Landscape and Travelling East and West: A Philosophical Journey
Editat de Professor Hans-Georg Moeller, Dr. Andrew K. Whiteheaden Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 iul 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781474248259
ISBN-10: 147424825X
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 147424825X
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
A
unique
contribution
to
current
debates
about
space,
belonging
and
the
environment
informed
by
non-Western
perspectives
Notă biografică
Hans-Georg
Moelleris
Senior
Lecturer
in
the
Department
of
Philosophy
at
University
College
Cork,
Ireland.Andrew
K.
Whiteheadis
the
Manager
of
the
Irish
Institute
of
Japanese
Studies
in
the
Department
of
Philosophy
at
University
College
Cork,
the
Executive
Director
of
the
Académie
du
Midi
Institute
of
Philosophy,
and
has
recently
been
appointed
Assistant
Professor
of
Philosophy
in
the
Department
of
History
and
Philosophy
at
Kennesaw
State
University,
USA.
Cuprins
Notes
on
ContributorsIntroduction
(Hans-Georg
Moeller)Part
I:
Strolls
and
Scrolls
1.
Landscape
and
Travelling
in
Early
Chinese
Thought
(Ouyang
Xiao)2.
Landscape
as
an
Aesthetic
Person:
On
the
Conceptual
World
of
German
Romanticism
(Rolf
Trauzettel)3.
The
Landscape
of
Yinyang:
Philosophy
and
Shanshui
Painting
(Robin
Wang)4.
Landscape,
Travel,
and
a
Zhuangist
Reply
to
Nagel's
Cosmic
Question
(Chris
Fraser)Part
II:
Buddhist
Journeys
5.
Hoben
as
Pedagogical
Landscape
(Andrew
Whitehead)6.
On
the
Shikoku
Pilgrimage
(John
Harding)
7.
Travelling
through
Tibet:
Images
and
Mirages
(Snjezana
Zoric)
8.
A
Walk
Through
Some
Zen
Landscapes
of
the
Heart
(John
Maraldo)
Part
III:
Contemporary
Paths
9.
Journeying
and
Locality
in
Migration
(Andrea
Martinez)
10.
Wandering
and/or
Being
at
Home:
Zhuangzi
and
Heidegger
(Franklin
Perkins)
11.
On
the
Way
-
Foolish
Notes
of
an
Old
Nomadic
Poet-Philosopher
(Günter
Wohlfart)
12.
Transcultural
Reflections
on
the
Limits
of
Travel
(Mario
Wenning)
Part
IV:
Landscape
and
Travelling
as
Philosophical
Metaphors
13.
The
Way
of
Transmission
in
Confucianism
(Roger
Ames
and
Henry
Rosemont)
14.
A
Daoist
Response
to
Ames
and
Rosemont
(Paul
D'Ambrosio)
15.
The
Moral
Landscape
in
the
Philosophy
of
Tang
Junyi
(Ady
Van
den
Stock)
16.
Travelling
with
Laozi
and
Plato
(May
Sim)
Index
Recenzii
An
inspiring
collection
of
diverse
and
fascinating
journeys
through
time,
space
and
cultures,
this
book
is
an
ideal
companion
for
wondering
and
wandering
philosophers,
East-West
comparativists
and
intellectual
flâneurs
of
any
kind.
This well-crafted unusual collection of essays devoted to philosophical reflections on landscape and travel, real and imaginary, ranges comparatively across East and West, from Laozi and Zhuangzi, Confucius and Mencius, Buddhist sutras, and Basho to Plato, Descartes, Hegel, Kant, Heidegger, and Caspar David Friedrich, from physical location and movement in time and space to concepts of 'home' and sense of community, from journey as metaphor for spiritual quest to issues of migration, exile, personal and national identity, and relations between the human and the natural environments. The essays are marked by much original thought, sophisticated analysis, and the extensive and insightful use of primary sources, and their collective effect expands our perspectives and sharpens the focus we bring to bear on cultural affinities that have long been obscured by uninformed attention to superficial differences. As such, this volume represents cross-cultural and inter-disciplinary studies at their best.
Although more people in the world are travelling farther and more often than ever before-not least philosophers to conferences-this activity has been neglected as a topic for philosophical reflection. And although landscape has long been such a topic in East-Asian traditions, it too has been largely ignored in Western philosophy. This collection of essays by a range of scholars, from eminent experts to promising younger thinkers, goes a long way toward filling in the gaps in admirable fashion.
This well-crafted unusual collection of essays devoted to philosophical reflections on landscape and travel, real and imaginary, ranges comparatively across East and West, from Laozi and Zhuangzi, Confucius and Mencius, Buddhist sutras, and Basho to Plato, Descartes, Hegel, Kant, Heidegger, and Caspar David Friedrich, from physical location and movement in time and space to concepts of 'home' and sense of community, from journey as metaphor for spiritual quest to issues of migration, exile, personal and national identity, and relations between the human and the natural environments. The essays are marked by much original thought, sophisticated analysis, and the extensive and insightful use of primary sources, and their collective effect expands our perspectives and sharpens the focus we bring to bear on cultural affinities that have long been obscured by uninformed attention to superficial differences. As such, this volume represents cross-cultural and inter-disciplinary studies at their best.
Although more people in the world are travelling farther and more often than ever before-not least philosophers to conferences-this activity has been neglected as a topic for philosophical reflection. And although landscape has long been such a topic in East-Asian traditions, it too has been largely ignored in Western philosophy. This collection of essays by a range of scholars, from eminent experts to promising younger thinkers, goes a long way toward filling in the gaps in admirable fashion.