ANSWER
In Being and Time, Martin Heidegger introduces Dasein (German for “being-there”) as the term for human existence. Dasein is not just a subject or object but a being that is always already engaged in the world, characterized by its care (Sorge) and being-toward-death. Heidegger emphasizes that Dasein’s existence is fundamentally temporal and pre-linguistic—it experiences the world directly before conceptualizing or categorizing it. This pre-reflective, lived experience is central to understanding being itself, as Dasein is the only being that questions its own existence and meaning. Heidegger’s focus on the primacy of lived experience over abstract thought aligns with Pirsig’s notion of Quality as a pre-linguistic, dynamic force.