释义 |
‖ Mitsein Philos.|ˈmɪtzaɪn| [ad. G. mit with + sein being.] A term used by Heidegger to express the concept of man's being in its relationship with others.
1955J. MacQuarrie Existentialist Theol. iv. 89 Thus ‘being-in-the-world’ implies ‘being-with-others’ (Mitsein). 1957H. Barnes tr. Sartre's Being & Nothingness III. iii. 413 The very existence of this grammatical form [sc. the word we] necessarily refers us to a real experience of the Mitsein. 1963Philos. XXXVIII. 275 The whole world of human Mitsein is regarded by M. Bastide as his province. 1966A. Manser Sartre vi. 97 The essence of relations between consciousnesses is not Mitsein (being together), it is conflict. |