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  1. Imagination and Knowledge in the Metaphorology of Paul Ricœur.Graziella Travaglini - 2019 - Theoria 85 (5):383-401.
    This article seeks to examine Ricœur's reflection on metaphor through an intertextual reading. This reading relates The Rule of Metaphor (1975) with lines of thought developed in a series of lectures held at the Centre de recherches phénoménologiques in Paris, from 1973–1974, on the theme From Language to Image, and an essay which appeared in 1978, “The Metaphorical Process as Cognition, Imagination and Feeling”. This work starts with an analysis of Ricœur's interpretation of the Aristotelian theory of metaphor, a theory (...)
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  • (1 other version)Recovering the Moment.Kenton Engel - 2018 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 18 (2):109-117.
    What is a moment? While Heidegger considers the moment (Augenblick) hermeneutically in the first division of Being and Time, he abandons the thoroughly hermeneutic account in an ecstatic analysis of time in the second. In this paper, I explore the moment in the direction of hermeneutic temporality and finite comprehensibility. I begin by describing how Heidegger’s ecstatic analysis by its very nature forecloses the possibility of the average, everyday constitution of the moment. I then attempt a broader recovery of hermeneutic (...)
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  • Books Received: The following books have been received and many of them are still available for review. Interested reviewers please contact the reviews editor: [email protected][REVIEW][author unknown] - 2012 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 20 (1):149-162.
    Abensour, M., Democracy Against the State: Marx and the Machiavellian Moment.. Polity, 2011. Pbk £15.99. Acampora, C. D. and Pearson, K.A., Nietzsche’s Beyo...
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  • Practical Hermeneutics: the Legal Text and Beyond.George H. Taylor - 2017 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 48 (3):257-274.
    This article attempts to show the continuing practical relevance of hermeneutics through the example of legal interpretation. The article begins with the very concrete nature of legal hermeneutics that forms everyday legal practice – the interrelation of meaning and application – and expands at a more theoretical to show how legal hermeneutics, and hermeneutics more generally, offers what Ricoeur calls an interpretive “choice in favor of meaning.” The choice in favour of meaning underscores the restorative character of hermeneutics that legal (...)
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  • Aesthetic Horizons: A Phenomenologically Motivated Critique of Zuidervaart.Eric Chelstrom - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 3 (1):1-14.
    One of the more ambitious and yet fruitful attempts in recent years to untangle general questions about the nature of aesthetic phenomena and their socially constituted nature rests in Lambert Zuidervaart’s critical hermeneutical theory of artistic truth. In this paper, I explore one part of Zuidervaart’s project, namely his conception of “aesthetic validity as a horizon of imaginative cogency.” I seek to develop Zuidervaart’s conception by bringing his thesis into dialogue with phenomenological analyses of “horizon” and the collective intentional approach (...)
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  • (1 other version)Recovering the Moment.Kenton Engel - 2018 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 18 (2):109-117.
    What is a moment? While Heidegger considers the moment (Augenblick) hermeneutically in the first division of Being and Time, he abandons the thoroughly hermeneutic account in an ecstatic analysis of time in the second. In this paper, I explore the moment in the direction of hermeneutic temporality and finite comprehensibility. I begin by describing how Heidegger’s ecstatic analysis by its very nature forecloses the possibility of the average, everyday constitution of the moment. I then attempt a broader recovery of hermeneutic (...)
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