estudos:taminiaux:taminiaux-hpp-18-21-arete-phronesis-3399
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| + | ====== arete - phronesis (HPP:18-21) ====== | ||
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| + | //Data: 2023-12-07 08:30// | ||
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| + | ==== Heidegger and Practical Philosophy ==== | ||
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| + | === The Interpretation of Aristotle’s Notion of Arete in Heidegger’s First Courses === | ||
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| + | Tal como a techne, relata Heidegger, a phronesis envolve uma deliberação. Tal como acontece com a techne, a deliberação da phronesis é, enquanto tal, relativa a algo que pode ser de outro modo. Mas é aí que termina a semelhança entre os dois modos deliberativos: | ||
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| + | <tabbox original> | ||
| + | Book VI of the Aristotelian treatise begins by recalling that the right principle (orthos logos) that governs each of the ethical dispositions examined in the preceding books consists in choosing the mean, at equal distance from excess and defect. It recalls also that the aretai of the psyche are divided into two groups: the ethical aretai and the dianoetical aretai. The latter, which belong to the part of the psyche that has logos, are subdivided into two groups: those where the psyche considers beings whose principles (archai) are unchangeable, | ||
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| + | It is at this point that Heidegger begins his interpretation by emphasizing that Aristotle introduces his research by a programmatic enumeration of the modes of aletheuein, which are techne, episteme, phronesis, sophia, and noûs (Book VI, 3, 1149b 15). And Heidegger leaves no doubt about the way in which he understands these modes. While Aristotle attributes them to psyche, Heidegger does not hesitate to attribute them to the “human Dasein.” He also does not hesitate to translate aletheuei he psyche as “Dasein is uncovering, | ||
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| + | One already suspects, under these conditions, that the interpretation of the Aristotelian problematic of arete will consist for Heidegger in defining, with respect to Dasein, the ontological capacity to uncover, which is inherent in each of the modes enumerated by Aristotle to better determine their scope. And since Aristotle defines arete in general as the best disposition, | ||
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| + | Now, Aristotle maintains that the best intellectual disposition is sophia, and he relegates episteme to an inferior rank. As for the deliberative disposition, | ||
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| + | The question that occupies me is therefore to ascertain if Heidegger subscribes to these two hierarchies and what meaning he attributes to them. | ||
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| + | As I indicated above, it is only in these pages devoted to the Aristotelian analysis of phronesis that Heidegger expressly uses—several times—the word arete. This frequent usage itself suggests that it is phronesis to which he attributes the dignity of arete. This permits us to presume, given the hermeneutic context that we have roughly recalled, that the Aristotelian analysis of phronesis to his mind is of paramount importance. But since manifestly sophia is for Aristotle also an arete, and even the highest arete, we can assume that it will also be a matter for Heidegger of questioning this preeminence and to situate it in relation to the arete of phronesis. | ||
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| + | For anyone familiar with Sein und Zeit, it is easy to perceive that the capital importance that Heidegger attributes to the Aristotelian analysis of phronesis, two or three years before the publication of his opus magnum, lies in the fact that Heidegger sees in it the central axis of his own analytic of Dasein. | ||
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| + | There is no need to follow the detail of the text to be convinced of this. A few indications will suffice. | ||
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| + | The Heideggerian interpretation of Aristotelian phronesis in §8 of the course on the Sophist begins by recalling the aletheic character of the two intellectual modes and the two deliberative modes. Heidegger emphasizes that neither episteme for the first mode nor techne for the second is able to assume the rank of arete. And it is at this point that he gives his own definition of the word: arete signifies the authentic and fully developed possibility of unconcealment (GA19:33). | ||
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| + | Paragraph 8 asks, then, by what right phronesis can assume the rank of arete, in the sense of authentic (eigentlich) possibility of unconcealment, | ||
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| + | The reason is simple: phronesis is able to assume the rank of arete insofar as it un-covers Dasein itself. | ||
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| + | It is this response that we must now consider. | ||
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| + | Like techne, recounts Heidegger, phronesis involves a deliberation. As is the case for techne, the deliberation of phronesis is, as such, relative to something that is able to be otherwise. But there the resemblance between the two deliberative modes ends: they are essentially different regarding their goal and principle. The telos of the kind of action revealed by techne – an action that pertains to poiesis, to production or the making of something – is some thing other than Dasein, an entity that is “over and against” Dasein, an ergon or a work that falls outside of Dasein. On the other hand, the action revealed by phronesis, far from being an involvement with exterior entities, is praxis, understood as the conduct of the very life of man, that is, as the very way in which Dasein exists. And the goal that phronesis takes into view is not, moreover, exterior (para), because it is nothing else than the accomplishment of praxis, eu prattein, that is, the accomplishment of the way in which Dasein exists. It is in Dasein itself, and not in the things that fall outside of it, that the houneka of phronesis resides. The difference between techne and phronesis is no less defined if one considers the arche, or principle, of each. On the one hand, the arche that guides techne in the production of a work also is by nature external to Dasein, because it is the eidos, the form or the model of the external product that is being produced. On the other hand, the arche of phronesis is not exterior to Dasein, because it is nothing else than the mode in which Dasein uncovers itself. | ||
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| + | As a mode of unconcealment, | ||
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| + | What is remarkable in this Heideggerian interpretation of Aristotle, first, is the insistence with which it moves into the sphere of Eigentlichkeit, | ||
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| + | One will no doubt object that Heidegger’s introduction in his interpretation of the Aristotelian phronesis of the notion of Gewissen, commonly translated as “moral conscience, | ||
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| + | We first note that it is after having pursued the comparison between techne and phronesis that Heidegger suggests a proximity between the latter and Gewissen. It is remarkable, he says, that techne is susceptible to development and improvement as a result of its failures, while phronesis obeys the law of all or nothing. It cannot be “more or less” complete. Either it is or it is not, so that one cannot say, unlike techne, “that it has an arete”; one must rather say that it “is in itself άρετή” (GA19:38). Furthermore, | ||
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| + | “What is most striking now,” he says, “is that Aristotle designates σοφία as the άρετή of τέχνη (Nic. Eth. VI, 7, 1141 a 12). The highest mode of άληθεύειν, | ||
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| + | </ | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //[Jacques Taminiaux, "The Interpretation of Aristotle’s Notion of Arete in Heidegger’s First Courses", | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
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