“…Also, participating in the interpretive efforts, these communities would have the first access to new forms of knowledge created using their empirical knowledge. Indeed, from this standpoint, anthropological hermeneutics is to include not only the collection, the indexing, the classification of pieces of knowledge and the structuring of disparate fragments of knowledge [46] but would also offer the capacity to see things anew and the power to change, to predict, and to solve puzzles [49]. In a sense, anthropological hermeneutics, as delineated here and in its search to see things anew, would be part of the general the grounded theory method [50] but, beyond minimizing preconceived ideas about the research problem and the data, using simultaneous data collection and analysis to inform each other, remaining open to varied explanations and understandings of the data, and focusing data analysis to construct middle-range theories [50], would add the space for studied societies to provide their own narratives of facts being depicted and for the researchers to continuously reflect on how the methods being used are capturing both facts and the narration from those communities.…”