ISBN:
9789400740471
,
1280996749
,
9781280996740
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (XI, 235 p. 7 illus, digital)
Series Statement:
Contemporary Philosophies and Theories in Education 1
Series Statement:
SpringerLink
Series Statement:
Bücher
Parallel Title:
Buchausg. u.d.T. Education and the Kyoto School of Philosophy
Keywords:
Geistesgeschichte
;
Aesthetics
;
Education
;
Education
;
Aesthetics
;
Education Philosophy
;
Kioto-Schule
;
Pädagogik
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Kyōto-Schule
;
Pädagogik
;
Geistesgeschichte
Abstract:
The work of the Kyoto School represents one of the few streams of philosophy that originate in Japan. Following the cultural renaissance of the Meiji Restoration after Japans period of closure to the outside world (1600-1868), this distinctly Japanese thought found expression especially in the work of Kitaro Nishida, Keiji Nishitani and Hajime Tanabe. Above all this is a philosophy of experience, of human becoming, and of transformation. In pursuit of these themes it brings an inheritance of Western philosophy that encompasses William James, Hume, Kant and Husserl, as well as the psychology of Wilhelm Wundt, into conjunction with Eastern thought and practice. Yet the legacy and continuing reception of the Kyoto School have not been easy, in part because of the coincidence of its prominence with the rise of Japanese fascism. In light of this, then, the Schools ongoing relationship to the thought of Heidegger has an added salience. And yet this remains a rich philosophical line of thought with remarkable salience for educational practice.The present collection focuses on the Kyoto School in three unique ways. First, it concentrates on the Schools distinctive account of human becoming. Second, it examines the way that, in the work of its principal exponents, diverse traditions of thought in philosophy and education are encountered and fused. Third, and with a broader canvas, it considers why the rich implications of the Kyoto School for for philosophy and education have not been more widely appreciated, and it seeks to remedy this.The first part of the book introduces the historical and philosophical background of the Kyoto School, illustrating its importance especially for aesthetic education, while the second part looks beyond this to explore the convergence of relevant streams of philosophy, East and West, ranging from the Noh play and Buddhist practices to American transcendentalism and post-structuralism.
Description / Table of Contents:
Education and the Kyoto School of Philosophy; Contents; Notes on Contributors; Contributors; Chapter 1: Sounding the Echoes - By Way of an Introduction; References; Part I: Thinking of Education in the Kyoto School of Philosophy; Chapter 2: Pure Experience and Transcendence Down; Mind, Matter, and the Methodology of Doubt; Philosophy as Usual?; Nishida and the West; Nothingness and Place; Language, Silence, and Transcendence; Possibilities of Becoming: The Aesthetic and the Political; References; Chapter 3: The Philosophical Anthropology of the Kyoto School and Post-War Pedagogy
Description / Table of Contents:
The Development of Philosophical Anthropology in the Kyoto SchoolThe Development of the Kyoto School's 'Pedagogical Anthropology'; Motomori Kimura's Pedagogical Plan; The Establishment of the Kyoto School and Post-War Pedagogical Anthropology; The Post-War Perspective of the Kyoto School as Expressed by Akira Mori's Pedagogical Anthropology; Visions of Pedagogical Anthropology and The Original Theory of Human Formation; The Kyoto School and the Educational Concept of 'Technique' ( gijutsu); The Evaluation of the Kyoto School in the Field of Educational Studies; References
Description / Table of Contents:
The Human Lifecycle as an Arch Bridge, Mutuality, Trust in PathosReferences; Chapter 6: The Kyoto School and the Theory of Aesthetic Human Transformation: Examining Motomori Kimura's Interpretation of Friedrich Schiller; Introduction; Aporia in the Interpretation of Aesthetic Letters; Kimura's Interpretation of Schiller (1): 'Purity' of 'Aesthetic Feeling'; 'Pure Feeling' and 'Locus'; Kimura's Interpretation of Schiller (2); the Schöne Seele and 'Absolute Nothingness'; The Kyoto School and Postmodernism; Two Possibilities of 'The Aesthetic': A Reply to Paul Standish
Description / Table of Contents:
Practice Led by the 'Self-Generating Idea''Development' and 'Becoming' in the Living Dynamics of Practice; References; Chapter 7: Metamorphoses of 'Pure Experience': Buddhist, Enactive and Historical Turns in Nishida; Nishida's Encounter with James; James and Modern Japan; Buddhism and 'Pure Experience'; Dogen: To Learn the Way with the Body; 'Pure Experience' and the Birth of Modern Japanese Philosophy; Reality and Unifying Activity; Acting-Intuition and the Historical World; The Stand of the Acting Self; 'Action-Perception Coupling' and Self-Awakening
Description / Table of Contents:
World of Historical Reality as Pure Experience
Description / Table of Contents:
Chapter 4: The Kyoto School and J.F. HerbartIntroduction: Philosophy of Education as a Place ('Topos') for a New Discourse Between East and West; Herbart Within Intellectual History; The Logic of Place, or the Epistemology of Moving/Developing; Judgment and Takt; References; Chapter 5: A Genealogy of the Development of the Clinical Theory of Human Becoming; Introdution: Towards a Clinical Theory of Human Becoming; The Establishment of the Pedagogy of the Kyoto School―Motomori Kimura's Hyogen (Expression) Pedagogy; From Pedagogical Anthropology to The Principles of Human Formation ―Akira Mori
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
DOI:
10.1007/978-94-007-4047-1
URL:
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