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  1. Thinking in transition: Nishida Kitaro and Martin Heidegger.Elmar Weinmayr, tr Krummel, John W. M. & Douglas Ltr Berger - 2005 - Philosophy East and West 55 (2):232-256.
    : Two major philosophers of the twentieth century, the German existential phenomenologist Martin Heidegger and the seminal Japanese Kyoto School philosopher Nishida Kitarō 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 (...)
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  • The last God-a reading.Gail Stenstad - 1993 - Research in Phenomenology 23 (1):172-184.
    The last withdraws itself from all reckoning.... how then will we be able to measure up to the unusual beckoning of the last god?1.
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  • Questioning the Sacred: Heidegger and Levinas on the Locus of Divinity.Sonia Sikka - 1998 - Modern Theology 14 (3):299-323.
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  • Beiträge zur Philosophie.Martin Heidegger - 2007 - Heidegger Studies 23:9-17.
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  • Nishida Kitaro.David A. Dilworth - 1973 - International Philosophical Quarterly 13 (4):463-483.
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  • Spatiality in the Later Heidegger: Turning - Clearing - Letting.John Krummel - 2006 - Existentia (5-6):405-424.
    Within the context of Heidegger’s claim that his thinking has moved from the “meaning of being” to the “truth of being” and finally to the “place of being,” this paper examines the “spatial” motifs that become pronounced in his post-1930 attempts to think being apart from temporality. My contention is that his “shift” (Wendung) in thinking was a move beyond his earlier focus upon the project-horizon of the meaning (Sinn) of being, i.e., time, based on the existential hermeneutic of mortality, (...)
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