137 research outputs found
"Protecting" the Sufferer
This editorial is in response to J.K. Amundson's article in 2019Â The Special Obligation of the Sufferer
Editorial: Following Good Leads
This is the fifth and final editorial to accompany the last installment of John Williamson's The Case of the Disappearing/Appearing Slow Learner: An Interpretive Mystery. In this editorial, I talk about the intention of publishing Williamson's work in this way as a unique example of applied hermeneutic research. I also discuss what the work teaches us in hermeneutic research: the importance of following good leads
Book Review: "The Responsibility to Understand: Hermeneutical Contours of Ethical Life" by Professor Theodore George
This paper is a book review of Professor Theodore George’s recent book, The Responsibility to Understand: Hermeneutical Contours of Ethical Life, published by Edinburgh University Press (2020). The review is directed towards not only the book itself but its applicability to applied hermeneutics and the ways that hermeneutic philosophy and hermeneutics research have been taken up in practice disciplines. Not written as a typical book review, this paper is more of a dialogue and conversation I had, and continue to have, with the book
Dr. David Jardine and the "Descartes Lecture": Twenty Years of Miraculous Returns
http://hdl.handle.net/10515/sy5th8c3
Editorial: A Caution with Questions
This editorial discusses how questions can be overused and serve to distance rather than engage as intended
Grief and Hermeneutics: Archives of Lives and the Conflicted Character of Grief
For Dad...thank you the treasures you left behind
Editorial: Watching My Mother Die - Subjectivity and the Other Side of Dementia
In this editorial, the authors discuss the idea of subjectivity as an often levelled criticism of qualitative reasearch, challenging the binary divide between subjective and objective. As an example of what could be "accused" of being a subjective account, Moules then discusses her experience of being at the other end of her mother's recent encounter with dementia
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