ورود به حساب

نام کاربری گذرواژه

گذرواژه را فراموش کردید؟ کلیک کنید

حساب کاربری ندارید؟ ساخت حساب

ساخت حساب کاربری

نام نام کاربری ایمیل شماره موبایل گذرواژه

برای ارتباط با ما می توانید از طریق شماره موبایل زیر از طریق تماس و پیامک با ما در ارتباط باشید


09117307688
09117179751

در صورت عدم پاسخ گویی از طریق پیامک با پشتیبان در ارتباط باشید

دسترسی نامحدود

برای کاربرانی که ثبت نام کرده اند

ضمانت بازگشت وجه

درصورت عدم همخوانی توضیحات با کتاب

پشتیبانی

از ساعت 7 صبح تا 10 شب

دانلود کتاب Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru: Language, Experience, and Zen (Tetsugaku Companions to Japanese Philosophy, 5)

دانلود کتاب Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru: Language, Experience, and Zen (Tetsugaku Companions to Japanese Philosophy, 5)

Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru: Language, Experience, and Zen (Tetsugaku Companions to Japanese Philosophy, 5)

مشخصات کتاب

Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru: Language, Experience, and Zen (Tetsugaku Companions to Japanese Philosophy, 5)

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان: , ,   
سری:  
ISBN (شابک) : 3030923207, 9783030923204 
ناشر: Springer 
سال نشر: 2022 
تعداد صفحات: 407 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 16 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 75,000



ثبت امتیاز به این کتاب

میانگین امتیاز به این کتاب :
       تعداد امتیاز دهندگان : 10


در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru: Language, Experience, and Zen (Tetsugaku Companions to Japanese Philosophy, 5) به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.

توجه داشته باشید کتاب Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru: Language, Experience, and Zen (Tetsugaku Companions to Japanese Philosophy, 5) نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


توضیحاتی درمورد کتاب به خارجی



فهرست مطالب

Prefatory Notes
Introduction
Contents
List of Contributors
Part I: Ueda’s Thought and Works
	Introduction
	Chapter 1: My Philosophy
	Chapter 2: The Contours of Ueda Shizuteru’s Philosophy of Zen
		1 Introduction
		2 Zen as a Path of Non-mysticism
		3 Walking the Zen Path of the Oxherding Pictures
		4 I, in Not Being I, Am I
		5 Between I and Thou, the Bow
		6 Exiting Language and Exiting Into Language
		7 Being-in-the-Twofold-World
		8 Gelassenheit in the Empty Expanse
		Bibliography
	Chapter 3: Introduction to Ueda’s Works
		1 The Organization of the Collection
		2 Major Influences in the Collection
		3 The Conceptual Matrix
		4 The Wartime Question
		References
Part II: Marburg Dissertation
	Introduction
	Chapter 4: Heinrich Dumoulin’s Review
	Chapter 5: Josef Sudbrack’s Review
		Bibliography
	Chapter 6: Tsujimura Kōichi’s Review
Part III: Disputation
	Introduction
	Chapter 7: Healing and Religion
		1 Disaster and the Ritual of Healing
		2 How Japanese People Bond Together
		3 What Is the Self?
		4 From “Middle Void” to “Emptiness”
		5 The Soul Resides Within the Gap Between Existence and Existence
		6 An Image of Death Acceptance
		7 The Child within the Adult
		8 The Healing Effects of a “Previous Life”
		9 The Image as Waypoint
		10 The Other World Peeks Out from the Sandbox
		11 Restoring our Cycle with this World
	Chapter 8: The Depth of the Mind
		1 The Depth of the Mind
	Chapter 9: The Secret of the Brain and the Mind: Responding to My Colleague Ueda Shizuteru
		1 The Secret of the Brain and the Mind
Part IV: Interview
	Introduction
	Chapter 10: Shouldering the Tradition of the Kyōto School
		1 Nishitani Keiji and Nishida Kitarō
		2 Reflections on Post-war Japan
		3 What Does It Mean to Engage in Scholarship?
		4 The Nishida – Tanabe Memorial Symposium and Suzuki Daisetsu
		5 Learning at Kyoto University
		6 Kyōto University Directly After the Defeat
		7 Progress in Religious Studies
		8 The Connection of Ideas Across all Times and Places
		9 What Cannot Be Put into Words
		10 Buddhist Teaching and Contemporary Japan
		11 Evil, Emptiness and Nihilism
		12 Meeting One’s Mentor in Scholarship
Part V: The Methodological Approach – Radicalizing Transcendentalism
	Introduction
	Chapter 11: Nishida and Ueda on Philosophical Reflection
		1 Introduction
		2 Two Models of Reflection
		3 Philosophical jikaku
		4 Philosophical jikaku as a Radicalized Form of Transcendental Reflection
		5 Conclusion
		Bibliography
Part VI: The Philosophical Position of the Twofold World
	Introduction
	Chapter 12: Twofold Being-in-the-World in Ueda’s Philosophy: On His Interpretation of Heidegger and Nishida
		1 Introduction
		2 Invisible Twofoldness of World: World and Nothingness in Heidegger
		3 Visible Twofoldness of World: “A World” and “B World”
		4 Primordial Experience and the Selfless Self: The Interpretation of Nishida
		5 Twofold Being-in-the-World and Philosophy of Life as Inochi
		Bibliography
	Chapter 13: Ueda on Being-in-the-Twofold-World or World Amidst the Open Expanse: Reading Nishida Through Heidegger and Reading Heidegger Through Nishida
		1 Introduction
		2 Reading Nishida Through Heidegger
		3 Reading Heidegger Through Nishida
		4 Being-in-the-Twofold-World or World/Open Expanse
		Bibliography
Part VII: Questioning the Philosophical Medium – On Language
	Introduction
	Chapter 14: Being With and In Language
		1 Introduction
		2 Experience in the Presence (Anwesenheit) of Language
		3 Urwort (kongengo 根源語)
		4 Language as Verbal Act: Urwort as Spontaneous Emergence of Expression
		5 The Undefinable (das Unbestimmbare)
		6 Conclusion
		Bibliography
	Chapter 15: The Articulation of Silence in Language
		1 Introduction
		2 How Does Silence Relate to Language?
		3 The “Primordial Silence” Beneath Speech
			3.1 Silence as a Way of Speaking
			3.2 The Determination of Non-speaking Silence
			3.3 The Silence in Relation to Gesture
		4 Voicing as the Origin of Articulation
			4.1 The Double Structure of the Concept of Articulation
			4.2 From Language to Speaking
			4.3 From the Sound to Vocalization
			4.4 From the “oh” to Silence and Back
			4.5 From the Urwort to the Philosophical System
		5 Silence as the Negation of Language?
			5.1 Forms and Modes of Articulation
			5.2 The Location of Silence in the Space of Articulation
			5.3 The Negation of Language in Silence?
		6 The Mediation of Silence Through Language
		Annex: Translation
		Bibliography
Part VIII: Reflecting Philosophy: In Poetry
	Introduction
	Chapter 16: Nothingness and Poetic Experience: Ueda and Valente
		1 Introduction. Ueda and Valente: A Rizomatic Connection
		2 José Ángel Valente: Poetics and Evolution Into Nothingness
			2.1 From His First Books of Poetry to His Encounter with Mysticism
			2.2 The Essays: The Vision of the East, Hermeneutic Schools of Thought, and the Search for Syncretism
			2.3 The Primal Word: Artistic Creation, Formless Matter, and Nothingness
			2.4 Poetic Experience as Wisdom
		3 Nothingness and Poetic Experience in Ueda’s Thought
			3.1 Ueda’s Philosophy of Religion
			3.2 Experience and Expression
			3.3 Understanding and the Horizon of Meaning
			3.4 Aesthetic Experience and Religious Experience
		4 Conclusions: Encounters in the Nothingness
		References
	Chapter 17: Ueda and Heidegger: Playing in Hollowness, Abiding in Actuality and the Risk of Poetic Language
		1 The Danger of Representation: “Open” and “Abyss”
		2 Ueda: “Hollowness” Between Visibility and Invisibility
		3 Heidegger: Invisibility of the “Heart’s Inner Space”
		4 Negation and the Threat of “Toying with Actuality”
		5 Conclusion: Poetic Language “Without Why”
		Bibliography
Part IX: Opening Up Philosophy: On Mysticism
	Introduction
	Chapter 18: Ueda as Reader of Eckhart
		Bibliography
	Chapter 19: On Mysticism and Non-mysticism, Religion and Non-religion
		1 “Mysticism”, “East” and “West”. Some Historical and Critical Perspectives
		2 From Mysticism to Non-mysticism: Ueda’s Sources and His Own Development
		3 Meister Eckhart and Zen
		4 Religion and Non-religion
		5 Final Considerations
		Bibliography
Part X: The Space Between East and West: On Zen Buddhism
	Introduction
	Chapter 20: In-Between: Religious Quest and Philosophy of Life in Ueda and Buber
		1 Introduction: Tradition and Renewal
		2 Buber’s Hasidism
			2.1 An Image of Man, a Way of Life
			2.2 The Redemption of the Everyday (Die Erlösung des Alltags)
			2.3 Hasidism as a Kulturkritik
		3 Ueda’s Zen
			3.1 Re-creating the Text
			3.2 Everydayness in Zen
			3.3 Zen in the Contemporary World
		4 Conclusions
		Bibliography
	Chapter 21: “The Self That Is Not a Self”: Ueda and Kuoan’s Ten Ox Pictures
		1 Introduction
		2 Kuoan’s Ten Ox Pictures
		3 Ueda’s Interpretation of the Ten Ox Pictures
		4 Towards a New Conception of the Self
		Bibliography
Part XI: Existential Practice: Ethical Engagement
	Introduction
	Chapter 22: Ueda’s Metaethics
		1 Introduction
		2 Metaethics
		3 Davis on Ueda
		4 Moral Dialethism
		Bibliography
	Chapter 23: An Ontology of Non-Discriminatory Love: The Resurrection of the Triune Self in Ueda Shizuteru’s Appropriation and Critique of Meister Eckhart
		1 Introduction: Towards an Ontology of Love
		2 Love in Meister Eckhart’s Speculative Mysticism
			2.1 The Ontological Ground of Agape: Nothingness of the Godhead
			2.2 Eckhart on Undifferentiated Love
		3 The Critique of Subjectivity: Incarnation, Resurrection, and Trinity in Ueda’s Conception of Selfhood
		4 From Agape to the Great Compassion: Ueda’s Critique of Meister Eckhart
		Bibliography
Correction to: Tetsugaku Companion to Ueda Shizuteru
Appendix
Biography
Bibliography
	Works by Ueda Shizuteru




نظرات کاربران