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The Nonduality of Life and Death: A Buddhist View of Repression, Psychoanalysis, Buddhism, and Heidegger on Death |
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Author |
Loy, David R.
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Source |
Philosophy East and West
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Volume | v.40 n.2 |
Date | 1990.04 |
Pages | 151 - 174 |
Publisher | University of Hawaii Press |
Publisher Url |
https://uhpress.hawaii.edu/
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Location | Honolulu, HI, US [檀香山, 夏威夷州, 美國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Translated into Hungarian and Reprinted in "Megszulettel-e mar?", Pozsony, Hungary and Bratislava, Slovakia,Kalligram Press, 1994. |
Keyword | Heidegger, Martin; Death; Psychoanalysis; Existentialism; Psychology |
Abstract | Existential psychoanalysis argues that our primal repression is not sex but death; the repressed returns symbolically as all the compulsive ways we try to make ourselves immortal. The Buddhist claim of "no-self" carries this a step further:even death-fear projects the problem into the future; my deepest dread is the quite valid suspicion that "I" don't really exist. The consequence is that our sense-of-self is always shadowed by a sense-of-lack,which it always tries to escape. Dogen implies that life-confronting-death is an unconscious game each of us is playing with him/herself. This conclusion is used to criticize Heidegger's Being and Time. |
ISSN | 00318221 (P); 15291898 (E) |
DOI | 10.2307/1399226 |
Hits | 1717 |
Created date | 2002.02.22; 2002.03.23
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Modified date | 2019.05.17 |

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