Aim & Scope
The aim of this journal is fourfold. First, it examines the reception of and confrontations with Western philosophy in East Asia. Secondly, it promotes the dialogue between various philosophical discourse and traditions in East Asia. Thirdly, it explores the potential of East Asian philosophy comprehensively. Fourthly, it attempts to articulate the history of East Asian philosophy. All time periods, themes, figures, texts, traditions and so on within and without East Asian philosophical contexts are welcome. Instead of confining East Asia to specific nations, languages, cultures, schools and so on, this journal perceives East Asia as a transnational and transcultural concept. East Asian philosophy, therefore, is a dynamic philosophical consortium that intercepts with philosophical texts, figures, concepts and traditions by trespassing cultural essentialism and national. East Asia-West and Intra-East Asia comparative philosophical studies are particularly welcome. [1]
2024
Correction to: Editor’s Words: Kyoto School, Everydayness, and the Logic of Social History
Journal of East Asian Philosophy , 2024
Editor’s Words: Kyoto School, Everydayness, and the Logic of Social History
Journal of East Asian Philosophy , 2024
Making More Sense: A Confucian-Hermeneutic Path to Aesthetics
Journal of East Asian Philosophy , 2024
“The Logic of Species”: A Translation of Tosaka Jun’s Commentary on Tanabe Hajime
Journal of East Asian Philosophy , 2024
The Fifth Decade of Religion and Nothingness: Introduction to the Special Issue
Journal of East Asian Philosophy , 2024
Correction to: Character and Everydayness: The Bottom-Up Historical Epistemology of Tosaka Jun
Journal of East Asian Philosophy , 2024