|
ON WHAT WE HAVE IN COMMON: THE UNIVERSALITY OF PHILOSOPHICAL HERMENEUTICS
From:
Renascence
| Date:
July 1, 2004| Author:
Wright, Kathleen
| Copyright Marquette University Summer 2004. Provided by ProQuest LLC.Copyright information
|
And when are we not still learners? (Gadamer)
TRUTH and Method is about how understanding comes about. The kind of understanding that Gadamer has in mind, Verstehen, is always about a matter of dispute, die Sache. Gadamer's question is not epistemological. It is not "What can I know about something and how can I know it?" It is instead "How can and how do we come to an understanding in a conversation with one another about a disputed matter? ("eine sachliche Verständigung im Gespräch...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
On what we have in common: the universality of philosophical hermeneutics.(Critical Essay)
Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature
; And when are we not still learners? (Gadamer) TRUTH and Method is about how understanding comes about. The kind of understanding that Gadamer has in mind, Verstehen, is always about a matter of dispute, die Sache. Gadamer's question is not epistemological. It is not What can I know about something
|
|
On the polity of experience: towards a hermeneutics of attentiveness (1).
Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature
; Attentive: 1. Concentrating; paying attention, observant awake, 2. assiduously polite. Courteous, courtly, gracious, accommodating, 3. mindful, carefully, alert, heedful, assiduous. PHILOSOPHICAL hermeneutics is always full of surprises. The thought of Hans-Georg Gadamer invariably turns out on
|
|
ON THE POLITY OF EXPERIENCE: TOWARDS A HERMENEUTICS OF ATTENTIVENESS1
Renascence
; Attentive: 1. Concentrating; paying attention, observant awake, 2. assiduously polite. Courteous, courtly, gracious, accommodating, 3. mindful, carefully, alert, heedful, assiduous. PHILOSOPHICAL hermeneutics is always full of surprises. The thought of Hans-Georg Gadamer invariably turns out on
|
|
Editor's page.(Editorial)
Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature
; SOME may find the German proponent of philosophical hermeneutics an odd subject for a special issue of a scholarly journal which encourages a Christian perspective or, at the very least, is devoted to--as our title puts it-- essays on values in literature. But Gadamer's work, a staggering
|
|
EDITOR'S PAGE
Renascence
; SOME may find the German proponent of philosophical hermeneutics an odd subject for a special issue of a scholarly journal which encourages a Christian perspective or, at the very least, is devoted to - as our title puts it - "essays on values in literature." But Gadamer's work, a staggering
|