Wiki Notes
Heidegger claimed that Western philosophy since Plato has misunderstood
what it means for something "to be", tending to approach this question
in terms of a being, rather than asking about Being itself. In other
words, Heidegger believed all investigations of being have historically
focused on particular entities and their properties, or have treated
Being itself as an entity, or substance, with properties. A more
authentic analysis of Being would, for Heidegger, investigate "that on
the basis of which beings are already understood," or that which
underlies all particular entities and allows them to show up as entities
in the first place.
Heidegger argued that this misunderstanding, beginning with Plato, has
left its traces in every stage of Western thought. All that we
understand, from the way we speak to our notions of "common sense", is
susceptible to error, to fundamental mistakes about the nature of being.
These mistakes filter into the terms through which being is articulated
in the history of philosophy—such as reality, logic, God,
consciousness, and presence. In his later philosophy, Heidegger argues
that this profoundly affects the way in which human beings relate to
modern technology.
Two recurring themes of Heidegger's later writings are poetry and
technology. The essence of modern technology is the conversion of the
whole universe of beings into an undifferentiated "standing reserve"
(Bestand) of energy available for any use to which humans choose to put
it. Heidegger described the essence of modern technology as Gestell, or
"enframing." Heidegger does not unequivocally condemn technology: while
he acknowledges that modern technology contains grave dangers, Heidegger
nevertheless also argues that it may constitute a chance for human
beings to enter a new epoch in their relation to being.
More recently, Heidegger's thought has considerably influenced the work
of the French philosopher Bernard Stiegler. This is evident even from
the title of Stiegler's multi-volume magnum opus, La technique et le
temps (volume one translated into English as Technics and Time, 1: The
Fault of Epimetheus).[95] Stiegler offers an original reading of
Heidegger, arguing that there can be no access to "originary
temporality" other than via material, that is, technical, supports, and
that Heidegger recognised this in the form of his account of world
historicality, yet in the end suppressed that fact. Stiegler understands
the existential analytic of Being and Time as an account of psychic
individuation, and his later "history of being" as an account of
collective individuation. He understands many of the problems of
Heidegger's philosophy and politics as the consequence of Heidegger's
inability to integrate the two.
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