From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sat Aug 24 2002 - 23:25:29 MDT
Expanding Hermeneutics 
Don Ihde, Philosophy, SUNY Stony Brook
The late twentieth century seems marked by a deep intellectual 
discomfort about the ways in which Western thought generally has 
framed its ways of understanding the World. One symptom of this dis-
ease revolves around the current philosophical debates which see 
either a dramatic end to, or a winding down from 'modernity.' Are we 
'postmodern'? 'a-modern'? or, were we, as Bruno Latour claims, never 
modern to begin with? {1} In this contribution to the closing of the first 
"Hermeneutics and Science" meeting, I shall be using this context to re-
interpret both hermeneutics and science. 
Here the more focused and immediate context is one which finds the 
early and mid-twentieth century interpretations of science called into 
question. Nor is this unique meeting alone--only a few weeks prior to 
the Vesprey meeting I had attended a similar search for alternative 
philosophies of science within a more Anglo-Australasian-American 
context in Newcastle, Australia. Here, in Hungary, the context is one 
which more fully draws from Euro-American philosophies relating more 
closely to phenomenological-hermeneutic traditions. But in both cases 
what is clear, negatively, is that earlier accounts of science now seem 
unsatisfactory. Allow one final parallelism between the two conferences: 
the Australian conference focused itself upon the "foundations of non-
formal reasoning" in science--the title still echos the earlier Anglo-
American analytic traditions, whereas we focused upon a "hermeneutics 
of science." Yet, both conferences might also be seen as reactions 
against the now dying prominence of intepretations of science which 
prevailed in early and mid-twentieth century thinking, interpretations 
which revolved around several variations upon Positivism and Logical 
Empiricism. 
Positivistic interpretations of science could be characterized as extreme 
late forms of Modern rationalistic interpretations which, in certain 
respects, saw the phenomenon of science as a kind of logical and 
propositional enterprise focused upon theory and its subsequent 
verifications--or falsifications--and clearly framed in terms of modernist 
epistemologies. It is this modernist framework which now falls into 
question in the dissatisfaction exemplified in both conferences. 
I. Setting the Context
If the general dissatisfaction is situated within the broader doubts being 
raised against modernist epistemologies, in this Euro-American context 
the primary alternative is one which seeks to find the relevance of 
hermeneutics for the sciences. But, interestingly, within the context of 
this search, there has emerged a strong tension concerning how 
hermeneutics itself is to be understood. 
Most simply it might be thought that what is needed is (a) to understand 
hermeneutics, and (b) to understand science, and then (c) to simply 
relate the two. But, in fact, the situation is much more complex in that 
neither term is clear, nor do they stand in isolation. Instead, 
hermeneutics needs to be understood, not only in relation to science, 
but in relation to the philosophies of science which, for philosophers, 
are often taken implicitly for science itself, or for how science is to be 
understood. Moreover, the parallel histories which relate to 
hermeneutics, science and philosophies of science have sometimes 
strange subterranean interconnections. 
This complexity is revealed in precisely the tension which has erupted 
in the debates and discussions here. One way of phrasing this is to say 
that there are two strongly held, but opposing, views of hermeneutics 
and its relations to science. The one view, supported most strongly by 
Karl Otto Apel, but also seconded by Dagfinn Follesdal and others, 
holds that there can be a hermeneutics of science as a cultural and 
historical phenomenon, but there cannot be a hermeneutics of the 
objects or products of science. This view, I shall argue, remains bound 
to the concept of hermeneutics which I shall call 'modernist' and which 
maintains some degree of strong difference between the human or 
social sciences and the natural sciences. 
The other view holds that there is emerging what I shall call in a very 
special sense, a 'postmodernist' hermeneutics which practices both a 
"hermeneutics of the thingly" and a hermeneutic philosophy of science 
which calls into question the older accepted strong distinctions between 
the human and natural sciences. This view argues for an 'expanded 
hermeneutics.' And although in the polemics of the debate Professor 
Apel has called this the view of "some Americans" (Crease, Eger and 
Ihde), it is obviously also held by some Europeans (Kampis and Ropolyi 
among them). 
I shall argue, albeit indirectly, that one key variable within this debate 
relates to, not so much how a hermeneutics operates, as to the regard 
with which philosophy of science operates. In particular, one difference 
between the 'traditionalists' and the 'expansionists' relates to the 
vestigial effects of Positivistic or 'modernist' forms of the philosophy of 
science still held to be more or less correct with respect to interpreting 
science by the traditionalists, whereas the expansionists hold that this 
tradition of philosophy of science has now been surpassed. To open the 
exploration, I shall turn to two brief histories. 
II. A Brief History of Hermeneutics
Paul Ricoeur, one of the primary twentieth century hermeneuts, claims 
that hermeneutics can be traced back to Aristotle's Peri hermeneias 
and that in this classical work hermeneutics is a general theory of 
human comprehension. {2} If that is the case, historically, then the 
argument which follows is an attempt to return an expanded 
hermeneutics to this general theory of understanding. However, 
Aristotle's 'hermeneutics' is one which preceeds the Modern division of 
knowledge into the cultural and the natural sciences. This means that 
we cannot simply either return to or recover the ancient sense without 
risking anachronistic error. 
In post-classical Europe, after the disruptions which separated 
European thought from classical thought, pre-modern hermeneutics 
became a much narrower discipline. It was an exegetical, expository, 
interpretive process applied to written texts and in particular, to sacred 
texts. And although such a textually oriented hermeneutics was far from 
naive--it included theories of symbols, analogies, and significations--it 
remained bound to exegetical praxis and remained so until the rise of 
modernity. 
Indeed, hermeneutic modernity could be said to have arrived somewhat 
late because it was primarily in the work of the late nineteenth and early 
twentieth century thinkers such as Friedrich Schleiermacher (l768-l834) 
and Wilhelm Dilthey (l833-l9ll) that hermeneutics becomes both 
philosophical and expands beyond exegesis. 
Schleiermacher, a theologian, begins this second development by 
adapting hermeneutics as a distinctive humanistic and historical 
discipline which, in effect, becomes a philosophical anthropology and a 
distinctive 'psychology.' But it is Dilthey who gives hermeneutics its 
'canonical' modernist direction. Hermeneutics is generalized as the 
"human science" which applies to the various disciplines which deal 
with Geisteswissenschaft, the sciences of "understanding." And, it is 
Dilthey who contrasts such sciences from the natural sciences, 
Naturwissenshaften, which are distinguished as sciences of 
"explanation." It is this distinction which becomes canonical and which 
remains operational within the still modernist hermeneutic 
traditionalists. Modern hermeneutics thus becomes a 'humanities' 
methodology, broader than exegesis, but not a truly 'general' method, 
and it remains distinct from the natural sciences. 
The twentieth century, particularly the mid-twentieth century, sees 
philosophical hermeneutics enriched by yet another development: 
phenomenology. Here we arrive at the three European giants of the 
hermeneutic tradition: Martin Heidegger, Hans Georg Gadamer, and 
Paul Ricoeur. Enriched by Husserlian phenomenology, hermeneutics in 
these three thinkers becomes ontological. And, insofar as there can be 
a hermeneutic ontology there can be a methodological generalization 
which reaches beyond any merely historical or humanistic trajectory. 
Ontology precedes epistemology and this, itself, is already to overturn 
the claims of modernist epistemology. 
There remain, however, epistemological implications of a hermeneutic 
ontology. Not only can one note the muting or virtual disappearance of 
a strong understanding/explanation distinction in the operative theory of 
these three hermeneuts, but the phenomenologically enriched 
epistemologies of late modern hermeneutics shows how, in principle, 
scientific knowledge as well as cultural knowledge must be derived from 
(human) ontology. In Husserl this was already argued for insofar as the 
constitution of any special science must refer back to the Lifeworld. In 
Heidegger this becomes the derivation of the objects of science 
(Zuhanden) from the praxical knowledge of pragmata or tools 
(Vorhanden). In effect this was to argue that scientific knowledge was 
derivative from practical knowledge. In Gadamer and Ricoeur, both 
somewhat more indirect in ontological claims than the former 
philosophers, it remains the blurring of the understanding/explanation 
distinction. I shall temporarily leave this brief history and now turn to a 
parallel brief history of science and the philosophy of science. 
III. A Brief History of Science and Philosophy of Science
If one accepts as the standard view that science is itself a Modern 
phenomenon, for purposes here one need not look at any pre-modern 
stage of the development of science. Nor need one look at all the 
stages by which early modern science attained the particular later 
modern perspective with which I wish to confront the modern stage of 
hermeneutics. Indeed, one could even claim that there is something of 
an early modern to late modern 'lag' between the development of 
modern science and modern hermeneutics not dissimilar to what I am 
arguing is a lag between traditional and expansionist hermeneutics in 
the late twentieth century. 
In this context, however, the relevant history is one which takes note of 
the late modern, established natural science perspective at the moment 
of the modernization (Schleiermacher/Dilthey) of hermeneutics. That 
perspective was distinctly pre-relativistic and distinctly early modern in 
form. In short, the 'science' which was being distinguished from the 
Geisteswissenshaften was the science of early modernity which held 
that (a) there could be a fully 'objective', contextless, ideal observer, 
perspectiveless knowledge. (b) This science took there to be an 
absolute space and absolute time as in the Newtonian conception, and 
(c) that such 'nature' could be arrived at through the variations upon 
'geometric theory' which used inferences of the hypothetical-deductive 
type. 
That such a perspective and method could not apply to the human 
sciences was obvious enough. And it was the implicit acceptance by 
modernist hermeneutics of this self-interpretation of science which 
entered into the human versus natural sciences distinctions which 
characterized early twentieth century hermeneutics. And, ironically, 
elements of this same self-interpretation of modern science also 
became canonized within the early twentieth century positivist 
developments in the philosophy of science as well. 
What first was to change science, and with it its perspective, but which 
was not to be socialized until later, was the "paradigm shift" introduced 
first through Einstein's theory of relativity and then through quantum 
mechanical probabilistic theory. Both these developments displaced the 
perspectiveless perspective of earlier modern science and introduced a 
perspective which tied relativistic sciences precisely back into the 
necessity of accounting for an embodied human perspective. This 
should have been seen from the beginning to pose a challenge to the 
nature/culture, human/natural science, and understanding/explanation 
distinctions of early twentieth century hermeneutics--but this was not 
the case until later. 
The need for re-introducing a hermeneutic ontology into science itself 
was already latent in the relativistic sciences which realized that the 
position of the observer must be taken into account in all 
measurements--measurements are relativistic in precisely the way 
phenomenological correlations of noema/noesis occur on a broader 
schema. Quantum explanations are even more radical in that in one 
sense one can say that in such explanations nothing becomes 'real' 
until it is looked at.
What I am suggesting here is that the 'science' which is correspondent 
to modernist hermeneutics is not the science which now obtains. 
The same type of shift from modern to late modern or contemporary 
views occurs in the philosophies of science. Positivistic versions of the 
philosophy of science are primarily pre-Kuhnian. (I use this term in a 
somewhat generic sense since it was not Kuhn alone who changed 
philosophers' perspectives on science.) From the late l950's on the view 
that science was, in effect, a complex 'theory generating (through 
hypothetical-deductive and propositional processes) machine' began to 
fall into disrepute. 
Kuhn's introduction of historical cases and recognition of radically 
disruptive shifts of "paradigms" in revolutions was to be adumbrated in 
later decades by the rise of a whole series of refractive intepretations of 
science. One new front was opened by the sociology of science in the 
seventies and eighties. This re-interpretation of science often included 
social scientists trained in phenomenologically oriented "social 
constructionist" theories (such as Andrew Pickering of 
CONSTRUCTING QUARKS) or the "strong program" traditions which 
saw that not only are scientific products historically, but socially 
"constituted." I shall not rehearse the full history of this set of 
arguments, some of which have been rather highly contested by more 
traditional modernist philosophers of science, but merely point out that 
the current generation of science interpreters seems no longer to deny 
that the products of science are socially constructed, rather they argue 
over whether these products are only social constructions implying at 
least that they are both/and rather than either/or. Such a stance, I would 
point out, is a distinctively postmodern stance. And it is a stance which 
holds to a multidimensioned analysis, also in keeping with 
contemporary multifactoral analysis. 
As the final step in this brief history, I wish to turn at a group of 
contemporary philosophers of science, some of whom are specifically 
self-identified with a 'hermeneutics' of science approach, and who take 
an expansionist direction into the analysis of scientific products 
themselves. These include the thinkers which I have included in my 
INSTRUMENTAL REALISM book (Indiana, l99l) {3}, all of whom argue 
that much contemporary science produces not only socially constructed 
products, but what could be called 'technologically constructed' 
products. Later, and on a much broader scale, Bruno Latour has 
recognized this same trajectory in his notion of "hybrids" in WE HAVE 
NEVER BEEN MODERN (Harvard, l993). 
Instrumental realists recognize that today's science technologically 
constructs products (of 'Nature'?) such as the newly constructed 
elements in the expanded table of elements which now includes entries 
which may or may not exist in nature (those of the heavy, nanosecond 
lives predicted as possible by atomic stability factors but the actual 
examples of which occur in laboratory productions.) Similarly, the 
creation of 'artificial' molecules (in polymers and plastics) which do not 
again, exist in nature. Or, in the latest biotechnological sciences, the 
applications of inter-species DNA manipulations which place human 
DNA into rats in a distinctly 'unnatural' construction. Latour, in 
specifically challenging the nature/culture distinction which 
characterizes so much of modern thought, argues further that even 
such a phenomenon as the ozone hole is precisely a "hybrid" which is 
simultaneously both cultural and natural. I am suggesting that 
hermeneutically a 'postmodern' hermeneutics can be a hermeneutics of 
the 'thingly' which does not presuppose the culture/nature modern 
distinction, and instead focuses upon the 'construction' of things. 
IV. Expanded Hermeneutics: A 'Thingly' and 'Postmodern' 
Hermeneutics
We are now at the end of the twentieth century and I have been arguing 
that at this historical point much has changed, including at the least our 
perspectives upon modernity. And, while I admit to some discomfort 
with the term, 'postmodern,' especially since it often has come to stand 
for a lot of sillyness, I cannot now think of a better term to denote 
passing out of the distinction sets of late modernity. 
In the context of a hermeneutics of science, I have been arguing that 
this expansion of hermeneutics is one which extends to the 'thingly', 
including the things of science and not merely to its history, its cultural 
context, or its sociology (all of which terms retain the modernist 
distinctions between social and natural sciences). Implicitly I am also 
suggesting that if there is to be a hermeneutics of (natural) science, it 
must be a hermeneutics which reverberates with the actual state of 
those sciences and not to what they have been at some earlier time. 
In what I have termed the 'postmodernity' of this hermeneutics, I am 
mostly reacting to the vestigial uses of nature/culture distinctions and 
the progeny from such which becloud the possibility of an emergent 
'thingly' hermeneutics. The mid- to late twentieth century applications of 
the social or human sciences to the practices of the natural sciences is 
a beginning. But this set of disciplines, too, is not yet fully 
hermeneutical. So, in conclusion I want to point to some interesting 
symptoms of what I take to be areas where a hermeneutics in a 
'postmodern' mode might look: 
A history of dominant metaphors which operate in so many of the 
sciences has long been of philosophic interest. And if the rise of 
mechanical metaphors in very early modernity was telling, it is of no 
small interest to see the late twentieth century turning to broadly 
linguistic or language metaphors. The scientific tribal languages of the 
genetic and biotechnological sciences, for example, are full of such 
metaphors. DNA is a 'code' which has 'communicative' aspects between 
gene strands. Genes 'express' themselves in various ways. At the full 
animal stage, one today even speaks of 'animal cultures' and 
increasingly of 'sociobiological' factors. 
Reductionistic simplicity has often been replaced with 'systems' and 
'complexity' factors which our new tools, particularly computers, make 
possible. Laplacean determinism is long dead with 'chaos' and 'fractals' 
contexted within very complex probablistic calculations their 
replacements. Here computers and computer modelling allows 
investigators to have a tool which can deal with complexity and 
multifactoral aspects of a phenomenon. 
And in the contemporary philosophies of science, the inclusion, rather 
than reduction of, history: sociology: culture: amd gender factors all 
must be included. These factors may not be simply rhetorical, but be 
inbuilt perspectives which can only be expanded by a multiperspectival 
inclusiveness. 
V. Epilogue
An expanded hermeneutics can and will play a role as a theory of 
meaning and interpretation, beyond the distinctions of modernity and 
towards the multifactoral and multistable analysis which is in keeping 
with 'postmodern' thinking. To undertake this role, however, 
hermeneutics must--like its sister disciplines are beginning to do--free 
itself of modernist epistemology. I suspect that will become the concrete 
task of our future meetings which delve into the interface of 
hermeneutics and science. 
Notes:
l. Bruno Latour, WE HAVE NEVER BEEN MODERN (Harvard 
University Press, l993) 
2. Paul Ricoeur, THE CONFLICT OF INTERPRETATIONS 
(Northwestern University Press, l974), p. 4 
3. Don Ihde, INSTRUMENTAL REALISM (Indiana University Press, 
l99l) Discusses Robert Ackermann, Robert Crease, Hubert Dreyfus, 
Peter Galison, Ian Hacking, Patrick Heelan, Don Ihde, and Bruno 
Latour.
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