LC control no. | n 82248602 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Miki, Kiyoshi, 1897-1945 |
Variant(s) | 三木淸, 1897-1945 三木清, 1897-1945 Miki, Kyoshi, 1897-1945 Kyoshi Miki, 1897-1945 Kiyoshi Miki, 1897-1945 |
Birth date | 1897-01-05 |
Death date | 1945-09-26 |
Place of birth | Hyōgo-ken (Japan) |
Field of activity | Philosophy, Japanese |
Profession or occupation | Philosophers |
Special note | Machine-derived non-Latin script reference project. Non-Latin script references not evaluated. Non-Latin script reference reviewed in NACO CJK Funnel References Project. |
Found in | Gendai kaikyū tōsō no bungaku, 1933: t.p. (Miki Kiyoshi) Dai jinmei j. (Miki Kiyoshi; 1897-1945; philosopher) LC database, March 19, 2020 (access point: 三木淸, 1897-1945 = 三木清, 1897-1945 = Miki, Kiyoshi,1897-1945; usage: 三木淸 = 三木清 = Miki Kiyoshi) ClassWeb, July 8, 2020 (Miki, Kiyoshi, 1897-1945; B5244.M54-.M544) Miki Kyoshi's The logic of imagination, 2024: CIP title page (Miki Kyoshi) galley (born in Hyōgo prefecture of Japan in 1897; studied philosophy at Kyoto Imperial University, mentored by Nishida Kitarō; graduated 1920, joined Army as student conscript while attending graduate school at Kyoto Imperial University, research focus on philosophy of history; began a series of roundtable dialogues with Nishida in 1932, two were published in the Yomiuri Newspaper; began writing the "Logic of Imagination" in 1937 in the form of twelve serially published essays; in essays, he views the formation of culture via technological-productive action as “creation from nothingness”; his philosophies of technological production and imagination involve unifying of opposites within framework of a self-forming force moving history; Miki was imprisoned in 1945 for sheltering Takakura Teru, who was accused of violating the Peace Preservation Law; died of sudden nephritis (acute kidney inflammation) in Toyotama Prison in Nakano, shortly after the end of World War II) Wikipedia website, viewed February 01, 2024: (Kiyoshi Miki, Japanese philosopher, literary critic, scholar and university professor. He was an esteemed student of Nishida Kitarō and a prominent member of the Kyoto School. Miki was a prolific academic and social critic of his time. He also had tense relations with both Japanese Marxism and the Imperial government at various stages of his career; born January 5, 1897, died September 26, 1945) |
Invalid LCCN | n 2024006224 |