
Publication details
Year: 2018
Pages: 233-254
Series: Human Studies
Full citation:
, "Animal experience", Human Studies 41 (2), 2018, pp. 233-254.


Animal experience
a formal-indicative approach to Martin Heidegger's account of animality
pp. 233-254
in: Human Studies 41 (2), 2018.Abstract
In the present paper I attempt an interpretation of Martin Heidegger’s analysis of animality, developed in winter semester 1929/1930. My general purpose is to examine Heidegger’s analysis in the wider context of formal-indicative phenomenology as such. Thus I show that in order to develop a phenomenology of animality, Heidegger must tacitly renounce the re-enactment of animal experience in which the formal-indicative concepts of his analysis could gain concreteness, and he resorts instead to scientific concepts and concrete experiments in biology or zoology. This is due to the fact that what I call the a-logical bursts into the field of the phenomenological regard when it is oriented toward animality. I therefore argue that the phenomenology of animality presents us with a paradigmatic case of a tension that is at work in any phenomenon, one between logos and a-logos, between hiddenness and unhiddenness—constituting a basic problem of future research in phenomenology and its approach to intersubjectivity and alterity.
Cited authors
Publication details
Year: 2018
Pages: 233-254
Series: Human Studies
Full citation:
, "Animal experience", Human Studies 41 (2), 2018, pp. 233-254.