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Publikace:
"Give Me an Example": Peter Winch and Learning from the Particular

Článekopen accesspeer-reviewedpublished
dc.contributor.authorBeran, Ondřejcze
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-22T08:39:29Z
dc.date.available2019-05-22T08:39:29Z
dc.date.issued2018eng
dc.description.abstractThe text deals with the role of particular examples in our understanding, especially in the encounters with unfamiliar cases that may require us to expand our concepts. I try to show that Peter Winch’s reflections on the nature of understanding can provide the foundations for such an account. Understanding consists in a response informed by a background network of particular canonical examples. It is against this background that the distinction between appropriate differentiated reactions and misplaced ones makes sense. To accommodate applications of known concepts (such as love, or humour) to unfamiliar cases, particular examples are needed that invite the recipient in a certain direction of understanding, while providing a “closure” against arbitrary mis- or re-interpretations. This capacity has to do with a capacity or incapacity to convey the sense of seriousness of an example dealing with the lives of the persons (or characters) concerned.eng
dc.description.abstract-translatedThe text deals with the role of particular examples in our understanding, especially in the encounters with unfamiliar cases that may require us to expand our concepts. I try to show that Peter Winch’s reflections on the nature of understanding can provide the foundations for such an account. Understanding consists in a response informed by a background network of particular canonical examples. It is against this background that the distinction between appropriate differentiated reactions and misplaced ones makes sense. To accommodate applications of known concepts (such as love, or humour) to unfamiliar cases, particular examples are needed that invite the recipient in a certain direction of understanding, while providing a “closure” against arbitrary mis- or re-interpretations. This capacity has to do with a capacity or incapacity to convey the sense of seriousness of an example dealing with the lives of the persons (or characters) concerned.cze
dc.formatp. 49-75eng
dc.identifier.doi10.15845/nwr.v7i2.3466eng
dc.identifier.issn2194-6825eng
dc.identifier.obd39882268eng
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10195/72802
dc.language.isoengeng
dc.peerreviewedyeseng
dc.project.IDEF15_003/0000425/Centrum pro etiku jako studium hodnoty člověkaeng
dc.publicationstatuspublishedeng
dc.relation.ispartofNordic Wittgenstein Review, volume 7, issue: 2eng
dc.rightsopen accesseng
dc.subjectExampleeng
dc.subjectclosureeng
dc.subjectseriousnesseng
dc.subjectPeter Wincheng
dc.subjectExamplecze
dc.subjectclosurecze
dc.subjectseriousnesscze
dc.subjectPeter Winchcze
dc.title"Give Me an Example": Peter Winch and Learning from the Particulareng
dc.title.alternative"Give Me an Example": Peter Winch and Learning from the Particularcze
dc.typeArticleeng
dspace.entity.typePublication

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