Abstract

Charles Taylor’s contribution (1964-2007) to the question of human existence expands across a wide range of areas to include ontological hermeneutics, linguistics, philosophy, and ethics. His Christian sensibility colors his philosophy of human existence which proposes that the self finds itself as a moral linguistic being who can exist only against a background of distinctions of moral worth and value and who is embedded in a world of meanings and dialogical relation with other linguistic beings. Marilynne Robinson’s acclaimed novel Lila (2015) is an account of the life of a young woman damaged by poverty, abandonment, and neglect and at the end healed by God’s grace. In fact, Lila is the story of how Lila, the title character, in her attempt to understand the meaning of existence through her being in the world and her linguistic awareness finds the answer to her questions in a higher sense of the good, the mystery of grace. In this study, first the dominant theses of Taylor’s philosophical anthropology will be discussed followed by a discussion of Robinson’s stand ‒ which accords with that of Taylor – against the naturalistic theories of the self. Finally, the way the character’s interpretation of human existence accords with Taylorian framework is explored. Keywords: Charles Taylor, Marilynne Robinson’ Lila, existence, hermeneutics, self-interpretation, dialogical self

Highlights

  • In this paper the attempt is to compare Charles Taylor’s philosophical thought with Marylinne Robinson’s views as exhibited in her most recent novel, Lila (2015)

  • Though hermeneutics in the theological, legal, literary, and epistemological traditions mostly refers to textual interpretation, in the Taylorian tradition interpretations are those of meanings in the world and they tell us about human existence

  • As Smith points out in reference to Heideggerian Dasein, “human existence is constituted by the meanings things have for it, meanings determined more or less explicitly by self-interpretations’’; according to Taylor, interpretation is a structural feature that is sustained for the self in order to gain an understanding, though slight, of human existence

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Summary

Introduction

In this paper the attempt is to compare Charles Taylor’s philosophical thought with Marylinne Robinson’s views as exhibited in her most recent novel, Lila (2015).

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