Nishida Kitaro (西田 幾多郎 Nishida Kitarō; 1870, Ishikawa Prefecture – 1945) was a prominent Japanese philosopher, founder of what has been called the Kyoto School of philosophy. He graduated from The University of Tokyo during the Meiji Era in 1894 with a degree in philosophy. He was named professor of the Fourth High School of Yamaguchi Prefecture in 1899 and later became professor of philosophy at Kyoto University. Nishida retired in 1927. Later in his retirement, in 1940, he was awarded the Cultural Medal of Honor. Nishida Kitaro died at the age of seventy-five of a renal infection. His grave is located at Reiun'in, a temple in the Myoshin-ji compound in Kyoto.
Philosophy
Having been born in the third year of the
Meiji Era, Nishida was presented with a newly unique opportunity to contemplate
eastern philosophical issues in the fresh light that
western philosophy shined on them. Nishida's original and creative philosophy, incorporating ideas of both
Zen and western philosophy, was aimed at bringing the East and West closer. Throughout his lifetime, Nishida published a number of books and essays including
An Inquiry into the Good and "
The Logic of the Place of Nothingness and the Religious Worldview." Taken as a whole, Nishida’s life work was the foundation for the
Kyoto School of Philosophy and the inspiration for the original thinking of his disciples. The most famous concept in Nishida's philosophy is the logic of basho (Japanese: 場所; usually translated to other languages as place or topos), a non-dualistic 'concrete' logic, meant to overcome the inadequacy of the subject-object distinction essential to the subject logic of
Aristotle and the predicate logic of
Kant, through the affirmation of what he calls the 'absolutely contradictory self-identity', a dynamic tension of opposites that, unlike the dialectical logic of
Hegel, does not resolve in a synthesis, but rather defines its proper subject by maintaining the tension between affirmation and negation as opposite poles or perspectives.
Notable disciples
References
Partial bibliography
Secondary resources
- Zen & Philosophy: An Intellectual Biography of Nishida Kitaro (ISBN 0-824-82459-8), Michiko Yusa
- Philosophers of Nothingness (ISBN 0-824-82481-4), James Heisig
- Nishida Kitaro (ISBN 0-520-073649-), Nishitani Keiji
- The Logic Of Nothingness: A Study Of Nishida Kitaro (ISBN 0-824-82969-7), Robert J. J. Wargo
External links
1870 births | 1945 deaths | Buddhists | Buddhist philosophers | Japanese philosophers
Kitarō Nishida | 西田幾多郎