estudos:krell:krell-1991-83-85-lumen-naturale
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| + | ====== Lumen Naturale (1991: | ||
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| + | //Data: 2024-01-30 01:43// | ||
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| + | <tabbox detalhe> | ||
| + | [...] Heidegger está bem ciente do peso da tradição, que, como Karl Marx diz da história em geral, oprime o cérebro dos vivos como um pesadelo. E é quase como se Heidegger pudesse ouvir as declarações de futuros comentadores que não achariam nada mais natural do que identificar o Dasein com o sujeito e o mundo com o objeto. A análise temática do " | ||
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| + | O modo de falar onticamente figurado que se refere ao lumen naturale no homem não significa outra coisa senão a estrutura existencial-ontológica deste ser; significa que este ser é, pelo fato de ser, o seu Da. Dizer que ele é " | ||
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| + | [...] | ||
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| + | Lumen naturale é denominação de uma imagem ôntica do Ser do homem. Embora possa servir como evidência para a análise do Ser-em, não pode ser tomado como ontologicamente fundamentado e esclarecido. Porque não é um ser que, como atestado ôntico, possa servir para fundamentar a análise; é antes um dos fardos da nossa tradição - " | ||
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| + | <tabbox original> | ||
| + | Although the word Lichtung and its cognates do not appear often in Being and Time, the matter is omnipresent. What in that treatise are called “existence, | ||
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| + | The first reference. The thematic analysis of Being-in as such in chapter five imposes itself as a task because of the need to synthesize the concrete analyses of “world” (chapter 3) and “the who” (chapter 4) and in order to prepare the way for the designation of the structural whole of the Being of Dasein as care (chapter 6). Is such a synthesis really necessary? Not if we have been careful to prevent “world” from collapsing into the res extensa of categorial interpretation and the “who” of Dasein into the res cogitans of metaphysical subjectivity. Yet Heidegger is well aware of the burden of tradition, which as Karl Marx says of history in general, oppresses the brain of the living like a nightmare. And it is almost as though Heidegger could hear the utterances of future commentators who would find nothing more natural than to identify Dasein with the subject and world with the object. The thematic analysis of “being-in” is to awaken the reader from such a nightmare, in which the entire project of Being and Time would founder. Heidegger has no illusions about the difficulty of his task. For his [84] earlier attempts to define Dasein as “the Being of the ‘between’, | ||
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| + | Die ontisch bildliche Rede vorn lumen naturale im Menschen meint nichts anderes als die existenzial-ontologische Struktur dieses Seienden, dass es ist in der Weise, sein Da zu sein. Es ist “erleuchtet, | ||
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| + | The ontically figurative turn of speech that refers to the lumen naturale in man means nothing else than the existential-ontological structure of this being; it means that this being is by way of being its Da. To say that it is “illuminated” means that it is lighted in itself as being-in-the-world, | ||
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| + | A few brief observations on this passage may be in order. | ||
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| + | Lumen naturale is called an ontic image of man’s Being. While it may serve as evidence for the analysis of Being-in it may not be taken as ontologically grounded and clarified. For it is not a being which, as ontic attestation, | ||
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| + | Heidegger nonetheless tries now to make this image (lumen naturale) an icon of the existential-ontological structure of Dasein. The attempt fails, for reasons that will become clear when we arrive at section 36, “Curiosity, | ||
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| + | That Heidegger is aware of the problematic nature of this particular burden or image is suggested by several peculiarities in the German text: (a) meint nichts anderes: the word “means” suggests perhaps that, in traditional doctrine at least, [85] lumen naturale actually “says” something quite different; (b) “erleuchtet" | ||
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| + | Note, finally, that although “light” and “dark” are introduced here they are restricted to the context of the disclosure of things at hand; there is a being that is gelichtet in such a way that things are accessible to it in the light—but concealed from it in the dark. Lichtung makes light and dark possible, but, at the same time, unlike a transcendental condition-of-possibility, | ||
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| + | </ | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //[KRELL, David F. Intimations of mortality: time, truth, and finitude in Heidegger’s thinking of being. 2. print ed. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State Univ. Press, 1991]// | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
