TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1 Introduction: Hermeneutics and Philosophy, Jeff Malpas; Part I Hermeneutic Origins; Chapter 1a Hermeneutics in Greek Philosophy, Francisco Gonzalez; Chapter 2 Hermeneutics in Medieval Thought, Mauricio Beuchot, Juan Tubert-Oklander; Part II Hermeneutic Thinkers; Chapter 3 Spinoza and Vico: a New Science of Interpretation, Leonardo Amoroso, Aidan Butler; Chapter 4 Wolff, Chladenius, Meier: Enlightenment and Hermeneutics, Frederick Beiser; Chapter 5 Ast and Schleiermacher: Hermeneutics and Critical Philosophy, Gunter Scholtz; Chapter 6 Dilthey: Hermeneutics and Neo-Kantianism, Rudolf A. Makkreel; Chapter 7 Nietzsche and the Ubiquity of Hermeneutics, Babette Babich; Chapter 8 Barth and Bultmann: Theological Hermeneutics, John E. Wilson; Chapter 9 Heidegger: Transformation of Hermeneutics, Ingo Farin; Chapter 10 Strauss: Hermeneutics or Esotericism?, Catherine H. Zuckert, Michael Zuckert; Chapter 11 Gadamer: the Universality of Hermeneutics, Hans-Helmuth Gander; Chapter 12 Ricoeur: The Long Way of Hermeneutics, Jean Grondin; Chapter 13 Lonergan's Hermeneutics, Frederick G. Lawrence; Chapter 14 Pareyson and Vattimo: from Truth to Nihilism, Gaetano Chiurazzi; Chapter 15 Collingwood and Oakeshott: History and Idealism, Giuseppina D’Oro; Chapter 16 Macintyre and Taylor: Traditions, Rationality, and Modernity, Arto Laitinen; Chapter 17 Davidson and Rorty: Triangulation and Anti-Foundationalism, Bjørn Torgrim Ramberg; Chapter 18 Brandom and Mcdowell: Hermeneutics and Normativity, Glenda Satne; Part III Hermeneutic Questions; Chapter 19 Rationality and Method, Ambrosio Velasco Gómez; Chapter 20 Being and Metaphysics, Santiago Zabala; Chapter 21 Language and Meaning, Daniel Dahlstrom; Chapter 22 Truth and Relativism, Paul Healy; Chapter 23 History and Historicity, Kristin Gjesdal; Chapter 24 Ethics and Community, Hans-Herbert Kögler; Chapter 25 Politics and Critique, Michael Marder; Chapter 26 Dialogue and Conversation, James Risser; Chapter 27 Text and Translation, Dennis J. Schmidt; Chapter 28 Place and Situation, Jeff Malpas; Chapter 29 Symbol and Allegory, William Franke; Chapter 30 Life and World, Eric S. Nelson; Chapter 31 Nature and Environment, Brian Treanor; Chapter 32 Self and Narrative, Shaun Gallagher; Part IV Hermeneutic Engagements; Chapter 33 Hermeneutics, Epistemology, and Science, Fred D'Agostino; Chapter 34 Hermeneutics and Literature, Andrew Bowie; Chapter 35 Hermeneutics, Religion, and God, Jean Greisch; Chapter 36 Hermeneutics, Jurisprudence and Law, Ralf Poscher; Chapter 37 Hermeneutics and Rhetoric, John Arthos; Chapter 38 Hermeneutics and Intercultural Understanding, Bruce Janz; Chapter 39 Hermeneutics and the Social Sciences, William Outhwaite; Chapter 40 Hermeneutics, Race and Gender, Tina Fernandes Botts; Chapter 41 Hermeneutics, Aesthetics and the Arts, Beata Sirowy; Chapter 42 Hermeneutics and Education, Paul Fairfield; Chapter 43 Hermeneutics, Health and Medicine, Fredrik Svenaeus; Chapter 44 Hermeneutics, Architecture and Design, Richard Coyne; Part V Hermeneutic Challenges and Dialogues; Chapter 45 Hermeneutics and Phenomenology, Robert Dostal; Chapter 46 Hermeneutics and Deconstruction, Donatella Di Cesare; Chapter 47 Hermeneutics and Critical Theory, Nicholas H. Smith; Chapter 48 Hermeneutics and Pragmatism, Endre Begby; Chapter 49 Hermeneutics and Psychoanalysis, Philippe Cabestan; Chapter 50 Hermeneutics and Language Philosophy, Lee Braver; Chapter 51 Hermeneutics and Feminism, Georgia Warnke; Chapter 52 Hermeneutics, Structuralism and Post-Structuralism, Nicholas Davey; Chapter 53 Hermeneutics and Confucianism, Kathleen Wright; Chapter 54 Hermeneutics and Judaic Thought, Andrew Benjamin; Chapter 55 Arabic and Islamic Hermeneutics, Ebrahim Moosa; Chapter 57 Conclusion: The Future of Hermeneutics, Gianni Vattimo, Faustino Fraisopi;