Cheese Danish #35
Terrance
lycidas2 at earthlink.net
Sun Nov 12 18:19:01 CST 2000
Dave Monroe wrote:
>
> Second, Terrence, do feel free to elaborate what you might think the
> relevance of Heidegger to Pynchon might be. I obviously think there's a
> connection, but it's an intuition at best. That "lifedeath" thing,
> first off, and the critique of Nietzsche (at least as elaborated by
> Krell), but, I must admit, my Heidegger is tenuous. Have, however, been
> thinking about Mondaugen ("moon-eyes"?) and Heidegger's "The Age of the
> World Picture." That point of view thing, the world as pictured from,
> say, the moon ...
First, I have not read David Farrell Krell, Contagion:
Sexuality, Disease and Death in German Idealism and
Romanticism.
Second, I can't commit to hosting it but I plan to post lots
on Mondaugen when we get to Mondaugen's Story.
You posted From David Farrell Krell, Daimon Life: Heidegger
and Life-Philosophy (Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1992), Chapter
Seven, "Lifedeath: Heidegger, Nietzsche, Freud" (pp.
217-51).
Sounds very interesting, no time
Third, I'm not sure what to elaborate on, to
?
How about the Clock & the Street Lamp?
If my memory is working better than the rest of me, I think
I remember that in his early thinking Heidegger admitted to
a difference between a world that is merely present and a
world that announces its usefulness.
I'll skip Heidegger's classic example of the hammer, being a
carpenter I like that example, but for V., the clock and the
lamp will do fine.
In Being And Time the Clocks and the Street Lamps reveal a
purpose in nature: the moving circle of time, the cycle of
light and darkness, and the human need to keep track of the
former so that humans may manipulate the latter. But it is
the change or refinement in Heidegger's ideas that your
quotes seem to be addressing, I think, that life-death and
question of telos theme.
First though, a little fun: From Eliot's poem Rhapsody On A
Windy Night and Mumford's Techincs and Civilization.
Not feeling like fun, you may skip over to Heidegger.
Twelve o'clock.
Along the reaches of the street
Held in a lunar synthesis,
Whispering lunar incantations
Dissolve the floors of memory
And all its clear relations,
Its divisions and precisions,
Every street lamp that I pass
Beats like a fatalistic drum,
And through the spaces of the dark
Midnight shakes the memory
As a madman shakes a dead geranium.
Half-past one,
The street lamp sputtered,
The street lamp muttered,
The street lamp said, "Regard that woman
Who hesitates towards you in the light of the door
Which opens on her like a grin.
--T.S. Eliot
"The application of quantitative methods of thought to the
study of nature had its first manifestation in the regular
measurement of time; and the new mechanical conception of
time arose in part out of the routine of the monastery.
Alfred Whitehead has emphasized the importance of the
scholastic belief in the universe ordered by God as one of
the foundations of modern physics: but behind that belief
was the presence of order in the institutions of the Church
itself."
--Mumford, Technics and Civilization
The Benedictines, the working order, were, according to
Coulton, Sombart, others, the original founders of modern
Capitalism. Mumfords says, they "gave human enterprise the
regular collective beat and rhythm of the machine
Eternity
ceased gradually to serve as the measure and focus of human
actions."
Stencil's WORK, his quest is NOT Puritan (Weber, Brown,
Marcuse, Puritan Capitalism, Calvanism vs. Catholicism and
how about Anabaptism-Chapter Two of V. and Limbo?).
Damned this pagination problem, V.HP(the 99 Classics). 50 or
Chapter Two part II, about 12 paragraphs in.
Back to Heidegger now and his changes, where later in his
life Heidegger admitted that the concept of technology is
much, much bigger than the way in which instruments announce
their functions. How big is much, much bigger? Well,
technology, Heidegger concluded, was so big that it
circumscribed the ways in which we live, all contemporary
ways of living and Knowing. Technology is said by Heidegger
to enframe (Ge-stell) all of modern life. What Heidegger
sees is that technology is so pervasive, so big and powerful
(how many clocks have you got in your house? and have you
one on your person now? and ubiquitous, powerful, important,
Big), that is relates to nature in a fundamentally different
way, even to the point where it becomes impossible to
consider nature outside of the bounds of this big,
enframing, technology.
What are the implications of this? There are many, and here
it will difficult not to oversimplify and piss some people
off or introduce a bunch of Heidegger's terms and their
translations
..but Heidegger considered this enveloping of
the world by technology as a stage in preparation of human
fulfillment that has always been with us and a revealing of
the earth, to "set free unto its own prescensing." The
release of the Earth unto itself ( this is one area of
interest, we can get into the role of language and
revealing, and what Pynchon says about this), is
accomplished with language, it is through language that
nature is revealed to Man and it also through language that
nature is transformed into material.
For Heidegger, technology is neither an instrument of
freedom nor an object alien to being human. Instrumentality
unveils aspects of nature. The clock, the lamp reveal, the
human makes, even Katje's windmills reveals that the wind
may turn wheels of stone to grind grain.
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