Finitude as Philosophical Condition
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Where it appears in the corpus (1)
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#01
Only a Joke Can Save Us: A Theory of Comedy · Todd McGowan · p.80
Tragedy and Pathos > The Pathetic Martin Heidegger
Theoretical move: The passage argues that Heidegger's philosophy of finitude installs pathos as the dominant modern mode of relating to others, crowding out both tragedy and comedy—both of which require transcendence—and that this ubiquitous finitude reduces all beings to pitiable victims, eliminating the dignity that comedy and tragedy confer.
Philosophies of finitude— philosophies that rejected any recourse to transcendence or the infinite— marked the twentieth century and continue to give voice to how we conceive others theoretically.