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Sekimon Shingaku: the Popularization of the Learning of the Mind of the Mind in Eighteenth Century Japan
著者 Sawada, Janine Anderson
出版年月日1990
ページ660
出版者Columbia University
出版サイト http://www.columbia.edu/
出版地New York, NY, US [紐約, 紐約州, 美國]
資料の種類博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
言語英文=English
学位博士
学校Columbia University
学部・学科名Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
指導教官De Bary, William Theodore
卒業年1990
キーワードReligious Education; Zen
抄録Sekimon Shingaku was a popular religious group of Tokugawa Japan. It originated as a small study-circle centered on the merchant Ishida Baigan (1685-1744), but grew into a large-scale movement after his death. The dissertation is a historical analysis of the later development of Shingaku, with particular emphasis on its program of religious education. The discussion covers Shingaku ideas and practices in the years in which Baigan's successor Teshima Toan (1718-86) and his most important disciple, Nakazawa Doni (1725-1803), were active as leaders--from about 1760 to 1803. During this period the movement spread to most regions of Japan.

Shingaku literally means learning of the mind or heart. The "learning of the mind" was an important strand of thought in the Neo-Confucian revival of Sung China. Teshima Toan took inspiration from this tradition of self-cultivation, as well as from popular Zen teachings of the mind. He taught that the beginning of all learning was the knowledge of one's own true nature or "original mind." Much of Toan's energy was devoted to systemizing the process of achieving and maintaining this internal knowledge. He especially sought to present his teaching in forms that could be easily grasped by uneducated common people.

This treatment gives particular attention to the function of Neo-Confucian and Zen traditions in Shingaku religious and moral education. The relative roles of these traditions in the movement sheds light on the ways in which each was adaptable that through their popular teaching methods, Teshima Toan and his followers contributed to the development of education in early modern Japan. Several Shingaku writings from this period have been translated from the Japanese and are included in the Appendix.
ヒット数190
作成日2000.02.01
更新日期2016.04.26



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