A Critical Recuperation of Watsuji's Rinrigaku.

Philosophia (Ramat-Gan, Israel) Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-11-28 DOI:10.1007/s11406-020-00296-1
Aleardo Zanghellini, Mai Sato
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Watsuji is recognised as one Japan's foremost philosophers. His work on ethics, Rinrigaku, is cosmopolitan in engaging the Western philosophical tradition, and in presupposing an international audience. Yet Watsuji's ethical thought is largely of niche interest outside Japan, and it is critiqued on the ground that it ratifies totalitarianism, demanding individuals' unquestioning subordination to communal demands. We offer a reading of Rinrigaku that, in attempting to trace the text's intention, disputes these arguments. We argue that Rinrigaku makes individual autonomy central to ethical action, despite the fact that its treatment of coercion may lead one to think otherwise; that it does not reduce ethical obligations to whatever demands any given society imposes on its members; that it draws a distinction between socio-ethical orders that are genuinely ethical and those that are not; and that, in insisting on the grounding of individuals in the Absolute, it makes adequate room for individuals' resistance to unjustifiable socio-ethical demands.

Watsuji的Rinrigaku的关键疗养。
Watsuji被认为是日本最重要的哲学家之一。他在伦理学方面的著作《理学》(Rinrigaku),在融入西方哲学传统和预设国际受众方面具有世界性。然而,Watsuji的伦理思想在很大程度上是日本以外的小众利益,它被批评的理由是它认可极权主义,要求个人无条件地服从集体的要求。我们提供了一种对临乐的解读,在试图追踪文本的意图时,对这些论点提出了质疑。我们认为,尽管它对强制的处理可能会导致人们产生不同的想法,但Rinrigaku将个人自治置于道德行为的中心;它不会将道德义务降低到任何特定社会强加给其成员的任何要求;它区分了真正道德的社会伦理秩序和非道德的社会伦理秩序;而且,在坚持个人以绝对为基础时,它为个人抵抗不合理的社会伦理要求提供了足够的空间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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