2020/06/25

Amazon.com: Overcoming Modernity: Synchronicity and Image-Thinking Yasuo, Yuasa



Amazon.com: Overcoming Modernity: Synchronicity and Image-Thinking (9780791474020): Yasuo, Yuasa: Books





Yasuo Yuasa
+ Follow

John W. M. Krummel
+ Follow


Overcoming Modernity: Synchronicity and Image-Thinking Paperback – January 8, 2009
by Yuasa Yasuo (Author)


Editorial Reviews

Review
“…the translators have to be commended for producing in collaboration with Yuasa an exciting presentation of his more controversial thought to complement the existing translations of Yuasa’s works in the English language and to introduce to the English-speaking audience one of the most fascinating Japanese thinkers of the twentieth century.” ― Philosophy East & West

“I commend Yuasa’s conscious commitment to creating a new form of thinking that transcends disciplinary compartmentalization and cultural boundaries. Indeed, Yuasa’s creative philosophizing demands that concepts from different disciplines and cultural traditions be removed from the frame of their traditional conceptual determinations and correlated to each other.” ― Tu Xiaofei, Dao

“…this book constitutes a cultural critique of modern Western science using as a point of departure not only Japanese culture but also the ideas of CG Jung … As a whole, the book is a stimulating corrective to the Western lens.” ― Network Review

“The translation, carefully executed by the longtime Yuasa scholar Shigenori Nagatomo and his student John Krummel, gives the book clarity and accessibility while retaining Yuasa’s unique flow of thought and way of reasoning.” ― Dao

“This is an outstanding piece of scholarship that breaks new ground in philosophy, science, religion, psychology, and ethics. Rather than treating these areas singly, Yuasa offers a theory that unifies all of them in one brilliant paradigm that establishes a new way of looking at ourselves and our world. Only a superior scholar and thinker like Yuasa could provide such an original perspective. This book stands alone as an innovative synthesis of East/West theory and practice.” ― Robert E. Carter, author of The Japanese Arts and Self-Cultivation

--------

About the Author


Yuasa Yasuo (1925–2005) was Professor Emeritus at Obirin University in Japan and the author of several books, including The Body, Self-Cultivation, and Ki-Energy and The Body: Toward an Eastern Mind-Body Theory, both also published by SUNY Press.

At Temple University, Shigenori Nagatomo is Associate Professor of Comparative Philosophy and East Asian Buddhism and John W. M. Krummel teaches religion.


Product details

Paperback: 258 pages
Publisher: State University of New York Press (January 8, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 079147402X
ISBN-13: 978-0791474020


--------

Overcoming Modernity: Synchronicity and Image-Thinking (review)
Article in Philosophy East and West 62(2):300-305 · January 2012 with 60 Reads 
DOI: 10.1353/pew.2012.0023
Cite this publication
Gereon Kopf
Abstract
Overcoming Modernity: Synchronicity and Image-Thinking constitutes the third book-length translation into the English language of a work by Yasuo Yuasa (Yuasa Yasuo 湯浅泰雄) (1925-2005), one of the most prolific philosophers of Japan in the second half of the twentieth century. Having written about "50 volumes and 300 articles . . . collected by Hakua Shobō in his complete works" and being known in academic circles in Japan and abroad as well as by a wider audience in Japan, he is probably the most prolific student of the famous philosopher Tetsurō Watsuji (Watsuji Tetsurō 和辻哲郎) (1889-1960). Yuasa's works explore topics ranging from comparative philosophy to a philosophy of self-cultivation (shugyō 修行) and potential affinities and intersections between the epistemological foundation of science and select mind-body theories developed in the context of Daoism, Buddhism, and depth psychology. While many aspects of Yuasa's work were already represented in the English language by Shigenori Nagatomo's translations of The Body (Shintairon 身体 論) and The Body, Self-Cultivation, and Ki Energy (Ki, shugyō, shintai 気, 修行, 身体) as well as a collection of original essays co-authored by Yuasa, Nagatomo, and David E. Shaner called Science and Comparative Philosophy: Introducing Yuasa Yasuo, there still has not been any translation of Yuasa's work on depth psychology in the English language. The present volume fills this lacuna. I would like to commence my review of this exciting work by this seminal thinker with a reflection on the choice of essays that were selected for translation and publication in Overcoming Modernity. Since Yuasa's work is rather extensive, the question of selection is highly important. Why did the translators choose among Yuasa's essays on Jung those that some consider cutting-edge while others think of them as "over the edge," instead of going with Yuasa's more traditional and conventional approach to Jung in works such as Yungu to tōyō ユングと東洋 (Jung and the East)? By the same token, it is important to ask why the authors selected independently published essays and presented them as if they made up one coherent work. I think the answer to these questions can be found in the questions themselves. Nagatomo, John Krummel, and their co-translators wanted to introduce Yuasa's work at its best, namely when he transgresses and transcends the boundaries between different traditions, discourses, and disciplines in order to challenge existing epistemic paradigms and advance our understanding of what it means to be human. In the service of this project, Yuasa never shied away from controversies but strove to find a language to describe what he considers the "supernormal" as opposed to "subnormal" phenomena of human existence even when it meant to break taboos. At the same time, it is possible to say that Yuasa's vision of an academic discipline combining the epistemic modalities of science and religion echoes in some sense the move toward interdisciplinary learning and research embraced by many universities today. This project as well as the refusal to avoid controversy is reflected in the title that was chosen by the translators for this collection of essays. While "Overcoming Modernity" does express Yuasa's desire to "overcome" the modern worldview as well as the vision of scholarship that was built on it, it is not without its set of problems. Specifically, this title may be considered misleading or even unfortunate, partly since the term "overcoming modernity" evokes the ghost of the simultaneously famous and infamous roundtable discussion held by a group of Japanese intellectuals in Shōwa Japan (1942 to be exact), published under the title Overcoming Modernity (Kindai no chōkoku 近代の超克), whose goal was to distinguish clearly between Japanese thought and "Western thought." In addition, the majority of philosophy in America and Europe, without a doubt postmodernism but also certain trends and movements within phenomenology and analytical philosophy, has already "overcome modernity" and especially the Cartesian dualism that Yuasa critiques in its own ways as well. Nevertheless, it is possible to say that insofar as he envisions a new academic discipline that does not privilege one form of knowledge over the others but is more inclusive, Yuasa did strive to "overcome modernity." Yuasa's argument, which the translators have condensed and highlighted by...