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Language, Philosophy of, 20th Century German Philosophy, Philosophers - Biography
Hans-Georg Gadamer by Jean Grondin β€” book cover

Hans-Georg Gadamer

by Jean Grondin, Joel Weinsheimer (Translator)
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Overview

Hans-Georg Gadamer (1900-2002) was one of the greatest philosophers of our era. He was also at the center of some of the century's darkest, most complex historical events, for he chose to remain in his native Germany in the 1930s, neither supporting Hitler nor actively opposing him, but negotiating instead an "unpolitical" position that allowed him to continue his philosophical work. In this magisterial book, Jean Grondin appraises Gadamer's life and achievement.

Drawing on countless interviews with Gadamer and his contemporaries, Gadamer's personal correspondence, and extensive archival research, Grondin traces Gadamer's life as an academician and the development of his ideas, placing them in the context of his times. He sheds light on the genesis and accomplishment of Gadamer's major opus, Truth and Method, the bible of modern-day hermeneutics. And he addresses the question of Gadamer's attitude and actions amid the catastrophe of Nazi Germany, painting a balanced portrait of a scholar who tried to preserve German culture and tradition in the face of an invasive menace.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Educated in both philology and philosophy, Gadamer (1900-2002) lived a rich and variegated intellectual life embedded in a century of political extremism and cultural evolution. Grondin (philosophy, Univ. of Montreal) uses large and illuminating strokes to depict the development of Gadamer from shy and obedient German schoolboy through his university apprenticeships to Plato and Heidegger, exasperatingly slow rise through the ranks of academia in a Germany on the verge of war, first explorations of the postwar world beyond Germany, preliminary retirement in his seventh decade, and rich work in hermeneutics, which he conducted at universities in Italy and America, right through to his essay responding to 9/11. While Gadamer's intellectual accomplishments are substantial, his self-effacing personality made him accessible even to young graduate students, and Grondin's biography offers both sides of the man, showing that for Gadamer, "Philosophy begins and ends in the Socratic admission of one's own ignorance." That makes him important for our age and, perhaps, all thinking ages to come.-Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley P.L., CA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 30, 2011
Publisher
Yale University Press
Pages
528
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780300180169

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