Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Cover Title Page Table of Contents Notes on Contributors Introduction
References
Part I: Hermeneutics and the History of Philosophy
1 The History of Hermeneutics
Heidegger’s Destruction of the Six Senses of “History” Heidegger’s History of the Concept of Hermeneutics Gadamer’s History of the Problem of Hermeneutics Ricoeur’s Story of Deregionalization and Radicalization Conclusion References
2 Hermeneutics and the Ancient Philosophical Legacy
The Ancient Roots of Philological and Theological Hermeneutics Language as Hermēneia and the “Logocentric” Theory of Meaning Aristotelian Phronēsis as a Model for Philosophical Hermeneutics References
3 Medieval Hermeneutics
Augustine Origen The Twelfth Century St. Thomas Aquinas References Further Reading
4 Hermeneutics and Modern Philosophy
Meaning and Theory Meaning and Art The Limits of Semantics Aesthetics and Meaning Hermeneutics, Philosophy, and Meaning References
5 Gadamer and German Idealism
Kant’s Critique of Judgment Hegel’s Speculative Idealism References
Part II: Themes and Topics
6 Hermeneutics and Ethical Life 7 Hermeneutics and Politics
References
8 Religion
Religious/Theological Origins of Hermeneutics General and Biblical Hermeneutics Historicism and Biblical Hermeneutics Hermeneutics of Belief/Hermeneutics of Suspicion Phenomenology of the Sacred and the Hermeneutics of the “Word” References
9 Method
Friedrich D. E. Schleiermacher Wilhelm Dilthey Martin Heidegger Hans-Georg Gadamer Paul Ricœur Gianni Vattimo and Richard Rorty Recent Developments in Hermeneutics References
10 Truth
Truth within the Framework of Historicity Truth, Objectivity, and Ideology Truth as Disclosure and the Challenge of Living Truthfully Concluding Reflections References
11 Historicity and Temporality
Radicalizing Hermeneutics Being and Time The Later Heidegger Philosophical Hermeneutics: Gadamer and Ricoeur Phenomenology of the Trace Conclusion References
12 Memory
References Further Reading
13 Language and Alterity
References Further Reading
14 Identity, History, Tradition
Wilhelm Dilthey Martin Heidegger Hans-Georg Gadamer Paul Ricoeur Conclusion: A Hermeneutic View of Personal Identity
15 Recognition and Freedom
Heidegger Sartre and Merleau-Ponty Ricœur Gadamer Taylor References Further Reading
16 Aesthetics and Perception
References Further Reading
17 Hermeneutics and Ontology
The Hermeneutic Turn of Philosophy and the Ontological Turn of Hermeneutics The Ontological Turn of Hermeneutics and the Hermeneutic Turn of Ontology in Heidegger's Early Path of Thinking: The Formation of a Hermeneutically Reshaped Phenomenology as Ontology Acknowledgment References
18 Narrative
Why Narrative? Defining Narrative Narrative, Explanation, and Understanding Narrative and Reality Denouement References
19 Rationality, Knowledge, and Relativism
References
20 Finitude
Finitude as the Bounds of Reason Finitude as the Facticity of Dasein Finitude as the Infinity of Experience Finitude as the Event of Dialogue References Further Reading
21 Authority
Introduction: The Vanishing and the Rehabilitation of Authority The Latin Origin of the Concept of Authority and Weber's Treatment Gadamer's Rehabilitation of Authority The Relation of Authority to Prejudice and Tradition Authority and the Author References
22 Subjectivity and Hermeneutics
Descartes, Kant, and the Modern Revolution Beyond Subjectivity: Heidegger, Marx, and Foucault Conclusion References
23 Biblical Hermeneutics
Premodern Biblical Hermeneutics Modern and Postmodern Biblical Hermeneutics References Further Reading
Part III: Key Concepts
24 Understanding
References
25 Interpretation, Judgment, and Critique
An Orientational Critique of Judgment Explanative and Interpretive Judgments References Further Reading
26 Word, Image, and Concept
Gadamer’s Account of the Speculative Dimension of Words References
27 Horizonality
References Further Reading
28 Application and Praxis
References
29 Dialectic
Plato and the Task of Becoming More Dialectical Language and the Speculative Dimension of Dialectic References
30 Play
Introduction Play, Historicity, and Universality Conclusion References
31 Sense and Meaning
Sense, Meaning, Intelligibility Aristotle’s De interpretatione 1–4 From Aristotle to Heidegger
32 Prejudice and Pre-Understanding
Conceptual History [Begriffsgeschichte] as Gadamer’s “Method” Heidegger’s Fore-Structure and Gadamer’s Elaboration on it in His Theory of Prejudice Enlightenment’s Prejudice against Prejudice Itself and Prejudices as Necessary Conditions for the Understanding of Finite Beings Acknowledgment References
33 On the Manifold Senses of Mimesis
I II III IV V References
34 The Hermeneutical Circle
References
35 Metaphor and Symbol
References
36 Dialogue, Goodwill, and Community
References
37 Textuality
References
38 Lived Experience
Erlebnisse and Lebenswelt Erlebnisse: Circular versus Recursive Erfahrungen as Hermeneutic Encounters The Wisdom of Lived (Hermeneutic) Experience References
Part IV: Major Figures
39 Martin Luther
Luther’s Theological Framework Luther’s Biblical Hermeneutics References
40 August Boeckh
Introduction Biography Boeckh’s Contribution to Hermeneutics Conclusion References
41 Immanuel Kant
Religious Interpretation Interpreting Nature Reflective Interpretation References Further Reading
42 G. W. F. Hegel
Experience and Interpretation Identity and Social Self-Interpretation Beyond Method: Contradiction Conclusion
43 F. D. E. Schleiermacher
Intellectual and Cultural Context Schleiermacher’s Hermeneutics References
44 Friedrich Nietzsche
References
45 Wilhelm Dilthey
References Further Readings
46 Edmund Husserl
The Correlation between Consciousness and Object Hermeneutic Elements in Phenomenology References
47 Martin Heidegger
The Hermeneutic Concept of World The Priority of Understanding over Perception The Fore-Structure of Understanding Cognition as a Mode of Interpretation References Further Reading
48 Hans-Georg Gadamer
Vita The Philosophical Hermeneutics of Truth and Method Debates References Bibliography On Gadamer
49 Mircea Eliade
The Symbol as a Dimension of Consciousness The Method for Establishing the Symbol as a Valid Form Conclusion References
50 Paul Ricoeur
Ricoeur’s Path to Hermeneutics Ricoeur’s Mature Conception of Hermeneutics Ricoeur’s Place in the Hermeneutic Tradition References
51 E. D. Hirsch
Biography Contribution to Hermeneutics References
52 Michel Foucault
Introduction Archaeology Genealogy The Problem of Power Conclusion References
53 Gianni Vattimo
References Books by Vattimo in English Translation Other Reading
54 Karl-Otto Apel
References
55 Jürgen Habermas
References Further Reading
56 Richard Rorty
Rorty’s Entanglements with Hermeneutics Is Rorty a Hermeneutical Philosopher? References
57 Günter Figal
The Hermeneutical Epochē Objectivity Aesthetics References
Part V: Philosophical Intersections and Encounters
58 Hermeneutics and Phenomenology
Phenomenology as Possibility and Its Role as “Guide” and “Path” for Hermeneutics Phenomenology Is a “Hermeneutic” in Three Senses of This Word “Grafting” Phenomenology onto Hermeneutics Phenomenology and Hermeneutics: A Relationship of “Mutual Belonging” References
59 Hermeneutics and Deconstruction
References
60 Hermeneutics, Politics, and Philosophy
Universality and Redemption Disorientation and the Philosophical and Political Project of Gadamer’s Hermeneutics Conversation and Agreement Tradition and Politics Politics and Power Conclusion References
61 Hermeneutic Philosophy of Science
References
62 Hermeneutics and Pragmatism
Hermeneutics and Classical Pragmatism Neo-Pragmatism and Hermeneutics References
63 Hermeneutics and Education
References
64 Hermeneutics and Critical Theory
Adorno: From Idealism’s Principle of Identity to Negative Dialectics Gadamer: From Dialectics to Dialogue Dialectics between Dialogue and Critique References
65 Hermeneutics and Theology
Christological Hermeneutics Trinitarian Hermeneutics The Eucharist’s Endless Hermeneutics Conclusion: Witnesses and Testaments References
66 Hermeneutics and Rhetoric
The Ancient Context Rhetoric and Audience The Legal Context Maimonides versus Spinoza and Biblical Hermeneutics Last Words References
67 Hermeneutics
References
68 Hermeneutics and Feminist Philosophy
Applications in Philosophy Feminist Modifications and Subversions Contributions by Female Authors “Tradition” as a Performative Conceptual Opposition and the Tradition References Further Reading
69 Hermeneutics and the Analytic–Continental Divide
Two Heterogeneous Fields Origins: Frege and Husserl Historical Origins of the Antagonism Make It Explicit! References
70 Hermeneutics and Humanism
Gadamer: “The Significance of the Humanist Tradition for the Human Sciences” A Short Hermeneutic Scrutiny of the Concept of Humanism: Hermeneutics from a Humanistic and Humanism from a Hermeneutic Perspective Acknowledgment References
71 Hermeneutics and Law
A Hermeneutical Phenomenology of Legal Practice Hermeneutical Themes Conclusion References
Index End User License Agreement
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion