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If none of this simply dissolves the evidence that the phenomenologist seeks to interrogate or the judgments that result from this interrogation--indeed, if it still must be claimed that there are instances in which it would be irrational to judge otherwise and that we are morally obligated at times to confront both the complexity of their limits, the summons of their responsibility, and the heterogeneous interface between interpretation and community. Indeed, in many ways, as has been seen, the problem of this interface has accompanied the itinerary of phenomenology itself--one that doubtless bears thinking and rethinking.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
If none of this simply dissolves the evidence that the phenomenologist seeks to interrogate or the judgments that result from this interrogation--indeed, if it still must be claimed that there are instances in which it would be irrational to judge otherwise and that we are morally obligated at times to confront both the complexity of their limits, the summons of their responsibility, and the heterogeneous interface between interpretation and community. Indeed, in many ways, as has been seen, the problem of this interface has accompanied the itinerary of phenomenology itself--one that doubtless bears thinking and rethinking.
Autorenporträt
Lenore Langsdorf is Professor of Communication at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. She is coeditor of Recovering Pargmatism's Voice: The Classical Tradition, Rorty, and the Philosophy of Communication also published by SUNY Press, and editor of the SUNY Press series in the Philosophy of the Social Sciences. Stephen H. Watson is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Extensions: Essays on Interpretation, Rationality, and the Closure of Modernism and coeditor (with Arleen B. Dallery and E. Marya Bower) of Transitions in Continental Philosophy, both published by SUNY Press. E. Marya Bower is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Earlham College.