Comparative Philosophy: An International Journal of Constructive Engagement of Distinct Approaches toward World Philosophy
Comparative Philosophy is a peer-reviewed, open-access/non-profit international journal of philosophy. With comparative philosophy understood as a general way of doing philosophy through cross-tradition engagement toward world philosophy, the Journal emphasizes the constructive engagement of distinct approaches and resources from different philosophical traditions (whether distinguished culturally or by style/orientation) for the sake of their joint contribution to the contemporary development of philosophy and society worldwide.
See About this Journal for complete coverage of this publication.
Current Issue: Volume 15, Issue 1 (2024)
Preliminaries
Articles
The Hand of Thought: A Cross-Tradition Examination of Kosho Uchiyama and Martin Heidegger
Gregory BURGIN
Heraclitus and the Rig Veda: A Cross-Tradition Engaging Examination
Eleni CHRONOPOULOU
The Social Relevance of Comparative Philosophy
Timothy CONNOLLY
Intersecting Perspectives: A Comparative Dialogue on Respect in Confucian and Western Philosophies
Chuan Chih HSU, Antonio CALDERÓN, and Chia Shih SU
A Madhyamaka Critique of Jaegwon Kim's Supervenience Argument
Tyler J. JUNGBAUER
A Comparative Study of Emotion in Indian and Western Philosophy
Prasasti PANDIT and William KRIEGER
Xun Zi on Desiring to be Good: Desire as the Necessary Condition for the Transformation of Nature
Angel TING
Recent Work
International Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief: Bo Mou (San Jose State University, USA)