Heidegger calls this nonexplicitable background that enables us to make sense of things “the understanding of being.” His hermeneutic method is an alternative to the tradition of critical reflection in that it seeks to point out and describe our understanding of being from within that understanding without attempting to make our grasp of entities theoretically clear. Heidegger points out how background practices function in every aspect of our lives: encountering objects and people, using language, doing science, etc. But he can only point out the background practices and how they work to people who already share them–who, as he would say, dwell in them. He cannot spell out these practices in so definite and context-free a way that they could be communicated to any rational being or represented in a computer. In Heidegger's terms, this means that one must always do hermeneutics from within a hermeneutic circle.