Abstract

Abstract:

This article aims to bridge quantum physics, human cognition, and Kitarō Nishida's logic of basho. The primary claim is that the indeterminacy underlying both quantum and cognitive phenomena is synonymous with Nishida's "absolute nothingness," the ontological basis of the logic. By interpreting Nishida's soku hi dialectic in terms of phenomenal appearances in awareness, Nishida's term "basho" is equated with this place where awareness actualizes, thereby allowing Nishida's three basho to be framed in terms of the degree of subjectivity present within awareness. Connections between the logic of basho and the theory of enactive cognition are set out with emphasis on how cognitive representation can be placed in the human's enactive engagement with reality. As the logic of basho accounts for the dialectical nature of both quantum reality and cognitive reality, the article concludes that his logic can be seen as encompassing physical reality as well as the reality of (non)subjective awareness.