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Single Idea 22223
[filed under theme 1. Philosophy / H. Continental Philosophy / 2. Phenomenology
]
Full Idea
Being-in-the-world is a phenomenon of 'care' with a tripartite structure: a) projection towards its possibilities, b) thrownness among those possibilities, so Dasein is not free, and c) fallenness among worldly possibilities, to neglect of its own.
Gist of Idea
Being-in-the-world is projection to possibilities, thrownness among them, and fallenness within them
Source
report of Martin Heidegger (Being and Time [1927]) by John D. Caputo - Heidegger p.227
Book Ref
'A Companion to Continental Philosophy', ed/tr. Critchley,S/Schroeder,W [Blackwell 1999], p.227
A Reaction
Sounds a bit Californian to me. Just living among the world's possibilities is evidently a bad thing, because you could be concentrating on yourself and your own development instead?
The
23 ideas
with the same theme
[approaching wisdom by examining human experience]:
22218
|
There can only be a science of fluctuating consciousness if it focuses on stable essences
[Husserl, by Bernet]
|
22217
|
Phenomenology aims to validate objects, on the basis of intentional intuitive experience
[Husserl, by Bernet]
|
22219
|
Husserl saw transcendental phenomenology as idealist, in its construction of objects
[Husserl, by Bernet]
|
22216
|
Phenomenology studies different types of correlation between consciousness and its objects
[Husserl, by Bernet]
|
22204
|
Start philosophising with no preconceptions, from the intuitively non-theoretical self-given
[Husserl]
|
22207
|
Epoché or 'bracketing' is refraining from judgement, even when some truths are certain
[Husserl]
|
22208
|
'Bracketing' means no judgements at all about spatio-temporal existence
[Husserl]
|
22210
|
After everything is bracketed, consciousness still has a unique being of its own
[Husserl]
|
22215
|
Phenomenology describes consciousness, in the light of pure experiences
[Husserl]
|
21217
|
Phenomenology needs absolute reflection, without presuppositions
[Husserl]
|
15570
|
Phenomenology is the science of essences - necessary universal structures for art, representation etc.
[Husserl, by Polt]
|
7614
|
Bracketing subtracts entailments about external reality from beliefs
[Husserl, by Putnam]
|
6893
|
Phenomenology aims to describe experience directly, rather than by its origins or causes
[Husserl, by Mautner]
|
3348
|
If phenomenology is deprived of the synthetic a priori, it is reduced to literature
[Benardete,JA on Husserl]
|
22223
|
Being-in-the-world is projection to possibilities, thrownness among them, and fallenness within them
[Heidegger, by Caputo]
|
22158
|
Pheomenology seeks things themselves, without empty theories, problems and concepts
[Heidegger]
|
7113
|
Phenomenology assumes that all consciousness is of something
[Sartre]
|
8247
|
Phenomenology needs art as logic needs science
[Deleuze/Guattari]
|
20448
|
Phenomenology uncovers and redescribes the pre-theoretical layer of life
[Critchley]
|
6846
|
Phenomenology is a technique of redescription which clarifies our social world
[Critchley]
|
20744
|
Phenomenologists say all experience is about something and is directed
[Aho]
|
21237
|
Phenomenology begins from the immediate, rather than from axioms and theories
[Bakewell]
|
21238
|
Later phenomenologists tried hard to incorporate social relationships
[Bakewell]
|