Rethinking Transcendence: Heidegger,Plessner and the Problem of Anthropology |
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Authors: | Thomas Schwarz Wentzer |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Culture and Society, Aarhus University, Aarhus C, Denmarkfilts@cas.au.dk |
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Abstract: | AbstractIn times of the Anthropocene, we are in need of philosophical anthropology, revisiting the question concerning the human condition. I suggest rethinking what one may call ‘human transcendence’ in terms of a responsivist paradigm. Drawing on Heidegger and Plessner, the idea is that we should think of the eccentric or ecstatic position of the human in terms of something we undergo, instead of it being a human capability or something we do. It is a gift, emplacing us to the time-space of responsive embodied existence. The paper will follow this agenda in five steps. Having introduced what I take to be the challenge for a timely ontology, I will unfold the problem entailed in the very idea of philosophical anthropology according to Heidegger. I then focus on Heidegger’s (hidden) rapprochement to Helmuth Plessner’s anthropology, recalling Plessner’s analysis of laughter as a bodily expression displaying the ‘eccentric positionality’ of the human. I suggest rephrasing this kind of transcendence in a responsivist paradigm: Humans are responsive beings. |
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Keywords: | Philosophical anthropology Anthropocene ontology responsiveness transcendence |
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