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  1. Global citizens, cosmopolitanism, and radical relationality: Towards dialogue with the Kyoto School?Satoji Yano & Jeremy Rappleye - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (9):1355-1366.
    Recent discussions around education for global citizenship continues to retrace notions of cosmopolitanism first laid out in Europe. Ostensibly seeking global inclusivity, much of this work ultimately returns to a rather narrow set of ontological and epistemic themes, primarily Stoicism and Pauline Christianity. The Kyoto School offers a constructive reconstruction of these core premises of European cosmopolitanism. In resisting the ontologizing of autonomous individualism and abstract universalism, Kyoto School thinkers offered an alternative tripartite structure that drew greater attention to the (...)
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  • Re-envisioning personhood from the perspective of Japanese philosophy: Watsuji Tetsuro's Aidagara-based ethics.Hirotaka Sugita - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (9):1367-1376.
    This paper re-envisions the personhood of severely disabled children, who are often excluded from the category of human beings in the academic literature due to their perceived lack of mental faculties, based on Japanese philosopher Watsuji Tetsuro’s concept of human beings. It begins with Carl Elliott’s claim that personhood should be used as a thick ethical concept. This concept has two features. First, it represents a fusion of fact and value. Second, it is embedded in our rich and culturally specific (...)
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  • Mori Akira's Education for Self‐Awareness: Lessons from the Kyoto School for Mindful Education.Anton Sevilla-liu - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (1):243-262.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  • Unlearning as (Japanese) learning.Tadashi Nishihira & Jeremy Rappleye - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (9):1332-1344.
    Unlearning is a recurrent theme in Japan. To further understanding of what this entails, we focus on the view of learning laid out by a revered 13th century Zen-inspired playwright. For Zeami, learning involved a movement from the acquisition to unlearning of skills, punctuated by an experience of mushin, followed by creative reemergence. To deepen understandings of this unlearning model, we turn to draw comparison with recent discussions in the Western literature, focusing on Double-Loop Learning and Learning III, both inspired (...)
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