hermeneutics in Arabic

Hermeneutics فرع اللّاهوت الذي يتعامل مع مبادئ التّفسير

Sentence patterns related to "hermeneutics"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hermeneutics" from the English - Arabic Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hermeneutics", or refer to the context using the word "hermeneutics" in the English - Arabic Dictionary.

1. Christocentric Hermeneutics There are two ways to read the Bible

2. Like Kantian Antinomies, or the Heisenberg uncertainty principle of quantum physics, hermeneutics is a field in which whenever we press too far in one direction …

3. She is often guilty of suspect hermeneutics, Allegorizes Scripture, and molds the biblical text to fit the message she wants to communicate

4. Alterity is a term now common in the literature of continental philosophy, theology, ethics, phenomenology, feminist theory, queer theory, hermeneutics, psychoanalysis, psychology, and cultural anthropology

5. The Assumptive phrase "What he appears to be saying" is a perfect example of the risk involved in biographical hermeneutics, and such wide interpretive latitude is …

6. The body of this book consists of three related case studies, which take up particular problematics surrounding the hermeneutics of the transgendered agent, the Askeses of organized weight-loss dieting, and attempts to represent the subjectivity of of cosmetic surgery recipients.

7. Asceticism is organized around four major themes that cut across religious traditions: origins and meanings of Asceticism, which explores the motivations and impulses behind ascetic behaviors; hermeneutics of Asceticism, which looks at texts and rhetorics and their presuppositions; aesthetics of Asceticism, which documents responses evoked by

8. In literary criticism and cultural studies, postCritique is the attempt to find new forms of reading and interpretation that go beyond the methods of Critique, critical theory, and ideological criticism.Such methods have been characterized as a "hermeneutics of suspicion" by Paul Ricœur and as a "paranoid" or suspicious style of reading by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick.