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Symbol and Interpretation
David M. Rasmussen
出版
Springer Science & Business Media
, 1974
主題
Education / Teaching / Subjects / Arts & Humanities
History / Social History
Literary Criticism / General
Philosophy / General
Philosophy / Epistemology
Philosophy / Reference
Philosophy / Hermeneutics
Philosophy / Language
Reference / Signs & Symbols
Social Science / Folklore & Mythology
ISBN
9024715792
9789024715794
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=JKeDyRgS3ksC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
For the past four or five years much of my thinking has centered up on the relationship of symbolic forms to philosophic imagination and interpretation. As one whose own philosophic speculations began at. the end of a cultural epoch under methodologies dominated either by neo-Kantianism or schools of logical empiricism the symbol as a prod uct of a cultural imagination has been diminished; it has been neces sary for those who wanted to preserve the symbol to find appropriate philosophical methodologies to do so. In the following chapters we shall attempt to show, through a consideration of a series of recent interpretations of the symbol, as well as through constructive argu ment, that the symbol ought to be considered as a linguistic form in the sense that it constitutes a special language with its own rubrics and properties. There are two special considerations to be taken ac count of in this argument; first, the definition of the symbol, and sec ond, the interpretation of the symbol. Although we shall refrain from defining the symbol explicitly at this point let it suffice to state that our definition of the symbol is more aesthetic than logical (in the technical sense of formal logic ), more cultural than individual, more imaginative than scientific. The symbol in our view is somewhere at the center of culture, the well-spring which testifies to the human imagination in its poetic, psychic, religious, social and political forms.