This is a special late-night interview with humanities writer Saito Tetsuya. We had a fun conversation about the “Introduction to the History of Philosophy” trilogy (NHK Publishing Shinsho), which has received a huge response as a history of Western philosophy through “listening.” In the second session, we discussed Descartes, which is often considered the source of its origins, from the pathology of modern civilizations to the climate change issues. In the second half, the three of them chat about how they interact with the Generator AI. (Included June 22, 2025) Previous video: A world of “Introduction to the History of Philosophy” with Saito Tetsuya on the Philosophy of Fluidity ① https://youtu.be/BjO8MTtLFo4 ■Service Book Introduction to the History of Philosophy I: From Ancient Greece to the Renaissance (NHK Publishing Shinsho 718) https://amzn.to/3ZgZHpf Introduction to the History of Philosophy II: From Descartes to Kant and Hegel (NHK Publishing Shinsho 719) https://amzn.to/495ftao Introduction to the History of Philosophy III: From phenomenology and analytical philosophy to modern thought (NHK Publishing Shinsho 721) https://amzn.to/3V1SQxD Saito Tetsuya Born in 1971. Humanities writer. Graduated from the Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Letters, University of Tokyo. He has worked on many books, mainly for humanities and ideology, and is responsible for editing and composing books that bridge knowledge. His books include “Philosophy that appears in the exam – Introduction to Western Thought through the National Center Test” (NHK Publishing Shinsho), “Introduction to Eastern Thought through “Entrance Exam Questions” (same), and “Reading Complaint Keywords” (Chikuma Shobo). Edited and supervised by the authors include “Illustrated Guide to Philosophical Terminology” and “Continued Guide to Philosophical Terminology: China, Japan, and the United States (Analytical Philosophy)” (by Tanaka Masato, President Publishing), and “Introduction to Contemporary Thought” (by Naka Masaki et al., PHP Institute). He is currently active as a subpersonalist for “Cultural Talk Radio Life” (TBS Radio). YouTube channel and X account https://www.youtube.com/@saitoshokai/videos https://x.com/saitoshokai Hoshi Hyuma Born in Nagano Prefecture in 1974. Author and translator. Completed a Master’s degree in Graduate School of Social Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University. Completed the Education Department of the Institute for Social Information Research, University of Tokyo. Master’s degree (sociology) (Tokyo Metropolitan University, 2001). His specialty is religious sociology and social policy. His books include “Early Buddhist Keywords” (Sanga), and “Understanding in 45 Minutes!” Learn Buddhist words through numbers. ‘ (Magazine House), ‘English words to “knowledge” – the first time you can learn the English seminar format’, Teis project, translated by Archan Chau.[ 増補版] There are also “How to Let go of Life” and “Vipassana Meditation” by Mahashi Sayadou (all from Sanga). note: https://note.com/humahoshi Blog: https://huma.hatenablog.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/humahoshi List of Hoshi Hibi Yuma’s work on Shueisha Shinsho Plus https://shinsho-plus.shueisha.co.jp/?s=%E6%98%9F%E9%A3%9B%E9%9B%84%E9%A6%AC ☆Please follow Hoshi Hibi Yuma’s note and support us with the articles! ■Hoshi Himi Yuma | note https://note.com/humahoshi Request to continue the full text of note for free in the future https://note.com/humahoshi/n/ndc86c0acad25 Sato Tetsuro Born in Tokyo in 1972. Graduated from the Department of Indian Philosophy, Faculty of Letters, Faculty of Letters, Toyo University, Second Department. After working as a writer and magazine editor, he has been secretary general and current editor-in-chief of the Japan Terawada Buddhist Association since 2003. He is responsible for the evangelism work through the internet and edited the works of Elder Albomulle Sumanasarah. His books include “The Great Asian Thought Action: Another Modern History of Buddhism,” and “Declaration of Japan as “re-Buddhist”! ‘Sanga together. Co-authored works include “Keywords in Japanese Religious History,” Keio University Press. note: https://note.com/naagita Blog: http://naagita.hatenablog.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/naagita ~May the living and living be happy~

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