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Paul Ricoeur [1913-2005] French
Rank: 102
Philosopher


Jean Paul Gustave Ricœur was a French philosopher best known for combining phenomenological description with hermeneutics. As such, his thought is within the same tradition as other major hermeneutic phenomenologists, Martin Heidegger and Hans-Georg Gadamer. 

Wisdom, Legal



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Testimony should be a philosophical problem and not limited to legal or historical contexts where it refers to the account of a witness who reports what he has seen. Legal
101
For my own part, I abandon the ethics of duty to the Hegelian critique with no regrets; it would appear to me, indeed, to have been correctly characterized by Hegel as an abstract thought, as a thought of understanding.
102
If it is true that there is always more than one way of construing a text, it is not true that all interpretations are equal.
103
The logic of validation allows us to move between the two limits of dogmatism and skepticism.
104
It is always possible to argue against an interpretation, to confront interpretations, to arbitrate between them and to seek for an agreement, even if this agreement remains beyond our reach.
105
Narrative identity takes part in the story's movement, in the dialectic between order and disorder.
106
On a cosmic scale, our life is insignificant, yet this brief period when we appear in the world is the time in which all meaningful questions arise.
107
So long as the New Testament served to decipher the Old, it was taken as an absolute norm.
108
Testimony gives something to be interpreted.
109
The moral law commands us to make the highest possible good in a world the final object of all our conduct.
110
The text is a limited field of possible constructions.
111
This is perhaps the most profound meaning of the book of Job, the best example of wisdom. Wisdom
112
Hope, insofar as it is hope of resurrection, is the living contradiction of what it proceeds from and what is placed under the sign of the Cross and death.
113
If the Resurrection is resurrection from the dead, all hope and freedom are in spite of death.
114
Myth expresses in terms of the world - that is, of the other world or the second world - the understanding that man has of himself in relation to the foundation and the limit of his existence.
115
What must be the nature of the world... if human beings are able to introduce changes into it?
116
The narrative constructs the identity of the character, what can be called his or her narrative identity, in constructing that of the story told. It is the identity of the story that makes the identity of the character.
117
Testimony demands to be interpreted because of the dialectic of meaning and event that traverses it.
118
Man is this plural and collective unity in which the unity of destination and the differences of destinies are to be understood through each other.
119
Wisdom finds its literary expression in wisdom literature. Wisdom
120
Although there has always been a hermeneutic problem in Christianity, the hermeneutic question today seems to us a new one.
121
First, it is not unimportant that the legislative texts of the Old Testament are placed in the mouth of Moses and within the narrative framework of the sojourn at Sinai.
122
Ordinary language carries with it conditions of meaning which it is easy to recognize by classifying the contexts in which the expression is employed in a meaningful manner.
123
The Law is one aspect of a much more concrete and encompassing relation than the relation between commanding and obeying that characterizes the imperative.
124
There has always been a hermeneutic problem in Christianity because Christianity proceeds from a proclamation.
125
There is no shorter path for joining a neutral existential anthropology, according to philosophy, with the existential decision before God, according to the Bible.
126
But myth is something else than an explanation of the world, of history, and of destiny.
201

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