The Prussian Sphinx

Idealistic Studies 25 (3):255-280 (1995)
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Abstract

Unhappy with a recent submission of mine, a referee for a journal specialising in the history of philosophy wagged a finger at what he or she called my ‘hermeneutical principles’. Though I am no stranger to the collegial woodshed, my initial reaction was nonetheless one of surprise. For had I then been asked about interpretive methodology I would have scoffed. The construer’s best course, I would have said, is to nose about the texts until some rough shape begins to emerge from the murk, and to inch forward in an effort to block in details, frequently doubling back for more nosing about. Isn’t this —fill, back, adjust, refill, back again, re-adjust—a counsel of anti-method?

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The Prussian Sphinx.Mark Glouberman - 1995 - Idealistic Studies 25 (3):255-280.
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Mark Glouberman
Kwantlen Polytechnic University

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