Japanese Philosophy: The Power of Nothingness | Fréderique Petit

In the 20th century, Japanese philosophers active at the University of Kyoto combined a Western approach to ‘doing’ philosophy with their own native concepts and ideas. There arose a Kyoto School, in which, of all things, ‘nothingness’ was a central concept.
Nothingness in the West usually has a negative connotation. It’s empty, meaningless, scary, and generally not something we like to think about. Not so for the Kyoto school. In their context, nothingness and emptiness take on a much deeper and balanced meaning. And not just intellectually, but experientially; it’s something everyone can experience.
In fact, over the past two years of covid lockdowns and quarantines, you yourself may have experienced more “nothingness” than you’d bargained for. What can Japanese philosophy teach you about these moments and their deeper meaning?
Fréderique Petit is an independent philosopher, political scientist, psychologist, and teacher, giving lectures and workshops for a variety of organisations and government institutions such as the Vrije Academie, NRC Academie and the Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, as well as private citizens and several universities in addition to the TU Delft.
Watch part 1 of her lecture here: • Japanese Culture & Phi...
SG’s GLOBAL PHILOSOPHIES LECTURE SERIES
Who am I? What is a good life? And how do you build a just society? Philosophy asks the big questions in life, but the answers of course are diverse. In the West we look to different thinkers and theories than in the East or the South. What else is there beyond Plato and Nietzsche? Studium Generale will introduce you to a series of different philosophical traditions from China, India, Africa, and the Americas. An acquaintance with other ways of thinking, but also with believing, seeing, and feeling, through philosophy, poetry, theatre, music, and other forms of art.
00:00 Intro
01:18 The meaning of nothingness
07:33 Zen Buddhism
13:02 Koans
19:24 Tetsugaku, engaged knowing
25:25 the Kyoto School
42:15 Conclusions
43:24 Q&A
www.sg.tudelft.nl

Пікірлер: 11

  • @tarikyurtgezer1700
    @tarikyurtgezer17007 ай бұрын

    As a photographer, I often experience the feeling of emptiness while shooting. At that moment, the subject-object duality disappears, I feel one with the entire universe. Thank you for this presentation and shairing.

  • @jonathanepstein7040
    @jonathanepstein7040 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this upload, wonderful presentation and series! We need more Kyoto School content on KZread!

  • @frankchilds9848
    @frankchilds9848 Жыл бұрын

    I respect you for acknowledging nothing and taking on the an impossible task.

  • @gangadharamg9469
    @gangadharamg9469 Жыл бұрын

    Beautiful lecture !

  • @haggaigertz
    @haggaigertz3 ай бұрын

    Min 11:26 it's a quote from the Dao De Ying, ten centuries older than the Buddhism

  • @darioscomicschool1111
    @darioscomicschool1111 Жыл бұрын

    Gonna Watch this later!

  • @craow4574
    @craow45745 ай бұрын

    amazing

  • @estelley1424
    @estelley14248 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the lecture ! Where can we find the booklist?

  • @NoeActually
    @NoeActually2 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU! Now onto jujutsu Kaisen

  • @lsdc1
    @lsdc17 ай бұрын

    Woof!

  • @aTrollstolemyBike
    @aTrollstolemyBike Жыл бұрын

    Great lecture, thanks for nothing :)