Being and Dasein in Heidegger A Tract Book Essay By Anthony J. Fejfar, J.D., Esq., Coif © Copyright 2007 by Anthony J. Fejfar
In “Being and Time” philosopher Martin Heidegger discusses Being and Dasein. Dasein is defined as “Being-in-the-world.”
Heidegger
spends a great deal of time exploring the question of Being and ends up arguing that Being is best known through a phenomenological analyis of Dasein. I argue, on the other hand, that Being is best known through Intuition. Philosophical Intuition intuits Being in a direct ontological fashion. So, I argue, based on Intuition, and Plato, that Being is “Form of Form,” or, as Jesuit Philosopher Bernard Lonergan puts it, Being is an “Unrestricted Act of Undertanding.” Once we have come to an understanding of Being, ontologically, based upon Intuition, then we can discuss Dasein, or Being-in-the-World, as does Heidegger. As Heidegger points out, Dasein involves a certain “thrownness” of Being into the World. When Being is “thrown” into the
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World the result is a kind of Authenticity. Authenticity involves Rational Self Interest, Autonomy, and Self-Actualization. Authenticity is at once selfish, but at the same time involves giving or, as Heidegger calls it, care. The authentic person has his own projects, but those projects help others, either directly or indirectly. Being, then, and Dasein, moves us toward Justice and Social Justice. Bibliography Heidegger, Martin, Being and Time (1926). Maslow, Abraham, Maslow on Management (1998). Lonergan, Bernard, Insight (1956).
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