Radical Hermeneutics
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- Indiana University Press
- https://www.pubmatch.com/INDIANA.html
More About This Title Radical Hermeneutics
- English
English
“This is a remarkable book: wide-ranging, resonant, and well-written; it is also reflective and personable, warm and engaging.” —Philosophy and Literature
“With this book Caputo takes his place firmly as the foremost American, continental post-modernist . . . ” —International Philosophical Quarterly
“One cannot but be impressed by the scope of Radical Hermeneutics.” —Man and World
“Caputo’s study is stunning in its scope and scholarship.” —Robert E. Lauder, St. John’s University, The Thomist
For John D. Caputo, hermeneutics means radical thinking without transcendental justification: attending to the ruptures and irregularities in existence before the metaphysics of presence has a chance to smooth them over. Radical Hermeneutics forges a closer collaboration between hermeneutics and deconstruction than has previously been attempted.
“With this book Caputo takes his place firmly as the foremost American, continental post-modernist . . . ” —International Philosophical Quarterly
“One cannot but be impressed by the scope of Radical Hermeneutics.” —Man and World
“Caputo’s study is stunning in its scope and scholarship.” —Robert E. Lauder, St. John’s University, The Thomist
For John D. Caputo, hermeneutics means radical thinking without transcendental justification: attending to the ruptures and irregularities in existence before the metaphysics of presence has a chance to smooth them over. Radical Hermeneutics forges a closer collaboration between hermeneutics and deconstruction than has previously been attempted.
- English
English
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Introduction: Restoring Life to Its Original Difficulty
Part One: Repetition and the Genesis of Hermeneutics
CHAPTER I. Repetition and Kinesis: Kierkegaard on the Foundering of Metaphysics
CHAPTER II. Repetition and Constitution: Husserl’s Proto-Hermeneutics
CHAPTER III. Retrieval and the Circular Being of Dasein: Hermeneutics in Being and Time
Part Two: Deconstruction and the Radicalization of Hermeneutics
CHAPTER IV. Hermeneutics after Being and Time
CHAPTER V. Repetition and the Emancipation of Signs: Derrida on Husserl
CHAPTER VI. Hermes and the Dispatches from Being: Derrida on Heidegger
CHAPTER VII. Cold Hermeneutics: Heidegger/Derrida
Part Three: The Hermenuatic Project
CHAPTER VIII. Toward a Postmetaphysical Rationality
CHAPTER IX. Toward an Ethics of Dissemination
CHAPTER X. Openess to the Mystery
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Introduction: Restoring Life to Its Original Difficulty
Part One: Repetition and the Genesis of Hermeneutics
CHAPTER I. Repetition and Kinesis: Kierkegaard on the Foundering of Metaphysics
CHAPTER II. Repetition and Constitution: Husserl’s Proto-Hermeneutics
CHAPTER III. Retrieval and the Circular Being of Dasein: Hermeneutics in Being and Time
Part Two: Deconstruction and the Radicalization of Hermeneutics
CHAPTER IV. Hermeneutics after Being and Time
CHAPTER V. Repetition and the Emancipation of Signs: Derrida on Husserl
CHAPTER VI. Hermes and the Dispatches from Being: Derrida on Heidegger
CHAPTER VII. Cold Hermeneutics: Heidegger/Derrida
Part Three: The Hermenuatic Project
CHAPTER VIII. Toward a Postmetaphysical Rationality
CHAPTER IX. Toward an Ethics of Dissemination
CHAPTER X. Openess to the Mystery
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index