Zarko Paic The Heidegger Case
New issues - old tenets?
It is almost unquestionable that throughout
history educated classes have always
adhered
to dictatorial regimes. Plato and his
failed
'mission' in service of Dionysius I,
tyrant
of Syracuse, bequeathed us the Seventh
Letter.
This legendary episode is often taken
as
a metaphor for all philosophers and
artists
of the 20th century who were impressed
by
leaders and politics crossing the boundaries
of democratic boredom. Notwithstanding,
it
is somewhat peculiar that the absolute
moral
guilt of visiting Syracuse has always
been
ascribed to the greatest thinker of
the 20th
century - Martin Heidegger - while
the cases
of Knut Hamsun and Ezra Pound, although
considered
amoral, have nevertheless been regarded
as
completely benign compared to that
of the
master thinker.
It is today most difficult to find
literature
describing and interpreting political
delusions
of the great novelist and poet. On
the other
hand, Heidegger's marveling at Adolf
Hitler's
'hands,' in the words of Jaspers, who
accused
Heidegger of allegiance to Nazism,
still
serves as an inspiration. One could
say that
dealing with Heidegger's short adherence
to Nazism during his vice-chancellorship
in Freiburg in 1933/34 represents a
certain
universal (moral) examination of conscience
for the entire western culture. In
the spirit
of Hegel's maxims, philosophy is in
this
way unintentionally placed above all
sciences
and human skills. This happens regardless
of the fact that the end of the
20th century was definitely marked
by Warhol's
maxim about the artist (the philosopher
included),
who is but one of many in the business
of
the world.
In spite of the studies written by
Bourdie,
Pöggeler, Farias, Safransky, it seems
that
the Heidegger case remains open. Nevertheless,
this does not mean that boredom has
gained
supremacy and that historical revisionism
will dilute this episode as unnecessary
for
the understanding of Martin Heidegger's
thought
world and political views. However,
it has
lately been easy to notice that most
studies
are trying to grasp the meaning of
Heidegger's
political engagement beyond the vulgar
accusation
that he was nothing more than a regular
Nazi.
Two books written by philosophers of
the
younger generation - Miguel de Beistegui's
Heidegger & political Dystopias
(Routledge,
London-New York 1998) and Julian Young's
Heidegger, philosophy, Nazism (Cambridge
University Press, 1997), stand out
as most
provocative studies. These books should
be
critically discussed if we wish to
find the
answer to the central question raised
in
this paper: is it possible to talk
about
Heidegger's understanding of politics
and
political engagement as such, from
the perspective
of Heidegger's idea of the western
metaphysics
and its particular turn? Moreover,
can Heidegger's
thinking still be preserved as a life-saving
chant in the overall nihilism of virtual
civilization?
Miguel de Beistegui is a professor
of philosophy
at the University of Warwick. His study
on
Heidegger and political engagement
written
from the point of view of understanding
political
as such, belongs to the tradition of
new
German historiography, since it is
trying
to consider the notion of political
in relation
to politics, in accordance with the
famous
book by Christian Meier, Die Entstebung
der
politischen bei den Griechen. The rigidity
of execution and the faithful following
of
the idea of political and politics
in Heidegger
make this work stand together with
pieces
written by Löwith, Bourdie and Pöggeler.
Beistegui is trying to understand Heidegger's
political engagement in service of
Nazism,
by pondering upon his idea of politics
in
general. The real question is whether
this
is possible in the first place, since
Heidegger
left only a few fragments written on
politics
and society (useless to the philosophy
of
politics), found in Sein und Zeit and
in
some of his lectures on great metaphysicians
of the West. Therefore, Beistegui is
trying
to correlate Heidegger's destruction
of traditional
ontology with the issues of border-lines
between peace and politics in the speech
of Heidegger himself. Three methodological
approaches have taken root since the
beginning
of analyzing the Heidegger case. They
are,
of course, cognitively relevant, as
well.
The first approach claims that Heidegger's
political engagement during Nazi regime
was
the result of his philosophy. The second
says that it is all only about moral
and
civil allegiance, as a form of human
and
political opportunism. The third approach
believes that Heidegger failed and
went astray
into politics, of which he soon grew
tired.
There is also a fourth approach, which
today
seems least credible, saying that Heidegger
gave some sort of esoteric criticism
of Nazism.
It could be said that Miguel de Beistegui's
is the first approach. However, he
rejects
Farias's accusation that the thinker
of the
turn of metaphysics was but a small,
provincial
Nazi. In the foreword to his book,
Beistegui
explicitly states that he wishes to
lay out
the following thesis obtained from
Heidegger's
radical criticism of metaphysics and
modern
times in general: we have before us
a philosophical
answer to the question about the sense
of
political engagement. In this respect,
the
entire interpretation is more inspired
by
the works of authors who focused on
Heidegger's
understanding of community and politics,
than those interpreters who ideologically
rejected him as an eminent Nazi thinker.
Beistegui presents Heidegger's reception
in the United States in detail, in
view of
his political engagement that was in
the
liberal democratic tradition always
confronted
with more benevolent attitudes of the
English
or Italians, or even the French, gathered
around Heidegger's friend Jean Beaufret
and
great surrealist poet and anti-fascist
Rene
Char.
Miguel de Beistegui openly admits that
his
main problem with articulating Heidegger's
attitude towards the Nazi politics
is an
attempt to clarify and phenomenologically
understand the notion of here-being
(Dasein)
in the part on historicity in Sein
und Zeit.
Nevertheless, he rejects Adorno's serious
accusation that Heidegger's thinking
is therefore
basically "fascist in its innermost
components." Since there is no
explicit
political philosophy in Heidegger,
it is
obvious that we must first see why
the modern
man's experience of being without home
creates
conditions for a different notion of
politics,
beyond enlightening tradition and liberalism.
For Beistegui, 'political' paves the
way
for the organization of being, the
original
place of openness towards an event.
This
is why decisionism and political romanticism
are close to Heidegger's existential
decision,
but are by no means his philosophical
credo
of political. In the openness of political,
Heidegger, according to Beistegui,
always
contemplated something fatefully different
from the politics of interest, something
more fundamental, stemming from historical
disclosure and the absence of being
and time.
This remained untouched until the closure
of his thoughtful life, if we bear
in mind
that Heidegger held all great ideologies
in the 20th century - fascism, bolshevism,
and Americanism - insufficient and
futile
when overcoming the experience of nihilism.
In spite of a meticulous interpretative
procedure
that should provide Heidegger with
a positive
relation toward political, Beistegui
is groping
in the dark of the inexpressible and
unutterable
Heideggerian 'jargon' on politics and
political.
'Black holes' appear in his interpretation,
especially when Beistegui is looking
for
the starting point of the so
-called topos of original politics
in Plato's
Politea and Aristotle's Politics. This
happens
because Heidegger believes political,
as
well as anthropology, to be derived
from
the basic metaphysical happening of
being
and time in past history, although
the real
question is whether Heidegger follows
through
the notion of political in the first
place.
Heidegger is not concerned with rebuilding
the polis, since this is essentially
impossible
to do. After the experience of nihilism
and
the unconditional rule of technology
over
mankind, various forms of political
engagement
(when it comes to the renewal of the
polis)
belong to the nostalgia of practical
philosophy
that could never 'steal' anything from
Heidegger
and use it for its purposes.
Yet another difficulty arises when
political
is pondered upon while circling around
Heidegger's
later idea of occasion (Ereignis) in
accordance
with Greek pre-metaphysical thinkers
and
romantic poet Hölderlin. All pathways
leading
into the secret of Heimweg, Heimat
and Heimkunft
are not plausible as possibilities
of establishing
Heidegger's political 'position', although
they are subtly disclosed by Miguel
de Beistegui
beyond the abuse of the conservative
revolution
of German right-wing political ideologists.
This does not reduce the value of authorial
work. Nevertheless, it still remains
unexplained
why the following question is never
raised:
if we take up the aforementioned first
approach
to the Heidegger's case, how come that
the
being-historical thinking lacks historical
subject matter of political as something
'positive'. The only philosopher of
the 20th
century who in a consistent manner
lived
through the 'end of philosophy' could
not
see from his perspective a single manifestation
of politics as a continuation of modern
subjectivism
in democratic games about power and
rule.
Hans-Georg Gadamer brilliantly interpreted
Heidegger's erring voyage to Syracuse,
by
placing the essence of political engagement
in the fall of the philosopher, below
the
level of thought experience. This experience
was in the course of the 20th century
undoubtedly
the most radical of all ideologies
against
technical nihilism and footlessness
of mankind.
In other words, Heidegger would have
not
been embraced by leftists and anti-fascists
if he had been nothing but a "damn
Nazi
fiend." If we use the Heidegger's
case
to erase the sins of philosophy in
its absolute
engagement, as it used to be done since
Plato
until Marx, why ascribe more to Heidegger
than any philosopher and man (as the
embodiment
of philosophy) deserves? Indirectly,
this
is the question about the border-lines
of
philosophical understanding of politics
in
the so-called meager times, which Beistegui
himself admits, as well. Moreover,
the question
whether Heidegger can be regarded as
a contemporary
thinker of political, from the point
of view
of here-being in his historicity, is
also
most disturbing. In other words, what
does
it mean to think beyond epochal borders?
All those who today celebrate the 'progress'
in philosophy, forget that Heidegger
made
a 'turn' against metaphysical tradition
when
he proclaimed Heggelian progress to
be the
end of philosophy. Thinking required
a step
back after this, not as nostalgia and
renewal
of something essentially past, but
as an
opening up of new horizons. There is
no doubt
that the self- deception of a non-political
individual (to borrow the title of
political
memoirs by Thomas Mann, who wrote about
the
tragic period in German history during
Nazism)
like Heidegger, was great and could
never
completely be 'morally' redeemable.
Nevertheless, where could one, in the
modern
world, find a way to overcome homelessness,
if the nihilism of technology is seen
as
the single joyful reality? On the other
hand,
Heidegger's thinking was substantially
different
from directions before action and general
computational character of modern metaphysics.
Contemplating the notion of political
eventually
ended up in poetic figures of speech.
In
other words, Miguel de Beistegui's
study
does not offer anything spectacular.
It does
not even get carried away by the pathos
of
deconstructing Heidegger's thinking.
This
is, actually, its greatest value, even
when
it is dealing with the most inexpressible
notion of political in Heidegger. In
Heidegger's
case, unpresumptuous intentions are
more
of use than a loud judgement, since
he continues
to intrigue philosophers at times when
dictatorships
and farce are mysteriously yet intimately
related.
Julian Young expresses his ideas in
a similar
manner, although emphasizing the politicization
of Heidegger in a 'story' about the
overcoming
of history. A professor of philosophy
at
the University of Auckland, Young is
the
author of well-received studies on
Schopenhauer
and Nietzsche, published by Cambridge
University
Press and Nijhoff. His study bearing
a somewhat
rigid title Heidegger, philosophy,
Nazism,
is most interesting since it follows
recent
investigations on the Heidegger case
- conducted
by Sluga, Safransky, Kraus, Beistegui
- that
openly reject the causative theory
about
the inseparability of Heidegger's thinking
and his submissiveness towards the
Nazi politics.
The scandal began with a book by Victor
Farias
and caused much damage to the objective
attempt
at interpreting an ambiguous relationship
between the most complex philosophical
thought
of the 20th century and a totalitarian
ideology
embodied in the rise of Nazism. Young
has
shown that he knows the main streams
in the
interpretation of Heidegger's thinking
exceedingly
well. At the same time, and in relation
to
the subject matter, he has presented
a variety
of keys to the mystery of the odious
thesis
on Heidegger's marveling at Hitler's
hands
as a representative essence of new
great
politics. Those researchers working
on Heidegger's
political engagement, before they produce
any statement about the subject matter,
always
inevitably end up in a situation where
they
have to identify themselves. They also
have
to find out whether they are nothing
more
than ideologists in service of an imaginary
critical theory of society, followers
of
a new metapolitical right wing, or
whether
they are simply studious researchers
whose
possible liberalism is never of great
importance
for their work.
Young's basic thesis focuses on the
de-Nazification
of Heidegger. The author himself is
aware
that this idea can create misunderstandings
and even produce dogmatic interpretations.
For this reason, he first expresses
it as
a historical, deconstructive and analytical
notion. In the first case, we are dealing
with a comparison of two stories
(the official and the unofficial story)
that
have been used as explanations of Heidegger's
political engagement. The first story
is
the one Heidegger told (with reliable
self-
understanding) in an interview to Rudolf
Augstein for the Spiegel. This story
has
been known in Croatia for a long time.
Vanja
Sutlic defended this position in his
interpretation
of the thinker and politics under the
heel
of totalitarianism, seeing it as obliging.
In short: in the interview under a
strange
editorial title "Only one God
can still
save us", Heidegger advocated
external
self-criticism of his own delusion.
Commitment
to nationalist socialism as a political
option
resulted from an alternative to the
destructive
spirit of the Weimar liberalism and
the danger
of the ghostly Bolshevik revolution.
Disappointment
in the 'movement' occurred as soon
as it
was taken over by primitive and barbaric
individuals, who directed it towards
the
outburst of racism and biologism in
its worst
imaginable form.
After his vice-chancellorship, Heidegger
turned to philosophical criticism of
the
movement, as he lectured on Nietzsche
and
metaphysics. Finally, the conclusive
proof
of his inner dissidence is the regime's
aversion
towards his name, his nonparticipation
in
philosophical conferences, his anonymous
participation in public works, etc.
Unofficial
history, however, claims that Heidegger's
opposition towards the Nazi regime
was not
at all evident. Moreover, it seems
that this
opposition could have been made up
and overblown.
This unofficial story began with Farias's
book, encouraged by documents gathered
by
Hugo Ott, and culminated in documents
collected
by Guido Schneeberger under the title
Nachlese
zu Heidegger. The story is all about
Heidegger's
compromising speeches that he gave
as vice-chancellor.
Statements uttered in those speeches
are
more often than not like the one calling
Hitler "the only German reality
and
law." This story shook up the
previous,
official version describing how Heidegger
accepted Nazism only for a short time
and
due to his political blindness and
conservative
approval of the Heimat ideology, but
without
any grave moral consequences. For this
reason,
while he is working on the thinker's
de-Nazification,
Young does not radically doubt the
documents
that compromise Heidegger. Moreover,
he does
not deny the evidence of Heidegger's
political
opportunism. In order to understand
why Heidegger
has to be de-Nazified in the first
place,
one must clarify yet another concept:
the
one that we have before mentioned as
the
deconstructive analytical concept.
Young's estimate is that the marveling
of
researchers, himself included, at Heidegger
and Nazism is in a fascinating disproportion
of an epochal "philosophy of being"
with the paradigm of evil. This is
why at
least at some point in Heidegger's
thinking
Young has to find indications of the
forthcoming
Nazi breakthrough. Young's thesis seems
to
be tautological from the beginning:
he wishes
to prove that Heidegger's thinking
had nothing
to do with Nazism. Is this something
completely
new? Of course not. Nevertheless, it
deals
with the deconstruction of the other,
unofficial
history, that can create, as it has
already
created, a different view on Heidegger
as
a philosopher of deconstruction of
traditional
ontology, or simply, as a thinker with
a
pivotal role in the epoch.
Young is aware that all Adornos were
familiar
with the ideological interpretation
of Heidegger
as a crypto-Nazi, and that Habermas,
who
wrote the foreword to the second, German
edition of Farias' book, directed his
criticism
in the same way. This is exactly why
it seems
that the banality of the thesis expressed
by Young in his study, is worth interpreting.
This is the reintroduction of Heidegger
into
the purity of his work that no new
evidence
of his delusions and opportunism can
ever
again question. After all, Safransky's
monograph
Ein Meister aus Deutschland: Heidegger
und
seine Zeit perhaps in the best way
speaks
of the problem without challenging
the outstanding
quality of the so-called unofficial
history.
As much as Young's intention is innovative,
it can at the same time be described
as old
wine in new bottles. What makes it
interesting
is its brushing away the interpretative
cobwebs
around Heidegger's political engagement.
In this connection, its only 'innovativeness'
is in the fact that, while deconstructing
the politicized Heidegger, it does
not fall
under the influence of Heideggerian
hagiography
of the so-called official history.
Young is passionately trying to prove
that
the character of Heidegger's political
engagement
was inconsistent with the deepest philosophical
conviction of the spirit of the time.
Consistently
with his criticism of metaphysics,
because
of which he rejected political science
as
ideology, Heidegger regarded politics
as
something pondered upon from the perspective
of making real a new historical complex
of
being and time. Therefore, it carried
signs
of decisionism and metaphysics. It
was a
strange concept of political romanticism
and activism, regarded by many theoreticians
as similar to the engagement of Ernst
Jünger,
since they saw it in the light of analyzing
the phenomena of conservatism and the
end
of the 20th century. Young refers to
a few
recent analysis of Heidegger's understanding
of politics, especially to the ideas
of Hans
Sluga in his book Heidegger's Crisis:
Philosophy
and Politics in Nazi Germany (Cambridge,
Harvard University Press, 1993). He
believes
that the distinction between philosophical
thinking and Heidegger's political
ideology
stems from the relation between high
modernism
and reactionary political romanticism.
We
should pause here. That is to say,
Hubert
Dreyfus from Berkley University, who
is one
of recent researchers on the same subject,
describes Young's book as innovative
in the
sense that it unmasks Heidegger as
a certain
defender of a communitarian ideology
that
today, alongside liberalism, seems
to be
the most influential theory in political
sciences. There is no doubt that political
romanticism and the notion of 'home'
are
indirectly close to the communitarian
concept
of the community. However, the difficulty
with Young's book and Dreyfus's review
is
that they both have as their starting
point,
a thesis that is hard to prove; they
both
claim that the de-Nazification of Heidegger
can uncover his implicit criticism
of the
totalitarian Nazi politics.
Communitarianism is a foreign body
of Heidegger's
political engagement. As Carl Schmitt
defined
it in his treatises, Heidegger was
familiar
with the inclination toward a sort
of decisionism
and political romanticism, but he did
not
pay any special attention to it. Every
historical
philosophical research, and this is
exactly
what Young's study is trying to be,
has to
restrain from external analogies, even
when
this, due to a lack of direct proof,
creates
an atmosphere of mystical bonds between
the
thematic time and the time of the researcher's
discourse. Hermeneutics in its original
essence
of text interpreting, as it was once
nicely
expressed by Heidegger himself, is
an attempt
at harmonizing bells ringing from the
tops
of different hills. If there is no
harmony
in music, then the bells are not well-tuned.
The interpreter of the tradition has
a great
responsibility when creating this harmony.
Young's book with its emphasized program
of "Heidegger's de-Nazification"
is a contemporary portrait of the state
with
a reception of Heidegger's political
engagement.
Borderlines of such a portrait are
set by
the greatness of the subject matter
and its
ideologization. This is why it is obligeable
to make an attempt at avoiding the
ideological
approach to the subject matter of philosophy
and evil, as regards Heidegger's relationship
with Nazism. Nevertheless, it is possible
to recognize in it a concern about
interpreting
something that not even Heidegger saw
as
a positive problem of political sciences
or the philosophy of politics. This
is first
and foremost a question of political
or politics
as a tragic fate of here-being within
a community.
Heidegger cannot be de-Nazified (if
he has
to undergo this project of 'purification'
in the first place) in such a way that
he
is 'lured' into thinking in a communitarianist
fashion. Delusions of a non-political
one
were far away from those of today's
theoreticians
concerned with the return to the ideal
of
the small community that will never
run through
the wringer of shapeless mass democracy,
where, in spite of the renewal of liberal
postulates, the ideas of freedom and
republicanism
are turning into illusions. Heidegger's
pseudo-poetic
vision of community was after all imprisoned
by a mystical reading of Hölderlin's
longing
for the genuine Greece - the homeland
of
gods, heroes and thinkers.
Published 2002-02-15 Original in Croatian
Translation by Ivana Polonijo Contribution
by Nova Istra © Nova Ist |