Plessners Philosophical Anthropology
Plessners Philosophical Anthropology
Plessners Philosophical Anthropology
Jos de Mul is full professor Philosophy of Man and Culture at the Faculty of
Philosophy, Erasmus University Rotterdam. He has also taught at the Univer-
sity of Michigan (Ann Arbor) and Fudan University (Shanghai), and stayed as
a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. His book
publications include: Romantic Desire in (Post)Modern Art and Philosophy
Plessners
Perspectives andPhilosophical
Prospects
Anthropology
Perspectives and Prospects
Edited by Jos de Mul
ISBN: 978-90-8964-634-7
AUP. nl
9 789089 646347
Plessners Philosophical Anthropology
Perspectives and Prospects
Edited by
Jos de Mul
Amsterdam University Press English-language titles are distributed in the US and Canada by
the University of Chicago Press.
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of
this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted,
in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise)
without the written permission of both the copyright owner and the author of the book.
Contents
Foreword 9
Artificial by Nature 11
An Introduction to Plessners Philosophical Anthropology
Jos de Mul
Part I Anthropology
1 Philosophical Anthropology 41
A Third Way between Darwinism and Foucaultism
Joachim Fischer
Part II Culture
18 The Quest for the Sources of the Self, Seen from the Vantage
Point of Plessners Material a Priori 317
Petran Kockelkoren
Appendix 477
Plessners Collected Writings (Gesammelte Schriften)
Jos de Mul
Those who want to find a home, a native soil, safety, must make the sacrifice of
belief. Those who stick to the mind, do not return.
Helmuth Plessner
The past few decades have been marked by a remarkable rediscovery of the
work of the German philosopher and sociologist Helmuth Plessner (1892-
1985), who for a long time remained in the shadow of his contemporary, Mar-
tin Heidegger. During the first International Plessner Congress in Freiburg,
in 2000, the organizers even dared to speak about a Plessner Renaissance.
However, with regards to the Anglo-Saxon academic community, it appears
too premature to speak about a revival. Given that only a few of his works
have been translated into English,1 the interest in Plessners work has mainly
been restricted to Germany and, to a lesser extent, Netherlands, Italy, and
Poland, so far. One does not come across his name, for example, in the
Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Yet, the publication of The Limits of
Community: A Critique of Social Radicalism in 1999 a translation of Grenzen
der Gemeinschaft: eine Kritik des sozialen Radikalismus (1924) and the
forthcoming translation of his philosophical magnum opus, The Levels of
the Organic and Man [Die Stufen des Organischen und der Mensch], which
originally appeared in 1928, indicate that there is an up-and-coming interest
in Plessners work among the Anglo-Saxon scholars.
One feasible explanation for the renewed acuteness of Plessners
philosophical anthropology lies in the virtues of his concept eccentric
positionality2 and the related concept of the natural artificiality of man.
1 Until recently, except for some smaller texts (Plessner 1964; 1969a; 19969b; 1970a; 1970b), no
works of Plessner haven been translated into English. For an overview of Plessners writings,
translations in Dutch, French, Italian, Polish and Spanish, and secondary literature, see the
website of the Helmuth Plessner Gesellschaft: http://www.helmuth-plessner.de/.
2 Some authors prefer to translate the German exzentrische Positionalitt with excentric
positionality in order to avoid association with the meaning deviating from conventional or
accepted use or conduct, which is attached to the English word eccentric. Nevertheless, we
decided to use the terms eccentric and eccentricity throughout this volume, not only because
12 Jos de Mul
this is in accordance with the spelling used in most dictionaries, but also because it has been
used in previously published translations of Helmuth Plessners works, such as Laughing and
Crying: A Study of the Limits of Human Behaviour [Lachen und Weinen. Eine Untersuchung der
Grenzen menschlichen Verhaltens, 1941] (Plessner 1970).
3 This biographical sketch has largely been taken from the biographical notes of his Dutch
student Jan Sperna Weiland (Sperna Weiland 1989).
Artificial by Nature 13
In 1943, after the German occupation of the Netherlands, his Jewish lineage
forced him to go into hiding. After the war he was reappointed to a post in
Groningen, but this time as full professor of philosophy. In 1951, he returned
to Germany and was appointed professor of philosophy and sociology in
Gttingen. In this position, he carried out various administrative functions,
including that of dean, rector magnificus (vice chancellor) in Gttingen, and
chairman of the German Association of Sociologists. Upon invitation by
Adorno and Horkheimer, he also contributed to the research of the Institut
fr Sozialforschung (the Frankfurt School). In 1962, he was appointed for
a one-year term as visiting professor at the New School for Social Research
in New York City. In the last period of his academic career, from 1965 to
1972, he was professor of philosophy in Zrich, Switzerland. Plessner died
in Gttingen at age 92 in 1985.
Between 1980 and 1985, Suhrkamp published Plessners Collected Writ-
ings [Gesammelte Schriften] in ten volumes. 4 It will probably take quite
some time before the entire collection is available in English. However,
the English-speaking community can duly anticipate the translation of
Die Stufen des Organischen und der Mensch, a book that occupies a key
position in his oeuvre and presents both Plessners philosophy of nature and
the building blocks of his philosophical anthropology, social philosophy,
and philosophy of culture and technology. Without a doubt, Levels of the
Organic and Man is Plessners magnum opus. It will also be the chief point
of reference of this volume.
Eccentric positionality
4 A selection of texts of Plessner not included in the Collected Writings, entitled Politics
Anthropology Philosophy: Essays and Lectures [PolitikAnthropologiePhilosophie: Aufstze und
Vortrge], has been published in 2001 by Salvatore Giammusso and Hans-Ulrich Lessing (Plessner
2001). In addition, Hans-Ulrich Lessing has published a series of previously unpublished lectures
of Plessner, in which his philosophical anthropology is presented in a broad philosophical
context: Elemente der Metaphysik: Eine Vorlesung aus dem Wintersemester 1931/32 [Elements of
Metaphysics: Winter Semester Lectures 1931/32] (Plessner 2002).
Artificial by Nature 15
been an important shift in the meaning of the concept. Where the finite,
in contrast to a transcendent, self-causing (causa sui) God, was initially
understood as that which is created that is to say, that which does not
have its ground in itself in modern secularized culture it is def ined
immanently as that which is limited in space and time (Marquard 1981, 120).
A crucial difference between Plessner and Heidegger lies in their diverging
points of departure with regards to their reflection on man, marked by
related though distinctively different dimensions of human finitude. In
Being and Time, Heideggers focal point is finitude in time. In this context,
finitude is primarily understood as mortality and the human way of being
(Dasein, literary translated: there-being), characterized by the awareness
of this mortality, consequently is defined as a Being-unto-death (Sein zum
Tode). In The Levels of the Organic and Man, however, Plessners point of
departure is finitude in space, in which finitude is primarily defined as
positionality and human life, in its specific relation to its positionality,
as decentered or, in his vocabulary, eccentric positionality (exzentrische
Positionalitt).
The fact that Heidegger takes the experience of temporality as his
departure point vastly determines his abstraction from the corporality of
man, and as a consequence shows an affinity to the idealistic rather than
the materialistic tradition (cf. Schulz 1953-1954). In contrast, by putting
the emphasis on the spatial dimension, Plessner assigns a central role to
(our relationship to) our physical body. In Plessners anthropology, the
biological dimension plays a crucial role and an important part of his
analysis aims at demarcating man from other living and lifeless bodies.
However, although Plessner, as a trained biologist, pays much attention
to the empirical knowledge about life, his focus is on the transcendental-
phenomenological analysis of the material a priori of the subsequent life
forms, particularly that of the human. In the first part of this volume,
various aspects of Plessners method and anthropology will be discussed
and compared to competing paradigms in more detail. Here, I will restrict
myself to a short introduction of some of the key concepts of his philosophy
of nature and anthropology.
According to Plessner, the living body distinguishes itself from the lifeless
in that it does not only possess contours but is characterized by a boundary
(or border) (Grenze), and consequently by the crossing of this boundary
(Grenzverkehr). Moreover, the living body is characterized by a specific
relationship to its own boundary, that is, by a specific form of positionality.
The positionality of living creatures is linked to their double aspectiv-
ity (Doppelaspektivitt): they have a relationship to both sides of their
16 Jos de Mul
constituting boundary, both to the inner and the outer side (GS V, 138f.).5
Anticipating Ryles later critique, Plessners concept of double aspectivity
explicitly opposes the Cartesian dualism of res extensa and res cogitans, in
which both poles are fundamentalized ontologically. Conversely, Plessner
considers life to encompass a physical-psychic unity; a lived body which,
depending on which aspect is disclosed, appears as either body or mind.
The manner in which positionality is organized determines the differ-
ence between plant, animal and human being. In the open organization of
a plant, the organism does not express a relationship to its own positional-
ity. Neither the inner nor the outer has a center. In other words, the plant
is characterized by a boundary which has no one or nothing on either
side, neither subject nor object (GS V, 282f.). A relationship with its own
positionality first appears in the closed or centric organization of animals.
In an animal organism, that which crosses the boundary is mediated by a
center, which at a physical level can be localized in the nervous system, and
at the psychic level is characterized by awareness of the environment. Thus,
what distinguishes the animal from the plant is that not only does it have a
body, it is also in its body. Furthermore, the human life form distinguishes
itself from that of the animal by also cultivating a relationship with this
center. Although we inevitably also take up a centrist position, we have, in
addition, a specific relationship to this center. There is therefore a second
mediation: human beings are aware of their center of experience or being,
and as such, eccentric. Man not only lives (lebt) and experiences his life
(erlebt), but he also experiences his experience of life (GS V, 364). In other
words: as eccentric beings we are not where we experience, and we dont
experience where we are.6 Expressed from the perspective of the body: A
living person is a body, is in his body (as inner experience or soul) and at
the same time outside his body as the perspective, from which he is both
(GS V, 365). Because of this tripartite determination of human existence,
human beings live in three worlds: an outer world (Aussenwelt), an inner
5 GS stands for Helmuth Plessners Gesammelte Schriften (GS), edited by Gnter Dux et al., 10
vols. (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1980-1985). Volume V of these collected works contains
Die Stufen des Organischen und der Mensch. Some of the authors in this volume refer to the
edition published by De Gruyter (Berlin and New York, 1975). Unfortunately the pagination of
these two editions is not identical.
6 With this emphasis on the decentred position of the subject, Plessners philosophical
anthropology clearly anticipates the (neo)structuralist conception of man as we find it, for
example, in the writings of Jacques Lacan (see Ebke and Schloberger 2012).
Artificial by Nature 17
In other words, technology and culture are not only and not even in
the first place instruments of survival but an ontic necessity (ontische
Artificial by Nature 19
essential for the technical artifact is its inner weight, its objectivity that
discloses the aspect of technology that only can be found or discovered,
but never made. Everything that enters the sphere of culture shows its
dependence on human creation. But at the same time (and to the same
extent) it is independent from man (GS V, 397).
Technological actions and cultural expressions have all kinds of un-
intentional side-effects which place strict limits on predictability and
controlability. Furthermore, as we are not alone in the world but interact
with other persons, we are constantly confronted with interests and powers
that conflict with our desires. And while life as we know it remains depend-
ent on finite, physical bodies, the dream of immortality will always persist.
In Plessners view, illusions of control no less than the religious hope to
find eternal bliss are doomed to remain unfulfilled dreams. We find this
expressed in Plessners third anthropological law, that of mans utopian
standpoint. The promise to provide that which by definition man must do
without safety, reconciliation with fate, understanding reality, a native
soil (GS V, 420) can be no other than a religious or secular illusion. The fact
that for many people in a society such as ours, technology has taken over the
utopian role of religion does not make this law any less valid. In reality, at-
tempts to find or create a paradise often result in the very opposite. However,
this should not surprise us, given that inhumanity is inextricably linked
with human eccentricity. Or as Plessner expressed it in Unmenschlichkeit:
The inhuman is not bound to any specific era, but a possibility which is
inherent to human life: the possibility to negate itself (Plessner 1982, 205).
Part I: Anthropology
dictates the concepts we employ to understand what life is. Contrary to the
explicit claim of Plessner and many of his commentators, Ebke argues that
this vital turn cannot be conceived of as a transcendental turn in a strict
Kantian sense. Whereas Kants transcendental deduction of the conditions
of the possibility of objects leads back to the a priori forms and categories
of the subject, Plessners deduction of the categories of the vital leads him
to a material a priori: the boundary-realization of living things, which is
in the vital performance that is carried out both by ourselves and by the
objects we experience. We are only able to deduce the specific boundary
realization of other life forms because, as eccentric beings, we are able to
take a transcendental perspective at the world that is no longer attached
to our specific (centric) organic shape. Referring to a similar tension in the
work of Bergson, Ebke argues that both philosophers of life were caught
in a struggle between a transcendental analysis and the insight into the
material a priori of life.
In Bodily Experience and Experiencing Ones Body, Maarten Coolen shows
that, concerning the bodily dimension of human life, Merleau-Pontys
existential phenomenology has remarkable similarities with Plessners
philosophical anthropology. Both thinkers emphasize the embodied
intentionality of our being-in-the-world. However, according to Coolen,
Merleau-Ponty underemphasizes the double aspectivity of human exist-
ence. As Plessner has shown, because of this double aspectivity, man not
only is a living body (Leib), but he also has its living body as a physical
body (Krper), that is a thing amidst other objects in the world. Discuss-
ing Plessners three anthropological laws, Coolen points at some crucial
implications of this double aspectivity. Seen from the perspective of the
law of mediated immediacy, human corporeality is characterized by the fact
that as a living body, we mediate our (immediate) contact with the world by
getting our physical body to do things. While we share this instrumental
use of our body with other animals, as human beings that are eccentric as
well, we distinguish ourselves from sheer centric animals by experiencing
the relationship between the living body and the physical body. Mans
natural artificiality is closely connected with this: being aware of the
inherent instrumental nature of his corporeality, man also experiences
the shortcomings of his body and is being forced to supplement it with
artificial (cultural and technological) means. In Plessners view, the law of
the utopian standpoint is another necessary consequence of our eccentric
positionality: both being a body and having it, we can never find a fully
secure place in the world, but instead maintain an perpetual longing for
such a safe haven. In the remaining sections of his contribution, Coolen
24 Jos de Mul
not essentialist entities, but rather open and dynamic structures involving
differences in the way they change and are open to self-correction and
reorientation. Taking up the Plessnerian notion of role playing already
introduced in Krgers contribution, Boccignone emphasizes that because of
his eccentric positionality, every person is a double (Doppelgnger), having
both a private and a public dimension. From this point of view, Plessner
criticizes both the Romantic ideal of a complete integration of individual
and community, as well as the Frankfurt School notion of alienation that is
based on this ideal. Referring to Levels of the Organic and Man, the author
especially emphasizes the inscrutability and natural artificiality of human
beings. Natural artificiality is not just a negative divergence or aberration
from the naturality of the other living beings, but it is also the very basis
for individual freedom, self-determination, and individual responsibil-
ity. The undetermined character of its agency implies the possibility of a
relative emancipation from both natural and cultural environments and
their constraints. It also opens fruitful perspectives for conceptualizing
intercultural understanding and dialogue and mutual cultural fertilization.
In the final section, Boccignone makes some critical remarks about the
notion of (Heideggerian) authenticity, as the natural artificiality of man
makes every individual and cultural identity inescapably temporal. Against
such dangerous enthusiasm for authenticity, the author defends the ironic
self, which can be seen as an equilibrist that always tries to keep a delicate
balance between the lack of a homeland and cosmopolitanism.
that Habermas seems to recognize that his approach so far lacked a certain
explanatory power. By taking some ideas of Helmuth Plessner into consid-
eration, he interprets the unavailability of human life as the unavailability
of living beings who live in the tension between being a living body and
having a physical body. However, to this day, he has not clearly articulated
the full impact of this recognition. It forces Habermas to a paradigm shift
away from his rationalist philosophy of language towards a philosophy of
the expressiveness of living beings.
In The Quest for the Sources of the Self, Seen from the Vantage Point of Pless-
ners Material a Priori, the first contribution of Part III of this volume, Petran
Kockelkoren makes a transition from culture to technology. His starting
point is the philosophical quest for the sources of the self. Against the
background of the postmodern proclamation of the death of the subject,
Kockelkoren criticizes the conservative attempts to resurrect the modern,
authentic and autonomous subject, as we find them, for example, in the
work of Charles Taylor and Paul Ricoeur. The self is seen as something that is
inscribed in the human body. Opposed to this view, Kockelkoren, following
Plessner, argues that self-awareness emerges out of the growing complexity
of the organization of life. One of the consequences of our eccentricity is
that our knowledge of the world around us, of our own bodies, and even
of our so-called inner selves, is always mediated by language, images and
technologies. Self and identities are the outcome of technological media-
tions and their cultural incorporations. Instead of being the origin of our
actions and inventions, the self is rather the product of them. Kockelkoren
concludes that the anthropology of Helmuth Plessner is very apt for the
understanding of self-production in our present-day technological culture
and media-society.
In The Brain in the Vat as the Epistemic Object of Neurobiology, Gesa Linde-
mann analyzes everyday practices in neurobiological laboratories from the
perspective of Helmuth Plessners philosophical anthropology. Her focus is
on neurobiological experiments with invasive electrophysiology (electrodes
lowered in the brain) that record complex neural events in order to develop
an exploratory theory of the brain. According to the self-understanding of
neuroscientists, they provide a mechanistic account of the brain and its
functions from a third-person perspective. However, following Plessner,
Lindemann argues that the interaction between living beings is always
characterized by a second-person perspective. All living beings express
32 Jos de Mul
exist in ancient brain regions that we share not only with chimpanzees, but
also with rats. Pott argues that Plessners anthropological interpretation of
laughter enables us to show how there is a shared biological basis for human
and animal laughter, whereas at the same time important ways of laughing
are exclusively human. She distinguishes four characteristics that different
sorts of laughter all have in common: a perception of incongruity, a buildup
of bodily tension and its relief, a specific relationship towards the cause of
the laughter, and a mechanism of social inclusion. In this sense, there is a
clear continuity between the laughter of all centric beings, from the laugh-
ing rat to the laughing human person. However, one typical form of laughter,
which is connected with eccentric positionality, is indeed restricted to
human beings. If we burst out in laughter in a particular situation and we
completely lose control over our body, we experience our twofold corporeal-
ity, the fact that we are embodied creatures and creatures in a body at the
same time. We are, Pott aptly summarizes her contribution, capable of
breaking out into laughter because of our fundamental brokenness.
In A Moral Bubble: The Influence of Online Personalization on Moral Repo-
sitioning, Esther Keymolen uses Plessners anthropology to analyse online
personalisation with the help of profiling technologies, which tailor internet
services to the individual needs and preferences of the users. Referring
to the work of various philosophers of technology like Ihde, Verbeek, and
Pariser, she first explains how these technologies lead to a Filter Bubble,
a unique universe of information for each of us. Next, she argues that this
filtering also might influence our moral repositioning. Using Plessners
notion of positionality, she argues that profiling technologies build a closed
Umwelt instead of an open world, resulting in an online environment that
is characterized by cold ethics rather than by hot morality. In addition, she
focuses on the opaqueness of the personalized interface. As there has not
been much public debate about online personalization until now, clear
rules or agreements on how to implement profiling technologies are lack-
ing, according to Keymolen. Therefore, most of the time there is also a
lack of transparency with regard to the operations that are being executed
automatically behind the screen. Moreover, because users have no direct
access to the settings of the interface, they cannot judge for themselves
whether the filtering of information is taken place accurately. Consequently,
there is little room for moral repositioning. Online personalization might
hamper normative reflection, establishing moral stagnation. By way of
conclusion, Keymolen consider several means to avoid this stagnation.
Based on a multi-actor approach, she focus on how users, technologies,
and regulation may counter the negative effects of profiling technologies.
34 Jos de Mul
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