Emptiness and Temporality

Emptiness and Temporality
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2008
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780804779401

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This is an account of classical Japanese poetics based on the two concepts of emptiness (ku) and temporality (mujo) that ground the medieval practice and understanding of poetry.

Emptiness and Temporality Buddhism and Medieval Japanese Poetics

Emptiness and Temporality  Buddhism and Medieval Japanese Poetics
Author: Esperanza U. Ramirez-Christensen
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2008
Genre: Buddhism and literature
ISBN: 0804779406

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This is an account of classical Japanese poetics based on the two concepts of emptiness (ku) and temporality (mujo) that ground the medieval practice and understanding of poetry.

Emptiness

Emptiness
Author: John Corrigan
Publsiher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 236
Release: 2015-05-27
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780226237633

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For many Christians in America, becoming filled with Christ first requires being empty of themselves—a quality often overlooked in religious histories. In Emptiness, John Corrigan highlights for the first time the various ways that American Christianity has systematically promoted the cultivation of this feeling. Corrigan examines different kinds of emptiness essential to American Christianity, such as the emptiness of deep longing, the emptying of the body through fasting or weeping, the emptiness of the wilderness, and the emptiness of historical time itself. He argues, furthermore, that emptiness is closely connected to the ways Christian groups differentiate themselves: many groups foster a sense of belonging not through affirmation, but rather avowal of what they and their doctrines are not. Through emptiness, American Christians are able to assert their identities as members of a religious community. Drawing much-needed attention to a crucial aspect of American Christianity, Emptiness expands our understanding of historical and contemporary Christian practices.

Critiques of Theology

Critiques of Theology
Author: Yotam Hotam
Publsiher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 367
Release: 2023-09-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9781438494371

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It seems hard to imagine a concept more significant to modern thought than critique. Critique involved distancing oneself from religious explanations and theological argumentation and came to represent the essence of secular consciousness's potential to deliver modernity's promise of human progress through rational inquiry and scientific development. Critiques of Theology debunks this common understanding. Based on a novel reading of previously less-discussed writings by Sigmund Freud, Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and Hannah Arendt, the book shows how the practice of critique emerged out of religious traditions and can, in many ways, be traced back to them. This study points to a persistent misreading of critique and demonstrates that it does not come from outside of religion to build a new world of ideas; on the contrary, it redeploys those already present within its theological constellations.

The Movement of Nothingness

The Movement of Nothingness
Author: Daniel M. Price,Ryan J. Johnson
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2013
Genre: Nothing (Philosophy)
ISBN: 1934542296

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The Weimar Moment

The Weimar Moment
Author: Leonard V. Kaplan,Rudy Koshar
Publsiher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 555
Release: 2012
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780739140727

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The Weimar Moment's evocative assault on closure and political reaction, its offering of democracy against the politics of narrow self-interest cloaked in nationalist appeals to Volk and "community"--or, as would be the case in Nazi Germany, "race"--cannot but appeal to us today. This appeal--its historical grounding and content, its complexities and tensions, its variegated expressions across the networks of power and thought--is the essential context of the present volume, whose basic premise is unhappiness with Hegel's remark that we learn no more from history than we cannot learn from it. The challenge of the papers in this volume is to provide the material to confront the present effectively drawing from what we can and do understand.

Harmony in Chinese Thought

Harmony in Chinese Thought
Author: Chenyang Li,Dascha Düring,Sai Hang Kwok
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 317
Release: 2021-03-10
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9781538147047

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He (和), or harmony, has traditionally been a central concept in Chinese thought, and to this day continues to shape the way in which people in China and East Asia think about ethics and politics. Yet, there is no systematic and comprehensive introduction of harmony as has been variously articulated in different Chinese schools. This edited volume aims to fill this gap. The individual contributions elaborate the conceptions of harmony as these were exemplified in central Chinese schools of thought, including Daoism, Confucianism, Legalism, Mohism, Buddhism, and trace their impact on contemporary Chinese philosophy. The volume explores the various meanings and implications of harmony so as to consider its relevance as a value and virtue in the modern world. It provides an accessible but substantial introductory work for readers interested in learning about pertinent core concepts and theories in Chinese thought, as well as engages specialists in Chinese philosophy by explicating its implications for ethical, political, epistemological, and metaphysical reflection as the basic point of reference.

Hidden in Historicism

Hidden in Historicism
Author: Harry Jansen
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2020-06-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781000090796

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Hidden in Historicism considers how the nineteenth-century philosophy of historicism depicts three "forgotten time regimes": a time of rise and fall, an ambiguous time of synchronicity of the non-synchronous, and a time in which decisive moments dominate. Before the eighteenth century, time was past-oriented. This inversed in the Enlightenment, when the future became dominating. Today, this time of progress continues to be embraced as a "time of the modern". Yet, inequality, increasing violence and climate change lead to doubts over a bright future. In this book, Harry Jansen moves away from the heritage of Reinhart Koselleck and his single time of the modern towards a historicist, threefold temporal approach to history writing. In the time regime of the twenty-first century past, present and future coexist. It is a heterogeneous time that takes on the three forms of historicism. Jansen’s study shows how all three times exist together in current historiography and contribute to a better understanding of the world today. Based on the idea that an incarnated time rules everything that happens it reality, the book offers a fresh perspective on the ongoing discussion about time and time regimes in contemporary philosophy and theory of history for students and scholars, both time specialists and the non-specialist.