Aspects of a non-reductive interpretation of life in Heidegger: the hermeneutic of nature and the phenomenon of life
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v16n2-93Keywords:
Heidegger; ontology; hermeneutic of nature; life; world.Abstract
This article shows the hermeneutical approach performed by Martin Heidegger to the concepts of nature and life from the fundamental ontology. In Being and Time, Heidegger elaborates the hermeneutical conditions so that we can apprehend ontologically life through what he calls the private interpretation of life. The systematic development of the sense of being of life is presented by Heidegger in the lecture course The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics: World, Finitude, Solitude, of 1929/1930. In this lecture, to present the phenomenon of life Heidegger uses the central thesis that every living being is organism in order to develop an ontological investigation in conjunction with biological and zoological research. Therefore, after the explanation of the ways of meeting with nature, will be shown as nature in the original sense shows itself from a withdrawal in the world opening of the being-there in its relationship with living organisms.Downloads
Published
2014-12-01 — Updated on 2014-12-01
How to Cite
Silveira, A. L. R. (2014). Aspects of a non-reductive interpretation of life in Heidegger: the hermeneutic of nature and the phenomenon of life. Human Nature - International Philosophy and Psychology Review, 16(2), 138–168. https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v16n2-93
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