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Rediscovering the West
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24 August 1994

A bold and illuminating journey where Zen insight meets Western tradition to reawaken meaning, practice, and cultural integrity.
On a restless cultural fault line between East and West, Rediscovering the West invites readers into a deeper way of seeing, thinking, and living.
Drawing on the penetrating clarity of Zen Buddhism and the rich intellectual and spiritual heritage of the West, the book explores a central question of our time: how can modern Western culture rediscover meaning without abandoning its roots? Through a thoughtful engagement with both traditions, the author challenges inherited assumptions about worldview, identity, and the nature of wisdom itself.
In Part I, readers are introduced to the Zen perspective as a transformative lens—one that unsettles Western habits of thought while opening new possibilities for presence, encounter, and understanding. Part II turns inward, reexamining the Western tradition through figures such as Socrates and Christ, and uncovering its neglected mystical and experiential depths. Finally, Part III offers a way forward, presenting "relatedness" as a lived practice that unites insight with action and grounds philosophy in everyday life.
Both critical and constructive, this work moves beyond simple comparisons to create a genuine dialogue between traditions. It argues that the encounter with the East is not an escape from Western culture, but the very condition for its renewal.
Insightful, rigorous, and deeply humane, this book speaks to anyone seeking a more integrated vision of self, culture, and spiritual practice in a fragmented world.
"This is a truly distinguished book on an extremely significant topic: the value axis of Western and, especially American culture. There are countless books dealing with a critique of Western culture in the light of spiritual ideas, but very few things in the Zen perspective with such sophistication and acuteness while remaining faithful to the West." — Jacob Needleman
"This book is a remarkable achievement in the ongoing East-West encounter. Rowe forcefully and carefully pursues both Eastern and Western traditions, critical of each yet constructive in relation to both. In dialogue with the East, Rowe grapples with Zen and the Kyoto School, and I acknowledge his approach to be proper. On the Western Side, he emphasizes practice in relation to Western experience. He demonstrates how encounter with the East provides the ground upon which reclaiming Western integrity becomes possible. Reappropriation of Western tradition requires integration of Eastern insight." — Masao Abe
Stephen C. Rowe is Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Grand Valley State University. He is the author of Leaving and Returning: On America's Contribution to a World Ethic; and editor of Living Beyond Crisis: Essays on Discovery and Being in the World; and Claiming a Liberal Education.
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Part I. Seeing the World with Zen
1. Western Teetering and the Japanese Claim
2. Worldview as the Problem
3. Buddhist Perspective and Zen
4. Eastern Presence in Encounter
5. World Perspective
6. Ram Dass, the Roshi, and Liberal Education
7. L.A.:Searching for Post-traditional Wisdom
Part II Rediscovering the West
8. Standing Our Ground
9. From Dialectic to Feminism
10. A View on the Western Drama
11. Testimony of Survivors
12. The Mystical Christ
13. The Radiance of Socrates
14. Jesus as Christ
15. Death and Rebirth
Part III. Relatedness as Practice
16. Dialogue and Development
17. The Practical Turn
18. Finding Western Practice
19. Sitting and Relating
20. Earth as Home
Notes
Bibliography
Index