The Hermeneutics of Facticity in the Young Heidegger

Authors

  • Alexandre Rubenich Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos (UNISINOS)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v16n2-85

Abstract

In the summer lecture of 1923, entitled Ontology: The Hermeneutics of Facticity, Martin Heidegger established his philosophical program in terms of a fundamental research, named by him as phenomenological hermeneutics of facticity. According to this, the interpretation of the factical life is not achieved without taking the being and the speaking as privileged phenomena, i.e., without recovering the essential bond in which we, existent human beings, have already discovered ourselves being in the world as being capable of speaking. Given the fact that it is from the construct being-in-the-world that the German philosopher is able to step back on subject-object scheme, it is not by accident that he tries to find, since the beginning, ways of expressing being that no longer turn it into an entity, with the intention of thinking it beyond the scheme and, therefore, any objectualization registry. It is based on this situation that it is pressing that his analysis starts from the horizon of a privileged entity, since it is for this the sense of being becomes a problem. In fact, this paper starts from the hypothesis that hermeneutics of facticity is constituted due to Heidegger’s attempt on holding to the problem of being that understands being, with the premise of a wide problematization regarding the significance of the word life.

Published

— Updated on 2025-03-27

How to Cite

Rubenich, A. (2025). The Hermeneutics of Facticity in the Young Heidegger. Human Nature - International Philosophy and Psychology Review, 16(2). https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v16n2-85

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Section

Artigos