This volume explores the connections between John McDowells philosophy and the hermeneutic tradition. The contributions not only explore the hermeneutical aspects of McDowells thought, but also asks how this reading of McDowell can inform the hermeneutical tradition itself.
This volume explores the connections between John McDowells philosophy and the hermeneutic tradition. The contributions not only explore the hermeneutical aspects of McDowells thought but also ask how this reading of McDowell can inform the hermeneutical tradition itself.
John McDowell has made important contributions to debates in epistemology, metaethics, and philosophy of language, and his readings of Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, and Wittgenstein have proved widely influential. While there are instances in which McDowell draws upon the work of hermeneutic thinkers, the hermeneutic strand of McDowells philosophy has not yet been systematically explored in depth. The chapters in this volume open up a space in which to read McDowell himself as a hermeneutic thinker. They address several research questions: How can McDowells recourse to the hermeneutical tradition be understood in detail? Besides Gadamer, does McDowells work implicitly convey and advance motives from other seminal figures of this tradition, such as Heidegger and Dilthey? Are there aspects of McDowells position that can be enhanced through a juxtaposition with central hermeneutic concepts like World, Tradition, and Understanding? Are there further, perhaps yet unexplored aspects of McDowells infl uences that ought to be interpreted as expressing hermeneutic ideas?
McDowell and the Hermeneutic Tradition
will appeal to researchers and advanced students working in American philosophy, Continental philosophy, hermeneutics, history of philosophy, philosophy of language, and epistemology.
Preface John McDowell Introduction Thomas J. Spiegel and Daniel Martin
Feige
1. The Quiet Hermeneutics of John McDowell Sabina Lovibond
2. On
Recognizing and Bridging the Gap between Analytic and Continental
Philosophy Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer
3. Precariousness and the Situated Space
of Reasons Shaun Gallagher
4. McDowells Theory of Perceptual Experience and
the Rapprochement between Hermeneutics and Cognitive Sciences Nadja El Kassar
5. Liberalizing Second Nature: McDowell, Dilthey, and the Sociality of Reason
Eric S. Nelson
6. Second Nature, Hermeneutics, and Objective Spirit Thomas J.
Spiegel
7. Gadamer According to McDowell, McDowell According to Gadamer: A
Meditation on Some Common Themes Sebastian Luft
8. Indeterminate Life. Themes
of a Hermeneutical Anthropology in Gadamer and McDowell Daniel Martin Feige
9. Coming Full Circle: Experience, Tradition, and Critique in Gadamer and
McDowell David Lauer
10. McDowell and the Hermeneutic Approach to the History
of Philosophy Yael Gazit
11. The Fragility of Reflection and the Spectrum of
Nature. McDowell, Brandom, and the Debate between Hermeneutics and Critical
Theory Italo Testa
Daniel Martin Feige is Professor of Philosophy and Aesthetics at the Stuttgart State Academy of Art and Design. His research focuses on topics in philosophical aesthetics and philosophical anthropology in their relation to topics in theoretical and practical philosophy. His latest book is Die Natur des Menschen: Eine dialektische Anthropologie (Berlin: Suhrkamp 2022).
Thomas J. Spiegel is Humboldt/JSPS postdoctoral fellow at Waseda University. He studied philosophy in Berlin, London, Tokyo, Pittsburgh, and Leipzig. He received his PhD in 2017 from the University of Leipzig under the supervision of Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer and Robert Brandom.