Here we have the more than welcome sequel to Alison Scott-Baumann's highly regarded and in many ways path-breaking study Ricoeur and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion. It takes us further in two directions. On the one hand it treats a topic, that of negation in its various forms, that was central to Ricoeur's philosophical interests early and late. On the other it proceeds by periodically expanding that focus to issues of ethical, cultural, and socio-political concern that have a direct and powerful contemporary relevance. This book is the product of original scholarship, much hard thinking, and a good deal of shrewdly applied practical as well as theoretical wisdom.