Flower petals fall, but the flower endures: the Japanese philosophy of transience.Seiichi Takeuchi -2015 - Tokyo, Japan: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture. Edited by Michael Brase.detailsLife is short and transient--Japanese people call this sentiment mujokan. However, what if we could sweep away the "despair" looming over the present age by proactively accepting this mujo (transience)? Perusing the thought of mujo from the perspectives of philosophy, literature, art and religion, Takeuchi delves into the view of life and death unique to the Japanese people who have shared "grief" and "pain" with each other, as well as into the very core of their underlying spirit." -- Publisher's description.
Nihon shisōshi josetsu.Seiichi Takeuchi,Michikazu Nishimura &Takaaki Kubota (eds.) -1982 - Tōkyō: Perikansha.details1-3. [without special titles] -- 4. "Kogaku" no shisō.
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Yamato kotoba de "Nihon" o shisō suru.Seiichi Takeuchi -2015 - Tōkyō: Shunjūsha.details「日本語の哲学」の可能性を求めて、「おのずから」と「みずから」の「あわい」という斬新な視点から、やまと言葉の思索を通して、日本人の思想と感情を究明する画期的論考。.