Modern hermeneutics includes both verbal and non-verbal communication as well as semiotics, presuppositions, and pre-understandings
For this hermeneutic phenomenology, whatever is intelligible comes to us in and through our use of language. While philosophical language always aims at univocal(singular) concepts, actually used language is always polysemic (various) it can have more than one meaning, more than one translation, so all uses of language necessarily call for interpretation
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phenomenology= science of phenomena as distinct from that of the nature of being.- an approach that concentrates on the study of consciousness and the objects of direct experience)
For this hermeneutic phenomenology, whatever is intelligible comes to us in and through our use of language. While philosophical language always aims at univocal(singular) concepts, actually used language is always polysemic (various) it can have more than one meaning, more than one translation, so all uses of language necessarily call for interpretation
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