Comparative Philosophy

ISSN: 2151-6014

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  1.  28
    A Realist Daoism: Reading the Zhuang-Zi with Lao Zi's Daoist Realism.Wai Lok Cheung - 2024 - Comparative Philosophy 15 (2):43-65.
    A realist Daoism is best illustrated through contrasting with something less robust. Chad Hansen’s Daoism may be understood as a linguistic constructivism and is thus a good candidate. I challenge his interpretation of the Zhuang-Zi and respond with a realist understanding of daos. The resultant realist Daoism is to be understood given a Daoist realism from Lao Zi’s Dao-De-Jing, whose realist flavour is constituted by some dao sometimes, if not always, outrunning us. The present paper thus situates Zhuang Zi better (...)
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  2.  62
    EDITOR's Words: On Constructive-Engagement Character of Comparative Studies of Chinese Philosophy toward World Philosophy—In View of ISCWP’s Two-Decade Development.Bo Mou - 2024 - Comparative Philosophy 15 (2):1-19.
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  3.  13
    The Hand of Thought: A Cross-Tradition Examination of Kosho Uchiyama and Martin Heidegger.Gregory Burgin - 2024 - Comparative Philosophy 15 (1):1-18.
    This paper presents how the Sōtō Zen priest, Kōshō Uchiyama, and the mercurial and polarizing German philosopher, Martin Heidegger, approach what the former calls “opening the hand of thought” (omoi no te banashi). For Uchiyama, the metaphoric opening of our mental hand requires the meditative practice of zazen or “just sitting” (shikantaza) and is said to mean that we avoid the act of thinking. Conversely, Heidegger maintains that the “releasement” (Gelassenheit) of our conceptual grasp is the basis of a more (...)
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  4.  13
    Heraclitus and the Rig Veda: A Cross-Tradition Engaging Examination.Eleni Chronopoulou - 2024 - Comparative Philosophy 15 (1).
    As early as the 18th century, the similarities between Greek and Iranian thought have raised questions about the origins of Greek philosophy and a possible Oriental influence many have ventured to highlight parallels and to explain this proximity of ideas. However, although it is very well-known that Iranian philosophy is influenced by the early Hindu thought, and there are studies on the analogies between the Greek and the Indian philosophy only few scholars have studied the closeness of the Heracletean philosophy (...)
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  5.  13
    The Social Relevance of Comparative Philosophy.Timothy Connolly - 2024 - Comparative Philosophy 15 (1).
    Early proponents of comparative philosophy believed that the dissemination of comparative methods would lead to step forward in human consciousness and contribute to a more peaceful world. Can comparative philosophy today still aspire to such goals? On the one hand, the aims of the field have narrowed, so that comparative philosophy is seen as a method of interpreting particular thinkers and texts or as a tool for addressing specific philosophical problems. On the other hand, critics argue that comparative philosophy is (...)
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  6.  33
    A Madhyamaka Critique of Jaegwon Kim's Supervenience Argument.Tyler J. Jungbauer - 2024 - Comparative Philosophy 15 (1):67–96.
    Jaegwon Kim’s supervenience argument objects to the possibility of emergent causation (both downward and same-level) based on both (1) the causal overdetermination of both (a) higher-level emergent events and (b) lower-level basal events, and (2) the causal closure principle of the physical domain. Kim argues that emergent causation entails epiphenomenalism. Madhyamaka Buddhist philosophy skeptically critiques the primary (ultimate) existence of causal phenomena and instead suggests that all such phenomena may only be secondarily (conventionally) existent. Mādhyamikas acknowledge that, conventionally, emergent phenomena (...)
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