The Japanese philosophical term Kamo (sometimes written as 可も, meaning “acceptable” or “not bad”) offers a compelling answer. Originating in the 1930s works of Kiyoshi Miki (1897–1945), Kamo describes the specific feeling of being able to live “as if” one were at home, despite full awareness of the situation’s impermanence. This paper unpacks Kamo as an existential-aesthetic category, distinct from both Western nostalgia and Japanese mono no aware, and demonstrates its relevance to modern experiences of migration, temporary housing, and digital nomadism. Kiyoshi Miki, a philosopher of the Kyoto School but critical of its nationalist turns, was deeply influenced by Marxism, phenomenology, and hermeneutics. In his unfinished masterpiece The Historical Character of Foundational Experience (1938–1939), Miki introduced Kamo in the context of analyzing how humans construct practical meaning in unstable historical conditions. The Japanese philosophical term Kamo (sometimes written as
For Miki, foundational experience ( kiso keiken ) is not raw sensation but already shaped by tools, habits, and social relations. Within this, Kamo refers to the affective tonality of “provisional settlement.” He gives the example of a traveler staying overnight at a simple inn: the room is not one’s home, and the stay is temporary, yet one can arrange one’s belongings, sleep soundly, and feel a modest sense of comfort. That feeling—neither deep attachment nor utter alienation—is Kamo . Kiyoshi Miki, a philosopher of the Kyoto School
Author: [Generated for academic purpose] Course: Comparative Philosophy / Aesthetics Date: April 17, 2026 Abstract This paper examines the Japanese philosophical concept of Kamo (可も), a term developed by Kiyoshi Miki in his work Kiso Keiken no Rekishiteki Seikaku (The Historical Character of Foundational Experience). Unlike more familiar Japanese aesthetic ideas such as wabi-sabi or yūgen , Kamo addresses the affective experience of being temporarily “at home” in an unstable or transitional environment. The paper argues that Kamo offers a unique lens for understanding how humans find provisional comfort, agency, and meaning in conditions of impermanence. Through a reconstruction of Miki’s thought and comparisons with Western existentialism, this study positions Kamo as a valuable contribution to global discussions of place, time, and affect. 1. Introduction In contemporary philosophy of place, the notion of “dwelling” often evokes permanence, rootedness, and belonging. Martin Heidegger’s “Building Dwelling Thinking” famously links dwelling with a lasting, poetic inhabitation of the earth. However, what happens when dwelling is necessarily transient—when one inhabits a space only briefly, under precarious conditions, yet still experiences a sense of ease, functionality, or even coziness? Within this, Kamo refers to the affective tonality
A second limitation: Kamo remains undertheorized. Miki died before fully developing it, and postwar Japanese philosophy largely neglected the term. Reconstruction relies heavily on inference and comparative philosophy. Kamo —the feeling of “acceptable dwelling” in the temporary—is a minor but potent concept in modern Japanese thought. It challenges the Western philosophical emphasis on permanent belonging, offering instead an ethics and aesthetics of provisional arrangement. In an age of climate displacement, housing crises, and liquid modernity, Kamo provides a vocabulary for dignity without durability, comfort without ownership, and agency without roots.
The Japanese philosophical term Kamo (sometimes written as 可も, meaning “acceptable” or “not bad”) offers a compelling answer. Originating in the 1930s works of Kiyoshi Miki (1897–1945), Kamo describes the specific feeling of being able to live “as if” one were at home, despite full awareness of the situation’s impermanence. This paper unpacks Kamo as an existential-aesthetic category, distinct from both Western nostalgia and Japanese mono no aware, and demonstrates its relevance to modern experiences of migration, temporary housing, and digital nomadism. Kiyoshi Miki, a philosopher of the Kyoto School but critical of its nationalist turns, was deeply influenced by Marxism, phenomenology, and hermeneutics. In his unfinished masterpiece The Historical Character of Foundational Experience (1938–1939), Miki introduced Kamo in the context of analyzing how humans construct practical meaning in unstable historical conditions.
For Miki, foundational experience ( kiso keiken ) is not raw sensation but already shaped by tools, habits, and social relations. Within this, Kamo refers to the affective tonality of “provisional settlement.” He gives the example of a traveler staying overnight at a simple inn: the room is not one’s home, and the stay is temporary, yet one can arrange one’s belongings, sleep soundly, and feel a modest sense of comfort. That feeling—neither deep attachment nor utter alienation—is Kamo .
Author: [Generated for academic purpose] Course: Comparative Philosophy / Aesthetics Date: April 17, 2026 Abstract This paper examines the Japanese philosophical concept of Kamo (可も), a term developed by Kiyoshi Miki in his work Kiso Keiken no Rekishiteki Seikaku (The Historical Character of Foundational Experience). Unlike more familiar Japanese aesthetic ideas such as wabi-sabi or yūgen , Kamo addresses the affective experience of being temporarily “at home” in an unstable or transitional environment. The paper argues that Kamo offers a unique lens for understanding how humans find provisional comfort, agency, and meaning in conditions of impermanence. Through a reconstruction of Miki’s thought and comparisons with Western existentialism, this study positions Kamo as a valuable contribution to global discussions of place, time, and affect. 1. Introduction In contemporary philosophy of place, the notion of “dwelling” often evokes permanence, rootedness, and belonging. Martin Heidegger’s “Building Dwelling Thinking” famously links dwelling with a lasting, poetic inhabitation of the earth. However, what happens when dwelling is necessarily transient—when one inhabits a space only briefly, under precarious conditions, yet still experiences a sense of ease, functionality, or even coziness?
A second limitation: Kamo remains undertheorized. Miki died before fully developing it, and postwar Japanese philosophy largely neglected the term. Reconstruction relies heavily on inference and comparative philosophy. Kamo —the feeling of “acceptable dwelling” in the temporary—is a minor but potent concept in modern Japanese thought. It challenges the Western philosophical emphasis on permanent belonging, offering instead an ethics and aesthetics of provisional arrangement. In an age of climate displacement, housing crises, and liquid modernity, Kamo provides a vocabulary for dignity without durability, comfort without ownership, and agency without roots.