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  1. Nishida Kitarō ( japanisch 西田 幾多郎; * 19. Mai 1870 in Mori bei Kanazawa (heute: Kahoku, Präfektur Ishikawa ); † 7. Juni 1945 in Kamakura, Präfektur Kanagawa) war ein japanischer Philosoph. Er gilt als geistiger Vater der Kyōto-Schule und markiert den Beginn der modernen japanischen Philosophie.

  2. 25. Feb. 2005 · Nishida Kitarō was the most significant and influential Japanese philosopher of the twentieth-century. His work is pathbreaking in several respects: it established in Japan the creative discipline of philosophy as practiced in Europe and the Americas; it enriched that discipline by infusing Anglo-European philosophy with Asian ...

  3. Kitarō Nishida (西田 幾多郎, Nishida Kitarō, May 19, 1870 – June 7, 1945) was a Japanese moral philosopher, philosopher of mathematics and science, and religious scholar. He was the founder of what has been called the Kyoto School of philosophy.

  4. 29. März 2024 · Nishida Kitarō (born June 17, 1870, near Kanazawa, Ishikawa prefecture, Japan—died June 7, 1945, Kamakura) was a Japanese philosopher who exemplified the attempt by the Japanese to assimilate Western philosophy into the Oriental spiritual tradition.

  5. 27. Feb. 2006 · The Kyoto School ( Kyōto-gakuha) is a group of 20 th century Japanese philosophers who drew on the intellectual and spiritual traditions of East Asia, those of Mahāyāna Buddhism in particular, as well as on the methods and content of Western philosophy.

  6. In the second stage of his philosophy, Nishida was under the influence of the philosophy of Henri Bergson, a French philosopher, which he tried to synthesize with a Neo-Kantian type of German thought that was then prevalent in Japanese philosophical circles.

  7. 25. Feb. 2005 · Nishida Kitarô was the most significant and influential Japanese philosopher of the twentieth-century.