Part One
Ecstatic Temporality in Heideggerâs Being and Time (1927)
1
The Ecstases of Time
âEcstatic temporality,â or the âecstatic interpretationâ of âoriginal,â âprimordialâ temporality, is one of the major achievements of the second division of Heideggerâs 1927 Sein und Zeit, Being and Time. When does Heidegger first come up with the idea of the âecstaticâ? What does he mean by it? Do we know where in the history of philosophy Heidegger may have found this idea? And was that idea ever applied to time in the way he applies it? If the ecstatic analysis of temporality is as remarkable as I believe it is, and if it alters in a fundamental way our idea of human existence in time, why does Heidegger soon drop it after the publication of Being and Time? And even if he drops it, does that mean we have to? These will be my questions not only today but throughout the series of the four Brauer Lectures.
Let me begin with section 65, and not with section 64. Section 64, on âCare and Selfhood,â seems to me highly problematic: its appeal to a self, an αáœÏÏÏ or ipse, and especially to the independence and autonomy of that self, even to some sort of permanence of the selfâall of these suggested by his emphatic and repeated use of the hyphenated word Selbt-stĂ€ndigkeitâseems to me to be as problematic as all the other terms he urges his readers to avoid, namely, spirit, soul, body, person, personality, and subject. Indeed, the problematic notion of a standing self, problematic if only because it does not seem to be submitted to that Destruktion or âdismantlingâ of ontological notions on which Heidegger otherwise insists, accompanies Heidegger after Being and Time as well. In the 1930s, for example, he counts on such selfhood for the grandiose âdecisionâ toward which he feels his times are compelling him.
No, let me begin with section 65, âTemporality as the Ontological Meaning of Care.â Three preliminary questions obtrude, however, before we begin to read section 65, which is where Heidegger first introduces his interpretation of âecstaticâ temporality. We have already heard these questions. First, when does Heidegger first come up with this idea of ecstatic temporality? Second, do we know where in the history of philosophy Heidegger may have found this idea of ecstasy, which he was able to apply to time? Third, if the ecstatic analysis, along with the analysis of being toward death, or toward âthe endâ of our mortal existence, is the great achievement of Division Two of Sein und Zeit, why does Heidegger soon drop it?
When does he first come up with the idea? Apparently, quite late in the writing of Sein und Zeit. During the summer semester of 1925 Heidegger teaches a lecture course titled Prolegomena to the History of the Concept of Time, now published as volume 20 of the Heidegger Gesamtausgabe. Surprisingly, the words and the idea of ecstatic temporality do not appear there. Time itself is understood to be âthe guidelineâ of his inquiry âinto the being of beingsâ (20:8), and yet, remarkably, there is not a hint of the ecstases. It is not as though the theme of time were new to Heidegger, either in 1925 or 1927. Indeed, his venia legendi lecture in July 1915 is on âThe Concept of Time in the Discipline of History.â Heidegger, we remember, serving as Husserlâs assistant, had as his special assignment the phenomenology of the historical sciences. We could hardly expect the word Ekstase to appear in the venia legendi lecture, but what does appear there, presumably for the first time, is the notion of time proper, âauthenticâ time, as it were, die eigentliche Zeit. In his preliminary discussion of time as the measure of motion and acceleration in modern physics from Galileo through relativity theory, Heidegger comments on what it means to declare a particular instant of time the starting point of a measurement: âWe make an incision into the timescale, so to speak, thereby destroying time proper [die eigentliche Zeit] in its flow, and we cause it to cease. The flux freezes, becomes a plane surface [FlĂ€che], and only as a plane surface is it measurable. Time becomes a homogeneous place-order, a scale, a parameterâ (FS 366). Time for an historian, by contrast, is a matter of qualitative determinations, as Dilthey and Bergson have already insisted, qualitative in terms of (1) our assessing the authenticity of the historianâs sources, (2) elaborating the context of the period under discussion, and (3) estimating in some nonarithmetic way the distance of our own world from the world under discussion. Periods and distances in the historical sciences do not succumb to measurement. Heidegger is particularly attuned to the problem of the historianâs selection of themes for discussion and even his or her decisions about what counts as evidence; for these matters are shaped by his or her own history, indeed in ways that are seldom evident. By 1915 Heidegger is sensitive to issues of hermeneutics, although that word too does not yet appear.
Heideggerâs focus on questions of time and history is clearly visible in every course he teaches and in every text he writes between 1915 and 1927. It is to Being and Time that we must now turn, and yet I find it impossible to finish discussing the venia legendi lecture before mentioning the final example Heidegger offers to show how the historian reckons with, but does not measure, time and time periods. Heidegger cites the twelve weeks that it took the Prussian general August von Mackensen to reach the Russian-Polish Festungsviereck, a recent event in World War I. Those twelve weeks assume their proper importance, Heidegger says, only insofar as they reflect âthe vast and powerful thrust of our allied troops [die ungeheure StoĂkraft unserer verbĂŒndeten Truppen],â the assuredness with which the âoperational targetâ was chosen, and the âresistanceâ of the Russian army (FS 374). Such military examples will not be missing from Heideggerâs lectures on Nietzsche two decades later, to say nothing yet of other texts from the late 1930s and early 1940s. They show how difficult it is for a philosopher as well as a historian to avoid those intrusions by contemporary events into oneâs selection of themes and examples. Indeed, in Being and Time Heidegger will take pains to show how existential-ontological analysis, in the pursuit of its aims, has to purge itself of the news of the day, as of âeverydaynessâ or âdailinessâ altogether. These military examples also show how impossible it is for Heidegger to purge himself of his deutsch-nationales Denken and the militancy that clings to it. The very âprincipleâ of historical conceptuality, Heidegger concedes at the end of his venia legendi lecture, lies in the âvalue relation,â Wertbeziehung, that permeates historical institutions such as the Church and the historians themselves. To repeat, these âvalue-relations,â are seldom visible to the historianâor philosopherâhim- or herself.
I realize that I may be getting sidetracked by this, but I cannot drop the matter before mentioning that, at least according to some reports I have seen, Walter Benjamin hated Heideggerâs venia legendi lecture, which he may have heardâthe two of them were students of Heinrich Rickertâs in Freiburg during the years 1912 to 1913âand which in any case Benjamin would surely have read. Nevertheless, it would be worthwhile to compare in detail Heideggerâs views in that lecture with Benjaminâs Kunstkritik essay and the âcritical-epistemological prefaceâ to his Trauerspiel book, both of which appear to conform with Heideggerâs main theses; it would be most instructive to compare that lecture with the late âOn the Concept of History,â which, with its stringent critique of historicism, opens a gap between Benjaminâs mature conception and Heideggerâs early conception of historical time. Yet even here, for instance, in Benjaminâs criticism of our belief in progress and the âhomogeneousâ notion of time that underlies such a belief, we hear echoes of Heideggerâs most strongly held views. In the Schwarze Hefte (96:183) we hear Heidegger say, âExpelled to the farthest remove from the truth of the historic are the historians,â and Benjamin would be hard put to disagree, even though his sense of the âhistoricâ would differ sharply from Heideggerâs. But enough.1
Our second question was: Where in the history of philosophy might Heidegger have found, if only quite late in his writing of Sein und Zeit, the idea of ecstatic temporality? Not in Husserl, surely. And even though Heidegger does find Bergsonâs DonnĂ©es immĂ©diates de la conscience compelling reading, which does not mean to say that he always interprets it well or fairly, âecstasyâ is not there, even if something of Bergsonian Ă©lan is already present, and Ă©lan, as Schwingung and Schwung, will be important for Heideggerâs later thinking of time. Could it have been in Kierkegaard, then, or in the literature of mysticism? Perhaps. But there ecstasy would have to do with some sort of intervention of âeternityâ into time, or at least with the temporary suspension of the temporal. Franz von Baader (1765â1841), in âOn the Concept of Ekstasis as Metastasis,â defines ecstasy as the temporary suspension of the interlacing of body, soul, and spirit, in anticipation of their complete separation in death.2 Whereas von Baader is an important source for Schelling, however, he is not such for Heidegger. Could it have been Schelling himself who gives Heidegger the word and the idea of ecstasis, inasmuch as Schelling uses the word áŒÎșÏÏαÏÎčÏ during his years in Erlangen? Let me take a moment to examine this possibility in detail.
Heidegger mentions âecstatic temporalityâ briefly in the notes for his lecture course on Schelling during the Summer Semester of 1936. Among the three principal terms at the outset of Schellingâs 1809 treatise on human freedomâWesen, Grund, Existenzâthe last means not the being on hand of a thing, or a thingâs existentia as opposed to its essentia, but precisely what Heidegger calls Ex-sistenz, âthat which steps out of itself,â das aus sich Heraus-tretende (SA 129). What undergoes this stepping out? Heidegger replies, das im Heraus-treten sich Offenbarende, everything that âin stepping out reveals itself,â or âenters into the openâ (ibid.), and that of course means beings as a whole, not merely Dasein. By 1936, both âexistenceâ and âecstasisâ have less to do with the unfolding of human temporality than with âthe truth of beyngâ as such and in general.
Yet temporality is also discussed in terms of Schellingâs discussion of Godâs âbecomingâ (SA 135â36). Such divine coming to be cannot be measured in terms of Kantian âsuccession,â das Nacheinander, inasmuch as a certain âsimultaneity,â or Gleich-Zeitigkeit, prevails in the divine. Heidegger adds, âThe original temporal simultaneity [Gleich-Zeitigkeit: âat or in the same timeâ] consists in this, that having-been and being-futural, and equally originally [gleichursprĂŒnglich] being-present, assert themselves as the plenitude of essence [WesensfĂŒlle], coining themselves within one anotherâ (SA 136). This odd phrase, âcoining themselves within one anotherâ tries to translate selbst ineinander schlagen. This last word means to strike or to imprint, hence, âto coin.â It is a word Heidegger will use decades later in his interpretation of Geschlecht in the poetry of Georg Trakl. If I am right, it is not a word Heidegger uses in his account of ecstatic temporality in Sein und Zeit. Here in the Schelling course the stroke, imprint, or coinage (der Schlag) has to do with âappropriate temporality,â or âtemporality proper,â which Heidegger identifies with the Augenblick. Thus, according to Heidegger, Schelling does not think of eternity as the nunc stans, âthe standing now.â Rather, he thinks of it in terms of a living, moving, processual eternity in which each temporal ecstasy is âstruckâ or âcoinedâ in all the others. Heidegger later in the course identifies âthe momentâ in which future, having-been, and present collide, or mutually imprint one another (zusammenschlagen), as the moment of decision, Entscheidung. In it the human being achieves its freedom, indeed as a form of âresolute openedness,â Entschlossenheit (SA 186â87).
In a later seminar on Schellingâs treatise, taught during the summer semester of 1941, Heidegger takes some distance on Schellingâs claim that the divine, in its ostensibly full and perfect freedom, âovercomesâ time. Beyng, argues Heidegger, can never be independent of time: âBeing is âdependentâ on ecstatic time; this is an essential characteristic of the âtruthâ of being; but this âtruthâ belongs to the essential unfolding [Wesung] of beyng itselfâ (SA 208). It is somewhat surprising to see the term ecstatic temporality still being used, yet an entire section of Heideggerâs notes in 1941 bears the title, âTemporality as Ecstatic Temporalizingâ (SA 228â29). Here Heidegger calls time âa preliminary name for the region in which the truth of being is projectedâ; he adds, â âtimeâ is the ecstatic between (time-space), not the in-which of beings, but the clearing of being itselfâ (SA 229).
When one turns from Heideggerâs own notes to Schellingâs texts, one notes initially that the word Ekstase is absent from the Treatise on Human Freedom. Nor does the word appear in the 1811, 1813, and 1815 versions of The Ages of the World, as edited by Heideggerâs colleague Manfred Schröter. Yet Schelling does use the word in an important way during his Erlangen lectures of 1820â21, and we will take a moment a bit later in the chapter to examine that use. But could Heidegger have found the term ecstasis anywhere in Schelling during the period in which he is writing Being and Time? That seems highly unlikely. He knew of Schellingâs 1809 treatise, and he may already have read Die Weltalter, to which he refers, albeit rarely, in the 1936 lecture course. Yet the Erlangen lectures were edited only much later (1969, 2002, and 2012â14 are important years for the new and more complete editions of the Weltalter-Fragmente and the Erlangen lectures), so that, to repeat, it is highly unlikely that Heidegger would have seen these materials.
Surely, w...