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The Bloomsbury research handbook of contemporary Japanese philosophy /

"A guide to the key areas of research in Japanese philosophical thought, confirming the relevance of philosophy in 21st century Japan"--

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Yusa, Michiko (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: New York : Bloomsbury Academic, 2017.
Colección:Bloomsbury research handbooks in Asian philosophy
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Half Title; Series; Title; Copyright; Contents; Chapter Summaries; Notes on Contributors; Abbreviations and Conventions; Introduction; 1. An orientation concerning "Japanese" philosophy" (tetsugaku); 1.1 Proximity and distance in hermeneutics; 2. Two ways of "defining" Japanese philosophy; 2.1 Revisiting Nakae Chomin's statement; 2.2 A view of "philosophy" as a Western import; 3. Nishida Kitaro's view of philosophy as an indigenous cultural activity; 3.1 Japanese philosophy, French philosophy, German philosophy . . .; 3.2 Cultural experience and philosophical formulation, or logic.
  • 3.3 Eastern and Western "accents" in logic3.4 Theism, non-theism, worldview, and philosophy; 3.5 Cultural boundaries can be transcended; 3.6 Cultural and intercultural sensitivity; 3.7 Cultural "terroir"; 3.8 A "semiotics" of "semi" (cicadas); 3.9 Universality of a culture as the "public" property; 3.10 Philosophy as authentic praxis; 4. Concluding remarks; 4.1 Language, philosophy, and translation; 4.2 Notes on the original textual sources; Notes; Part One Making of Modern Japanese Philosophy: ; Chapter One Phenomenology in Japan: Its Inception and Blossoming.
  • 1. The First Generation: The Introduction of Phenomenology to Japan1.1 Takahashi Satomi (1886-1964) and the introduction of Husserl; 1.2 Miyake Goichi (1895-1982) and the introduction of Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty; 2. The Second Generation: The Burgeoning of Phenomenology in Japan; 2.1 Human existence as corporeal and the discovery of Merleau-Ponty; 2.2 Kida Gen: The radical spirit of social and philosophical critique; 2.3 Nitta Yoshihiro and Kida Gen: Philosophies of rudimentary nature; 2.4 Tatematsu Hirotaka: Translations of Husserl's writings.
  • 3. The Third Generation: The Transformation of Phenomenology3.1 Washida Kiyokazu's phenomenology of care and Murata Jun'ichi's phenomenology of technology; 3.2 Noe Keiichi's phenomenology of history as narration; By Way of Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Further Reading; Part Two Social and Political Themes; Chapter Two Confucianism in Modern Japan; Introduction; 1. Tokugawa Confucianism; 2. The Nishogakusha and Modern Confucianism-Mishima Chushu and the doctrine of the unification of morality and profit; 3. Japanese Capitalism and Confucianism-Shibusawa Eiichi.
  • 4. Inoue Tetsujiro and Modern Yomeigaku5. Hattori Unokichi and Koshikyo ("Confucius's Teaching"); 6. Taiwan and Japanese Confucianism; 7. Nakae Chomin and "Red Yomeigaku"; 8. The Osaka Yomei Gakkai and the "Civil Foundation"; 9. Religious Yomeigaku; Concluding Remarks; Notes; Bibliography; Further Reading; Chapter Three The Political Thought ofthe Kyoto School: Beyond"Questionable Footnotes"and "Japanese- StyleFascism"; Introduction; 1. A Sketch of the Past Seven Decades Inacademia in Japan and Abroad.