James Heisig
James W. Heisig (born 1947) is a philosopher who specializes in the field of philosophy of religion. He has published several books, their topics ranging amongst the notion of God in Jungian psychology, the Kyoto School of Philosophy, and contemporary interreligious faith. He currently resides in Nagoya, Japan, where he continues to conduct research at the Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture. He is also famed among students of the Japanese and Chinese languages for his Remembering the Kanji and Remembering the Hanzi series.
Books
- Remembering the Kanji series (1977, 1987, 1994)
- Remembering the Kana
- Heisig, James and Timothy Richardson, Remembering Simplified Hanzi 1 and Remembering Traditional Hanzi 1, University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu (2009). Volume 2 of each book which were published in early 2012.[1][2]
- Imago Dei: A Study of C. G. Jung's Psychology of Religion (Studies in Jungian thought) (1979)
- Philosophers of Nothingness: An Essay on the Kyoto School (Nanzan Library of Asian Religion and Culture) (2001)
References