This study brings together ideas developed over many years in various lectures in an endeavour to clarify the concept of hermeneutic fore-structure of scientific research. The starting point of my investigations was the outline of an interp- tative approach to the constitution of science's cognitive content. In the late 1970s I was preoccupied with a question that nowadays should be formulated as follows: Is it possible to claim a validity of the hermeneutic view of the "situatedness in a tradition" also for the natural sciences? I was convinced that the negative answer implies a…mehr
This study brings together ideas developed over many years in various lectures in an endeavour to clarify the concept of hermeneutic fore-structure of scientific research. The starting point of my investigations was the outline of an interp- tative approach to the constitution of science's cognitive content. In the late 1970s I was preoccupied with a question that nowadays should be formulated as follows: Is it possible to claim a validity of the hermeneutic view of the "situatedness in a tradition" also for the natural sciences? I was convinced that the negative answer implies a self-defeating position. It states that in order to champion the (cultural) universality of hermeneutics, one has to profess the non-hermeneutic nature of the natural sciences. Paradoxically enough, this a- wer presupposes a sharp dividing line (between dialogical experience and monological research) in culture in order to stress the universality of hermeneutics. Long before the period of perestroika in my corner, I learned from Joseph Kockelmans, Patrick Heelan, and Theodore Kisiel how the universalization of hermeneutics can include the natural sciences without ignoring their cognitive specificity. Somewhat later, in the aftermath of the discussions over the "finalization of science", I began to confront the view that it would be a kind of trivializing the struggle for a philosophical hermeneutics if the theory-observation nexus is treated as a specific hermeneutic circle. No doubt, the view is correct. I was, however, dissatisfied with the way of arguing for it.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science 247
Artikelnr. des Verlages: 11680499, 978-1-4020-4712-1
Seitenzahl: 258
Erscheinungstermin: 6. Juni 2006
Englisch
Abmessung: 244mm x 163mm x 15mm
Gewicht: 1230g
ISBN-13: 9781402047121
ISBN-10: 1402047126
Artikelnr.: 20946671
Autorenporträt
Dimitri Ginev, Prof. Dr., Studium von Medizin, Kunstgeschichte und hermeneutischer Methodologie in Sofia, wo er als außerordentlicher Universitätsprofessor lehrt. Forschungsaufenthalte und Gastprofessuren in Marburg, Düsseldorf, Berlin, Bielefeld, Bremen, Bochum, Leipzig, Melbourne und Pittsburgh sowie an der Western Kentucky University, der Penn State University und der Catholic University of America. Seit 1995 Mitglied der New York Academy of Sciences.
Inhaltsangabe
Ideas for the situatedtranscendence of scientific research.- Reformulating the concept of "normal science" in the framework of hermeneutic phenomenology.- Hermeneutic phenomenology of scientific research.- The normativity of normal science: hermeneutic contextualism and proto-normativity.
Ideas for the situatedtranscendence of scientific research.- Reformulating the concept of "normal science" in the framework of hermeneutic phenomenology.- Hermeneutic phenomenology of scientific research.- The normativity of normal science: hermeneutic contextualism and proto-normativity.
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