Schleiermacher

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FriedrichSchleiermacher

Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834) was a German philosopher known as the father of modern theology and also as the father of modern hermeneutics. He transformed the hermeneutics from Biblical hermeneutics to general hermeneutics which includes all kinds of texts. Texts refer not only to written text but also to conversation and understanding. Schleiermacher recognizes two aspects of interpretation: grammatical and psychological.

In the grammatical interpretation it is important to understand the text. Therefore you have to understand words to understand sentences, sentences to understand paragraphs and further to understand the whole text. This made a circle because you have to understand the whole text to understand individual sentences and you have to understand individual sentences to understand the whole text. This is what Schleiermacher calls the ‘hermeneutical circle’. This hermeneutical method is a back-and-forth movement of information and when there is more information exchanged the understanding will be better.

References

Rutt, J. On Hermeneutics. Vinddatum 24-10-2012 op: http://nb.vse.cz/kfil/elogos/student/rutt.pdf

Contributors

  • Page enhanced by KoenMolenaar 26-10-2012
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