Weinmayr, Elmar. "Thinking in Transition: Nishida Kitaro and Martin Heidegger." Philosophy East & West 55, no. 2 (April 2005): 232-256.
Abstract
Two major philosophers of the
twentieth
century, the German existential phenomenologist Martin Heidegger and
the seminal Japanese Kyoto School philosopher Nishida Kitaro are
examined here in an attempt to discern to what extent their ideas may
converge. Both are viewed as expressing, each through the lens of his
own tradition, a world in transition with the rise of modernity in the
West and its subsequent globalization. The popularity of Heidegger's
thought among Japanese philosophers, despite its own admitted
limitation to the Western "history of being," is connected to Nishida's
opening of a uniquely Japanese path in its confrontation with Western
philosophy. The focus is primarily on their later works (the post-Kehre
Heidegger and the works of Nishida that have been designated "Nishida
philosophy"), in which each in his own way attempts to overcome the
subject-object dichotomy inherited from the tradition of Western
metaphysics by looking to a deeper structure from out of which both
subjectivity and objectivity are derived and which embraces both. For
Heidegger, the answer lies in being as the opening of unconcealment,
from out of which beings emerge, and for Nishida, it is the place of
nothingness within which beings are co-determined in their oppositions
and relations. Concepts such as Nishida's "discontinuous continuity,"
"absolutely self-contradictory identity" (between one and many, whole
and part, world and things), the mutual interdependence of individuals,
and the self-determination of the world through the co-relative
self-determination of individuals, and Heidegger's "simultaneity"
(zugleich) and "within one another" (ineinander) (of unconcealment and
concealment, presencing and absencing), and their "between" (Zwischen)
and "jointure" (Fuge) are examined. Through a discussion of these
ideas, the suggestion is made of a possible "transition" (Übergang) of
both Western and Eastern thinking, in their mutual encounter, both in
relation to each other and each in relation to its own past history,
leading to both a self-discovery in the other and to a simultaneous
self-reconstitution.