HEIDEGGER AND ETHICS:
FROM DASEIN AS BEING-IN-THE-WORLD TO DASEIN AS ETHICAL
Eric Panicco
In traditional approaches to ethics, there is something peculiar about the way in which we have to check to see if we have found a good ethical theory or not. In the sciences we observe the relevant phenomena so that when we hypothesize in order to explain why certain things happen while others do not. We can check this hypothesis in other instances to find out whether it is good enough to become accepted theory. In ethics, though, whether or not an action is right or wrong, whether or not it does or does not conform to the good is not something to be empirically observed as a property in the same way of empirical observation.
Sound familiar? The part where science revolves largely around the either/or world. Something broached theoretically either is or is not wholly in sync objectively with the laws of matter. After all, it's not often that physicists and chemists and biologists and geologists or even meteorologists are tasked with resolving moral quandaries.
Though, sure, to the extent that ethics is discussed and debated up in the theoretical clouds things might be "resolved" in the sense that agreements might be reached regarding definitions and deductions. Same with Dasein as an intellectual contraption in
Being and Time. Dasein theoretically meets morality theoretically?
But take them both out into the world of conflicting goods...into conflagrations that rage day in and day out "in the news"?
This is nothing ground-breaking. What is interesting for justifying the need to investigate Dasein as ethical is that we are left to appeal to our pre-theoretical intuition.
Our "pre-theoretical intuition"?
Okay, given a moral conflict of note, how would you encompass your own pre-theoretical intuition?
Our intuition is exactly that element of our understanding that does not give us precise reasons, but that we nevertheless still take as giving us some reason.
Here, again, I would still need someone to explain to me how human intuition itself is not in turn rooted existentially in dasein.
Intuition:
"a thing that one knows or considers likely from instinctive feeling rather than conscious reasoning."
"the ability to understand something immediately, without the need for conscious reasoning."
"Intuition, in philosophy, the power of obtaining knowledge that cannot be acquired either by inference or observation, by reason or experience."
Okay, but just as those all up and down the moral and political spectrums, think and feel what they do regarding their moral convictions, don't they intuit what "deep down" they "just know" is right or wrong all up and down them as well?
How are our intuitions not shaped and molded as well by our indoctrination as children and by the social, political and economic parameters of the particular world we are a part of historically and culturally?
As for this...
If attempts in ethical theory are even going to use the intuition about right and wrong as an important factor for whether or not an ethical theory is plausible, then this will for us constitute an acknowledgment that there is something more fundamental to what Heidegger presents as being-in-the-world. So, while this does not constitute anything like a proof that Dasein is ethical, it at least gives us the prompt we need to begin an investigation to find out if Dasein can be understood as ethical.
...what on Earth does it mean to you in regard to your own value judgments? How do you relate Dasein as construed in
Being and Time to your own understanding of what it means to be ethical? The part where you make distinctions between thinking and feeling and intuiting when choosing behaviors.