Imagine
Boethius, who was a Roman senator, a consul, and all-around good-guy Stoic
philosopher at large, but who had then been, from the height of his successes,
thrown into prison for conspiracy against the Ostrogoth King, Theodoric, and
then executed in 524 AD. This good man, who seemingly had forgotten all the life-lessons
that are taught by Stoicism and by Plato, had in prison a consoling series of conversations
with Lady Philosophy; and she was able to guide Boethius back again onto the
path of right thinking and therefore of right living and dying. Boethius has therefore
been for centuries the quintessential example of the life lived philosophically.
Now
imagine Heidegger in a bitch session with Lady Philosophy. First it would be H
saying: ‘Get away from me, because I don’t believe that Reasoned Thinking (a.k.a.,
rationalism) can help us live,’ and then him explaining in the inexplicable
jargon of mumbo-jumbo: ‘In my Nazi vision of life a man only has meaning as a
cog in the wheels of the German state; but I am special because I am the Führer’s philosopher, so please leave me alone—you
have nothing to teach me.’ Unlike Boethius, Heidegger was never plagued by ethical
thinking, and he was uninterested in being a teacher of the philosophical life.
Phrontisterion
readily understands philosophy that is conceived of as a vehicle to help us to negotiate
with awareness and personal dignity the all-too-often surprising vicissitudes
of life, which is why Boethius’ Consolation
of Philosophy has continued to remain at the top of philosophy’s all-time best-seller
list. And very rightly so. However, what should be the take-home Kerygma of a conception of philosophy
that is not truly interested in life at all, but only in the enslavement of the
many?
The following is
Phrontisterion’s translation of a book
review by Yann Diener, which appeared in the French weekly journal, Charlie Hebdo (No. 1228 / 3 February
2016); Diener reviews several books about Martin Heidegger that have recently been
or are about to be published in French.
“Books [by Yann Diener]: Heidegger: his Life, his Work, his Führer.
Star philosopher
and notorious Nazi, Martin Heidegger would have preferred that his
bibliographical notice be limited to the narrative of his promenades in the
Black Forest with his students. That did not happen: the historian Guillaume
Payen has published [Perrin: January 2016] a solid biography that tells the story
of the Master’s passage from Catholicism to Nazism.
Very well
documented, Payen’s book will not end up as fodder for peoples’ magazines;
rather, it shall permit one to read or reread Heidegger in his context. Payen,
as historian, is contributing to the contextualizing work that the philosopher Emmanuel
Faye as well as the linguist Francois Rastier have so desperately wished for (Charlie Hebdo, 16 & 23 December
2015). This biography is important because it is the first that shows the logic
of young Heidegger’s journey, going from Catholicism to Nazism: first he wants
to become a priest, but then he is seized by the desire to toss everything out
the window, and he will begin to focus first on philosophy and then on national-socialism.
Heidegger’s adepts have wanted to portray him as an inadvertent or
opportunistic Nazi; but now we discover that he had a veritable passion for
Hitler. When, in June 1933, his colleague Karl Jaspers asks him how a man as uninformed
as Hitler can govern Germany, Heidegger gives him this stupefying response: “His
educational upbringing does not matter; just look at his marvelous hands.” The
‘back-to-Being’ philosopher is counting on the Führer to provide for Germany, and so also for
the whole world, the conditions for a philosophical revolution. (In his
Reichstag speech of January 1939, Hitler even portrays himself as a prophet).
Catholic until the age of 25, Heidegger will remain Nazi until his death.
Nevertheless, his apologists continue to maintain that their hero was nothing
more than an unfortunate assimilation into the Nazis worldview. This is an
example of a thesis contradicted by the biography. The only choice the adepts
shall have will be either to go into full-blown denial or to shift from their
position of negation to a position of affirmation in order to claim/explain
their unconditional love of their prophet.
Hypnotic
language.
Translator
of Kafka, of Freud or of Peter Handke, George-Arthur Goldschmidt has already
shown an interest in the particularity of Heidegger-speak: his violence is
contained in his hypnotizing prosody, which quickly fascinates his students. He
uses the omnipresent ‘We,’ which helps to constitute [psychologically] a combat
group. The texts that George-Arthur Goldschmidt has dedicated to this
terrifying ‘newspeak’ are reedited in a book scheduled for publication at the
end of January 2016. [NT: It is as of yet unpublished]. There is no doubt that
the publication of this book shall permit us to get a clearer picture of how
Heidegger’s words have slipped into the vocabulary of philosophy and how,
unfortunately, they have also wormed their way into the vocabulary of
psychoanalysis. Anne-Lise Stern, Auschwitz survivor and psychoanalyst, used to
spit on the ground when she had to pronounce the name of Heidegger, whose
concepts have helped psychoanalysis to slide toward a sort of adaptive
psychotherapy, whose focus is to normalize and to format the subject.
When Heidegger used to begin his
lecture on Aristotle, he would summarize the biography of the Greek philosopher
by saying: “He was born, he lived, he died.” For Heidegger, we can say: he was
born a Catholic, he lived as a Nazi, he is a dead Nazi.
1. Guillaume Payen, Martin Heidegger. Catholicisme,
révolution, nazisme (Perrin), January 2016.
2. George-Arthur Goldschmidt. Heidegger contre la langue allemande, to be published at CNRS publishers.”
Further reading:
- François Rastier, Naufrage d’un prophète. Heidegger aujourd’hui, PUF, 2015.
- Emmanuel Faye, Heidegger, l’introduction du nazisme dans la philosophie : Autour des séminaires inédits de 1933-1935, Le Livre de Poche, réed. 2007.
- http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.nl/2016/02/heidegger-treacherous-millesime.html
- http://www.worldcat.org/title/crisis-of-german-ideology-intellectual-origins-of-the-third-reich/oclc/253069
- http://next.liberation.fr/culture/2014/03/06/il-n-y-a-pas-d-affaire-heidegger_985029
- http://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/lessai-et-la-revue-du-jour-14-15/laffaire-heidegger-revue-critique
- https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2015/09/30/commentary-heideggers-black-notebooks
- http://www.openculture.com/2015/03/martin-heideggers-black-notebooks-reveal-the-depth-of-anti-semitism.html
- https://www.foreignaffairs.com/reviews/review-essay/what-heidegger-was-hiding
- http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.fr/2012/08/martin-heidegger-state.html
- http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.fr/2014/11/novembers-essaynietzsche-eichmann-and.html
- http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.fr/2014/08/august-septembers-essayvoices-on.html
- http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.fr/p/blog-page_24.html
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