Part
1 Range | fountain-head of their own ancient knowledge.~Thus Japan is a museum
2 Confuc| zenana-life of the East; that knowledge of the stars which they
3 Confuc| third emperor they made a knowledge of Confucianism compulsory
4 Nara | finally gave to Arabia the knowledge with which she was later
5 Heian | representations (1) of Power, which is knowledge; (2) of Wealth, which is
6 Heian | Amoghavajra, bringing further knowledge on his return from India
7 Ashika| fetters in which all forms of knowledge tended to enchain it. Zenism
8 Ashika| ignorance and so-called human knowledge. By freeing thought from
9 Ashika| eighty-four thousand gates of knowledge were like the meaningless
10 Meiji | array of differentiated~knowledge, and keen with the edge
11 Meiji | Tokugawas, which had spread the knowledge of reading and writing to
12 Meiji | Dutch traders came. The knowledge of geography which they
13 Meiji | coasts.~But the thirst for knowledge was not to be quenched.
14 Meiji | the flood-gates of Western knowledge, which burst over the country
15 Meiji | profound admiration for Western knowledge which confounded beauty
16 Meiji | and aiming at a love and knowledge of the most sympathetic
17 Meiji | artistic warfare; scientific knowledge of anatomy and perspective,
18 Vista | individuality as the ripe and living knowledge, the harmonised thought
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