Hybridity of robotics and Buddhism : Masahiro Mori and the philosophy of robotics
        The philosophical studies of Yamaguchi University Volume 22
        Page 31-42
        
    published_at 2015-03-23
            Title
        
        ロボットと仏教のハイブリディティ : 森政弘のロボット考学
        Hybridity of robotics and Buddhism : Masahiro Mori and the philosophy of robotics
        
    
                
                    Creators
                
                    Kimura Takeshi
                
                
            
    
        
            Source Identifiers
        
    
        Masahiro Mori is a well-known Japanese robotics scholar who studies and practices Buddhism. He has published several books on the topic of the Buddhist Philosophy of Robotics. The author feels puzzled about Moriʼs statements that “a robot is already enlightened” and “an animal is a machine without any space in it,” and then, attempts to understand them in this paper. In the first part, the author explains how to locate the issue of the meaning of robotics in the history of the study of religion. The issue of Other has been one of the main issues in the phenomenology of religions. In this relationship, Moriʼs famous “Uncanny valley (Bukimi no Tani Gensho)” is investigated. In the second part, it is examined how Mori explains his view on the relationship between Buddhism and the philosophy of robotics. What is interesting is his view that he came to understand the teaching of Buddhism through his robotics work. Mori even states that it is possible to recognize Buddhahood in a robot. In the third part, Moriʼs view of the relationship between the Buddhist notion of śūnyatā and robots is examined.
        
        
            Languages
        
            jpn
    
    
        
            Resource Type
        
        departmental bulletin paper
    
    
        
            Publishers
        
            山口大学哲学研究会
    
    
        
            Date Issued
        
        2015-03-23
    
    
        
            File Version
        
        Version of Record
    
    
        
            Access Rights
        
        open access
    
    
            Relations
        
            
                
                
                [ISSN]0919-357X
            
            
                
                
                [NCID]AN10403441
            
    
