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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Shūzō_KukiShūzō Kuki - Wikipedia

    Shūzō Kuki (九鬼 周造, Kuki Shūzō, February 15, 1888 – May 6, 1941) was a Japanese art critic, philosopher, and poet.

  2. Kuki Shūzō (1888-1941) was a Japanese philosopher of considerable eminence in the first half of the 20th century. He is credited for bringing into Japan Martin Heidegger's philosophy and for giving the translation jitsuzon for the German Sein (being).

  3. Jun 6, 2017 · This chapter explores the aesthetics and ethics of Kuki Shūzō (1888–1941), a poet and philosophy professor at Kyoto University. It explains Kuki’s unique phenomenological approach to philosophical analysis.

  4. Sep 6, 2018 · Iki is the key word of Shūzō Kuki’s The Structure of Iki, and it became one of the most widely recognized Japanese aesthetic categories mainly due to this work.

    • Yingjin Xu
    • 2018
  5. Kuki Shûzô (1888-1941), one of Japan's most original thinkers of the twentieth century, is best known for his interpretations of Western Continental philo...

  6. The aesthetic system of Japanese philosopher KUKI Shūzō exposes the value systems at the heart of our current environmental crisis. Kuki’s anthropology and aesthetics stand in sharp contrast to the Platonic metaphysics that forms the historical basis of Western value schemes.

  7. Iki (Japanese :いき), a Japanese term which is hard to be faithfully translated into English, is the key word of Shūzō Kuki (九鬼周造)’s Iki no kōzō (or ‘いきの構造’ in Japanese, which means ‘The Structure of Iki’ or ‘The Structure of Detachment’).