University of Hawai'i Press Is Collaborating With JSTOR To Digitize, Preserve and Extend Access To Buddhist-Christian Studies
University of Hawai'i Press Is Collaborating With JSTOR To Digitize, Preserve and Extend Access To Buddhist-Christian Studies
University of Hawai'i Press Is Collaborating With JSTOR To Digitize, Preserve and Extend Access To Buddhist-Christian Studies
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/
info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content
in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship.
For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
University of Hawai'i Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Buddhist-Christian Studies.
http://www.jstor.org
This content downloaded from 146.189.194.69 on Sun, 20 Dec 2015 08:18:43 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
IN MEMORIAM
KeijiNishitani
(1900-1990)
This content downloaded from 146.189.194.69 on Sun, 20 Dec 2015 08:18:43 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
242 IN MEMORIAM
,. ~~~~~~~4
and somehow bottomless Sea ofjapan, and the mountains and their paths were
sometimes steep, sometimes flat, and sometimes connected to other mountains
and paths by narrowbridgesthat our bus could barelydrive through.
These landscapes reminded me of the philosophy of Nishitani because it is
one unified with the nature of mountains, rivers,fields, and seas. His philoso-
phy must surely have been motivated by the rich landscapes of the home in
which he was brought up in his infancy.It is verynaturalthat Nishitani particu-
larly liked Bi-yan-lu, the theme of which is mainly the nature of places such as
mountains, rivers, plants, and valleys. Seeing the beautiful rich nature of his
home, we could understand why we sometimes heard him criticize Nishida's
This content downloaded from 146.189.194.69 on Sun, 20 Dec 2015 08:18:43 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
IN MEMORIAM 243
philosophy, which does not deal with nature but rather sees it as historical
nature.
Nishitani's philosophy is called the philosophy of emptiness. He himself
began his philosophy with the problem of evil and nihil. With regard to this
problem he wrote varioustheses about Schelling, and his onlyJapanese transla-
tion of a foreign philosophicalwork is that of Schelling'sPhilosophische Unter-
suchungen iiber das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit (1927). After that he
researchedfundamental subjectivity through the study of Nietzsche and Eck-
ehardt and wrote God and Absolute Nothingness and Nihilism from an inter-
national standpoint but with special referenceto the differences between East
and West, namely, from the standpoint of emptiness. In 1961 he wrote his
main work, Religion and Nothingness (Shukyo to wa nani ka?) in which his
philosophy was firmlyestablishedas the philosophy of emptiness.
The philosophy of emptiness in Nishitani includes in itself the logic of emp-
tiness, which contains both "the logic of the place of absolute nothingness" of
his teacher Kitaro Nishida and "the logic of species" and the philosophy of
metanoetics of Hajime Tanabe, who was both a disciple and a critic of Nishi-
da's. Nishitani's philosophy also debated "the principle of negation," which
was imposed on posterity by Tanabe through the elucidation of freedom, evil,
and the issue of nihilism brought about by the extreme development of natural
science in modern times.
The philosophy of emptiness consists in emptiness as absolute openness
where all is as it is and at the same time as it should be. It encloses the domains
of philosophy, before philosophy, and after philosophy, including topics that
were excluded as outside the realmsof philosophy by traditionalEuropeanphi-
losophers since ancient Greek philosophy in that Nishitani inquires anew into
what philosophy is.
We often hear criticismfrom a speculative position that emptiness concerns
the world of experience or religious experience but is not a sphere of philoso-
phy. However,we must see through this and understandthat Nishitani's defini-
tion of religion is real self-awarenessof realityand that the philosophy of emp-
tiness, founded on our own religious experience, is established on reborn
thinking, namely, on the thinking of nonthinking. This is exactly the philoso-
phy that the philosophersafter Hegel look for.
Nishitani stayed in Marburg, Germany, for two years from 1937 and
researchedphilosophy under Heidegger. The confrontation of the philosophy
of emptiness with Heidegger'sphilosophy tacitly shown in Nishitani's Religion
and Nothingness-although both philosophers criticize philosophy as tradi-
tional European metaphysics itself in that they return to its beginning-is
based on Nishitani's deep understandingof Heidegger'sphilosophy.
Nishitani gave many lecturesin Americaand Europe and was a guest profes-
sor at Hamburg Universityin 1964 and at Temple Universityin 1969. He was,
moreover,given the Goethe gold medal prize by the Goethe Institute of Ger-
many.
This content downloaded from 146.189.194.69 on Sun, 20 Dec 2015 08:18:43 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
244 IN MEMORIAM
Calligraphy by ProfessorNishitani. Haiku on left was given to the author in April of 1986. It
means, "In the depths of frostysky/ /A sound of an airplane."Signed with the name Boro Sanmin
(mountaineer who forgot the way). Verse on right was given to the author in October of 1986. It
means, "The moon falls from heaven/ /But it doesn't leave heaven." Signed with the name Keisei
(the voice of the valley).
This content downloaded from 146.189.194.69 on Sun, 20 Dec 2015 08:18:43 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
IN MEMORIAM 245
Eiko Kawamura-Hanoka
Universityof OsakaPrefecture
This content downloaded from 146.189.194.69 on Sun, 20 Dec 2015 08:18:43 UTC
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions