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Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science F.G. Nagasaka

Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science By F.G. Nagasaka

Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science by F.G. Nagasaka


Summary

The splendid achievements of Japanese mathematics and natural sciences during the second half of our 20th century have been a revival, a Renaissance, of the practical sciences developed along with the turn toward Western thinking in the late 19th century.

Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science Summary

Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science by F.G. Nagasaka

The splendid achievements of Japanese mathematics and natural sciences during the second half of our 20th century have been a revival, a Renaissance, of the practical sciences developed along with the turn toward Western thinking in the late 19th century. The equally admirable results of Japanese philosophers (and historians) of science in our time followed upon a period less congenial to Western interests in the philosophical questions linked to modern science; and this reluctance to confront the epistemology, not even the humane significance, of the sciences went along with devotion to other Western trends. Thus, with the 'new' Japan of the Meiji restoration of 1868, and the early introduction of Western philosophy in the subsequent decade by Nishi Amane, a period of intellectual attraction to utilitarian, positivist, evolutionary, even materialist outlooks was soon replaced by devotion to scholarly work on Kant and Hegel, on ethical and general philosophical idealism. These studies often could emulate the critical spirit (the philosopher Onishe Hajime, praised for his own critical independence, was known as the Japanese Kant) but the neo Kantian and neo-Hegelian developments were not much affected by either empirical sciences or theoretical speculations about Nature. The pre-eminent philosopher of Japan ofthe first half of our century was Nishida Kitaro, with a pioneering treatise A Study of the Good, who, with his leading student Tanabe Hajime, formed the 'Kyoto School' of pre-war philosophy.

Table of Contents

1. The Mind as Human Jobs.- 2. Other Minds.- 3. On the Individuation of Events.- 4. Mind, Privacy and Causality.- 5. Double Look: Science Superposed on a Perceptual World.- 6. Scientific Laws as Tools for Taxonomy.- 7. Causality and Temporal Irreversibility.- 8. The Structure of Statistical Inference.- 9. On Inference in Science.- 10. Comment on the Machida-Namiki-Araki Theory.- 11. Who Are Precursors of Galileo in His Pisan Dynamics? A Criticism of Professor Moodys Paper.- 12. Philosophical Meanings of the Concept of Evolution.- Index of Names.

Additional information

NPB9780792347811
9780792347811
0792347811
Japanese Studies in the Philosophy of Science by F.G. Nagasaka
New
Hardback
Springer
1998-05-31
202
N/A
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