Tag Archives: Nishida Kitarō

The Role of Nothingness

  1. Introduction: The Philosophical Weight of Nothingness

In every tradition of thought, the question of “nothing” provokes a tremor. To speak of nothingness is to flirt with paradox: how can one speak of what is not? How can one reflect on what refuses to appear, what resists being grasped either as object or concept? In ordinary discourse, “nothing” is a lack, a privation, the absence of something that could or should be present. Yet in the context of spiritual philosophy, “nothingness” is not a deficit but a revelation. It is not the failure of being, but its most radiant unveiling. read more

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The Unborn Mind Zen: Doctrine and Practice (Part Two)

  1. Comparative Perspectives:

The Unborn is not an isolated doctrine. Rather, it sits at the crossroads of Buddhist, Hindu, and even Western mystical thought. By situating Unborn Mind Zen in dialogue with Advaita Vedānta’s Brahman and with the apophatic traditions of “Absolute Nothingness,” we gain a sharper sense of both its uniqueness and its shared insights. read more

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