Nishida - Jav _verified_

For Nishida, the self is not a substance but an act of self-awareness within a place. In Java, an object is not a thing in memory but a reference — a pointer to a place. The object’s identity is inseparable from the context (heap, stack, classloader). Without the JVM’s basho , the object is just bytes. Without basho , the self is just a thought.

: Versions of videos that have had mosaics removed or were filmed specifically for the overseas market. nishida jav

: Article 175 of the Japanese Penal Code requires the use of digital mosaics (blurring) over specific anatomy in domestic releases. This has led to a secondary market of "uncensored" content specifically produced for international distribution. For Nishida, the self is not a substance

Finally, Nishida speaks of death not as annihilation but as return to the formless. Java’s garbage collector is a quiet, unseen gardener. When no references remain to an object, it becomes unreachable — not destroyed, but released back into the place of unallocated memory. The object, once active in the world of references, becomes nothing — yet that nothing sustains new objects to come. Without the JVM’s basho , the object is just bytes

In the Kyoto school, Kitarō Nishida spoke of basho — a “place of nothingness” that is not a container but the very ground where objects, predicates, and selves come to be known. Java, too, has its basho : the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). It is a place of execution, neither purely hardware nor software, but a logical space where objects are born, interact, and are finally collected — returned to nothingness.