All Stories

  1. When Zen Becomes Philosophy: The Case of Dōgen’s Uji
  2. From Uji to Being-Time (and Back): Translating Dōgen into Philosophy
  3. The Ōshū Fujiwara—An interdisciplinary study on the history, culture and medical assessment of the oldest known mummified human remains in Japan (late Heian, 12th century AD)
  4. President’s Address: Time in Variance
  5. The missing piece in E. Cassirer’s theory of symbolic forms: the economy
  6. Note from the Editor: Time in Variance
  7. Presidential Address: Should We Give Up “Time”?
  8. Temporality
  9. How time is written
  10. Auf Nichts gebaut: Zum logischen Kern von Nishida Kitarōs Philosophie
  11. Is Zen a "religion"? - A case study from medieval Japan
  12. Time Subsumed or Time Sublated?
  13. Introduction from the Guest Editors to the Special Issue “Time in Historic Japan”
  14. Time in Old Japan: In Search of a Paradigm
  15. Editors’ Introduction: The Importance of Translating
  16. Authorship in East Asian Literatures
  17. 6 Enlightened Authorship: The Case of Dōgen Kigen
  18. Operationalizing the theory of authorship
  19. Origins and Futures: Time Inflected and Reflected
  20. Review of Rowe: Bonds of the Dead
  21. Appreciating Conflict: Lessons from J.T. Fraser’s Theory of Time
  22. Introduction
  23. Time: Limits and Constraints
  24. Truth, Time, And The Extended Umwelt Principle: Conceptual Limits And Methodological Constraints
  25. Kultur und Bioethik
  26. Der Leib als Eigentum: bioethische Debatte und aktuelle Rechtsentwicklung in Japan
  27. Einleitung: Kultur und Bioethik: Eigentum am eigenen Körper?
  28. Informed consent in Japan: Jenseits des Kulturvergleichs
  29. Time is not fleeting: Thoughts of a Medieval Zen Buddhist
  30. "Person" concepts in Japanese bioethics
  31. How "brain death" was invented and why it is not "death" as we know it.
  32. 14 Time, Waste, and Enlightenment, or: On Leaving No Trace