A travel guide to comparative philosophy which focuses upon the concern for meaning and the corresponding development of thinking methodologies in certain Greco-European, Indian, and Chinese philosophical systems. In addition to outlining the presuppositions of different traditions, it discusses their methods and techniques for reasoning in what the author calls four dimensions of philosophizing space an object dimension, a subject dimension, a situational dimension, and an aspective/perspective dimension. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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Walter Benesch is Professor of Philosophy, University of Alaska. He has presented papers on comparative logic and philosophy in Taiwan, Europe and the US and has published articles and papers on comparative philosophy and logics in the US, Europe, Taiwan and Japan.
'An Introduction to Comparative Philosophy is eminently readable. The style of writing is economical and clear. It will be informative and valuable to anyone interested in comparative philosophy' - Kwang-Sae Lee, Professor of Philosophy, Kent State University
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