Zusammenfassung
Nishida Kitarō (1870-1945) is considered Japan’s greatest modern philosopher. As the founder of the Kyoto School, he initiated a rigorous philosophical engagement with Western philosophy, including the work of Karl Marx. Bradley Kaye explores the political aspects of Nishida’s thought, placing his work in connection with Marxism and Zen. Developing concepts of self-awareness, Basho, dialectical materialism, circulation, will, nothingness, and the state. Nishida’s thought offers an ethics of personal will that radical awakening that offers clarity in a seemingly hopeless world.
Schlagworte
Buddhism Zen Marxism Nishida Kitaro Japanese Philosophy Comparative PhilosophyKeywords
ethics- Kapitel Ausklappen | EinklappenSeiten
- 183–226 Chapter 5: Nishida Kitarō and the Later Marx: Ground Rent, Utopia, and the Pure Land 183–226
- 227–228 Acknowledgments 227–228
- 229–238 Bibliography 229–238
- 239–240 Index 239–240