- Gadamer on Celan - http://www.sunypress.edu/sunyp/backads/html/gadamer.html
A collection of all of Gadamer's published writings on Celan's poetry. There is also an accessible commentary on the poems and a translation of Who Am I and Who Are You.
- Heidegger's Ways by H.G. Gadamer - http://humanum.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/humftp/Literature/gadamer.phil-literature
Anotation of Gadamer's volume on Heidegger. Some of the fifteen essays, written over a period of about 25 years, look back to Gadamer's early days as a student under Heidegger.
- MediaMente: Hans Georg Gadamer - http://www.mediamente.rai.it/mmold/english/bibliote/biografi/g/gadamer.htm
Italian site, which gives a short biography and bibliography of Gadamer. In English.
- Hans-Georg Gadamer - http://www.mythosandlogos.com/Gadamer.html
Gadamer Page at Mythos & Logos, including links to other Gadamer pages on the www.
- Etsuro Makita's Gadamer Page - http://www.ms.kuki.tus.ac.jp/KMSLab/makita/gdmhp/gdmhp_d.html
Homepage of the author of the definitive Gadamer bibliography. Includes a substantial portion of the bibliography. In German and Japanese.
- Gadamer and the Philosophy of Education - http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/gadamer.htm
Article from the Encyclopaedia of Philosophy of Education, by Padraig Hogan. Details six themes of Gadamer's hermeneutics, in relation to pedagogy.
- Richard Palmer - http://www.mac.edu/faculty/richardpalmer/
Homepage of the premier exponent of Gadamer in English. Includes notes on how to research Gadamer, bibliographies, and general links on hermeneutics.
- Library of Living Philosophers: Hans-Georg Gadamer - http://www.siu.edu/~philos/llp/Hans%20Gadamer.html
A description of this volume, which is intended to shed new light on Gadamer's relation to Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, and especially on his complex relationship to Heidegger.
- Hans-Georg Gadamer - http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/gadamer/
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy article providing a brief biographical sketch, a genealogy of Gadamer's hermeneutic philosophy, an explication of its fundamental principles, and primary and secondary bibliographical resources. By Jeff Malpas.
|