lem09 said:
Hi I hope someone can reply to this, it's a very interesting topic and surely central to Heidegger...From that article neither do I understand the difference between expecting and anticipating. In expecting we wait for death as an actuality, in anticipating death we are close to death as a possibility? But aren't all possibilities possible actualities? That goes back to the original question, if death is not a possible actuality, then what kind of possibility is it? What is it like to be dead?
Let me try, but I am not an expect on Heidegger. If there is an expert on Heidegger that reads this thread, please contribute:
I think the problem,
LEM09 , is when you say this:
"...but aren't all possibilities possible actualities..."?
I think the answer Heidegger would give is "no". If what you say is true for Heidegger, then there would be no difference for him between "being at an end' and "being toward an end". He would claim that, when you live to "anticipate" being toward an end, rather than live to "expect" being at and end, then, as stated in the link paper:
"[tJhe closest closeness which one may have in Being towards death as possibility, is as far as possible from anything actual" -Heidegger (Being and Time)
So, you see, for Heidegger, all possibilities are NOT actualities, there is one that is as far from being actual as is possible, and that is the possibility of your "being toward death".
As to your question..."what kind of possibility is death", I think Heidegger would answer, as stated in the paper (with my [] added):
Being towards [an end]...[is the] possibility [that] is [the] 'anticipation' of this possibility" -Heideggar (Being and Time)
So, death is a very specific type of possibility, it is the anticipation of the possibility of "being toward an end".
As to your final question..."what is it like to be dead"
I think Heidegger would answer, as stated in the paper:
"Death is a way to be, not a way to end"-Heidegger (Being and Time)
So, what you are asking yourself when you ask "what is it like to be dead"--for Heidegger you are then asking "what is it like for you to be alive". So, my understanding of Heidegger , to discover in your mind what "it is like to be dead", you must discover, what it is like for you,
LEM09, to be alive (of course, only you can know this, only you can know what it is like for you "to be" dead as a way of being while you are alive).
Perhaps I error, this was my best try to understand your questions.