The Relativity of Interpretation

The Monist 69 (1):103-118 (1986)
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Abstract

What makes an interpretation good? This question defines an area where the concerns of philosophers and literary theorists coincide. One sort of response, which stresses the relativity of interpretation to the interests, purposes, and background beliefs of interpreters, increasingly commands the attention of both groups, though it is hard to get past one’s initial reaction, favorable or not, to the accompanying displays of rhetorical plumage. In this essay I shall try to do just that, in the hope of seeing what the relativity of interpretation consists in and whether it need lead to the consequences that make some people pine for universal constraints and determinate meanings.

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Citations of this work

Comments on six responses to democracy and tradition.Jeffrey Stout - 2005 - Journal of Religious Ethics 33 (4):709-744.
The truth of religious narratives.Gary L. Comstock - 1993 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 34 (3):131 - 150.

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