<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Christianity and other religions / Eastern philosophy / Interfaith / Kyoto School / Keiji Nishitani / Hajime Tanabe / Kitaro Nishida / Metanoetics / Masao Abe / Philosophy / Existentialists / Moral philosophers
Date: 2011-05-24 05:37:57
Christianity and other religions
Eastern philosophy
Interfaith
Kyoto School
Keiji Nishitani
Hajime Tanabe
Kitaro Nishida
Metanoetics
Masao Abe
Philosophy
Existentialists
Moral philosophers

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.parrhesiajournal.org

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 137,16 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Philosophy / Kyoto School / Social philosophy / Kitaro Nishida / Zen / Parapsychologists / An Inquiry into the Good / Nishida / Sciousness / Buddhist philosophy / William James / Japanese philosophy

[Paper Submission] From James to Nishida:

DocID: 1q0VQ - View Document

Christianity and other religions / Eastern philosophy / Interfaith / Kyoto School / Keiji Nishitani / Hajime Tanabe / Kitaro Nishida / Metanoetics / Masao Abe / Philosophy / Existentialists / Moral philosophers

PDF Document

DocID: 1818R - View Document

Logic / Theories of truth / Empiricism / Charles Sanders Peirce / Philosophical movements / Truth / A priori and a posteriori / Pragmatism / Criteria of truth / Philosophy / Epistemology / Philosophical logic

The Standpoint of Religion Shukyo no tachiba[removed]by Nishida Kitaro; W.S. Yokoyama, trans. (This is a draft translation of Nishida Kitaro, "Shukyo no tachiba," in Nishda Kitaro Zenshu [Collected Works] 14:[removed]It w

DocID: YS2q - View Document

Tetsuya SAKAKIBARA The University of Tokyo, Japan I and Thou in Nishida and Heidegger Kitaro Nishida’s article “I and Thou” (1932) is a very interesting, yet quite difficult essay. In this paper I will go into and

DocID: U3zd - View Document

Philosophy / Mind / Psychology of self / Religious views on the self / Nishida / Buddhism / Self / Kitaro Nishida / Religion

The Pure Experience of KITARO NISHIDA HAYASHI Nobuhiro Kitaro Nishida, the most original and influential of modern Japanese philosophers,says as follows

DocID: 4Zcg - View Document