Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Nishda Kitarô'
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Sekoguchi, Aya. "« Le champ (basho) dans les arts traditionnels japonais » : autour de l'union corps-esprit et de la relation entre artiste et public chez Zeami." Paris, EHESS, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007EHES0156.
Full textHow is the field in which individuals fit embodied in the Japanese traditional arts ? From the analysis of Zeami, this study re-examines the issue in the light of the works of NISHIDA Kitarô and others also addressing concepts such as kata, ki, ma in effective practices such as martial arts, tea ceremony, etc. . . The art and the spirit in Zeami correspond to the dual structure of the self : the individual, local, subjectal self as a physical place (topos), and the social, global, predicate self situated in a place (chôra). The way of Art (geidô) is a process where the second indicates its importance relative to the first, that is to say that the self is denied (self-negation) and absorbed into the place (non-mind). This allows to establish an interaction between self and the other. The regard for the field crystallizes in an aesthetic of bareness that characterizes Japanese culture, as implemented by breathing practices which create an intimate relationship with the ki. Effective access to a wider and deeper field through the dynamics between the individual and the social shows how te connect the nothingness promoted by the Japanese thought with the being praised in European thought : what wil overcome concretely and effectively the impasse in the modem Western paradigm of subject and object
Dalissier, Michel. "Nishida kitarô: une philosophie de l'unification." Paris, EPHE, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005EPHE4050.
Full textNishida Kitaro's philosophy intends an original meditation about the notion of unification (tôitsusuru), which allows us from one part to read again, into a new and remarkable light, one history of occidental philosophy, and from the other to provide a new answer to the problem of the relations of the one and the many, which consists in criticising the idea of a unification conceived as a finite process of union, bringing back the diverse to unity. Inside his first piece of work in 1911, An Inquiry into the Good, the unification is introduced as an infinite cosmic first dialectic of unity and difference, of which the human consciousness reproduces, in its thirst for synthesis, a fundamental expression, at a psychological and epistemical level. This theory is deepened in a second work of 1917, Intuition and Reflexion in Self-Consciousness, through epistemological, phenomenological and metaphysical investigations; the unity, constinuously restarted and seeking for his foundation, incurs a risk at each moment of its unificational running, a petrification into a last unity, and the unification which animates it a fallacious transfiguration into a finite process of union. This theory through only finds its most essential philosophical justification in the “logic of place”, according to the exposition proposed by the author in 1926 into the essay “the place”. For an infinite unification can only occur in the place of an absolute nothingness, which, according to its own dynamic, always restarts the unity in this undated engineering of itself. It will belong to the late philosophy of Nishida to apply this theory as regards to the praxis and poiesis of man in the world
Dalissier, Michel. "Anfractuosité et unification : la philosophie de Nishida Kitarô /." Genève : Droz, 2009. http://opac.nebis.ch/cgi-bin/showAbstract.pl?u20=9782600011884.
Full textBastarache, Martin J. "Nishida Kitaro and the Question of Japanese Fascism." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20203.
Full textHirayama, Yō. "Nishida tetsugaku no saikōchiku sono seiritsu katei to hikaku shisō /." Kyōto-shi : Mineruva Shobō, 1997. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/38916114.html.
Full textErrata slip inserted. Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-285) and indexes.
Cunningham, Eric Paul. "Visions of a place beyong time : Nishida Kitaro's historical world and the problems of overcoming modernity /." view abstract or download file of text, 2004. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/uoregon/fullcit?p3120617.
Full textTypescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 456-480). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
Evans, Robert A. "An Aesthetic Attitude: An East - West Comparison of Bullough and Nishida." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1274279326.
Full textKuroda, Akinobu. "Enjeux, possibilités et limites d'une philosophie de la vie : Kitarô Nishida au miroir de quelques philosophes français." Université Marc Bloch (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003STR20019.
Full textThe current work proposes to offer a precise expression of the philosophy of Kitarô Nishida (1870-1945) in a French philosophical language, while developing in a clear and harmonious perspective a thematic network constituted by his fundamental theses. The author has constructed a coherent study on the phenomenological concept of life, by presenting several original elaborations of Nishida around this concept, and that reflected by French phenomenology. As for methode, a comparative procedure was adopted, consisting of interpreting and analyzing Nishida's philosophy as reflected by several French philosophers such as Maine de Biran, Merleau-Ponty, and Michel Henry, under different perspectives, all the while following the main theme, which is the notion of life, in order to raise up the key points around which a space of interrogation or dialog is opened, where the problematic of Nishida can be deepened or eventually be developed beyond the range envisaged by the philosopher himself. It is a question of apprehending the phenomenal logic of life which appears to itself, that is to say directly taken in us in the world where we live. With Nishida and Maine de Biran, we examine the interior life experienced immediately in our corporeal being. With Nishida and Merleau-Ponty, we ponder the theme of the perceptive life lived by our own bodies, which is at the same time seeing-visible and acting-passible. Through a confrontation between Nishida and Henry, we enter into a decisive question for this project, that of self-donation of life, by probing the depth as well as the limits of their questioning of which is more real
Hantke, Myriam-Sonja. "Die Poesie der All-Einheit bei Friedrich Hölderlin und Nishida Kitarō." Nordhausen Bautz, 2008. http://d-nb.info/995272468/04.
Full textZetterberg, Theodor. "Döden på Tomhetens Fält : Döden, Intet och det Absoluta hos Nishitani Keiji och Nishida Kitarō." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Filosofi, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-37553.
Full textCrespín, Perales Montserrat. "Experiencia, Autoconciencia y Voluntad. La conceptualización de la subjetividad en el primer periodo (1911-1923) de la filosofía de Nishida Kitarô." Doctoral thesis, Universitat de Barcelona, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/123668.
Full textThe research presents an analysis of the first period of philosophical production of the Japanese philosopher NISHIDA Kitarô (1870-1945). For that reason, it presents the inquiry around three of his major works: Inquiry into the Good (1911), Intuition and Reflection in Self-consciousness (1917), and Art and Morality (1923). The aim is to respond to the necessity of introduce a feasible and plausible approximation that wants to throw light about the consequences resulting from a psychologist and voluntarist point of view typical of the first period of Nishida's works. It wants to clarify the conditions and how Nishida uses certain idea about subjectivity and, especially, how is conduced his asking about some epistemological, ethical as well as artistic schemes shared and common to philosophical modernity.
Uehara, Mayuko. "Traduire la philosophie japonaise : formation des concepts et transformation de la langue dans l'oeuvre de Nishida Kitarô : sa traduction en français." Paris, EHESS, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004EHES0103.
Full textJapanese traditional thought went through significant and rapid shifts as Western philosophy was introduced in the late nineteenth century. Translations of new concepts were done usin Sino-Japanese terms composed of ideograms (kango). These constitue the fundamental elements of Japanese philosophical discourse, represented in some key concepts of Nishida Kitaro (1870-1945), the fouder of modern Japanese philosophy. How can we problematize the translation of his expressions in Kango into French, which originally derived from the translated terms of Aritote, Kant, Fitchte or Hegel, considering that the language in-form and trans-form the conceptions? How can we conceptualize the tranlability and intranslability of Kango into French? The present thesis analyses the problematics of Nishida's philosophical language in the context of translation studies
Jones, Christopher S. "Ideas at war : Nishida Kitarô and the philosophical context of the co-prosperity sphere." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2003. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.273235.
Full textHoffmann, Alexander. "Kenosis im Werk Hans Urs von Balthasars und in der japanischen Kyoto-Schule ein Beitag zum Dialog der Religionen." Bonn Borengässer, 2007. http://d-nb.info/991408462/04.
Full textGrosz, Elizabeth. "The Vulnerability of the Relational Self: G. W. F. Hegel, Simone de Beauvoir, and Nishida Kitarō Meet Patty Hearst." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/18428.
Full textOzdemir, Ibrahim Soner. "Grasping The Space Of The Heart/mind: Artistic Creation And Natural Beauty In The Later Philosophy Of Kitar." Phd thesis, METU, 2011. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12613515/index.pdf.
Full textaesthetic form&rdquo
and its relation to the distinction between natural and artistic beauty, it is argued that the Japanese philosopher Kitar
Hoffmann, Alexander. "Kenosis im Werk Hans Urs von Balthasars und in der japanischen Kyoto-Schule : ein Beitag zum Dialog der Religionen /." Bonn : Borengässer, 2008. http://d-nb.info/991408462/04.
Full textImono, Mika. "Sur le mouvement volontaire en tant que réflexion ou création : essai sur la philosophie de Maine de Biran par l'entremise de Félix Ravaisson et de Kitarô Nishida." Phd thesis, Université Toulouse le Mirail - Toulouse II, 2013. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00878832.
Full textImono, Mika. "Sur le mouvement volontaire en tant que réflexion ou création : essai sur la philosophie de Maine de Biran par l’entremise de Félix Ravaisson et de Kitarô Nishida." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013TOU20019/document.
Full textThe aim of this thesis is to prove a philosophical notion of Maine de Biran: the “immediate apperception (aperception immédiate)”. The immediate apperception is the moment when I know myself, or when I grab immediately the evidence of my existence. Biran links this moment to voluntary movement, a movement which has its purpose in itself. What is a philosophical signification of this connection? In this thesis, with the study of Félix Ravaisson and of Kitaro Nishida, we will find that the voluntary movement in Biran is, at first, a reflection (réflexion), which lets us know ourselves. We will also find that it should be considered as a creation, an act of taking part in the real and historical world
本論文の目的は、メーヌ・ド・ビランにおける概念「直接的覚知 (aperception immédiate)」について考察することにある。直接的覚知とは、私が私に気付く瞬間、あるいは私が直接的に私の存在を確信する瞬間である。ビランはこの瞬間を、意志的運動に見出した。意志的運動とは運動それ自体が目的である運動である。この連結は何を意味しているのか。本論文は、フェリックス・ラヴェッソン、西田幾多郎を経由して、この問いに答える。すなわち、意志的運動とはまず、自分自身を知る反省として考えられる。次いで、それは究極的には創造として考えられるべきであることを明らかにする。創造とは、現実的歴史的世界へ参与する行為である。
Bove, Frank John. "SOCIAL SELF AND RELIGIOUS SELF: AN INQUIRY INTO COMPASSION AND THE SELF-OTHER DIALECTIC." [Kent, Ohio] : Kent State University, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=kent1195568243.
Full textTitle from PDF t.p. (viewed July 3, 2008). Advisor: Jeffrey Wattles. Keywords: social self; self-other dialectic; pure experience; I-Me; I-Thou; sunyata; kenosis; basho; absolute nothingness; George H. Mead; Nishida Kitaro; Steve Odin. Includes bibliographical references (p. 65).
Henares, Joseph Alambra. "Reluctant Complicity in a Fascist Age: Nishida Kitarō’s The Problem of Japanese Culture and Iwanami Culture, 1938-1941." The Ohio State University, 2019. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1556903910811186.
Full textMastrokalou, Effrosyni Efrosini. "Exploring 'optimal' states of consciousness in Michael Chekhov's psychological gesture : towards a new phenomenological paradigm." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/29894.
Full textSato, Ryo. "Penser le néant, vivre libre : sur quelques thèses de Maître Eckhart et leur résonance dans la philosophie de l'École de Kyoto." Thesis, Strasbourg, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016STRAK006/document.
Full textKeiji Nishitani, philosopher of the Kyoto School, developed his philosophy of religion, studying the German sermons of Meister Eckhart, in the light of the notion of “absolute nothingness” of Kitarô Nishida. He applies that notion to the “Godhead” (Gotheit) outlined in Eckhart’s preaching, where he discovers the idea of awakening to the elemental subjectivity in human soul. This awakening opens up to the soul a liberty “in Godwithout God”, accessible to the religious intelligence detached from all dualism. In this perspective, how can we integrate the metaphysics exposed by Eckhart in his Latin works ? In the Commentary on the Gospel of John, Eckhart explains his vision of God, Being-One, “Principle without principle”, and he teaches to “live” the unity between “being” and “knowing”, of which the beatitude consists. Our study revolves around the thinking on “live the life”. We try to unify the detachment in the “nothingness of the Godhead” according to Nishitani and the “unlimited Being” according to the biblical commentary, so as to show the Eckhartian thought as a synergy between metaphysic speculation and existential practice to experience the Transcendent in our immanent life
Boucher, Mélany. "Penser l’identité et le rapport à l’Autre au Québec, perspectives selon la pensée de Kitaro Nishida." Thesis, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/24217.
Full textFrom the Quiet Revolution to the all-encompassing events of the Bouchard-Taylor Commission, the issue of intercultural and interfaith relations in Quebec still occupies a large part of public debate. Many authors have shown that particular relationships would have settled in the course of history between “representations of identity” and “events” specific to a French-Canadian culture. This relational peculiarity, which is characterized in the form of “imaginary links” with certain “historical events”, would paradoxically have the property of causing a break with its past. This dynamic of relationships that we represent in Quebec and that we situate in a perspective of interconnection between what represents the “we” and what represents the “Other” is an interesting way of thinking about it in another way. To think about the relationship to the “Other” in Quebec. Addressing this question, inspired by the thought of Kitaro Nishida, a Japanese philosopher of the early 20th century, whose works have been translated by an author, Jacynthe Tremblay, offers an unprecedented perspective on the question of identity and its relation with the world around him. Nishida will speak about the relationship between the “I” and the “you” from which he will be able to show how the “I” of modern subjectivity (the consciousness of “I” that he has of himself) is a problem to this otherness. He proposes to deconstruct this self-consciousness to be able to envisage a new consciousness of “self” and of the “Other” which will culminate in the notion of “true self” and ultimately to a relation to the “other-absolute” or the “Historical world”. Intrinsic notions considered according to Nishida, fundamental to human existence and essential for a harmony of differences.