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Recognizing the importance of the Kyoto School and its influence on philosophy, politics, religion, and Asian studies, Japanese and Continental Philosophy initiates a conversation between Japanese and Western philosophers. The essays in this cross-cultural volume put Kyoto School thinkers in conversation with German Idealism, Nietzsche, phenomenology, and other figures and schools of the continental tradition such as Levinas and Irigaray. Set in the context of global philosophy, this volume offers critical, innovative, and productive dialogue between some of the most influential philosophical figures from East and West.
Philosophy, Japanese --- Philosophy, Comparative --- Continental philosophy --- Nishida, Kitarō, --- Nishitani, Keiji, --- Tanabe, Hajime, --- Philosophy, Japanese. --- Philosophy, Comparative. --- Continental philosophy. --- Philosophie japonaise --- Philosophie comparée --- Philosophie continentale --- Nishida, Kitarō, --- Japanese philosophy --- Comparative philosophy --- Philosophy, Continental --- Philosophy, Modern --- 田辺元, --- 田邊元, --- 田辺亓, --- Keiji, Nishitani --- 西谷啓治 --- Kitaro, Nishida, --- 西田幾多郎, --- 西田几多郎, --- Nishitani, Keiji --- Nishida, Kitarō, - 1870-1945 --- Nishitani, Keiji, - 1900-1990 --- Tanabe, Hajime, - 1885-1962
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Like Schelling before him and Deleuze and Guattari after him, Gaston Bachelard made major philosophical contributions to the advancement of science and the arts. In addition to being a mathematician and epistemologist whose influential work in the philosophy of science is still being absorbed, Bachelard was also one of the most innovative thinkers on poetic creativity and its ethical implications. His approaches to literature and the arts by way of elemental reverie awakened long-buried modes of thinking that have inspired literary critics, depth psychologists, poets, and artists alike. Bachelard’s extraordinary body of work, unduly neglected by the English-language reception of continental philosophy in recent decades, exhibits a capacity to speak to the full complexity and wider reaches of human thinking. The essays in this volume analyze Bachelard as a phenomenological thinker and situate his thought within the Western tradition. Considering his work alongside that of Schelling, Husserl, Bergson, Buber, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Gadamer, Deleuze, and Nancy, this collection highlights some of Bachelard’s most provocative proposals on questions of ontology, hermeneutics, ethics, environmental politics, spirituality, and the possibilities they offer for productive transformations of self and world.
Bachelard, Gaston, --- Bachelard, Gaston --- Philosophy --- Phenomenology --- Bachelard, Gaston, - 1884-1962 --- Phenomenology.
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