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  1.  20
    Philosophy of science and the Kyoto school: an introduction to Nishida Kitarō, Tanabe Hajime and Tosaka Jun.Dean Anthony Brink - 2021 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    This book offers the first introduction to a major Japanese philosophical movement through the interests and arguments of its founder, Nishida Kitaro (1870-1945), his successor, Tanabe Hajime (1885-1962), and student-turned-critic, Tosaka Jun (1900-1945). Focusing on their contributions to thinking about place, space, and dialectics, this concise introduction brings these influential thinkers to life by connecting their work to issues still debated in the philosophy of science and physics today. Beginning with an overview of the reception of quantum physics and relativity (...)
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  2.  6
    Post-Anthropocentric Implications of “World-Expression” in Nishida’s “Life”.Dean Anthony Brink - 2022 - Journal of World Philosophies 7 (1):43-60.
    pThis paper examines Nishida Kitarō’s (1870–1945) late essay, “Life,” which develops the process of “world-expression” (世界表現) to situate human and nonhuman agency in ways drawing his thought closer to concerns of posthuman ideals of inter-species commensurability and biosemiotics today. Here he extends his philosophy of a site-specific matrix or basho (場所) so as to incorporate arguments from J. S. Haldane’s emThe Philosophical Basis of Biology/em (1931), which poses questions concerning the coordination of organisms and environments. Nishida finds in Haldane support (...)
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    Quantum Dialectics.Dean Anthony Brink - 2019 - Philosophy Today 63 (4):1069-1080.
    This brief examination of treatments of nothingness-oriented dialectics in Kyoto School philosophers Nishida Kitarō and Tanabe Hajime engages questions of space from Hegel to quantum mechanics. It begins to situate their work in light of Emmanuel Levinas’s writings on empty space and as overlooked contributions to the philosophy of science.
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