Heidegger notes that buliding is
the manner in which mortals dwell on earth.
To dwell is more than to simply reside or have an address
somewhere. To dwell requires a certain
receptivity. To dwell requires to reveal
the Fourfold. What is the fourfold? The fourfold is a unity of four different
things. Each of the four parts of the
fourfold can only be truly understood in relationship with the other
parts. First, there are the
mortals. Mortals dwell on this earth and
have the capacity to regard their death as death; this just means that we can
think of death not just as a stopping point of our lives but as something that
unifies and brings meaning to our lives.
We can imagine that our lives will end in the sense that a big project
has come an end. Second, there is the
earth. The earth is what nourishes us
and sustains us. The earth is where we
get the resources for our projects.
Third is the sky. The sky
represents open possibilities. Whereas
the earth is grounded in practical possibilities, the sky is open. Fourth are divinities. Divinities are inherently beyond human
comprehension.
To dwell, then, means to reveal
these four things in association with one another. A peasant farmhouse makes a place to
divinities to be welcomed as divinities--which means that we wait for
divinities as something unknown. The
roof of a farmhouse is steep to avoid snow building up. This represents a way in which dwelling
requires the ability to be open to possibilities. Also, the farmhouse is placed on the
protected side of a mountain. This shows
how the dwelling takes advantage of practical possibilities already present on
the earth. And this is a place of
dwelling for mortals as it serves our human purposes.
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