释义 |
Definition of hermeneutics in English: hermeneuticsplural noun ˌhəːmɪˈnjuːtɪksˌhərməˈn(j)udɪks usually treated as singular The branch of knowledge that deals with interpretation, especially of the Bible or literary texts. (尤指对《圣经》或文学文本的)解释学 Example sentencesExamples - Most of the chapters deal with hermeneutics, interpretation, or philosophy.
- It does not require great skills in biblical theology and hermeneutics and exegesis to understand God's message concerning the depth, extent, and significance of the Flood.
- The study of literature and history has of course taken many different forms as different ideas about the ontology of the text, hermeneutics, history, culture, and epistemology have waxed and waned.
- A gay man, he was known for his investigative work, delving into hermeneutics and literature, as well as giving seminars at Collège de France.
- Meanwhile, what of his implied connection between the critical biblical scholarship of authorially-oriented hermeneutics and the hegemonic mediation of the Bible by the medieval Catholic church?
- Ward's reason is that sufficiency ‘is a good analytical tool for setting the classical doctrine of Scripture in dialogue with contemporary hermeneutics and literary theory.’
- No theologian in the United States did more, though generally uncredited, to bring the biblical view of the ‘powers’ back onto the map of hermeneutics and theological ethics.
- Both postmodern hermeneutics and classical Jewish belief embody utmost significance in text and speech.
- James Packer's essay on hermeneutics predates Anthony Thiselton's efforts to increase hermeneutical awareness among evangelicals.
- Critical of unnecessary obscurity and jargon of modernist discourse, post-modernism has created a paralleled obscurity of hermeneutics, deconstruction and textual nihilism.
- Analytical psychology can make no claim, therefore, to be an experimental science, any more than psychoanalysis: it is best classified as a branch of hermeneutics - the art of interpretation in the service of meaning.
- His degree theses were about contemporary hermeneutics and the hermeneutics of Matthew.
- The dominant paradigm today for textual hermeneutics is that interpretation of any work involves merging the horizons of the contemporary reader's world with the world projected by the text.
- The question, then, is not whether hermeneutics will adopt a theological framework, but what kind it will adopt.
- His gambit is simple: that hermeneutics connects interpretation to ethics.
- Part of the deal with hermeneutics, by the way, is that texts are not homogenous.
- Reading biblical texts intertextually with a hermeneutics of other deconstructs the familiar and conventional.
- From the time of Blackstone, legal history remained the province of lawyers, whose labours of love bore more relation to the apologetic hermeneutics of Bible scholars than to ‘historical method’.
- In literary studies, this is a contrast between poetics and hermeneutics.
- Moreover, the playing field has been changed in the radical postmodern hermeneutic by the denial of an objective text, and by deconstruction and the hermeneutics of suspicion.
Definition of hermeneutics in US English: hermeneuticsplural nounˌhərməˈn(j)udɪksˌhərməˈn(y)o͞odiks usually treated as singular The branch of knowledge that deals with interpretation, especially of the Bible or literary texts. (尤指对《圣经》或文学文本的)解释学 Example sentencesExamples - A gay man, he was known for his investigative work, delving into hermeneutics and literature, as well as giving seminars at Collège de France.
- James Packer's essay on hermeneutics predates Anthony Thiselton's efforts to increase hermeneutical awareness among evangelicals.
- From the time of Blackstone, legal history remained the province of lawyers, whose labours of love bore more relation to the apologetic hermeneutics of Bible scholars than to ‘historical method’.
- Most of the chapters deal with hermeneutics, interpretation, or philosophy.
- Both postmodern hermeneutics and classical Jewish belief embody utmost significance in text and speech.
- Analytical psychology can make no claim, therefore, to be an experimental science, any more than psychoanalysis: it is best classified as a branch of hermeneutics - the art of interpretation in the service of meaning.
- His degree theses were about contemporary hermeneutics and the hermeneutics of Matthew.
- No theologian in the United States did more, though generally uncredited, to bring the biblical view of the ‘powers’ back onto the map of hermeneutics and theological ethics.
- The question, then, is not whether hermeneutics will adopt a theological framework, but what kind it will adopt.
- Moreover, the playing field has been changed in the radical postmodern hermeneutic by the denial of an objective text, and by deconstruction and the hermeneutics of suspicion.
- In literary studies, this is a contrast between poetics and hermeneutics.
- Ward's reason is that sufficiency ‘is a good analytical tool for setting the classical doctrine of Scripture in dialogue with contemporary hermeneutics and literary theory.’
- It does not require great skills in biblical theology and hermeneutics and exegesis to understand God's message concerning the depth, extent, and significance of the Flood.
- Reading biblical texts intertextually with a hermeneutics of other deconstructs the familiar and conventional.
- Meanwhile, what of his implied connection between the critical biblical scholarship of authorially-oriented hermeneutics and the hegemonic mediation of the Bible by the medieval Catholic church?
- The dominant paradigm today for textual hermeneutics is that interpretation of any work involves merging the horizons of the contemporary reader's world with the world projected by the text.
- Part of the deal with hermeneutics, by the way, is that texts are not homogenous.
- His gambit is simple: that hermeneutics connects interpretation to ethics.
- The study of literature and history has of course taken many different forms as different ideas about the ontology of the text, hermeneutics, history, culture, and epistemology have waxed and waned.
- Critical of unnecessary obscurity and jargon of modernist discourse, post-modernism has created a paralleled obscurity of hermeneutics, deconstruction and textual nihilism.
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