estudos:blattner:blattner-199946-51-medo-furcht
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| + | ===== MEDO (1999: | ||
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| + | No §30, Heidegger desenvolve a sua explicação de (Stimmung) através do exemplo do medo. Ora, é sempre incerto, quando confrontado com um exemplo, até que ponto se pode generalizar a partir dele, e Heidegger não se esforça por nos ajudar aqui. Com efeito, tomarei uma posição sobre essa questão, optando por me concentrar nas duas características dominantes do medo: o fato de ter um objeto (o temível) e de ter também um elemento de auto-consideração. Heidegger chama a estes dois itens o " | ||
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| + | He develops his account of (attunement) in §30 by way of the example of fear. Now, it is always unclear, when confronting an example, how much to generalize from it, and Heidegger does Not go out of his way to help us here. I shall in effect take a Stand on that question by choosing to focus on the two dominant features of fear: that it has an object (the fearsome), and that it has a self-regarding element as well. Heidegger calls these two items the fear’s “in-the-face-of-which” and its “about-which.” | ||
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| + | The In-the-Face-of Which of Fear. The in-the-face-of-which of fear is the object or item that one fears, say, the oncoming car as Jones stands in the middle of the boulevard: | ||
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| + | (47) The in-the-face-of-which of fear, the “fearsome, | ||
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| + | Heidegger proceeds with a rather detailed analysis of fearsome items, which is not really to our point. The basic idea is that the attunement reveals an entity in the environment (an intraworldly entity) as fearsome, as being threatening. This fearsome thing is in the environment; | ||
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| + | Attunement reveals that intraworldly item as bearing an import | ||
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| + | Circumspectively concernful letting-encounter has — as we can now see more sharply on the basis of affectivity — the character of being touched (Betroffenwerdens) | ||
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| + | (48) Attunement reveals the imports of things, they way they touch Dasein. A car is not just something with which to drive, a means of transportation. Instead, a car is also (all too often) something threatening. The plate on Jones’s shelf is not just something with which to serve food, but also importantly something of familial value, something cherished. The overused joke that Heidegger describes the world in chapter 3 of division 1 of Being and Time as one large gas station hits an important nerve of truth about that chapter. Chapter 3 presents the world simply as a set of use-objects, | ||
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| + | What Fear Fears about. Dasein does not frighten itself, it is not the in-the-face-of-which of fear, but Dasein does fear about itself: “That about which fear fears is the fearful entity itself, Dasein” (SZ:141). There is a straightforward way in which this claim is quite clear. Jones fears the car as she stands in the middle of the boulevard, and she fears about herself, about her safety and physical integrity. Her fear has an “object” (the fearsome, the car), which is not she, yet that fear is nonetheless “self-regarding”: | ||
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| + | But fearing-for can also concern others, and in such cases we speak of fearing for them. This fearing for . . . does not catch fear from the other. That is already out of the question in so far as the other, for whom we fear, need not on his side fear at all. We fear for the other mostly precisely when he does not fear for himself and foolhardily throws himself up against what threatens him. (SZ:141-2) | ||
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| + | In this case, Jones fears for someone who does not fear about or for himself. She sees Smith in the middle of the road, blithely reading the newspaper as BMWs rush by. Smith is so absorbed in the reading that he has not noticed the cars; or perhaps he is from New York and does not fear cars in the way thatjones does. Here the fearing is all “on her side.” In a stronger case, only hinted at in Heidegger’s term “fearing with” (Sichmitfürchten), | ||
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| + | In both of the first two cases, although it may seem at first that Jones only fears for another, and not for or about herself, Heidegger wants to argue that in fearing for Smith she is also fearing about herself: | ||
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| + | One can fear for . . . , without fearing (for) oneself. Precisely speaking, however, fearing-for... is indeed a fearing (about) oneself One’s being-with (50) the other, which could be ripped from one, is also “feared” (about). (SZ:142) | ||
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| + | Jones fears for Smith, rather than simply apprehends that he could very well presently lose his life, because Jones stands in a relation (being-with) to Smith and cares about him. Now, this need not be a terribly emotional thing; Smith need not be a friend. Only a very thin and diffuse care is required. It is in virtue of this diffuse, solicitous being-with | ||
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| + | Heidegger makes a correlative point about cases in which Jones fears not for another, but to use Heidegger’s example, “for house and home”: | ||
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| + | When we fear for house and home, we find no counterexample for the determination above of the about-which of fear (i.e., for the thesis that Dasein always fears about itself). For Dasein is in each case, as being-in-the-world, | ||
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| + | As the fire approaches her house, Jones fears the fire (it is the fearsome), and she fears for her house. She may be far away, in a hotel in the next town, utterly safe. Still, she fears for her house. This is possible, Heidegger argues, because she is essentially “being-amidst, | ||
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| + | The attunement of fear not only reveals a fearsome object, and not only sometimes involves another person or thing feared for, but also always discloses something about the fearful one, something that is “feared about.” In the case of fearing for others, Jones’s being-with them is feared about and can be seen to be a deeper ground that makes the fear possible. When she fears “for herself,” when she is stranded in the middle of the boulevard, she clearly fears about her own safety. This fear discloses the way in which certain aspects of herself matter to her. Now, the phraseology (“certain aspects of herself mattering to her”) makes the whole affair sound rather selfish, or at least egocentrically self-regarding. But that is not the point at all. If she were indifferent to her being with Smith, then she would not fear for Smith. Of course, it does not follow that her fear for Smith is a self-absorbed fear. It simply must be grounded in the way her relationship to Smith matters to her. Moreover, Heidegger is not arguing that Jones is only motivated by self-regarding facts. Yet he is making a claim about motivation, and in exploring it, we shall further illuminate his conception of attunement. | ||
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estudos/blattner/blattner-199946-51-medo-furcht.txt · Last modified: by mccastro
