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Comte, Mill, and the Thought of Nishi Amane in Meiji Japan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2011
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One aspect of the intellectual upheaval which accompanied the Meiji Restoration of 1868 was the phenomenon of bummei kaika, “civilization and enlightenment.” Although it may be useful to think of the early Meiji years as a Japanese siècle de lumières, it is significant that the country's most progressive scholars derived their main inspiration from such contemporaneous Western social philosophies as positivism and utilitarianism, not the European enlightenment of the eighteenth century. It is natural that the proponents of bummei kaika turned for guidance to John Stuart Mill and Auguste Comte rather than Diderot or Rousseau, because their goal was to expose Japan to those urbane modes of thought from abroad which would bring her to the “civilized” stage of development envisaged by European social philosophy. The means to be employed consisted of empiricism, not abstract reasoning: “what we should call the truly enlightened world,” wrote Tsuda Mamichi in 1874, “is when practical studies become popular in our country and each person attains an understanding of truth.” Similarly, Fukuzawa Yukichi took nineteenth century England, not eighteenth century France, as the model for Japan's efforts to achieve “enlightenment.”
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References
1 Rousseau was not introduced to Japan until 1877, for all practical purposes. See Tōru, Miyagawa, “Nihon no keimō shisō” [“Japanese Enlightenment Thought”], Kōza kindai shisō [Colloquium on Recent Thought], ed. Musashi, Kaneko and Hisao, Ötsuka, IX (Tokyo, 1959), 141Google Scholar.
2 “Kaika o susumeru hōhö o ronzu” [“Discussion of the Methods of Promoting Enlightenment”], Meiroku zasshi [Journal of the Meiji Six Society], No. 3 (Tokyo, Feb. 1874)Google Scholar, in Meiji bunka zenshū [Collection on Meiji Culture], ed. Sakuzō, Yoshino (Tokyo, 1927–1930), XVIII, 65Google Scholar.
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9 Ōgai, p. 135.
10 The text, together with photographic reproductions of the entire original notes, was first published in NAZS 1945, pp. 3–562. The text is supplemented by notes taken by Nishi's pupil Nagami Yutaka. Hereafter Hyakugakfi renkan will be cited as HGRK.
11 HGRK, pp. 62–65. See Piovesana, p. 16.
12 HGRK, pp. 66–67.
13 The most important was Seisei hatsuun [The Relation of the Physical and the Spiritual], NAZS 1960, pp. 29–129.
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18 HGRK, p. 145.
19 I am indebted to Professor Joseph R. Levenson for suggestions on this point.
20 HGRK, p. 55.
21 This work may be found in NAZS 1960, pp. 232–89.
22 Chichi keimō appears in NAZS 1960, pp. 390–450.
23 HGRK, p. 146.
24 Sec Blacker, p. 29, and Abosch, David, “Katō Hiroyuki and the Introduction of German Political Thought in Japan: 1868–1883” (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation in history, University of California, Berkeley, 1964), p. 322Google Scholar.
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26 For Mill, see Principles of Political Economy, ed. Ashley, W. J. (London, 1909), pp. 795–96Google Scholar.
27 For Comte, see Court de philosophic positive (Paris, 1830–42) VI.Google Scholar
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30 See Charlton, pp. 5–7, for a summary of the various types of positivism.
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36 Liberty was first published in England in 1859, and Nakamura's translation was a complete one. Nagamine Hideki published a partial translation of Representative Government (1861) as Daigi seitai in 1875. Hayashi Shigeru and Suzuki Jūkō brought out a complete translation of Political Economy (1848) as Keizai ron in 1875. See Asō, p. 177.
37 Asō, p. 83.
38 Saburo, Ienaga and Kenji, Ino, “Kindai shisō no tanjō to zasetsu” [“The Birth and Collapse of Recent Thought”], Kindai Nihon shisōshi kōza [Colloquium on Recent Japanese Thought], ed. Saburō, Ienaga, I (Tokyo, 1959), 51–52Google Scholar.
39 On this point see Asō, p. 177; Shin'ichi, Funayama, Nihon no kannenronsha [Japanese Idealists], (Tokyo, 1956), pp. 48–49Google Scholar; Kyōichi, Kazue and Toru, Sagara, Nihon no rinri [Japanese Ethics] (Tokyo, 1959). PP. 175–76Google Scholar.
40 This theme, of course, is not unique to the Meiji period or to Japan. Cf. the search by Japanese intellectuals for the moral basis of “democratization” after World War II, especially in such works as Osaragi Jirō, Homecoming, trans. Brewster Horowitz (Rutland, Vt. and Tokyo, 1955).
41 Rigaku appeared in two volumes. System of Logic was first published in England in 1843, while Utilitarianism appeared serially in Fraser's magazine in 1861 and as a separate book in 1863.
42 It is contained in NAZS 1960, pp. 514–54. Hereafter Jinsei sampōsetsu will be cited as JSSPS.
43 JSSPS, p. 514
44 JSSPS, p. 515.
45 JSSPS, p. 515.
46 JSSPS, p. 519.
47 JSSPS, p. 515.
48 JSSPS, p. 515.
49 JSSPS, p. 519.
50 JSSPS, p. 521.
51 JSSPS, P. 527.
52 JSSPS, p. 528.
53 JSSPS, p. 546.
54 JSSPS, p. 532. By public Nishi meant society, not the state.
55 See Ryōen, Minamoto, “Meiji ishin to jitsugaku shisō” [“The Meiji Restoration and Practical Thought”], Meiji ishinshi no mondaiten [Problems of Meiji Restoration History], ed. Yoshio, Sakata 1962), pp. 116–17Google Scholar.
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57 JSSPS, p. 534.
58 JSSPS, p. 534.
59 As expressed in “Representative Government,” in Utilitarianism, Liberty, and Representative Government, ed. Lindsay, A. D. (New York and London, 1951), pp. 271–92Google Scholar.
60 JSSPS, pp. 535–36.
61 JSSPS, p. 536.
62 JSSPS, p. 540.
63 JSSPS, p. 541.
64 JSSPS, p. 541.
65 For a discussion of Fukuzawa's ideas on this point, see Carmen Blacker's summary of Gakumon no susume, in Blacker, pp. 57–58.
66 JSSPS, p. 542.
67 For a less sanguine appraisal of the effects of keimō thought in general, see Blacker, pp. 138–39.
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