| Charles Taylor - 1985 - 352 strani
...reading can only be other readings. The circle can also be put in terms of part— whole relations: we are trying to establish a reading for the whole...depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole. Put in forensic terms, as we started to do above, we can only convince an interlocutor if at some point... | |
| Thomas J. Sergiovanni, John E. Corbally - 1986 - 358 strani
...context seeking everenriched meanings. The circle can also be put in terms of part-whole relations: we are trying to establish a reading for the whole...depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole [C. Taylor 1971, 4]. Understanding means going in circles: rather than a unilinear progress toward... | |
| Paul Rabinow, William M. Sullivan - 1987 - 408 strani
...this reading can only be other readings. The circle can also be put in terms of part-whole relations: we are trying to establish a reading for the whole...depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole. Put in forensic terms, as we started to do above, we can only convince an interlocutor if at some point... | |
| Michael Martin, Lee C. McIntyre - 1994 - 818 strani
...this reading can only be other readings. The circle can also be put in terms of part-whole relations: we are trying to establish a reading for the whole...depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole. Put in forensic terms, as we started to do above, we can only convince an interlocutor if at some point... | |
| Massimo Ammaniti, Daniel N. Stern - 1994 - 240 strani
...meanings assigned the whole of a text (say a story) and its constituent parts. As Charles Taylor puts it, "we are trying to establish a reading for the whole...on those of others, and ultimately of the whole." 13 This is probably nowhere better illustrated than in narrative. The accounts of protagonists and... | |
| Jerome Bruner - 1996 - 246 strani
...laws of necessary reason, but by reference to other alternative readings. As Charles Taylor puts it, "We are trying to establish a reading for the whole...expressions depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole."21 Since the meanings of the parts of a story are "functions" of the story as a whole, and,... | |
| David I. Kertzer, Thomas Earl Fricke - 1997 - 304 strani
...this reading can only be other readings. The circle can also be put in terms of part-whole relations: we are trying to establish a reading for the whole text, and for this we appeal to the readings of its partial expressions" (Taylor 1985:17-18). This may be the most difficult characteristic... | |
| Hwa Yol Jung - 2002 - 468 strani
...interpretation, he states the case as follows: "The circle can also be put in terms of partwhole relations: we are trying to establish a reading for the whole text, and — 381 — for this we appeal to readings of its partial expressions; and yet because we are dealing... | |
| Mieke Bal - 2004 - 456 strani
...meanings assigned the whole of a text (say a story) and its constituent parts. As Charles Taylor puts it, "we are trying to establish a reading for the whole...expressions depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole."12 This is probably nowhere better illustrated than in narrative. The accounts of protagonists... | |
| Jolita Pons - 2004 - 250 strani
..."The circle can also be put in terms of part-whole relations: we are trying to establish a reading of the whole text, and for this we appeal to readings...expressions depend on those of others, and ultimately of the whole."23 Heidegger gives the "hermeneutic circle" — which previously bore only an epistemological... | |
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