Introduction: Different Differences in Identity, Lydia Azadpour,
Sarah Flavel & Russell Re Manning (Bath Spa University, UK)
1. Souls, Stars and Shadows, Stephen R. L. Clark ((Liverpool &
Bristol Universities, UK)
2. Confucian Philosophy as a Universal Approach to Civilized
Living: A Contemporary Interpretation, Geir Sigurðsson (University
of Iceland, Iceland)
3. Realizing Virtues: Plato and Buddhism, Chiara Robbiano (Utrecht
University, the Netherlands) & Shalini Sinha (University of
Reading, UK)
4. Application of Tradition in Gadamer and the Sameness-Otherness
of Islamic Philosophy, Selami Varlik (Istanbul 29 Mayis University,
Turkey)
5. The Mind is More like Matter, the Body More Like the Form’:
Geulincx Against Descartes (and the Scholastics) on the Sources of
Difference in Minds, Michael Jaworzyn (KU Leuven University,
Belgium)
6. My Identity Differs: On Why I Am Not Myself in Light of Hume,
Beauvoir, and Zen Buddhist Writings, Andrew Whitehead (Kennesaw
State University, USA)
7. Individual Identity and Cultural Practice Relationalism in
Modern Protestant Theology, Harald Matern (Universitat Basel,
Switzerland)
8. One’s Other Self: Contradictory Self-Identity in Ueda’s
Phenomenology of the Self, Raquel Bouso Garcia (Universitat Pompeu
Fabra, Spain)
9. Events of Excess, Being and Existence in Jean-Luc Nancy and
Jean-Luc Marion’s Philosophies, Robert Luzar (Bath Spa University,
UK)
Bibliography
Index
Provides a philosophical re-examination of the role of difference in conceptions of identity from a variety of philosophical and religious traditions.
Sarah Flavel is Reader in Asian and Comparative
Philosophy at Bath Spa University, UK.
Russell Re Manning is Reader in Philosophy and Ethics at
Bath Spa University, UK.
Lydia Azadpour is a Ph.D. Researcher at Royal Holloway,
University of London, UK.
Not only is this a wonderful and provocative collection of some of
the most thoughtful “intercultural” philosophers writing in English
today, its cumulative effect challenges some of the standard myths
by which we maintain the absolute separation of the “West” from its
Other, the “East.” Philosophy itself is the clear winner from the
debris of this untenable dualism.
*Jason M. Wirth, Professor of Philosophy, Seattle University,
USA*
This volume reminds us that what brings us together are not our
similarities but our differences. Drawing on diverse traditions of
thought, it expands the horizon of possibilities of how we think
about the self and identity.
*Kevin C. Taylor, Instructor and Online Coordinator of Philosophy,
The University of Memphis, USA*
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