estudos:caputo:caputo-meht156-159-homem-em-heidegger-e-eckhart
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| + | ===== HOMEM EM HEIDEGGER E ECKHART (MEHT: | ||
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| + | O próprio Heidegger estabelece assim o primeiro ponto de comparação para nós (de seu pensamento e aquele de Mestre Eckhart). Ele, tal como Meister Eckhart, encontra no homem algo mais profundo do que o seu comércio quotidiano com as coisas que o rodeiam. Este ser primordial do homem é designado por Heidegger e Eckhart como o " | ||
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| + | Ora, em ambos os casos, o próprio ser do homem, que nada tem de antropomórfico, | ||
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| + | Neither Eckhart nor Heidegger speaks of “Man.” For both thinkers, there is something deeper within man, something which is Not merely human, which constitutes man’s true dignity and worth. For both, there is a hidden ground in which man’s truest being and essential nature (Wesen) lies. “Here is man a true man,” writes Eckhart (Q, 215, | ||
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| + | Do not think to base holiness on doing; one should rather base holiness on being. For works do not make us holy, but we must make works holy. (Q. 57, | ||
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| + | Holiness has to do not with our action, but the ground of our action, our being. The truly great are great in their being: | ||
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| + | Nothing will come of whatever works they work who are not great in being. (Q, 57, | ||
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| + | It is in the inner ground of the soul, the very being (Wesen) of the soul, that genuine greatness is to be found. Heidegger singles out this text of Meister Eckhart in “The Reversal, | ||
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| + | We consider that the great being (Wesen) of man consists in the fact that it belongs to the essence (Wesen) of Being, that it is needed and used by the latter to preserve (wahren) the essence of Being in its truth (Wahrheir). (K, 39/7) | ||
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| + | Heidegger himself thus draws the first point of comparison for us. He, like Meister Eckhart, finds in man something deeper than his everyday commerce with the things around him. This primal being of man is called by both Heidegger and Eckhart man’s “Wesen.” As for Eckhart, so for Heidegger, Wesen has a verbal sense. Eckhart usually translated the Latin esse by the Middle High German wesen (he often employed wesenheit and wesunge as translations of essentia) (cf. Q, “Anrnerkungen, | ||
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| + | Now in both cases the very being of man, which is nothing anthropomorphic, | ||
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| + | Eckhart and Heidegger do not often use the word “man”they speak instead of “Dasein, | ||
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| + | In both cases, then, the anthropological interpretation of man is “overcome.” Man is not understood “zoologically”as an animal with the specific difference of rationality. Nor is he given any of the other, equally anthropological, | ||
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| + | Consequently, | ||
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| + | The ground of the soul is not a being, or a kind of being, but a place within which God reveals Himself as He is in His truest being. | ||
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| + | So too “Dasein” is not merely a being, or a species of beings, which can be differentiated off from other beings (HB, 66/199). Rather Dasein is primarily a “relation” (Ver-hältnis) to Being as such. Dasein is not so much a being but a relationship to Being. Dasein is not something which man “has,” a property or characteristic of man, but something which possesses man and makes man and his relationship with other beings possible (WM, 16/308-9). “Dasein” is not consciousness, | ||
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| + | In What Is Called Thinking? Heidegger seems to indicate that he is not prepared to admit that Eckhart’s conception of the “little spark of the soul” (Seelenfünklein) does indeed fully transcend the notion of man as a “living being” endowed with a “specific difference” of “reason” or “thought’’: | ||
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| + | However, it still makes a decisive difference whether this trait of the living being “man” is merely included in our considerations as a distinguishing mark superadded to the living being — or whether this relatedness to what is, because it is the basic characteristic of man’s human nature, is given its decisive role as the standard. (WHD, 96/149) | ||
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| + | It is not enough to speak of man as anima — a being possessed of a principle of life, for every living thing (”animal”) has anima. But neither is it enough, Heidegger says, to speak of man as animus. Now animus means, according to Heidegger, | ||
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| + | . . . that inner striving of human nature which always is determined by, attuned to, what is. The Latin word animus can also be translated with the word “soul.” “Soul” in this case means not the principle of life, but that in which the spirit has its being, the spirit of spirit [cf. Q, 319,10/Ev., 33], Meister Eckhart’s “spark” of the soul. (WHD, 96/149) | ||
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| + | Even Meister Eckhart, in Heidegger’s view, fails to understand that man is basically and fundamentally a relatedness to what is and that this is not simply something “added on” to man. | ||
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| + | Heidegger is, I believe, mistaken about this. For Eckhart, the “little spark” or “ground” of the soul refers to the innermost “source” and “root” (Wurzel: Q, 318,17/Ev., 32) of the soul’s being. It is not something added on to the soul, but that from which the soul draws its (159) life. This is the force of the very word “Grund.” Moreover, the little spark of the soul is in no way a “distinguishing mark” of the soul because it signifies that realm of the soul where there are no “distinguishing marks’’ or “names’’ at all. The ground of the soul is no “thing”; | ||
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