Hans-Georg Gadamer is one of the leading philosophers in the world
today. Since the publication in 1960 of his magnum opus Truth and
Method, his philosophical hermeneutics has been the focus of a great
deal of attention and controversy. His ideas have been applied to
questions of interpretation in the study of art and literature, to
issues of knowledge and objectivity in the social sciences, and even to
reevaluations of philosophy itself.
This book is a systematic introduction to Gadamer's work, presented with
a clarity of exposition and argument that makes it rewarding to
non-philosophers and philosophers alike. It is constructed around a
series of debates on historicism, authorial intention, subjectivism,
ideology, and the "New Pragmatism," and it pays particular attention to
how Gadamer's work has been interpreted and criticized by such
philosophers as Hirsch, Habermas, Apel, and Rorty. The dialogic form,
which is in itself a central feature of hermeneutic theory, gives the
book an immediacy that textual exegesis cannot achieve.
This is the first book in the series, Key Contemporary Thinkers, which
will make available the ideas of some of the most influential
philosophers of our time. The series will cut across academic
disciplines and will include books on European, British, and American
thinkers.