estudos:withy:katherine-withy-2019-befindlichkeit-e-vocacao
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| + | ====== Befindlichkeit e vocação (2019) ====== | ||
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| + | //Data: 2024-02-20 17:44// | ||
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| + | Heidegger analisa tanto a disposição [Befindlichkeit] como a compreensão [Verständnis], | ||
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| + | Mas, em primeiro lugar, por que razão assumo o projeto de ser empresário? | ||
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| + | Heidegger analyzes both finding and understanding by considering how they open us (i) to ourselves (self-disclosing), | ||
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| + | But why do I take up the project of being an entrepreneur in the first place? Why not that of office worker, or stay-at-home parent, or backyard tinkerer? Obviously, my talents and aptitude suit me to some identities and not others—and some identities might be ruled out by other identities I have already taken up. But why did I take up those identities in the first place? And why do I pick this identity from the suite of those to which I am suited? I do so because I am called to. Our identities are vocations (L. vocare, to call, to summon)—not necessarily in the sense that they are our deepest, truest callings, but at least in the sense that they ‘speak’ to us. (If, for example, my profession or my socially-given gender does not speak to me in this way, then it is merely a social role that I inhabit and not an identity onto which I project). Finding myself called to a vocation is necessary for me to project myself onto that way of being me. Otherwise, there would be no reason for my projecting to seize upon one identity rather than another. | ||
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| + | The call to a vocation is delivered by the call of conscience. Conscience is introduced in Division II of BT to show that it is [156] existentielly possible to relate to death authentically. As an instance of disclosing, conscience involves finding, understanding, | ||
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| + | There are many possibilities of being, or identities, available to take up from the public world. How is it decided which of these we are to resolve upon? Despite Heidegger’s voluntaristic language in this chapter, the identity that we take up is not chosen but given, and so found: “On what is it [sc. Dasein] to resolve? Only the resolution itself can give the answer” (SZ 298). What we resolve upon is given—and given in the resolution itself. It is given as that which has already made a claim on us, that which has already called us to resolve upon it. Even, and perhaps especially, when we go through a long deliberative period about who to be and which identities to take up, what we describe as the final moment of choice is (to a greater or lesser degree) experienced as a moment of being chosen—of receiving a call that “comes from me and yet from beyond me ” (SZ 275). | ||
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| + | To receive a call like that of a vocation is to hearken (horchen ) to it (cf. SZ 163). While to hear is to understand (SZ 163) (and this is why hearing the call of conscience is resolute projecting), | ||
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| + | But what about the fact that we find ourselves not only called to take up a particular identity but already stuck with identities? Some of [157] these are identities we are already projecting upon, and some of these (such as gender, race, and social standing) are or can be identities that we find thrust upon us by our community. Indeed, we find ourselves already having been issued not only some of our identities but also our aptitudes and talents, as well as our bodies, our histories, our time and place, and so on. Is this a different type of finding—not finding ourselves called, but finding ourselves stuck with something? No; it is a variety of finding ourselves called. For what we find ourselves stuck with is what Heidegger calls our ‘facticity’ (SZ 56). Whereas present-at-hand objects are simply possessed of facts (Tatsachen ), such as their dimensions, weight, and spatial location, we—as cases of Dasein—are possessed of Facts (Fakten ) (SZ 56), such as being short, being overweight, and being in Chicago—as well as being good at math, being a woman, and having gone to boarding school. Fakten are different from Tatsachen in that the former figure in our self-interpreting. This means that they are identities or vocations that we are given and that we must take up—that we must be—in one way or another.4 If we do not find something as such a calling, then it is a mere fact rather than a Fact and so irrelevant to our lives. It follows that, for self-interpreting entities like us, what we find given to us to deal with is a species of what we find called to take up. Thus we can say generally that to be self-finding is to find ourselves called to a vocation, in the broadest possible sense. | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //Katherine Withy. " | ||
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