2024-03-29T11:30:27Z
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/oai
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/37
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/37
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2010); 87-98
Narrative Refiguration of Social Events: Paul Ricoeur's Contribution to Rethinking the Social
Borisenkova, Anna; Centre for Fundamental Sociology
University - Higher School of Economics
2010-12-29
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/37
Event
Narrative
Event-Event Causation
Ricoeur
Davidson
Configuration
Emplotment
Refiguration
en_US
The analysis of events has been a central issue for social sciences for a long time. The problem of an event's definition and distinction is still at stake in sociological debates. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the contribution of Paul Ricoeur's narrative theory to social events studies. First, this is done through the explication of the concept in the framework of narrative approach. Secondly, the paper highlights the narrative's capacity of 'refiguring' the social by re-describing social events, subordinating their succession to the logic of story-telling and transforming temporal characteristics as well. Apart from some insights, interpretative explanations and illustrations the paper provides critical arguments concerning the limitations of Paul Ricoeur's narrative approach with respect to sociological event-analysis. L'analyse des événements a toujours été une question centrale pour l'histoire et les sciences sociales. Le problème de la définition et de la distinction des événements est encore en jeu dans les débats sociologiques contemporains. L'objectif de cet article est de s'attarder sur la contribution de la théorie de Paul Ricœur aux études des événements sociaux. Après avoir montré les limites d'une conception impersonnelle de l'événement, l'auteur se penche sur la solution narrative proposée par Ricœur, à savoir la capacité du récit à “refigurer” du Social par la re-description des événements sociaux. Il s'agit de soumettre la logique de la succession temporelle à la logique de la narration. Tout en rendant justice à la valeur heuristique de telles analyses (à travers une série d'explicitations et d'illustrations), l'article pointe les limites de l'approche narrative de Paul Ricœur au regard des analyses sociologique des événements.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/42
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/42
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 2 No. 1 (2011); 168-178
Towards a Phenomenology of Memory and Forgetting
Dessingué, Alexandre; Université de Stavanger, Norvège
2011-06-10
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/42
Memory
History
Forgetting
Phenomenology
Hermeneutics
en_US
Differences and trends in the discourse of memory in France have been consistent since the publication by Henri Bergson of Matter and Memory in 1896. In History, Memory and Forgetting published in 2000, Ricœur’s approach goes further than Bergson, Durkheim and Halbwachs. The memory issue in Ricœur is closely linked to a “hermeneutics of the self” that he already introduced in Oneself as Another in 1990. It seems that the traditional paradigm between individual and collective memory has been replaced by the affirmation of the dialogical nature of memory related to the dialogical nature of being a self and an other.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/43
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/43
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 2 No. 1 (2011); 179-197
Prendre Soin: Anamnèse, Témoignages, Aveux, Preuves documentaires
Lucas, Jean-Pierre; Médecin généraliste
2011-05-08
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/43
Relation de soin
Symptômes
Témoignages
Aveux
Preuves documentaires
Anamnèse
fr_CA
La relation de soin est une aventure historique partagée et bien singulière. Le sujet souffrant, ses proches et les soignants sont les co-auteurs de l'historiographie des rencontres itératives. Cela construit un système complexe de sens lié à l'interaction entre l'ensemble des témoignages avec les aveux à soi-même et avec l'archivage de preuves documentaires sous la forme d'un dossier médical partagé.L'anamnèse est un travail sur les mémoires enchevêtrées, elle s'élabore sur les oublis réactivés dans la trame du texte qui se construit au prétexte des symptômes perçus et exprimés. C'est donc à partir d'une phénoménologie que se développe une herméneutique clinique.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/51
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/51
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 2 No. 1 (2011); 150-167
Narrative Identity against Biographical Illusion: The Shift in Sociology from Bourdieu to Ricœur
Truc, Gérôme; Institut Marcel Mauss - EHESS/ CNRS Paris
2011-06-29
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/51
Personal Identity
Narrative Identity
Biographical Illusion
Pierre Bourdieu
Sociology
en_US
Since the publication of Oneself as Another, many sociologists have referred to the work of Paul Ricœur, some of them considering his notion of narrative identity to be a useful means of analyzing some aspects individual identity left unresolved by Bourdieu’s notion of habitus. Bourdieu had, however, already discredited the sociological relevance of the notion of narrative in his 1986 article “The Biographical Illusion.” Through a careful re-reading of both texts, this article will determine to what extent the sociological use of Ricœur’s notions can escape the confines of Bourdieu’s analysis and, moreover, the different conceptions of the human being and of ethics underlying the two distinct frameworks of analysis.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/60
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/60
2020-07-22T14:33:34Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 2 No. 2 (2011); 146-170
Genèse phénoménologique de la reconnaissance: La chair, l’autre et le corps propre
Tiaha, David-Le-Duc; David-Le-Duc TIAHA est dominicain et doctorant en Philosophie à Paris à l'Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), à la Faculté de Philosophie de l'Institut Catholique de Paris (ICP) et auprès du Fonds Ricoeur.
2011-06-09
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/60
Chair
Corps propre
Donation
Intersubjectivité
Soi
fr_CA
En amont des représentations collectives et des formes instituées de la vie sociale, cet article se propose d’étudier l’articulation de l’intersubjectivité et de l’incarnation dans la constitution du soi et de l’autre comme une genèse phénoménologique de la reconnaissance à travers la lecture ricoeurienne de la cinquième des Méditations cartésiennes publiée dans À l’école de la phénoménologie. Lors de la donation du sens ego dans l’intersubjectivité, la constitution de la reconnaissance sur le plan de la perception se fait grâce aux distinctions entre corps (Körper) et chair (Leib) d’une part, et, d’autre part entre chair (Leib) et corps propre (Leibkörper). L’analyse des textes sur "Le sentiment,” repris dans À l’école de la phénoménologie, et sur "La fragilité affective" dans L’homme faillible, propose une phénoménologie de la reconnaissance sur le plan de l’affection. Le désir est révélé par le "sentiment ontologique" comme la racine affective de l’intersubjectivité dont les modalités sont objectivées par les dimensions économique, politique et culturelle de l’espace social correspondantes aux requêtes affectives différenciées de la reconnaissance sociale telles que l’avoir, le pouvoir et le valoir.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/61
2017-02-01T19:39:13Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/61
2017-02-01T19:39:13Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 1 (2012); 132-143
Looking for the Just
Pellauer, David; DePaul University, USA
2012-06-25
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/61
Alterity
Justice
Violence
Mutual recognition
Tolerance
en_US
This essay explores the idea of the just which allowed Ricoeur to move beyond and expand the “little ethics” presented in Oneself as Another. One key development is that he moves beyond the idea of solicitude as a kind of benevolent spontaneity on the basis of the insight that not all intersubjective relations are face-to-face. This recognition that who the other is can be important allows him to show why the just is a notion that explicitly arises at the level of the distant and often anonymous other, which is that of social and political institutions where the question of justice rather than friendship is central. Another related development is that the idea of reciprocity is shown still to fall short of truly mutual recognition. Pursuing a just solution to social problems leads to the question of a limited but bounded pluralism and a concomitant role for tolerance at the level of society and politics.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/73
2017-02-01T19:39:14Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/73
2017-02-01T19:39:14Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 1 (2012); 156-171
La conception ricœurienne de la raison pratique: Dialectique ou éclectique?
Jaffro, Laurent; Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
2012-06-25
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/73
Ethics
Univeralization
Paul Ricœur
Kant
Aristotle
fr_CA
This article examines and discusses the presuppositions behind the answer that Paul Ricœur brought to the question “What is practical reason?” in a series of studies that led to the “little ethics” of Oneself as Another. The conception defended by Ricœur is presented as a sort of reconciliation, or composition, of Aristotelian ethics and Kantian morality. Two problems in particular are raised: the first is raised by the questionable nature of Ricœur’s interpretation of the positions that he synthesizes; the second concerns the model - dialectic or eclectic – of this synthesis.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/103
2017-02-01T19:39:16Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/103
2017-02-01T19:39:16Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 1 (2012); 144-155
Le premier écrit philosophique de Paul Ricœur: Méthode réflexive appliquée au problème de Dieu chez Lachelier et Lagneau
Vallée, Marc-Antoine; École des hautes études en sciences sociales
2012-06-25
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/103
Reflexive Philosophy
Idealism
Immanence
God
Evil
fr_CA
This paper proposes a presentation and an analysis of the first philosophical writing of Paul Ricœur, on the problem of God in the reflexive philosophies of Lachelier and Lagneau. His principal aim is to situate this first writing in the context of Ricœur’s philosophical work, by underlining his belonging to the french reflexive tradition and his refusing of the absolute idealism of Lachelier and Lagneau. The author insists more precisely on the realistic and personalist thesis of the young Ricœur and on the appearance of the problem of evil in his work.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/113
2017-02-01T19:39:35Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/113
2017-02-01T19:39:35Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 2 (2012); 149-170
"As if" and the Surplus of Being in Ricoeur's Poetics
Helenius, Timo; Boston College
2012-12-14
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/113
poetics
ontology
polysemy
metaphor
en_US
Based on the double character of “as if,” it is argued in this paper that “the surplus of meaning” turns out to be “the surplus of being,” which reveals a human being who interprets his or her own being and also acknowledges this being as be-ing at the same time. In this article, 1) the notion of “as if” is retrieved from Ricoeur’s early work in relation to the “poetics of being” aspired to by him. This leads us to 2) examine the relation between the “semantic surplus” and the “becoming of being.” 3) Addressing the problem of metaphorical reference, the key philosophical problem of poetics, is, therefore, inevitable. Only after this analysis will we 4) be able to consider whether there is a kind of “poetics of being” in the work of Paul Ricoeur.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/114
2017-02-01T19:39:18Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/114
2017-02-01T19:39:18Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 1 (2012); 172-193
Aesthetic Experience, Mimesis and Testimony
Savage, Roger W. H.; University of California at Los Angeles, USA
2012-06-25
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/114
Aesthetic experience
Mimesis
Judgment
Testimony
en_US
In this article, I relate the demand that Paul Ricoeur suggests mimesis places on the way we think about truth to the idea that the work of art is a model for thinking about testimony. By attributing a work’s epoché of reality to the work of imagination, I resolve the impasse that arises from attributing music, literature, and art’s distance from the real to their social emancipation. Examining the conjunction, in aesthetic experience, of the communicability and the exemplarity of a work reveals how Ricoeur’s definition of mimesis as refiguration relates to the “rule” that the work summons. This “rule” constitutes the solution to a problem or question for which the work is the answer. In conclusion, as a model for thinking about testimony, the claims that works make have a counterpart in the injunctions that issue from exemplary moral and political acts.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/130
2017-02-01T19:39:38Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/130
2017-02-01T19:39:38Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 2 (2012); 110-127
L’Imagination poético-pratique dans l’identité narrative
Amalric, Jean-Luc; Université de Montpellier
2012-12-14
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/130
imagination
narrative identity
poetic
practical
figure
fiction
fr_CA
Starting from a genesis of the concept of narrative identity, this article attemps to interpret the constitution process of our narrative identities through a systematic and synthetic review of the main contributions of the Ricœurian theory of imagination, from Freedom and Nature to Oneself as Another. In its complex imaginative constitution, narrative identity can then be characterized as a poetico-practical mix that mediates and puts in a dialectical relation two distinct functions of the imagination: a poetic and a practical one, which are themselves enlivened by a dialectic and an internal duplication.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/132
2017-02-01T19:39:40Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/132
2017-02-01T19:39:40Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 3 No. 2 (2012); 128-148
Le concept de “hantises”: de Derrida à Ricœur (et retour)
Stavo-Debauge, Joan; Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaires Démocratie, Institutions, Subjectivité (Université Catholique de Louvain) et Groupe de Sociologie Politique et Morale (EHESS).
2012-12-14
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/132
Memory
History
Social Sciences
Trauma
fr_CA
This article considers Derrida’s and Ricœur’s take on the concept of haunting (hantise). Begining with Derrida’s use of the concept in Specters of Marx, the article then turns to Ricœur’s two rather distinct conceptions of the phenomenon of haunting (hantise) in Memory, History, Forgetting and in The Course of Recognition. After assessing the different uses of this concept in Ricœur’s work, the article frames a new understanding of this phenomenon, one that is suitable for the social and historical sciences.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/154
2017-02-01T19:39:56Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/154
2017-02-01T19:39:56Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 1 (2013); 170-183
Paul Ricœur: Variations et continuité d'un projet politique
Monteil, Pierre-Olivier; EHESS (Paris)
2013-01-29
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/154
fr_CA
Les commentateurs s’accordent pour constater une évolution dans la pensée politique de Ricœur conduisant d’un radicalisme à un réformisme. Par-delà ces variations, on se propose plutôt de mettre en évidence la continuité d’un projet. Non seulement la critique du capitalisme se poursuit jusqu’au bout, mais la perspective du socialisme semble très tôt tenue pour improbable. Dans les deux cas, la préoccupation centrale porte sur la nécessité de raviver les traditions et de faire émerger l’élan initial sous la doctrine “ossifiée ” en les situant en tension critique entre elles pour qu’elles se corrigent mutuellement. Le projet politique de Ricœur consiste à établir en vis-à-vis libéralisme et socialisme.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/156
2017-02-01T19:39:58Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/156
2017-02-01T19:39:58Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 1 (2013); 140-158
Hermeneutics and Truth: From Alētheia to Attestation
Purcell, Sebastian; Department of Philosophy
SUNY-Cortland
2013-01-29
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/156
Aletheia
Attestation
Events
Heidegger
Truth
Finitude
en_US
This essay aims to correct a prevalent misconception about Paul Ricoeur’s hermeneutics, which understands it to support a conception of human understanding as finite as Heidegger did, but in a more “conceptuallyconservative” way. The result is that Ricoeur’s work is viewed as incapable of addressing the most pressingproblems in contemporary Continental metaphysics. In response, it is argued that Ricoeur is in fact the firstto develop an infinite hermeneutics, which departs significantly from Heideggerian finitude. This positionis demonstrated by tracing the itinerary from Heidegger’s account of aletheia to Ricoeur’s account ofattestation. The conclusion, then, not only clears Ricoeur of the stated charges, but also presents a moreviable path for the future of hermeneutics.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/160
2017-02-01T19:40:22Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/160
2017-02-01T19:40:22Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 2 (2013); 90-107
Ricoeur and Foucault: Between Ontology and Critique
Gamez, Patrick; University of Notre Dame
2014-01-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/160
Foucault
critique
ontology
history
historiographyFoucault
historiography
en_US
In this paper, I trace some of Ricoeur’s criticisms of Foucault in his major works on historiography, and evaluate them. I find that Ricoeur’s criticisms of Foucault’s archaeological project in Time and Narrative are not particularly worrisome, and that Foucault’s “critical” project actually provides alternatives for enriching and expanding on some of Ricoeur’s later insights in Memory, History, Forgetting and – in particular – for troubling the distinction made between critique and ontology.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/163
2017-02-01T19:39:59Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/163
2017-02-01T19:39:59Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 1 (2013); 130-139
Ricœur's Freud
Bernstein, Richard J.; New School for Social Research
2013-05-22
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/163
Freud
Psychoanalysis
Hermeneutics
Dialectic
en_US
Ricoeur’s reading of Freud is one of the most comprehensive, perceptive and judicious explications of Freudianism—one that begins with his early “Project” of 1895 and culminates with the last book that Freud published, Moses and Monotheism. Ricoeur is successful in exposing some of the weaknesses in Freud, and even more importantly, why we need to move beyond Freud. I am deeply sympathetic with his claim that there is a dialectical relationship between a hermeneutics of suspicion and a restorative hermeneutics of meaning—and that they are integral to each other. And I also think he is successful in showing how, if we relentlessly pursue the logic of Freud’s thinking, we are led beyond Freud. But, even though he gives some indications of how such dialectic is to be developed, this remains a task (an Aufgabe) that lies before us.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/167
2017-02-01T19:40:05Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/167
2017-02-01T19:40:05Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 1 (2013); 159-169
The Paris Debate: Ricœur’s Public Intervention and Private Reflections on the Status and Meaning of Christian Philosophy in the 1930s
Sohn, Michael; Institut protestant de théologie/EHESS (Paris)
2013-06-06
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/167
Christian Philosophy
Reason
Faith
Immanence
Transcendence
en_US
This article explores Paul Ricœur’s early writings in the 1930s on Christian philosophy. It seeks to contextualize both his published and unpublished works from that period within the robust historical, philosophical and theological debates in Paris between the leading intellectuals of the time: Bréhier, Gilson, Blondel, Brunschvicg, Marcel, Maury, de Lubac, and Barth. The article proceeds to examine Ricœur’s own position within these debates.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/199
2017-02-01T19:40:28Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/199
2017-02-01T19:40:28Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 2 (2013); 123-139
Ricœur et Deleuze, lecteurs de Spinoza: Ontologie, éthique, imagination
Possati, Luca M.; EHESS-Paris
2014-01-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/199
Spinoza
Nabert
Phenomenology
Imagination
Art
Deleuze
fr_CA
This article proposes a reading of Ricoeur and Deleuze from their respective interpretations of Spinoza's thought. Ricoeur and Deleuze are placed in the center of the Spinoza-Renaissance that took place in France in the Fifties and Sixties. However, Ricoeur's Spinozism is still largely unknown. The first two parts of the article concern Spinoza's concepts of conatus and essentia actuosa, emphasizing their importance for Ricoeur's hermeneutics of symbols, especially in relation to his reading of Jean Nabert. The following three sections concern Deleuze and the role of Spinoza's thought in the genesis of rhizomatic ontology in Mille plateaux. The last part of the article seeks to explore the possibility of a dialogue between Ricoeur and Deleuze.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/202
2017-02-01T19:40:31Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/202
2017-02-01T19:40:31Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 2 (2013); 108-122
Narrative Identity and Social Networking Sites
Romele, Alberto; University of Verona
2014-01-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/202
Hermeneutics
Narrative
Identity
Social Networking Sites
en_US
The following paper takes on a double hypothesis: (1) that the concept of narrative identity, as developed by Ricoeur, is a strong candidate to account for the consequences of the “emplotment (mise en intrigue)” of our identities on social networking sites; and (2) that social networking sites can be useful to reconsider some of the assumptions at the basis of the Ricoeurian concept of narrative identity. The analysis is developed in three sections: (a) Ricoeur’s “temperate” notion is compared to the “savage” post-modern concept of performative identity; (b) part of the literature about identity on social networking sites is criticized in the light of the Ricoeurian concept; and (c) the paper considers the impact of such a “detour” through social networking sites on Ricoeur’s still monomediatic and monolinear notion.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/205
2017-02-01T19:40:33Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/205
2017-02-01T19:40:33Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 4 No. 2 (2013); 79-89
La reconnaissance, la justice, et la vie bonne
Reagan, Charles; Kansas State University
2014-01-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/205
Recognition
Justice
The Good Life
fr_CA
This article deals with recognition, justice, and the good life separately, then as tied together in a web of interdependence. I begin with the multiple meanings of “recognition” and “to recognize.” I follow the order that Paul Ricoeur has in established in The Course of Recognition. Ricoeur groups these definitions into three kinds: epistemological definitions, recognition of oneself, and recognition of others. Next, I describe two kinds of justice, that of the judiciary and courts, both civil and criminal. Finally, I point out the many systems that must function to have a good life in a modern society. These include systems of transportation, communication, commerce, banking, private property, as well as many others. Their importance is brought home when we look at countries in civil war, such as Syria, or ones that have been mostly destroyed by natural forces such as Haiti after the massive earthquake. My conclusion is that the good life requires recognition of one another and of legitimate governments as well as functioning systems of justice.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/229
2017-02-01T19:41:02Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/229
2017-02-01T19:41:02Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 5 No. 2 (2014); 105-127
Ricœur et Giddens: l’herméneutique de l’homme capable et la théorie de structuration
Wolff, Ernst; Université de Pretoria
2014-12-23
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/229
fr_CA
RésuméLe but de cet article est de mettre en dialogue Ricœur avec la théorie sociale d’Anthony Giddens, plus spécifiquement l’herméneutique de l’homme capable avec la théorie de la structuration. Nous commencerons par explorer quelques termes clefs permettant de comparer les deux auteurs au sujet du rapport entre acteurs et systèmes. Chez Ricœur, nous commenterons les notions d’institution et de pratique; chez Giddens, des notions importantes pour présenter la “dualité de structure.” Au cours de cette exploration, quatre tâches seront identifiées en vue de préciser la “théorie sociale” de Soi-même comme un autre: (1) dépasser le schéma foncièrement téléologique de l’action; (2) explorer la stabilisation de l’action malgré l’incertitude inscrite dans le schéma téléologique; (3) réinvestir la notion de contrainte; et (4) clarifier l’ambiguïté de la notion d’institution. En conclusion, nous montrerons quels apports la mise en dialogue de Ricœur avec Giddens pourrait offrir pour accomplir ces quatre tâches.Mots-clés : Homme capable, sructuration, acteur, dualité de structure, institution, contrainte.AbstractThe aim of this article is to reconstruct a dialogue between Ricœur and Anthony Giddens, in particular between the hermeneutics of the capable human and the theory of structuration. The article starts with an exploration of key concepts on the basis of which to compare the two authors on the relation between actors and systems. On Ricœur’s side the concepts of institution and practice will be commented on; on Giddens’ side notions selected to present the “duality of structure” will be considered. In the course of this exploration, four tasks will be identified by which to refine the “social theory” of Oneself as Another: (1) surpass its ultimately teleological schema of action; (2) explore the stabilisation of action despite the uncertainty attributed to the teleological schema; (3) reinvest the notion of constraint; and (4) clarify the ambiguity in the notion of institution. In conclusion the contribution of a Ricœur-Giddens dialogue to the accomplishment of these four tasks will be demonstrated.Keywords: Capable Man, Structuration, Actor, Duality of structure, Institution, Constraint.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/274
2017-02-01T19:41:19Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/274
2017-02-01T19:41:19Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 6 No. 1 (2015); 94-110
Du témoignage ou de l’ininterprétable
Alloa, Emmanuel; University of St. Gallen
2015-07-13
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/274
Ricœur
Testimony
Hermeneutics
Historiography
Ethics
fr_CA
This article defends the thesis that the reflection which Ricœur conducts on the notion of testimony is not one research topic among others, but forms one of the keys to understanding the Ricœurian project as such. The notion of testimony enables one to get beyond the polarity of (phenomenological) description and (hermeneutical) ascription, in order to return to the question of the real. Through an examination of the quadruple grammar of testimony that Ricœur proposes (with its aspects of “presentification,” “credence,” “assertion,” and “substitutability”) and its context in the dialogue with historiography and theology, the article advances the thesis that with testimony, we broach the limit point of hermeneutics, a “non-interpretable” at the heart of interpretation. This “non-interpretable” acquires a quasi-transcendental status, because it allows interpretation to broach the thing it is dealing with and not another interpretation. Lastly, it will be important to show how Ricœur’s thought on testimony also reflects an ethics: this ethics prohibits treating the testimony as a mere source, referring to a positivity, but as a trace, within an experience, which as such is unrepeatable.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/275
2017-02-01T19:41:21Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/275
2017-02-01T19:41:21Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 6 No. 1 (2015); 111-122
La reconnaissance factuelle: Le récit itératif d’un accident pour rétablir un rapport à soi et à autrui
Dubuis, Alexandre; Dr s Université de Lausanne
2015-07-13
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/275
Narrative Identity
Selfhood
Recognition
Severe Burn
Accident
fr_CA
This text draws on the concepts of narrative identity and selfhood to analyze stories about accidents that resulted in severe facial burns. These adjustable accounts, regularly set out by the people concerned, are considered across two axes: for oneself and for others. The “story for oneself” mainly ensures the preservation of an identity fractured by severe trauma. For the severely burned person, it establishes continuity between an identity prior to the burn and an identity post-burn, which drastic changes to their appearance have shattered. As to the “story for others,” it serves other purposes. It is aimed, in particular, at helping to identify after-effects and in this way reducing discomfort around interaction. Whatever the varied forms that they can take, these two types of stories become the expression of a struggle for recognition, led by the burn victim, to restore a relationship as much with himself as with others.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/312
2017-02-01T19:41:46Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/312
2017-02-01T19:41:46Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 6 No. 2 (2015)
On Ricœur’s Shift from a Hermeneutics of Culture to a Cultural Hermeneutics
Adams, Suzi; Flinders University
2016-01-19
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/312
Paul Ricœur
Cultural Hermeneutics
Phenomenology
Social Imaginary
World Horizon
the Symbolic
the Human Condition
en_US
The essay’s argument is twofold: First, it contends that Ricœur’s articulation of the social imaginary in the Lectures on Ideology and Utopia (and other essays of that period), reveals a turn to a general theory of culture, which is best understood as a shift from a hermeneutics of culture to a cultural hermeneutics. This move forms part of his philosophical anthropology of “real social life.” The essay proposes it is epitomized in Ricœur’s changing reception of Cassirer. Second, the essay hermeneutically reconstructs the emergence of this turn in Ricœur’s intellectual trajectory, and, in so doing, contends that it is connected to a rearticulation of both the phenomenological reduction and the symbolic function that took place in the mid- to late 1960s. Ricœur’s developing response to the phenomenological problematic of the world horizon underlies these further phenomenological-hermeneutic considerations. The essay concludes with a brief sketch of Ricœur’s understanding of the symbolic mediation of action (in the Geertz lecture) as a reconfiguration of the hermeneutical actualization of phenomenological preconditions of the symbolic.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/318
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/318
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 7 No. 2 (2016); 164-186
Penser la confiance avec Paul Ricoeur
Assayag, Laure; Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne / EHESS
2017-02-01
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/318
Trust
Paul Ricœur
Promise
Faith
Recognition
en_US
This article proposes to retrace the path of trust that Paul Ricœur has drawn across his works. If the concept of trust is never themed as such, nevertheless it unfolds in subtle ways in fields as diverse as ethics, morality, politics, and religion. We will argue that trust is a solid but fragile foundation for Ricœur’s recognition theory. Rooted in man’s structural disproportion, trust is a perpetual tension between the finitude of existence and the infinitude of mutual recognition, between the ability and fallibility of the human being -it is thus a continuous search, always disappointing but always renewed, of a mediation between the self and the other, the hope of happiness and the reality of evil. The analysis of various forms of trust, including interpersonal and institutional forms, will then be coupled with a study of trust in practical terms, based on Ricœur’s approach to healthcare relationships, or the perception of foreigners.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/343
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/343
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 7 No. 2 (2016); 146-163
At the Threshold of Ricoeur’s Concerns in La Métaphore Vive: A Spatial Discourse of Diametric and Concentric Structures of Relation Building on Lévi-Strauss
Downes, Paul; Dublin City University
2017-02-01
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/343
Diametric Space
Concentric Space
Ricœur
Heidegger
Lévi-Straus
en_US
In La Métaphore Vive, spatial understandings pervade much of Ricoeur’s discussion of metaphor in terms of proximity and distance, tension, substitution, displacement, change of location, image, the ‘open’ structure of words, closure, transparency and opaqueness. Yet this is usually where space is discussed within metaphor, and as a metaphor itself, rather than as a precondition or prior system of relations to language interacting with language. Based on reinterpretation of an aspect of Lévi-Strauss’ structuralist anthropology, diametric and concentric spaces are argued to be such a prior system of relations to language, actively framing metaphor. This article examines the relevance of this prelinguistic spatial discourse to Ricoeur’s framework of metaphor and interrogation of the copula, influenced centrally by Heidegger . Concentric spatial assumed connection and diametric spatial assumed separation offer a framework for understanding, in Ricoeur’s words, the “conflict between identity and difference” in metaphor and early Heidegger’s existential spatiality.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/356
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/356
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 8 No. 1 (2017); 122-139
Sur la soumission au pouvoir. Convergences et differences entre le Discours de la servitude volontaire d’Etienne de La Boétie et la pensée politique de Paul Ricœur
Monteil, Pierre-Olivier; chercheur associé au Fonds Ricœur (Paris)
2017-07-31
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/356
friendship
La Boétie
politics
Ricœur
and the will
fr_CA
This study undertakes a reading of Etienne de La Boétie’s Discours de la servitude volontaire, endeavoring to bring to light the way it convergences with and diverges from the political thought of Paul Ricœur, around the central concept of the will. On the basis of the twin notions of “denaturation” and of “pathology,” a course unfolds which aims at helping establish the people, in comparison with the institution of the State, through a political process revitalised by friendship. But the two thinkers differ when it comes to the resources of the will. This is reflected in the notion of freedom, conceived as absolute in La Boetie, while Ricœur emphasizes its contingency, which leads him to thematize it in terms of capabilities.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/360
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/360
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 9 No. 1 (2018); 90-107
A Bigger Splash to the Narrative
Sanfelice, Vinicius Oliveira; Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp/Fapesp)
2018-09-04
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/360
Art
Metaphor
Ricœur
Aesthetic
Image.
en_US
The objective of this article is to offer an example of a work of art identified with what Paul Ricœur named polysemy or linguistic density. Some works of art exemplify a metaphoricity in their constitution and the metaphor would be a privileged model for the analysis of figurative art and of allusive figuration. I believe that the painting A Bigger Splash by David Hockney has an image game that is also a language game: the aesthetic figuration as semantic link between the verbal and the non-verbal, between the poetic and the pictorial. I argue that figuration through metaphoricity also exemplifies an ambiguity in Ricœur’s philosophy of language, and the distinction between the field of the pre-narrative and the narrative of the artwork clarify the aesthetic aspect of his theory of metaphor. The advantage of my example is that the immanent analysis of the metaphoric constitution of the work of art is compatible with the isolation of its narrative elements. The metaphoric redescription in painting should not be automatically extended to the narrative refiguration.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/364
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/364
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 7 No. 2 (2016); 187-199
Le jugement et sa logique dans la philosophie de Ricœur (Première partie)
Lacour, Philippe; Université Fédérale de Brasilia
2017-02-01
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/364
Judgment
Language
Discourse
Argumentation
Interpretation
Reflection
fr_CA
In this article, I underline the profound link existing between Ricœur’s practical philosophy and language. Indeed, the latter bestows unity upon the former, because it constitutes its main axis, for methodological reasons. First of all, I recall Ricœur’s definition of discourse and explain its various transphrastic dimensions. I then show how this philosophy of language is carefully used to build a very coherent logic of judgment, which underlies all Ricœur’s epistemological reflections about normative disciplines (ethics, law, politics). I particularly insist on the logic of legal judgment.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/369
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/369
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 8 No. 1 (2017); 110-121
Testimony, Memory and Solidarity across National Borders: Paul Ricoeur and Transnational Feminism
Purcell, Elizabeth; SUNY-Oneonta
2017-07-31
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/369
Feminism
Paul Ricoeur
Hospitality
Social Justice
Memory
Transnationalism
en_US
In many ways, globalization created the problem of representation for feminist solidarity across the borders of the nation state. This problem is one of presenting a cohesive identity for representation in the transnational public sphere. This paper proposes a solution to this problem of a cohesive identity for women’s representation by drawing on the work of Paul Ricœur. What these women seem to have in common are shared political aims, but they have no basis for those aims. This paper provides a basis for these aims by turning to Ricœur’s work on collective memory from Memory, History, Forgetting. The paper concludes that it is the shared testimony through narrative hospitality, which can provide a foundation for a social bond for those with common political aims. More specifically, this common knowledge provides a justification for the representation of women and their allies in the transnational public sphere.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/370
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/370
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 8 No. 1 (2017); 83-109
Speaking Images. Chomsky and Ricoeur on Linguistic Creativity
Pedriali, Walter B.; University of St Andrews
2017-07-31
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/370
Linguistic Creativity
Imagination
and Metaphor
en_US
Linguistic creativity is the ability to understand indefinitely many previously unencountered sentences. In this paper, I compare Chomsky’s and Ricœur’s contrasting conceptions of this ability, in particular, their divergent views of nonsense. With nonsense, it seems as if syntax is outrunning semantics. Chomsky took this to show that syntax is autonomous of semantics. I propose a reading of Ricœur’s work on metaphor whereby Chomsky’s thesis is modified so that syntax and semantics are declared to be ultimately co-extensive notions.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/383
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/383
2017-04-19T12:58:14Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 7 No. 2 (2016); 124-145
Digital Ricoeur
Taylor, George H.; University of Pittsburgh
Nascimento, Fernando; Pontifical Catholic University of Campinas
2017-02-01
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/383
en_US
As Ricœur scholars know, the literature by and on Ricœur is vast. Material written by Ricœur that is not collected in published volumes is often difficult to locate, and even in the published volumes it is frequently a challenge to locate where Ricœur discusses a particular topic. Given the amount of his work it can be a challenge too to determine changes in his analyses over the life of his corpus. And locating secondary literature on Ricœur can be equally problematic. In response, we have been working to establish a model for how Ricœur’s corpus might be digitized so that the issues of access, keyword location, and pattern might all be addressed. To develop the model, we are starting with Ricœur’s primary texts in English and plan to expand over time to other languages and to the secondary literature on Ricœur. In the present article we discuss our model and its five steps: digital access; copyright; text preparation for digital searches and analysis; examples of digital searches and analyses; and an archive portal interface that allows users to query based on an extensible set of search variables without needing to know or access the underlying search logic. We also invite interested researchers to help assist the development of this digitization project.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/387
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/387
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 9 No. 1 (2018); 70-89
Opaque Selves: A Ricœurian Response to Galen Strawson’s Anti- Narrative Arguments
Arca, Kristofer Camilo; Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
&
Miami Dade College, Miami, FL, USA
2018-09-04
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/387
Narrative Identity
Personal Identity
the Self
Ipseity
Existential
and Phenomenological Hermeneutics
en_US
As narrative conceptions of selfhood have gained more acceptance within various disciplines including philosophy, psychology, and the cognitive sciences, so too have these conceptions been critically appraised. Chief among those who are suspicious of the overall viability of ‘narrative identity’ is the philosopher, Galen Strawson. In this paper, I develop five arguments underlying Strawson’s critique of narrative identity, and respond to each argument from the perspective of the hermeneutic phenomenology of Paul Ricœur. Though intuitive, I demonstrate that none of Strawson’s arguments are cogent. The confrontation between these two figures highlights a deep conceptual disagreement about our epistemic access to the self, which has thus far gone unrecognized in the Anglo-American discussion, so that it raises a new problem for the metaphysics of personal identity.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/388
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/388
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 11 No. 1 (2020); 130-143
Ricoeur’s Rawls: Constitutive Antecedence and Reflective Equilibrium
Hutchens, Benjamin Coy; Rutgers University, Newark
2020-07-22
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/388
Hermeneutics
Justice
Reflective Equilibrium
Convictions
Maximin Rule
en_US
This article aims to stimulate dispute about the justification of Paul Ricœur’s hermeneutic reading of John Rawls. Offering a close, methodically point-for-point textual engagement, I shall propose that Ricœur’s misreading of certain hermeneutic circularities in Rawls is owed to some confusion about the role of the procedural nature of Rawls’ theory. Generally speaking, the problems with Ricœur’s interpretations center on the question of whether there is something “pre-understood” within the formal theoretical understanding of the procedural theory of justice and the substantive convictions and judgments that figure within the reflective equilibrium of deliberations about the terms of justice. Arguably, Ricœur has not made a satisfactory case that the difference and liberty principles are considered convictions that anticipate their discovery and establishment. Ultimately, Ricœur has not demonstrated that there is a single presuppositional form that renders Rawls’ procedure self-defeating. Instead, he has proposed to us several potential forms of damaging presupposition, each of which is based on a questionable reading of Rawls’ text.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/404
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/404
2018-09-04T17:34:50Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 8 No. 1 (2017); 140-153
Le jugement et sa logique dans la philosophie de Ricœur (Deuxième partie)
Lacour, Philippe; Université de Poitiers/EHESS-Paris/Fonds Ricoeur
2017-07-31
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/404
fr_CA
Dans cet article, je souligne le lien profond qui relie la philosophie pratique de Ricœur à la question du langage. J’insiste sur le fait que celle-ci donne son unité à celle-là, parce qu’elle en constitue l’axe privilégié, pour des raisons méthodologiques. Je rappelle la définition que Ricœur donne du discours et explique ses différentes dimensions transphrastiques. Je montre ensuite que cette philosophie du langage est soigneusement réinvestie dans une logique du jugement très cohérente, qui sous-tend ses développements épistémologiques touchant les disciplines normatives (éthique, droit, politique). J’insiste tout particulièrement sur la logique du jugement judiciaire.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/422
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/422
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 9 No. 2 (2018); 149-159
Paul Ricœur au fondement d’une éthique herméneutique et narrative, enracinée dans une ontologie de l’action
Thomasset, Alain; Centre Sèvres - Facultés jésuites de Paris
2019-02-15
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/422
Ethics
Hermeneutics
Narrativity
Ontology
Religion
fr_CA
For Paul Ricœur, human action was a central preoccupation already present in his early work and deepening over time, benefitting from a long engagement with hermeneutical and narrative analyses. It is the concern to locate, through obligatory moral norms, the ethical dimension of desire that guides and motivates action that first makes use of a hermeneutic of signs, symbols, and texts in which the desire of the subject has been expressed. But narratives become essential in order to describe action in such a way that the actor’s responsibility can be evaluated at the level of his narrative identity. To this responsibility, interpreted and taught by means of cultural narratives, the concepts of memory and promise add the dimension of the struggle for recognition and point to an ontology of the historical condition at the foundation of an ethic that rests open to a religious dimension of an original goodness.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/424
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/424
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 9 No. 2 (2018); 138-148
Faute, culpabilité et dette
Gagnebin, Jeanne Marie; Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo et Unicamp, Brésil
2019-02-15
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/424
Paul Ricœur
Friedrich Nietzsche
Schuld
Debt
Culpability
fr_CA
This paper attempts to analyse the relationship between Paul Ricœur and Friedrich Nietzsche starting from the specific problem of the debt that we owe to the past, that is of the legacy of the past. It is indeed a striking fact that in Memory, History, Forgetting, although Ricœur refers several times to Nietzsche, he does not take up the nietzschean analysis of the Schuld – “debt, fault”– in the Genealogy of Moral, even tacitly decline them. Starting from the importance of the notion of fault in Ricœur (particularly in The Symbolic of Evil) we will try to better understand this refusal and is hermeneutical implications.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/429
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/429
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 9 No. 2 (2018); 124-137
De l’agent économique à l’homme capable. Une critique de l’économisme à partir de l’herméneutique critique de Paul Ricœur
Pierron, Jean-Philippe; Faculté de Philosophie, Université Jean Moulin Lyon 3, France
2019-02-15
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/429
Hermeneutics
Work
Capacity
Capability
Anthropology
fr_CA
Paul Ricœur’s dialogue has been constant with the human and social sciences, but with little attention given to economics. This Ricœurian silence on the economy is relative. Without developing an epistemology of economics, he showed a constant preoccupation with the working-class condition (cf. Simone Weil) and the practical effects of economic alienation. He has constantly focused on work rather than economics, on exchanges rather than modeling the mathematical economy that forgets economics as a social science. His anthropology is an anthropology of the capable man rather than that of the accounting man. Indeed, its ethical concern reinstates in terms of evaluations an economic activity, not only standardizing but unidimensionalizing, which resorbs the plan of value in that of price. His anthropology of the capable man reevaluates the figure of the economic agent. Thus in Ricœur, the ethical concern is epistemologically informed by the social sciences. He thinks ethics and economy together through the symbolic mediations of the institutions and structures that make exchanges possible. From whence a fine approach to the theses of Marx on economic alienation, and later an encounter with the works of the economist Amartya Sen, not without links to the works of Martha Nussbaum on capabilities.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/466
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/466
2020-07-22T14:33:51Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 10 No. 1 (2019); 125-139
Paul Ricœur et Emmanuel Levinas: vulnérabilité, mémoire et narration: Peut-on raconter la vulnérabilité?
Galabru, Sophie; Université Paris I - Panthéon Sorbonne
2019-09-16
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/466
Vulnerability
Narrativity
Memory
Levinas
Ethics
fr_CA
In Time and narrative then in Oneself as another Paul Ricœur proposes a philosophy of personal and collective identity, through research on time and narrative. According to these books, emplotment would synthesize and reconcile the temporal discordance, experienced by the selfhood. The subject’s fragmentation by the otherness of time could then define vulnerability. Our aim is to question this triad time-vulnerability-narrative thanks to the opposite positions of Emmanuel Levinas. Unlike Ricœur, Levinas severely criticizes the idea of memory and narrative in order to respect the vulnerability of the other. Yet, the Ricœurian analysis of the responsibility affirms the need for a capable and not dispossessed Self. From this point of view, Ricœur helps us to question the limits set by Levinas to narrative and leads us to wonder if the ethical plot for the vulnerability of others does not need memory and narrative.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/472
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/472
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 11 No. 1 (2020); 160-172
Une lecture de la figurabilité psychanalytique chez Paul Ricœur
Sanfelice, Vinicius Oliveira; Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp/Fapesp)
2020-07-22
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/472
Figurability
Psychoanalysis
Hermeneutics
Image
fr_CA
In this article, I will analyze Paul Ricœur’s conception of the function of “figurability” in psychoanalysis, namely through his reading of the “psychoanalytic discovery” where language works at the pictorial level [langage figuré]. This reading provides another notion of the image for his hermeneutics insofar as Ricœur calls into question the submission of the image in relation to language. From this reading, I will argue that the connection between the “work of image,” in his reading of psychoanalysis, and the “work” of metaphor, in his theory of metaphor, leads to the expansion of the conception of metaphor insofar as it reveals a level of visualization where language does not control the image.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/479
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/479
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 10 No. 2 (2019); 70-87
“L’énigme du passé”. Vers les fondements du rapport entre l’histoire et la psychanalyse
Marinescu, Paul; Société Roumaine de la Phénoménologie
Institut de Philosophie Alexandru Dragomir
2020-03-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/479
History
Past
Memory
Psychoanalysis
Afterwardsness
Violence
fr_CA
This article aims to address, by means of a two-step analysis, the foundations of the relationship between history and psychoanalysis as “disciplinary practices” that deal with the past. In the first step, I examine the different relationships between history and psychoanalysis but also the uses of psychoanalysis in historical approaches. My goal here is to situate the context and the guiding questions. As a second step, I try to show that Ricœur puts forward, in his book Memory, History, Forgetting, a major thesis regarding the foundations of the relationship between psychoanalysis and the hermeneutics of history. By means of the phenomenology of wounded memory, he identifies a fundamental structure of collective existence that provides the basis of this relationship. Finally, I seek to determine the scope of this structure, which takes the form of an originary trauma affecting the collective existence, by drawing an analogy with the psychoanalytic concept of afterwardsness.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/480
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/480
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 10 No. 2 (2019); 52-69
Les risques de la symbolisation du mal. Essai de confrontation entre La Symbolique du mal et La Littérature et le mal
Costa, Cristina Henrique da; UNICAMP
2020-03-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/480
The Symbolism of Evil
Literature and Evil
Evil
Bataille
fr_CA
This article compares two major books: Paul Ricœur’s The Symbolism of Evil and George Bataille’s Literature and Evil. The linking between these two thinkers that everything seems to oppose is driven by the hope to find a productive compatibility between them through their common interest in the language of evil. Emphasis will first be placed on Ricœur: by recognizing that the expression of evil necessarily involves a symbolic language, he allows us to think through Bataille’s insistence on the place of literature concerning evil. Then, we will show that Bataille’s statement concerning the existence of a modern literary lucidity regarding evil both allows confirmation of Ricœur’s thesis concerning the historical and linguistic character of the experience of evil and also leads to formulation of its main consequence: that the language of evil, marked with the seal of poetic creativity, probably cannot be considered as accomplished. We highlight finally the interest of such an approach in interpreting, through literature, the new experiences of evil today.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/482
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/482
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 10 No. 2 (2019); 92-99
The Ego’s Attention and the Therapist’s Attention to Reality in Freud. At the Threshold of Ethics
Montoya, Ana Lucía; Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome
2020-03-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/482
Attention
Reality Principle
Narcissism
Truth
en_US
This article aims to show that the practice of attention can create an openness to the truth, from where ethics arises. It does so by exploring the role attention plays, according to Ricoeur, in Freud’s thought. Ricoeur shows how in the first stage of Freud’s thinking – that of the Project of a Scientific Psychology – attention is one of the instances in which a purely mechanical quantitative explanation can be questioned. Further on, with the introduction of narcissism, Ricœur shows that attention, insofar as it opens a space for the “wounding truth,” opposes narcissism. Finally, the article explains how in the therapeutic setting an attentional epochē allows the therapist to be “the reality principle in flesh and in act,” so that the ego can gain control. According to Ricœur, this non-judgmental gaze opens a space of truthfulness for the patient’s self-knowledge which, although not being the totality of ethics, constitutes its threshold.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/485
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/485
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 10 No. 2 (2019); 88-89
Prix d’excellence de l’édition 2019 des Ateliers d’été du Fonds Ricœur
Amalric, Jean-Luc
2020-03-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/485
fr_CA
Presentation of the Prix d’excellence de l’édition 2019 des Ateliers d’été du Fonds Ricœur
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/486
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/486
2020-07-22T14:34:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 10 No. 2 (2019); 90-91
The Excellence Award at the Fonds Ricœur’s Summer Workshop 2019
Amalric, Jean-Luc
2020-03-03
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/486
en_US
Presentation of the Excellence Award at the Fonds Ricœur’s Summer Workshop 2019
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/489
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/489
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 11 No. 1 (2020); 144-159
Une juste reconnaissance. La place du juridique dans l’articulation de la “petite éthique”
Gorgoni, Guido; University of Padova
2020-07-22
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/489
Subject of law
Imputation
Responsibility
Capable Man
Practical Wisdom
fr_CA
This essay critically examines the place that the reference holds relative to law, and more broadly to the legal phenomenon, in the final phase of Ricœur’s reflection on the capable subject. References to the law and more in general to the legal sphere play an increasingly relevant role in the later reflections of Ricœur, in particular in articulating its “little ethics.” This is done, by contrast, through a deep reconfiguration of some fundamental legal categories, in particular that of legal subject and that of responsibility. The implications of this theoretical renewal will be examined both as regards the internal articulation of Ricœur’s late thought as well as regards their potential repercussions for the contemporary legal theory.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/494
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/494
2020-07-22T16:38:06Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 11 No. 1 (2020); 117-129
Metaphor as Lexis: Ricoeur on Derrida on Aristotle
Driscoll, Sean Donovan; Boston College
2020-07-22
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/494
Metaphor
Syntax
Meaning
Reference
Lexis
en_US
Both Derrida and Ricœur address philosophy’s relation to metaphor, and both take Aristotle as their starting points. However, though Ricœur’s The Rule of Metaphor is largely a response to Derrida’s “White Mythology,” Ricœur seems to pass right over Derrida’s critically important interpretation of Aristotle. In this essay, I dispel concerns that Ricœur may have been intellectually irresponsible in his engagement with Derrida on this point, and I demonstrate how Study 1 makes better sense as a detailed response to Derrida.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/495
2021-03-17T17:54:32Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/495
2021-03-17T17:54:32Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 11 No. 2 (2020); 111-132
A Living Spatial Movement of Relation. Reconceptualising Ricœur’s Oneself as Another and Heidegger’s Being and Time
Downes, Paul; Dublin City University
2021-03-17
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/495
Diametric Space
Concentric Space
Ricœur
Heidegger
Lévi-Strauss
en_US
Beyond the disparate and mainly fleeting references to life in Ricoeur’s Oneself as Another, whether as life as power, living well and with others, or as Ricoeur’s attempt to develop a concept of embodied subjectivity as flesh, which is presumably living flesh, not dead flesh, a further and arguably primordial life principle needs emphasis, namely, living space. Ricoeur’s recognition of the vital significance of space primordiality, as a pivotal dimension that is even prior to language, offers a significant conceptual leap in Ricoeur’s later work, Oneself as Another. Ricoeur’s proposed ontology of the flesh is one dimension towards expression of an authentic phenomenology of spatiality, though not necessarily the only one. Building upon but going beyond Ricoeur, the article explores concentric and diametric spatial interplay in relation to the early Heidegger’s existential spatiality, Angst and care, as candidate living spatial movements. This proposed primordial spatial discourse re-examines Ricoeur’s conatus as power to act, and his quest for a structure of relation to the other that is not closure, separation, or diametric opposition.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/524
2023-12-20T19:24:00Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/524
2023-12-20T19:24:00Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 14 No. 2 (2023); 117-133
Many Colors of History
Řídký, Josef; Fulbright-Masaryk Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of History, Brown University
2023-12-20
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/524
Time
Historical Time
longue durée
Initiative
Historiography
en_US
In his Time and Narrative, Ricœur introduces the term of “third time” to designate the middle ground between human and natural time. This time is synonymous with historical time, which is the main source of historical discourse. The third time consists of inscribing human time onto the time of nature. While historiography must strictly follow this structure, works of fiction have the freedom to explore and even create imaginative variations of time. Despite the constraints this seems to impose on historical writing, this article shows that even within the tight structure of historical time, a palette of various colors and shades, akin to imaginative variations, can be observed. Historical time possesses depth and speed; it can contract and relax, motivate or prevent action, or gain various dynamics in relation to the ending it offers.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/538
2021-07-22T16:25:46Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/538
2021-07-22T16:25:46Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 12 No. 1 (2021); 124-151
Language as the Power of Norm-guided Creation. On Paul Ricoeur's Lectures on Language (1962-1967)
Tétaz, Jean-Marc; Université d'Erfurt/Université d'Iéna
2021-07-19
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/538
Ricœur
Language
Structuralism
Analytic Philosophy
Phenomenology
Text.
fr_CA
Between 1962 and 1967/68, Ricœur devoted several courses to the question of language. Even though there are many traces of these lectures in the articles and essays published during these years (and collected in part in The Conflict of Interpretations), they have so far attracted little attention from the research community. However, they mark a decisive turning point in Ricœur’s thinking and lay the systematic foundation of the hermeneutics of the text that he would deploy in his later works. The article first clarifies the place occupied by these courses in Ricœur’s work. It then presents the archival material and characterizes the specific approach of each of the courses on the basis of Ricœur’s preparatory manuscripts. In a final section, three particularly instructive aspects of the courses are discussed: the shift from symbol to metaphor (in discussion with Greimas and Jakobson), the articulation of analytic philosophy and phenomenology (Frege and Husserl), and finally the program of a transcendental foundation of the rules of discourse production (Strawson, Wittgenstein and Chomsky).
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/540
2022-07-08T15:06:39Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/540
2022-07-08T15:06:39Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 13 No. 1 (2022); 138-165
Envisager l’idéologie et l’utopie depuis une phénoménologie du pâtir et de l’agir
Tiaha, David-Le-Duc; Fonds Ricœur, EHESS (Paris) & Lycée-UFA Maurice Rondeau (Bussy-Saint-Georges)
2022-07-07
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/540
Imagination
Imaginary
Immanence
Transcendence
Ideology
Utopia
Marx
Freud
Henry
Ricœur
fr_CA
I pursue here a wish of Ricœur: to analyze ideology and utopia from a genetic phenomenology, in the sense of Husserl in the Cartesian Meditations, which “strives to dig under the surface of apparent meaning to the most fundamental meanings.” A single innovative interest guides my proposal between two contrasting phenomenologies of the imagination in Michel Henry and Paul Ricœur: to root, on the one hand, the dialectical mediation of ideology and utopia in the living immanence of the affective imagination and, on the other hand, to inscribe the power of its expression as well as its power to act in the social and cultural field require to hold together the affective immanence of life, the figuration of the social reality and the socio-cultural and historical praxis. The psychoanalytical interpretation of the cultural imaginary to the bending of the affect and the language and the micro-history of the social practices of the representations serve here as “forks caudines,” under which the immanent phenomenology of the affective imagination is led to a hermeneutics of the imaginative practices of the discourse and the action.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/543
2022-07-07T20:26:33Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/543
2022-07-07T20:26:33Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 12 No. 2 (2021); 120-137
Thought and Political Judgment
Savage, Roger W. H.; University of California at Los Angeles, USA
2021-12-15
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/543
Keywords
Eros
Evil
Freedom
Philosophical Anthropology
Political Judgment
Phronesis
Reason
Reflective Judgment
Sensus Communis.
en_US
Hannah Arendt’s claim that thinking is the last defense against the moral outrages of criminal political regimes sets the problematic of good and evil in relief. Human freedom, Paul Ricœur reminds us, is responsible for evil. The avowal of the evil of violence is thus the condition of our consciousness of the freedom to act anew.Aesthetic experience’s lateral transposition onto the planes of ethics and politics highlights our capacity to respond to exigencies in apposite ways. Exemplary representations of the good, the right, and the justexpress a desire for being. Eros is accordingly the law of every work, word, deed, or act that answers to a difficulty, challenge, or crisis. Bound to living experiences, thought attains its true height through interrogating, demystifying, and vacating frozen norms, standards, and mores. Judgment actualizes thought’s liberating effects in answer to the demands of the situations in which we find ourselves.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/575
2022-07-07T20:26:32Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/575
2022-07-07T20:26:32Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 12 No. 2 (2021); 102-119
The Excellence Award at the Fonds Ricœur’s Summer Workshop 2021 - “Ricœur rhétorique. The Missed Encounter with Chaïm Perelman in The Rule of Metaphor”
Scott, Blake D.; Institute of Philosophy, KU Leuven
2021-12-15
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/575
Audience
Reader
Rhetoric
Ricœur
Perelman.
en_US
This paper argues that Ricœur’s philosophy operates on the basis of a more expansive conception of rhetoric than it first appears. To show this, I reread The Rule of Metaphor through the “new rhetoric” of Chaïm Perelman. First, I survey Ricœur’s understanding of rhetoric in the 1950s and 60s. Second, I examine Ricœur’s relation to Perelman within the context of the broader “rhetorical turn” of the 1970s. After examining their respective positions, I argue that Ricœur fails to appreciate the full significance of Perelman’s conception of audience. In doing so, I draw attention to the central role that Ricœur himself ascribes to the audience or reader in the “work of meaning.” I conclude by proposing that the rhetorical triad of logos/ethos/pathos may serve as a conceptual matrix with which the rhetorical aspects of Ricœur’s philosophy can be interpreted.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/578
2022-07-08T15:06:39Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/578
2022-07-08T15:06:39Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 13 No. 1 (2022); 117-137
At the Limits of Narrative. Unintelligibility and the (Im)possibilities of Self-Disclosure in the Asylum Claiming Process.
Robathan, Lucie; McGill University
2022-07-07
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/578
Narrative
Intelligibility
Language
Time
Asylum
en_US
This paper offers an intervention into the notion of narrativity. It aims to refract Ricœur’s hermeneutics of the subject through a more expanded account of the political dimension of narrative, both to situate the narrative self politically, and to flesh out the ethico-political (im)possibilities of self-disclosure. Focusing on the process of claiming asylum as an instance of politically precarious self-disclosure in which narrative is demanded as a marker of truthful identity, it will explore the limits of narrative as the mode through which subjectivity is made intelligible. Through an analysis of the residues of power in the institution of language that qualify the emergence of the speaking subject and the socio-political assumptions we can excavate from the notion of narrative time, this paper will suggest that narrative unintelligibility could have politically transformative potential.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/605
2023-07-17T20:25:15Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/605
2023-07-17T20:25:15Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 14 No. 1 (2023); 132-150
“Who do you say that I am?” Truth in Narrative Identity
Pereira Rodrigues, Inês; Universidade da Beira Interior (Praxis)/Centro de Filosofia e Género
2023-07-17
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/605
Identity
Truth
Ethics
Butler
Vulnerability
en_US
The following article explores what notion of truth is possible in Ricœur’s narrative identity. It is motivated by the question of how our identity can be constituted in narratives of self when we are often easily self-deceiving and do not choose the building blocks of our narratives. It explores how our identities are constituted in narrative, with others, in order to see what dimensions of truth this allows. Narrative identity implicates a novel notion of truth that is intrinsically ethical, which gives rise to a set of ethical issues. In particular, a truth of self that occurs in relation to others is open to violence and abuse—our very identity is, to varying degrees, in others’ hands. Butler’s ethics of fragility may offer a positive solution.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/616
2022-12-17T11:16:39Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/616
2022-12-17T11:16:39Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 13 No. 2 (2022); 79-98
Le Prix d’excellence des Ateliers d’été 2022 du Fonds Ricœur –« Dissonances mélodiques. Du cercle de la mimèsis à la Poétique du récit : une transition difficile »
Chacón, Federico; Institut supérieur de philosophie / Centre de philosophie du droit, UC Louvain
2022-12-15
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/616
Mimesis
Prefiguration
Refiguration
Time
Narrative
Action
Praxis
Ontology
Connectors
History
Reading
Poetics
Hermeneutics
fr_CA
This article points out some methodological difficulties in Time and Narrative. On the one hand, the imbalance in the re-elaboration of the mimetic model: the extensive treatment of the configurative and the refigurative components contrasts with the indeterminacy which remains in the prefigurative component. On the other hand, there is a discontinuity between narrative refiguration and the hermeneutics of historical consciousness. A certain ambiguity of the “ontological” allows for the integration of the hermeneutics of historical consciousness and the prefigurative dimension of action. By limiting the scope of refiguration in this way, the poetic circle operates solely within the hermeneutic circle. The connectors of historical time and the theory of the act of reading are also related to the hermeneutics of action. Thus an alternative view of Time and Narrative emerges, where narrative ceases to be the main axis, and where praxis gives full meaning to the hermeneutic reflection, and thereby to the experience of time.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/619
2023-07-17T20:25:14Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/619
2023-07-17T20:25:14Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 14 No. 1 (2023); 113-131
De la sagesse poétique à la sagesse pratique. Quelle place pour les poètes et le poétique dans l’anthropologie de l’homme capable ricœurienne ?
Pierron, Jean-Philippe; Université de Bourgogne, membre du UMR 7366-LIR3S, Dijon
2023-07-17
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/619
Poetry
Theatre
Practical Wisdom
Poetic Wisdom
Psalm
Ethics
Imagination
fr_CA
Ricœur never ceased exploring the links between literature and philosophy, between poetics understood in the broad sense and practical philosophy. This exploration impacted his analyses in a major way, with the concept of narrative identity, and the adjective also understood in its literary dimension, as one of its centres. But this valorisation of the linearity of the narrative has sometimes given the impression of having valorised the importance of the novel, at the expense of the role of poetry and theatre. This article proposes to explore the mutual links between poetic and practical wisdom by returning them their full place. It does so by following the way in which Ricœur gave place to poetry, particularly that of Rilke; and by bringing to light the different argumentative strategies (exergue, correspondence, commentary) by which poetry, particularly the psalm, enlightens and enriches the understanding of those who engage in action.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/624
2023-12-20T19:24:00Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/624
2023-12-20T19:24:00Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 14 No. 2 (2023); 134-152
Vivre, pour vivre ensemble
Nicolaï, Jean-Paul; Fonds Ricoeur
2023-12-20
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms: The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a Creative Commons 4.0 License (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works), or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;Noncommercial—other users (including Publisher) may not use this Work for commercial purposes;No Derivative Works—other users (including Publisher) may not alter, transform, or build upon this Work,with the understanding that any of the above conditions can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license. The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a pre-publication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.The Author represents and warrants that:the Work is the Author’s original work;the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;the Work has not previously been published;the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; andthe Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter. The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.
url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/624
Ricœur
Hermeneutical Phenomenology
Anthropology
New
Intersubjectivity
fr_CA
According to Paul Ricœur, “anthropology has become an urgent task of contemporary thought.” The one he develops in all of his work is based on his own hermeneutical phenomenology (the originality of which is due to the heritage of reflective philosophy in particular) to the point that the latter is enough, in our opinion, to draw the main lines of the former. It makes it possible to endow the world with regularities which make it habitable and to endow each human being with a self. It tackles head-on the difficulties of intersubjectivity that Edmund Husserl or Martin Heidegger had left unresolved and makes it a key to his philosophy. People are then more than inhabitants of the world; they inhabit a City that they contributes to build. The theme of the “new” allows us to consolidate one of the lessons that we can draw from Ricœur’s work: to live together, we must live. Ricœurian anthropology then does not require any added ethics for this vitalist impetus to appear via its hermeneutic phenomenology.
oai:ricoeur.pitt.edu:article/628
2023-12-20T19:23:59Z
ricoeur:VAR
v2
http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/628
2023-12-20T19:23:59Z
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Vol. 14 No. 2 (2023); 95-116
Empathy in the Context of the Hermeneutics of Suspicion
Agosta, Lou; Lecturer in the Medical Humanities, Ross University Medical School, Saint Anthony Hospital, Chicago (USA)
2023-12-20
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url:http://ricoeur.pitt.edu/ojs/ricoeur/article/view/628
Empathy
Hermeneutics of Suspicion
Understanding
Receptivity
Responsiveness
en_US
We defend in this essay Paul Ricœur’s hermeneutics of suspicion against Toril Moi’s debunking of it as a misguided interpretation of the practice of critical inquiry, and we relate the practice of a rigorous and critical empathy to the hermeneutics of suspicion. For Ricœur, empathy would not be a mere psychological mechanism by which one subject transiently identifies with another, but the ontological presence of the self with the Other as a way of being —listening as a human action that is a fundamental way of being with the Other in which “hermeneutics can stand on the authority of the resources of past ontologies.” In a rational reconstruction of what a Ricœur-friendly approach to empathy would entail, a logical space can be made for empathy to avoid the epistemological paradoxes of Husserl and the ethical enthusiasms of Levinas. How this reconstruction of empathy would apply to empathic understanding, empathic responsiveness, empathic interpretation, and empathic receptivity is elaborated from a Ricœurian perspective.