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Heidegger on Understanding One's Own Being

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R. Matthew Shockey
Affiliation:
Indiana University
Burt Hopkins
Affiliation:
Seattle University
John Drummond
Affiliation:
Fordham University
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Summary

Abstract: One of the characteristics that define us as Dasein, according to Heidegger, is that our being is at issue for us. Most readers interpret this to mean that we each, as individuals situated in the world with others, face the questions of who, how, and whether to be within our unique situations. Yet what Heidegger identifies as Dasein's being is a general structure—care—that is the same for all individuals. Adapting and modifying John Haugeland's account of understanding as projecting entities upon their constitutive ontological possibilities, I argue that it is this general, ontological structure that Heidegger means to say is at issue for us, and that understanding ourselves in terms of it is a condition of possibility of understanding ourselves as particular individuals faced with the questions of who, how, and whether to be in our respective situations. I then show how this allows us to begin to address Heidegger's view of the role philosophy plays in an individual's existence as it makes explicit the ontological structure which she normally only tacitly understands.

Keywords: Martin Heidegger; care; authenticity; Dasein.

I

“Dasein,” Martin Heidegger claims early in Being and Time, “is an entity which does not just occur among other entities. Rather it is ontically distinguished by the fact that, in its being, that being is at issue for it.” This central thought seems, as Heideggerian thoughts go, remarkably clear: it appears to express the idea that, whereas other kinds of entities simply are what they are, we Dasein must determine for ourselves who and how we will be.

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Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2012

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