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  • Japanese philosophy has historically been a fusion of both indigenous Shinto and continental

  • religions, such as Buddhism and Confucianism.

  • Formerly heavily influenced by both Chinese philosophy and Indian philosophy, as with

  • Mitogaku and Zen, much modern Japanese philosophy is now also influenced by Western philosophy.

  • == Ancient and medieval thought ==

  • Before feudalism was firmly established in Japan, Buddhism occupied the mainstream of

  • Japanese thought.

  • The Buddhist culture introduced politically by Prince Shōtoku is completed as the "making

  • a country safe" thought in the Nara period.

  • When the Heian period (794–1185) began, in substitution for the "making a country

  • safe thought", form of esoteric Buddhism collectively known as mikkyō became widespread.

  • However, in the late noble era when pessimism was popular due to the "belief that Buddhism

  • will decline during the latter days of this world", the Pure Land movements spread out

  • encouraging anticipation of a "future life" as a means to cope with desperation over "life

  • in this world".

  • During the Kamakura period (1185–1333) when government dominated by the samurai class

  • began, a “newBuddhism for the newly-risen class (samurai) appears.

  • === Arrival of Buddhism and early influence in Japan ===

  • In ancient Japan, the arrival of Buddhism closely relates the national construction

  • and the national centralization of power.

  • Prince Shōtoku and the Soga family fought and overcame the Mononobe family, who had

  • handled the ancient Japanese religion, and elaborated a plan for national governance

  • based on the unification of the legal codes system and Buddhism.

  • While cooperating with the Soga family, Prince Shōtoku, who was the regent of the Empress

  • Suiko, showed a deep understanding in "foreign" Buddhism, and planned to stabilize national

  • politics through the use of Buddhism.

  • The thought that national peace and security came through the power of Buddhism is called

  • the "making a country safe" thought.

  • In the Nara period, in particular the times of Emperor Shōmu, the Kokubun-ji temples

  • and Kokubun-ni-ji temples were erected throughout the whole country anddai-ji Temple and

  • the Daibutsu were erected in Nara.

  • The Buddhist policy of the state reached its apex during the Nara period, as evidenced

  • by Jianzhen of the Tang dynasty bringing an imperial ordination platform to Todai-ji Temple,

  • While Nara Buddhism followed only the "making a country safe" thought, Heian Buddhism brought

  • not only national peace and security but also the personal worldly profit.

  • Because practitioners of Heian Buddhism frequently performed severe ascetic practices, incantations

  • and prayers in the mountains, this Buddhism came to be called mikkyō.

  • kai, a Buddhist monk, learned Chinese esoteric Buddhism while on a diplomatic mission to

  • the Chinese court, and combined Japanese Buddhism with Chinese esoteric Buddhist practices to

  • form Japanese Shingon Buddhism.

  • Saichō, a Buddhist monk who also journeyed to China, learned the practices of the Chinese

  • Tendai sect and argued that the teachings of the Lotus Sutra should be the core of Japanese

  • Buddhism.

  • By the late Heian era, the earthly focus of Heian Buddhism led Buddhist monks to declare

  • a "sinful age" wherein the possibility of relief in this world was denied and therefore

  • a trend of looking for reincarnation to the Buddhists' paradise after death arose.

  • Additionally, the new thought that "Buddhism will decline during the latter days of this

  • world" led to the rise of the Pure Land movement.

  • This movement, spearheaded byya, a follower of Pure Land Buddhism, preached faith to the

  • Amitābha and taught that all people could reach the Buddhist paradise, not just Buddhist

  • monks.

  • === Kamakura Buddhism === Thedo faith, which affected by the Jodo

  • sect of the late Heian period, relies on salvation through the benevolence of Amitābha, and

  • is going to be relieved by its power.

  • nen, who initiated the Jodo sect of Buddhism, abandoned other ascetic practices entirely.

  • He preached his pupils to believe in Amitabha and to earnestly pray "namu-amida-butsu",

  • and so they would go to the paradise.

  • His pupil, Shinran who initiated Pure Land Buddhism, thoroughly carried out Honen's teaching

  • and preached the absolute dependence.

  • In addition, Shinran advocated that an object of the relief of the Amitabha was a criminal

  • who was aware of a worldly and desirous criminal oneself.

  • Ippen, who initiated the Jishu sect, began "the chanting religious dance".

  • As contrast with dependent Jōdō faith, Zen Buddhism attempts to be spiritually self-awakened

  • by Zen meditation.

  • Eisai learned Rinzai sect in China.

  • He gave pupils a difficult problem and he made them solving the problem, and so his

  • pupils would be enlightened by themselves.

  • Rinzai Zen was supported widely by the upper samurai class in the Kamakura period.

  • gen learned Sōtō sect in China.

  • Oppose to Eisai, he preached enlightenment by earnest sitting meditation (zazen).

  • Soto Zen was supported by the local samurais.

  • Most schools of Nichiren Buddhism (Japanese: 法華系仏教 Hokke-kei Bukkyō) refer to

  • the priest and teacher Nichiren as their founding father.

  • In his teachings he underlined the, to his mind, supremacy of the Lotus Sutra.

  • He advocated the attainment of Buddhahood during one's lifetime and regarded his interpretation

  • of the Buddhist teachings the correct form of practice for the Latter Day of the Law

  • mappō.

  • One of his major treatises is the "Rissho Ankoku Ron" (On Establishing the Correct teaching

  • for the Peace of the Land).

  • The chanting of the Mantra "Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō" is to this day the central practice

  • to almost all Nichiren Buddhist schools and organisations.

  • == Early modern thought ==

  • Whereas the ancient and medieval thought of Japan was tied closely to Buddhism, the early

  • modern thought of Japan was mainly Confucianism or Neo-Confucianism, which was designated

  • for official study of the Tokugawa shogunate.

  • In addition, rational Confucianism stimulated Kokugaku, Rangaku and the non-official popular

  • thought after the middle Edo period.

  • === Confucianism ===

  • In the Edo period, Confucianism was the authorised study.

  • Various schools of neo-Confucianism were popular.

  • The Zhu Xi school of neo-Confucianism respected family-like feudal social position order.

  • Hayashi Razan assumed the Zhu Xi school of neo-Confucianism to be the theoretical basics

  • of the Tokugawa shogunate.

  • Through the principle of civilian government, Yushima Seidō dedicating to Confucius was

  • established.

  • By the Kansei Reforms, the Zhu Xi school of neo-Confucianism were still more strengthened

  • and authorized by the Tokugawa shogunate.

  • In addition, the thought of a school of the Zhu Xi school of neo-Confucianism gave big

  • influence to the political movement advocating reverence for the Emperor and the expulsion

  • of foreigners of the late Tokugawa era.

  • In contrast with the Zhu Xi school of neo-Confucianism, the Wang Yangming school of neo-Confucianism

  • respecting practical ethics consistently monitored and oppressed by the Tokugawa shogunate because

  • of criticisms for the socio-political conditions under the Tokugawa shogunate.

  • The third schools of neo-Confucianism took consideration into the real intentions of

  • original texts by Confucius and Mencius.

  • Yamaga Sokō established his philosophy on Confucian ethics, and assumed the samurai

  • to be the highest class.

  • Itō Jinsai paid attention to "ren" of Confucius and he respected "ren" as the love for another

  • person and "truth" as pure consideration.

  • In addition, deriving from his substantial studies of ancient Chinese classics, Ogyū

  • Sorai insisted that original Confucian spirit is to rule the world and to save a citizen.

  • === Kokugaku and Rangaku ===

  • In the middle of the Edo period, Kokugaku, the study of ancient Japanese thought and

  • culture, became popular against foreign ideas such as Buddhism or Confucianism.

  • By Sakoku policy of the Tokugawa shogunate, Edo intellectuals could not have any positive

  • contact with Western civilization, and so Rangaku, Dutch learning, was the only window

  • to the West.

  • In the middle days of the Edo period, Kokugaku became popular while being influenced by positivist

  • Confucianism with nationalism as a background.

  • Kokugaku positively studied ancient Japanese thought and culture, including "Kojiki", "Nihon

  • Shoki" and "Man'yōshū", and they aimed at excavating original moral culture of Japan

  • which was different from Confucianism and Buddhism.

  • Kamo no Mabuchi wrestled with the study of "Manyoshu" and called "masurao-buri" for masculine

  • and tolerant style, and he evaluated the collection as pure and simple.

  • Through his study of the Kojiki, Motoori Norinaga argued that the essence of the Japanese literature

  • came from "mono no aware" which was natural feelings to occur when you contacted with

  • an object.

  • He respected Japanese "Yamato spirit" instead of Chinese (Confucianism / Buddhism) "Kara

  • spirit".

  • According to him, Kokugaku should pursue Japanese old way of "Shinto".

  • Through his study of Kokugaku, Hirata Atsutane advocated nationalistic State Shinto, the

  • obedience to the Emperor and abolition of Confucianism and Buddhism.

  • It was a driving force to the end of the Tokugawa shogunate and the Meiji Restoration.

  • In Sakoku period of the Edo period, there was no direct contact with the West, but,

  • Rangaku became popular by encouraging importation of Western books translated in Chinese from

  • China during the Kyōhō Reforms.

  • Maeno Ryotaku and Sugita Genpaku translated Dutch "Tafel Anatomie" into Japanese.

  • Dutch learning unfolded to other Western studies such as British, French and American studies

  • by the late Tokugawa era.

  • The manner of "Japanese spirit, Western civilisation" was completed by Sakuma Shōzan's straightforward

  • expression, "Eastern ethics and Western technology".

  • Because Takano Chōei and Watanabe Kazan of the person of Dutch learning criticized Sakoku

  • strictly, they were oppressed by the Tokugawa shogunate.

  • === Popular thought === In the Edo period, private schools were opened

  • by samurais, merchants and scholars who played an active part.

  • Their thoughts were criticisms for the dominant feudal order.

  • Ishida Baigan synthesized Confucianism, Buddhism and Shinto, and established practical philosophy

  • for the masses.

  • He recommended working hard at commerce as the effect by honesty and thrift.

  • Ando Shoeki called nature's world the ideal society where all human beings engaged in

  • farming and they lived self-sufficiently without artificiality.

  • He criticized a lawful society where there were feudal class discrimination and the difference

  • between the rich and poor.

  • Ninomiya Sontoku insisted that people must repay the virtues, which supported their existence,

  • with own virtue.

  • == Late Modern thought ==

  • While the early modern Japanese thought developed in Confucianism and Buddhism, English Enlightenment

  • and French human rights were prevalent after the Meiji Restoration rapidly affected by

  • Western thought.

  • From the time of Sino- and Russo-Japanese Wars, Japanese capitalism highly developed.

  • Christianity and socialism developed and they tied to various social movements.

  • In addition, nationalistic thought and study were formed while being opposed to foreign

  • study.

  • === The Enlightenment and people's rights ===

  • In the Meiji Restoration, English and French civil society was introduced, in particular,

  • utilitarianism and social Darwinism from England, and popular sovereignty of Jean-Jacques Rousseau

  • from France.

  • The thinkers of the early Meiji period advocated British Enlightenment derived from Western

  • civil society.

  • They attempted to criticise Japanese traditional authority and feudalism.

  • However they were finally in harmony with the government and accepted the modernization

  • from the above without the radicalness.

  • In 1873, Mori Arinori formed Meirokusha.

  • The people who gathered in this cultural association had much in common with points such as regarding

  • practical learning as important, catching human characteristics practically and assuming

  • the form of government that accepted the conditions of a country an ideal.

  • Mori Arinori promoted national education as Minister of Education.

  • Nishi Amane affirmed a human behaviour based on interest.

  • Katō Hiroyuki threw away natural rights under influence of social Darwinism, and instead

  • advocated the survival of the fittest.

  • Fukuzawa Yukichi who introduced British utilitarianism to Japan advocated the natural rights assumed

  • that the human rights were given from the heaven.

  • He considered the development of the civilization to be the development of the human spirit,

  • and it was assumed that one's independence led to independence of one country.

  • Fukuzawa thought that there was the government in "sake of the convenience", and its appearance

  • should be suitable to the culture.

  • He said that there is no single ideal form of government.

  • In addition, he insisted that Japan should have gone into the continent externally against

  • the Great Powers.While members of Meirokusha finally advocated harmonization of the government

  • and people, democratic thinkers absorbed radical people's rights from France and they supported

  • national resistance and revolution verbally against the Meiji oligarchy after the Satsuma

  • Rebellion.

  • In 1874, Itagaki Taisuke introduced the establishment of the elected legislature.

  • It spread nationwide as the Freedom and People's Rights Movement.

  • Ueki Emori helped Itagaki and he drew up a radical draft.

  • Strongly influenced from Rousseau, Nakae Chōmin argued for people's sovereignty and individual

  • freedom.

  • However, concerning with Japanese situation, he pointed out the importance of parliamentary

  • monarchy.

  • According to him, the Imperial Constitution should be gradually revised by the Diet.

  • From the late period of Meiji to the Taishō era, a democratic trend spread as a background

  • of bourgeois political consciousness.

  • Its current led to political movements for safeguarding the Constitution and for the

  • popular election.

  • Yoshino Sakuzō argued for party cabinet politics and popular election.

  • He did not deeply pursue who was the sovereign but he insisted political goal aim for people's

  • happiness and political decision aim for people's intention.

  • Minobe Tatsukichi interpreted a sovereign as not an emperor but the state.

  • According to him, an emperor just only excises his power as the highest organ under the Meiji

  • Constitution.

  • Although his theory was widely acknowledged at first, he was politically suppressed by

  • the military and the rightists afterwards.

  • In 1911, Hiratsuka Raichō formed Seitosha.

  • She asked for awakening of women's own and development of feminist movement.

  • While Yosano Akiko denied gender difference, Raicho emphasised motherhood raising a child

  • and she acknowledged the official aids for women to demonstrate their feminine ability.

  • In 1920, Raicho formed a new association for women with Ichikawa Fusae and Oku Mumeo.

  • Soon after their activities were successful in women's participating at political address,

  • the association were broken up by an internal split.

  • Later, Ichikawa formed a new one and continued a movement for female suffrage.

  • === Christianity and socialism ===

  • It was Christians and socialists who struggled with social contradictions derived from Japanese

  • modernity.

  • Christian social movements were active after the Sino- and Russo-Japanese Wars which brought

  • capitalism and its contradiction to Japanese society.

  • Many Japanese socialists were influenced by Christian humanism, and in that point they

  • were deeply associated with Christianity.

  • Christianity, banned by the Tokugawa shogunate, influenced many Meiji intellectuals.

  • Uchimura Kanzō developed "two Js" to unite Bushido and Christian spirit.

  • He believed that his calling was to serve "Japan" and "Jesus".

  • He argued for the nonchurch movement.

  • He challenged the Imperial Rescript on Education and spoke against the Russo-Japanese War.

  • Nitobe Inazō was a Quaker and attempted to unite Japanese culture and Christianity.

  • He introduced Japanese culture abroad and he became secretary-general of the League

  • of Nations.

  • Joseph Hardy Neesima studied theology abroad in the United States.

  • He established Doshisha University at Kyoto and he was engaged in Christian character

  • building.

  • About the time of Sino- and Russo-Japanese wars, Japan succeeded in capitalization through

  • the industrial revolution as soon as socialism spread against capitalism.

  • However, the social movements were suppressed by the security police law of 1900, and finally

  • in the High Treason Incident of 1910 socialists were pressed by the military and the fascist

  • government ... Kawakami Hajime wrote articles about poverty in a newspaper.

  • He emphasized personal remodelling to solve poverty at first, however, later he became

  • Marxist and he argued for social remodelling by social compulsion.

  • toku Shūsui originally attempted to realize socialism through the Diet, however, he became

  • a unionist and he argued for a direct action by a general strike.

  • He was executed as the mastermind of the high treason incident of 1910.

  • Osugi Sakae argued for individual freedom using the principles of anarchism and unionism.

  • He was seen as a threat by the government and was assassinated by military police in

  • the disorder following the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake.

  • === The development of Japanism ===

  • The Age of Enlightenment, Christianity and socialism have influenced Japanese thought

  • since the Meiji Restoration.

  • The emphasis on Japanese political culture and national tradition rose as a reaction

  • against westernization.

  • This trend has had an ideological side of legitimizing imperialism and militarism/fascism.Tokutomi

  • Sohō published a magazine in which he argued for liberal democracy and populism against

  • Japanese westernization.

  • However, he was disillusioned with the bourgeois who should play a political part in ... Kuga

  • Katsunan regarded Japanese political culture and national tradition very highly.

  • He aimed for restoration and enhancement of national emotion; however, he was not a narrow-minded

  • nationalist.

  • He criticized the military and argued for a parliamentary system of government and expansion

  • of suffrage.

  • After the Meiji Restoration, Japanese government protected Shinto and treated it well not as

  • a special religion but as State Shinto.

  • The government closely related Shinto with the holy emperor, and they used Shinto as

  • a tool for their state governance.

  • State Shinto was clearly distinguished from private sects of Shinto religion.

  • It was a model of ideological state governance to form State Shinto and to promulgate the

  • Imperial Rescript on Education.

  • Meiji statism attempted to restore national sovereignty and pursued imperialism and colonialism

  • through Sino- and Russo-Japanese Wars.

  • However, its militaristic trend developed to ultra-nationalism.

  • Kita Ikki advocated the exclusion of the zaibatsu, senior statesmen and political parties and

  • the establishment of government for direct connection with the emperor and the people.Yanagita

  • Kunio was at the forefront of study of Japanese folklore.

  • He named general public who are not political leaders and intellectuals asjomin”.

  • Other folklorists are Minakata Kumagusu, Yanagi Muneyoshi and Orikuchi Shinobu.

  • In pre-war Japan, German philosophy was eagerly studied and introduced.

  • However, from the late Meiji to Taishō period, Kyoto School attempted to harmonize Western

  • thought with Eastern thought such as Zen Buddhism.

  • Nishida Kitaro established an original thought by fusion of Zen and Western thought.

  • His thought is called as Nishida philosophy.

  • He insisted on pure experience in which there is no opposition between subjectivity and

  • objectivity.

  • His ontology derived from absolute nothingness.

  • Watsuji Tetsuro criticized Western selfish individualism.

  • His ethics says human beings are not isolated existence but related existence.

  • He insisted that individual and social beings should be aware of their own individuality

  • and social membership.

  • He is also well known as his Climate and Culture in which he studied the relationship between

  • natural environment and local lifestyle.

  • === Contemporary Japanese philosophy === After World War II, many academic philosophers

  • have published books on Continental philosophy and American philosophy.

  • Among those Shozo Omori, Wataru Hiromatsu, Yasuo Yuasa, and Takaaki Yoshimoto created

  • original works under the influence of Marxism, phenomenology and analytic philosophy.

  • Shozo Omori created a unique monist epistemology based on his concepts of "representation monism",

  • "double depiction", and "language animism".

  • Wataru Hiromatsu developed his theory of "multi-subjective ontological structure of the world".

  • Yasuo Yuasa advanced a new theory of the body influenced by Merleau-Ponty and the body image

  • found in Chinese medicine.

  • Takaaki Yoshimoto is famous for his "shared illusion theory" and various philosophical

  • essays on Japanese culture.

  • Today, such scholars as Kojin Karatani (literary theory), Hitoshi Nagai (solipsism), Shigeki

  • Noya (analytic philosophy), Masahiro Morioka (philosophy of life), and Motoyoshi Irifuji

  • (analytic philosophy) are considered to be characteristic philosophers in the Japanese

  • academy.

  • == See also == Budō

  • Giri (Japanese) Grace – "itsukushimi"

  • Haibutsu kishaku Hakkō ichiu

  • Hermit – e.g., Yoshida Kenkō, Kamono Chōmei Kami

  • Kokutai Ma (negative space)

  • Maruyama Masao – "Bamboo whisk" culture and "octopus pot" culture

  • Nihonjinron Shame society

  • Wabi-sabi Yamato-damashii

  • Taoism in Japan William Vorilong, one of the first Europeans

  • to get some knowledge about Japanese philosophy

  • == Notes ==

  • == Bibliography == TextsJames W. Heisig, Thomas P. Kasulis, John

  • C. Maraldo (eds.), Japanese Philosophy: A Sourcebook, Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi

  • Press, 2011.

  • David A. Dilworth & Valdo H. Viglielmo, with Agustin Jacinto Zavala (eds.), Sourcebook

  • for Modern Japanese Philosophy: Selected Documents, Westport: Greenwood Press, 1998.

  • R. Tsunoda, W.T.de Bary, D. Keene (eds.), Sources of Japanese Traditions, New York:

  • Columbia University Press, 1964, 2 vols.StudiesH.

  • Gene Blocker, Christopher L. Starling, Japanese Philosophy, Albany, N.Y.: State University

  • of New York Press, 2001.

  • Hajime Nakamura, History of Japanese thought: 592–1868.

  • Japanese Philosophy before Western Culture Entered Japan, LondonNew York: Kegan

  • Paul, 1969.

  • Gino K. Piovesana, Contemporary Japanese Philosophical Thought, New York: St John's University Press,

  • 1969.

  • == External links == Japanese philosophy: Routledge Encyclopedia

  • of Philosophy Online Japanese Aesthetics by Graham Parkes in the

  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

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