2000 年 8 巻 p. 19-
A member of the Cogito school, Eijiro Nakajima (1910-45) accepts the anxiety of Schestov and proposes realism as a problem of how to live. From his view point, there are three ways for human beings to relate with nature: past as (in) death, future as (in) love, and present as (in) life. He says, moreover, that there are two kinds of present ways of life. One is present mixed with the past and future, which is explained by Heidegger's Gerede. The other is present as a moment, whose meaning is based on, what Schelling calls the escape from the Abgrund. It seems that the realism of Nakajima not only comprehends Schelling's thought as a whole, but it also gives a hint about the mediation of Romanticism and Existentialism.