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Nothingness and Desire: A Philosophical Antiphony [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 250 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 228x152x16 mm, weight: 333 g
  • Serija: Nanzan Library of Asian Religion and Culture
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jul-2013
  • Leidėjas: University of Hawai'i Press
  • ISBN-10: 0824838858
  • ISBN-13: 9780824838850
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 250 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 228x152x16 mm, weight: 333 g
  • Serija: Nanzan Library of Asian Religion and Culture
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jul-2013
  • Leidėjas: University of Hawai'i Press
  • ISBN-10: 0824838858
  • ISBN-13: 9780824838850
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

The six lectures that make up this book were delivered in March 2011 at London University’s School of Oriental and Asian Studies as the Jordan Lectures on Comparative Religion. They revolve around the intersection of two ideas, nothingness and desire, as they apply to a re-examination of the questions of self, God, morality, property, and the East-West philosophical divide.

Rather than attempt to harmonize East and West philosophies into a single chorus, Heisig undertakes what he calls a “philosophical antiphony.” Through the simple call-and-response of a few representative voices, Heisig tries to join the choir on both sides of the antiphony to relate the questions at hand to larger problems that press on the human community. He argues that as problems like the technological devastation of the natural world, the shrinking of elected governance through the expanding powers of financial institutions, and the expropriation of alternate cultures of health and education spread freely through traditional civilizations across the world, religious and philosophical responses can no longer afford to remain territorial in outlook. Although the lectures often stress the importance of practice, their principal preoccupation is with seeing the things of life more clearly. Heisig explains:

“By that I mean not just looking more closely at objects that come into my line of view from day to day, but seeing them as mirrors in which I can see myself reflected. Things do not just reveal parts of the world to me; they also tell me something of how I see what I see, and who it is that does the seeing. To listen to what things have to say to me, I need to break with the habit of thinking simply that it is I who mirror inside of myself the world outside and process what I have captured to make my way through life. Only when this habit has been broken will I be able to start seeing through the reflections, to scrape the tain off the mirror, as it were, so that it becomes a window to the things of life as they are, with only a pale reflection of myself left on the pane. Everything seen through the looking glass, myself included, becomes an image on which reality has stamped itself. This, I am persuaded, is the closest we can come to a ground for thinking reasonably and acting as true-to-life as we can.”

Prologue i
Nothingness and Desire
1 The guiding fictions
9(2)
2 Desire and its objects
11(6)
3 Desire without a proper object
17(2)
4 Nothingness and being
19(5)
5 The nothingness of desire and the desire for nothingness
24(7)
Self and No-Self
6 Defining self through no-self
31(4)
7 Getting over one's self
35(3)
8 The mind of nothingness
38(3)
9 The self with its desires
41(5)
10 No-self with its desire
46(2)
11 No-self and self-transcendence
48(7)
God
12 God and death
55(2)
13 From God to nothingness
57(3)
14 God and life
60(4)
15 Displacing the personal God
64(3)
16 Toward an impersonal God
67(3)
17 The absolute of relatedness
70(4)
18 The God of nothingness
74(5)
Morality
19 The place of morality
79(3)
20 Convivial harmony
82(2)
21 Customs, habits, decisions
84(4)
22 Morality and religion
88(5)
23 The moral-subject in love
93(3)
24 The experience of happiness
96(7)
Property
25 Giving and receiving
103(3)
26 The body as property
106(2)
27 Detachment
108(2)
28 Orthoaesthesis
110(2)
29 Consumption
112(3)
30 Sufficiency
115(8)
The East-West Divide
31 An elusive horizon
123(2)
32 Rewriting the history of philosophy
125(3)
33 Philosophical antiphony
128(3)
34 Cultural disarmament
131(5)
35 Philosophy beyond the divide
136(5)
Epilogue 141(2)
Notes 143(36)
Bibliography 179(12)
Index of Proper Names 191