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The Linguistic Quandary of Environmental Hermeneutics
Applications from Heidegger, Li Zehou, Gadamer, and Zhuangzi
The Linguistic Quandary of Environmental Hermeneutics
Applications from Heidegger, Li Zehou, Gadamer, and Zhuangzi
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Description
Within the context of the Age of the Anthropocene, this book outlines the existential preconditions for understanding the language of nature.
Andrew Fuyarchuk uses environmental hermeneutics as an example of a social conundrum, which is traced to the barriers created by Heidegger to understand animals-in-their environment. In response to these barriers, the author draws on the anthropological ontology of Li Zehou and Daoist philosophy. In contrast to the tradition of metaphysics that overshadows Heidegger, these philosophies think about humans and nature within a “one-world view” and thereby provide the conceptual resources to redefine what it means to be a human being from the domain of “being-in-nature.” This entails a transformation in the meaning of existence that the author develops in terms of three Gadamerian dispositional preconditions for a hermeneutics of nature: empathetic bodily affinity, receptivity to ambient environments, and imitation as a way of knowing.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Anthropological Ontology
1. Linguistic Quandary of Environmental Hermeneutics
2. The Being of Human Beings and the Problem of Method
3. Heidegger and Li Zehou
4. Philosophical Anthropology in the Age of the Anthropocene
Part II: Hermeneutics of Nature
Introduction
5. Malaise of Modernity
6. Heidegger versus Zhuangzi
7. Gadamer and the Chinese One-World
8. The Language of Nature
Bibliography
About the Author
Index
Product details
| Published | 08 Jan 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 214 |
| ISBN | 9781978761339 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This book lays the groundwork for a hermeneutics of nature and the environment by relying on Gadamer's productive metaphysical reading of Plato, which sets him apart from Heidegger's attempt to overcome metaphysics, and by practicing a fruitful form of East-West comparative philosophy that rests on an impressive familiarity with Chinese and especially Daoist thinking. This hermeneutics of the environment practices the dialogue between world cultures that Gadamer called for.
Jean Grondin, Université de Montréal, Canada
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Andrew Fuyarchuk's The Linguistic Quandary of Environmental Hermeneutics is a rare philosophical achievement-both erudite and quietly visionary. Through a luminous dialogue between Heidegger, Gadamer, Li Zehou, and Zhuangzi, Fuyarchuk transforms environmental hermeneutics from a theoretical field into a living art of listening. He shows that language is not a human instrument applied to nature, but the rhythm in which nature itself discloses meaning. His synthesis of phenomenology and Chinese thought reveals how understanding can become ecological-how words breathe, sediment, and return to the world that first gave them life. Original, exacting, and at times lyrical, this book invites readers to inhabit the fragile interval where speech becomes care and philosophy begins to sound like the earth thinking through us.
Zhang Ping, Tel Aviv University, Israel
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In The Linguistic Quandary of Environmental Hermeneutics: Applications from Heidegger, Li Zehou, Gadamer, and Zhuangzi, Andrew Fuyarchuk asserts that environmental hermeneutics remains lodged within an anthropocentric worldview distanced from existential preconditions of its own claims about the “thing itself.” Fuyarchuk revisits Martin Heidegger's leap into phusis (nature) through engaging counter-arguments by Heideggerian Daoists Jay Goulding and Bret Davis as a philosophical anthropology that includes a divided ontology: being-nature and being-in-the-world. This is explored by way of Li Zehou's theory of sedimentation and the “naturalization of human beings” during the transformation of nature, alongside an interpretation of Hans-Georg Gadamer that develops affinities with a Chinese “one-world view” from the Daoist Zhuangzi.
Fuyarchuk's incorporation of Chinese philosophy (Li Zehou, Daoist Heideggerians and Daoist ecologists) into contemporary hermeneutics attests to cross-cultural research for advancing philosophical anthropology that includes a pre-linguistic and trans-historical disposition. His understanding of conditions for a hermeneutics of nature within “nature” are above all called for in the midst of a planetary climate crisis. Fuyarchuk's work is a valuable contribution to contemporary environmental philosophy, hermeneutics, and philosophical anthropology. Well researched and written with passion and bravado, Fuyarchuk's book is a must read for interdisciplinary scholars, novices and specialists alike.Jay Goulding, York University, Canada
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In this groundbreaking work, Andrew Fuyarchuk examines the foundations of environmental hermeneutics through the tension between Western and Chinese philosophy. Drawing on a dialogue between Heidegger's phenomenological ontology and Li Zehou's anthropological philosophy, he develops a new understanding of human existence as “being-in-nature.” Fuyarchuk shows how the language of nature can be accessed beyond purely human discourse. By integrating ecological ethics, hermeneutics, and intercultural philosophy, he makes an innovative contribution to environmental philosophy in the Anthropocene era.
Jana S. Rošker, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
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