
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1989
Pages: 32-121
Series: Nijhoff international philosophy series
ISBN (Hardback): 9789401076128
Full citation:
, "The interpretive turn from Kant to Derrida", in: History and anti-history in philosophy, Berlin, Springer, 1989


The interpretive turn from Kant to Derrida
A critique
pp. 32-121
in: T. Z. Lavine, Victorino Tejera (eds), History and anti-history in philosophy, Berlin, Springer, 1989Abstract
The thematization of an interpretive element in experience and knowledge has been continuous in the general theory of knowledge since the late decades of the 18th century. Interpretation theory may be seen to have been initiated by Kant's critical philosophy as the epistemological culmination of Enlightenment modernity, reconciling its internal controversy between rationalism and empiricism. After Kant, the problems of interpretation and the clarification of a theory of interpretation became central to Hegel and Marx and to various 19th century social philosophies and philosophies of history; to 20th century pragmatism and sociology of knowledge; and to later 20th century transcendental phenomenology, ontological hermeneutics, critical theory, and deconstruction.
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1989
Pages: 32-121
Series: Nijhoff international philosophy series
ISBN (Hardback): 9789401076128
Full citation:
, "The interpretive turn from Kant to Derrida", in: History and anti-history in philosophy, Berlin, Springer, 1989