estudos:kisiel:kisiel-1995315-319-preludio-a-conceito-de-tempo-ga64
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| + | The core idea of BT as we know it receives its first “oral publication” in the public address entitled “The Concept of Time” presented to the Marburg Theologians’ Society on July 25, 1924. Gadamer aptly calls it the “Urform” of BT. Not yet a draft of BT, it is nevertheless the first major and quite public step toward the extant book BT, by elaborating its core structure, which in retrospect finds its seminal roots in the 1922 Introduction. For in that Einleitung (cf. chap. 5), Heidegger for the very first time juxtaposes the deliberate seizure of my certain death, through which the very being of life becomes visible, with the countermovement of falling through absorption in the averageness of the public “one.” Death’s peculiar sight into the very being of life therefore provides a unique ontological access to the temporality properly belonging to human being, and so also to its historicality. This polar space of interrelationships between life’s movement and its countermovement first unveiled in the Einleitung receives its first full-fledged development in July 1924 in terms of two basically different ways of “being temporal” (Zeitlichsein). | ||
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| + | But something peculiar has happened terminologically between 1922 and 1924. For precisely at this point of staking out the polar space of countervailing movements in his Einleitung, Heidegger for the very first time also formally introduces the term “existence” to define the authentic way of temporalizing one’s facticity. For this authenticating is always an “existentiell” (i.e., individual) possibility and choice by which to counteract the tendency to lapse in life. And in SS 1923 (GA 63:16), interpreting one’s facticity in terms of this ownmost possibility of “existence” generates those conceptual explicata or categories which may be called “existentialia.” (316) But in his public address of 1924 (and in the ensuing drafts of BT save the very last), Heidegger diligently avoids this “existentialist” vocabulary, even though the main thrust of the lecture is to show that “Dasein is authentically with itself, it is truly existent” (BZ 18),1 by persistently forerunning the certain possibility of its “being gone” (das Vorbei). Why this diligent evasion of a vocabulary which Heidegger began to develop in his early Freiburg period and which will eventually inundate BT itself? The reasons are obscure, but one reason that can be gleaned from Heidegger’s correspondence at this time is a strong aversion, which he apparently developed upon first arriving in Lutheran Marburg, to the “Kierkegaardism” then in vogue in theological circles.2 Given this burgeoning antipathy, the Marburg Theologians’ Society Was the Last place for him to wax “existential”! | ||
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| + | Of course, two other key terms central to this old polar constellation are also not explicitly used. 1) But the countermovement of “falling” does appear implicitly in the lecture in the “flight from goneness” (BZ 20) opposing the “run forward” which anticipates this uttermost possibility of being gone; and the addictive “pendency” (Verhängnis: | ||
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| + | Fresh from his course on Aristotle’s Rhetoric, Heidegger is here taking the first, albeit quite imperfect steps toward articulating the immediacy of human experience in terms of three equiprimordial ways of “being in.” As Aristotle already knew, “the being-in-the-world of human being takes place primarily in speaking. . . . How Dasein in its world speaks about its way of getting along with its world equally yields a self-interpretation of Dasein. It asserts how Dasein in each such case understands (317) itself, as what it takes itself’ (BZ 13). This still quite nascent phase in the discussion of In-Sein, the equiprimordial constellation of involvement with the world and self through affective disposition, | ||
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| + | Especially the prereflective immediacy of “finding oneself with oneself” so that one finds oneself “disposed, | ||
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| + | How close does Heidegger come in this lecture to confronting his newly won concept of time with the classical concept of being, let alone the need to “repeat” (and so to review and revise) it in view of this new concept of time? The armature of the lecture, from its proper starting point in the temporal particularity of the “I am” (BZ 11) to its thus virtually tautological conclusion of “I am my time” (“time is in each case mine”: BZ 26), operates strictly on the level of the question of the being of Dasein, which is in each case mine. And yet the very last question in the series seeking “to repeat temporally” the what-question, | ||
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| + | And yet Heidegger had just finished saying that at this level of encounter “the Being of temporality means unequal reality” (BZ 26). Through this rather abrupt juxtaposition of sameness and difference, he is thus raising the Problem of a reality which belongs at once to each and to all, a problem common to the temporal particularity (Je-weiligkeit) of Dasein and to the distributive universality of being itself. And even earlier, he raises another paradox: “Dasein is time, time is temporal. Dasein is not time but rather temporality. The basic statement, Time is temporal, is accordingly the most proper determination” (BZ 26). I both am and am not my time, because time itself is temporal: it is the same relationship that he discovered in KNS 1919, at the interface of factic immediacy, between me and my life, a life which is given to me before I assume it as mine. And this “before” of not-mine provides the space of transcendence, | ||
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| + | But even though the lecture abounds with the ontological concerns evident since 1921 for the “being of Dasein” and the “being of time” (BZ 10), and closes by raising the issue of the “being of temporality” (BZ 26), Heidegger does not make the reverse move to the genitive subjective “temporality of being” which would have completed the ontological destructuring, | ||
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