HERMENEUTICS AND RECEPTION AESTHETICS SUMMER SEMESTER 2019 2020

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HERMENEUTICS AND RECEPTION AESTHETICS SUMMER SEMESTER 2019 -2020 5 th Lecture

HERMENEUTICS AND RECEPTION AESTHETICS SUMMER SEMESTER 2019 -2020 5 th Lecture

Gadamerian philosophy draws its philosophical grounds from Martin Heidegger’s thought. • This philosophy turns

Gadamerian philosophy draws its philosophical grounds from Martin Heidegger’s thought. • This philosophy turns traditional perspective we are used to. – 1. things as present-at-hand precede bare facts; practice precedes theoretical thought – 2. assertion as a derivative mode of fundamental hermeneutic interpretation – 3. every meaning depends on „circular structure of understanding“ which is embedded in the temporality of Dasein × traditional epistemology, scientific approach. • See previous 3 rd and 4 th lecture

Heidegger × Gadamer – Heidegger as a radical adversary of science and technology. He

Heidegger × Gadamer – Heidegger as a radical adversary of science and technology. He makes no effort to ground his philosophy in epistemology but goes back before Plato‘s metaphysics to archaic Greeks thought. – Metaphysik × Denken [Thought] – “Die Wissenschaft denkt nicht. “ – “Science does not think. ” × – Gadamer, on the contrary, aims at the methodology of human sciences by employing Heideggerian new philosophical perspective.

Methodology of the human sciences as a big issue of the 19 th century

Methodology of the human sciences as a big issue of the 19 th century – Development of human sciences (Geisteswissenschaften, sciences sociales/sciences morales). – Many attempts to establish their methodological grounds and find for them a unified method derived from natural sciences. – Natural sciences (Naturwissenschaften, sciences naturelles) as a model for human sciences.

John Stuart Mill – the inductive method is the only method valid in both

John Stuart Mill – the inductive method is the only method valid in both natural and human fields. They are “concerned with establishing similarities, regularities, and conformities to law which would make it possible to predict individual phenomena and processes. ” – One does not ascertain causes for particular effects, but simply establishes regularities. The ideal of physics (Newton’s laws of motion, Archimides’ law) – Human sciences are less exact and complete than natural sciences but are reducible to one principle: physics – meteorology – history. – Discrimination of humanities, reductionism

Gadamer • The knowledge in the human sciences does not consist in capturing a

Gadamer • The knowledge in the human sciences does not consist in capturing a particular phenomenon as a case of general rule. • the individual case does not serve only to confirm a law from which practical predictions can be made • E. g. : knowledge of a historical event: requires an understanding of the phenomenon itself in its unique and historical concreteness × regular law.

Rector‘s Speech of Hermann Helmholtz – Über das Verhältnis der Naturwissenschaften zur Gesamheit der

Rector‘s Speech of Hermann Helmholtz – Über das Verhältnis der Naturwissenschaften zur Gesamheit der Wissenschaften (1862) [On the Relation of the Natural Sciences to Science in General] – In this speech, Helmholtz makes a distinction between natural a human sciences. – Natural sciences = methods of logical induction; from the given material they point out definable rules and laws. × – Human sciences = psychological tact, “artisticinstinctive induction”; a well-stocked memory and the acceptance of authorities.

– According to Gadamer, Helmholtz’s comparison is just and accurate. It is a first

– According to Gadamer, Helmholtz’s comparison is just and accurate. It is a first explicit declaration that the method of natural sciences is not a binding standard. – Gadamer analyses this short and occasional text of physicist Helmholtz by ignoring vast epistemological discussions from the late 19 th century that strived to establish a method for human sciences (Dilthey, Weber, Neo-Kantianism). He finds them infertile. – critique of attempts to establish a scientific character of the human sciences

A tension between individual tact and the model of natural sciences • Human sciences

A tension between individual tact and the model of natural sciences • Human sciences resist to be integrated (more precisely subordinated) to the modern concept of science, thus they remain a problem of philosophy. • The nature of human sciences can be better understood from concepts that the humanist tradition has implemented

Humanist tradition of the 18 th Century – or German classics; traditions of artists,

Humanist tradition of the 18 th Century – or German classics; traditions of artists, aestheticians, essayists, non-epistemologically oriented philosophers, but also philologists and historians. – E. g. Herder, Lessing, Schiller, Goethe, Winckelmann. – This tradition had a strong influence on German romanticism and German idealistic philosophy. – The humanist tradition exceeded the obsolete ideal of taste which was binding for the period of the rational Enlightenment. It is as well independent on epistemological requirements of philosophy (philosophy whose ideal is the scientific method). – Bildung, sensus communis, judgment, taste.

 • Read: H. -G. Gadamer, The Significance of the Humanist Tradition for the

• Read: H. -G. Gadamer, The Significance of the Humanist Tradition for the Human Sciences, in Truth and Method, p. 3– 8.