Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism
Philosophers are an argumentative bunch. Indeed, they pride themselves on it, even going so far as to define philosophy precisely in terms of argument, contestation, and critique. So presumably philosophers should not in the least mind if in this article I pick an argument—two, in fact—with the cont...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1688462023-06-25T15:42:20Z Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism Stepien, Rafal K. S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Humanities::Philosophy Humanities::Religions::Buddhism Non-Western Philosophy Buddhism Philosophers are an argumentative bunch. Indeed, they pride themselves on it, even going so far as to define philosophy precisely in terms of argument, contestation, and critique. So presumably philosophers should not in the least mind if in this article I pick an argument—two, in fact—with the contemporary practice of philosophy itself. In the section titled “Playing at Arguments: On Buddhism as Philosophy,” I argue against the exclusion of Buddhist philosophy specifically, and other non-Western philosophies more generally, from the domain of philosophy—or rather, against the very game of exclusion itself. In the final section, I argue against excusing philosophers engaged in this game of a charge they (or at least the vast majority of them) will presumably deem unjustified: that of racism. This is, therefore, not so much a philosophical study of Buddhist materials as it is a (meta-) philosophical critique of the manner in which the philosophical study of Buddhist (and other non-Western) philosophical materials is (not) being conducted. The thread linking my two main arguments is thus the role of non-Western philosophies within the profession/discipline of philosophy as this is professed and practiced today. Published version 2023-06-20T05:38:12Z 2023-06-20T05:38:12Z 2022 Journal Article Stepien, R. K. (2022). Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism. Philosophy East and West, 72(4), 1066-1088. https://dx.doi.org/10.1353/pew.2022.0081 0031-8221 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168846 10.1353/pew.2022.0081 2-s2.0-85148065959 4 72 1066 1088 en Philosophy East and West © 2022 by University of Hawai‘i Press. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Philosophy East and West and is made available with permission of University of Hawai‘i Press. application/pdf |
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Humanities::Philosophy Humanities::Religions::Buddhism Non-Western Philosophy Buddhism Stepien, Rafal K. Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism |
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Philosophers are an argumentative bunch. Indeed, they pride themselves on it, even going so far as to define philosophy precisely in terms of argument, contestation, and critique. So presumably philosophers should not in the least mind if in this article I pick an argument—two, in fact—with the contemporary practice of philosophy itself. In the section titled “Playing at Arguments: On Buddhism as Philosophy,” I argue against the exclusion of Buddhist philosophy specifically, and other non-Western philosophies more generally, from the domain of philosophy—or rather, against the very game of exclusion itself. In the final section, I argue against excusing philosophers engaged in this game of a charge they (or at least the vast majority of them) will presumably deem unjustified: that of racism. This is, therefore, not so much a philosophical study of Buddhist materials as it is a (meta-) philosophical critique of the manner in which the philosophical study of Buddhist (and other non-Western) philosophical materials is (not) being conducted. The thread linking my two main arguments is thus the role of non-Western philosophies within the profession/discipline of philosophy as this is professed and practiced today. |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Stepien, Rafal K. |
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Article |
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Stepien, Rafal K. |
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Stepien, Rafal K. |
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Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism |
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Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism |
title_full |
Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism |
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Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism |
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Contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and Buddhism |
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contest, game, disgrace: on philosophy and buddhism |
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2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168846 |
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