×
welcome covers

Your complimentary articles

You’ve read all of your complimentary articles for this month. To have complete access to the thousands of philosophy articles on this site, please

If you are a subscriber please sign in to your account.

To buy or renew a subscription please visit Subscriptions.

If you are a print subscriber you can contact us to create an online account.

You can register for a free account to have four complimentary articles per month. We will occasionally email you a newsletter, from which you can unsubscribe at any time. We do not sell personal data or otherwise disclose personal information to other organisations.

Tallis in Wonderland

On Being (Roughly) Here

Raymond Tallis tries to work out where he is.

Martin Heidegger’s Being and Time (1927) is one of the greatest works of twentieth century philosophy. At its heart is the notion of human being as Da-sein or ‘being-there’. This is a profound and complex thought, which Heidegger unpacks through nearly 500 densely argued pages. By making being-there fundamental, Heidegger aims to by-pass the hoary problem of the relationship between mind and body and some of the epistemological anxieties that have haunted Western philosophy. Instead of having a consciousness as a mere spectator – a mind mysteriously located in the cabinet of a body trying to construct a world out of data generated through interaction with a putatively external reality – human being is being-in-the-world.