Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

Hermeneutical injustice is the inequality suffered by individuals as subjects of social understanding. This inequality mainly comes from the structural bias of a certain group and the inability to understand the suffering of other groups. For example, it is difficult for people in the Western world to understand the concept of "destruction of traditional lifestyles" for indigenous people, so they cannot measure the value of "cultural damage". Because it is difficult to measure non-material harm with Western values, the spiritual suffering of many indigenous people is hidden, and material suffering is also understood by Western society as spiritual suffering, such as "traditional lifestyles are destroyed." In addition, Western society cannot measure the value of some items given by indigenous people, just like they rename some places without caring that there are already indigenous names here. And these cultural losses and neglect cannot be measured by law.

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