If you have any problems seeing the subtitles, please click on the CC button at the bottom of each video.
Martin Heidegger is often called the most important philosopher of the 20th century. Iâm not in a position to evaluate this claim, but his influence on contemporary and successive European and American thinkers is considerable. That influence spread all the way to Thailand, where Buddhist monk and university professor Bhikku Maha Mani came to think of Heidegger as âthe German philosopher.â (A conception, writes Otto Poggeler in an essay on Heidegger and Eastern thought, that may have âperverted the monkâs wanting to talkâ to the philosopher, âsince philosophy never lets itself be embodied in an idol.â) The Buddhist monk, also a radio presenter who later left his order to work for American television, met the German philosopher in 1963 for an interview on German TV station SWR. Maha Mani asks his questions in English, Heidegger responds in German. See the first part of the interview above, the second below.
This was not at all the first time the German philosopher had dialogued with an East Asian thinker. In a study on the Buddhist and Taoist influences on Heideggerâs work, Reinhold May writes that Heideggerâs âdirect contact with East Asian thought dates back at least as far as 1922â when he began conversations with several major Japanese thinkers. Nonetheless, Heidegger apparently had little to say on the correspondences between his ideas and those of Eastern philosophers until the 1950s, and the little that he did say seems marginal at best to his main body of work. Mayâs claims of âhidden influenceâ may be highly exaggerated, yet Heidegger was familiar with Buddhist thought, and, in the interview, he makes some interesting distinctions and comparisons. In answer to the Bhikkuâs first, very general, question, Heidegger launches into his familiar refrainââone question was never asked [in âOccidentalâ philosophy], that is, the question of Being.â Heidegger defines âthe human beingâ as âthis essence, that has language,â in contrast to âthe Buddhist teachings,â which do not make âan essential distinction, between human beings and other living things, plants and animals.â For Heidegger, consciousnessââa knowing relation to Beingâ through languageâis the exclusive preserve of humans.
In the second part of the interview (read a transcript here), Bhikku Maha Mani asks Heidegger what he thinks about the contradictory Western tendency to identify people without religion as âcommunistsâ and those who live âaccording to religious rulesâ as insane. Heidegger responds that religion, in its most radical sense, simply means âa bonding-back to powers, forces and laws, that supersede human capability.â In this respect, he says, âno human being is without religion,â whether it be âthe belief in scienceâ of communists or âan atheistic religion, namely Buddhism, that knows no God.â Heidegger goes on to explain why he sees little possibility of âimmediate and simple understandingâ between people of different religions, philosophies, and political groups. While it may be tempting to view Heideggerâs workâand that of other phenomenological, existential, or skeptical philosophersâas working in tandem with much Eastern thought, as perhaps âtheâ German philosopher himself would caution, the differences are significant. In the interview above, Heidegger largely faults Germany and âall of Europe in generalâ for a general lack of human harmony: âWe do not have any clear, common and simple relation to reality and to ourselves,â he says. âThat is the big problem of the Western world.â
Courses on Heidegger’s philosophy can be found in our collection of Free Online Philosophy Courses, part of our larger collection of 950 Free Online Courses from Top Universities.
Related Content:
Martin Heidegger Talks About Language, Being, Marx & Religion in Vintage 1960s Interviews
Human, All Too Human: 3-Part Documentary Profiles Nietzsche, Heidegger & Sartre
Existentialism with Hubert Dreyfus: Four Free Philosophy Courses
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Martin Heidegger Talks Philosophy with a Buddhist Monk on German Television (1963) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post Martin Heidegger Talks Philosophy with a Buddhist Monk on German Television (1963) appeared first on Open Culture.
Martin Heidegger Talks Philosophy with a Buddhist Monk on German Television (1963)
No comments:
Post a Comment