Hegel in Japan: Impressions of a Visit to Nagoya and Tokyo, April 1990

The Owl of Minerva 22 (2):252-254 (1991)
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Abstract

A historical account of Hegel’s reception in Japan would have to deal with the European impact on the Japanese Enlightenment of the years that preceeded and prepared the Meiji era, then with the switch over from British and French to German trends marked by the Imperial Constitution, and would finally have to center on the efforts of the Nishida school to combine eastern, especially Zen, wisdom with German Idealism. That cannot here be attempted. Such a task would require a Japanese scholar or, at least, somebody with an intimate knowledge of Japanese history and the history of its philosophy, not to mention, of course, the Japanese language. The author of these remarks cannot pretend to such a knowledge; all he can offer is what the subtitle specifies: impressions of a recent visit, augmented, perhaps, by some subsequent reflections; both, no doubt, highly subjective.

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