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facticity
facˈticity [f. fact n. + -icity.] The quality or condition of being a fact; factuality.1945 W. Ebenstein Pure Theory of Law iii. 114 What is the relation between..the law's normativity..and its ‘facticity’, that is, the efficacy of the idea of the law? 1956 Scott. Jrnl. Theol. IX. 310 [Man's] fall i...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Facticity
As such, facticity is not something we come across and directly behold. In moods, for example, facticity has an enigmatic appearance, which involves both turning toward and away from it.
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Existentialism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Jan 6, 2023Existence is a reflexive or relational tension between "facticity" and "transcendence," where we are constrained by our facticity but simultaneously endowed with the freedom to exceed or transcend it. The human being is, as Ortega y Gasset writes, "a kind of ontological centaur, half immersed in nature, half transcending it" (1941 ...
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TRUTH Synonyms: 43 Similar and Opposite Words - Merriam-Webster
Synonyms for TRUTH: accuracy, authenticity, truthfulness, facticity, verity, factuality, reliability, trueness; Antonyms of TRUTH: untruth, falsity, falseness, lie ...
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Phenomenology (sociology)
Attitude", it is not a thesis in the formal sense of the term, but a non-thematic assumption, or belief, that underlies our sense of the objectivity and facticity The facticity of this world of common sense is both unquestioned and virtually "unquestionable;" it is sanctionable as to its status as that which "is,
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Thrownness
See also
Facticity in Heidegger
References
External links
Existentialist concepts
Martin Heidegger
Philosophical analogies
Philosophy of life
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The Ethics of Ambiguity
But each person is also a thing, a "facticity," an object for others. The ambiguity is that each of us is both subject and object, freedom and facticity.
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Bad faith (existentialism)
Although external circumstances may limit individuals (this limitation from the outside is called facticity), they cannot force a person to follow one In this sense, humans cannot be defined as "intentional objects" of consciousness that includes the restrictions imposed by facticity, personal history
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Great refusal
Alfred North Whitehead used the phrase great refusal for the determination not to succumb to the facticity of things as they are—to favour instead the
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Always already
See also
A priori and a posteriori
Hauntology
Noumenon
Facticity
Thrownness
References
Tore Langholz, Das Problem des »immer schon« in Derridas
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Biblical infallibility
Christian interpreters of the Bible have seen it as reliable and trustworthy, but such views do not equate veracity with historicity, scientificity or even facticity
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Dimitri Ginev
Ginev’s hermeneutic realism states that the facticity of scientific practices cannot be separated from objectified factuality. Theory of the narrativity of social practices, drawn from Ginev's reading of Wilhelm Schapp's philosophy, complements this amplified concept of facticity
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William F. Vallicella
Publications
Books
Kant, subjectivity and facticity, Boston College, 1978
A Paradigm Theory of Existence: Onto-Theology Vindicated, Kluwer Academic Publishers "Sokolowski on Husserl: From the Metaphysical to the Tautological Interpretation," WF Vallicella, Cultural Hermeneutics, 1976
"Kant, subjectivity and facticity
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Thomas Sheehan (philosopher)
Facticity and Ereignis. Interpreting Heidegger. Critical essays. Ed. Daniel O. Dahlstrom. Cambridge (England) 2011. p. 42–68.
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Harald Holz
In 1969 he published his Second Book with the university entitled Speculation and Facticity. On middle-aged and late Schelling's concept of freedom.
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