The Hermeneutic Productivity of the Familiar
From the morass of the unfamiliar and strange, humans seem to acquire language or other forms of understanding by known quantities.
From the morass of the unfamiliar and strange, humans seem to acquire language or other forms of understanding by known quantities.
Presuppositions that remain unacknowledged at least to oneself can still exercise strong influence. Indeed, [a] person who believes he is free of prejudices, relying on the objectivity of his procedures and denying that he is himself conditioned by historical circumstances, experiences the power of the prejudices that unconsciously dominate him as a vis a tergo. A person who does not admit that he is dominated by prejudices will fail to see what manifests itself by their light [because it will not be foregrounded from them] (Gadamer, Truth and Method, 2006, 354 and Gadamer, Truth and Method, 2013, 369). ...