Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống
1
/ 195 trang
THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU
Thông tin cơ bản
Định dạng
Số trang
195
Dung lượng
575,61 KB
Nội dung
[...]... simply fail to see the arm ofthe everyday body rising in order to hammer the shingles onto the roof, did he overlook the quotidian gaze directed toward the ticking watch that overtakes both sun and moon, did he miss thebody poised daily in its brazen car, a car equipped with a turn signal fabricated by and for the hand and eye 1 2 Heidegger’s NeglectoftheBodyof man, did he neglectthe human being... the human being also for himself The Da of [Dasein’s] being distinguishes the humanness ofthe human being (ZS, 120) 4 Heidegger’s NeglectoftheBody I argue that it is only on the basis of an already opened horizon of meaning that we can understand and make sense of beings in the first place, including the “corporeal body (Körper), the “lived -body (Leib), and all of its manifestations This, however,... decline ofthe earth has progressed so far that people are in danger of losing their last spiritual strength, the strength that makes it possible even to see the decline and to appraise it as such This simple observation has nothing to do with cultural pessimism—nor with any optimism either, of course; for the darkening ofthe world, the flight ofthe gods, the destruction ofthe earth, the reduction of. .. question of why Heidegger may have bypassed an analysis ofthebody in the first place and where such an analysis might fit within the overall context of his project In the following, I suggest that the criticisms of Heidegger regarding his neglectofthebody hinge largely on a misinterpretation of Heidegger’s use ofthe word “Dasein.” For Heidegger, Dasein is not to be understood in terms of everyday... instance of Dasein David Cerbone explains, Thebody would seem to be immediately implicated in [Heidegger’s] phenomenology of everyday activity For this activity involves the manipulation of concrete items such as hammers, pens, doorknobs, and the like, and those manipulations are effected by means ofthe body. ”7 While acknowledging the merits of these criticisms, the goal of this book is to address the. .. space of meaning that is already “there” (Da), prior to the emergence ofthe human body and its various capacities Heidegger reminds us of this point thirty years after the publication of Being and Time in his seminars in Zollikon: The Da in Being and Time does not mean a statement of place for a being, but rather it should designate the openness where beings can be present for the human being, and the. .. outside of these experiential and interrogative horizons outlined by the definition ofthe most customary name for this entity: homo animal rational What is to be determined is not an outward appearance of this entity but from the outset and throughout its way to be, not the what of that of which it is composed but the how of its being and the characters of this how (HCT, 154) Thus the inquiry into the. .. material content ofthe thematic object of science, but speaks only of how, the way in which something is” (HCT, 85) Phenomenology, in this regard, is not an explanation; rather, it signifies a method that describes the way human beings encounter things “proximally and for the most part,” 12 Heidegger’s NeglectoftheBody as they are revealed in everyday, concrete situations Employing the phenomenological... Park: Pennsylvania StateUniversity Press, 2001 G2 “Geschlecht II: Heidegger’s Hand.” In Deconstruction and Philosophy: The Texts of Jacques Derrida, ed John Sallis, trans John P Leavey Jr Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1987 MP Margins of Philosophy Translated by Alan Bass Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1982 OS Of Spirit: Heidegger and the Question Translated by Geoffrey Bennington... and things show up for me as the kinds of things that they are This context “governs” any possible interpretation that I can have of myself (HCT, 246) 14 Heidegger’s NeglectoftheBody Interpreting Dasein in terms of activity or movement allows us to make some preliminary remarks on the role ofthebody in Heidegger’s project The conception ofthebody as understood by mainstream Anglophone philosophy . Heidegger’s Neglect of the Body SUNY series in Contemporary Continential Philosophy Dennis J. Schmidt, editor Heidegger’s Neglect of the Body Kevin A. Aho Published by State University of New York Press, . Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty 29 The Absence of the Body in Being and Time 29 The Body and the Problem of Spatiality 33 The Importance of the Zollikon Seminars 36 The Limits of Merleau-Ponty’s Relation. concerning the problem of perception; one does not fi nd ten concerning that of the body. ” 1 Jean-Paul Sartre amplifi ed this line of criticism when he emphasized the importance of the body as the