Tuesday, February 12, 2019
Nishida Kitarôs Studies of the Good and the Debate Concerning Universal Truth in Early Twentieth-C :: Philosophy Philosophical Papers
Nishida Kitars Studies of the Good and the Debate Concerning Universal Truth in Early Twentieth-Century japanABSTRACT When Nishida Kitar wrote Studies of the Good, he was a high schooltime teacher in Kanazawa furthest from Tokyo, the center of Japanese scholarship. While he was praised for his mind effort, on that point was no substantive agreement about the content of his ideas. Critics disagreed with the way he conceived of reality and of impartiality as contained in reality. Taken together, I recollect that the responses to Nishidas early work give us a window on the state of Japanese philosophy in the early twentieth century. In what follows, I give evidence for the existence of such a struggle about the record of truth and reality. After a sketch of Nishidas role (in which scientific truth is made subordinate to an all-encompassing divine truth), I outline the positions of two other contemporary thinkers cat-o-nine-tails Hiroyuki and Takahashi Satomi. With respect to N ishida, they set up markedly different takes on the question of universal truth Kat favors an antireligious, scientific positivism while Takahashi accepts an existentialist notion of radical kind-hearted finitude, in which human access to any certainty is denied. I intermit that one is confronted with a lively debate by Japanese philosophers interior Japan about the definition of truth and consequently about the personality of reality. Nishida Kitar (1870-1945) wrote the essays that make up Studies of the Good while a high school teacher in Kanazawa, in the hokuriku region on the Japan sea, far from the center of scholarship in Tokyo. The essays originally appeared separately in unlike journals and in 1911 were published in book form. From the publication of the first essay, Concerning the spirit of Reality, in Tetsugaku zasshi, the journal of the philosophy seminar at Tokyo lofty University, Nishida faced a number of direct and indirect critiques. While his intellectual eff ort was highly praisedone person proclaiming that such a level of action . . . would have been unattainable for anyone but a true scholarthere was no such agreement about the content of what Nishida had written. Critics disagreed with the way he conceived of reality and of truth as contained in reality. Taken together, I believe that the responses to Studies give us a window onto the state of philosophizing in Japan in the early twentieth century. The responses show that four decades into the program of opening up to the West, philosophers in Japan were in full-scale debate about the nature of truth and reality.
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