<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Lorenzo C. Simpson offers a persuasive and powerful argument that hermeneutics is a valuable tool not only for critical theory but also for addressing many of the urgent issues of today. He shows its utility for unpacking intractable debates in the philosophy of science, multiculturalism, social epistemology, and racial and social justice.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Hermeneutics has frequently been dismissed as useful only for literary and textual analysis. Some consider it to be Eurocentric or inherently relativistic and thus unsuited to social critique. Lorenzo C. Simpson offers a persuasive and powerful argument that hermeneutics is a valuable tool not only for critical theory but also for robustly addressing many of the urgent issues of today. <p/>Simpson demonstrates that hermeneutics exhibits significant interpretive advantages compared to competing explanatory modalities. While it shares with pragmatism a suspicion of essentialism, an understanding that disagreements are situated, and an insistence on the dialogical nature of understanding, it nevertheless resolutely rejects the relativistic accounts of rationality that are often associated with pragmatism. In the tradition of Gadamer, Simpson firmly establishes hermeneutics as a resource for both philosophy and the social sciences. He shows its utility for unpacking intractable issues in the philosophy of science, multiculturalism, social epistemology, and racial and social justice in the global arena. Simpson addresses fraught questions such as why recent claims that "race" has a biological basis lack grounding, whether female genital excision can be critically addressed without invidious ethnocentrism, and how to lay the foundations for meaningful cross-cultural dialogue and reparative justice. This book reveals how hermeneutics can be a worthy partner with critical theory in achieving emancipatory aims.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>I know of no other book expansive enough to cover issues in hermeneutics, critical theory, the philosophy of science, multiculturalism, race, social epistemology, and global justice at all, much less in the depth that Lorenzo Simpson covers them in <i>Hermeneutics as Critique</i>. Here Simpson takes the tradition of hermeneutics to the next level with clarity, elegance, and insight.--Georgia Warnke, author of <i>After Identity: Rethinking Race, Sex, and Gender</i><br><br>In this engaging study, Simpson reaffirms the relevance of a critical hermeneutics for the full range of human inquiry and practice, including science, politics, and sociocultural understanding. He decisively rebuts the common charge of relativism and makes original and valuable contributions to discussions about critical rationality, social agency, race, and cross-cultural interpretation.--Kenneth Baynes, author of <i>Habermas</i><br><br>Lorenzo Simpson's <i>Hermeneutics as Critique</i> is a path-breaking contribution to the defense of hermeneutics, not just as a method of text interpretation but also as a critical philosophy with wide-ranging power to illuminate cultural dilemmas. Hermeneutics is commonly understood to espouse a coherentist account of truth and a contextualist understanding of culture; as such, it seems devoid of an ideology-critical moment to invalidate established types and classifications or repudiate cultural belief systems. Through a lucid and elegantly written account, Simpson shows how hermeneutics can be practiced as a critical philosophy of science and of culture. The best contribution to the hermeneutics-critical theory discussion since the Habermas-Gadamer debate.--Seyla Benhabib, professor emerita of political science and philosophy at Yale University and senior research fellow at Columbia Law School<br><br>Simpson's book is a stunning intellectual achievement that deftly demonstrates the power of philosophical hermeneutics to illuminate ongoing debates about scientific theory choice, the nature and autonomy of human agency, and the biological significance of race. The argumentation is learned and precise, the depth of philosophical insight extraordinary!--Robert Gooding-Williams, author of <i>In the Shadow of Du Bois: Afro-Modern Political Thought in America</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Lorenzo C. Simpson is professor of philosophy at Stony Brook University. His books include <i>Technology, Time, and the Conversations of Modernity</i> (1995) and <i>The Unfinished Project: Towards a Postmetaphysical Humanism</i> (2001).
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