Abstract
With Martin Heidegger and Emmanuel Levinas, I show that a home does not have the ontological structure of objects; it is a fixed point that makes possible the perceived and employed map of the paths, objectives, implements and obstacles of the environment. It is also a space closed to the trafficking of the outside environment. It is also a place of welcome, where we, Heidegger says, welcome earth and skies, fellow mortals and harbingers of the sacred, where we, Levinas says, welcome kin and strangers. Humans share the establishing of a home base with many other species of mammals, birds, fish, and insects. And humans share their home with other species. Incarceration is the extreme case of a home base without an outlying environment. Humans also live in spaces without home base. The bent to live on the open road without a home base is something humans share with giraffes, opossums, quail, and albatross. Some people by choice or by necessity are homeless. Most people live months or years of homelessness.