Intercultural philosophy /
The meeting of different cultures, philosophies and religions today calls for an intensive and qualified discourse on the part of all concerned. Intercultural Philosophy seeks to develop such a discourse through a new orientation of thought that will allow for a discussion of all philosophical probl...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Lanham :
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers,
2000.
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Colección: | Philosophy and the global context.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Preface; Introduction; Chapter 1: Intercultural Philosophy-A Conceptual Clarification; Preliminary Remarks; The Hermeneutic Situation Today; Culture and Philosophy; The Concept of Intercultural Philosophy; Cultural Encounters; Interculturality Before Multiculturality; Philosophy and Interculturality; Notes; Chapter 2: Toward a Theory of an Analogous Hermeneutics; Preliminary Remarks; The Concept of Interculturality; The Concept of an Analogous Intercultural Hermeneutics; Toward an Ethos of Interculturality.
- Asia Versus Europe or Universism Versus UniversalismNotes; Chapter 3: Hermeneutics of the One Under Different Names; Universality and Particularity; Original Context; The Import of the Vedic Dictum Today; The Idea of Religio Perennis
- The Vedic Dictum and the Idea of Philosophia Perennis
- Toward a Metonymic Theory of One Truth Under different Names; Notes; Chapter 4: Intercultural Philosophy and Postmodernity; The De Facto Hermeneutic Situation; The Concept of Interculturality; The Concept of Postmodernity; Interculturality and Postmodernity.
- Modernity, Postmodernity, Interculturality, and beyondNotes; Chapter 5: An Intercultural Philosophy of Unity without Uniformity; Preliminary Remarks; The Principle of Unity; A Critical Examination of Hegel's Philosophy of Unity; Toward a Concept of a Nonreductive, open, and Normative Hermeneutics; Chapter 6: Two Metaphors of Time-Arrow and Time-Cycle; The Thesis Defended; An Empirico-Phenomenological Approach; Time-Arrow and Time-Cycle; A Critical Comparison; Three Factors in Time Consciousness; An Intercultural Perspective; Temporality and Historicity; Concluding Remarks; Notes.
- Chapter 7: Metonymic Reflections on Shamkara's Concept of Brahman and Plato's Seventh EpistlePreliminary Remarks; Shamkara's Concept of the Nondual, the Nirguna Brahman; Plato's Concept of the One and the Good (Hen and Agathon) and His Epistle VII; Shamkara and Plato Compared and Contrasted; Concluding Remarks; Notes; Chapter 8: The God of Phenomenology in Comparative Contrast to Those of Philosophy and Theology; Husserl's Religious Leanings; Husserl's Concept of Teleology; Two Paths to God: The Historical and the Philosophical.
- The Program of Phenomenology in Relation to Teleology and TheologyPhenomenology of Religion; Hume, Husserl, and Hegel; Husserl and Scheler; Husserl's Phenomenology and the Problem of God's Transcendence and Immanence; Husserl, the Phenomenologist, and Husserl, the Believer; Notes; Chapter 9: The Concept of the Absolute-An Intercultural Perspective; Preliminary Remarks; Toward the Concept of an Overlapping Absolute; An Interreligious Hermeneutics; Philosophy of Values and the Absolute in Indian Thought; An Intercultural Concept of Tolerance; Notes.