Falsafah jawa suharto biography
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- Author / Creator
- Achmad, Sri Wintala, 1964- author
- Available as
- Physical
- Summary
Philosophy break into leadership amidst Javanese people.
- Creator
- Sri Wintala Achmad ; penyunting, Winarsho T
- Format
- Books
- Language
- Indonesian
- Publication
- Cetakan 1, Apr 2013
- Bantul, Yogyakarta Araska, 2013
- ISBNs
- 9786027934399, 6027934395
- OCLC
- ocn851868601
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 205-209)
- In Indonesian.
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Javanese people
Ethnic group of Indonesia
For other uses, see Javanese (disambiguation).
Ethnic group
A Javanese bride and groom in traditional wedding dresses | |
More than 100 million | |
Indonesia | 98,217,022 (2010)[2] |
---|---|
Malaysia | c. 1,500,000 (including Malaysian citizens counted as "Malays")[note 1] |
Saudi Arabia | 1,000,000 (2014) (Javanese and Indonesian descent are often referred to as 'Al-Jawi' which means people from the Javanese islands (modern Indonesia))[6][7][8] |
Singapore | c. 400,000 (including Singaporean citizens, more than 60% of Singaporean Malays are of Javanese descent)[9] |
Suriname | 102,000 (2019) (Javanese Surinamese)[10] |
Netherlands | 21,700[11][12] |
Sri Lanka | 8,500[13] |
New Caledonia | 4,100[14] |
Thailand | 3,000[15] |
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Predominantly Sunni Islam (97.15%) Minorities Christianity 2.56% (1.59% Protestant and 0.97% Roman • Indonesian philosophyAbstract speculation from the people of Indonesia Indonesian philosophy is a generic designation for the tradition of abstract speculation held by the people who inhabit the region now known as Indonesia. Indonesian philosophy is expressed in the living languages found in Indonesia (approximately 587 languages) and its national language Indonesian, comprising many diverse schools of thought with influences from Eastern and Western origins, and indigenous philosophical themes. The term Indonesian philosophy originates from the title of a book written by M. Nasroen, in which he traced philosophical elements found in Indonesian culture. Since then, the term has been popular and inspired many later writers like Sunoto, Parmono, and Jakob Sumardjo. Sunoto established the nation's first philosophy department at Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta in August, 1967.[2] Sunoto, Parmona, and Sumardjo each defined the word Indonesian philosophy differently. Without clearly defining the word, M. Nasroen argued that Indonesian philosophy was neither Western nor Eastern. He pointed to core Indonesian concepts and practices such as mupakat, pantun-pantun, Pancasila, hukum adat, gotong-royong, and kekeluargaan. Sunoto also embraced a culturalis |