Understanding Comparative Philosophy

Arts & Entertainment Article Directory, Get Free Reprint Articles and Arts & Entertainment Content for your site with
article directory
54866 *recent articles in 509 categories Last article added 11/15/07
 
Article Categories
 
Reviews
 
Site Menu
 
Site Search


 
ArticlePros.com » Arts & Entertainment » Philosophy » Understanding Comparative Philosophy

  • Date: 2007-02-10
  • Author: Tom Takihi
  • All articles by this author
  • Visit author's website
  • Understanding Comparative Philosophy


    Related Philosophy Articles

         As a branch or subfield of philosophy, comparative philosophy is quite young and is still in its early stage of development. Its aim is to work on problems and compare various philosophies by taking into account all sources regardless of culture, language or philosophical stream. It differs from area studies philosophy in that area studies philosophy focuses its study on a single region or area. For instance, it may compare the various forms of Confucianism within China or compare Chinese Philosophy with Indian Philosophy. Comparative philosophy differs in that it goes beyond the boundaries of culture and language as it seeks to find a basis for comparing philosophical traditions. In this sense, comparative philosophy can be regarded as an extension of world philosophy because world philosophy brings together philosophical writings and traditions that exist among all human cultures with the end in view of coming up with a unified global stand. It differs from comparative philosophy, however, in that the latter does not really strive to become a world philosophy but only to gain a better understanding of the differences in beliefs of one culture with another from a different region. The Hurdles of Comparative Philosophy Certain problems stand in the way of comparative philosophy that prevents it from totally achieving its goals. First of this is descriptive chauvinism or the tendency of philosophers to regard his own tradition as the only correct tradition and other traditions that differ from his as erroneous or false. Another is skepticism or the tendency to narrate or discuss various traditions and attitudes of other philosophers while suspending belief or judgment of their adequacy and veracity. Incommensurability is another obstacle of comparative philosophy that refers to the extreme diversity of traditions that may make it impossible to reach a common ground on which to base comparisons. Perennialism or the failure to recognize that traditions and beliefs evolve and thus the basis for a dialogue today may change tomorrow is another major obstacle that comparative philosophy needs to overcome. And finally there's the lack of acceptance by other philosophers of comparative philosophy itself as a subfield of philosophy. There are those that contend that there is no such thing as comparative philosophy because all philosophical work is comparative. When you try and find the common ground among different versions of one religion, you are actually comparing them. When you study the principles that one philosopher espouses and test these principles with that of another, you are comparing them. Truth be told, the strong tendency for incommensurability that results from the excessively diverse scope of subjects embraced by comparative philosophy results in the failure to create a synthesis of traditions. What comparative philosophy creates is not a new belief or understanding but a new method or process by which one can try to understand.

    More articles from this pro: http://www.ArticlePros.com/author.php?Tom Takihi


    More on Arts & Entertainment and Philosophy can be found here.
     

    Get this article to go

    RSS | JScript | Email | HTML

     

    About the author

    Tom Takihi is the owner of this website. For more information please visit http://www.DefinitionOfPhilosophy.com.

    http://www.DefinitionOfPhilosophy.com

     
    Email options
       

    ** Check all that apply **

     

    This article has been accessed 550 times since 2007-02-10.


    Home  •  Search  •  Add Your Own Article  •  RSS feeds  •  JavaScript Feeds  •   •  Set as Homepage  •  Add to Favourites
    Disclaimer: The information presented and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors
    and do not necessarily represent the views of ArticlePros.com and/or its partners.
    Copyright ArticlePros.com © 2005. All Rights Reserved