Available Formats
Tragic Beauty in Whitehead and Japanese Aesthetics
By (Author) Steve Odin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
19th May 2016
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
111.850952
Hardback
356
Width 159mm, Height 237mm, Spine 32mm
699g
The present volume endeavors to make a contribution to contemporary Whitehead studies by clarifying his axiological process metaphysics, including his theory of values, concept of aesthetic experience, and doctrine of beauty, along with his philosophy of art, literature and poetry. Moreover, it establishes an east-west dialogue focusing on how Alfred North Whiteheads process aesthetics can be clarified by the traditional Japanese Buddhist sense of evanescent beauty. As this east-west dialogue unfolds it is shown that there are many striking points of convergence between Whiteheads process aesthetics and the traditional Japanese sense of beauty. However, the work especially focuses on two of Whiteheads aesthetic categories, including the penumbral beauty of darkness and the tragic beauty of perishability, while further demonstrating parallels with the two Japanese aesthetic categories of ygen and aware. It is clarified how both Whitehead and the Japanese tradition have articulated a poetics of evanescence that celebrates the transience of aesthetic experience and the ephemerality of beauty. Finally it is argued that both Whitehead and Japanese tradition develop an aesthetics of beauty as perishability culminating in a religio-aesthetic vision of tragic beauty and its reconciliation in the supreme ecstasy of peace or nirvana.
Tragic Beauty in Whitehead and Japanese Aesthetics embodies the best in comparative philosophy. Both Whitehead and various Japanese thinkers (Dogen, Nishida, etc.) are mutually illuminated in this clear and insightful study.Further, readers who are interested in the crucial issue of tragic beauty will be edified by the authors treatment of this topic even if they are not experts in Whitehead or Japanese thought.Highly recommended! -- Daniel A. Dombrowski, Seattle University
Steve Odin teaches Japanese and East-West comparative philosophy at the University of Hawaii, where he has taught for more than thirty years.