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Intro
The Roots of Hermeneutics in Kant's Reflective- Teleological Judgment
Copyright
Preface
References
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Gadamer - Benchmark of Hermeneutics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 The Hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer
1.3 The Dead Meanings of Romantic Hermeneutics
1.4 Gadamer's Dilthey
1.5 Gadamer's Conception of Language
1.6 Hermeneutic Circularity
1.7 Fusion of Horizons
1.8 What Is Understanding?
1.9 The Hermeneutics of Facticity

1.10 Historicalness, Wirkungsgeschichte, and Productive Prejudice
1.11 Tradition and Universal Hermeneutics
1.12 Gadamer's Failure to Distinguish Kant's and Romantic Subjectivity
1.13 Gadamer's Failure to Address Kant's Reflective-Teleological Judgment
References
Chapter 2: The Chiastic Structure of Kant's Critical Concepts
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The Chiasmus of Kant's Conceptual Architectonic
2.2.1 Formal Judgments
2.2.2 Mathematical Judgments
2.2.3 Pure Judgments
2.2.4 Empirical Judgments
2.2.5 Practical Judgments
2.2.6 Non-cognitive, Aesthetic Judgments

2.2.7 Cognitive Judgments about Art
2.2.8 Reflective-Teleological Judgment
2.2.9 The Primacy of Reflective-Teleological Reason
2.2.10 Projection
2.2.11 Systematicity
2.2.12 The Telos of the Moral
2.2.13 The Telos of Normativity
2.3 Justification for Generalizing Kant's Reflective-Teleological Procedure
References
Chapter 3: Kant's Proto-Hermeneutics
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The Dual Nature of Reflective and Teleological Reason
3.3 Parts and Wholes (Teile und Ganzes)
3.4 Wholes: From Conglomeration to System
3.5 Means and Ends (Mittel und Zwecke)

3.6 Proto-Hermeneutic Circularity
3.7 Purposiveness (Zweckmässigkeit)
3.8 Explaining, Interpreting, Understanding
3.9 The Social Dimension of Understanding (Verstand
Verstehen)
References
Chapter 4: Kant's Conception of Natural Language
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Kant's Linguistic Sign
4.2.1 Language as a Set of Signifiers
4.2.2 Kant's Motivated Signifieds
4.3 Kant on Syntax and Grammar
4.4 Schematism
4.4.1 Schematism as Procedure
4.4.2 Degrees of Schematization
4.5 Language as Erörterung (Discursive Deliberation
Exposition)

4.5.1 Kant's Tone as "Mode of Expression"
4.5.2 Circumlocution and the Language of Poetry
4.5.3 Discursive Reasoning in Reflective-Teleological Judgments
4.6 Conclusion: Kant's Contribution to the Theorization of Natural Language
References
Chapter 5: Ast, Schleiermacher, Dilthey: Hermeneutics as Inductive Reconstruction
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Friedrich Ast (1778-1841)
5.3 Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher (1768-1834)
5.4 Wilhelm Dilthey (1833-1911)
References
Chapter 6: Husserl and Ingarden: Hermeneutic Intentionality
6.1 Introduction

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