Abstract
Man is the measure of all things: of things that are, that they are; of things that are not, that they are not. In “The Age of the World Picture” Heidegger writes that the “essence of the modern age can be seen in the fact that man frees himself from the bonds of the Middle Ages in freeing himself to himself.”1 He goes on to explain that “What is decisive is not that man frees himself to himself from previous obligations, but that the very essence of man itself changes in that man becomes subject.”2 According to Heidegger, when “man” becomes subject, for the first time is there any such thing as a “position” of man. Man makes depend upon himself the way in which he must take his stand in...