Document Type : Research Paper
Authors
1 Ph.D. student of philosophy, Imam Khomeini International University
2 Associate Professor of Philosophy, Imam Khomeini International University.
3 -Assistant Professor at Imam Khomeini International University
4 Associate Professor at Imam Khomeini International University
Abstract
For the establishment of the fundamental ontology, early Heidegger disregards the vulgar understanding of time and analyzes temporality. He believes that the vulgar understanding of time is the degeneration of the world-time, and the world-time itself is the degeneration of temporality. In Being and Time, Heidegger interprets temporality as the ontological sense of care. Here, this three-part phrase is relied on to interpret temporality in the thought of Heidegger. The ontological counteracts the ontic. The ontic investigation is one that considers the entity present-at-hand and determined. But the ontological investigation focuses on the how-being of an entity that is always anticipating itself by projecting itself upon its possibilities. The sense is not what is revealed at the end of the understanding act; but is what wherein the understandability of something maintains itself, namely, the condition for the possibility of understandability of a thing. Care implies what gives totality and unity to the structural aspects of Dasein. Care, which is the sense of Dasein’s being, is constituted through three items including existence, facticity, and fallenness. Temporality is the ontological sense of care; namely, the condition for the possibility of its understandability. Heidegger analyzes authentic existence to explain this word. The ontological structure of authentic existence is the anticipatory resoluteness towards death. The resolute existence that anticipates to death shows itself in the three ecstasies futurity, having-been, and making-present. Each of these three ecstasies is respectively the sense of one of the items of care. Hence, temporality in its unity is the ontological sense of care.
Highlights
Temporality in Heidegger’s Early Thought
Ehsan Nazari1, Seyed Masoud Sayf2 Mohammad Hassn Heidari3 Ali Naghi Baghershahi4
1 Ph.D. candidate of philosophy at Imam Khomeini International University, (Corresponding Author). E-mail:Ehsan.ph.86@gmail.com
2 Associate Professor at Imam Khomeini International University, E-mail: seif@hum.ikiu.ac.ir
3Assistant Professor at Imam Khomeini International University, E-mail: m_heidari@ikiu.ac.ir
4Associate Professor at Imam Khomeini International University, E-mail: baghershahi@hum.ikiu.ac.ir
Abstract
For the establishment of the fundamental ontology, early Heidegger disregards the vulgar understanding of time and analyzes temporality. He believes that the vulgar understanding of time is the degeneration of the world-time, and the world-time itself is the degeneration of temporality. In Being and Time, Heidegger interprets temporality as the ontological sense of care. Here, this three-part phrase is relied on to interpret temporality in the thought of Heidegger. The ontological counteracts the ontic. The ontic investigation is one that considers the entity present-at-hand and determined. But the ontological investigation focuses on the how-being of an entity that is always anticipating itself by projecting itself upon its possibilities. The sense is not what is revealed at the end of the understanding act; but is what wherein the understandability of something maintains itself, namely, the condition for the possibility of understandability of a thing. Care implies what gives totality and unity to the structural aspects of Dasein. Care, which is the sense of Dasein’s being, is constituted through three items including existence, facticity, and fallenness. Temporality is the ontological sense of care; namely, the condition for the possibility of its understandability. Heidegger analyzes authentic existence to explain this word. The ontological structure of authentic existence is the anticipatory resoluteness towards death. The resolute existence that anticipates to death shows itself in the three ecstasies futurity, having-been, and making-present. Each of these three ecstasies is respectively the sense of one of the items of care. Hence, temporality in its unity is the ontological sense of care.
Keywords: Time, Temporality, Early Heidegger, Ontological, Sense, Care.
1- Introduction
In accord with Heidegger’s word, all previous philosophers forgot Being and correlatively neglected the true sense of time. The most influential interpretation of time, he believes, belongs to Aristotle. For an accurate investigation of the concept of time, we must inevitably turn back to Aristotle.
2- Heidegger's Confrontation with Aristotelian Interpretation of Time
2-1. Aristotle on Definition of Time
Aristotle explains time through the motion and extension is one of the key elements of motion. On a motion as an extension, countless successive points are assumed. These points are considered before and after concerning each other. When we understand the motion in terms of before and after, we also perceive time as a quantity.
2-2. The Necessity of passing through the Aristotelian Definition of Time and attain to an Originary Time (Temporality)
As Heidegger believed, in Aristotle's definition of motion, concepts of before and after must return to the earlier and later as comparatives. Clearly, ‘earlier and later are time-determinants’. So, we encounter time on the horizon of time. Heidegger believes that one of these two times is more originary than Aristotelian time. This originary time is called temporality.
3- Temporality as the Ontological Sense of Care
3-1. The Ontological
The meaning of the ontic and the ontological must be understood in differentiating beings and Being. Reference of an ontic is timeless and determined beings, while an ontological finds its reference within the process of how those beings determined.
3-2. The Sense
The sense is upon-which or realm of understanding in the manner of projecting. The sense in which the intelligibility of something preserves itself makes possible any understanding.
3-3. The Care
Being-in as one of the moments of being-in-the-world is constituted through understanding, attunement, and falling. Each of these three is based on one of the elements of care (existence, facticity, and fallenness). Being-in in its totality, therefore, is based on the care in its totality. In other words, care is the prior condition of being-in. The care itself has an articulated structure with various elements. Temporality makes ‘Totality of the articulated structural whole of care’ possible.
4- Temporality and Authentic Existence
To describe the relationship between care and temporality more precisely, Heidegger analyzes the authentic existence.
4-1. Authentic and Inauthentic
Taking notice of death as its ultimate possibility, Dasein realizes its possibilities are finite; the Being-towards-death leads to authentication of Dasein. Inauthentic Dasein, in contrast, becomes negligent of death by absorbing in One.
4-2. Temporality as the Foundation of the Authentic Existence
Authentic Dasein exists in a way which called ‘anticipatory resoluteness’. Such a way of being is futural. Heidegger attains ‘having-been’, through futurity of existence. The futurity which has been released the Present. The unified phenomenon of futurity which makes present in the process of having been is called temporality.
5- Conclusion
Futurity, having-been, and making-present are three ecstasies of the temporality. Each of these ecstasies makes one of the elements of care possible. Thus, temporality in its unity makes care as a whole possible.
References
- Barnes, J. (1991) Complete Works (Aristotle), Princeton, Princeton University Press.
- Dahlstrom, D. O. (2013) The Heidegger Dictionary, London, Bloomsbury Academic.
- Descartes, R. (2003) Discourse on Method and Meditations, trans. by E. S. Haldane and G. R. T. Ross, New York, Dover Publications.
- Dreyfus, H. L. (1995) Being-in-the-World: A Commentary on Heidegger's Being and Time, Division I, Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.
- Heidegger, M. (1976a) Gesamtausgabe 9: Wegmarken, Frankfurt am Main, Vittorio Klostermann.
- Heidegger, M. (1975b) Gesamtausgabe 24: Grundprobleme der Phänomenologie, Frankfurt am Main, Vittorio Klostermann.
- Heidegger, M. (1988) Gesamtausgabe 42: Schelling; Von Wesen der Menschlichen Freiheit (1809), Frankfurt am Main, Vittorio Klostermann.
- Macquarrie, J. (1968) Martin Heidegger, Richmond, Virginia, John Knox Press.
- Palmer, R. (1969) Hermeneutics, Evanston, Northwestern University Press.
Keywords
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