Class discussion this week was dictated by Miguel de Unamuno’s
The Tragic Sense of Life and Martin
Heidegger’s Being and Time. Beginning
with Unamuno’s philosophical struggle between logic and passion, we are
presented with the notion that strife in living is inevitable. That is,
everyone at some point is going to encounter struggles within their everyday lives;
however, certain conditions can produce more or less strife. For example,
Unamuno wants to point out that “but whoever is convinced that he is sailing,
perhaps without a set course, on an unstable or sinkable craft, will not be
daunted if he finds the deck giving way beneath his feet and threatening to
sink” (Unamuno in Solomon, 158). Yet, I would stress the point that this does
not necessarily entail that the individual without a set course in his life is
without any worries. This type of person still experiences pain and strife
within his or her life that is certainly complex and confusing, but I feel that
Unamuno wants it to be understood that this pain will be substantially less
than that of the fanatics. But who are the fanatics?
Unamuno
wants to express that individuals tend to get their motivations and morals from
a sort of pre-packaged set. We can identify these as “dogmas” which people tend
to give in and identify with. However, to Unamuno, this is not something that
should be praised with approval. Rather, “virtue, therefore, is not based upon
dogma, but dogma upon virtue, and it is not faith which creates martyrs but
rather martyrs who create faith” Unamuno in Solomon, 159). That is, the
doctrines by which each and every one of us use to describe ourselves is
nothing more than an attempt to justify our actions to others. Unamuno
describes how this is so when describing how a man may justify his morals in
fear of being damned into eternal hellfire. However, Unamuno wants to show that
even in the absence of believing in hellfire, or the idea that he may experience
such a place, this man will simply come up with another alternative for
explaining and justifying his actions or morals.
From here I
still want to return to this notion of the fanatics. Unamuno states that “whoever
bases or thinks he bases his conduct – his inner or outward conduct, his
feeling or his action – on a dogma or
theoretical principle which he deems incontrovertible, runs the risk of being a
fanatic” Unamuno in Solomon, 158). Even so, why would a fanatic experience more
pain? To Unamuno, the amount of pain can be associated with life can be
identified with the groundwork for which one justifies their actions. A fanatic
subscribes to a dogma to justify the way in which they live, however if she finds
the groundwork for her morals to begin to shake, the fall appears to be much
more tremendous than someone who is not a fanatic. Therefore, it would appear
as if the idea of the fanatic is to be associated with more pain than someone
who believes that “by acting thus he will make it true, prove it true, and that
by thus acting he will create his spiritual world” (Unamuno in Solomon, 158).
Turning to
Heidegger, we understand that there is a sense of a similarity to that of the
philosophical approach of Unamuno. To be quite honest, I found Heidegger’s
writing style to be more than a bit confusing and difficult to read. Nevertheless,
I still want to return to one of the very first class discussion questions from
group 16, that being whether or not we should believe that a dog has da-sein. To
answer this, I found it odd that no one appeared to desire to return to
Kierkegaard’s examples of the ethical and aesthetic life. I would indeed agree
that one of the greatest determinants of da-sein would be the capability of
understanding mortality. Along with this, since human beings appear to be the
only creatures that know that we are going to die, I would argue that only
humans can have da-sein. Yet, I feel that this does not go far enough.
I feel that
another determinant for da-sein should be the ability to contemplate life. Interestingly
enough, this appears to be the kind of determinant that we saw from the ethical
life portrayed by Kierkegaard. Compared to the aesthetic life that can most
easily be explained within the life of an animal such as a dog, I would argue
that many of the same qualities of the ethical life are indeed contained within
da-sein. To counter what an individual during class discussion stated about
dogs fearing for their life when they retreat: why would you have any reason to
believe that the dog understands mortality? Wouldn’t it be more likely that the
dog fears the experience of pain, rather than the extremely complicated and
philosophical notion of life and the desire to preserve it?
I believe
that da-sein has an extremely important impact on the further examination of
authentic and inauthentic life. While I want to return to this in more detail
on next week’s blog, I feel that it is important to bring up the point that
Heidegger more than likely would feel that modernization has created the
circumstances in which people are thrown into a particular society that has
created certain social standards. These standards tell us how to live, and how
to shape our morals. To Heidegger, this would be the creation of an inauthentic
life; a life that should be compared to one which can be won. By winning, it is
meant that we have chosen our own value in absence of external influence. But
more on this later.
Although fanatical thinking is not one of the main points I absorbed when I initially read the texts from last week, it is interesting that you bring up the issue of fanatics presented by Unamuno—that is, fanatics (or those who base their conduct on a dogma that they consider to be incontrovertible) experience more “pain” than those who do not recognize a predetermined course in their lives. I agree that it is incontrovertible (at the risk of sounding fanatic myself) that fanatics will experience a suffering that is impossible for those who live without dogma to experience. Put simply, the stakes are higher for subscribers to a dogmatic understanding. Like you pointed out, they have more to lose. For example, if our composite comprehension of meanings and values change by new evidence or social thought, what implications does that have for the individual who is open-minded? Virtually none, as he or she does not feel the necessity to defend previously held convictions. But for the fanatic, the pain of losing a false but firmly held framework of belief is a present fear. This is why, in my opinion, fanatic action is always spurred by a provocation to fanatic fears. And so, based on your reflections above, Unamuno would presumably agree with your statement above that “the fall appears to be much more tremendous [for a fanatic] than someone who is not.”
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