Search
Search
Heidegger on Why Our Presence Matters

Date

source

share

In this piece (also for the New York Times) author Lawrence Berger talks about the conversation between the sciences and existentialists over what it truly means to be human. Many in the hard sciences believe we should seek to analyze the human person solely in terms of their physical selves and reduce the focus on human experience as a key to what it means to be a person. Berger argues otherwise.

“The thought is that our worldly presence matters for how things actually unfold, well beyond any physical or physiological processes that would purport to be the ultimate basis for human activity. So, for example, when we feel that someone is really listening to us, we feel more alive, we feel our true selves coming to the surface — this is the sense in which worldly presence matters.”

More
articles

More
news

What is Disagreement?

What is Disagreement?

This is Part 1 of a 4-part series on the academic, and specifically philosophical study of disagreement. In this series...

Navigating the Ethics and Ontology of Human Neuron-Microchip Biocomputers

Medical Bias as Hierarchy

Just ten hours after giving birth to her second child via C-section, Kira Johnson died of haemorrhagic shock at Cedars-Sinai...

Navigating the Ethics and Ontology of Human Neuron-Microchip Biocomputers

Towards a Democratic Economy

A strange cognitive dissonance is pervading our social life: we regard it as our inalienable right to govern ourselves democratically...