Japanese Environmental Philosophy by James McRae (2017, Trade Paperback)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherOxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-100190456337
ISBN-139780190456337
eBay Product ID (ePID)234933412

Product Key Features

Number of Pages336 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameJapanese Environmental Philosophy
SubjectEastern, Ecology, Public Policy / Environmental Policy
Publication Year2017
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaNature, Political Science, Philosophy
AuthorJames Mcrae
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.9 in
Item Weight16.8 Oz
Item Length9.1 in
Item Width6.1 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN2016-035607
Dewey Edition23
Reviews"Japanese Environmental Philosophy provides timely perspectives on the ecological exigencies facing our world while also offering essential scholarship in the burgeoning field of Japanese philosophy... [for] it offers fresh perspectives on key debates. The quality of the work in this anthology is excellent. ... Working through the volume the reader will engage with foundational aspects of Japanese cultural, religious, and philosophical traditions, withan eye toward contemporary environmental concerns. Given the mounting ecological crises we are experiencing throughout the world, environmental philosophy should not be confined to a specialized subfield. ...Japanese Environmental Philosophy is a model of how an anthology can open up a space for productive cross-cultural environmental theory and action." -- Philosophy East and West"It is, to my knowledge, one of the most (if not the most) comprehensive collections dealing with environmental philosophy in Japan ... it is abundant in ideas, hints, and clues that can help us develop a new frame of mind to help us deal with contemporary environmental problems. Secondly, it is structured upon the premise that "philosophy" should not be understood in a narrow sense (e.g., the Graeco-European tradition), but broadly as the practice of thinkingabout the world ... it is clear from their inclusion of thinkers as diverse as Dogen and Kukai, Watsuji and Imanishi that their stance on philosophy is very open and inclusive." -- Roman Pasca, H-Net, "It is, to my knowledge, one of the most (if not the most) comprehensive collections dealing with environmental philosophy in Japan ... it is abundant in ideas, hints, and clues that can help us develop a new frame of mind to help us deal with contemporary environmental problems. Secondly, it is structured upon the premise that "philosophy" should not be understood in a narrow sense (e.g., the Graeco-European tradition), but broadly as the practice of thinking about the world ... it is clear from their inclusion of thinkers as diverse as Dogen and Kukai, Watsuji and Imanishi that their stance on philosophy is very open and inclusive." -- Roman Pasca, H-Net, "Japanese Environmental Philosophy provides timely perspectives on the ecological exigencies facing our world while also offering essential scholarship in the burgeoning field of Japanese philosophy... [for] it offers fresh perspectives on key debates. The quality of the work in this anthology is excellent. ... Working through the volume the reader will engage with foundational aspects of Japanese cultural, religious, and philosophical traditions, with an eye toward contemporary environmental concerns. Given the mounting ecological crises we are experiencing throughout the world, environmental philosophy should not be confined to a specialized subfield. ... Japanese Environmental Philosophy is a model of how an anthology can open up a space for productive cross-cultural environmental theory and action." -- Philosophy East and West "It is, to my knowledge, one of the most (if not the most) comprehensive collections dealing with environmental philosophy in Japan ... it is abundant in ideas, hints, and clues that can help us develop a new frame of mind to help us deal with contemporary environmental problems. Secondly, it is structured upon the premise that "philosophy" should not be understood in a narrow sense (e.g., the Graeco-European tradition), but broadly as the practice of thinking about the world ... it is clear from their inclusion of thinkers as diverse as Dogen and Kukai, Watsuji and Imanishi that their stance on philosophy is very open and inclusive." -- Roman Pasca, H-Net, It is, to my knowledge, one of the most (if not the most) comprehensive collections dealing with environmental philosophy in Japan ... it is abundant in ideas, hints, and clues that can help us develop a new frame of mind to help us deal with contemporary environmental problems. Secondly, it is structured upon the premise that "philosophy" should not be understood in a narrow sense (e.g., the Graeco-European tradition), but broadly as the practice of thinking aboutthe world ... it is clear from their inclusion of thinkers as diverse as Dogen and Kukai, Watsuji and Imanishi that their stance on philosophy is very open and inclusive., "Japanese Environmental Philosophy provides timely perspectives on the ecological exigencies facing our world while also offering essential scholarship in the burgeoning field of Japanese philosophy... [for] it offers fresh perspectives on key debates. The quality of the work in this anthology is excellent. ... Working through the volume the reader will engage with foundational aspects of Japanese cultural, religious, and philosophical traditions, with an eye toward contemporary environmental concerns. Given the mounting ecological crises we are experiencing throughout the world, environmental philosophy should not be confined to a specialized subfield. ... Japanese Environmental Philosophy is a model of how an anthology can open up a space for productive cross-cultural environmental theory and action." -- Philosophy East and West"It is, to my knowledge, one of the most (if not the most) comprehensive collections dealing with environmental philosophy in Japan ... it is abundant in ideas, hints, and clues that can help us develop a new frame of mind to help us deal with contemporary environmental problems. Secondly, it is structured upon the premise that "philosophy" should not be understood in a narrow sense (e.g., the Graeco-European tradition), but broadly as the practice of thinking about the world ... it is clear from their inclusion of thinkers as diverse as Dogen and Kukai, Watsuji and Imanishi that their stance on philosophy is very open and inclusive." -- Roman Pasca, H-Net
Dewey Decimal179/.10952
Table Of ContentAcknowledgementsContributorsForeword: Back to the Future? Carl B. BeckerIntroduction J. Baird Callicott and James McRaeSection I: Nature in the Japanese Tradition of Thought1. Thinking the Ambient: On the Possibility of Shizengaku (Naturing Science) Augustin Berque2. Pure Land Ecology: Taking the Supernatural Seriously in Environmental Philosophy Leah Kalmanson3. From Kyosei to Kyoei: Symbiotic Flourishing in Japanese Environmental Ethics James McRaeSection II: Human Nature and the Environment4. Kukai and Dogen as Exemplars of Ecological Engagement Graham Parkes5. Sensation, Betweenness, Rhythms: Watsuji's Environmental Philosophy and Ethics in Conversation with Heidegger INUTSUKA Yu6. Climate Change as Existentialist Threat: Watsuji, Greimas, and the Nature of Opposites Steve BeinSection III: Environmental Aesthetics7. Whitehead's Perspectivism as a Basis for Environmental Ethics & Aesthetics:A Process View on the Japanese Concept of Nature Steve Odin8. Japanese Gardens: The Art of Improving Nature Yuriko Saito9. Kuki Shuzo and Platonism: Nature, Love, and Morality YAMAUCHI TomosaburoSection IV: Nature and Japanese Culture10. Recollecting Local Narratives for the Land Ethic TOYODA Mitsuyo11. Recognizing the Crucial Role of Culture in Japanese Environmental Philosophy Midori Kagawa-Fox12. Kagura: Embodying Environmental Philosophy in the Japanese Performing Arts GODA HirokoSection V: Natural Disasters1. Disaster Prevention as an Issue in Environmental Ethics TAKAHASHI Takao2. Non-Dualism after Fukushima? Tracing Dogen's Teaching vis-à-vis Nuclear Disaster Masato Ishida3. Planetary Philosophy and Social Consensus Building KUWAKO ToshioAfterword J. Baird CallicottIndex
SynopsisJapanese Environmental Philosophy is an anthology that responds to the environmental problems of the 21st century by drawing from Japanese philosophical traditions to investigate our relationships with other humans, nonhuman animals, and the environment. It contains chapters from fifteen top scholars from Japan, the United States, and Europe. The essays cover a broad range of Japanese thought, including Zen Buddhism, Shintoism, the Kyoto School, Japanese art and aesthetics, and traditional Japanese culture., Japanese Environmental Philosophy is an anthology that responds to the environmental problems of the 21st century by drawing from Japanese philosophical traditions to investigate our relationships with other humans, nonhuman animals, and the environment. It contains chapters from fifteen top scholars from Japan, the United States, and Europe. The essays cover a broad range of Japanese thought, including Zen Buddhism, Shintoism, the Kyoto School, Japaneseart and aesthetics, and traditional Japanese culture., Japanese Environmental Philosophy is an anthology that responds to the environmental problems of the 21st century by drawing from Japanese philosophical traditions to investigate our relationships with other humans, nonhuman animals, and the environment. It contains chapters from fifteen distinguished scholars from Japan, the United States, and Europe.
LC Classification NumberGF80.J36 2017

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