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Religion and Nothingness : ウィキペディア英語版 | Religion and Nothingness
''Religion and Nothingness'' (''(日本語:Shūkyō to wa Nanika)''; the original title translates literally as "What is Religion?") is a 1961 book by the Japanese philosopher Keiji Nishitani.〔Habito 1995. p. 396.〕 ==Summary== Nishitani relates nihilism to what he sees as the problematic nature of modern science. For Nishitani, science as understood in the age of modernity involves an objectification of both the natural world and human subject, leading to depersonalization of both. This leads to an acute sense of alienation and derootedness in human consciousness, features of the ''nihil'' that cuts through human existence. The almost worship-like attitude with which science is regarded, a corollary to atheism, further aggravates the issue.〔 Nishitani believes that the attitude of scientism is based on the classic but faulty epistemology that separates subject and object and tends to create the illusion of the subject as an independent entity separate from the rest of the world: this creates the rift in human consciousness that lies at the root of the nihilism confronting modern humanity.〔
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