2023/07/18

Keiji Nishitani - Wikipedia

Keiji Nishitani - Wikipedia

Keiji Nishitani

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Keiji Nishitani
西谷 啓治
BornFebruary 27, 1900
DiedNovember 24, 1990 (aged 90)
Nationality Japanese
Alma materKyoto Imperial University
Notable workReligion and Nothingness
EraContemporary philosophy
Region
SchoolKyoto School
InstitutionsKyoto Imperial University
Main interests
Philosophy of religionnihilismnothingnessemptinessmysticism
Influences

Keiji Nishitani (西谷 啓治Nishitani Keiji, February 27, 1900 – November 24, 1990) was a Japanese philosopher. He was a scholar of the Kyoto School and a disciple of Kitarō Nishida. In 1924, Nishitani received his doctorate from Kyoto Imperial University for his dissertation "Das Ideale und das Reale bei Schelling und Bergson". He studied under Martin Heidegger in Freiburg from 1937 to 1939.

Career[edit]

Nishitani held the principal Chair of Philosophy and Religion at Kyoto University from 1943 until becoming emeritus in 1964. He then taught philosophy and religion at Ōtani University. At various times Nishitani was a visiting professor in the United States and Europe.

According to James Heisig, after being banned from holding any public position by the United States Occupation authorities in July 1946, Nishitani refrained from drawing "practical social conscience into philosophical and religious ideas, preferring to think about the insight of the individual rather than the reform of the social order."[1]

In James Heisig's Philosophers of Nothingness Nishitani is quoted as saying "The fundamental problem of my life … has always been, to put it simply, the overcoming of nihilism through nihilism."[2]

Thought[edit]

On Heisig's reading, Nishitani's philosophy had a distinctive religious and subjective bent, drawing Nishitani close to existentialists and mystics, most notably Søren Kierkegaard and Meister Eckhart, rather than to the scholars and theologians who aimed at systematic elaborations of thought. Heisig further argues that Nishitani, "the stylistic superior of Nishida," brought Zen poetry, religion, literature, and philosophy organically together in his work to help lay the difficult foundations for a breaking free of the Japanese language, in a similar way to Blaise Pascal or Friedrich Nietzsche.[1] Heisig argues that, unlike Nishida who had supposedly focused on building a philosophical system and who towards the end of his career began to focus on political philosophy, Nishitani focused on delineating a standpoint "from which he could enlighten a broader range of topics," and wrote more on Buddhist themes towards the end of his career.[1]

In works such as Religion and Nothingness, Nishitani focuses on the Buddhist term Śūnyatā (emptiness/nothingness) and its relation to Western nihilism.[3] To contrast with the Western idea of nihility as the absence of meaning Nishitani's Śūnyatā relates to the acceptance of anatta, one of the three Right Understandings in the Noble Eightfold Path and the rejection of the ego in order to recognize the Pratītyasamutpāda, to be one with everything. Stating: "All things that are in the world are linked together, one way or the other. Not a single thing comes into being without some relationship to every other thing."[4] However, Nishitani always wrote and understood himself as a philosopher akin in spirit to Nishida insofar as the teacher—always bent upon fundamental problems of ordinary life—sought to revive a path of life walked already by ancient predecessors, most notably in the Zen tradition. Nor can Heisig's reading of Nishitani as "existentialist" convince in the face of Nishitani's critique of existentialism—a critique that walked, in its essential orientation, in the footsteps of Nishida's "Investigation of the Good" (Zen no Kenkyū).

Among the many works authored by Nishitani in Japanese, are the following titles: Divinity and Absolute Negation (Kami to zettai Mu; 1948), Examining Aristotle (Arisutoteresu ronkō; 1948); Religion, Politics, and Culture (Shūkyō to seiji to bunka; 1949); Modern Society's Various Problems and Religion (Gendai shakai no shomondai to shūkyō; 1951); Regarding Buddhism (Bukkyō ni tsuite; 1982); Nishida Kitaro: The Man and the Thought (Nishida Kitarō, sono hito to shisō; 1985); The Standpoint of Zen (Zen no tachiba; 1986); Between Religion and Non-Religion (Shūkyō to hishūkyō no aida; 1996). His written works have been edited into a 26-volume collection Nishitani Keiji Chosakushū (1986-1995). A more exhaustive list of works is accessible on the Japanese version of the present wikipage.

List of works[edit]

Collected Works [西谷啓治著作集] 26 vols. (Tokyo: Sōbunsha [創文社], 1986–95) [CW].

CW1: Philosophy of Fundamental Subjectivity, Vol. 1 [根源的主体性の哲学 正] (Tokyo: Kōbundō [弘文堂], 1940)

  • Part I: Religion and Culture [宗教と文化]
  • Nietzsche’s Zarathustra and Meister Eckhart’ [ニイチェのツァラツストラとマイスター・エックハルト] (Festschrift for Professor Hatano Sei’ichi [哲学及び宗教とその歴史——波多野精一先生献呈論文集], Iwanami Shoten, September 1938)
  • ‘Religion, History, Culture’ [宗教・歴史・文化] (Tetsugaku Kenkyū [哲学研究], No. 250, January 1937)
  • ‘Modern Consciousness and Religion’ [近代意識と宗教] (Keizai Ōrai [経済往来], Vol. 10, No. 7, July 1935)
  • ‘Modern European Civilisation and Japan’ [近世欧羅巴文明と日本] (Shisō [思想], No. 215-16, April–May 1940)
  • Part II: History and Nature [歴史と自然]
  • ‘Timeliness and Untimeliness in Morality’ [道徳における時代性と恒常性] (Risō [理想], No. 48, 1933)
  • ‘The Historical and the Congenital’ [歴史的なるものと先天的なるもの] (Shisō [思想], No. 109-10, June–July 1931)
  • ‘Patterns of Human Interpretation and Their Significance’ [人間解釈の類型性とその意義] (Risō [理想], No. 55-56, 1935)
  • ‘Individuality and Universality in Life’ [生における個別と一般] (Ōtani Gakuhō [大谷学報], Vol. 12, No. 3, October 1931)

CW2: Philosophy of Fundamental Subjectivity, Vol. 2 [根源的主体性の哲学 続]

  • Part III: Thought and Will [思惟と意志]
  • ‘On the Problem of Evil’ [悪の問題について] (Tetsugaku Kenkyū [哲学研究], No. 142, 1928)
  • Schelling’s Identity Philosophy and the Will: The Real and the Ideal’ [シェリングの同一哲学と意志——実在的なるものと観念的なるもの] (Tetsugaku Kenkyū [哲学研究], No. 104-5, 1924)
  • ‘Transcendentality of the Object: Spiritualism of No Spirit’ [対象の超越性——無心の唯心論] (Shisō [思想], No. 44, June 1925)
  • Kant’s Aesthetic Ideas: The Link between Intuition and Feeling’ [カントの審美的理念——直観と感情との聯関] (Shisō [思想], No. 51, January 1926)
  • ‘Miscellaneous Thoughts on Religion’ [宗教雑感] (Shisō [思想], No. 77, March 1928)
  • ‘Dialectic of Religious Existence’ [宗教的実存の弁証法] (Shisō [思想], No. 159-61, August–October 1935)

CW3: Studies on Western Mysticism [西洋神秘思想の研究]

  • ‘A History of Mysticism’ [神秘思想史] (Iwanami Kōza: Tetsugaku [岩波講座・哲学], Vol. 4, 1932)
  • ‘Mysticism’s Ethical Thought’ [神秘主義の倫理思想] (Iwanami Kōza: Rinrigaku [岩波講座・倫理学], Vol. 14, 1941)
  • ‘The Problem of Mysticism’ [神秘主義の問題] (Tetsugaku Kenkyū [哲学研究], No. 334, 1944)
  • ‘Mysticism’ [神秘主義] (Gendai Kirisutokyō Kōza [現代キリスト教講座], Vol. 4, 1956)
  • Plotinus’ Philosophy’ [プロティノスの哲学] (Naganoken Suwa Tetsugakukai [長野県諏訪哲学会], Summer 1929)
  • ‘The Problem of Evil in Augustine’ [アウグスティヌスにおける悪の問題] (Tetsugaku [哲学], Vol. 1, No. 3, 1946)
  • ‘The Problem of Knowledge in Augustine’ [アウグスティヌスにおける知の問題] (Kirisutokyō Bunka [基督教文化], No. 31, November 1948)
  • Augustine and the Position of Contemporary Thought’ [アウグスティヌスと現代の思想境位] (Kirisutokyō Bunka [基督教文化], No. 34, March 1949)

CW4: Contemporary Society’s Problems and Religion [現代社会の諸問題と宗教]

  • Part I: Contemporary Society’s Problems and Religion [現代社会の諸問題と宗教]
  • Religion, Politics and Culture [宗教と政治と文化] (Kyoto: Hōzōkan [法蔵館], 1949)
  • ‘Problems of Contemporary Religion’ [現代における宗教の諸問題]
  • Contemporary Society’s Problems and Religion [現代社会の諸問題と宗教] (Kyoto: Hōzōkan [法蔵館], 1951)
  • Part II: Philosophy of World History and Historical Consciousness [世界史の哲学と歴史的意識]
  • ‘Philosophy of World History’ [世界史の哲学]
  • Worldview and Stateview [世界観と国家観] (Tokyo: Kōbundō [弘文堂], 1941)
  • ‘Historical Consciousness’ [歴史的意識]

CW5: Aristotle Studies [アリストテレス論考] (Tokyo: Kōbundō [弘文堂], 1948)

  • ‘Aristotle’s Theory of Sensation’ [アリストテレスの感性論]
  • ‘Aristotle’s Theory of Imagination’ [アリストテレスの構想論]
  • ‘Aristotle’s Theory of the Intellect’ [アリストテレスの理性論]

CW6: Philosophy of Religion [宗教哲学]

  • ‘Prolegomena to Philosophy of Religion’ [宗教哲学——序論]
  • ‘Religion and Philosophy’ [宗教と哲学]
  • ‘Introduction to Philosophy of Religion’ [宗教哲学——研究入門]
  • Marxism and Religion’ [マルクシズムと宗教]
  • ‘The Problem of Evil’ [悪の問題]
  • ‘Buddhism and Christianity’ [仏教とキリスト教]
  • ‘The Problem of Mythology’ [神話の問題]
  • ‘The Transethical’ [倫理を超えるもの]
  • ‘Science and Religion’ [科学と宗教]

CW7: God and the Absolute Nothing [神と絶対無]

  • God and the Absolute Nothing [神と絶対無] (Tokyo: Kōbundō [弘文堂], 1948)
  • ‘German Mysticism and German Philosophy’ [ドイツ神秘主義とドイツ哲学]

CW8: Nihilism [ニヒリズム]

  • Nihilism [ニヒリズム] (Tokyo: Kōbundō [弘文堂], 1949)
  • ‘Nihilism and Existence in Nietzsche’ [ニイチェにおけるニヒリズム=実存]
  • Russian Nihilism [ロシアの虚無主義] (Tokyo: Kōbundō [弘文堂], 1949)
  • ‘Problems of Atheism’ [無神論の問題]

CW9: Nishida’s Philosophy and Tanabe’s Philosophy [西田哲学と田辺哲学]

  • Nishida Kitarō [西田幾多郎] (Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō [筑摩書房], 1985)
  • ‘On Tanabe’s Philosophy’ [田辺哲学について]
  • ‘Professor Tanabe’s Thought in His Final Years’ [田辺先生最晩年の思想]

CW10: What Is Religion: Essays on Religion, Vol. 1 [宗教とは何か——宗教論集I] (Tokyo: Sōbunsha [創文社], 1961)

  • ‘What Is Religion’ [宗教とは何か]
  • ‘Personhood and Non-Personhood in Religion’ [宗教における人格性と非人格性]
  • ‘Nihil and Śūnyatā’ [虚無と空]
  • ‘The Position of Śūnyatā’ [空の立場]
  • Śūnyatā and Time’ [空と時]
  • Śūnyatā and History’ [空と歴史]

CW11: The Standpoint of Zen: Essays on Religion, Vol. 2 [禅の立場——宗教論集II] (Tokyo: Sōbunsha [創文社], 1986)

CW12: Hanshan’s Poetry [寒山詩] (Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō [筑摩書房], 1986)

CW13: Philosophical Studies [哲学論考]

  • ‘The Problem of Being and the Problem of Ontology’ [存在の問題と存在論の問題]
  • Prajñā and Reason’ [般若と理性]
  • ‘On Satori’ [「覚」について]
  • Śūnyatā and Pṛthak’ [空と即]
  • Schelling’s Absolute Idealism and Bergson’s Pure Duration’ [シェリングの絶対的観念論とベルグソンの純粋持続]
  • ‘A Brief Biography of Schelling’ [シェリング略伝]
  • Schelling and Bergson: A Survey of Their Works’ [シェリング及びベルグソン(著作解題)]

CW14: Lectures on Philosophy, Vol. 1 [講話 哲学I]

CW15: Lectures on Philosophy, Vol. 2 [講話 哲学II]

CW16: Lectures on Religion [講話 宗教]

CW17: Lectures on Buddhism [講話 仏教]

CW18: Lectures on Zen and Jōdo [講話 禅と浄土]

CW19: Lectures on Culture [講話 文化]

CW20: Occasional Essays, Vol. 1 [隨想I]

CW21: Occasional Essays, Vol. 2 [隨想II]

CW22: Lectures on Shōbōgenzō, Vol. 1 [正法眼蔵講話I]

CW23: Lectures on Shōbōgenzō, Vol. 2 [正法眼蔵講話II]

CW24: Lectures at Ōtani University, Vol. 1 [大谷大学講義I]

CW25: Lectures at Ōtani University, Vol. 2 [大谷大学講義II]

CW26: Lectures at Ōtani University, Vol. 3 [大谷大学講義III]

English translations[edit]

Monographs

  • Nishitani Keiji. 1982. Religion and Nothingness. Translated by Jan Van Bragt. Berkeley: University of California Press. (ISBN 0-520-04946-2)
  • Nishitani Keiji. 1990. The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism. Translated by Graham Parkes and Aihara Setsuko. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 1991. Nishida Kitarō. Translated by Yamamoto Seisaku and James W. Heisig. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 2006. On Buddhism. Translated by Yamamoto Seisaku and Robert E. Carter. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 2012. The Philosophy of Nishitani Keiji 1900-1990 - Lectures on Religion and Modernity. Translated by Jonathan Morris Augustine and Yamamoto Seisaku. New York: The Edwin Mellen Press. (ISBN 0-7734-2930-1)

Articles

  • Nishitani Keiji. 1960. ”The Religious Situation in Present-day Japan.” Contemporary Religions in Japan, 7-24.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 1984. ”Standpoint of Zen.” Translated by John C. Maraldo. The Eastern Buddhist 17/1, 1–26.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 1989. ”Encounter with Emptiness.” In The Religious Philosophy of Nishitani Keiji (edited by Taitetsu Unno). Jain Publishing Company. 1-4.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 1990. "Religious-Philosophical Existence in Buddhism." Translated by Paul Shepherd. The Eastern Buddhist (New Series) 23, 1-17.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 2004a. ”The Awakening of Self in Buddhism.” In The Buddha Eye - An Anthology of the Kyoto School and Its Contemporaries (edited by Frederick Franck). World Wisdom: Bloomington, Indiana. 11–20.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 2004b. ”The I-Thou Relation in Zen Buddhism.” In The Buddha Eye - An Anthology of the Kyoto School and Its Contemporaries (edited by Frederick Franck). World Wisdom: Bloomington, Indiana. 39–53.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 2004c. ”Science and Zen.” In The Buddha Eye - An Anthology of the Kyoto School and Its Contemporaries (edited by Frederick Franck). World Wisdom: Bloomington, Indiana. 107–135.
  • Nishitani Keiji. 2008. ”My Views on ”Overcoming Modernity”." In Overcoming Modernity - Cultural Identity in Wartime Japan (translated and edited by Richard Calichman). New York: Columbia University Press. 51-63.

Notes[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b c James W. Heisig. Philosophers of Nothingness. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2001.
  2. ^ Heisig, James W. (2001). Philosophers of nothingness : an essay on the Kyoto school. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 058546359XOCLC 53344327.
  3. ^ "The abyss of Keiji Nishitani" by Eugene Thacker, Japan Times, 30 Apr. 2016.
  4. ^ Nishitani, Keiji (1982). Religion and nothingness (1st paperback ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520043294OCLC 7464711.

References[edit]

External links[edit]

종교란 무엇인가 - 니스타니 게이지 - 불교신문 2002

종교란 무엇인가 < 칼럼 < 대중공사 < 기사본문 - 불교신문

종교란 무엇인가
칼럼
입력 2002.04.04

종교란 무엇인가 - 니스타니 게이지 

장영섭 

십자가로 밥을 떠먹을 수 없고 하루종일 염불한다고 떼인 돈을 받을 수도 없는 노릇이다. 종교는 문화-예술과 마찬가지로 인간이 먹고사는 데 있어 없어서는 안될 필요조건은 아니다. 그러나 종교를 완전히 무시하고 살다 보면 가슴 한켠이 적잖이 켕기는 것이 인지상정이다. 잘못을 저지르면 고해성사를 위해 신부를 찾고 절집에 몇 푼이라도 시주를 하면 왠지 모르게 뿌듯한 인간의 보편적 심리. 왜일까? 

일본 교토대 철학과 교수 니시타니 게이지(1900~)는 이 물음에 대하여 “종교는 삶 그 자체의 중대한 문제이다. 순간의 삶을 살고 마느냐, 영원한 삶을 추구하느냐 하는 것은 삶의 중대사가 아닐 수 없다.”라고 해답을 제시한다. 나직한 목소리가 참으로 미덥다. 신앙의 목적이 단순히 얄팍한 위안을 위해서라면, 인간의 심리적 쾌락과 효용성 증진이 종교의 기능은 아니라는 존제에서 차라리 곰 인형을 사서 끌어안고 자는 것이 낫다. 우리에게 죽음이 없었다면, 이마에 ‘유한성(有限性)’이라고 낙인찍기 위해 뒷덜미에서 달려드는 검고 광폭한 그림자가 없었다면, 인간 세상에 종교가 태동하기는 어려웠을 것이다. 

아무리 탁월한 협상가라도 죽음과는 거래가 불가능하다. 억만금을 주고도 불현듯 엄습한 죽음을 되돌려 보낼 수 없음을 처절히 깨우칠 때, 그의 눈시울엔 도저한 절망과 허탈감이 이내처럼 깔린다. 니시타니는 이러한 “허무를 절대무의 차원으로 승화시키는 것이 종교의 역할”이라고 역설한다. 허무해 하는 나 자신 역시 ‘없음’을 깨달을 때, 죽음과 흔쾌히 두 손을 맞잡을 수 있는 것이다. 그런데 신(神)은 전지전능한 신성일지언정 종교는 실수투성이 인간성이 만들어놓은 체계인지라 어딘가 모르게 삐그덕거린다. 

한 걸음 더 나아가 종교가 붕괴되는 징조를 느낄 때, 기독교를 기반으로 한 서양과 대체적으로 불교의 그늘 아래 놓인 동양의 뼛속깊은 갈등을 목도하게 된다. 그리고 그 붕괴를 야기한 망치는 세계사적 측면에서 살펴볼 경우 순교자를 양산한 만큼 유례 없는 보복을 빈번하게 일삼은 기독교의 손에 들려 있었다고 해야 옳다. 

책은 종교의 본질에 대한 탐구와 함께 동양과 서양을 대표하는 불교와 기독교를 비교 연구하는 것에도 매진한다. 서양은 나르시스의 생트집, 즉 자기만 아는 철부지 정신과 타자 배척의 역사일 뿐이라고 매도할 수도 있지만 공 사상을 내면화한 니시타니는 따스하게 에둘러 간다.

 불교의 편에 선 저자이지만 결코 기독교를 험구하지 않는다. “‘공(空)’, 업(業)‘, ’성기(性起) 등 특정 종교의 용어를” 자주 거론하지만 이것은 “‘리얼리티’와 ‘인간의 본질과 현실’을 조명하기 위해 빌어 쓴 것”일 따름이다. 요는 ‘영생’도 ‘열반’도 아니고 ‘절대무에의 회귀’, ‘죽음과 절친한 사이가 되기 위한 인간의 노력’이 니시타니 필생의 화두이기 때문이다. 이 책에서 공감을 얻는 이유는 저자의 으리으리한 박람강기(博覽强記)와 날카롭고도 튼튼한 논변 덕분만은 아니다. 

거기엔 그의 ‘몸’이, 젊은 날의 허기와 피로와 허망함이 면면히 녹아 들어가 있기에 딱딱한 종교입문서를 넘어 '정제된 살풀이'로 읽힌다. 죽음의 친구가 되기는 삶의 노예가 되는 것보다 분명 어려운 일이지만 그만큼 무한한 가치가 있다.