Simon Belmont wrote:I'm "going there" because it's the only place to go.
No, you are going there because it’s the only way you can defend DCP, who must be defended at all costs.
Simon Belmont wrote:Just because later philosophers and writers "grouped" Heidegger with the existentialists does not mean he was one or saw himself as one.
Plz lrn 2 reed:
MrStakhanovite wrote:Yes yes, who didn’t see you going there? Existentialism is a term that retroactively applies to his work, just like Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, because it’s used to group a bunch of philosophers who deal with similar topics. Spinoza never identified with the word “rationalist”, and thought Descartes was a beast, but he still gets grouped with him because this how the history of philosophy decided to do it.
But hey, I’m not alone here:
SEP wrote:Like “rationalism” and “empiricism,” “existentialism” is a term that belongs to intellectual history. Its definition is thus to some extent one of historical convenience. The term was explicitly adopted as a self-description by Jean-Paul Sartre, and through the wide dissemination of the postwar literary and philosophical output of Sartre and his associates—notably Simone de Beauvoir, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Albert Camus—existentialism became identified with a cultural movement that flourished in Europe in the 1940s and 1950s. Among the major philosophers identified as existentialists (many of whom—for instance Camus and Heidegger—repudiated the label) were Karl Jaspers, Martin Heidegger, and Martin Buber in Germany, Jean Wahl and Gabriel Marcel in France, the Spaniards José Ortega y Gasset and Miguel de Unamuno, and the Russians Nikolai Berdyaev and Lev Shestov. The nineteenth century philosophers, Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche, came to be seen as precursors of the movement.
SAUCEIEP wrote:Existentialism is a catch-all term for those philosophers who consider the nature of the human condition as a key philosophical problem and who share the view that this problem is best addressed through ontology. This very broad definition will be clarified by discussing seven key themes that existentialist thinkers address. Those philosophers considered existentialists are mostly from the continent of Europe, and date from the 19th and 20th centuries
SAUCEand there is of course, what I showed DCP when he made his ridiculous claim many months ago:

From this
book, by a leading scholar of Existentialism
Heidegger was against Marxism Simon, he published critiques of Marx himself, and do we find Heidegger in any Marxist Philosophy anthologies? No? Why do you suppose that is? According to your logic and an obscene ignorance you share with DCP, you seem to think Heidegger is grouped in with Existentialism because of his criticism of Sartre.
Simon Belmont wrote: He was a phenomenologist, for sure, but I (and many others, including himself) would not classify him as an existentialist.
Who are these others Simon? Roll out your citations. Let me see that grand list of names of people who would agree that Heidegger was not an existentialist.