The Anonymous Subject of Life—Some Philosophical, Psychological, and Religious Considerations

Research in Phenomenology 49 (3):385-402 (2019)
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Abstract

This paper focuses on one of the mainstays of Japanese psychiatrist and philosopher Kimura Bin’s (1931–2021) philosophical approach. Kimura’s work is characterized by the intersection of therapeutic, philosophical, and intercultural dimensions in ways that enable his clinical practice and philosophical investigations to mutually inform one another. I examine how this dialectic comes together with his conversion of ordinary Japanese words into philosophical concepts. Explicating the concepts Kimura deploys in developing a phenomenology of the self allows us to make new sense of phenomena ranging from the process of individuation to the collective subjectivity of group life, from the breakdown of the self to its fuller realization.

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2019-10-18

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David W. Johnson
Boston College

Citations of this work

Life Between Bios and Zoē: Barbaras and Cross-Cultural Philosophy.David W. Johnson - 2024 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 38 (3):287-298.

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