Showing posts with label **. Show all posts
Showing posts with label **. Show all posts

2022/06/20

Toward a Philosophy of Zen Buddhism. By T Izutsu. Book Rev by DAVId A. KOLB 1977

Toward a Philosophy of Zen Buddhism. By Toshihiko Izutsu. 
Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977. Pp. xii + 259.

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J Amazon
禪佛敎の哲學に向けて
선불교의 철학을 향해
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책 소개

井筒俊彦 (이즈츠 토시히코)
노히라 무네히로 (노히라 무네히로) 번역
출판사·취급자 :  푸네우마사
발행 연월 :  2014년 1월 23일
본체 가격 :  본체 3,600엔+세금

목차
I 무위의 진인-선에서의 필드각지의 문제
-II 자아의식의 2개의 차원
III 선불교에 있어서의 의미와 무의미
IV 분절의 철학적 문제 
V 공안을 통한 사고와 비사고 

VII 동아시아의 예술과 철학에 있어서 의 색채 의 배제



収録内容

1 1 無位の真人―禅におけるフィールド覚知の問題
2 2 自我意識の二つの次元
3 3 禅仏教における意味と無意味
4 4 分節の哲学的問題
5 5 公案を通じての思考と非思考
6 6 禅における内部と外部
7 7 東アジアの芸術と哲学における色彩の排除


「조사가 서쪽으로부터 온 의의란 무엇인가, 나에게 가르쳐 주세요」 「정원의 카시와의 나무!」――이런 소위 「선문답」은, 언뜻 보면 미명의 수수께끼 걸린 것 같다. 그것은 선어가 말로 진리를 밝히는 것이 아니라 오히려 말에 의해 분절되기 이전의 무분절 진리의 세계를 깨닫게 하기에 힘들기 때문이다. 선의 세계는 "사고와 언어적 묘사를 허락하지 않는 비범한 체험의 세계이다"라고 알면서, 저자가 "선 체험에 자신을 철학화시키는 사소한 시도"(서)를 감행한 것이 이 책이다. 『임제록』의 일절 「운수 시법 법 시심법」을 「너희들은 <리얼리티>를 무엇이라고 생각하는가.<리얼리티>는 <마음의 리얼리티>에 다름없다" , 『무문관』 『바리무록』 등의 선어록·공안집을 대담하게 읽어내면서, 화엄교학, 유식사상, 수묵화까지를 회통해, 선에 있어서의 분절된 표현과 무분절의 진리와 의 역동적인 왕환을 명백한 말로 풀어낸다.

이통 슌히코(1914~1993)는 그리스 신비 사상, 이슬람 사상, 노장 사상, 불교 사상 등을 망라해 보편적인 <동양 철학>을 고찰한 세계적인 언어 철학자이다. 국내에서는 '꾸란' 전역을 비롯한 이슬람학의 실적으로 알려져 있지만 불교에 익숙한 독자에게는 '대승기신론'을 논고한 명저 '의식의 형이상학'이 유명할 것이다.

저작의 대부분이 영문으로 쓰여졌기 때문에 오히려 구미에서의 평가가 높다. 본서는 그 중 선을 주제로 하는 것을 정리해 1977년에 간행된 저작권의 방역이다. 주저 『의식과 본질』에서도 다루어지는 대로, 저자에게 있어서 선은 중요한 요소였지만, 정리된 일본어의 논집은 없었다. 첫출은 어색하기 때문에 어디서 읽어도 좋다. 구체적으로 선어가 피로되는 III장, IV장당부터 들어가면 읽기 쉬울 것이다. 지적공간에 해방된 선체험의 섬광을 엿볼 수 있다.


평자:히노 케이운(조토 마무네 혼간지파 종합 연구소 연구 조수)
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■영문 그대로 남겨진, 가학 혼신의 노작. 선과 철학──부립문자의 핵심에 오늘의 사상과 말로 다가온다. ■구미인을 향해, 동방불교 사상의 근원을 말하는 것. 그 궁리에 따라 선의 정신이 새로운 빛의 아래에 일어난다. 개념적 사고를 싫어하고 오로지 태어난 현실적인 경험의 장소로의 돌파를 목표로 하는 실천을 말로 옮기고 심으려고 한다. ■동서종교사상의 호응과 교차를, 그 최심부로 파악하는, 섬세하게 하고 역동적인 이통종교사상의 도전.
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일본에서
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별점 5점 만점에 5.0점 이통씨의 원점을 확인하고, 읽어내면 좋다.
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'신비철학'(이와나미 문고)의 '서문'에 이츠루씨는 '아버지로부터 그 독특한 내관법을 가르쳤다'고 써 그 방법을 기술하고 있다. 그것은 결과적으로 "여의 마음을 보지 말고, 내외 일체의 혼란을 떠나 오로지 무사히 귀몰하라. 「지적 사색을 가하는 것은 무서운 사도」이며, 「「사유할 수 없고, 사유할 수 없어」」라고 한다. 이 사고 방법은 범인에게는 무리다. 범인의 사고방법으로는 본서는 이해할 수 없다. 그러나 알 수 있는 곳도 있다. P210에 있다.
 "한 스님이 한 번 조주 선사에게 물었다. "개에는 불성이 있습니까?"
  스승은 대답했다. "무!
" 개 '에 대해 '지적 레벨'로 물었다. 그에 대해 「사」는 위에 쓴 이통씨의 「무」(무.「없음」이 아니다)의 위상으로부터 발언한 것이다. 「무!」라고. 절대 위상이다. 문답이 되어 있지 않은 것은 위상이 다르기 때문이다. 상대 위상과 절대 위상의 차이입니다. P231에도 이 문답의 해설이 있다.

이 생각을 누르면 다음(P167)은 어떻게 될까.
"바쇼(신라의 선사)는 한 번 모인 승려들에게 말한 적이 있다." 하지만 지팡이가 없다면, 나는 그것을 빼앗자.”
“지팡이”라고 말하는 이상, 그것은 상대의 개인의·분절된 “지팡이”이다. "하나 주는" 지팡이는 절대적이다. 다음에 「지팡이가 없다」라고 하는 「지팡이」는 상대이다. 빼앗기게 된다. 하지만 생각합니다. 절대는 「주는」것인가.

 이통씨는 이 절대가 지금·여기에·모두에 와 있는 것을 「공시적 구조」(『의식과 본질』)이라고 말하고 있다. 이 위상으로부터 세계사에 남는 문학 작품은 쓰여져 있다. 이 책은 그 추출물이다.
3명이 이 정보가 도움이 되었다고 평가했습니다.
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바다
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별점 5점 만점에 5.0점 호설 조각 별처에 떨어지지 않고.
2014년 4월 7일에 일본에서 작성
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이원적 분절이 지배하는 표층 세계, 무분절의 심층 세계에 대한 깊은 고찰이다.
선(=언어 배제)은 '실체'를 인정하지 않는다.
사물의 초월적, 초감각적 질서(=본질)의 존재도 인정하지 않는다.
따라서 '주체'·'객체'가 없는 세계이다.
'아는'대신 '완성=현성'이 필요하다.
여기에 이르려면 '신심'이 '탈락'되어야 한다. 그것은 동시에 '탈락신심'이기도 하다.
"좌선"은 그 최상의 가능성입니다. 그것은 "비사량"(=순수한 <각지>)으로서의 활동이다.
그것은, 예를 들면 「나는 산을 본다」가 1, 「나는 산을 본다」 2, 「산은 나를 본다」 3, 「산은 산을 본다」4, 「나는 나를 본다」라고 하는 등 상호 치환의 차원입니다. A=비A의 세계이다.
나를 잊어서 물건에 비추게 된다. 그때 자기 의식은 없다. "일종"(= 의미적 동일성)이 된다.

선으로 말하는 <마음(대문자)>은 존재=절대 무분절의 형이상학적 <무언가>이며, 무수한 형태로 분절되기 이전의 <현실>(=존재의 기초), 부모 미생 이전의 면목의 의미이다.

호설편편 별처에 떨어지지 않고 (호거사)
깊숙히 눈이 내리고 있다. 하지만 '주'·'객'은 근원적 통일체 <마음>에 관입하고 있기 때문에 눈송이가 떨어지는 곳은 없다.
움직임이 있는 것은 외부 체계가 있는 상대적 세계뿐이다.
외부 체계가 없는 차원에서 그 움직임에 대해 말하는 것은 의미가 없는 것이다.

「어떻게 될까 조사 서래의 뜻」 주정부 「정원 앞의 카시와 수코」(조주 와즈)
선문답의 질문은, 분절. 대답은 무분절이다.
선문답은, 묻는 사람을 초원적 단계에 멈추게 하기 위해, 간발을 넣지 않고 대답시킨다. 생각은 배제되어야 한다. 기계가 익고 있으면 거기에 <깨달음>=현성이 일어난다.
선은 <현상>을 절대화하고 구체적인 것을 넘은 <초월적 절대자>를 부정한다.
그리고, 무분절을 통해 상호 관입한 「무분절 즉분절」의 차원에서, 「지금·여기」에 있어서, 그 때마다 자유롭고 <열린, 투명한> 분절체가 현성된다.
<각자>는 <무언가>의 무분절 시점에서 각 사물 일체를 보고 있다. 사물은 모든 사물이면서 자기입니다.
화엄철학에서는 모든 사물간의 방해받지 않는 상호관입의 형이상학적 차원을 '사사무리법계'라고 한다. <무언가>와 현상이라면 「이사무사」라고 한다.
무분절 즉분절의 구조는 무분절이 자신을 자신으로 분절한다는 것이다. (도원의 표현에서는, 물이 물을 본다)
존재론적으로는, 자신의 분절 행위를 순간마다 무효화하고 있는 것이 된다.
무분절은 섬광처럼 분절하고 순간 무분절로 돌아간다.
도원의 고찰에서는, 이것은 곳곳에서 모든 순간에 일어나고 있다. 세계는 다이나믹하게 살고 있는 것이다.

언어는 <현실>을 의미적으로 구분한다.
선은 의식의 정상 수준에 기원과 기초를 가진 언어는 의미가 없는 것이다. 「부립문자」이다. 그것보다는, 완전한 침묵이다.
선문답에서는 "강은 가만히 머물고 다리는 흐른다"처럼 의미분절 기능은 변형된다.
선에게 결정적 중요성을 갖는 것은 말의 발발된 근원에 있다.

향엄선사의 깨달음 체험이 있다.
그것은 주·객 2분을 초월한 <삼매>로부터 주·객의 각지를 되찾는 순간에 찾아온다. 그것은 감각적 자극 (그것은 자갈이 대나무에 붙어있는 소리였다)에 의해서였다. 그리고 그 소리는 우주 전체이기도 했다. 그 때, 향엄도 소리가 되어 있었다.
<견성>에서는 나를 잊고 대나무로 만들어야 하고 종소리로 만들어야 하고 꽃으로 이루어져야 한다.
그리고 대나무도 종소리도 꽃도 사라지고 주·객이 사라지고 단지 <각지>뿐이 된다.
그리고 사람은 이 <각지>에서 깨어나 무분절인 <무언가>는 '나'와 예를 들면 '대나무'로서 다시 자신을 분절한다.
그리고, 이 2분의 바로 그 순간, 대나무는 갑작스럽게 절대적인 <대나무>로서 현성하는 것이다.
그리고 뛰어난 시인도 화가도 그것을 그리는 것이다.

영문으로부터의 번역이다. 그 의미에서 알기 쉬운 면이 있다.
이통은 "색 즉 시공", "공 즉 시색"을 "감각적인 것은 <무>이고, <무>는 바로 감각적인 것이다"라고 표현하고 있다.
<무위의 진인>(임제)이 <무언가>(=무분절의 세계)에 관입(무분절 즉분절)하여 현상을 <각지>한다는 구도이다.
기존의 추상적이고 정적 인 설명과 달리 구체적이고 동적입니다.
힘줄에 떨어지는 경우가 많았다.
16명이 이 정보가 도움이 되었다고 평가했습니다.
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별점 5점 만점에 5.0점 번역가의 역량이 굉장하다
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이통의 원문과 이 책을 나란히, 양쪽을 맞대면서 정중하게 읽으면, 동양적 사고의 논리와 감성을, 영어로 구미인에게 설명할 때의 강력한 참고서로서 가장 적합한 책.
15명이 이 정보가 도움이 되었다고 평가했습니다.
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카리타스77
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별점 5점 만점에 5.0점 현재 진행형으로 말하면
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본서의 독서 체험은, 만일 현재 진행형으로 말하면, 「선이란 무엇인가」에 대해 정중하게 생각해 가는 강의에 사귀고 있는 작업이 됩니다.

철학의 행위는 다양한 직무분담을 가지고 있지만, 기초부착 작업도 그 중 중요한 하나입니다.

지금까지 선에 대해 경험에서 알고 있었던 것에 저자의 가리키려는 의미가 주어집니다.

'해석'이라기보다는 '재확인'을 지남하는 텍스트일 것입니다.

이 재확인 작업을 필요로 하는 독자에게는 중요하고 흥미로운 서술이 되고, 재확인 작업을 특별히 필요로 하지 않는 독자에게는, 전체의 7개의 장립 중에서, 괄호로 묶어 두고, 방치 해도 문제없는 것도 포함되어 있다고 생각합니다.

따라서 필요한 부분이나 필요할 수없는 부분이 독자에게 중요합니다.

그런데 달은 달이 된다는 표현은 동일률이 아닌 경우가 있습니다. 만약을 위해.
한 사람이 이 정보가 도움이 되었습니다.
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별점 5점 만점에 5.0점 너무 어려워! ! 영혼의 구제에는 도움이 되지 않는다
2014년 5월 14일에 일본에서 작성함
선불교 그것도 임제종계의 해설서의 느낌일까요 내용은 완전히 철학적인 사고를 할 수 없는 사람은 읽을 수 없습니다! ! 나도 그 중~~:: 이통씨는 역시 너무 어려운 것이 난점이지요 이것을 강의 혹은 이야기해도 아는 사람은 거의 없는 것이 아닐까 전문가 이외에서는! ! 마음을 위해 죄송합니다! !
7명이 이 정보가 도움이 되었다고 평가했습니다.
도움이 되는
남용 신고
====
izumowol 님 의

팔로우
2016년 7월 6일

원래 '이리'를 뛰어넘어 세계를 파악하고자 하는 선과 세계
를 이성으로 포착하려고 하는 철학을 나란히 논하려고 하는 것은
무리가 있을 것 같은 이야기이다. 그러나 선도 사람의 영업이며,
거기에는 움직임 일하는 마음이 존재하기 때문에, 무엇인가의 철학적
이라고 말해도 좋은 동향은 존재할 것이다. 무리문답이라고 밖에
생각할 수 없는 공안이나, 선에 있어서의 깨달음에 대해, 거기서
일하고 있는 철학을 매우 알기 쉽게 해설하고 있는 이 책은,
읽은 것만으로 선을 알게 된 것 같은 신경이 쓰이는 위험한 서적
이다 (웃음).
=====



Review by  David A. KOLB
Bates College
Philosophy East and West
Vol. 30, No. 4 (Oct., 1980), pp. 540-542 (3 pages)
Published By: University of Hawai'i Press
====
Professor Izutsu, a noted Islamicist, has published a set of essays on Zen which are thoroughly unified in theme and style despite their various origins; many were
originally given at the Eranos conferences. Besides its considerable intrinsic interest, the book merits note as perhaps one of the last of its kind, published as it is by the Imperial Iranian Academy.

Izutsu sets out to develop "the philosophical potential hidden in the Zen experience of reality" (p. ×). 
He deals with a variety of topics but 
approaches them all on the basis of a fundamental duality which is developed into a three-part scheme. 
The duality is 
  • metaphysical, between the realm of names and forms and its unformed, 
  • unarticulated ground.
  •  This duality is expanded into a triplicity by the use of "our old familiar metaphysical theme, namely that 
  • the Undifferentiated ex-ists only through its own differentiations" (p. 171). 

The developed scheme 
  • starts with the formed things of ordinary experience
  • moves to the unformed ground, and 
  • then back to the formed things, now seen as the unformed ground
    • or as divested of "their ontological opaqueness ... totally transparent, pervading each other, submerged into one" ' (p. 204).

Zen experience moves along this same are: 
from concentration on things to submersion in the primal ground to seeing things as the ground. 
Zen use of language moves similarly: 
from the usual referential use of language, to silence, to language use where the usual semantic articulation is suspended and everything means everything else in a linguistic parallel to the Hua Yen interplay suggested earlier. 

This is the language of koan and mondo.

Given these tools Izutsu discusses 
  • Zen views of man and consciousness,
  • the place of language, 
  • rationality and thought in Zen practice, 
  • satori, and 
  • various aspects of Eastern artistic practice, 
  • especially the tendency toward black-and-white painting.

Izutsu manages to give an exposition of Zen which shows 
why it can be a transforming and saving religion
not just a form of play, discipline, or psychotherapy.

His threefold scheme, patterned on the famous koan of mountain/no mountain/ 
mountain, enables him to avoid facile interpretations of Zen as an inexpressible 
experience coupled with nonsensical language. He can suggest the sounder notion of an experience articulating itself in a new language use. Along this line his remarks about the centrality of language in Zen despite its official denials are directly on target (confer pp. 111, 123). Also very suggestive is his conception of a use of language which parallels the Hu Yen transparent and interrelated world.

The threefold metaphysical scheme reminds us forcibly of the Heart Sutra's "form is emptiness and emptiness is form."

* Yet I wonder if the anatta doctrine has been given its due. Izutsu freely uses words from a variety of philosophical traditions East and West to describe the undifferentiated reality: pure self (p. 21), a field of pure energy (p. 24), pure light (p. 32), Mind (p. 33), the Eternal Present (p. 37), a relational field (p. 45), emptiness (p. 106), the Ur-grund (p. 127), the Plenitude of Reality (p. 127), ultimate reality (p. 130). Despite his disclaimers that this is not to indicate an absolute beyond the world of names and forms, the impression of substantiality persists. This is reinforced by such phrases as "The Eternal Present is eternally calm and tranquil in spite of all the motions of the mind on another dimension" (p. 42). At the core of Izutsu's threefold scheme we get only metaphors: the Undifferentiated "articulates itself" and things "are transparent.

Such carefree collisions of diverse philosophical terms raise serious problems of method. Izutsu can use terms from German idealism, Platonism, Buddhism, and  Hinduism indiscriminately because he means them all to be qualified by "the Zen experience of reality.'

" But how do we know there is one Zen experience? And granted there is one, how do we know that it is so prior to learning the concepts as to be an independent check on their meanings? Izutsu's quick dismissal of Soto Zen on pages 161-167 is not encouraging here. Has he overunified the tradition?

More generally, why should we assume that "at the original point of all Philosophieren in any form whatsoever there is and there must be a peculiar reality-experience" (p. ix). Are such "experiences" to be the point of unity within any tradition? The result of this hermeneutical rule is to break thought into large blocks each ruled by one reality-experience and within which details of argument and terminological differences become secondary. Philosophy reduces to high-level show-and-tell.

Izutsu's translations of mondo and koan into his scheme are very helpful. His choice of examples for interpretation is always interesting and the vast range of his scholarship continually surprises the reader. Yet the very ease of translation should worry us. His principles lead him to find over and over the same threefold scheme behind every example. While this is illuminating in dismissing simpler interpretations, should we perhaps worry that Izutsu has created a unique object or structure to be the signified of every expression, thus making Zen "metaphysical" in the sense recently discussed by Derrida and Heidegger? Izutsu's text will not help us here because his ideas on meaning are too limited. He justly attacks a simple reference-theory of meaning, but we are no longer Naiyäyikas today. Denial of their theory does not help us all that much.

Although Izutsu shows an awareness of contextual factors in Zen expression (confer p. 102), he does not integrate these into a better theory of meaning to realize his intriguing suggestions about Zen language.

Despite these problems and in part because of them Izutsu's book remains a 
stimulating and unified picture of Zen.

DAVId A. KOLB

Bates College
===

===
David Kolb 1
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For the educational theorist, see David A. Kolb.

David Kolb (born 1939[1]) is an American philosopher and the Charles A. Dana Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Bates College in Maine.

Kolb received a B.A. from Fordham University in 1963 and an M.A. in 1965. He later received a M.Phil. from Yale University in 1970 and a Ph.D. in 1972. Kolb's Dissertation was titled "Conceptual Pluralism and Rationality." Most of Kolb's writing deals with "what it means to live with historical connections and traditions at a time when we can no longer be totally defined by that history." Professor Kolb taught at the University of Chicago before moving to Bates in 1977 and teaching there until 2005, when he took emeritus status.


Contents
1 Works
2 See also
3 References
4 External links


Works
Kolb has written many articles and published several books including:

  • The Critique of Pure Modernity: Hegel, Heidegger, and After, 1987
  • Postmodern Sophistications: Philosophy, Architecture, and Tradition, 1990
  • New Perspectives on Hegel's Philosophy of Religion, 1992
  • Socrates in the Labyrinth: Hypertext, Argument, Philosophy, 1994
  • Sprawling Places, 2008

===
Not to be confused with
===
David Allen Kolb 2
Born December 12, 1939
Era 20th-century philosophy
Region Western Philosophy
Main interests experiential learning
Notable ideas Experiential Learning Model (ELM)
Influences
David Allen Kolb (born December 12, 1939 in Moline, Illinois) is an American educational theorist whose interests and publications focus on experiential learning, the individual and social change, career development, and executive and professional education. He is the founder and chairman of Experience Based Learning Systems, Inc. (EBLS),[1] and an Emeritus Professor of Organizational Behavior in the Weatherhead School of Management, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.

Kolb earned his BA from Knox College in 1961 and his MA and Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1964 and 1967 respectively, in social psychology.


Contents
1 Experiential learning
2 Learning Style Inventory
3 Bibliography
4 See also
5 References
6 External links
Experiential learning
Main article: Experiential learning
In the early 1970s, Kolb and Ron Fry (now both at the Weatherhead School of Management) developed the Experiential Learning Model (ELM),[2] composed of four elements:

concrete experience,
observation of and reflection on that experience,
formation of abstract concepts based upon the reflection,
testing the new concepts,
(repeat).
These four elements are the essence of a spiral of learning that can begin with any one of the four elements, but typically begins with a concrete experience.

Learning Style Inventory
Kolb is renowned in educational circles for his Learning Style Inventory (LSI). His model is built upon the idea that learning preferences can be described using two continuums:

Active experimentation ↔ Reflective observation
Abstract conceptualization ↔ Concrete experience.
The result is four types of learners: converger (Active experimentation - Abstract conceptualization), accommodator (Active experimentation - Concrete experience), assimilator (Reflective observation - Abstract conceptualization), and diverger (Reflective observation - Concrete experience). The LSI is designed to determine an individual's learning preference.[3]

Bibliography
Kolb, D.A., Rubin, I.M., McIntyre, J.M. (1974). Organizational Psychology: A Book of Readings, 2nd edition. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
Kolb, D.A., Fry, R.E. (1974). Toward an Applied Theory of Experiential Learning
Kolb, D. A., Kolb, A.Y. (2011). The Kolb Learning Style Inventory 4.0
See also
Experiential learning
Constructivism (philosophy of education)
References
 Experience Based Learning Systems, LLC. (EBLS)
 Kolb. D. A. and Fry, R. (1975) Toward an applied theory of experiential learning. in C. Cooper (ed.), Theories of Group Process, London: John Wiley.
 Experience Based Learning Systems, Inc. (EBLS)
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to David A. Kolb.
Kolb's Faculty Profile at Case Western University
===

===
David Kolb
Department of Philosophy 130 Nottingham Road
Bates College, 73 Campus Avenue Auburn, Maine 04210
Lewiston, Maine 04240 USA Tel: (207) 782-6817
Tel: (207) 786-6308 Email: dkolb@bates.edu
Fax: (207) 786-6123 http://www.bates.edu/~dkolb/
Education:
1972 Ph.D., Yale University. Dissertation: "Conceptual Pluralism and Rationality"
1970 M. Phil., Yale University
1965 M.A., philosophy, Fordham University
1963 B.A., Fordham University, summa cum laude, double major, classics and philosophy

Academic Honors:
1999-00 Charles Phillips Research Fellowship
1989 Charles A. Dana Professor of Philosophy
1983-84 Fulbright Lectureship, Nagoya, Japan
1982-83 National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers
1976-1982 Danforth Associate
1970 Tew Prize in Philosophy, Yale University
1969-72 Kent Fellowship (Danforth Foundation)
1967 Scholarship for summer Asian studies, University of Pennsylvania
1964 Licentiate in Philosophy, summa cum laude

Professional Experience:
1999 Guest Researcher, School of Architecture, Lund, Sweden (autumn only)
1989 on Charles A. Dana Professor of Philosophy, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine
1983-9 Professor of Philosophy, Bates College
1983-4 Fulbright Lecturer, Nanzan University and Aichi Kenritsu University, Nagoya, Japan.
1980-82 Chair, Division of the Humanities, Bates College.
1977-91 Chair, Department of Philosophy and Religion, Bates College
1977-83 Associate Professor of Philosophy, Bates College
1972-77 Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Chicago
1971 Teaching Assistant, Yale University
1969 Intern, Department of City Planning, City of Baltimore, Maryland
1968-69 Instructor (part-time), Mt. St. Agnes College and Woodstock College, Baltimore
1964-67 Instructor, Fordham College, Bronx, New York

Books:
The Critique of Pure Modernity: Hegel, Heidegger, and After. University of Chicago Press, 1987.
Postmodern Sophistications: Philosophy, Architecture, and Tradition. University of Chicago Press, 1990.
New Perspectives on Hegel's Philosophy of Religion. SUNY Press, 1992. (edited)
Socrates in the Labyrinth: Hypertext, Argument, Philosophy. Eastgate Systems, 1994. (hypertext essay collection)

Essays and Articles:
"Impure Postmodernity -- Philosophy Today," preface for the Chinese translation of The Critique of Pure Modernity: Hegel, Heidegger, and After.
"Hegelian Buddhist Hypertextual Media Inhabitation, or, Criticism in the Age of Electronic Immersion," in Adrift in the Technological Matrix, Bucknell Review 46.2, Autumn 2002, 90-108.
"Et blandet selskab: Laesekundskaber inden for trykte tekster og hypertekst på én og samme tid," in Standart 4/5, Copenhagen. (A translation of a portion of the talk "Ruminations in Mixed Company: Literacy in Print and Hypertext Together")
"Borders and Centers in an Age of Mobility," forthcoming in a Festschrift.
"Why Hegel? Why Now?" Introductory essay to the Hegel issue, Dialogue XXXIX (2000), 651-6. (with Suzanne Foisy)
"Exposing an English Speculative Word," The Owl of Minerva, Fall 2000, xx.
"Learning Places: Building Dwelling Thinking On-Line," Journal Of Philosophy Of Education, vol. 34, no. 1,Winter 2000, 121-133.
"Hypertext as Subversive?" a hypertext essay, in Culture Machine 2, http:culturemachine.tees.ac.uk
"Genius Fluxus: The Spirit of Change," Proceedings of a Conference on The Flux of Place, forthcoming.
"The Particular Logic of Modernity," Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain, Nos. 41.42, 2000, 31-42.
"Hegel's Architecture," in A Companion to Hegel's Aesthetics, Cambridge University Press, forthcoming.
"Modernity's Self-Justification," The Owl of Minerva, vo. 30, no. 2, Spring 1999, 253-276.
"Collisions and Interactions: Philosophical Reflections on CATAC '98," at the conference on Cultural Attitudes toward Technology and Communication, London, August 1998. Available at http://www.bates.edu/~dkolb/catac-dk.html
"Four Questions and a Funeral: Hegel on Spirit's Self-Division and New Life," Proceedings of a Colloquium on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit, forthcoming.
"Steps to the Futures," Proceedings of the Conference on Religion and Education at the Millennium, forthcoming.
"The Age of the List,"in Algreen-Ussing, Gregers, et al, ed.. Urban Space and Urban Conservation as an Aesthetic Problem. Rome: Accademica Danica, L'Erma di Bretschneider, 2000, 27-35.
"The Spirit of Gravity: Architecture and Externality in Hegel," in Hegel and Aesthetics, SUNY Press, 2000, 83-96.
"Tradition and Modernity in Architecture," in the Encyclopedia of Aesthetics. Oxford Unversity Press, 1998.
"Circulation and Constitution at the End of History,"in Endings: Questions of Memory in Hegel and Heidegger, ed. by Rebecca Comay and John McCumber.Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1999, 57-76.
"Filling the Blanks," in Language Beyond Postmodernism: Saying and Thinking in Gendlin's Philosophy, ed. by David Michael Levin. Northwestern University Press, 1998, 65-83.
"Scholarly Hypertext: Self-Represented Complexity," Hypertext '97, Association For Computing Machinery, 1997, 29-37.
"The Final Name of God: Hegel on Determinate Religion," Hegel and the Tradition:. University of Toronto Press, 1997, 162-175.
"Communicating Across Links," Philosophical Perspectives on Computer Mediated Communication, SUNY Press, 1996, 15-26.
"Circulation Bound: Hegel and Heidegger on the State," Phenomenology, Interpretation, and Community, SUNY Press, 1996.
"Raising Atlantis: The Later Heidegger and Contemporary Philosophy," From Phenomenology to Thought, Errancy, and Desire, Kluwer, 1995, 55-69.
"Identity and Judgment: Five Theses and a Program,"Nordisk Arkitekturforskning, Fall 1994, 37-40.
"Home on the Range: Planning and Totality," Research in Phenomenology, 1992, 3-11. (Reprinted in Nordisk Arkitekturforskning, Spring 1995.)
"Heidegger and Habermas on Criticism and Totality," Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, vol. LII, no. 2, 1992, 683-693.
"What is Open and What is Closed in the Philosophy of Hegel?" Philosophical Topics, vol. 19, no. 2, Fall 1991, 29-50.
"Heidegger at 100, in America," Journal of the History of Ideas, 1991, 140-151.
"Criticism and the Formless Center," in a forthcoming book on Technology and Culture, University of South Florida.
"Before Beyond Function," Proceedings of the Conference on Hegel and Architecture, School of Architecture, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, forthcoming.
"Socrates in the Labyrinth," a linear version of one hypertext essay from the above collection, in Hyper/Text/Theory Johns Hopkins Press, 1994, 323-344.
"Call for Submission Recycled," a hypertext, in Perforations 4.
"Postmodern Sophistications"Postmodernism on Trial, A/D Profile, London: Academy Editions,1990, 13-19.
"Haughty and Humble Ironies," Annals of Scholarship, vi, 1989, .
"American Individualism: Does it Exist?," Nanzan Review of American Studies, vi, 1984, 21-45.
"Pythagoras Bound: Limit and Unlimited in Plato's Philebus,"Journal of the History of Philosophy, 1984, 497-512.
"Dialectic and Phenomenology: Heidegger's Lectures on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit," The Owl of Minerva, 1982.
"Heidegger on the Limits of Science," Journal of the British Society forPhenomenology, January 1983, 50-64.
"Hegel and Heidegger as Critics," The Monist, 1981, 481-499.
"On the Objective and Subjective Grounding of Knowledge," translation, with introduction and notes, of an essay by the Neo-Kantian Paul Natorp,Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, 1981, 245-261.
"Language and Metalanguage in Aquinas," Journal of Religion, 1981, 428-432.
"A Place Without a Form," Proceedings of the Fifteenth Heidegger Conference, 1981.
"Socrates and Stories," Spring, 1981, 177-184.
"Sellars on the Measure of All Things," Philosophical Studies, 1979, 381-400.
"Ontological Priorities: A Critique of the Announced Goals of Descriptive Metaphysics," Metaphilosophy, 1975, 238-258.
"Time and the Timeless in Greek Thought," Philosophy East-West, 1974, 137-143.

Interviews
"Ma tu come scrivi col computer: Fra rete e ipertesti: scrittori esperti," interview published in Domenico Fiormonte and Ferdinanda Cremascoli, Manuale di scrittura (Turin: Bollati Boringhieri, 1998).
"An Analysis of the concept of hypertext," an interview with Italian public television 's Mediamente, RAI, Rome, October, 1997. Available at http://www.mediamente.rai.it/english/bibliote/intervis/k/kolb.htm
"Socrates Apology," essay/interview in Seulemonde (University of South Florida, Web journal; the essay is at http://www.bates.edu/~dkolb/seulmonde/Apology.html), Spring 1995.

Book Reviews:
Another Modernism?: Form, Content and Meaning of the new Housing Architecture of Hanoi, by Tran Hoi Anh, in Nordisk Arkitekturforskning, forthcoming.
Substance or Context: A Study of the Concept of Place, byWang Jun-Yang , in Nordisk Arkitekturforskning, 1995:3, 123-127, and a second review in Arkitectur 1995:7, 62-64.
Freedom, Truth, and History: an Introduction to Hegel's Philosophy, by Stephen Houlgate, The Owl of Minerva, Volume 26, Number 2, Spring 1995.
The Modernist City: an Anthropological Critique of Brasília, by James Holston, Visual Anthropology Review.
Hegel's Theory of Mental Activity, by Willem A. deVries, Idealistic Studies, Fall 1992.
Hegel and Mass Death, by Edith Wyschgrod, The Owl of Minerva, Fall 1989.
Hegel, Heidegger, and the Ground of History, by Michael Gillespie, Journal of the History of Philosophy, January 1987, 569-571.
The Eclipse of the Self, by Michael Zimmerman, Canadian Philosophical Reviews, January 1985.
The Turning Point, by Fritjof Capra, and The Reenchantment of the World, by Morris Berman, Commonweal, June 18, 1982.
Naturalism and Ontology, by Wilfrid Sellars, Philosophical Books, April 1982, 108-111.
Toward a Philosophy of Zen Buddhism, by T. Izutsu, Philosophy East-West, 1980, 540-542.
Plato: The Written and Unwritten Doctrines, by J. N. Findlay, Ethics, 1976.
Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge, ed. by Imre Lakatos, in Main Currents of Modern Thought, 1972.

Book Notes:
The Moral Order of a Suburb, by M. P. Baumgartner, Ethics.
Relationship and Solitude, by Maurice Natanson, Ethics, October 1988, 200.

Professional Talks:
"The Logic of Language Change," Presidential Address, Hegel Society of America, Penn State, October 2002.
"Why Hegel?" at a panel at the APA Central meeting, Chicago, April 2002.
"The Logic of the Critical Process," at a panel on Hegel and Critical Theory, SPEP, Baltimore, October 2001.
"Space and Meaning Stability," at the Hypertext 01 Workshop on Spatial Hypertext, Aarhus, Denmark, August 2001.
"Saving the Suburbs," Faculty lecture, Bates College, January 2001.
"Variations on a Theme by Disney," at Architecture, Language and Design, Bowdoin College, April, 2000.
"Hypertext and Print," to the Center for the Study of Digital Libraries, Texas A and M University, March, 2000.
"Full Theme Ahead," to the Center for the Study of American Design, University of Texas School of Architecture, March, 2000.
"Complex Grammars: Saving Suburbia," to Studio E, and the Building Function department, School of Architecture, Lund, Sweden, October 1999.
"Genius Fluxus: The Spirit of Change," at a conference on the flux of place, Sandbjerg, Denmark, October, 1999.
"Hypertext at Work," to the Design@Work group, Lund, Sweden, October 1999.
"Casey on Site and Place," Seminar on Edward Casey's The Fate of Place, School of Architecture, University of Lund, Sweden, October 1999.
"The Particular Logic of Modernity," to the Hegel Society of Great Britain, Pembroke College, Oxford, September 1999.
"Steps to the Futures," to a conference on religion and education at the millennium, Bates College, January 1999.
"Four Questions and a Funeral: Hegel on Spirit's Self-Division and New Life," to a colloquium on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit, Pennsylvania State University, March, 1999.
"Ruminations in Mixed Company: Literacy in Print and Hypertext Together," a talk given at the Open University, Milton Keynes, UK, July 1998. Available at http://www.bates.edu/~dkolb/ou-dk.html
"Hypertext and Argument," a seminar given at the University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy, October 1997.
"The Age of the List" a talk at the conference on Urban Preservation as an Aesthetic Problem, Rome, October 1997.
"Scholarly Hypertext: Self-Represented Complexity" at Hypertext 97, University of Southampton, England, April 1997.
The Spirit of Gravity: Hegel Society of America, Denver, Colorado, October, 1996.
"Hypertext and Literacy," SPEP, Washington, October 1996.
"Hypertext in the Classroom and Research," Nercomp, Sturbridge, March 1996.
"Hyper-Literacy: Re-forming Reading in a Media Age," University of Manitoba, April 1996.
"The Prose of Hypertext: Hypertext for Teaching and Writing Philosophy," CHUG (Brown University Computers in the Humanities User Group), October 1995.
Panelist at a Conference on "King Ludd and the Resistance to Technology," University of South Florida at Tampa, September 1995 (Virtual panel session through IATH Moo, University of Virginia)
"Re-writing Socrates: Hypertext Prose and Argument," Workshop "Serious Hypertext," Boston, May, 1995.
"Before Beyond Function," Conference on Hegel and Architecture, School of Architecture, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, March 1995.
"Postmodernism and Pluralism," and "Japanese Architecture Today," School of Architecture, Chalmers Technical University, Gothenburg, Sweden, February 1995.
"Irony and Postmodernism," University of Tokyo, October 1994.
"Form and Flow: Is there a Postmodern Age?," two lectures at a conference on The European City in the Age of Pluralism, School of Architecture, Aarhus, Denmark, September 1994.
"Socrates in the Labyrinth," remote video presentation of a hypertext essay, at ECHT '94 Edinburgh, Scotland, September 1994.
"Subdivisions, Metaphysics, and the History of Classification," Pennsylvania State University, February 1994, and Northwestern University, March 1994
"Raising Atlantis: the Later Heidegger and Contemporary Philosophy," invited symposium talk, American Philosophy Association, Eastern Division, Atlanta, December 1993.
"Building and Thinking at the End of History," Holy Cross College, October 1993.
"Coming Down out of the Trees: Kant and Hegel on the Transcendentals,"University of New Hampshire, October 1993.
"Hypertext and Philosophy," Conference on Computers in Philosophy, Pittsburgh, August 1993.
"Socrates in the Labyrinth," Vassar College, April, 1993.
"Computers, Communication, and Walls," Kanazawa Nichibei Kyokai Kanazawa, Japan, April 1993.
"Locality and Identity: Escaping Hierarchy," University of Nagoya, Japan, April, 1993.
"How do we build and think at the end of history?," University of Maine at Orono, November 1992.
"Es spielet, weil es spielet," Between Heidegger and Nietzsche, Trieste, April, 1992.
"Scholars, Scholasticisms, and the End of Philosophy," Wabash College, March 1992.
"Circulation Bound: Hegel and Heidegger on the State," Invited paper, Society for Phenomenological and Existential Philosophy, Memphis, October 1991.
"Circulation and Constitution at the End of History," Invited symposium participant, American Phiilosophical Association Central Division, Chicago, April 1991.
"Planning and Totality," Center for Sustainable Cities, University of Kentucky, April 1991.
"Postmodernism in Thought and Architecture," Vassar College, April 1990.
"Hegel and Religion: an Open and Shut Case," Brown University, March 1990.
"What is Open and What is Closed in the Philosophy of Hegel (Version 2)," Society for Systematic Philosophy, Atlanta, December, 1989.
"Heidegger and Habermas on Criticism and Totality," Heidegger Conference 1989, University of Notre Dame.
"Haughty and Humble Ironies," University of South Carolina, April 1989.
"What is Modern about Postmodern Architecture," Clemson University School of Architecture, April 1989.
"Traditional Japanese Crafts in the Modern Context," Olin Museum of Art, Bates College Museum of Art, November, 1988.
"What is Open and What is Closed in the Philosophy of Hegel," Loyola University of Chicago, October, 1988.
"Projects and Roots: Heidegger on Where We Are," American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., September, 1988.
"The Power of the Sophist," Maine Philosophical Institute, April, 1988.
"Modernity in America and Japan," delivered at ELEC, Tokyo, Japan, December, 1987.
"From Pillar to Post: Modernity and Postmodernity in Architecture," International Association for Philosophy and Literature, University of Kansas, May, 1987.
"The Semantics of Modern Dance," panelist, Bates Dance Festival, July, 1987.
"Heidegger and Transcendental Arguments," Nagoya Philosophical Society, January 1984.
"Rationality and Persuasion," Nagoya Business Debate Group, December 1983.
"American Individualism and Law," (with Richard Parker), the American Centers, Osaka and Nagoya, Japan, November 1983.
"Hegel and Heidegger: Locating Modernity," New School for Social Research Graduate Faculty, February 1983.
"Humanism Letter: The Price of Land Around The House of Being," Collegium Phenomenologicum, Perugia, Italy, Summer 1982.
"Hegel: The Whole Story," at Hegel Today: the Meaning of Hegel's Absolute Spirit, University of Ottawa, October 1981.
"A Place Without a Form," Heidegger Circle, Pennsylvania State University, Spring 1981.
"Animal Rights or Animal Values?" Bates College Colloquium on Animal Experimentation, 1979.
"Heidegger and Hegel as Critics," Collegium Phenomenologicum, Perugia, Italy, Summer, 1978, and at Northern New England Philosophy Association, November 1979.
"The Last Word in Greek Philosophy," Symposium on Early Greek Thought and Culture, University of Chicago, 1977; also delivered to the Department of Philosophy, University of Maine at Orono, 1978.
"Myth, Truth, and Translation," Conference on Myth, University of Chicago, 1975.
"The Varieties of Transcendental Method in Philosophy," Washington and Lee University, 1975.
"Mysticism and Philosophy," Washington and Lee University, 1975.
"Sellars on the Measure of All Things," Department of Philosophy, University of Illinois Chicago, 1975.
Talks delivered to the philosophy colloquium at the University of Chicago, 1973-7: "The Philosophy of Wilfrid Sellars" "Relations between European and American Philosophy" "De Re and De Dicto in Medieval Logic" "Ontological Priorities in Strawson" "Eternity in Plato and Plotinus"
"Heidegger on the Limits of Science," Heidegger Circle, Tulane University, Spring 1974.
"Ontological Priorities," Department of Philosophy, Rice University, 1974.
"Time and the Timeless in Greek Thought," Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy, 1973.

Comments on presentations:
"Collisions and Interactions: Philosophical Reflections on CATAC '98," at the conference on Cultural Attitudes toward Technology and Communication, London, August 1998. Available at http://www.bates.edu/~dkolb/catac-dk.html
Recollecting Design," comments on a paper by Robert Mugerauer on Daniel Liebeskind's addition to the Berlin Museum, at the Society for Phenomenological and Existential Philosophy, Chicago, October 1995.
"Training and Architecture," Conference on "Das Unheimliche" in Architecture and the City, DePaul University, April 1991.
"Heidegger and Politics," American Political Science Association, New England Regional Meeting, April 1990.
"Me and My Shadow," Heidegger Circle, 1982, (on Robert Bernasconi)
"The Community of Inquiry," Boston Colloquium on Philosophy and Religion, 1980. (on Robert Neville)
"Two Cheers for the Ontic," Heidegger Circle, University of Toronto, Spring 1980. (on Charles Scott)
"Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis," Heidegger Circle, Duquesne University Spring 1979. (on William Richardson)
"Aquinas on God," Symposium on Medieval Thought, University of Chicago, 1974. (on David Burrell)

Performances:
"Touring," a reading given at Hypertext 01, Aarhus, Denmark, August 2001.

Other:
Fifty or so small journalistic articles and reviews of varying lengths concerning computers and word processing, published in a newsletter, a computer magazine, and the APA Newsletter on Computing in Philosophy.

Courses Taught:

At Bates College:
Architecture, Tradition, Innovation
Between Text and Hypertext (first year seminar)
Contemporary Continental Philosophy
Contemporary Debates about Subjectivity
Designs, Traditions, and Powers
Dilemmas of Architecture and Design in the Post-Modern Age (Alumni Course)
Doing Philosophy
Dwelling and Dispersion
Feminist and Postmodern Critiques of Philosophy
From Text to Hypertext (first year seminar)
Greek Philosophy
Habermas and Foucault
Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
Hegel's Philosophy of Art (short term unit)
Hyperwriting (short term unit)
Intention and Meaning (co-taught with five colleagues)
Interpretation and Deconstruction
Introduction to Logic
Japanese Places: Modern, Feudal, Postmodern (Bates Fall Program in Japan, Tokyo, 1989)
Metaphysics and its Enemies
Modernization: an Introduction to Japanese Civilization (Bates Fall Program in Japan 1987)
Nietzsche
Nineteenth Century Philosophy
Normative Ethics
Phenomenology and Existentialism
Phenomenology and Science
Philosophy of Art
Philosophy of Science
Postmodernism: Lyotard and Habermas
Readings in Greek Philosophy: Plato's Phaedrus and Plotinus, "On Beauty,"
Readings in Greek Philosophy: Plato's Philebus and Gorgias
Readings in Greek Philosophy: The Nichomachean Ethics
Religion and Science (co-taught with Thomas Tracy)
Rorty on Heidegger and Derrida
Self and Individual East and West (co-taught with Lily de Silva)
Seminar on Major Thinkers: Aristotle
Seminar on Major Thinkers: Wittgenstein
Seminar: Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
Seminar: World and Reality

Short Term Symposium: The Exploration of Space (co-taught with physics and mathematics)
Short Term trip to Japan, Spring 1985
Tokyo as City and as Myth (Bates Fall Program in Japan 1994)
Topics in the Philosophy of Art: Place and Placelessness
Transcendental Arguments in Analytic Philosophy

At Japanese Universities:
American Thought.
The Idea of Progress

At the University of Chicago:
Ancient Philosophy
General Humanities
Greek Thought and Literature
Hegel's Logic
Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit (with Paul Ricoeur)
Heidegger's "Origin of the Art Work" (with Ted Cohen).
Nietzsche (with Paul Ricoeur)
Phenomenology and Science
Philosophy of Religion: Mysticism
Strawson and Heidegger on Kant
The Philosophy of Wilfrid Sellars
Transcendental Method in Philosophy

At Yale University:
Political Philosophy (teaching assistant)
At Mt. St. Agnes College:
Introduction to Asian Religions
The Problem of Evil.
At Woodstock College:
Introduction to Asian Religions.

At Fordham University:
Epistemology
Ethics
History of Philosophy
Ontology and Metaphysics.
Philosophy of Man
Philosophy of Nature
Philosophy of Religion

Administrative Experience:
At Bates College:
Chair, Humanities Division
Chair, Department of Philosophy and Religion
Committee Chair: Library Committee, Long Range Planning Committee, Ad Hoc Committee on Extracurricular Life, Computing Service Committee, Information Services Advisory Committee, Task Force on Strategic Planning for Technology, Information Services Advisory Committee
Committee Member: Personnel Committee, Educational Policy Committee, Academic Computing Service Committee, Ad Hoc Committee on Computers and the Liberal Arts, Graduate Study Committee, Ad Hoc Committee on Tenure Rules, Planning Group for New Residential Construction, Committee on Teaching Awards, Vision 2005 Planning Committee, Interdepartmental Hiring Committees in Education, Art History, and for the Dean of the Faculty, Architectural Advisory Committees for a new student residence, a new academic building, and the renovation of Coram Library, President's Advisory Committee
Planned, administered, and taught a spring term trip to Japan, 1985, and the Bates Fall Semesters in Japan, 1987, 1989, 1994.
At The University of Chicago:
Chair, Departmental Committees on Admissions, Financial Aid, Library
Member, Departmental Committee on Placement, Humanities Collegiate Division Advisory Board, University Advisory Board on Continuing Education
At Fordham University:
Director, Fordham College Debate Program.

Other Services:
Guest Editor, special issue on Hegel, Dialogue: a Canadian Journal of Philosophy.
Reviewed manuscripts for the University of Chicago Press, University of Minnesota Press, Critical Inquiry, Continental Philosophy Review, Journal of Digital Information, SUNY Press, Duke University Press, The Review of Politics, Dialogue, Cambridge University Press, Northwestern University Press, Rowan and Littlefield, the ACM Hypertext Conference, World Wide Web Conference.
Reviewed PhD dissertations for Northwestern University, University of Sydney, University of Chicago, University of Toronto.
External examiner for PhD defenses at the University of Toronto and at Chalmers Technical University, Sweden; External examiner for the Swarthmore College Honors Program in Philosophy
External Reviewer of the Philosophy Department, Wabash College
Reviewed dossiers and interviewed candidates for fellowships, planned and helped run annual conferences for the Danforth Foundation.
Participant in seminars, Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Chalmers Technical University School of Architecture, Aarhus University School of Architecture, Lund University School of Architecture.
Member, Lewiston Historical Preservation Review Board

Professional Organizations:
American Philosophical Association
Hegel Society of America (Vice-President, 1988-1990, President, 2000-2002))
Heidegger Conference
Association for Computing Machines
Society for Phenomenological and Existential Philosophy

2022/06/13

Meeting for Learning - send us responses to the following queries

Meeting for Learning - sejin.pak8@gmail.com - Gmail

Fiona Gardner
Attachments
Sat, May 21, 4:32 PM
to me, fionagardneraway@icloud.com

Dear Sejin,  thank you for your enquiry about Meeting for Learning.  I’ve attached the pamphlet that gives you the basic information.  It can also be helpful to talk to someone who has been – which Meeting are you in and I can suggest people, unless you have already done that of course!

We also ask people to send us responses to the following queries to help us make sure Meeting for Learning fits with what you are hoping for:

  1. How would you describe your spiritual journey so far?  
  2. What has been your involvement with Friends or with other spiritual development programs? 
  3. What is it about the Meeting for Learning that attracts you now?  
  4. What do you hope to gain from participating in this program?


Feel free to ask me anything else you would like to.

 

Peaceful wishes,

Fiona Gardner
----

Answering your intial queries for Meeting foe Learning:

1] How would you describe your spiritual journey so far?  

First, I would like to tell a little bit about my background. I am born in 1948, retired from a university teaching job in the social sciences and Asian studies. My ethnic background is Korean. I left South Korea in 1964 when my parents decided to migrate to Brasil. We remigrated to Canada. So, spent a lot of time adjusting to new cultures and languages. My first major in the university in Canada was Physics which was different from what my occupation ended up beig later. 

In my twenties, although I was studying very hard to become a physicist as I that was the sole goal in my life, I was not very happy for reasons that I did not understand. My parents were both university educated and seemed "reasonable" in child rearing, so I thought they had done their best in rearing me. But, am I not happy, I asked my self. I thought about suicide, or becoming a monk, at least not pursue a normal life that most people pursue. I concluded at the time that I could do no better than my parents in child rearing, so I would not want to have a child, which meant also not getting married. 

It was around this time that I got interested in exploring the reasons for my unhappyness, which turned out to be the beginning of what would later conceived as "a sort of spiritual quest". Although my major was physics and I studied it for seven years to PhD level, I was at the same time pursuing a sepate study of philosophy and religion on my own. 

Toward the latter part of my study in physics, something happened in my family related to the diaspora politics of the overseas Koreans, that I will not explain. This lead me to abandone my dream of becoming a physicist. I now wanted become a sociologist. I wanted to explore the question of the historical, social and political forces in Korea and in the overseas Korean communities, that impacted my family and myself. 

Changing the career plan from physics to sociology was of course not easy. I was not a native speaker of English, my training was in science, not in writing. Whether this change will be successful was very unclear, and it was a gamble. So I had to work very hard in a new field to get into a PhD program, and eventually to get into an academic career in the new field. What this meant to my "spiritual quest" that started in my twenties, was it was stalled there, not to continue and grow. 

When finally retired form my job, I wanted to go back to the "spiritual quest" of my twenties, and continue the process. I was around this time that I encountered Quakerism through a friend, whom I did not know was a Friend. I had a connection to this friend though a spiritual group callled the Emissaries of Divine Light to which my siblings were connected. I should also mention that my wife is a Christian, who goes to an ethnic Korean Presbitarian church. I do not go to this church because it has a conservative leaning even though my life is not religious conservative. I am not very socal, and I continued to feel lack of sense of community. I was already feeling lack of a sense of beloniging because of many international moving (from Soutj Korea, to Brazil, Canada, USA, Japan, back to Canada, then to Australia). 

I was hoping to find a spiritial community through a Quakerism and a Quaker community.  

I should add that in terms of religion and my background, I used to say I was not religious even though I have been exposed to Buddhism as a sort of family religion and Christianity as the major religion among the migrant Koreans. 

2] What has been your involvement with Friends or with other spiritual development programs? 

I began attending a Quaker meeting in Adelaidesix years ago. I attended very diligently for about four years, but stopped doing that for a combination of a medical condition of Bowel cancer and the Covid situation. For the first four years, I attended all Yearly meetings. And it tured out that the connection I established with a group of iter state friends became stronger than that with the people in my local meeting. 

The main reason for that was that I lead a group of friends to visit North Korea as a study group to establish a peaceful relationship with the people of that country. Preparing for the trip and our effort to develop a program to interact with North Korea lead to a lot of interaction among a group of 8 to 10 friends. I am not sure whether this group can be called a spiritual one in a typical sense, but may be in a loose sense. The idea of to trip to North Korea bascally started from my CONCERN about the issue of PEACE with North Korea.  Actually, this was related to family history and the reason I gave up my career in physics.

On the matter of my encounter with "spiritual development programs" other than the Quaker one, I already mentioned the Emissaries group to which most of my siblings were related to. I got involved to this group actively only in late 2000. I went through a series of spirituality workshop in three levels. I also attended a sort of Buddhist group workshop in the late 1990s. All of these workshops were about a week long. 




3] What is it about the Meeting for Learning that attracts you now?  

Four (or five ?) years ago, when I first applied to the Meeting for Learnng, it was a way for me to learn more about Quakerism. At the time, I was told that the program was not about teaching Quakerism, but for exploring participant' own spirituality. I took it as a discuragement for a new comer for a right reason, but also for a wrong one. I will not explain that, but my status did change because I had ample tie to study Quakerism as well as other spiritual traditions since my retirement. 

4] What do you hope to gain from participating in this program?

I had read some of previous participants' reflections on attending this program. I also studied Fiona's Backhouse lecture. So I have a reasonably good idea of the intention or goal of the program, as well as the diverse outcome for participants. 

My expectation is first to acquire the Quaker frame and language of spiritual journey which is somewhat similar, and somewhat different to those of other traditions. I want pf curse to take this opportunity to enernise my spiritual journey. I also have an expectation to meet people with similar interest, in this case, in the Quaker tradition. 

However, I am already concered about finding four people to regularly talk to with my spiritual concern. 




2022/06/12

A Spiritual Quest –Simon Carey Holt Heaven All Around Us: Discovering God in Everyday Life


SIMPLY SIMON

CITY, CHURCH & SOUL


ABOUT

I am a Baptist minister, teacher and writer. I serve at the Collins Street Baptist Church in the heart of Melbourne, one of Australia’s most beautiful cities. With a history dating back to 1838, Collins Street is among the nation’s oldest continuing Baptist congregations. More than that, it’s an engaging and courageous community deeply committed to the city and its people.

After a decade of service in church planting and youth ministry, I did postgraduate studies in practical theology at Fuller Seminary in Los Angeles, California.  I then spent 15 years teaching in spirituality, ethics and pastoral theology, first at Macquarie Christian Studies Institute in Sydney and then at Melbourne’s Whitley College. My research and writing interests include the ethics of everyday life, the theology of food and hospitality, and the nature of Christian mission in suburbia

My books include 

  • God Next Door: Spirituality and Mission in the Neighbourhood (Acorn, 2007), 
  • Eating Heaven: Spirituality at the Table (Acorn, 2013) and 
  • Heaven All Around Us: Discovering God in Everyday Life (Cascade, 2018).

I live with my partner in the city and am inspired every day by the neighbourhood of which I’m a part.

I have two blogs, Eating Heaven where I write about all things food, and this one where I wonder about everything else.

Simon Carey Holt


A Spiritual Quest – SIMPLY SIMON


A SPIRITUAL QUEST
Posted on June 8, 2022 by simoncareyholt


I’m a keeper of journals. For as long as I can recall I have written my way through life. In copious notebooks I’ve documented and reflected on what’s been a mostly unremarkable story. Regardless, the earliest of these are drenched with angst. As I scan them now, I cringe. They read like an endless and urgent ‘quest’ for improvement or for reality different to the one I knew.

My religious upbringing did not help. The journey to Christian devotion — a quest of the most noble kind — was fueled by a dim view of the human heart and of the world in which we’re ‘entrapped’. The narrow road out and toward God was paved with words of obligation: repent, give up, let go, deny, quench, resist. It was an urgent business. Honestly, I felt more failure than progress as I trudged along, but the drive to ‘press on’ remained.

With the benefit of age, I wish now I could go back to that ernest young man and others like him. While he sits hunched over his journal I would stand behind him, my hands on his shoulders, and speak words of peace. “Go easy,” I would say, “this world is good and precious, and so are you.”

It is the psalmist who affirms all creation as filled with the beauty and majesty of God and 
St Paul who marvels at that all-encompassing love that leaves no peak or crevice of this life untouched. 
The Franciscan Richard Rohr describes true religion as “always a deep intuition that we are already participating in something very good, in spite of our best efforts to deny it or avoid it.” 

Indeed, this world declared ‘good’ and ‘very good’ in the creation story continues to be so. The great privilege of the Christian faith is not that we are on a journey toward God, but that we are in God and the life of God is in us.

Yes, I am still journaling and still questing. I still seek meaning in what I do. I still aspire to goodness in who I am and justice for those around me. 
But the urgency of it and the self-criticism, they are less. 

Rather than being driven by a rejection of the world’s darkness and a desire for improvement in myself, I find myself inspired by the beauty of all that’s around and even within me. 

Today there is less drive for personal progress and more longing for the grandeur, kindness and grace that fills this world of ours.

==

RELATED


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Baptists and same-sex marriageMay 14, 2012In "Sexuality"


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5 THOUGHTS ON “A SPIRITUAL QUEST”
larry.holt@bigpond.com says:
June 9, 2022 at 8:02 am


Love this Simon.
The Godfrey Birtill musical version of this is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3HsdHsy4_g
Reply
simoncareyholt says:
June 9, 2022 at 8:20 am


That’s beautiful Lal. Thank you.
Reply

salemfarm says:
June 10, 2022 at 1:45 pm


Yes Simon I was a young zealous Christian living in an Open Brethren environment of piety more than grace. Baptist life was doing doing doing rather than being. PNG reminded me that culture is more than western while as an Industrial Chaplain spirituality was more than church. Whitley College was a light into new thought , doubt and challenge.
I now live that “easy” life in solitude using my iPad to wander as I choose. Yesterday Jim Barr at Box Hill Baptist, today Sarah Miles St Gregory of Nyssia in San Francisco. 

Tomorrow I coffee with 10 non Christians whose sense of community is Christian but they just don’t know it.
I will walk home along Spring Creek encountering platypus koala a wallaby.
My prayer is that we will grow community through IT.
Mark Blackwell
Reply

salemfarm says:
June 10, 2022 at 1:54 pm


My guiding prayer is that of Thomas Merton
My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going/
I do not see the road ahead of me./
I cannot know for certain where it will end./
Nor do I really know myself,/ and the fact that
I think I am following Your will/ does not mean that I am actually doing so./
But I believe that the desire to please You/
does in fact please you./
And I hope I have that desire/ in all that I am doing./
I hope that I will never do anything/ apart from that desire./
And I know that/, if I do this,/You will lead me by the right road,/though I may know nothing about it./
Therefore I will trust You always/ though I may seem to be lost/
and in the shadow of death/
I will not fear,/for You are ever with me /.
and You will never leave me to face my perils alone./
Reply
simoncareyholt says:
June 10, 2022 at 4:04 pm


A beautiful prayer, Mark. So glad you live in a place the sustains your spirit.
Reply

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==
Heaven All Around Us: Discovering God in Everyday Life

Heaven All Around Us: Discovering God in Everyday Life


By Simon Carey Holt
315 pages
9 hours

Included in your membership!
at no additional cost

Description
If living with a deep awareness of God in our lives is important, how do we do it without moving to a monastery?
How do we discern and respond to God amidst the places, routines, and relationships of our everyday lives? 

In this book, we go in search of God's presence in homes and neighborhoods, supermarkets and sporting arenas, workplaces and weekends. 

Along the way we look for practices that can lead us more deeply into the way of Jesus: activities like cooking and laundry, walking and sleeping, shopping and conversation with friends. Throughout, we want to better understand how to make God a central part of our lives, and to hear Jesus' call to "follow me" more clearly in the world around us.
Christianity
All categories

===
Heaven All Around Us: Discovering God in Everyday Life 
Kindle Edition
기준 Simon Carey Holt (Author)  형식: Kindle Edition
Kindle
US$9.99부터

If living with a deep awareness of God in our lives is important, how do we do it without moving to a monastery? 
How do we discern and respond to God amidst the places, routines, and relationships of our everyday lives? 

In this book, we go in search of God's presence in homes and neighborhoods, supermarkets and sporting arenas, workplaces and weekends. Along the way we look for practices that can lead us more deeply into the way of Jesus: activities like cooking and laundry, walking and sleeping, shopping and conversation with friends. Throughout, we want to better understand how to make God a central part of our lives, and to hear Jesus' call to "follow me" more clearly in the world around us.

"Simon Carey Holt hallows the everyday, revealing God's presence in our homes and neighborhoods, in pubs and offices and sports stadiums, and supplying us with wisdom and practices for sensing God when we wake, when we sleep, when we eat, when we play, and when we work."
--Michael Frost, Morling College, Sydney

"For every person seeking to move beyond a Sunday faith, for every busy worker and parent for whom spirituality feels out-of-reach, Simon Carey Holt is an invaluable guide. Drawing from Christian tradition and personal story, he points to God's presence in the smallest routines, and explores how we might honor the sacred in ordinary things."
--Alison Sampson, Baptist Pastor and Columnist

"Heaven All Around Us will bust your ideas of spirituality wide open. It is a must read for everyone who has ever thought, 'I'm just not that spiritual.' Holt will make you think again as he peels back the surface of ordinary things to expose the thrill of God's presence everywhere. This is a book that will enlarge your soul."
--Allan Demond, Senior Pastor of NewHope Baptist Church, Melbourne, Australia

"At the same time as our dislocated and dispirited society is looking to find connection in the near and the neighborhood, so this book invites us to find God in the 'local' of our lives. The author enticingly encourages us to experiment with seeing matters as routine as the laundry, the making of a meal, sports, and everyday conversation as ways to nurture our spirituality. It will be freeing and stretching for many who want to grow in love and goodness."
--Anne Wilkinson-Hayes, Head of Mission, Baptist Union of Victoria

"Simon Carey Holt has been at this for a very long time. From the start, his eyes have been shaped by the local and his life has been lived in the everyday. In this scurrying around for new fixes for the churches I urge you to sit quietly in your own place of living and absorb the practices Simon is proposing."
--Al Roxburgh, Writer and Consultant, The Missional Network

Simon Carey Holt is pastor of Collins Street Baptist Church, Melbourne, and adjunct lecturer in practical theology at Whitley College, University of Divinity. He is author of the award winning God Next Door: Spirituality and Mission in the Neighborhood (2007), and Eating Heaven: Spirituality at the Table (2013).

===
Heaven all around us: Discovering God in everyday life
by Simon Carey Holt
 4.13  ·   Rating details ·  8 ratings  ·  3 reviews
If living with a deep awareness of God in our lives is important, how do we do it without moving to a monastery? How do we discern and respond to God amidst the places, routines, and relationships of our everyday lives? In this book, we go in search of God's presence in homes and neighborhoods, supermarkets and sporting arenas, workplaces and weekends. Along the way we loo ...more

Alan  Marr
Dec 20, 2018Alan Marr rated it it was amazing
This is a book i wish I had written. It is clear, comforting and challenging. The final chapter should be required reading for every pastor. Thanks Simon.
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review


Campbell  J. Brice
Jul 31, 2021Campbell J. Brice rated it liked it
Shelves: 00-my-library, 02-theological-collection
3.5 stars
flagLike  · comment · see review


David Mitchell
Oct 12, 2019David Mitchell rated it it was ok
The last chapter - written to pastors - is good. It is written sympathetically to calls of the reformers that identified with 1 Peter 2:9. In this regard, I had not read Elton Trueblood The Company Of The Committed

"But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light." 1 Peter 2:9

Other chapters so-so.

I had to skip the chapter "God at the Supermarket" as I could not cope with the notion of God among an aisle of sugary cereal. This chapter could perhaps been framed as "God as providore".

I won this book in a competition. It had been shortlisted as 2019 Australian Christian Book of the Year. (less)
flagLike  · comment · see review

===

God Next Door 

기준 Simon Carey Holt (Author)  형식: Kindle Edition
별 5개 중 5.0    2개의 평가
모든 형식 및 에디션 보기
Kindle
US$17.99부터

What if God lived next door? Would you recognise him? Would you talk to him at the fence or avoid catching his eye? Would you love him as you love yourself? Simon Carey Holt has listened to the experiences of numerous men and women of faith living in a variety of urban and suburban neighbourhoods, and uncovered the spiritual possibilities of our neighbourhoods. His inspiring stories open up exciting new possibilities for 21st-century mission.


인쇄 길이
183 페이지
2007
고객 리뷰
별 5개 중 5.0
미국의 상위 리뷰
John Gibbs
별 5개 중 5.0 Everyone is called to be a good neighbour
미국에서 2011년 5월 5일에 검토됨

We are called to seek, live and breathe the redemptive peace and presence of God in the neighbourhoods that are immediately before us, according to Simon Carey Holt in this book. 
The book, which was the winner of the Australian Christian Book of the Year award for 2008, describes a spirituality of neighbourliness in which:

* Love of God and love of neighbour are a package: our neighbourliness is directly connected to our relationship with God;
* To love the neighbour is to act justly, compassionately and selflessly: love of neighbour is embodied in action;
* Real neighbourliness is inclusive and offered without prejudice: God's neighbourly love extends to all regardless of race, class or moral standing;
* The neighbourhood is a place of God's presence: neighbourly relationships play host to the presence of God;
* The neighbourhood is an important place of ministry: neighbourhoods are primary places of mission;
* Neighbourliness and neighbourhood continue to have an important connection: our call to global mission does not negate the primacy of our immediate environments.

Part one of the book describes modern neighbourhoods including rural communities, urban communities and suburban communities. 
Part two describes the call of God with respect to neighbourhoods, including the Biblical mandate, the example of Jesus and the relationship between neighbourhood and church. 
Part three describes mission in neighbourhoods including disciplines of engagement which the author calls "naming", "celebrating", "nurturing" and "inviting".

Most churches in the Western world are not very effective in engaging with their local neighbourhoods. Larger churches often cater more for members who live some distance away than for neighbours who live nearby. Smaller churches are often too inwardly focused. The author does not say that churches should be of any particular size or style; he merely says that they should have a strong missional focus on local neighbourhoods.

Many readers - perhaps most - will find the book uncomfortable to read. 
The pressures of modern life and the strong preference most city-dwellers have for privacy make local neighbourliness and neighbourhood mission very difficult to do effectively. But the author refuses to excuse anyone; we might be called to serve people far away or in the workplace or within the walls of the church, but we are also called to mission in our local neighbourhood.

I was surprised by how much of the author's advice is simple and non-threatening. I highly recommend the book to church leaders and to any Christians who are seeking practical and achievable ways of engaging with their neighbours.
간단히 표시
10명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
--
Bradley J. Brisco
VINE VOICE
별 5개 중 5.0 Love this book.
미국에서 2014년 6월 17일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
I can not recommend more highly this book by Simon Carey Holt. Not only does the book provide great handles for living a relationally connected life in the neighborhood, but Holt provides one of the best theological/biblical reflection on how the incarnation of Jesus is our model for living in context. 
If you are serious about understanding what it means to life with, and for the sake of others in your neighborhood, then do yourself a favor and read this book.
3명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
--

===