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  2. Ontotheology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontotheology

    Consistently with Kant's definition, philosophical and theological writers sometimes use the words "ontotheology" or "ontotheological" to refer to the metaphysical or theological views characteristic of many rationalist philosophers. Heidegger, discussed below, later argued for a broader definition of the word ontotheology.

  3. Heideggerian terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heideggerian_terminology

    Heidegger states that, "The 'they' prescribes one's state-of-mind, and determines what and how one 'sees'." To give examples: when one makes an appeal to what is commonly known, one says "one does not do such a thing"; When one sits in a car or bus or reads a newspaper, one is participating in the world of 'the They'.

  4. Martin Heidegger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Heidegger

    Heidegger believed that Dasein already has a "pre-ontological" and concrete understanding that shapes how it lives, which he analyzed in terms of the unitary structure of "being-in-the-world". Heidegger used this analysis to approach the question of the meaning of being; that is, the question of how entities appear as the specific entities they ...

  5. Ontology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontology

    Speculative ontology aims to determine which entities actually exist, for example, whether there are numbers or whether time is an illusion. [81] Martin Heidegger proposed fundamental ontology to study the meaning of being. Metaontology studies the underlying concepts, assumptions, and methods of ontology.

  6. Fundamental ontology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_ontology

    Moreover, Heidegger went on to separate his fundamental ontology from previous ontologies. Heidegger wrote that clarifying the meaning of being is required for the basis of all fields of science. For Heidegger, the ontical forms of research conducted by scientists presuppose the fundamental-ontological. As he expresses it:

  7. Existential phenomenology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Existential_phenomenology

    In Being and Time, Martin Heidegger reframes Edmund Husserl's phenomenological project into what he terms fundamental ontology.This is based on an observation and analysis of Dasein ("being-there"), human being, investigating the fundamental structure of the Lebenswelt (lifeworld, Husserl's term) underlying all so-called regional ontologies of the special sciences.

  8. Poiesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poiesis

    Heidegger referred to poiesis as a "bringing-forth", or physis as emergence. Examples of physis are the blooming of the blossom, the coming-out of a butterfly from a cocoon, and the plummeting of a waterfall when the snow begins to melt; the last two analogies underline Heidegger's example of a threshold occasion, a moment of ecstasis when something moves away from its standing as one thing to ...

  9. Object-oriented ontology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object-oriented_ontology

    Anthropocentrism is the privileging of humans as "subjects" over and against nonhuman beings as "objects". Philosophical anthropocentrism tends to limit certain attributes (e.g., mind, autonomy, moral agency, reason) to humans, while contrasting all other beings as variations of "object" (that is, things that obey deterministic laws, impulses, stimuli, instincts, and so on).