Agreeing with Marx that ontology is production and production is ontology, Nishida in these three essays-"Expressive Activity" (1925), "The Standpoint of Active Intuition" (1935), and "Human Being" (1938)-addresses sense and reason, language and thought, intuition and appropriation, ultimately arguing that in this concept of production, ideality and materiality are neither mutually exclusive nor oppositional but, rather, coimmanent. Nishida's forceful articulation of the radical nature of Marx's theory of production is, Haver contends, particularly timely in today's speculation-driven global economy. Nishida's reading of Marx, which points to the inseparability of immaterial intellectual labor and material manual labor, provokes a reconsideration of Marxism's utility for making sense of-and resisting-the logic of contemporary capitalism.
ISBN: | 9780822351801 |
Publication date: | 17th February 2012 |
Author: | Kitaro Nishida |
Publisher: | Duke University Press an imprint of Duke University Press Books |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 224 pages |
Series: | Asia-Pacific |
Genres: |
Philosophy: metaphysics and ontology |