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Nishida and Western philosophy

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Nishida Kitaro (1870-1945) is the most important Japanese philosopher of the last century. His constant aim in philosophy was to try to articulate Zen in terms drawn from Western philosophical sources, yet in the end, he found that he could not do so, and his thought illustrates a conceptual incommensurability at the deepest level between the main line of the Western tradition and one of the main lines in Eastern thought. This book is a work of comparative philosophy, attention is given to the consequences of Nishida's metaphysics in the areas of ethics, aesthetics, the philosophy of religion

Title Nishida and Western philosophy / Robert Wilkinson.
Publisher London : Routledge
Creation Date 2016
Notes First published 2009 by Ashgate Publishing.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [163]-168) and index.
English
Content Cover
Contents
Preliminary Notes
Introduction
1 Nishida's Starting Point
2 Radical Empiricism and Pure Experience
3 Fichte, the Neo-Kantians and Bergson
4 Nishida's Later Philosophy: The Logic of Place and Self-Contradictory Identity
Summary and Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Extent 1 online resource (185 p.)
Language English
National Library system number 997010716890505171
MARC RECORDS

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