11 found
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  1.  8
    The Political Dangers of Nishida’s View of Embodiment.Dennis Stromback - 2022 - Philosophy East and West 72 (2):432-452.
  2.  8
    Philosophy beyond Mechanization: Critiquing Economic Liberalism through Nishitani Keiji's Critique of Modernity.Dennis Stromback - 2020 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 40 (1):233-252.
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  3.  5
    A Dialogue on the Good and Evil Bivalence in the Study of Ethics: On François Flahault and Nishida Kitarō.Dennis Stromback - 2022 - Journal of World Philosophies 7 (1):29-42.
    pThis article seeks to demonstrate how a dialogue between literary theorist and psychoanalyst François Flahault and Kyoto School philosopher Nishida Kitarō can be mutually beneficial in the service of building an account of good and evil that contributes to discourses in ethics. Although Flahault and Nishida share a similar commitment to disrupt the dichotomy between good and evil in the effort to liberate subjectivity, they diverge in terms of how their accounts relate subjectivity to the processes of social history. As (...)
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  4.  11
    A re-evaluation of the modern psychiatric hospital from the standpoint of the Kyoto school’s critique of modernity.Dennis Stromback - 2021 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (3):367-376.
    Michel Foucault defines the modern psychiatric hospital as an institution of power that excludes and disciplines those who are deemed immoral, perverse, or abnormal in society. Rather than a facility for healing, as Foucault has taught us, the psychiatric hospital operates more as a punitive method of the body. But what is not considered in Foucault’s historical account of the psychiatric institution are the epistemological preconditions that allowed for its original formation. Drawing on the Kyoto School philosophers’ critique of modernity, (...)
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  5.  5
    Can There Be a Marx After the Kyoto School?Dennis Stromback - 2023 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 15 (1):124-128.
    This review essay discusses, summarizes, and evaluates Bradley Kaye’s latest book, Marx After the Kyoto School, in which he imagines a hypothetical roundtable where Nishida and the Kyoto School philosophers and Marx and the Marxists debate the nature of reality, with the goal of facilitating new creative interpretations and potential hermeneutical engagements. While Kaye’s vision is quite convincing in the end, there are some limits as to how far this imaginary conversation can go. This essay examines the strengths and weaknesses (...)
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  6.  7
    Notes on Miki Kiyoshi’s Anthropological Humanism and Environmental Ethics.Dennis Stromback - 2021 - Environmental Philosophy 18 (2):227-257.
    This article argues for the importance of using Miki Kiyoshi’s anthropological humanism as a theoretical resource for confronting the unfolding ecological crisis. What makes Miki’s anthropological humanism valuable towards this end, in particular, is in the way he blends multiple theoretical discourses—particularly Nishida and Marx—which speak to the concerns espoused by Deep Ecology and Marxist approaches to environmental philosophy. Unlike other Kyoto School thinkers deployed in the service of building an environmental ethics in recent years, Miki’s philosophical work offers social-economic (...)
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  7.  2
    Nishida’s Resistance to Western Constructions of Religion.Dennis Stromback - 2020 - Journal of Japanese Philosophy 6:63-94.
    It has been common to frame Nishida Kitarō’s philosophy as an attempt to overcome Western modernity, but what has been downplayed in this reading is how Nishida redefines the concept of religion in a way that undermines the secular-religion binary formulated in Western modernity. Nishida’s view of religion, as both a structuring logic of historical reality and as an existential form of awareness, with its own epistemological criteria, contrasts with Western accounts of religion, which has assumed religion to be a (...)
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  8.  16
    Philosophy of Science and the Kyoto School: An Introduction to Nishida Kitaro, Tanabe Hajime and Tosaka Jun by Dean Anthony Brink.Dennis Stromback - 2022 - Philosophy East and West 72 (1):1-4.
    There is certainly a lot of academic buzz these days around the relationship between Buddhism and physics. Of course, as we learned from Donald Lopez's famed book Buddhism and Science, there is a long history, beginning in the nineteenth century, to this proclamation that Buddhism is compatible with modern day science. Indeed, Dean Anthony Brink's book Philosophy of Science and the Kyoto School: An Introduction to Nishida Kitaro, Tanabe Hajime and Tosaka Jun is one of many contemporary examples of this (...)
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  9.  12
    Transcritique versus basho: Framing the debate between Nishida Kitarō’s and Kōjin Karatani’s standpoint of the ‘third’.Dennis Stromback - 2020 - Asian Philosophy 30 (1):1-16.
    Japanese philosopher and literary critic, Kōjin Karatani, introduces a ‘third position’ that seeks to correct the limitations of post-modern thought and the problems of global capitalism. By restoring Kant’s ‘transcendental’ as the methodological basis for capturing the structural interstice between different theoretical positions, Karatani’s ‘third position’ allows for a re-introduction of Marxism in addressing the circulation of the capital-nation-state trifecta and its relationship to ideological superstructures operating within a closed discursive space. Many years earlier, Nishida Kitarō, the father of the (...)
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  10.  6
    Ueda Shizuteru on Language and its Confrontation with the Derridean World.Dennis Stromback - 2023 - Journal of East Asian Philosophy 2 (2):137-153.
    The Derridean standpoint has made it challenging for philosophy to affirm a non-dualistic view of the world. If signification is a process where linguistic signs are always postponed or in deferment, then it is impossible to cultivate experiences without recurring to metaphysical thought. However, third generation Kyoto School thinker, Ueda Shizuteru, complicates this viewpoint. What Ueda describes as “exiting of language and exiting into language” is the dynamic movement of Zen experience that instantiates how language can be torn through and (...)
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  11.  9
    Book Review on Kyoto School Philosophy in Comparative Perspective: Ideology, Ontology, Modernity (by Bernard Stevens). [REVIEW]Dennis Stromback - unknown
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