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Theory, Culture & Society
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Looking Back with Gadamer Over his Writings and their Effective History

A Dialogue with Jean Grondin (1996)

Hans-Georg Gadamer

Jean Grondin

In this interview with Jean Grondin, Gadamer discusses the meaning ‘linguisticality’ and acknowledges his intellectual debt to Heidegger, Augustine, Vico and classical Greek philosophy. Heidegger’s influence on Gadamer can be seen in Gadamer’s awareness of pernicious ontological effects of the Latinization of European language, his awareness of the centrality of technology to the understanding of contemporary philosophical problems and the idea that ‘language speaks’. From Augustine, Gadamer derived his theory of the word as that which cannot be known and brought under control; from Vico the idea that language is rhetorical; and from classical philosophy the Aristotelian idea of phronesis and the Platonic idea that the idea of beauty is inseparable from the idea of the good. Gadamer concludes the interview with a discussion of the need for humanity to overcome its present fascination with technology.

Key Words: classical philosophy • Heidegger • history • language • technology

Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 23, No. 1, 85-100 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0263276406063230


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