Original time as foundation of dynamic of factical life
time; life; movement; Dasein; care; temporality
The objective of the present thesis is to analyze the reasons why time is commonly interpreted as movement in everyday life. To do so, we will turn to the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, for whom time is what gives meaning to human life. In this way, time is indelibly correlated with life, as it is in the common discourse about daily experiences that time as movement becomes transparent as that which passes, is irreversible, continuous, and unlimited. Analyzing time from the heideggerian perspective also involves delving into Aristotle's thoughts on time; for this philosopher, everyday time is a flow of continuous “nows”, where the current “nows” is interconnected with subsequent and preceding “nows”. In this sense, the “nows” are stretched between the “then”, the posterior, and the “before”, the anterior. Heidegger sees Aristotle's concept of time as the time expressed in everyday life. Through the interconnection of life, time, and movement, we aim to analyze the correlation between the dynamics of life and its relationship with everyday time as movement, in order to reach the original foundations of this mode of time.