Martin Heidegger

Contributions to Philosophy (Of the Event)

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  • Liamhas quoted5 months ago
    Beyng needs humans in order to occur essentially, and humans belong to beyng so that they might fulfill their ultimate destiny as Da-sein.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    This remaining absent is all the more uncanny the longer churches and forms of divine service survive (and seem permanent) and yet are unable to ground an original truth.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    That title came from clear knowledge of the task: no longer beings and beingness, but being; no longer “thinking,” but “time”; the priority no longer given to thinking, but to beyng. “Time” as a name for the “truth” of being; and all this as task, as “still on the way,” not as “doctrine” and dogma.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    Precisely therefore, however, transitional thinking must not succumb to the temptation to simply leave behind what it grasped as the end and at the end; instead, this thinking must put behind itself what it has grasped, i.e., now for the first time comprehend it in its essence and allow it to be integrated in altered form into the truth of beyng.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    For transitional thinking, however, what matters is not an “opposition” to “metaphysics,” since that would simply bring metaphysics back into play; rather, the task is an overcoming of metaphysics out of its ground.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    Da-sein is the grounding of the truth of beyng.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    But what if the essence of thinking has been lost to us and “logic” has been predestined to commandeer “thinking,” even though “logic” itself is indeed merely a vestige of the powerlessness of thinking, i.e., of unsupported and unprotected questioning in the abyss of the truth of being? And what if “thinking” retains validity only as the faultless drawing of conclusions within the correct representation of objects, i.e., as the avoidance of that questioning?
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    What is “more sure”: the immediate, naive description or the exact experiment? The former, because there theory is presupposed “less”!
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    Sheer idiocy to say that experimental research is Nordic-Germanic and that rational research, on the contrary, is of foreign extraction! We would then have to resolve to number Newton and Leibniz among the “Jews.” It is precisely the projection of nature in the mathematical sense that constitutes the presupposition for the necessity and possibility of “experimentation” as measuring.
  • Liamhas quoted7 months ago
    This “development” of modern science, its coming into its essence, is visible today only to a few and will be rejected by most as nonexistent. It cannot be proven by matters of fact; instead, it can be grasped only out of a knowledge of the history of being.
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