's Sein and Zeit (Ratio)
Critchley (2002) - Enigma Variations - An Interpretation of Heidegger's Sein and Zeit (Ratio)
2002, 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main
Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA.
Ratio (new series) XV 2 June 2002 0034–0006
Simon Critchley
Abstract
There are two phrases in Heidegger’s Sein und Zeit that provide a
clue to what is going on in that book: Dasein ist geworfener Entwurf
and Dasein existiert faktisch (Dasein is thrown projection and
Dasein exists factically).1 I begin by trying to show how an inter-
pretation of these phrases can help clarify Heidegger’s philo-
sophical claim about what it means to be human. I then try and
explain why it is that, in a couple of important passages in Sein
und Zeit, Heidegger describes thrown projection as an enigma (ein
Rätsel). After considering the meaning and etymology of the word
‘enigma’, I trace its usage in Sein und Zeit, and try and show how
and why the relations between Heidegger’s central conceptual
pairings – state-of-mind (Befindlichkeit) and understanding (Verste-
hen), thrownness and projection, facticity and existentiality – are
described by Heidegger as enigmatic. My thesis is that at the
heart of Sein und Zeit, that is, at the heart of the central claim of
the Dasein-analytic as to the temporal character of thrown-
projective being-in-the-world, there lies an enigmatic apriori. That
is to say, there is something resiliently opaque at the basis of the
constitution of Dasein’s being-in-the-world which both resists
phenomenological description and which, I shall claim, is that in
virtue of which the phenomenologist describes. In the more crit-
ical part of the paper, I try and show precisely how this notion of
the enigmatic apriori changes the basic experience of under-
standing Sein und Zeit. I explore this in relation to three examples
from Division II: death, conscience and temporality. I try and
read Heidegger’s analyses of each of these concepts against the
grain in order to bring into view much more resilient notions of
facticity and thrownness that place in doubt the move to existen-
tiality, projection and authenticity. The perspective I develop can
be described as originary inauthenticity. As should become evident,
such an interpretation of Sein und Zeit is not without political
consequences.
1
All references to Sein und Zeit are to the pagination of the 15th Edition (Niemeyer,
Tübingen, 1984), which can be found in the margins of English translations of the text.
AN INTERPRETATION OF HEIDEGGER’S SEIN UND ZEIT 155
4
See Grimm, Deutsches Wörterbuch, Achter Band (Hirzel, Leipzig, 1893), pp. 194–95.
The Oxford English Dictionary, Vol. XIII (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1989). Middle English
Dictionary, Part Q (University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1984). Eric Partridge, Origins.
A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English (Routledge, London, 1958).
5
‘Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes’, in Holzwege, 6th edition (Klostermann, Frankfurt
a.M., 1980), p. 65.
9
Frank Cioffi, Wittgenstein on Freud and Frazer (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
1998), p. 243.
10
This phrase is Rüdiger Safranski’s, which he uses to describe the undoubted Platon-
ism of Heidegger’s political commitment in 1933. See Ein Meister aus Deutschland. Heideg-
ger und seine Zeit (Hanser, Munich, 1994). On the question of the enigma of the everyday
in Heidegger see Michel Haar, ‘L’enigme de la quotidieneté’, in Être et Temps de Martin
Heidegger. Questions de méthode et voies de recherche, eds. J-P. Cometti & D. Janicaud (Sud,
Marseille, 1989), pp. 213–25.
11
See Löwith’s essay in The Heidegger Controversy, ed. R.Wolin (MIT, Cambridge Mass.,
1993). To my mind, the systematic connection between fundamental ontology and national
socialism was convincingly established by Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe in his ‘Transcendence
Ends in Politics’, Typography (Harvard University Press, Cambridge Mass., 1989) and also at
greater length in his Heidegger, Art and Politics, trans. C. Turner (Blackwell, Oxford, 1990).
The same argument has been stated much more polemically and in extraordinary scholarly
detail by Johannes Fritsche in Historical Destiny and National Socialism in Heidegger’s Being and
Time (University of California Press, Berkeley, 1999). About the discussion of historicity,
Fritsche claims, ‘. . . Section 74 of Heidegger’s Being and Time is as brilliant a summary of
revolutionary rightist politics as one could wish for’.(p. xii)
12
See Heidegger, Einführung in die Metaphysik (Niemeyer, Tübingen, 1953), p. 152; and
Habermas, ‘Mit Heidegger gegen Heidegger denken. Zur Veröffentlichung von Vorlesun-
gen aus dem Jahre 1935’, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 25th July 1953, pp. 67–75.
15
Levinas responds directly to this passage in a remarkably sane and measured paper
given at the hysterical height of the Heidegger affair in Paris in 1987, ‘Mourir pour. . .’,
which translates Heidegger’s ‘Sterben für’, in Heidegger. Questions ouvertes (Osiris, Paris,
1988), pp. 255–64. The theme of enigma is obviously central to Levinas work, in particu-
lar his 1965 essay ‘Enigma and Phenomenon’, in Emmanuel Levinas. Basic Philosophical Writ-
ings, eds. Peperzak et al. (Indiana University Press, Bloomington, 1996), pp. 65–77.
16
See Volume 11 of the Penguin Freud, On Metapsychology (Penguin, Harmondsworth,
1984).
17
On this topic, see Paul Ricoeur, ‘La marque du passé’, Revue de Métaphysique et de
Morale, Janvier-Mars 1998, No. 1.
Department of Philosophy
University of Essex
Colchester
Essex
UK