Jun Tosaka

Jun Tosaka (Japanese: 戸坂 潤, Hepburn: Tosaka Jun, 27 September 1900 – 9 August 1945)[1] was a Shōwa era Kyoto-trained Japanese intellectual, and teacher. Some identify strands of Marxism in his later philosophy. His criticisms of governments and their war policies meant that he ended up in prison on various occasions.[2]

Jun Tosaka
Born(1900-09-27)September 27, 1900
Tokyo, Japan
DiedAugust 9, 1945(1945-08-09) (aged 44)
Nationality Japanese
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionJapanese philosophy
School
Academic advisorsNishida Kitarō
Main interests
Critique, social criticism, historical materialism, anti-imperialism

Life

Jun Tosaka was born in Tokyo in 1900. Due to his mother's illness and his father's early death he was moved that same year with his nurse to live with his grandparents in the Ishikawa Prefecture on the western side of the country. In September 1905 he returned to Tokyo where he grew up with his mother in the city's Kanda quarter (today part of Chiyoda).

He attended Kyoto Imperial University. He was interested in Nishida Kitaro, and Tanabe Hajime, neo-Kantianism, and then Marxism. He was a member of the Kyoto School. In 1938, he was arrested under the Peace Preservation Law. He died in Nagano Prison before the end of World War II.[3]

gollark: Nature fairly bad, as they say.
gollark: BRB, engineering new forms of pathogen to infect your machine-based body.
gollark: The problem is that biology is poorly architected. All the parts interlock and do 10 different confusing things and there's no documentation.
gollark: Drug development often runs into ridiculous safety issues, sometimes even ones which didn't turn up in animal testing, actually.
gollark: The effectiveness is worse → it is uncool.

References

  1. "Tosaka Jun". Kotobanku (in Japanese). Asahi Shinbun. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  2. Ken C. Kawashima (compiler-editor); Fabian Schaefer (compiler-editor); Robert Stolz (compiler-editor) (2013). "Tosaka Jun: A Critical Reader". only a "sample chapter" is accessible here. Cornell University (East Asia Program), NY. ISBN 978-1-933947-88-4. Retrieved 2 June 2019.
  3. William Theodore De Bary (13 April 2005). Sources of Japanese Tradition: Volume 2, 1600 to 2000. Columbia University Press. p. 932.

Further reading

  • Ken C. Kawashima; Fabian Schäfer; Robert Stolz (2013). Tosaka Jun: A Critical Reader. Cornell University East Asia Program.
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