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On the ground of understanding

In Brice R. Wachterhauser (ed.), Hermeneutics and truth. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press. pp. 68--82 (1994)

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  1. Gadamer in the English-Speaking World.Jeff Malpas & Niall Keane - 2025 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 56 (1):3-17.
    Providing a summary history of the reception of Gadamer's work in English across a range of disciplines from literature to philosophy, this essay also explores elements of both influence and convergence connecting Gadamer's thinking with that of several key figures in twentieth century analytic philosophy.
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  • Gadamer and Davidson on Language and Thought.David Vessey - 2012 - Philosophy Compass 7 (1):33-42.
    Recently philosophers interested in bridging the gap between continental and analytic philosophy have looked to connecting Hans‐Georg Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics with Donald Davidson’s philosophy of language. Both seem to share a number of positions, and each was familiar with the other’s writings. In this essay, I look at Davidson’s criticisms of Gadamer’s hermeneutics—in particular Gadamer’s view that dialogue always depends on a shared language and, when successful, produces a new common language to understand a topic. I argue that Davidson’s objections (...)
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  • Making Public Policy Matter: The Hermeneutic Dimension.Paul Healy - 2014 - Cosmos and History 10 (2):278-299.
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  • From Object to Other: Models of Sociality after Idealism in Gadamer, Levinas, Rosenzweig, and Bonhoeffer.Christopher J. King - 2017 - Dissertation, University of South Florida
    This dissertation offers an account of the different ways in which putatively idealist and transcendental models of sociality, which grounded the subject’s relation to other human beings in the subject’s own cognition, were rejected and replaced. Scrapping this account led to a variety of models of sociality which departed from the subject as the ground of sociality, positing grounds outside of the subject. Hans-Georg Gadamer, Emmanuel Levinas, Franz Rosenzweig, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer represent alternative positions along a spectrum of models of (...)
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