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Kyoto school


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    • found: Work cat: Philosophy of science and the Kyoto school : an introduction to Nishida Kitarō, Tanabe Hajime and Tosaka Jun, 2021:ECIP galley (in Japan there has been a divide held between the local thought and the (western) philosophy. The Kyoto School figures introduced here blurred this division by bringing to bear issues close to them in Japan--of whatever cultural or national origins) (DLC)2020049459
    • found: Bibliography of Asian studies, viewed Jan. 5, 2021(in titles: Kyoto school)
    • found: The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy, viewed January 5, 2021(The Kyoto School (Kyoto-gakuha) is a group of 20th century Japanese thinkers who developed original philosophies by creatively drawing on the intellectual and spiritual traditions of East Asia, those of Mahayana Buddhism in particular, as well as on the methods and content of Western philosophy)
    • found: Wikipedia, viewed Jan. 5, 2021(The Kyoto School (Kyoto-gakuha) is the name given to the Japanese philosophical movement centered at Kyoto University that assimilated Western philosophy and religious ideas and used them to reformulate religious and moral insights unique to the East Asian cultural tradition)
    • found: Encyc. Britannia academic, viewed January 5, 2021(under: Modern and contemporary Japanese philosophy: Nishida's new style of philosophizing was the inspiration for the Kyoto school, 20th-century Japan's most influential philosophical movement. The Kyoto school set the stage for a distinctly Japanese philosophical discourse by exploring affinities and differences between Western philosophical traditions and the East Asian philosophies and religions that had been foundational to Japanese life since the classical period)
    • notfound: Websters dictionary; Oxford dictionary
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    • 2021-01-05: new
    • 2022-12-09: revised
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