[lit-ideas] Re: Heidegger and the "Ideas of 1914"

  • From: "Mike Geary" <atlas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 14:35:23 -0600

Heidegger and the "Ideas of 1914"I'm curious, Lawrence, as to what you find of 
value in Heidegger's philosophy either before or after the so-called "Turning" 
that makes you pursue so doggedly a Nihil obstat for his philosophy?  What 
thoughts does he espouse that speak to you so meaningfully?  

Mike Geary
Memphis 

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lawrence Helm 
  To: lawrenchelm1. post@blogger. com 
  Sent: Monday, November 09, 2009 1:13 PM
  Subject: [lit-ideas] Heidegger and the "Ideas of 1914"


  http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=10315

  The above is a review of Steffen Breundel's Die "Ideen von 1914" und die 
Neuordnung Deutschlands im Ersten Weltkrieg, 2003.  Unfortunately it hasn't 
been translated into English.

  The "ideas of 1914" are important to understanding Heidegger's brand of 
National Socialism.  Breundel's book presents these ideas as embodying 
Germany's motivation for entering World War One.  

  Julian Young in Heidegger, Philosophy, Nazism, 1997 sees these Ideas of 1914 
as being to some extent an ongoing climate of opinion growing out of the 
unification of 1870.  German unification was still fresh in peoples' thinking.  
It was still important to many to exalt the "Volk."  The Volkisch ideal still 
had to be defended and worked at.  What Heidegger did  was to apply the "ideas 
of 1914" almost intact to 1933.  Young points out that there is nothing 
original about Heidegger's thinking in 1933.  These ideas were not accepted by 
all Germans, but they were very common at the time.  

  Heidegger's brand of National Socialism isn't what it became under Hitler, 
but it was reprehensible enough according to Young.  Heidegger was an 
anti-modernist; which in practical terms meant a rejection of Capitalism along 
with Capitalistic industrialism.  What Heidegger advocated was a return to a 
preindustrial condition.  (Think Theodore Kaczynski)   Heidegger advocate a 
Volkisch Totalitarianism and would have forcibly removed Germans from cities 
and installed them in the countryside.  


  Heidegger's totalitarianism was very different from Hitler's.  One of the 
important ideas of 1914 was that Germany was spiritual and the nations that 
opposed Germany were not.  The ideas of 1914 especially demonized Britain and 
Russia.  Heidegger in 1933 substituted the U.S. for Britain.  He thought the 
U.S. and Russia indistinguishable.

  Heidegger's ideas were naïve, but no more so, Young writes, than the British 
belief that its empire was equivalent to Modern Rome or America's belief in 
Manifest Destiny.  

  Heidegger's views in all these matters changed after the war.  For example 
the very matter Young finds most heinous, the relocating of Germans from cities 
to the country, comes up in a disagreement Heidegger had with Herbert Marcuse.  
Young on page 49 writes, "Curiously, Herbert Marcuse seems not to recognize the 
appalling nature of 'ethnic cleansing'.  In reply to Heidegger's suggestion 
that, not just the Jews but, after the war, the Germans expelled from Eastern 
Europe by Stalin had also been the victims of criminal acts, Marcuse replies 
that conversation is impossible with a man who fails to see the 'night and day' 
difference between the concentration camps and the 'forcible relocation of 
population groups'"


  Young said there were two anti-modern ideas.  The more naïve idea was the one 
Heidegger subscribed to.  The more practical anti-modern idea was that 
Modernism had created all sorts of evils but it was now impossible to reverse 
the process.  They could not do away with cities and factories, but they could 
work to ameliorate their negative effects.  The Islamists have come to a 
similar conclusion.

  As to the question of whether the brand of National Socialism Heidegger 
evinced in 1933-1935 (the period in which Heidegger, according to Young, was an 
active member of the Nazi Party) informed (or was informed by) his philosophy, 
I can't at this point see a connection - especially since his magnum opus, 
Being and Time was completed in 1927.


  Lawrence Helm

  www.lawrencehelm.com

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