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  1. “Instincts into sacred cows”: Are hermeneutical universalsreducibleto agreement? Reply to Friedman.Ingrid Harris - 1994 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 8 (1):113-136.
    Jeffrey Friedman's claim that arbitrariness is the inevitable result of the rejection of objectivist notions of truth misses its mark because it is based on a sense of ?agreement? that is radically at odds with the concept of agreement at work in hermeneutical practice. The rationalist notion of truth Friedman upholds cannot escape the need for agreement any more than the hermeneutical notion; the central distinction between the two senses of ?agreement? is the distinction between coercion and consent. Hermeneutical practice (...)
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  • From Husserl to de beauvoir: Gendering the perceiving subject.Debra B. Bergoffen - 1996 - Metaphilosophy 27 (1-2):53-62.
    This paper breaks ranks with those philosophers and feminists who either ignore de Beauvoir or find her passé. It argues that de Beauvoir is fundamentally a philosopher; that one of her crucial contributions to philosophy was to identify the erotic as a philosophical category; and that we best understand de Beauvoir's place in the feminist and philosophical fields if we read her as a phenomenologist who reworks Husserl's theory of intentionality and who, in this reworking, steps out of Sartre's shadow (...)
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  • A Pandemic Refocuses Bioethics on “The Big Questions”.Brian M. Cummings & John J. Paris - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (12):51-54.
    To paraphrase Lewis Carroll’s poem “The Walrus and the Carpenter” from his Through the Looking Glass, “The time has come to talk of many things.” Not as the Walrus did in the nursery rhyme, “of sho...
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  • “Instincts into sacred cows”: Are hermeneutical universalsreducibleto agreement? Reply to Friedman.Ingrid Harris - 1994 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 8 (1):113-136.
    Jeffrey Friedman's claim that arbitrariness is the inevitable result of the rejection of objectivist notions of truth misses its mark because it is based on a sense of “agreement” that is radically at odds with the concept of agreement at work in hermeneutical practice. The rationalist notion of truth Friedman upholds cannot escape the need for agreement any more than the hermeneutical notion; the central distinction between the two senses of “agreement” is the distinction between coercion and consent. Hermeneutical practice (...)
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