2.3.4 Strand C: The Early Buddhist Scriptures and Its Mahāyāna Development
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Intro; Introduction; Work Cited; Contents; About the Editor; Part I: Basic Issues in Japanese Buddhist Philosophy; Chapter 1: "Japanese Buddhism": Constructions and Deconstructions; 1 Preface in the Form of an Allegory: Seeking Landmarks on a Dusky Moor-Issues in the Comparative Study of the Praxis of the Buddhisms of Japan; 2 Introduction; 3 Reifying the Buddhisms of Japan as "Japanese Buddhism"; 3.1 Privileges of the Nation-State; 3.2 Japanese Exceptionalism; 3.3 Ahistorical Essentializing; 4 Philosophy, Religion, or What?; 4.1 Philosophy, of a Comparative Kind
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4 Philosophical Methods in Japanese Buddhism4.1 Practice as a Method of Investigation; 4.2 Styles of Argumentation; 5 Conclusion; Works Cited; Abbreviations; Other Sources; Sources Not Cited in the Text; Chapter 3: One Step Towards Buddhism as Philosophy; 1 Wisdom Called Buddhism; 1.1 The Unique Way of "Wisdom" in Buddhism; 1.2 Truth Regarding Self and World; 1.3 The Problem of Overrating Rationality; 1.4 The Environmental Crisis as the Problem of the Other; 1.5 The Key to Change; 1.6 A Philosophy Wherein the Self Embraces All Others; 1.7 Sympathetic Oscillation
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4.1.1 Issues and Questions: Beyond Presumed Universals4.1.2 Comparativism Versus Constructivism: Straw Men and Straw Dogs; 4.1.3 Danger: Context Ahead; 4.1.4 Comparative Philosophy as Colonialism; 4.1.5 The Putative Universality of Philosophy; 4.1.6 Through a Glass, Darkly: The Crystal Mirror; 5 Is the Buddhist Thought of Japan Philosophy or Religion?; 6 Japan's Buddhisms as Religion: Matrices, Narratives, and Metaphors; 6.1 The Matrix of "Religion"; 6.2 The "Great World Religions": Making the Buddhisms of Japan Invisible; 6.3 Structuring Thought: Zombie Metaphors
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6.3.1 The Organic Metaphor: Religion as a Living Being6.3.2 Agonistic Metaphors: Religions as Armies or Corporations; 6.3.3 Consumerist Metaphors: Spirituality and the Consumption of Buddhism; 6.4 A Cognitive Argument Against Constructivism in Comparative Religion; 7 Concluding Comments; Works Cited; Chapter 2: The "Philosophy" in Japanese Buddhist Philosophy; 1 Putting "Japanese Buddhist Philosophy" in Context; 2 The Philosophical Significance of Historical Debate; 3 Two Philosophical Themes in Japanese Buddhism; 3.1 Language, Reality, and Truth; 3.2 The Nature of Buddhist Practice
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The volume introduces the central themes in and the main figures of Japanese Buddhist philosophy. It will have two sections, one that discusses general topics relevant to Japanese Buddhist philosophy and one that reads the work of the main Japanese Buddhist philosophers in the context of comparative philosophy. It combines basic information with cutting edge scholarship considering recent publications in Japanese, Chinese, English, and other European languages. As such, it will be an invaluable tool for professors teaching courses in Asian and global philosophy, undergraduate and graduate students, as well as the people generally interested in philosophy and/or Buddhism.