Justice and Interpretation

Capa
MIT Press, 1993 - 178 páginas

In this book, she traces the myriad ways in which interpretive perspectives have come to prominence in modem political philosophy.

Georgia Warnke began her career by studying the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer, the foremost contemporary proponent of hermeneutics, a philosophical approach that centers on interpretation as dialogue across times and cultures. In this book, she traces the myriad ways in which interpretive perspectives have come to prominence in modem political philosophy. Focusing on the work of John Rawls, Michael Walzer, Ronald Dworkin, Charles Taylor, Alasdair MacIntyre, and Jurgen Habermas, Warnke finds an increasing concern with the grounding of political norms in communal values rather than on abstract, universal principles. Warnke develops the implications of this hermeneutic turn in political philosophy, identifying and defining a range of unresolved problems and suggesting a new model of democracy that takes free and equal discussion and mutual education as its primary values.

 

Conteúdo

Walzer and Social Interpretation
13
Rawls Pluralism and Pragmatic Hermeneutics
38
Legal Interpretation and Constraint
62
Habermas and the Conflict of Interpretations
87
Dealing with Interpretive Conflict
111
Hermeneutic Conversation and the Critique of Ideology
135
Conclusion
158
Index
175
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