Becoming a Knower Through Apory Taking Inspiration from Nishida in Working with Yolngu Aboriginal Australians in Northern Australia

Main Article Content

Helen Ruth Verran
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5745-4888
Hayashi Yasunori
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6240-8448

Abstract

Located in a settler-Australian tertiary education institution we develop a worldly or mundane approach to working in and between institutions enacting two distinct world philosophies. We engage with the epistemics embedded and expressed in the functioning of modern institutions committed to a naturalistic scientific world. And albeit to a more limited extent we engage with epistemics embedded in and expressed by institutions framed and ordered by collectively enacting intentions of Eternal World-Making Beings of Yolngu Aboriginal Australian lands and peoples.


 

Article Details

How to Cite
Verran, H. R., & Hayashi, Y. (2024). Becoming a Knower Through Apory: Taking Inspiration from Nishida in Working with Yolngu Aboriginal Australians in Northern Australia. Journal of World Philosophies, 8(2). Retrieved from https://scholarworks.iu.edu/iupjournals/index.php/jwp/article/view/6572
Section
Articles
Author Biography

Hayashi Yasunori, Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University

 

Hayashi Yasunori is Co-Director of the First Nations Diplomacy Centre, Charles Darwin University, and a doctoral student on the Northern Institute