Go home!

RECENT ENTRIES
-Changing past and realism
-Nonfixity of past
-Union card
-Brick Hermeneutics
-Eucharistic meditation
-Baptismal meditation
-Ancient etymology
-John and Creation
-Reader Response
-Eco on Derrida
-Expression and content
-Fat Heart
-From Creator-creature to Subject-object
-God-like Hirsch
-Sacraments and texts
-Another hermeneutical parable
-A Hermeneutical parable
-Enlightened Romanticism
-Sabbath
-Style as proof
CATEGORY ARCHIVES
  • LINKS
    - Biblical Horizons
    - Covenant Worldview Institute
    - Theologia
    FEED

    CONTACT

    Comments:
    leithart@leithart.com

    Problems:
    webmaster@leithart.com





    « Previous Post | Next Post »
    « Previous post in category | Next post in category »

    Hermeneutics: Context?

    [Print] | [Email]

    Context determines the meaning of a word, right?

    But “context” refers, in the first instance, to other words.

    But their meaning must also be determined by context?

    When you take all the words away, what’s left of the “context” that’s supposed to determine  the word’s meaning?

    Mustn’t individual words and context be (perichoretically) co-determinative?

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Saturday, July 19, 2008 at 4:39 pm