MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Monday October 27, 2025
Jump to navigationJump to search
116 bytes added
, 16:18, 13 August 2011
| Line 2,529: |
Line 2,529: |
| | | | |
| | ====Points==== | | ====Points==== |
| | + | |
| | + | {| align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="90%" |
| | + | | |
| | + | <p>If exegesis raised a hermeneutic problem, that is, a problem of interpretation, it is because every reading of a text always takes place within a community, a tradition, or a living current of thought, all of which display presuppositions and exigencies — regardless of how closely a reading may be tied to the ''quid'', to “that in view of which” the text was written.</p> |
| | + | |- |
| | + | | align="right" |Paul Ricoeur, ''The Conflict of Interpretations'', [Ric, 3] |
| | + | |} |
| | | | |
| | <pre> | | <pre> |
| − | If exegesis raised a hermeneutic problem, that is, a problem of interpretation, it is because every reading of a text always takes place within a community, a tradition, or a living current of thought, all of which display presuppositions and exigencies — regardless of how closely a reading may be tied to the quid, to "that in view of which" the text was written.
| |
| − | Paul Ricoeur, The Conflict of Interpretations, [Ric, 3]
| |
| − |
| |
| | Point 1. Thought takes place in signs. | | Point 1. Thought takes place in signs. |
| | | | |