Abstract
This analysis takes as its point of departure the narrative process and logic, implying determinant aspects of its modal condition. Through this approach and taking as a premise the existence of a narrative epistemology with operative effects, I aim to show the explicit or masked presence of the potential of textual representation and articulation in different areas of knowledge, beyond those that are usually perceived as part of the field of Humanities. In the transdisciplinary perspective that dominates this approach, Medical Sciences, Law, Computer Sciences, and Economics are understood as fields of knowledge influenced by the narrative turn that projects on them cognitive attitudes and representational instruments usually understood as exclusive to formally conceived forms of narration.1
Resumo
Abstract
This analysis takes as its point of departure the narrative process and logic, implying determinant aspects of its modal condition. Through this approach and taking as a premise the existence of a narrative epistemology with operative effects, I aim to show the explicit or masked presence of the potential of textual representation and articulation in different areas of knowledge, beyond those that are usually perceived as part of the field of Humanities. In the transdisciplinary perspective that dominates this approach, Medical Sciences, Law, Computer Sciences, and Economics are understood as fields of knowledge influenced by the narrative turn that projects on them cognitive attitudes and representational instruments usually understood as exclusive to formally conceived forms of narration.1
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