Friday, June 19, 2026

The Other Is Always More

 

The Other Is Always More

On Perspective, Otherness, and the Limits of Our Understanding

We often say that we understand another human being.

We say it in everyday life, in the family, in the therapy room, in social work, in education, and in friendship. We say: I understand you. I see how you feel. Now I understand what you mean. Now I am beginning to understand why you acted as you did.

Such words can be good.

They can bring relief. They can give a person the feeling of no longer being alone. They can open the space between us and make it possible for the conversation to continue.

But the words can also be dangerous.

For when I say that I understand you, I may at the same time have begun to enclose you within my understanding.

I may believe that I have seen enough. That your story is now clear. That your reactions fit into an explanation. That I know where your pain comes from, what you need, and which path you should take.

Then understanding is no longer a bridge.

It has become a room from which the other person cannot escape.

Hermeneutics teaches us that the human being is an interpreting being. We always understand from somewhere, through language, tradition, experience, and pre-understanding. We cannot refrain from interpreting. Without interpretation, we would not be able to orient ourselves in the world or encounter other people meaningfully.

But hermeneutics also teaches us something else:

Understanding has limits.

Another human being is never only what I have understood.

The other is always more.

The Perspective from Which I See

I never encounter the other from nowhere.

I see from my own life. I carry with me my age, body, history, education, language, culture, faith, doubt, vulnerability, and experience. I see through what I have lived, but also through what I have not lived.

This applies both in everyday life and in professional practice.

The person who has worked for many years with children in vulnerable life situations sees signs that an inexperienced person may not see. The person who has met many people in crisis may recognise patterns. The person who has researched shame, power, or abuse has concepts that make certain experiences visible.

This is valuable.

But the perspective that opens also limits.

When I see from one place, I do not at the same time see from every other place. What is close to my experience becomes easier to recognise. What lies far from my life may become foreign, unclear, or misinterpreted.

I may believe that I see the human being.

But often I see the human being from my side.

Hermeneutic humility begins here. Not by ceasing to trust everything I see, but by remembering that I see from a particular place.

My understanding may be true.

But it is not the whole truth.

The Other as Stranger

There is always something foreign in the other person.

Even in people we know well. Even in those we love. Even in children we have followed since they were small. Even in the spouse with whom we have shared a long life.

The other person can surprise us. Say something we did not expect. Carry a sorrow we did not know. Remember an event differently. React in a way that shows that we have not understood everything.

This is not necessarily a defeat.

It is a sign that the other person is still alive.

Otherness does not mean that the other is inaccessible. It does not mean that understanding is impossible. It means only that understanding is never total.

A human being is not a text we can finish reading.

Even a text can be read in new ways. How much more, then, does this apply to a human being who continues to live, act, remember, forget, hope, feel shame, remain silent, and change?

The other is not a problem to be solved.

The other is a life that can never be fully contained within my explanation.

When Understanding Becomes Possession

Understanding can become a form of possession.

This happens when I make my interpretation of the other stronger than the other person’s own possibility of speaking. I may say: What this is really about is fear. You are really angry with your mother. You do not really want to get well. This is really trauma, shame, resistance, or control.

Sometimes such interpretations may touch something true.

There are experiences for which people do not yet have language. There are defences, repressions, and patterns that others may see before the person sees them.

But the word “really” is dangerous.

It can give the helper the right to know more about the other than the other knows about themselves.

Then understanding risks becoming appropriation.

The other person is no longer allowed to be the primary witness to their own life. Everything they say can be interpreted through the helper’s explanation. If the person confirms the interpretation, it is insight. If the person rejects it, it is resistance.

In this way, the person becomes trapped.

There is no way out of the other’s understanding.

For this reason, all deep interpretation must be accompanied by caution. We may offer language, suggest connections, and share professional insight. But we must do so in a way that allows the other person to respond.

An understanding that cannot be corrected by the other is no longer dialogical.

It has become power.

The Professional Temptation

Professionals are particularly exposed to the temptation to understand too much.

Not because they are bad people. Often quite the opposite. They wish to help. They have knowledge, experience, and responsibility. They meet people who suffer, and they know that passivity may have serious consequences.

They must therefore interpret.

A social worker must assess whether a child is safe. A therapist must try to understand pain and patterns. A physician must make a diagnosis. A teacher must interpret a pupil’s difficulties. A judge must assess credibility and responsibility.

Professional practice requires judgement.

But precisely for that reason, it also requires humility.

The professional may begin to see the person through the case, the diagnosis, the risk assessment, or the intervention. The person becomes an example of something already known.

The violence case.

The depressed patient.

The unmotivated young person.

The difficult parent.

The silent child.

Such labels may be practical. They may provide overview. But they may also conceal the fact that the human being is always more than the category.

The category must never have the final word about the person.

Understanding Without Reducing

The goal cannot be to stop understanding.

That would be indifference.

If a child remains silent, we must try to understand the silence. If a person harms themselves, we must try to understand what the action expresses. If a parent fails, we must examine what the failure consists in and what consequences it has.

To refrain from understanding may also be a form of betrayal.

But we must understand without reducing.

This means continually distinguishing between the human being and our explanation of the human being.

An explanation may be necessary. It may be professionally justified. It may even be sufficiently correct that action must be taken.

But it is still an explanation.

It is not the person themselves.

A human being may be traumatised and at the same time courageous, humorous, demanding, loving, contradictory, and hopeful. A parent may have failed and at the same time love the child. A young person may be caught in serious substance use and at the same time carry a deep longing for dignity. An old person may need help and at the same time fight for the last remnant of self-determination.

To understand without reducing is to allow several truths to stand side by side without forcing the person into only one of them.

Otherness as Protection

The other person’s otherness may feel like an obstacle.

We often want to come closer. We want to know, help, explain, and perhaps also comfort. What we do not understand may make us uneasy.

But otherness also has ethical significance.

It protects the other from being completely taken over by our gaze.

As long as I know that I do not understand everything, I must continue listening. I must ask again. I must wait. I must make room for the other person to come forward in ways I had not anticipated.

Otherness prevents the human being from becoming an object.

Emmanuel Levinas formulates this radically: the other encounters me as someone who cannot be reduced to my knowledge. The face of the other makes a claim upon me before I have understood everything. I must respond to the other’s vulnerability without first making the other completely intelligible.

This is crucial in all helping work.

The child needs protection before we understand everything.

The person exposed to harm needs safety before the story is complete.

The stranger needs recognition before we have translated the whole life into our concepts.

Ethics does not begin after understanding has been completed.

It begins in the encounter with the other who already concerns us.

The Limit That Makes Dialogue Possible

It may sound paradoxical, but the limit of understanding makes dialogue possible.

If I believe that I already understand you completely, I no longer need to listen. I can explain you, treat you, teach you, or correct you. But the dialogue is over.

Dialogue presupposes that something may still come forward.

Something I do not know.

Something you have not yet said.

Something we may perhaps discover only together.

Humility is therefore not an addition to dialogue. It is a condition for it.

The good conversation lives from the fact that no one has full control over what it may open. We may begin with one question and end somewhere else. The other may say something that requires my understanding to change. I may discover that the matter was different from what I believed.

This does not mean that everything is uncertain.

It means that truth in human relationships often needs time, trust, and mutual correction.

It does not always arrive as a conclusion.

Sometimes it arrives as greater caution.

Perspective Is Not Relativism

When we say that all understanding takes place from a perspective, some may fear relativism.

If everyone sees from their own place, is there then no truth? Is everything merely interpretation? Can we never say that something is right, wrong, true, or false?

This is an important concern.

But perspective does not mean that all interpretations are equally good.

Some interpretations are better justified than others. Some take more aspects of the matter into account. Some withstand resistance. Some distinguish clearly between observation, assumption, and judgement. Others are too quick, too narrow, or governed by power.

The fact that I see from somewhere does not mean that I cannot see something true.

It means that truth must be sought responsibly.

It must be tested against the matter itself, against the other person’s voice, against experience, against other perspectives, and against the consequences of our interpretation.

Hermeneutic humility is therefore not the enemy of truth.

It is part of the search for truth.

It reminds us that truth does not become stronger when we make ourselves blind to our own limitations.

When the Other Becomes a Mirror

Sometimes we believe that we understand the other, but in reality we are seeing ourselves.

We recognise a pain, a fear, or an experience and assume that it means the same for the other as it did for us. We use our own history as the key to the other’s.

Recognition can be a gift.

It can create warmth and closeness. It can make us less judgemental.

But recognition can also become a trap.

The other becomes a mirror of my own life rather than a human being with their own story.

I may say: This is how it was for me, therefore it must be like this for you.

But the other’s experience may resemble mine and still be different.

Two people may lose a parent, but grief may take different forms. Two people may live with illness, but illness may affect self-image, family, and future in different ways. Two people may experience exclusion, but exclusion may mean something different in each life story.

Empathy therefore requires more than recognition.

It requires that I allow the familiar to become strange again.

The Unsaid in the Other

Much of a human life remains unsaid.

Some of it because there are no words. Some because the words have not yet been found. Some because it is too painful. Some because it is too private. Some because no one has previously asked in a way that made it possible to answer.

The unsaid does not always mean that something is being hidden.

It may also mean that the experience has not yet found form.

In the face of the unsaid, the helper often becomes uneasy. She wants to open, clarify, and put words to things. This may be necessary, but it may also come too quickly.

There is an ethical difference between creating room for words and forcing the words forth.

The other person has a right to language.

But also a right to space.

Not everything must be said now. Not everything must be said to me. Not everything that is true must necessarily be made public, recorded, or analysed.

The limits of understanding therefore also concern respect for the private.

The other is more than what can be shared.

The Story Is Never Completely Finished

Human beings tell stories about their lives.

We create connections between events, choices, losses, hopes, and turning points. We say: This was the reason. That was when everything changed. This made me who I am.

Such stories are necessary.

Without them, life would be fragmented.

But stories change.

An event that in youth was understood as defeat may later appear as the beginning of something new. A relationship that was idealised may later be seen with greater clarity. A pain that seemed meaningless may, in retrospect, find a place within a larger understanding without thereby becoming good.

The other is therefore not only more than my story about them.

They are also more than their present story about themselves.

This must be said with caution. It does not give the helper the right to take over the other person’s self-understanding. But it reminds us that the human being is underway.

No one should be judged entirely by one story, not even the story they themselves are currently able to tell.

Hope lies in the fact that life can still be interpreted anew.

Being Misunderstood

Being misunderstood can be painful.

Especially when the misunderstanding comes from someone who has power over us: a teacher, physician, therapist, social worker, manager, or judge.

Then it is not merely a private discomfort.

The misunderstanding may have consequences.

A child may be understood as difficult when they are afraid. A patient may be understood as uncooperative when she is actually trying to preserve dignity. A client may be understood as irresponsible when he is overwhelmed. A parent may be understood either too leniently or too harshly, with serious consequences for the child.

Humility is therefore not only a personal virtue.

It is a professional requirement.

The person who has the power to describe others must know that the description is never innocent. The words remain. They may follow a person through systems. They may open doors or close them.

To write about a human being is also to act towards that person.

The professional must therefore ask:

Would the other person be able to recognise themselves in some part of this?

Have I distinguished between facts, interpretation, and assessment?

Have I written in a way that still allows the person to be more than the problem?

Understanding Evil?

The question of the limits of understanding becomes especially difficult when we encounter actions that are evil, violent, or violating.

Should we understand the abuser? Should we understand the violence? Should we try to see the world from the perspective of the person who has harmed others?

These are difficult questions.

To understand is not to excuse.

To explain is not to acquit.

If we do not try to understand the patterns of violence, the mechanisms of power, and the strategies of the perpetrator, we cannot protect well enough. Knowledge is necessary.

But here too there is a limit.

Understanding must not make the victim invisible. It must not transform the violation into merely an expression of the perpetrator’s pain. It must not become so preoccupied with causes that responsibility disappears.

Some actions must be met with clear moral judgement.

Hermeneutic humility does not mean that everything should be understood gently.

It means that judgement, too, must be truthful, responsible, and conscious of its grounds.

We may try to understand how something became possible.

At the same time, we must be able to say: This should not have happened.

The Other as Subject

To encounter the other as a subject means to encounter someone who themselves sees, interprets, hopes, fears, and responds.

The other is not merely an object of my knowledge.

She is also someone who has a world.

This may seem obvious, but in practice it is easily forgotten. Especially when people need help, they may be made into objects of assessment. They become cases, symptoms, diagnoses, needs, or risks.

The subject disappears behind what we must manage.

To remember that the other is a subject means asking how the world appears from her place. But it also means knowing that I can never fully take over that place.

I can listen.

I can ask.

I can try to understand.

But I cannot become her.

This is a limit that protects both her and me.

It prevents me from turning her life into my project. It prevents her from being reduced to my empathy, my theory, or my help.

The Other and the Inviolable

Human dignity does not rest upon our fully understanding one another.

It rests upon the fact that the other has a claim to respect even before understanding is complete.

A child should not have to explain their pain perfectly in order to be protected. A person with dementia should not have to express their identity clearly in order to be treated with dignity. A refugee should not have to make their entire story comprehensible in order to be met as a human being. Someone who is silent, confused, or different does not lose their dignity because our understanding falls short.

This is important.

For if dignity depends on intelligibility, the most vulnerable also become the most exposed.

The human being we do not understand may easily be pushed aside, diagnosed too quickly, made ridiculous, controlled, or overlooked.

Ethics must therefore come before complete understanding.

We should try to understand.

But we should not wait to show respect until we have succeeded.

Living with Open Understanding

How does one live with the fact that the other is always more?

One lives with open understanding.

This does not mean that one never reaches conclusions. Life requires decisions. Professions require assessments. Children must be protected. Treatment must be given. Injustice must be stopped.

But the conclusion must carry within it the memory that it has been reached under conditions of limited insight.

Open understanding says:

This is the best I understand at present.

I must act upon it.

But I must still be able to learn.

Such an attitude is demanding, but it is also liberating.

It makes it possible to be clear without being closed. It makes it possible to be responsible without pretending to be omniscient. It makes it possible to meet people with knowledge without turning knowledge into a cage.

A Humble Ending to Hermeneutics

This series has been about understanding.

About pre-understanding, prejudices, tradition, horizon, dialogue, text, and interpretation. About how we never begin from zero, how we become ourselves in conversation, and how words acquire a life after they have been written.

But a hermeneutics that only celebrates understanding is too simple.

It must also teach us to stop.

Not to stop in the sense of giving up, but to stop in the sense of bowing before the limit.

Here is a human being.

I can understand something.

Perhaps I can understand much.

I can listen, read, interpret, ask, wait, and learn.

But I cannot possess this human being through my understanding.

The other is always more.

More than the diagnosis.

More than the story.

More than the shame.

More than the trauma.

More than the disability.

More than the role.

More than the case.

More than what I fear.

More than what I hope.

More than what she herself is able to say at this moment.

This more-ness is not a gap in our knowledge merely waiting to be filled.

It is part of human dignity.

The Open Hand

Perhaps understanding can be compared to a hand.

We can grasp tightly. Then we hold on, but we may also crush what we wished to protect.

Or we can open the hand.

The open hand does not let go of everything. It is still there. It can support, carry, protect, and receive. But it does not possess.

Such is the hermeneutic attitude at its best.

It seeks understanding, but without making understanding into possession.

It takes responsibility, but without turning responsibility into control.

It meets the other with knowledge, but allows knowledge to remain humble.

It knows that a human being needs to be seen.

But also to remain more than what is seen.

The final word in hermeneutics is perhaps therefore not understanding.

It is reverence.

Reverence for the fact that the other can never be made entirely mine.

Reverence for the fact that the world always contains more than my horizon.

Reverence for the fact that every interpretation of a human being must be carried with care.

We never understand everything.

But we may understand enough to act more responsibly, listen more humbly, and meet the other with greater attentiveness.

Perhaps that is enough.

Not because understanding is complete.

But because the human being before us is still alive.

And because the other, always, is more.

Recommended Reading for Further Study

Readers who wish to explore perspective, otherness, human dignity, and the limits of our understanding may begin with the following works.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2010). Truth and Method. Continuum.

Gadamer’s principal work provides the central background for this series’ reflections on understanding, pre-understanding, dialogue, and horizon. The book is particularly important for understanding why all understanding both opens and limits what we are able to see.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2007). The Gadamer Reader: A Bouquet of the Later Writings. Northwestern University Press.

An accessible English-language selection of Gadamer’s writings on language, conversation, and understanding. Especially useful for readers seeking shorter entries into philosophical hermeneutics.

Levinas, E. (1996). Basic Philosophical Writings. Indiana University Press.

Levinas challenges every form of understanding that turns the other into an object of our knowledge. His ethics is decisive for the idea that the other always exceeds what we can grasp.

Buber, M. (1970). I and Thou. Charles Scribner’s Sons.

Buber’s thought on the I–Thou relationship shows how the other must be encountered as a subject, not as a thing, function, or case. The book gives an existential and dialogical deepening of the essay’s central theme.

Ricoeur, P. (1992). Oneself as Another. University of Chicago Press.

Ricoeur examines identity, narrative, action, and responsibility. The book is central to understanding the human being as both narrative and more than any narrative.

Ricoeur, P. (1981). Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press.

An important collection of texts on interpretation, action, and the human sciences. Ricoeur provides a necessary supplement to Gadamer, especially concerning critique, text, and responsibility.

Løgstrup, K. E. (1997). The Ethical Demand. University of Notre Dame Press.

Løgstrup shows how human beings always hold something of one another’s lives in their hands. The book is particularly relevant to understanding trust, vulnerability, and responsibility in human encounters.

Vetlesen, A. J. (2007). Hva er etikk. Universitetsforlaget.

An accessible Norwegian introduction to fundamental ethical questions. The book is useful for further reflection on responsibility, vulnerability, dignity, and moral judgement.

Taylor, C. (1985). Interpretation and the sciences of man. In Philosophy and the Human Sciences: Philosophical Papers 2 (pp. 15–57). Cambridge University Press.

Taylor shows why human actions must be understood within contexts of meaning, while also reminding us that understanding is never entirely detached from the interpreter.

van Manen, M. (2016). Researching Lived Experience: Human Science for an Action Sensitive Pedagogy (2nd ed.). Routledge.

Van Manen offers a careful phenomenological-hermeneutic approach to lived experience. The book is especially useful for professionals who seek to understand human experience without reducing it.


We never understand everything. But we may understand enough to act more responsibly, 

listen more humbly, and meet the other with greater attentiveness.

Perhaps that is enough.Not because understanding is complete.

But because the human being before us is still alive.

And because the other, always, is more.


Authors note: This essay brings together several threads: pre-understanding, dialogue, text, otherness, and professional responsibility. It is developed from my lecture notes on hermeneutics as the art of understanding, but ends at the limit of all understanding: the other is always more. The text is written in a conversation with OpenAI/ChatGPT.


Den andre er alltid mer

 

Den andre er alltid mer

Om perspektiv, fremmedhet og grensene for vår forståelse

Vi sier ofte at vi forstår et annet menneske.

Vi sier det i hverdagen, i familien, i terapirommet, i sosialt arbeid, i undervisning og i vennskap. Vi sier: Jeg forstår deg. Jeg skjønner hvordan du har det. Nå ser jeg hva du mener. Nå begynner jeg å forstå hvorfor du gjorde som du gjorde.

Slike ord kan være gode.

De kan skape lettelse. De kan gi et menneske følelsen av ikke lenger å være alene. De kan åpne rommet mellom oss og gjøre det mulig å fortsette samtalen.

Men ordene kan også være farlige.

For når jeg sier at jeg forstår deg, kan jeg samtidig ha begynt å lukke deg inne i min forståelse.

Jeg kan mene at jeg har sett nok. At historien din nå er tydelig. At reaksjonene dine passer inn i en forklaring. At jeg vet hvor smerten kommer fra, hva du trenger, og hvilken vei du bør gå.

Da er forståelsen ikke lenger en bro.

Den er blitt et rom den andre ikke kommer ut av.

Hermeneutikken lærer oss at mennesket er et fortolkende vesen. Vi forstår alltid fra et sted, gjennom språk, tradisjon, erfaring og forforståelse. Vi kan ikke la være å fortolke. Uten fortolkning ville vi ikke kunne orientere oss i verden eller møte andre mennesker meningsfullt.

Men hermeneutikken lærer oss også noe annet:

Forståelsen har grenser.

Et annet menneske er aldri bare det jeg har forstått.

Den andre er alltid mer.

Perspektivet jeg ser fra

Jeg møter aldri den andre fra ingensteds.

Jeg ser fra mitt eget liv. Jeg bærer med meg min alder, kropp, historie, utdanning, språk, kultur, tro, tvil, sårbarhet og erfaring. Jeg ser gjennom det jeg har opplevd, men også gjennom det jeg ikke har opplevd.

Dette gjelder både i hverdagen og i profesjonelt arbeid.

Den som har arbeidet lenge med barn i utsatte livssituasjoner, ser tegn en uerfaren kanskje ikke ser. Den som har møtt mange mennesker i krise, kan gjenkjenne mønstre. Den som har forsket på skam, makt eller overgrep, har begreper som gjør visse erfaringer tydelige.

Dette er verdifullt.

Men perspektivet som åpner, begrenser også.

Når jeg ser fra ett sted, ser jeg ikke samtidig fra alle andre steder. Det som er nært min erfaring, blir lettere å gjenkjenne. Det som ligger langt fra mitt liv, kan bli fremmed, utydelig eller feilfortolket.

Jeg kan tro at jeg ser mennesket.

Men ofte ser jeg mennesket fra min kant.

Den hermeneutiske ydmykheten begynner her. Ikke med at jeg slutter å stole på alt jeg ser, men med at jeg husker at jeg ser fra et bestemt sted.

Min forståelse kan være sann.

Men den er ikke hele sannheten.

Den andre som fremmed

Det finnes alltid noe fremmed i den andre.

Selv i mennesker vi kjenner godt. Selv i dem vi elsker. Selv i barn vi har fulgt fra de var små. Selv i ektefellen vi har delt et langt liv med.

Den andre kan overraske oss. Si noe vi ikke ventet. Bære en sorg vi ikke kjente. Huske en hendelse annerledes. Reagere på en måte som viser at vi ikke har forstått alt.

Dette er ikke nødvendigvis et nederlag.

Det er et tegn på at den andre fortsatt er levende.

Fremmedheten betyr ikke at den andre er utilgjengelig. Den betyr ikke at forståelse er umulig. Den betyr bare at forståelsen aldri blir total.

Et menneske er ikke en tekst vi kan lese ferdig.

Selv teksten kan leses på nye måter. Hvor mye mer gjelder ikke da et menneske, som fortsatt lever, handler, husker, glemmer, håper, skammer seg, tier og forandrer seg?

Den andre er ikke et problem som skal løses.

Den andre er et liv som aldri helt kan innesluttes i min forklaring.

Når forståelse blir eierskap

Forståelse kan bli en form for eierskap.

Det skjer når jeg gjør min fortolkning av den andre sterkere enn den andres egen mulighet til å tale. Jeg sier kanskje: Egentlig handler dette om frykt. Egentlig er du sint på moren din. Egentlig vil du ikke bli frisk. Egentlig er dette traume, skam, motstand eller kontroll.

Noen ganger kan slike fortolkninger treffe noe sant.

Det finnes erfaringer mennesker ikke selv har språk for. Det finnes forsvar, fortrengninger og mønstre som andre kan se før personen selv ser dem.

Men ordet «egentlig» er farlig.

Det kan gi hjelperen rett til å vite mer om den andre enn den andre vet om seg selv.

Da risikerer forståelsen å bli overtakelse.

Den andre får ikke lenger være den fremste vitne til sitt eget liv. Alt vedkommende sier, kan tolkes gjennom hjelperens forklaring. Dersom personen bekrefter fortolkningen, er det innsikt. Dersom personen avviser den, er det motstand.

Slik blir mennesket fanget.

Det finnes ingen vei ut av den andres forståelse.

Derfor må all dyp fortolkning ledsages av varsomhet. Vi kan tilby språk, foreslå sammenhenger og dele faglig innsikt. Men vi må gjøre det på en måte som lar den andre svare.

En forståelse som ikke kan korrigeres av den andre, er ikke lenger dialogisk.

Den er blitt makt.

Den profesjonelle fristelsen

Profesjonelle er særlig utsatt for fristelsen til å forstå for mye.

Ikke fordi de er dårlige mennesker. Ofte tvert imot. De ønsker å hjelpe. De har kunnskap, erfaring og ansvar. De møter mennesker som lider, og de vet at passivitet kan få store konsekvenser.

Derfor må de fortolke.

En sosialarbeider må vurdere om et barn er trygt. En terapeut må forsøke å forstå smerte og mønstre. En lege må stille diagnose. En lærer må tolke elevens vansker. En dommer må vurdere troverdighet og ansvar.

Profesjonelt arbeid krever dømmekraft.

Men nettopp derfor krever det også ydmykhet.

Den profesjonelle kan begynne å se mennesket gjennom saken, diagnosen, risikovurderingen eller tiltaket. Personen blir et eksempel på noe man kjenner fra før.

Saken om vold.

Den depressive pasienten.

Den umotiverte ungdommen.

Den vanskelige forelderen.

Det tause barnet.

Slike betegnelser kan være praktiske. De kan gi oversikt. Men de kan også skjule at mennesket alltid er mer enn kategorien.

Kategorien kan aldri få siste ord om personen.

Å forstå uten å redusere

Målet kan ikke være å slutte å forstå.

Det ville være likegyldighet.

Hvis et barn tier, må vi forsøke å forstå tausheten. Hvis et menneske skader seg selv, må vi forsøke å forstå hva handlingen uttrykker. Hvis en forelder svikter, må vi undersøke hva svikten består i og hvilke konsekvenser den får.

Å avstå fra forståelse kan også være en form for svik.

Men vi må forstå uten å redusere.

Det betyr at vi hele tiden må skille mellom mennesket og vår forklaring av mennesket.

En forklaring kan være nødvendig. Den kan være faglig begrunnet. Den kan til og med være riktig nok til at det må handles.

Men den er fortsatt en forklaring.

Den er ikke mennesket selv.

Et menneske kan være traumatisert og samtidig modig, humoristisk, krevende, kjærlig, selvmotsigende og håpefullt. En forelder kan ha sviktet og samtidig elske barnet. En ungdom kan være i alvorlig rus og samtidig bære en dyp lengsel etter verdighet. En gammel person kan trenge hjelp og samtidig kjempe for den siste rest av selvbestemmelse.

Å forstå uten å redusere er å la flere sannheter stå ved siden av hverandre uten å tvinge mennesket inn i én av dem.

Fremmedheten som vern

Den andres fremmedhet kan oppleves som en hindring.

Vi vil gjerne komme nærmere. Vi ønsker å vite, hjelpe, forklare og kanskje også trøste. Det vi ikke forstår, kan gjøre oss urolige.

Men fremmedheten har også en etisk betydning.

Den verner den andre mot å bli fullstendig overtatt av vårt blikk.

Så lenge jeg vet at jeg ikke forstår alt, må jeg forbli lyttende. Jeg må spørre på nytt. Jeg må vente. Jeg må gi plass til at den andre kan komme frem på måter jeg ikke hadde forutsett.

Fremmedheten gjør at mennesket ikke blir en gjenstand.

Emmanuel Levinas formulerer dette radikalt: Den andre møter meg som en som ikke kan reduseres til min kunnskap. Ansiktet til den andre stiller et krav til meg før jeg har forstått alt. Jeg må svare på den andres sårbarhet uten først å gjøre den andre fullstendig forståelig.

Dette er avgjørende i alt hjelpearbeid.

Barnet trenger beskyttelse før vi forstår alt.

Den utsatte trenger trygghet før fortellingen er fullstendig.

Den fremmede trenger anerkjennelse før vi har oversatt hele livet inn i våre begreper.

Etikken begynner ikke etter at forståelsen er fullført.

Den begynner i møtet med den andre som allerede angår oss.

Grensen som gjør dialog mulig

Det kan høres paradoksalt ut, men grensen for forståelsen gjør dialogen mulig.

Hvis jeg tror at jeg allerede forstår deg helt, trenger jeg ikke lenger lytte. Jeg kan forklare deg, behandle deg, undervise deg eller korrigere deg. Men dialogen er over.

Dialog forutsetter at noe fortsatt kan komme frem.

Noe jeg ikke vet.

Noe du ennå ikke har sagt.

Noe vi kanskje først kan oppdage sammen.

Derfor er ydmykhet ikke et tillegg til dialogen. Den er en betingelse for den.

Den gode samtalen lever av at ingen har full kontroll over hva den kan åpne. Vi kan begynne med et spørsmål og ende på et annet sted. Den andre kan si noe som gjør at min forståelse må endres. Jeg kan oppdage at saken var annerledes enn jeg trodde.

Dette betyr ikke at alt er usikkert.

Det betyr at sannheten i menneskelige forhold ofte trenger tid, tillit og gjensidig korrigering.

Den kommer ikke alltid som en konklusjon.

Noen ganger kommer den som en større varsomhet.

Perspektiv er ikke relativisme

Når vi sier at all forståelse skjer fra et perspektiv, kan noen frykte relativisme.

Hvis alle ser fra sitt sted, finnes det da ingen sannhet? Er alt bare fortolkning? Kan vi da aldri si at noe er rett, galt, sant eller usant?

Dette er en viktig bekymring.

Men perspektiv betyr ikke at alle fortolkninger er like gode.

Noen fortolkninger er bedre begrunnet enn andre. Noen tar hensyn til flere sider av saken. Noen tåler motstand. Noen skiller tydelig mellom observasjon, antakelse og dom. Andre er for raske, for snevre eller styrt av makt.

At jeg ser fra et sted, betyr ikke at jeg ikke kan se noe sant.

Det betyr at sannheten må søkes ansvarlig.

Den må prøves mot saken, mot den andres stemme, mot erfaring, mot andre perspektiver og mot konsekvensene av vår fortolkning.

Hermeneutisk ydmykhet er derfor ikke sannhetens fiende.

Den er en del av sannhetssøkingen.

Den minner oss om at sannhet ikke blir sterkere av at vi gjør oss selv blinde for våre egne begrensninger.

Når den andre blir et speil

Noen ganger tror vi at vi forstår den andre, men vi ser egentlig oss selv.

Vi kjenner igjen en smerte, en frykt eller en erfaring og antar at den betyr det samme for den andre som den gjorde for oss. Vi bruker vår egen historie som nøkkel til den andres.

Gjenkjennelse kan være en gave.

Den kan skape varme og nærhet. Den kan gjøre oss mindre dømmende.

Men gjenkjennelse kan også bli en felle.

Den andre blir et speil for mitt eget liv i stedet for et menneske med sin egen historie.

Jeg kan si: Slik var det for meg, derfor må det være slik for deg.

Men den andres erfaring kan ligne og likevel være annerledes.

To mennesker kan miste en forelder, men sorgen kan ha ulik form. To mennesker kan leve med sykdom, men sykdommen kan treffe selvbildet, familien og framtiden på ulike måter. To mennesker kan oppleve utenforskap, men utenforskapet kan bety noe forskjellig i hver livshistorie.

Empati krever derfor mer enn gjenkjennelse.

Den krever at jeg lar det kjente bli fremmed igjen.

Det usagte i den andre

Mye av et menneskes liv er usagt.

Noe fordi det ikke finnes ord. Noe fordi ordene ennå ikke er funnet. Noe fordi det er for smertefullt. Noe fordi det er for privat. Noe fordi ingen tidligere har spurt på en måte som gjorde det mulig å svare.

Det usagte betyr ikke alltid at noe skjules.

Det kan også være at erfaringen ennå ikke har fått form.

I møte med det usagte blir hjelperen ofte urolig. Hun vil åpne, avklare og sette ord på. Dette kan være nødvendig, men det kan også bli for raskt.

Det finnes en etisk forskjell mellom å skape rom for ord og å presse ordene frem.

Den andre har rett til språk.

Men også rett til rom.

Ikke alt må sies nå. Ikke alt må sies til meg. Ikke alt som er sant, skal nødvendigvis gjøres offentlig, journalføres eller analyseres.

Forståelsens grenser handler derfor også om respekt for det private.

Den andre er mer enn det som kan deles.

Fortellingen er aldri helt ferdig

Mennesker forteller om livet sitt.

Vi skaper sammenheng mellom hendelser, valg, tap, håp og vendepunkter. Vi sier: Dette var grunnen. Det var da alt forandret seg. Dette gjorde meg til den jeg er.

Slike fortellinger er nødvendige.

Uten dem ville livet være fragmentert.

Men fortellinger forandrer seg.

En hendelse som i ungdommen ble forstått som nederlag, kan senere fremstå som begynnelsen på noe nytt. En relasjon som ble idealisert, kan senere sees med større klarhet. En smerte som virket meningsløs, kan i ettertid få plass i en større forståelse uten at den dermed blir god.

Den andre er derfor ikke bare mer enn min fortelling om ham.

Han er også mer enn sin nåværende fortelling om seg selv.

Dette må sies varsomt. Det gir ikke hjelperen rett til å overta selvforståelsen. Men det minner oss om at mennesket er underveis.

Ingen skal dømmes helt ut fra én fortelling, heller ikke den fortellingen vedkommende selv for øyeblikket klarer å fortelle.

Håpet ligger i at livet fortsatt kan fortolkes på nytt.

Å bli misforstått

Å bli misforstått kan gjøre vondt.

Særlig når misforståelsen kommer fra noen som har makt over oss. En lærer, lege, terapeut, sosialarbeider, leder eller dommer.

Da er det ikke bare et privat ubehag.

Misforståelsen kan få konsekvenser.

Et barn kan bli forstått som vanskelig når det er redd. En pasient kan bli forstått som lite samarbeidsvillig når hun egentlig forsøker å bevare verdighet. En klient kan bli forstått som uansvarlig når han er overveldet. En forelder kan bli forstått enten for mildt eller for hardt, med store følger for barnet.

Derfor er ydmykhet ikke bare en personlig dyd.

Den er et profesjonelt krav.

Den som har makt til å beskrive andre, må vite at beskrivelsen aldri er uskyldig. Ordene blir liggende. De kan følge et menneske gjennom systemer. De kan åpne dører eller stenge dem.

Å skrive om et menneske er også å handle overfor det.

Derfor må den profesjonelle spørre:

Ville den andre kunne kjenne seg igjen i noe av dette?

Har jeg skilt mellom fakta, fortolkning og vurdering?

Har jeg skrevet på en måte som fortsatt lar mennesket være mer enn problemet?

Å forstå det onde?

Spørsmålet om forståelsens grenser blir særlig vanskelig når vi møter handlinger som er onde, voldelige eller krenkende.

Skal vi forstå overgriperen? Skal vi forstå volden? Skal vi forsøke å se verden fra perspektivet til den som har skadet andre?

Dette er krevende spørsmål.

Å forstå er ikke å unnskylde.

Å forklare er ikke å frikjenne.

Dersom vi ikke forsøker å forstå voldens mønstre, maktens mekanismer og overgriperens strategier, kan vi heller ikke beskytte godt nok. Kunnskap er nødvendig.

Men også her finnes en grense.

Forståelsen må ikke gjøre offeret usynlig. Den må ikke forvandle krenkelsen til bare et uttrykk for overgriperens smerte. Den må ikke bli så opptatt av årsaker at ansvaret forsvinner.

Noen handlinger må møtes med klar moralsk dom.

Hermeneutisk ydmykhet betyr ikke at alt skal forstås mildt.

Det betyr at også dommen må være sannferdig, ansvarlig og bevisst sin begrunnelse.

Vi kan forsøke å forstå hvordan noe ble mulig.

Samtidig må vi kunne si: Dette skulle ikke ha skjedd.

Den andre som subjekt

Å møte den andre som subjekt betyr å møte en som selv ser, fortolker, håper, frykter og svarer.

Den andre er ikke bare gjenstand for min kunnskap.

Hun er også en som har en verden.

Dette virker selvfølgelig, men i praksis glemmes det lett. Særlig når mennesker trenger hjelp, kan de bli gjort til objekter for vurdering. De blir saker, symptomer, diagnoser, behov eller risiko.

Subjektet forsvinner bak det vi må håndtere.

Å huske at den andre er subjekt, betyr å spørre hvordan verden ser ut fra hennes sted. Men det betyr også å vite at jeg aldri fullt ut kan overta dette stedet.

Jeg kan lytte.

Jeg kan spørre.

Jeg kan forsøke å forstå.

Men jeg kan ikke bli henne.

Dette er en grense som beskytter både henne og meg.

Den hindrer meg i å gjøre hennes liv til mitt prosjekt. Den hindrer henne i å bli redusert til min empati, min teori eller min hjelp.

Den andre og det ukrenkelige

Menneskeverdet hviler ikke på at vi forstår hverandre fullt ut.

Det hviler på at den andre har krav på respekt også før forståelsen er fullstendig.

Et barn skal ikke måtte forklare sin smerte perfekt for å bli beskyttet. En person med demens skal ikke måtte uttrykke sin identitet tydelig for å behandles med verdighet. En flyktning skal ikke måtte gjøre hele sin historie begripelig for å møtes som menneske. En som er taus, forvirret eller annerledes, mister ikke sin verdighet fordi vår forståelse kommer til kort.

Dette er viktig.

For dersom verdighet avhenger av forståelighet, blir de mest sårbare også de mest utsatte.

Det mennesket vi ikke forstår, kan lett bli skjøvet bort, diagnostisert for raskt, gjort latterlig, kontrollert eller oversett.

Derfor må etikken komme før full forståelse.

Vi skal forsøke å forstå.

Men vi skal ikke vente med respekt til vi har lykkes.

Å leve med åpen forståelse

Hvordan lever man med at den andre alltid er mer?

Man lever med en åpen forståelse.

Det betyr ikke at man aldri konkluderer. Livet krever beslutninger. Profesjoner krever vurderinger. Barn må beskyttes. Behandling må gis. Urett må stanses.

Men konklusjonen må bære i seg minnet om at den er truffet under begrenset innsikt.

Åpen forståelse sier:

Dette er det beste jeg forstår nå.

Jeg må handle på det.

Men jeg må fortsatt kunne lære.

En slik holdning er krevende, men den er også frigjørende.

Den gjør det mulig å være tydelig uten å være lukket. Den gjør det mulig å være ansvarlig uten å late som om man er allvitende. Den gjør det mulig å møte mennesker med kunnskap uten å gjøre kunnskapen til et bur.

En ydmyk slutt på hermeneutikken

Denne serien har handlet om forståelse.

Om forforståelse, fordommer, tradisjon, horisont, dialog, tekst og fortolkning. Om hvordan vi aldri begynner fra null, hvordan vi blir til i samtale, og hvordan ordene får liv etter at de er skrevet.

Men en hermeneutikk som bare feirer forståelsen, blir for enkel.

Den må også lære oss å stoppe.

Ikke stoppe i betydningen gi opp, men stoppe i betydningen bøye seg for grensen.

Her er et menneske.

Jeg kan forstå noe.

Jeg kan kanskje forstå mye.

Jeg kan lytte, lese, tolke, spørre, vente og lære.

Men jeg kan ikke eie dette mennesket gjennom min forståelse.

Den andre er alltid mer.

Mer enn diagnosen.

Mer enn historien.

Mer enn skammen.

Mer enn traumet.

Mer enn funksjonsnedsettelsen.

Mer enn rollen.

Mer enn saken.

Mer enn det jeg frykter.

Mer enn det jeg håper.

Mer enn det hun selv akkurat nå klarer å si.

Denne merheten er ikke en mangel i vår kunnskap som bare venter på å bli fylt.

Den er en del av menneskets verdighet.

Den åpne hånden

Kanskje kan forståelse sammenlignes med en hånd.

Vi kan gripe hardt. Da holder vi fast, men vi kan også klemme i stykker det vi ønsket å ta vare på.

Eller vi kan åpne hånden.

Den åpne hånden slipper ikke alt. Den er fortsatt der. Den kan støtte, bære, beskytte og ta imot. Men den eier ikke.

Slik er den hermeneutiske holdningen på sitt beste.

Den søker forståelse, men uten å gjøre forståelsen til besittelse.

Den tar ansvar, men uten å gjøre ansvar til kontroll.

Den møter den andre med kunnskap, men lar kunnskapen være ydmyk.

Den vet at et menneske trenger å bli sett.

Men også å få forbli mer enn det som blir sett.

Det siste ordet i hermeneutikken er derfor kanskje ikke forståelse.

Det er ærbødighet.

Ærbødighet for at den andre aldri helt kan gjøres til min.

Ærbødighet for at verden alltid rommer mer enn min horisont.

Ærbødighet for at enhver fortolkning av et menneske må bæres med varsomhet.

Vi forstår aldri alt.

Men vi kan forstå nok til å handle mer ansvarlig, lytte mer ydmykt og møte den andre med større varhet.

Det er kanskje nok.

Ikke fordi forståelsen er fullført.

Men fordi mennesket foran oss fortsatt er levende.

Og fordi den andre, alltid, er mer.

Anbefalt litteratur for videre lesning

Den som ønsker å fordype seg i perspektiv, fremmedhet, menneskeverd og grensene for vår forståelse, kan begynne med følgende arbeider.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2010). Sannhet og metode: Grunntrekk i en filosofisk hermeneutikk. Pax Forlag.

Gadamers hovedverk gir seriens sentrale bakgrunn for forståelse, forforståelse, dialog og horisont. Boken er særlig viktig for å forstå hvorfor all forståelse både åpner og begrenser.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2003). Forståelsens filosofi: Utvalgte hermeneutiske skrifter. Cappelen Akademisk Forlag.

Et tilgjengelig norsk utvalg av Gadamers tekster om språk, samtale og forståelse. Særlig nyttig for lesere som ønsker kortere innganger til den filosofiske hermeneutikken.

Levinas, E. (1996). Basic Philosophical Writings. Indiana University Press.

Levinas utfordrer enhver forståelse som gjør den andre til et objekt for vår kunnskap. Hans etikk er avgjørende for tanken om at den andre alltid overskrider det vi kan gripe.

Buber, M. (2003). Jeg og du. De norske Bokklubbene.

Bubers tenkning om Jeg–Du-forholdet viser hvordan den andre må møtes som subjekt, ikke som ting, funksjon eller sak. Boken gir en eksistensiell og dialogisk utdypning av essayets hovedtema.

Ricoeur, P. (1992). Oneself as Another. University of Chicago Press.

Ricoeur undersøker identitet, fortelling, handling og ansvar. Boken er sentral for å forstå mennesket som både fortellende og mer enn enhver fortelling.

Ricoeur, P. (1981). Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press.

En viktig samling tekster om fortolkning, handling og samfunnsvitenskap. Ricoeur gir et nødvendig supplement til Gadamer, særlig i spørsmålet om kritikk, tekst og ansvar.

Løgstrup, K. E. (1997). The Ethical Demand. University of Notre Dame Press.

Løgstrup viser hvordan mennesker alltid holder noe av hverandres liv i sine hender. Boken er særlig relevant for forståelsen av tillit, sårbarhet og ansvar i menneskelige møter.

Vetlesen, A. J. (2007). Hva er etikk. Universitetsforlaget.

En tilgjengelig norsk innføring i etikkens grunnspørsmål. Boken er nyttig for å tenke videre om ansvar, sårbarhet, verdighet og moralsk dømmekraft.

Taylor, C. (1985). Interpretation and the sciences of man. I Philosophy and the Human Sciences: Philosophical Papers 2 (s. 15–57). Cambridge University Press.

Taylor viser hvorfor menneskelige handlinger må forstås innenfor meningssammenhenger, samtidig som forståelsen aldri er helt løsrevet fra den som fortolker.

van Manen, M. (2016). Researching Lived Experience: Human Science for an Action Sensitive Pedagogy (2. utg.). Routledge.

van Manen gir en varsom fenomenologisk-hermeneutisk tilnærming til levd erfaring. Boken er særlig nyttig for profesjonsutøvere som vil forstå menneskers erfaring uten å redusere dem.


Vi forstår aldri alt. Men vi kan forstå nok til å handle mer ansvarlig, l

ytte mer ydmykt og møte den andre med større varhet.

Det er kanskje nok.Ikke fordi forståelsen er fullført.

Men fordi mennesket foran oss fortsatt er levende.

Og fordi den andre, alltid, er mer.


Forfatterens merknad: Dette essayet samler flere tråder: forforståelse, dialog, tekst, fremmedhet og profesjonelt ansvar. Det bygger på mine forelesnings notater om hermeneutikk som forståelsens kunst, men ender i grensen for all forståelse: den andre er alltid mer. Teksten er skrevet i en samtale med OpenAI/ChatGPT.


When the Text Leaves the Author

 

When the Text Leaves the Author

Ricoeur and the Life of Words After Publication

There is a moment when a text no longer belongs only to the person who wrote it.

As long as the words remain in the notebook, on the screen, or in the unfinished manuscript, the author can still intervene. Sentences can be removed. A word can be replaced. A tone can be softened. A thought can be clarified. The author can explain themselves along the way and say: This was not quite what I meant. This must be formulated differently.

But then the text is published.

It is sent out into the world.

At that point, something decisive happens.

The text loosens from the author’s hand. It can be read by people the author will never meet, in situations the author does not know, with experiences the author cannot control. It can be understood as the author hoped. It can be misunderstood. It can be used, rejected, quoted, forgotten, rediscovered, or read into a new time.

The author has still written the text.

But the text no longer lives only within the author’s intention.

Paul Ricoeur made this one of the central themes of hermeneutics. When speech becomes writing, words acquire a certain autonomy. The text is detached from the original situation, from the author’s voice, and from the immediate conversation in which misunderstandings can be corrected on the spot.

This does not mean that the author becomes unimportant.

But it does mean that the meaning of the text cannot be reduced to what the author once had in mind.

The text opens a world in front of itself.

And the reader enters into it.

From Speech to Writing

When we speak face to face, words can be corrected along the way.

The other person can ask: What do you mean? Have I understood you correctly? Did you say this seriously, or was it irony? Tone of voice, gaze, pauses, and body language help us understand. If something goes wrong, we can explain, withdraw, or elaborate.

Writing is different.

When words have been written, they stand without the author’s body beside them. The reader does not necessarily hear the voice. She does not see the face. She does not always know the situation in which the text was written, the concerns the author carried, or the readers to whom the text was first addressed.

Writing creates distance.

But this distance is not only a loss.

It also makes something possible.

Because the text is not bound to one conversational situation, it can travel. It can cross time, language, borders, and life experiences. A text written in one time can touch people in another. A thought formulated in one particular room can find new readers far from the room in which it came into being.

Speech often disappears with the moment.

The text can remain.

Writing therefore has a strange double character. It makes words more vulnerable to misunderstanding, but also more open to future understanding.

The Author’s Intention Is Not Enough

When we read a text, we may ask what the author meant.

This is a reasonable question. Texts are written by human beings. They do not arise by themselves. An author has had an intention, an experience, a question, an unease, or a hope.

But Ricoeur reminds us that this is not the only question.

The author’s intention is not identical with the meaning of the text.

An author may have meant more than he understood. He may also have understood less than the text later makes possible. The words may open connections the author himself did not see when he wrote them.

Many writers recognise this.

Sometimes we read an old text we ourselves have written and discover something there that we did not know we had formulated. The sentence carries more than the conscious intention. It points towards a connection that becomes visible only later.

This does not mean that the reader can do anything at all with the text.

But it does mean that the text is not a closed container for the author’s original intention.

It is a work that can continue to give meaning.

The author releases the words into the world, but the world continues to read them.

The Autonomy of the Text

Ricoeur speaks of the autonomy of the text.

This means that after publication, the text gains a relative independence. It is still written by someone, but it is no longer fully controlled by that someone.

The text becomes autonomous in several directions.

It loosens from the author’s intention. It may mean more, less, or something other than the author first thought.

It loosens from the original situation. A text written in one historical context may be read in another.

It also loosens from the first recipient. The text may encounter readers who were not imagined when it was written.

This autonomy can be frightening for the author.

One may wish to accompany the text into the world and explain it to every reader. One may want to say: Do not read it that way. That was not the point. Remember the context. Remember the tone. Remember the pain behind the words.

But the text moves on without us.

That is part of the risk of writing.

At the same time, it is also the gift of writing.

If the text could mean only what the author already knew, it would be less alive. It could not meet readers in new ways. It could not become relevant again in other situations. It could not give other people words for experiences the author never knew.

The autonomy of the text makes loss of control possible.

But it also makes new meaning possible.

The World the Text Opens

Ricoeur is concerned that the text does not merely point backwards towards the author’s mind.

It also points forwards towards a world the reader may enter.

A good text does not only describe something that already exists. It opens a possible way of seeing, living, and understanding. It shows a world.

A novel can open the reader to a life she has never lived. A philosophical essay can give language to an unease that had previously been unclear. A religious text can shape a way of hoping. A poem can gather grief into words that make the grief possible to bear.

The text does not only say: This is how it was.

It may also ask: Could the world be understood in this way?

When a text acts upon us, it is not always because we have come close to the author’s private life. It may be because the text has opened a world in which we can recognise ourselves or by which we can be challenged.

This is decisive.

The reader does not read only to reconstruct the past. She also reads in order to understand her own present and possible future.

The text meets the reader where the reader lives.

But if the encounter is strong enough, it does not allow the reader to remain entirely the same.

The Reader as Co-creator

When the text leaves the author, the reader’s work begins.

Reading is not passive reception.

The reader must give the text time, attention, and imagination. She must connect the words with experiences, questions, and life situations. She must distinguish between what is written there, what she herself adds, and what the text may be asking her to see.

In this way, the reader becomes a co-creator of meaning.

But not an absolute creator.

The text sets limits. It has words, structure, images, and arguments. It does not allow every reading equally well. Some interpretations do violence to the text. Others open it.

To read responsibly is to allow the text to resist us.

We cannot only ask: What does this mean to me?

We must also ask: What does the text actually say? What can it not be reduced to? Where does it challenge my habitual understandings?

The reader brings herself to the text.

But she must also allow the text to come to her.

Meaning arises in this encounter.

The Possibility of Misunderstanding

When the text becomes public, it becomes exposed to misunderstanding.

This cannot be avoided.

Some read quickly. Some read through their own pain. Some read with resistance. Some read isolated quotations without context. Some read in order to find support for what they already believe.

The author may experience this as unfair.

It is painful to be misunderstood, especially when the text concerns something important. One may have written with care and still be read as harsh. One may have tried to nuance and still be perceived as one-sided. One may have written in grief and be read as theory.

Ricoeur’s perspective does not help us avoid this risk.

But it helps us understand that the risk belongs to the very nature of writing.

To publish is to relinquish total control.

Words encounter lives one does not know.

For that reason, they may also be read in ways one had not foreseen.

This does not mean that all misunderstandings are equally valid. The author may still correct, elaborate, and protest. The text may be defended against readings that distort it.

But the author cannot demand that the text live only within the original intention.

If that were the demand, it should never have left the desk.

When the Text Is Better Than the Author

Sometimes a text can carry something truer than the author himself is able to live.

A person can write wisely about humility and still be proud. He can write beautifully about love and still fail in close relationships. He can write about justice and still be blind to his own injustice.

This does not necessarily make the text false.

It shows that the text may exceed the author.

Human beings are complex. We can understand something in glimpses before we are able to realise it in life. We can formulate an insight that also judges ourselves. We can write towards a truth we do not yet fully live.

This is one of writing’s more serious possibilities.

The text can become a witness against the author.

But it can also become a teacher.

When the author later reads his own words, he may be reminded of something he himself had seen but forgotten. The text speaks back to the one who wrote it.

Then the text is no longer merely a product of the author.

It has become a conversation partner.

When the Text Is Worse Than the Author

The opposite can also happen.

A text can make the author smaller than he is.

It may have been written too quickly, too sharply, too imprecisely, or with too little care. It may fix a thought in a form that later feels narrow. It may remain as a public expression of something the author no longer means in that way.

Human beings change, but texts remain.

There is a particular vulnerability in this.

The author may develop beyond what he has written, but the text continues to meet readers. Old words can reappear and demand explanation. An earlier formulation may be read as an expression of the person the author is now, even though it belongs to another phase of life.

This is particularly evident in our digital age.

Published words do not easily disappear. They can be shared, stored, quoted, and reused. The text does not merely leave the author. It can also return in unexpected ways.

This should not make us silent.

But it should make us careful.

To write publicly is to write with a future reader present, even when we do not know that reader.

Publication as an Ethical Act

To publish is not only a technical act.

It is an ethical act.

When the text is sent out, it can touch other human beings. It can comfort, explain, illuminate, and open. But it can also hurt, simplify, stigmatise, or create distance.

The author therefore has responsibility for the words before they are released.

This responsibility applies especially when the text concerns other people.

When we write about children, clients, patients, families, abuse, shame, or vulnerable lives, language must carry an extra caution. Even anonymised people can be turned into examples in ways that reduce them. A story can be used to illustrate a point while at the same time losing the dignity of the person whose story it is.

The question is not only whether the text is true.

The question is also how the truth is carried.

Has the text preserved the other person’s humanity?

Has it given the reader insight without turning the vulnerable person into material?

Has it distinguished between experience, interpretation, and judgement?

Ricoeur’s hermeneutics reminds us that the life of the text continues after publication. Precisely for that reason, the author must write responsibly before the text leaves him.

The Text as Action

Ricoeur was concerned that actions, in some ways, can be understood as texts.

Once an action has been performed, it loosens from the person who acted. It has consequences that cannot be fully controlled. Others can interpret the action, build upon it, or be affected by it.

So it is with publication.

The text is not only words.

It is an action in the world.

It can create community. It can begin a conversation. It can give a person courage to tell their own story. It can also fix an idea, spread an unfair description, or reinforce a position of power.

The author cannot always know what the text will do.

But he cannot pretend that the text does nothing.

This applies especially to texts in the public sphere. Essays, academic articles, blog posts, reports, and books enter conversations that already contain power and history. They can give language to some and take language from others.

Writing is therefore never entirely innocent.

It is a way of participating in the world.

When the Reader Finds Themselves in the Text

One of the most beautiful possibilities of the text is that the reader may find themselves there.

Not necessarily because the text is about the reader, but because it gives words to something the reader has carried without language.

A person may read about shame and suddenly understand a lifelong unease. A parent may read about powerlessness and feel less alone. A professional may read about power and begin to see their own practice anew. An old text may give a young person a sentence to live by.

Then the text has left the author and found a new address.

For a moment, it dwells in the reader’s life.

The author could not have fully planned this. The reader brings their own history to the words. It is in the encounter between text and life that meaning becomes active.

This is not a weakness of the text.

It is its richness.

A text that can be understood only by the person who wrote it has not yet become truly public.

When the Text Is Read Against the Author

Sometimes a text is read in ways the author does not wish, but which may nevertheless be fruitful.

A reader may see a blind spot. A text about care may reveal a paternalistic tone. A text about freedom may lack attention to class, gender, or disability. A text about understanding may itself be too quick in its understanding.

Then the reader may read the text against the author’s own intention.

This may feel threatening.

But it may also be necessary.

No author owns all the consequences of their words. The text stands in public and can be examined by others. It can be criticised not only on the basis of what the author meant, but on the basis of what the text actually makes visible and invisible.

This is part of the democratic life of the text.

Publication makes the text available to the judgement of others.

The author may respond. But he cannot cancel in advance the reader’s right to ask questions.

The Humble Author

What is required of the one who writes if, after publication, the text no longer fully belongs to the author?

Humility is required.

Not a false humility that says the text means nothing. The one who publishes must believe that the words may have value.

But a humility that knows the text may be understood differently than intended. That the reader may see something the author did not see. That a formulation may cause harm even if the intention was good. That the text may continue to live in rooms the author will never visit.

The humble author therefore does not write with complete control as the ideal.

He writes with responsibility.

He seeks to be precise, but knows that no precision abolishes the risk of interpretation. He seeks to be truthful, but knows that truth is always carried by a limited human being. He seeks to be careful, but knows that the reader encounters the text from their own life.

Humility consists in releasing the text without renouncing responsibility.

The Responsible Reader

The reader, too, has responsibility.

The autonomy of the text does not mean that the reader can treat it arbitrarily.

To read is to enter into a relation with another person’s words. This requires integrity. The reader should try to understand before judging. He should attend to context, genre, tone, and argument. He should ask what the text actually opens, and not merely use it as material for his own reaction.

This is particularly important in a time of rapid digital reading.

A sentence can be torn from the whole. A headline can become more important than the content. A text can be shared by people who have not read it. The author can be judged on the basis of a formulation that does not carry the whole matter.

The responsible reader pauses a little longer.

He asks:

What kind of text is this?

What is it trying to understand?

Where is its strength?

Where is its blindness?

What happens to the text when I read it from my place?

In this way, the reader becomes more than a consumer of words.

He becomes a participant in the ethics of interpretation.

The Text as Conversation After the Conversation

When a text has been published, the conversation continues in other ways.

Some readers respond directly. Others carry the text with them without saying anything. Some become irritated. Some are comforted. Some forget the text but remember a sentence. Some return to it many years later and read it differently.

The text continues to work in silence.

This is perhaps especially true of essays.

An essay seldom concludes a matter. It tries to open it. It invites the reader to think further, not merely to agree. It is a form well suited to hermeneutic experience, because the essay itself knows that understanding is under way.

The essay does not say: Here is the final word.

It says rather: Here is a way into the question.

When the text leaves the author, others can continue the journey.

Being Read After One’s Death

All published texts have a possible future in which the author can no longer participate.

Some texts are read after the author’s death. Then there is no possibility of clarification, protest, or elaboration. The words stand alone.

This may feel strange and unsettling.

But it is also part of the historical life of human beings.

We converse with the dead through texts. Philosophers, poets, religious voices, letter writers, and diarists still speak, not because we can hear their living voice, but because writing has preserved something that can enter new conversations.

The dead author no longer owns the reading.

But the text may still bear witness.

In this way, writing becomes a bridge between times.

It allows people who never meet to touch one another. Not directly. Not without interpretation. But truly enough that new lives may be affected by old words.

The Afterlife of Words

Words have an afterlife.

They can change meaning when the world changes. They can gain new force in crises. They can lose innocence when history casts new light upon them. They can be rescued from oblivion by a reader who suddenly needs them.

The author cannot control this afterlife.

But he can contribute to it by writing as truthfully, clearly, and responsibly as possible.

The future life of the text is not only a threat. It is also the reason we write.

We write because words can reach further than our own voice. Because experiences can be shared. Because insight can be preserved. Because a person we never meet may one day find something in the text that helps them see, understand, or endure.

To write is therefore an act of trust.

One sends the words out without knowing where they will land.

When the Text Returns

Sometimes the text returns to the author through the reader.

A reader says: This helped me. This made me angry. I did not understand this. This made me think of my own life.

Then the author encounters his own text again, but now through another person’s experience.

The text is no longer the same as when it was written.

It has been out in the world.

It has gathered readings.

It has received resistance, resonance, and new connections.

In this way, the author can also become a reader of his own text.

Not only by reading the words again, but by hearing what they did in another person’s life.

This can be instructive. It can also be painful. The author may discover that what he wrote was unclear. That the text opened something he had not seen. That a reader found comfort where the author believed he had written only analysis.

When the text returns, it does not come empty-handed.

It brings the world with it.

Writing Without Owning

The one who writes must tolerate a paradoxical truth:

The text is mine.

And the text is not only mine.

It bears traces of my life, my experience, my language, and my responsibility. No one else could have written it in exactly this way.

But once it is published, it enters a larger context. It meets readers with other lives. It becomes part of conversations I do not control. It may be understood, misunderstood, and used in ways I cannot foresee.

This applies to everyone who writes publicly.

The researcher, the poet, the priest, the teacher, the therapist, the social worker, the blogger, and the essayist send words into the world.

The words leave us.

But they do not cease to concern us.

Ricoeur helps us understand this doubleness. The text gains autonomy, but autonomy does not abolish responsibility. The reader creates meaning, but the reading is not arbitrary. The author’s intention matters, but it does not exhaust the text.

Between author, text, and reader, a space arises in which meaning can happen.

No one can fully own that space.

The Seriousness of the Published Word

To publish is to allow words to begin a life one cannot follow to the end.

This requires courage.

But also care.

The author must write with awareness that the text may become part of other people’s self-understanding. The reader must read with awareness that the text comes from another human being’s attempt to understand.

Between them stands the text.

Silent, detached, and yet active.

It points backwards towards the one who wrote it. It points forwards towards the world it opens. It invites the reader in, but does not give itself over entirely. It cannot explain itself with a living voice, but it can continue to speak.

When the text leaves the author, it does not die.

It begins its second life.

A life in reading.

A life in misunderstanding and new understanding.

A life in criticism, recognition, and change.

A life in which the words no longer ask only what the author meant, but what the text may now open in the world.

Perhaps this is writing’s deepest hermeneutic riddle:

That words must leave us in order truly to meet others.

And that only then do we understand that what we have written was never entirely ours alone.

Recommended Reading for Further Study

Readers who wish to explore Ricoeur’s textual hermeneutics, the autonomy of the text, interpretation, and the life of words after publication may begin with the following works.

Ricoeur, P. (1976). Interpretation Theory: Discourse and the Surplus of Meaning. Texas Christian University Press.

A short and central book on the relation between speech, writing, text, and interpretation. Here Ricoeur develops the idea that the text gains an independence that makes meaning possible beyond the author’s original intention.

Ricoeur, P. (1981). Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press.

An important collection of essays in which Ricoeur examines text, action, meaning, and interpretation in the humanities and social sciences. Particularly relevant for understanding actions as texts and texts as actions.

Ricoeur, P. (1991). From Text to Action: Essays in Hermeneutics II. Northwestern University Press.

This collection deepens the connection between textual interpretation and practical action. It is especially useful for readers who want to understand how Ricoeur’s hermeneutics concerns ethics, society, and practice.

Ricoeur, P. (1992). Oneself as Another. University of Chicago Press.

Ricoeur’s major work on identity, self-understanding, narrative, and responsibility. The book is important for understanding how human beings interpret themselves through language, action, and narrative contexts.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2010). Truth and Method. Continuum.

Gadamer’s principal work provides the background for the philosophical hermeneutics that Ricoeur both continues and challenges. Particularly relevant to the relationship between understanding, tradition, and dialogue.

Grondin, J. (1994). Introduction to Philosophical Hermeneutics. Yale University Press.

A clear introduction to the philosophical development of hermeneutics. The book provides helpful background for placing Ricoeur in relation to Schleiermacher, Dilthey, Heidegger, and Gadamer.

Kearney, R. (2004). On Paul Ricoeur: The Owl of Minerva. Ashgate.

An accessible and insightful book on Ricoeur’s philosophy. Kearney shows how Ricoeur’s thought connects interpretation, narrative identity, ethics, and imagination.

Thompson, J. B. (1981). Critical Hermeneutics: A Study in the Thought of Paul Ricoeur and Jürgen Habermas. Cambridge University Press.

A study of the relationship between Ricoeur’s hermeneutics and Habermas’ critical theory. The book is especially relevant to questions of text, power, ideology, and social criticism.

Thiselton, A. C. (2009). Hermeneutics: An Introduction. Eerdmans.

A broad introduction to hermeneutics with a helpful treatment of Ricoeur. The book is useful for readers who wish to understand textual interpretation in philosophical, theological, and humanistic contexts.

Vanhoozer, K. J., Smith, J. K. A., & Benson, B. E. (Eds.). (2006). Hermeneutics at the Crossroads. Indiana University Press.

A collection of essays on modern hermeneutics, interpretation, and meaning. The book offers broader perspectives on how textual meaning arises in the encounter between author, text, reader, and tradition.


The author must write with awareness that the text may become part of other people’s self-understanding. The reader must read with awareness that the text comes from another human being’s attempt to understand.


Authors note: The essay is developed from my lectures on Ricoeur, the autonomy of the text, and the responsibility of interpretation. The text is written in a conversation with OpenAI/ChatPT.