Publication Details
Migration and Environment or about the Human as Climatic Being: Tetsurō Watsuji’s Dialectical Concept and How It Can Be Applied to the Issue of Migration
(Original title: Migration and Environment or about the Human as Climatic Being: Tetsurō Watsuji’s Dialectical Concept and How It Can Be Applied to the Issue of Migration)
Filozofia, 79 (2024), 9, 1019 - 1033.Type of work: Original Articles: The Anthropocene Epoch
Publication language: English
Abstract
The interaction between migration and the environment is essential, but it is not usually the focus of philosophical reflection. In this article, the author explores the nexus of migration and environmental protection, based on a new and expanded conception of the subject. The subject, according to this view, emerges from a new synthetic blend of a Buddhist-Shinto-Confucian-European model. This approach should allow for a deeper and more differentiated understanding of the relationship between human beings, human beings and nature, and lead to new perspectives in understanding humans as climatic beings. This broader approach is necessary for a better understanding of migrants, but also to win them over as new allies for environmental protection. At the end of the article, a practical example is presented to illustrate the theoretical explanation.
Keywords
intercultural philosophy, Japanese philosophy, Environmental philosophy, Social philosophy, migration, Human-Between, Tetsurō Watsuji
File to download: PDF