1
"The Kō-ji-ki," translated by B. H. Chamberlain, Vol. X.
Appendix; "The Revival of Pure Shin-tau," by Ernest Satow, Vol. III.
Appendix; "Ancient Japanese Rituals," by the same, Vols. VII, IX;
also "The Classical Poetry of the Japanese" by B. H. Chamberlain.
2
"Things Japanese," by B. H. Chamberlain, p. 71, 2nd Ed.
3
James Troup's translations of the Shin teaching, Vols. XIV, XVII of these
Transactions.
4
"The International Journal of Ethics," Vol. 1, No. 3, p. 307.
5
"Things Japanese," 2nd Edition, p. 92.
6
See "The Religions of China," Lecture I; and Faber's "A
Systematical Digest of the Doctrines of Confucius," pp. 44-53.
7
"The Religions of China," p. 180.
8
"The China Review" Vol. VIII, No. 1, p. 59.
9
Dr. Edkins ("The Phœnix" Vol. III, pp. 47-49) divides the
intellectual development of China into five stages;—1, Struggles for
Confucianism against various speculations, with Taoist doctrine gaining yearly;
2, The "Han", when the tone of speculation was predominantly Taoist;
3, The six dynasties, when Buddhism was triumphant; 4, The "Tang,"
luxurious and poetical; 5, The " Sung," and on to our day. In none of
these periods was "the purely human side of morals" the creed of
educated Chinamen." Some addition was always needed to satisfy their
intellectual and religious natures.
10
The Middle Kingdom, Vol. II, p. 165.
11
The Middle Kingdom, Vol. II, p. 166.
12
The Chinese philosophy is sometimes called "agnostic," so "a
friendly German critic" in "Things Japanese," p. 94, and that
too was once my opinion, "Ōsaka Conference," p. 115. It is not
agnostic, but pantheistic, as will abundantly appear.
13
The Middle Kingdom, Vol. II, p.174.
14
Mayers's "Manual," p. 34.
15
Shushi's name is variously written by writers in China, Chu-hsi, Choo He, Chu
He, Chu Hi and Ku Hsi. Dr. Legge has used much of Shushi's commentary in
connection with his various translations. Accounts of his life are given by
Mayer, p. 25; Meadows, The Chinese, Chap. XVIII; in the Chinese Repository,
Vol. XVIII, p. 206 f. A section of his writings has been translated by
Medhurst, Chinese Repository, Vol. XIII, pp. 552, 609 ff. Also by Canon
McClatchie,—"Chinese Cosmogony," being "Section Forty-Nine of
the Complete Works," with criticisms and defence in The China Review, Vol.
III, p. 342 f., Vol. IV, pp. 84, 342 ff. "The Middle Kingdom" has
various references to Shushi (Chu Hi), the most extended being Vol. I, pp.
682-685. An interesting account of some points in his philosophy is given by W.
A. P. Martin, D.D.,—"The Cartesian Philosophy before Descartes, (Extract
from the Journal of the Peking Oriental Society)." See also Faber's
"Doctrines of Confucius," pp. 32-33. Rev. Griffith John, Journal of
the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. II, No. I, pp.
37-44., "The Ethics of the Chinese."
16
"Between heaven and earth there is nothing so important, so almighty and
omnipresent as this breath of nature. . . Through it heaven and earth and every
creature live and move and have their being. Nature's breath is, in fact, but
the spiritual energy of the male and female principles."
"Feng-shui," p. 45.
17
"Feng-shui," pp. 5-9., See "Ki, Ri and Ten" below. Also my
"Comment" below for a further exposition, differing somewhat from
Eitel's.
18
"The Revival of Pure Shin-tau," pp. 13-14, 21-34.
19
### b. 1140 A.D. "In opposition to the critical philosophical erudition of
Chu-hsi, Lu desires rectification of heart and life to be the main point, as
the commencement and aim of study. There is no doubt that in this Confucius
stands on his side." Faber's "Doctrines of Confucius," p. 33.
20
Mayers's "Manual," p. 246. This brief paragraph is all I have been
able to find in English. A lecture recently given by Prof. Inoue of the
Imperial University is the authority for my account of Ōyōmei and his
philosophy. Printed in the Rikugo Zasshi—Feb. 1892.
21
Pneuma "is the totality of all existence; out of it the whole, visible
universe proceeds, hereafter to be resolved into it again. . . . Out of it
separated first the elemental fire, and this again condenses into air; a
further step in the downward path derives water and earth from the
solidification of air. . . . From the elements the one substance is transformed
into the multitude of individual things." Enc. Brit., art. Stoics. Compare
pp. 46-47 below.
22
For an example of the process of this "reification of the concept"
see p. 47 below.
23
This method professes to rest upon a phrase of Confucius. "the distinction
of things." See p. 43 note, below.
24
P. 72 below.
25
Ōyōmei's system may be studied in the ###, Den-shu-roku, the Zen-sho
and Zen-shu, ###.
26
Pp. 28 f. below.
27
Okina mondō. Vol. II p. 3.
28 Okina Mondō, Vol. V. p. 35.
29 Okina Mondō, Vol. I. p. 3.
28a
Okina Mondō, Vol. I. pp. 3-7. The Okina Mondō is a posthumous work of
Nakai Tōju printed in 1650 A.D. I printed an abridged translation in
"The Chrysanthemum," Vol. II., Nos 3, 4, 6, 8.
29a
Prof. T. Inoue.
30
The Rev. M. Uemura.
31
Okina Mondō, Vol. II., p. 34.
32
Okina Mondō, Vol. III., pp. 10-12.
33
Okina Mondō, Vol. III., pp. 12-14. Compare pp. 61 below.
34
Okina Mondō, Vol. IV., pp. 1-13.
35
During a time of scarcity Ōshio's wrath was excited by the heartless
conduct of an official in Ōsaka who refused to remit the taxes. So
Ōshio, influenced by his philosophical views to a democratic disregard of
official rank and right, led an assault upon the government warehouses, took
out the grain and distributed it to the people. The rising was quickly put down
and Ōshio suffered death as a criminal. Another account says that en route
to Satsuma he was lost at sea—"Dai Ni Hon Jim-mei Ji-sho." Vol. I:
### It is possible that the teachings of the Ōyōmei school were more
dangerous to the existing order than appears to a foreign student, and that
Tokugawa knew its own interests best as it forbade their propagation.
36
Jinsu and Sōrai were not orthodox. See Mr. Haga's "Note" below.
37 The Ancient Learning
School "Kogaku" also rested upon the modern Chinese School.—Faber's
Doctrines of Confucius, p. 34; and Mr. Haga's "Note" below.
38
Similar instances are found, of course, in Chinese history.
39
Pp. 41, 42 below.
40
Numerous translations of the sermons of this school have been printed, among
the earliest in A. B. Mitford's "Tales of Old Japan" pp. 288-326. The
sermons called Kyuō Dōwa and Shingaku Michi no Hanashi are best
known. Besides these there are among others;—Shō-ō Michi no Hanashi,
Dōni-ō Dō-wa, Shingaku-kyoyu-roku, and Zoku-zoku Kyuō
Dōwa.
41 P.
50 below.
42
The Okina Mondō, Vol. V. pp. 17-18.
43 P.
55 below.
44 P.
55 below.
45
The Okina Mondō, Vol. II., p. 31.
46 P.
60 below. Compare a
certain phase of Christian mysticism:—"Oh to be nothing, nothing;"
"A broken and empty vessel;" "Emptied, that He might fill
me;" "Broken, that so unhindered, His life through me might
flow."
47
The Okina Mondō, Vol. V
p. 26.
48 P.
40 below.
49
The worship of ancestors remains an inconsistency difficult of explanation in
Shushi's philosophy. He teaches (in the Gorui ###) that at death we are like
the flame: it ascends and disappears yet we cannot say that it has ceased to
be. It is the law that man's spirit (ki ###) dissolves at death, vanishes into
thin air; but there are exceptions. When men naturally, and, so to speak,
willingly die the spirit thus dissolves, but when they die violently, with
strong protest, the spirit remains for a time collected and may return and show
itself p. 24 and work harm. A man who was killed
by his adulterous wife appeared to her undoing, for his hatred held his spirit
together until vengeance was executed. But such exceptions are only for a time;
finally all alike return to the primeval spirit. Shushi thus saves his
philosophy and his orthodoxy.
50
The ### is the authority for these statements. His burial place is in the
section of the city now called Koishikawa. He wrote many books; among them the
most celebrated are the following: ###
51
Such collections are among the most valuable of the writings of the Chinese
also, Confucius and Shushi, among others, using this method.
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