Heidegger: The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy in Light of the Unpublished Seminars of 1933-1935
Emmanuel Faye
Trans. Michael B. Smith, foreword Tom Rockmore
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009
Read Part 1 here.
Two.
Faye’s Argument
Heidegger’s seminars of 1933 and 1934, in Emmanuel Faye’s view, expose the “fiction” that separates Heidegger’s philosophy from his politics. For these seminars reveal a brown-shirted fanatic who threw himself into the National Revolution, hoping to become Hitler’s philosophical mentor.
At the same time, Faye argues that Heidegger’s work in the 1920s, particularly his magnum opus, Being and Time (1927), was already infected with pre-fascist ideas, just as his postwar work, however much it may have resorted to a slightly different terminology, would continue to propagate National Socialist principles.
Earlier, however, when the young Heidegger was establishing himself in the world of German academic philosophy (the 1920s), there is very little public evidence of racial or anti-Jewish bias in his work. To explain this, Faye quotes Heidegger to the effect that “he wasn’t going to say what he thought until after he became a full professor.” His reticence on these matters was especially necessary given that his “mentor,” Edmund Husserl, was Jewish and that he needed Husserl’s support to replace him at Freiburg.
(For those militant Judeophobes who might think this is somehow compromising, let me point out that Wilhelm Stapel [1882-1954], after also doing a doctorate in Husserlian phenomenology, was a Protestant, nationalist, and anti-Semitic associate of the Conservative Revolution who played an important early role in NSDAP politics.)
Faye nevertheless claims that Heidegger’s early ideas, especially those of Being and Time, were already disposed to themes and principles that were National Socialist in nature.
In Being and Time, for example, Heidegger rejects the Cartesian cogito, Kant’s transcendental analytic, Husserlian phenomenology — along with every other bloodless rationalism dominating Western thought since the 18th century — for the sake of an analysis based on “existentials” (i.e., on man’s being in the world).
Like other intellectual members of Hitler’s party, Heidegger disparaged all forms of universalist thought, dismissing not only notions of man as an individual, but notions of the human spirit as pure intellect and reason.
In repudiating universalist, humanist, and individualist thought associated with liberal modernity, Faye’s Heidegger is seen not as contesting the underlying principles of liberal modernity, which he, as a former Catholic traditionalist, thought responsible for the alienation, rootlessness, and meaninglessness of the contemporary world. Rather he is depicted as preparing the way for the “Nazi” notion of an organic national community (Volksgemeinschaft) based on racial and anti-Jewish criteria.
Revealingly, this is about as far as Faye goes in treating Heidegger’s early thought. In fact, there is very little philosophical analysis at all of Being and Time or any other work in his book. Every damning criticism he makes of Heidegger is based on Heidegger’s so-called affinity with National Socialist themes or ideas — or what a liberal defending a Communist would call guilt by association.
Worse, Faye lacks any historical understanding of National Socialism, failing to see it as part of a larger anti-liberal movement that had emerged before Hitler was even born and which influenced Heidegger long before he had heard of the Führer.
For our crusading anti-fascist professor, however, the anti-liberal, anti-individualist, and anti-modern contours of Heideggerian thought are simply Hitlerian — because of their later association with Hitler’s movement — unrelated to whatever earlier influences that may have affected the development of his thought. Q.E.D.
Faye, though, fails to make the case that Heidegger’s pre-1933 thought was “Nazi,” both because he’s indifferent to Heidegger’s philosophical argument in Being and Time, which he dismisses in a series of rhetorical strokes, and, secondarily, because he doesn’t understand the historical/cultural context in which Heidegger worked out his thought.
More generally, he claims Heidegger negated “the human truths that are the underlying principle of philosophy” simply because whatever doesn’t accord with Faye’s own liberal understanding of philosophy (which, incidentally, rationalizes the radical destructurations that have come with the “Disneyfication, MacDonaldization, and globalization” of our coffee-colored world) is treated as inherently suspect.
Only on the basis of the 1933-34 and ‘34-35 seminars does Faye have a case to make.
For the Winter term of 1933-34 Heidegger led a seminar “On the Essence and Concepts of Nature, History, and State.” If Faye’s account of the unpublished seminar report is accurate (and it’s hard to say given the endless exaggerations and distortions that run through his book), Heidegger outdid himself in presenting National Socialist doctrines as the philosophical basis for the new relationship that was to develop between the German people and their new state.
Like other National Socialists, Heidegger in this seminar views the “people” in völkisch terms presuming their “unity of blood and stock.”
Faye is particularly scandalized by the fact that Heidegger values the “people” (Volk) more than the “individual” and that the people, as an organic community of blood and spirit, excludes Jews and exalts its own particularity.
In this seminar, Heidegger goes even further, calling for a “Germanic state for the German nation,” extending his racial notion of the people to the political system, as he envisages the “will of the people” as finding embodiment in the will of the state’s leader (Führer).
Faye contends that people and state exist for Heidegger in the same relation as beings exist in relation to Being.
As such, Heidegger links ontology to politics, as the “question of all questions” (the “question of being”) is identified with the question of Germany’s political destiny.
Heidegger’s rejection of the humanist notion of the individual and of Enlightenment universalism in his treatment of Volk and Staat are, Faye thinks, synonymous with Hitlerism.
Though Faye’s argument here is more credible, it might also be pointed out that Heidegger’s privileging of the national community over the interests and freedoms of the individual has a long genealogy in German thought (unlike Anglo-American thought, which privileges the rational individual seeking to maximize his self-interest in the market).
The second seminar, in the Winter term of 1934-35, “On the State: Hegel,” again supports Faye’s case that Heidegger was essentially a “Nazi” propagandist and not a true philosopher. For in this seminar, he affirms the spirit of the new National Socialist state in Hegelian terms, spreading the “racist and human-life destroying conceptions that make up the foundations of Hitlerism.”
In both courses, Faye sees Heidegger associating and merging philosophy with National Socialism.
For this reason, his work ought not to be considered a philosophy at all, but rather a noxious political ideology.
Faye, in fact, cannot understand how Heidegger’s insidious project has managed to “procure a planetary public” or why he is so widely accepted as a great philosopher.
Apparently, Heidegger had the power to seduce the public — though on the basis of Faye’s account, it’s difficult to see how the political hack he describes could have pulled this off.
In any case, Faye warns that if Heidegger isn’t exposed for the political charlatan he is, terrible things are again possible. “Hitlerism and Nazism will continue to germinate through Heidegger’s writings at the risk of spawning new attempts at the complete destruction of thought and the extermination of humankind.”
To be continued . . .
3 Comments
Faye is either a self-loathing goy [excessively so] as David put it in the comments on part I or he’s Jewish. The intensity of the hatred and the goal of the work leaves but one word in my mind: chutzpah.
To carry over a theme from the first part ["Indeed, it’s undefeatable there because the only thing its enemies can do to counter its insidious ideas is to ban those thinkers(.)]. Aye, ban or make the thinkers in question toxic to mainstream discourse. The more honest of these anti-liberal assassins, e.g. Roger Griffin, acknowledge that these thinkers delegitimize many (read: all) liberal assumptions. Yet even with this acknowledgment they devote their entire career to combating these thinkers and their ideas. Not very liberal now is it.
In The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy Carl Schmitt illustrates how the liberal of yesteryear thought that in parliament individuals (atomized of course) would come together to debate an issue whereby the best reasoned argument or a synthesis thereof would be agreed to by all. Schmitt saw that this was no longer the liberals definition of parliament.
An anti-liberal such as Heidegger using his human reason in debate against liberalism can show that the most rational courses are those that liberals flout as pre-rational (as if that were a reasoned argument against something!); those that are völkisch. To the current day liberal these refutations of liberalism are not rational for the only philosophy that human reason shows to be true for the whole universe is liberalism. This will be the liberals undoing. This Cult of Reason. Their definition of reason being that which supports liberalism.
The liberal Cult of Reason is analogous to the Christian Cult of Truth (see http://www.toqonline.com/2010/02/three-horsemen-3/#comment-6056). The Cult of Reason since being filtered into all aspects of life has been disastrous; being responsible for the homo oeconomicus and calculating man. But it is in the hands of anti-liberals that it is turned against itself. To paraphrase Greg Johnson, the irony of ironies for it was those early Cultists that did Christianity in and now their methods are used against them. Everything has come full circle, the difference being that when the Cultists defeated Christianity it sounded the death knell of the West and the desacralization of our people. The death of liberalism heralds the resacrilisation of our people and a new Aryan Hochkultur.
Although it is contemptible what these self-appointed Grand Inquisitors do it is nothing but the desperate last breath of a dead man clawing at life. Liberalism is dead and what’s more it was self-inflicted.
An an aside. I was looking at the reviews on Amazon. Hopeless. All of them. No one there has any clue about Heidegger let alone other concepts, basic ones at that. For example, one reviewer labeled the Democrats center-right and the Republicans radical right and a few paragraphs later calls Heidegger a Prussian!
Second semester this year I’ll be doing a course that has a Heidegger component, will let you know how erroneously the professor teaches him. Should be worth a laugh. Perhaps this book will be brought up by indignant Trotskyites and Jews [for some reason I don't think I need to make a distinction of the two...].
Steven,
It’s nice that we agree on this.
Faye’s hatred of Heidegger and the “Nazis” is so visceral that I suspect he may, indeed, be Jewish. But I have no proof.
Nice article. I think maybe this is part of a broader attempt at starting to attack European philosophy in general, smearing them and making an example. If they can demonize and topple respect for these pillars of western philosophy, then what chance does the modern academic have at freedom? Ironically, Faye seems to be doing exactly what he falsely accuses Heidegger of doing — only on a grander, more direct plane.
This sort of culture of critique is a Jewish hallmark. Do exactly what you accuse others of doing (when the others are not even really doing it…). Without a truth motive, this is what you get — political manipulation, raw political interests motivating criticism and discourse — throwing academia off on dead-end tangents and over the cliff of corruption.