Martin Heidegger: Being and Time #1 | The Necessity and Structure of the Question of Being §§1-2

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024

Комментарии • 3

  • @-arche-7926
    @-arche-7926 6 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderful and very well explained! Im looking forward to the rest of the book.

  • @kaiko2020
    @kaiko2020 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you! Amazing video

  • @exlauslegale8534
    @exlauslegale8534 6 месяцев назад

    From the lightning speed of a shizoanalytic _pensée_ you dropped down to walking pace of this unnecessarily ornamental priestly _denken_ of the posterboy for the ad hominem argument. You could have at least explored what this obsessional narcissist ripped off from Bergson, if you had anything guattarian in you… You deserve the following citation from a famous Austrian:
    « I cannot visualize Heidegger other than sitting on the bench outside his Black Forest house, alongside his wife, who all her life totally dominated him and who knitted all his socks and crocheted all his caps and baked all his bread and wove all his bedlinen and who even cobbled up his sandals for him. Heidegger was a kitschy brain, Reger said, just as Stifter, but actually more ridiculous than Stifter who in fact a tragic figure unlike Heidegger, who was always merely comical, just as petit-burgeois as Stifter, just as disastrously megalomaniac, a feeble thinker from the Alpine foothills, as I believe, and just about right for the German philosophical hot-pot. For decades they ravenously spooned up that man Heidegger, more than anybody else, and overloaded their stomachs with his stuff. Heidegger had a common face, not a spiritual one, Reger said, he was through and through an unspiritual person, devoid of all fantasy, devoid of all sensibility, a genuine German philosophical ruminant, a ceaselessly gravid German philosophical cow, Reger said, which grazed upon German philosophy and thereupon for decades let its smart little cow-pats drop on it. Heidegger, in a manner of speaking, was a philosophical con-man, Reger said, who succeeded in getting a whole generation of German philosophers to stand on their heads. Heidegger is a revolting episode in the history of German philosophy, Reger said yesterday, an episode in which all philosophical Germans participated and still participate. To this day Heidegger has still not been entirely exposed for what he is; true, the Heidegger cow has become thinner but the Heidegger cow is still being milked.»
    Thomas Bernhardt