Friday, April 24, 2020
Martin Heidegger Essays - Martin Heidegger, Philosophy Of Technology
  Martin Heidegger  annon    Note: The main work from which text was drawn is The Question Concerning    Technology by Martin Heidegger.    Martin Heidegger was a German philosopher, who developed existential  phenomenology and has been widely regarded as the most original    20th-century philosopher. His works include complicated essays such as An  introduction to Metaphysics and The Question Concerning Technology. In  his essay The Question Concerning Technology, Heidegger attempts to  create several intricate arguments regarding technology and the  significance of information. One prominent theme in this essay is the idea  and meaning of info rmation.    Heidegger presents his thoughts by searching for the roots of the ideas  behind information. He includes many references to German, Greek and Latin  vocabulary to better explain his ideas. In order to fully understand the  meaning and significance of informa tion, one must be educated as to the  accurate definitions of some basic vocabulary regarding information. The  first word that is significant to the idea of information that Heidegger  explains to the reader is episteme. Episteme in basic translation can be  defined as knowledge. (Episteme is a term) for knowing in the widest  sense (it) means to be entirely at home with something, to understand and  be expert in it. Such knowing provides an opening up. As an opening it up  it is a revealing. This leads   to the next expression, alethia. Alethia is used by Heidegger the same  way it was defined by the ancient Greeks; revealing. This same word is  translated by the Romans to veritas. Again, veritas in English is used  to mean truth which can be unde rstood as correctness and  representation. It is in this change, due to translation of ideas, that    Heidegger notices some inconsistencies.    Information is an often misused term in Heideggers opinion. As previously  noted, the translation from one language to another can often turn true  definitions of words askew, and this can cause serious problems with  larger concepts of technology and an id ea of enframing (gestell).    Gestell is a German word whose direct translation means enframing. The  idea of enframing is also quite prevalent in this essay.  We now name that challenging claim which gathers man thither to order the  self-revealing as standing-reserve: ge-stell (enframing). We dare to use  this word in a sense that has been thoroughly unfamiliar up to now.    According to ordinary usage, the word    Gestell (frame) means some kind of apparatus, e.g., a bookrack. Gestell  is also the name for a skeleton. And the employment of the word    Gestell(enframing) that is now required of us seems equally eerie, not to  speak of the arbitrariness with which words of a mature language are so  misused.    Heidegger  Enframing means the gathering together of that setting-upon that sets man  upon man, i.e., challenges him to bring forth, to reveal the real, in the  mode of ordering, as standing reserve. Enframing means that way of  revealing that holds sway in the essenc e of modern technology and that it  is itself nothing technological. Heidegger is portraying the idea that  gestell is not a tangible object but more of a concept, a way of  classifying. Although it may seem possible to step away from this  gestell it is i mpossible. Regardless of outside influences there is  still the underlying revelation that occurs through gestell. In the idea  of gestell lies the idea of information. Information is indebted (aion) to  enframing (gestell), just as enframing is indebted (ai on) to revealing  (alethia). Alethia is then indebted (aion) to knowledge (episteme). These  cycles of indebtedness are recognized by Heidegger and are called the four  causes.  the causa materialis, the material, the matter out of which, for example,  a silver chalice is made.  the causa formalis, the form, the shape into which the material enters.  the causa finalis, the end, for example, the sacrificial rite to which the  chalice required is determined as to its form and matter  the causa efficiens, which brings about the effect that is the finished,  actual chalice, in this instance, the silversmith.    The significance of these four causes becomes more readily apparent when  the definition of indebtedness is further understood. The basic idea of  indebtedness and of being responsible is often misinterpreted. Again,    Heidegger introduces terminology that wi ll better describe what is meant  by indebtedness and responsibility. Poiesis literally means  bringing-forth and this is the definition that Heidegger intended when  describing the four causes. Heidegger recognizes that the causa finalis   is brought f orth by a combination of other causes and is incapable of  repaying the debt that is produced. It simply exists. Bringing-forth  brings out of concealment into unconcealment. Bringing forth comes to pass  only insofar as something concealed comes    
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