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Distanciation and epoché

the influence of Husserl on Ricoeur's hermeneutics

Leslie MacAvoy

pp. 13-30

Ricoeur's concept of distanciation is central to his critical hermeneutics. This paper argues that this concept gets its critical potential from its relationship to Husserl's notion of the epoché. The epoché entails a bracketing of the natural attitude that inaugurates the phenomenological attitude. From this vantage point one can see that the sense of reality is given through a synthesis of the actual and the possible. Thus, the epoché opens up the dimension of the possible in the real, and this in turn opens up the space for the imagination to engage in eidetic variation. These elements of the epoché are echoed in Ricoeur's treatment of distanciation as opening up a second order reference through which a text proposes a world. The text exposes the reader not only to other possible worlds, but other possible ways of being, thus affording a perspective from which one can question current ways of being.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-33426-4_2

Full citation:

MacAvoy, L. (2016)., Distanciation and epoché: the influence of Husserl on Ricoeur's hermeneutics, in S. Davidson & M. Vallée (eds.), Hermeneutics and phenomenology in Paul Ricoeur, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 13-30.

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