[QUOTE=Surya Deva;34392]I have studied a large majority of it, yes. In Western Philosophy I have Western philosophy from the Greeks to contempoary philosophy. In Eastern Philosophy I have studied the origins of Philosophy from the Vedas to contempoary Eastern philosophy, including various subtraditions within that line Taoism, Confuncianism, Buddhism, Jainism, Charvaka, Sikhism, Tantra.
I know the fundamental and general differences between the Eastern mind and the Western mind. The Eastern mind is holistic and the Western mind is divisive.[/QUOTE]
I am not sure you understand the western philosophy you have read, that or you read it with a preconception as to see what you wanted to see.
Ever studied Legalism? It’s eastern.
Ever read the Koran?
Ever read the Bible?
Ever read the Tibetan Book of the Dead?
And there are those that will argue (both eastern and western) that Buddhism (they are generally referring to Tibetan Buddhism) is Nihilistic
As to western Philosophy being divisive meaning creating disunity or dissension
I’m not sure Aristotle or Kant or any other number of Western Philosophers would agree
To quote a Western Philosopher
Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves. (Carl Jung)
We cannot change anything unless we accept it. Condemnation does not liberate, it oppresses. (Carl Jung)
But this is going way off topic and IMO a thing for another post, my apologies to the OP