Hermeneutics and Communication in Heidegger's Philosophy of Existence

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Ben Chaib Belkacem

Abstract

      In his communicative hermeneutic philosophy, Heidegger adopts the relationship between interpretation, understanding, and existence, as well as the role of being and communication between humans and language. He contemplates existence through the essence of being, which he considers as engaging in metaphysical reflection through hermeneutic interpretation within communicative philosophy. Existence can only be understood through the property of language, which serves as the communicative link between humans and the world of existence, and the world of the self that exists within existence. Since understanding is connected to the mind, communicative reason also represents the essence of language as a sociological communicative interaction between the self and the other. This interaction, for Heidegger, occurs between interpretation and communication in his existential philosophy, which is concerned with the system and the search for truth within the linguistic reality as a pragmatic indication in the communicative linguistic context between the mind, existence, and the human according to Heidegger.

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