A Heideggerian Phenomenological Perspective on the Concept of Person… Not Functionalist or Deterministic
LEONARD, V.W. (1994)
A Heideggerian Phenomenological Perspective on the Concept of Person. In: P.
BENNER (Ed.), Interpretive Phenomenology: Embodiment, Caring, and Ethics in
Heath and Illness. Sage Publications, Inc. pp43-64
“Disputes in hermeneutic interpretation resolve
based on the plausibility of alternative interpretations, and the plausibility
of an interpretation, cannot be reduced to a-priori-derived, cut-and-dried
criteria.” (p61)
Annotation: Ihde
(2009) states that a criticism of phenomenology is that it is perceived as
antiscientific and “locked into idealism
or solipsism” (p23). Hirsch (1967, p166) criticises the hermeneutic circle’s
circularity of thinking as an imprisonment of thought that can lead to
self-confirming hypotheses in the interpreter. The nature of interpretation as understood within a holistic and phenomenological
perspective acknowledges that a ‘correct’ interpretation cannot be produced by functionalist
or deterministic hard science, as science is not suited to the explaining how
humans process and experience the world. From a functionalist and deterministic
perspective the hermeneutic
methods are viewed at best with scepticism and at worst academic hostility.
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