Introduction to Gadamer
* - Book: Gadamer. By Patricia A. Johnson. Wadsworth,
URL =
Summary
From the reading notes of Michel Bauwens, 2006
Gadamer, in his analysis of art and aesthetic consciousness in 'Truth and Method', shows that the experience of art invalidates the subject-object distance, i.e. the "inadequacy of a dualistic self-understanding that places people at an epistemological distance from the world in which they live. He develops a similar critique of historical consciousness, as creating an object in time: "the essential nature of the historical spirit consists not in the restoration of the past, but in the thoughtful mediation with contemporary life.
Gadamer also rehabilitates prejudice: such pre-understanding (f.e. of the student in the teacher or of the child in the parent) is essential to understanding, which is to be thought less as a subjective act, than as participating in an event of tradition.
Understanding is a historically effected event. To be historical means that knowledge of oneself can never be complete. We also speak from a situation and cannot go outside it to see ourselves from an objective distance. In the first two parts of Truth and Method, dealing with aesthetic and historical consciousness, Gadamer aims to overcome the alienation of Enlightenment thinking by overcoming the absolute subject-object divide by a relative one. We are never really separate from our objects and from the past, we are constantly re-mediating these meanings as part of a spatial and temporal community. But the medium of this ongoing dialogue is language, and it is this that he examines in the third part of the book.
His essential thesis is: language is NOT a tool, but the medium in which we live (like the air we breathe). Understanding, i.e. interpretation, is finding the 'right language' to appropriate (make into one's own), the object of meaning.