RT Article T1 Ricoeurian Hermeneutics and Indian Thought: Analyzing Evil in Cross-Cultural Philosophy JF Sophia VO 64 IS 3 SP 513 OP 537 A1 Bilimoria, Puruṣottama A1 Baindur, Meera A2 Baindur, Meera LA English YR 2025 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1937100715 AB This paper examines the intersection of Western and Indian hermeneutical traditions, focusing on Paul Ricoeur's hermeneutics and its application to the Upaniṣads. Engaging with the broader hermeneutical debates between Gadamer, Habermas, and Ricoeur, the study highlights the tensions between tradition and critical reflection. Ricoeur's "hermeneutics of suspicion" is employed to interrogate dominant interpretations shaped by the Brahmasūtra, particularly those that prioritize mokṣa (liberation) as the central goal of the Upaniṣads. Drawing from the Mīmāṃsā tradition and Nirukta exegesis, the study introduces a "decolonial hermeneutics of trust," which reframes these texts in terms of embodied experience rather than transcendence. Through an analysis of Upaniṣadic doctrines and myths, particularly the struggles between deva-s and asura-s, the paper explores the concept of pāpmā/pāpman (‘evil’) as an amoral force of privation that affects perception and disrupts the unity of the self. By bridging Western philosophical discourse, focusing on Ricoeur's work, with Indian hermeneutical methods, this study reveals the cross-cultural dimensions of meaning-making while also challenging essentialist readings of Indian thought. The philosophical investigation contibutes to a broader rethinking of hermeneutical frameworks, emphasizing the dynamic interplay between critique and tradition in interpreting classical texts. K1 Critique K1 Dharma K1 Evil K1 Habermas-Gadamer Debate K1 Hermeneutics K1 Ideology K1 Mīmāṃsā K1 Postpresent K1 Pāpmā-pāpman K1 Ricoeur K1 Tradition K1 Upaniṣads K1 Śaṅkara DO 10.1007/s11841-025-01075-9