The Natural and the Human in the Thought of Young Heidegger.

Authors

  • José Carlos Michelazzo

Abstract

Despite we know that there is not a formal treatment of nature’s concept in the initial steps of Heidegger’s thought, there is, although, a critical interpretation of the naturalist concept of Being, concerning to metaphysical tradition, which the philosopher wants go beyond to another perspective of thought. That perspective is guided by a hermeneutic phenomenology and born from human character of being of man, that is, from ontological and factical conditions of your existence. The present paper intends to indicate the counterpoint between these two ways of the interpretation of Being, the natural and the human, following the more expressive steps given by young Heidegger between 1907, age of his awakening to philosophy, and the early twenties, time of his researches about primal Christianity and Aristotle’s practical writings.Key-words: natural; theoretical; metaphysics; alive spirit; human; facticity

Published

2024-10-02

How to Cite

Michelazzo, J. C. (2024). The Natural and the Human in the Thought of Young Heidegger. Human Nature - International Philosophy and Psychology Review, 7(2), 375–397. Retrieved from https://revistas.dwwe.com.br:443/index.php/NH/article/view/1015