iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 6:24 pm
Of course: Ethics. With a capital E. Ethics as defined and then deduced into existence didactically/theoretically/analytically in a world of words that make no real connection to the world of actual human interactions like the examples I noted above.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 6:51 pm "Ethics," with a capital "E" is a discipline. The capital is no more insidious than the capital on the world "English."
Okay, take your disciplined grasp of Ethics "to the world of actual human interactions like the examples I noted above."
Someone speaking the English language or someone being English is not going to generate much in the way of ethical conflict.
Right?
Instead, among the English speaking population, it is when the discussion revolves around moral and political and spiritual value judgments in conflict, that we are far more likely to encounter the manner in which I construe the meaning of dasein.
You choose the conflict and the context and let's examine this...existentially.
dasein
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 6:51 pm You really can't help yourself, can you? You keep using this undefined word of yours.
Even Heidegger didn't do that.
Right. Dasein
defined in Being and Time.
Now, what I prefer however are those here who think they grasp Heidegger's "didactic, analytic, scholastic, academic" definition of Dasein and are willing to examine it in regard to the manner in which I speculate on the existential meaning of dasein as it pertains to the accusations leveled against him in regard to fascism, the Nazis and the Jews.
Which approach do you think will be more pertinent to the "human condition" insofar as we examine the moral and political value judgments that
we have come to embody? His Dasein or my dasein?
Again, let's take the discussion to a particular set of circumstances in which our own value judgments come into conflict and explore the big D and the little d dasein.
Ever and always: define, define, define!
As though there aren't words such that any definitions a "serious philosopher" might provide us with are only as relevant as the particular context in which his or her definition is used.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 6:51 pm No, the problem is the opposite: there are, in fact, as I have shown you,
so many definitions for dasein that nobody can possibly guess which one you're trying to use.
The one I use revolves around this particular [subjective] assumption:
If I am always of the opinion that 1] my own values are rooted in dasein and 2] that there are no objective values "I" can reach, then every time I make one particular moral/political leap, I am admitting that I might have gone in the other direction...or that I might just as well have gone in the other direction. Then "I" begins to fracture and fragment to the point there is nothing able to actually keep it all together. At least not with respect to choosing sides morally and politically.
Which has resulted in "I" becoming "fractured and fragmented" in regards
to conflicting goods.
A problem you don't have becasue existentially you have been able to take your own subjective "leap of faith" to the Christian God. Objective morality? No problem. It's right there in The Book...Scripted for all Christians.
Thus: Define "Freedom". Define "Justice".
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 6:51 pm No good philosopher would undertake a treatise on these terms
without trying to define them.
But apparently, you would?
But I'm not taking individual philosophical assessments of freedom and justice to a treatise: "a written work dealing formally and systematically with a subject."
I'm taking the "didactic, analytic, scholastic, academic" conclusions reached in the treatise out into the complex and convoluted world of actual human interactions where freedom and justice for some revolve more around "I" or "we", around capitalism or socialism, around religion or atheism, around deontology or utilitarianism, around might makes right, right makes might or democracy and the rule of law.