Being as Event and the Essence of Poetry in Later Heidegger’s Philosophy
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The purpose of the paper is to analyze the concept of Being in later Heidegger’s philosophy
with regard to its contexts in the study of poetry. The scrutiny, being guided by the recent interpretations,
focuses on Heidegger’s turnabout that resulted in the renunciation of the metaphysical
intuition of Being as some infinitely continuing state. The later Heidegger shifted
from the task of understanding Being to considering it only as happening. The Being was
since then construed as the emergent appropriating event (Ereignis), i. e., a break in familiarity
with beings as a whole and at the same time the condition of the inception of a new familiarity
or everydayness. According to Heidegger, this catastrophic and at the same time favorable,
inceptive event does not exist permanently, but only unpredictably occurs sometimes. That
is why the construal of Being as event implies in the first place the breakup of the shared
senses of everydayness. However, Being gives us beings as a whole by appropriating sense
to them and turning them into the familiar and accessible environment which is suitable for
untroubled dwelling. The givenness of beings as a whole makes them “our own” and thereby
ensures our identity and distinguishes us from the Other. Thus, Being as event, bringing the
once-established identity into question, every time raise anew the problem of the Other. Accordingly, the essence of poetry that is for Heidegger mainly exemplified by F. Hölderlin’s poems
is considered to be the ability to reveal Being in exactly the same way as it is inherent in
the appropriating event. Heidegger therefore argues that poetry is essential for the formation
of the national identity and the notion of the Other.
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Pigalev A. I. Being as Event and the Essence of Poetry in Later Heidegger’s Philosophy. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies, 2023, vol. 39, issue 4, pp. 658– 670. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu17.2023.405 (In Russian)