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Titel
The Cambridge companion to Gadamer / edited by Robert Dostal (Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania)
HerausgeberDostal, Robert J. In der Gemeinsamen Normdatei der DNB nachschlagen In Wikipedia suchen nach Robert J. Dostal
ErschienenCambridge ; New York ; Port Melbourne ; New Delhi ; Singapore : Cambridge University Press, 2021
Ausgabe
Second edition
Umfangix, 445 Seiten
SerieCambridge companions to philosophy
SchlagwörterGadamer, Hans-Georg In Wikipedia suchen nach Hans-Georg Gadamer / Hermeneutik In Wikipedia suchen nach Hermeneutik / Philosophie In Wikipedia suchen nach Philosophie / Gadamer, Hans-Georg In Wikipedia suchen nach Hans-Georg Gadamer / Bibliografie In Wikipedia suchen nach Bibliografie
ISBN978-1-108-83040-9
ISBN978-1-108-81629-8
ISBN978-1-108-83040-9
Links
Download The Cambridge companion to Gadamer [0,23 mb]
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Verfügbarkeit In meiner Bibliothek
Archiv METS (OAI-PMH)
Zusammenfassung

"In 1960 Hans-Georg Gadamer, then a sixty-year-old German philosophy professor at Heidelberg, published Truth and Method (Wahrheit und Methode). Although he had authored many essays, articles, and reviews, to this point Gadamer had published only one other book, his habilitation on Plato in 1931: Plato's Dialectical Ethics. As a title for this work on a theory of interpretation, he first proposed to his publisher, Mohr Siebeck, "Philosophical Hermeneutics." The publisher responded that "hermeneutics" was too obscure a term. Gadamer then proposed "Truth and Method" for a work that found, over time, great resonance and made "hermeneutics" and Gadamer's name commonplace in intellectual circles worldwide. Truth and Method has been translated into many languages, including Chinese and Japanese. It found and still finds a receptive readership, in part, because, as the title suggests, it addresses large and central philosophical issues in an attempt to find a way between or beyond objectivism and relativism, and scientism and irrationalism. He accomplishes this by developing an account of what he takes to be the universal hermeneutic experience of understanding. Understanding, for Gadamer, is itself always a matter of interpretation. Understanding is also always a matter of language. "Being that can be understood is language," writes Gadamer in the culminating section of the work in which he proposes a "hermeneutical ontology" (TM 432)"--