Hermeneutics, Practical Wisdom, and Cognitive Poetics Do We Know More Than We Can Tell in Literary Interpretation?

被引:0
作者
Zheng, Yi [1 ]
机构
[1] Free Univ Berlin, Peter Szondi Inst Comparat Literature, Berlin, Germany
来源
LILI-ZEITSCHRIFT FUR LITERATURWISSENSCHAFT UND LINGUISTIK | 2021年 / 51卷 / 04期
关键词
Hermeneutics; Practical Wisdom; Gadamer; Tacit Knowledge; Implicit Memory; Literary Interpretation; SCIENCE; NEUROBIOLOGY; INFERENCES; KNOWLEDGE; EXPLICIT; MEMORY; TEXT;
D O I
10.1007/s41244-021-00238-8
中图分类号
H [语言、文字];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
It may seem trivial to stress that our background knowledge is essential for literary interpretation, but what about practical wisdom, the inarticulable background knowledge? Can we articulate all the things that we know and are able to do in literary interpretation? Are we fully aware of all the assumptions behind our literary arguments? Instead of generally reflecting the status of hermeneutics at a macro-level, this essay argues that one way for hermeneutics to remain meaningful today is not to be tried as a theoretical whole, but as a source of sporadic inspiring arguments. To show that, at a micro-level, we can evaluate the strength of these arguments case by case without generalizing, we analyze from a cognitive perspective Gadamer's argument that practical wisdom is crucial for literary interpretation. Using cognitive science to provide insights for literary study does not make the latter subservient to the former. Rather, cognitive poetics is a two-way street where each field complements the other by providing hypotheses and functioning as a testing ground. By demonstrating that we know more than we can tell in literary interpretation and that the three features Aristotle and Gadamer attribute to practical wisdom (contingent, inarticulable, and only learnable through experience) are at least tentatively empirically justified, this essay argues that hermeneutics has offered a noteworthy example for the two-way street of cognitive poetics.
引用
收藏
页码:833 / 843
页数:11
相关论文
共 78 条
[1]  
Alan Richardson., 2018, The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Science, P207, DOI [DOI 10.1017/9781139942096.012, 10.1017/9781139942096.012]
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1993, HERMENEUTIK WAHRHEIT
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2009, MEMORY METAPHORS MEA
[4]  
Aristotles, 2009, NICOMACHEAN ETHICS
[5]  
Armstrong PaulB., 2014, How Literature Plays with the Brain: The Neuroscience of Reading and Art
[6]   HERMENEUTICS TODAY SOME SKEPTICAL REMARKS [J].
BIRUS, H .
NEW GERMAN CRITIQUE, 1987, (42) :71-78
[7]  
Bortolussi M., 2015, Investigations into the phenomenology and the ontology of the work of art, P31, DOI [10.1007/978-3-319-14090-2_3, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-14090-2_3]
[8]  
Br?llmann P., 2005, ARISTOTELES LEXIKON, P451
[9]   SCHEMA CRITICISM: LITERATURE, COGNITIVE SCIENCE, AND SOCIAL CHANGE [J].
Bracher, Mark .
COLLEGE LITERATURE, 2012, 39 (04) :84-+
[10]  
Burke M, 2011, ROUT STUD RHETORIC, P1