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Research articles

Heidegger in the township

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 34 , issue 2 , 2015 , pages: 240–254
DOI: 10.1080/02580136.2015.1046112
Author(s): Abraham Olivier Department of Philosophy, South Africa

Abstract

Imagine Heidegger in a township. Imagine you are able to translate his concept of ‘care’ to ‘the people’. Would they agree that in their ordinary experience people care? I argue not and contend that, instead, they would choose the term ‘struggle’. I analyse experiential aspects of ordinary life in the context of the township, which involves a significant part of people around the world, in order to argue that, at least in such contexts, it is a more common experience for people to struggle than to care. In this way I hope to show how a phenomenological analysis of everyday life experience such as Heidegger's can contribute to the understanding of contextual issues, but also how a context can induce the introduction of new concepts of thinking.

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