" Hermeneutics After Ricoeur is a superb book. It is a passionate defense of the project of a general hermeneutics, and shows that despite his own reservations, Ricoeur has much to contribute to this project. Arthos balances sensitive readings of Ricoeur's key works with a panoramic view of his place in the larger intellectual currents of his time. Above all, he shows that Ricoeur is a valuable ally to those concerned about the future of the liberal arts. An indispensable work." -- Robert Piercey, Professor of Philosophy, University of Regina, Canada "John Arthos is perhaps uniquely gifted to write this book. The book evinces his singularly deep and erudite immersion in the hermeneutics not only of Ricoeur but of Gadamer and Heidegger, and the result is a sophisticated, interwoven argument for a general hermeneutics after Ricoeur. The model of hermeneutics that the book proposes - one of dialogue and contestation - is one that the book undertakes itself in analysis of Ricoeur.
Of particularly timely interest in the absolutism of our times is the book's advance of a political hermeneutics building on Ricoeur that seeks recognition of our situated finitude and calls for prudential dialogue and judgment." -- George H. Taylor, Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh, USA "John Arthos is one of the few scholars who can offer such a comprehensive, lucid, and engaging study of Ricoeur's legacy in hermeneutics. Part intellectual history, part close reading of complex concepts, and part panoramic surveying of Ricoeur's rich body of works, Arthos's book is not only an outstanding contribution to hermeneutics, but also an original type of scholarly monograph, a real exercise in humanistic method, blending inquiry with historical narrative, and critique with application." -- Andreea Deciu Ritivoi, Professor of English, Carnegie Mellon University, USA.