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It seems clear to me from many of Bultmann's formulations that he is in no way slavishly dependent on his own technical terminology -- much less on Heidegger's.unmigrated-wiki-markup

Thus, for example, he can speak of the modem modern man's knowing "openly or hiddenly" that "his life as a person \ [_sein Personleben_\] cannot be the object of objectifying thinking" (_GV_ 3: 181). If one compares the clearly parallel passage to which Bultmann himself refers only two sentences earlier, one finds the following more "technical" formulation: "There is in fact a language in which existence \ [_die Existenz_\] naively expresses itself, and correspondingly, there is a an it, science that talks about existence \ [die Existenz\] without objectifying~nto being within the world" (KM 2: 187 \ [NTM: 101\]). Clearly, "das Personleben" and "die ExistentExistenz;" are simply two ways of referring to one and the same thing-the first being the less, the second, the more, technical way of doing so.
Or, again, note the references toward the end of the German translation of Jesus Christ and Mythology to "existential, personal self-understanding \ [das existentielle, personliche Selbstverstiindnis\Selbstverständnis]" or "such existential personal understanding \ [solches existentielle personliche Verstehen\]." Here, again, "existential" is shown to be only a more technical way of talking about what we usually speak of less technically as "personal."

16 October 2001