The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism
Keiji Nishitani author Graham Parkes translator Setsuko Aihara translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:State University of New York Press
Published:2nd Oct '90
Currently unavailable, currently targeted to be due back around 31st December 2024, but could change
This non-fiction paperback, "The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism" from Keiji Nishitani, Graham Parkes & Setsuko Aihara, was published 2nd October 1990 by State University of New York Press.
"As a past reader of Nishitani in both the original Japanese and English translation, I find this manuscript to be the most accessible and clearly written of any book-length work I have read by him. It shows Nishitani as a vital and vigorous thinker, and serves as an introduction to his widely acclaimed Religion and Nothingness.
"The summaries of the relation to nihilism of Hegel, Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Feuerbach, and Stirner, a nearly forgotten figure in intellectual history, are all perspicacious. Even the chapters on Nietzsche, about whom volumes are written these days, provide new insights. The brief section on the problem of nihilism for Japan is unprecedented in the English literature, and the sketches on karma and historicity whet the appetite for the more extensive and difficult expositions in Religion and Nothingness.
"It will be mandatory reading for an understanding of both Nishitani's thought and the problem of nihilism. Scholars and other persons interested in nihilism, in Nietzsche, and/or in contemporary Buddhist or Japanese philosophy, will greatly profit from a study of this book." — John C. Maraldo, Department of Philosophy, University of North Florida
"This is a fine translation of an important work in the corpus of Nishitani's early writings. The translation is timely both because of the Western interest in Nishitani as a preeminent contemporary Japanese philosopher and because of the continuing Western perplexity about the problems Nishitani addresses. Nishitani is one of the world's greatest living philosophers and even in this early work of his that brilliance shines through." — Thomas P. Kasulis, Department of Philosophy, Northland College
ISBN: 9780791404386
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 390g
274 pages