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The Epistemology of Reading and Interpretation

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Reading and textual interpretation are ordinary human activities, performed inside as well as outside academia, but precisely how they function as unique sources of knowledge is not well understood. In this book, René van Woudenberg explores the nature of reading and how it is distinct from perception and (attending to) testimony, which are two widely acknowledged knowledge sources. After distinguishing seven accounts of interpretation, van Woudenberg discusses the question of whether all reading inevitably involves interpretation, and shows that although reading and interpretation often go together, they are distinct activities. He goes on to argue that both reading and interpretation can be paths to realistically conceived truth, and explains the conditions under which we are justified in believing that they do indeed lead us to the truth. Along the way, he offers clear and novel analyses of reading, meaning, interpretation, and interpretative knowledge.

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  • Makes the original epistemological claim that reading and interpretation are sources of knowledge
  • Offers clear and novel analyses of the concepts of reading, meaning, interpretation, and interpretative knowledge
  • Distinguishes analytically between seven activities (and their outcomes) that go by the name of interpretation
Author: van Woudenberg Rene
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 252
ISBN: 9781009016360
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

Introduction
1. Knowing and reading
2. Reading and understanding
3. Sources of knowledge and their individuation
4. Why reading doesn't reduce either to attending to testimony or to perception
5. Reading as a source of knowledge
6. The objects of reading are the products of writing
7. Texts, meanings, and interpretation
8. Knowledge through interpretation (1): Allegory, difficulty, and disambiguation
9. Knowledge through interpretation (2): Holism, reconstruction, externalism, and reader response.

René van Woudenberg is Professor of Philosophy at Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam and Director of the university's Abraham Kuyper Center for Science and the Big Questions. He is the co-editor, with Rik Peels and Jeroen de Ridder, of Scientism: Prospects and Problems (2018) and Scientific Challenges to Common Sense Philosophy (2020).

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