viernes, 9 de noviembre de 2012

Radical Hermeneutics: Repetition, Deconstruction, and the Hermeneutic Project - John D. Caputo

Radical hermeneutics forges a closer collaboration between hermeneutics and deconstruction than has previously been attempted. For John D. Caputo, hermeneutics means radical thinking without transcendental justification: attending to the ruptures and irregularities in existence before the metaphysics of presence has a chance to smooth them over. Deconstruction belongs integrally to the hermeneutic project as conceived by Caputo. Part One shows how Kierkegaardian repetition and Husserlian constitution are fused in Heidegger's classic hermeneutic statement, Being and Time. Part Two takes up the radicalization of Husserl's and Heidegger's questioning carried out by Derrida. Here, Caputo urges a more radical reading of Heidegger as well as a more hermeneutic reading of Derrida. Part Three argues that radical thinking is not an exercise in nihilism, as its critics charge, but a renewed vigilante about the gaps and differences inherent in our experience. Caputo projects the possibility of a postmetaphysical conception of rationality, an ethics of dissemination, and a notion of faith liberated from the ontotheo-logic. Radical hermeneutics addresses the most trenchant issues in recent Continental thought in a lively, lucid, and unusually readable style.

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