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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And
+Psychic, by Sidney L. Gulick
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And Psychic
+
+Author: Sidney L. Gulick
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2004 [EBook #13831]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE, ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Michael Ciesielski and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE
+
+
++----------------------------------------------------------------+
+| THE GROWTH OF THE KINGDOM OF GOD |
+| By |
+| |
+| SIDNEY L. GULICK, M.A. |
+| |
+| Illustrated with Twenty-six Diagrams _12 mo, Cloth, $1.50_ |
+| |
+| "Commends itself to thoughtful, earnest men of any nation as a |
+| most valuable missionary paper. Mr. Gulick traces the |
+| Christian religion through history and up to now. The survey |
+| is calm, patient, thoroughly honest, and quietly assured." |
+| --_Evangelist_. |
+| |
+| FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY |
+| |
+| Publishers |
+| |
++----------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE
+
+_SOCIAL AND PSYCHIC_
+
+BY
+
+SIDNEY L. GULICK, M.A.
+
+_Missionary of the American Board in Japan_
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+NEW YORK CHICAGO TORONTO
+
+Fleming H. Revell Company
+
+LONDON AND EDINBURGH
+
+
+New York: 158 Fifth Avenue Chicago: 63 Washington Street Toronto: 27
+Richmond Street, W. London: 21 Paternoster Square Edinburgh: 30 St.
+Mary Street
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The present work is an attempt to interpret the characteristics of
+modern Japan in the light of social science. It also seeks to throw
+some light on the vexed question as to the real character of so-called
+race-nature, and the processes by which that nature is transformed. If
+the principles of social science here set forth are correct, they
+apply as well to China and India as to Japan, and thus will bear
+directly on the entire problem of Occidental and Oriental social
+intercourse and mutual influence.
+
+The core of this work consists of addresses to American and English
+audiences delivered by the writer during his recent furlough. Since
+returning to Japan, he has been able to give but fragments of time to
+the completion of the outlines then sketched, and though he would
+gladly reserve the manuscript for further elaboration, he yields to
+the urgency of friends who deem it wise that he delay no longer in
+laying his thought before the wider public.
+
+To Japanese readers the writer wishes to say that although he has not
+hesitated to make statements painful to a lover of Japan, he has not
+done it to condemn or needlessly to criticise, but simply to make
+plain what seem to him to be the facts. If he has erred in his facts
+or if his interpretations reflect unjustly on the history or spirit of
+Japan, no one will be more glad than he for corrections. Let the
+Japanese be assured that his ruling motive, both in writing about
+Japan and in spending his life in this land, is profound love for the
+Japanese people. The term "native" has been freely used because it is
+the only natural correlative for "foreign." It may be well to say that
+neither the one nor the other has any derogatory implication,
+although anti-foreign natives, and anti-native foreigners, sometimes
+so use them.
+
+The indebtedness of the writer is too great to be acknowledged in
+detail. But whenever he has been conscious of drawing directly from
+any author for ideas or suggestions, effort has been made to indicate
+the source.
+
+Since the preparation of the larger part of this work several
+important contributions to the literature on Japan have appeared which
+would have been of help to the writer, could he have referred to them
+during the progress of his undertaking. Rev. J.C.C. Newton's "Japan:
+Country, Court, and People"; Rev. Otis Cary's "Japan and Its
+Regeneration"; and Prof. J. Nitobe's "Bushido: The Soul of Japan,"
+call for special mention. All are excellent works, interesting,
+condensed, informative, and well-balanced. Had the last named come to
+hand much earlier it would have received frequent reference and
+quotation in the body of this volume, despite the fact that it sets
+forth an ideal rather than the actual state of Old Japan.
+
+Special acknowledgment should be made of the help rendered by my
+brothers, Galen M. Fisher and Edward L. Gulick, and by my sister, Mrs.
+F.F. Jewett, in reading and revising the manuscript. Acknowledgment
+should also be made of the invaluable criticisms and suggestions in
+regard to the general theory of social evolution advocated in these
+pages made by my uncle, Rev. John T. Gulick, well known to the
+scientific world for his contributions to the theory as well as to the
+facts of biological evolution.
+
+S.L.G.
+
+MATSUYAMA, JAPAN.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+INTRODUCTION 13
+
+
+I. PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS
+
+Occidental conceptions of the recent history of Japan--Japan seems to
+be contradicting our theory of national evolution--Similarities of
+ancient and modern Japan--Japanese evolution is "natural"--The study
+of Japanese social evolution is of unusual interest, because it has
+experienced such marked changes--Because it is now in a stage of rapid
+growth--And is taking place before our eyes--Also because here is
+taking place a unique union of Occidental and Oriental
+civilizations--Comparison between India and Japan, 23
+
+
+II. HISTORICAL SKETCH
+
+Mythology and tradition--Authentic history--Old Japan--The transition
+from Old to New Japan--New Japan--Compelled by foreign nations to
+centralize--Ideals and material instruments supplied from
+abroad--Exuberant Patriotism--"Ai-koku-shin," 35
+
+
+III. THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS
+
+Is Japan making progress?--Happiness as a criterion--The oppressive
+rule of militarism--The emptiness of the ordinary life--The condition
+of woman--"The Greater Learning for Woman"--Divorce--Progress
+defined--Deficiency of the hedonistic criterion of progress, 52
+
+
+IV. THE METHOD OF PROGRESS
+
+Progress a modern conception and ideal--How was the "cake of custom"
+broken?--"Government by discussion" an insufficient principle of
+progress--Two lines of progress, Ideal and Material--The significance
+of Perry's coming to Japan--Effect on Japan of Occidental ideas--The
+material element of progress--Mistaken praise of the simplicity of Old
+Japan, L. Hearn--The significance of the material element of
+civilization--Mastery of nature--The defect of Occidental
+civilization, 61
+
+
+V. JAPANESE SENSITIVENESS TO ENVIRONMENT
+
+Our main question--Illustrations--Japanese students
+abroad--Sensitiveness to ridicule--Advantages and disadvantages of
+this characteristic--National sensitiveness to foreign
+criticism--Nudity--Formosa--Mental and physical
+flexibility--Adjustability--Some apparent exceptions--Chinese
+ideographs--How account for these characteristics, 72
+
+
+VI. WAVES OF FEELING--ABDICATION
+
+The Japanese are emotional--An illustration from politics--The
+tendency to run to extremes--Danger of overemphasizing this
+tendency--Japanese silent dissent--Men of balance in public
+life--Abdication--Gubbins quoted--Is abdication an inherent trait? 82
+
+
+VII. HEROES AND HERO-WORSHIP
+
+Popular national heroes--The craving for modern heroes--Townsend
+Harris's insight into Oriental character--Hero-worship an obstacle to
+missionary work--Capt. Jaynes--An experience in Kumamoto--"The sage of
+Omi"--"The true hero"--Moral heroes in Japan--The advantage and
+disadvantage of hero-worship--Modern moral heroes--Hero-worship
+depends on personality and idealism--The new social order is producing
+new ideals and new heroes, 89
+
+
+VIII. LOVE FOR CHILDREN
+
+Japanese love for children--Children's festivals--Toys and
+toy-stores--Do Japanese love children more than Americans
+do?--Importance in Japan of maintaining the family line--The looseness
+of the Japanese family tie--Early cessation of demonstrative
+affection--Infanticide, 96
+
+
+IX. MARITAL LOVE
+
+Affection between husband and wife--Occidental and Oriental estimate
+of woman contrasted--This a subject easily-misunderstood--Kissing a
+social habit unknown in Japan--Demonstrative affection a social, not a
+racial characteristic--Some specific illustrations, Dr. Neesima--A
+personal experience--Illegitimate children--Fraudulent
+registration--Adult adoption--Divorce--Monogamy, polygamy, and
+prostitution--Race character, social order, and affection--Position of
+women--The social order and affection--The social order and the
+valuation of man and woman--The new social order and the valuation of
+man--The spread of Christian ideals and the re-organization of the
+family, 102
+
+
+X. CHEERFULNESS--INDUSTRY--TRUTHFULNESS--SUSPICIOUSNESS
+
+Japanese cheerfulness--Festivals--Pessimism existent, but easily
+overlooked--The ubiquity of children gives an appearance of
+cheerfulness--Industry--Illustrations--Easy-going--Sociological
+interpretation--Mutual confidence and trustfulness--Relation to
+communalistic feudalism--Changes in the social order and in
+character--The American Board's experience in trusting Japanese
+honor--The Doshisha and its difficulties--Suspiciousness--Necessary
+under the old social order--The need of constant care in conversation,
+115
+
+
+XI. JEALOUSY--REVENGE--HUMANE FEELINGS
+
+Jealousy particularly ascribed to women--How related to the social
+order--Is jealousy limited to women?--Revenge--Taught as a moral
+duty--Revenge and the new social order--Are the Japanese cruel?--First
+impressions--Treatment of the insane--Of lepers--The cruelty and
+hardness of heart of Old Japan--Buddhistic teaching and
+practice--Buddhist and Christian Orphan Asylums--Treatment of
+horses--Torture in Old Japan--Crucifixion and transfixion by
+spears--Hard-heartedness cultivated under feudalism--Cruelty and the
+humane feelings in the Occident--Abolition of cruel customs in ancient
+and in Old Japan--Cruelty a sociological, not a biological
+characteristic--The rise of humane feelings--Doctors and
+hospitals--Philanthropy, 127
+
+
+XII. AMBITION--CONCEIT
+
+Ambition, both individual and national--The "Kumamoto
+Band"--Self-confidence and conceit--Refined in nature--Illustrations
+in the use of English--Readiness of young men to assume grave
+responsibilities--A product of the social order--Assumptions of
+inferiority by the common people--Obsequiousness--Modern
+self-confidence and assumptions not without ground--Self-confidence
+and success--Self-confidence and physical size--Young men and the
+recent history of Japan--The self-confidence and conceit of Western
+nations--The open-mindedness of most Japanese, 137
+
+
+XIII. PATRIOTISM--APOTHEOSIS--COURAGE
+
+"Yamato-Damashii": "The Soul of Japan"--Patriotism and the recent war
+with China--Patriotism of Christian orphans--Mr. Ishii--Patriotism is
+for a person, not for country--National patriotism is
+modern--Passionate devotion to the Emperor--A gift of 20,000,000 yen
+to the Emperor--The constitution derives its authority from the
+Emperor--A quotation from Prof. Yamaguchi--Japanese Imperial
+succession is of Oriental type--Concubines and children of the
+reigning Emperor--Apotheosis, Oriental and Occidental--Apotheosis and
+national unity--The political conflict between Imperial and popular
+sovereignty--Japanese and Roman apotheosis--Prof. Nash
+quoted--Courage--Cultivated in ancient times--A peculiar feature of
+Japanese courage--"Harakiri"--E. Griffis quoted--A boy hero--Relation
+of courage to social order--Japanese courage not only physical--modern
+instance of moral courage, 144
+
+
+XIV. FICKLENESS--STOLIDITY--STOICISM
+
+Illustrations of fickleness--Prof. Chamberlain's
+explanation--Fickleness a modern trait--Continuity of purpose in spite
+of changes of method--The youth of those on whom responsibility
+rests--Fluctuation of interest in Christianity not a fair
+illustration--The period of fluctuation is passing
+away--Impassiveness--"Putty faces"--Distinguish between stupidity and
+stoicism--Stupid stolidity among the farmers--Easily removed--Social
+stolidity cultivated--Demanded by the old social order--The influence
+of Buddhism in suppressing expression of emotion--An illustration of
+suppressed curiosity--Lack of emotional manifestations when the
+Emperor appears in public--Stolidity a social, not a racial trait--A
+personal experience--The increased vivacity of Christian
+women--Relations of emotional to intellectual development and to the
+social order, 159
+
+
+XV. AESTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS
+
+The wide development of the æsthetic sense in Japan--Japanese æsthetic
+development is unbalanced--The sense of smell--Painting--Japanese art
+pays slight attention to the human form--Sociological
+interpretation--The nude in Japanese art--Relation to the social
+order--Art and immorality--Caricature--Fondness for the abnormal in
+nature--Abnormal stones--Tosa cocks--Æsthetics of speech--The æsthetic
+sense and the use of personal pronouns--Deficiency of the æsthetic
+development in regard to speech--Sociological explanations--Close
+relation of æsthetics and conduct--Sociological explanation for the
+wide development of the æsthetic sense--The classes lived in close
+proximity--The spirit of dependence and imitation--Universality of
+culture more apparent than real--Defects of æsthetic taste--Defective
+etiquette--How accounted for--Old and new conditions--"Western taste
+debasing Japanese art"--Illustration of aboriginal æsthetic
+defects--Colored photographs--Æsthetic defects of popular shrines--The
+æsthetics of music--Experience of the Hawaiian people--Literary
+æsthetic development--Aston quoted--Architectural æsthetic
+development--Æsthetic development is sociological rather than
+biological, 170
+
+
+XVI. MEMORY--IMITATION
+
+Psychological unity of the East and the West--Brain size and social
+evolution--The size of the Japanese brain--Memory--Learning Chinese
+characters--Social selection and mnemonic power--Japanese memory in
+daily life--Memory of uncivilized and semi-civilized peoples--Hindu
+memory--Max Müller quoted--Japanese acquisition of foreign
+languages--The argument from language for the social as against the
+biological distinction of races--The faculty of imitation; is not to
+be despised--Prof. Chamberlain's over-emphasis of Japanese
+imitation--Originality in adopting Confucianism and
+Buddhism--"Shinshu"--"Nichirenshu"--Adoption of Chinese
+philosophy--Dr. Knox's over-emphasis of servile adoption--Our
+ignorance of Japanese history of thought--A reason for Occidental
+misunderstanding--The incubus of governmental initiative--Relation of
+imitation to the social order, 189
+
+
+XVII. ORIGINALITY--INVENTIVENESS
+
+Originality in art--Authoritative suppression of originality--Townsend
+Harris quoted--Suppression of Christianity and of heterodox
+Confucianism--Modern suppression of historical research--Yet Japan is
+not wholly lacking in originality--Recent discoveries and
+inventions--Originality in borrowing from the West--Quotations from a
+native paper, 203
+
+
+XVIII. INDIRECTNESS--"NOMINALITY"
+
+"Roundaboutness"--Some advantages of this
+characteristic--Illustrations--Study of English for direct and
+accurate habits of thought--Rapid modern growth of
+directness--"Nominality"--All Japanese history an illustration--The
+Imperial rule only nominal--The daimyo as a figure-head--"Nominality"
+in ordinary life--In family relations--Illustrations in Christian
+work--A "nominal" express train--"Nominality" and the social order,
+210
+
+
+XIX. INTELLECTUALITY
+
+Do Japanese lack the higher mental faculties?--Evidence of
+inventions--Testimony of foreign teachers--Japanese students, at home
+and abroad--Readiness in public speech--Powers of generalization in
+primitive Japan--"Ri" and "Ki," "In" and "Yo"--Japanese use of Chinese
+generalized philosophical terms--Generalization and the social
+order--Defective explanation of puerile Oriental science--Relation to
+the mechanical memory method of education--High intellectuality
+dependent on social order, 218
+
+
+XX. PHILOSOPHICAL ABILITY
+
+Do Japanese lack philosophical ability?--Some opinions--Some
+distinctions--Japanese interest in metaphysical problems--Buddhist and
+Confucian metaphysics--Metaphysics and ethics--Japanese students of
+Occidental philosophy--A personal experience--"The little
+philosopher"--A Buddhist priest--Rarity of original philosophical
+ability and even interest--Philosophical ability and the social order
+in the West, 225
+
+
+XXI. IMAGINATION
+
+Some criticisms of Japanese mental traits--Wide range of imaginative
+activity--Some salient points--Unbalanced imaginative
+development--Prosaic matter-of-factness--Visionariness--Impractical
+idealism--Illustrations--An evangelist--A principal--Visionariness in
+Christian work--Visionariness in national ambition--Imagination and
+optimism--Mr. Lowell's opinion criticised--Fancy and
+imagination--Caricature--Imagination and imitation--Sociological
+interpretation of visionariness--And of prosaic
+matter-of-factness--Communalism and the higher mental
+powers--Suppression of the constructive imagination--Racial
+intellectual characteristics are social rather than inherent, 233
+
+
+XXII. MORAL IDEALS
+
+Loyalty and filial piety as moral ideals--Quotations from an ancient
+moralist, Muro Kyuso--On the heavenly origin of moral teaching--On
+self-control--Knowledge comes through obedience--On the impurity of
+ancient literature--On the ideal of the samurai in relation to
+trade--Old Japan combined statute and ethical law--"The testament of
+Iyeyasu"--Ohashi's condemnation of Western learning for its
+impiety--Japanese moral ideals were communal--Truthfulness
+undeveloped--Relations of samurai to tradesman--The business standards
+are changing with the social order--Ancient Occidental contempt for
+trade--Plato and Aristotle, 249
+
+
+XXIII. MORAL IDEALS (_Continued_)
+
+The social position of woman--Valuation of the individual--Confucian
+and Buddhistic teaching in regard to concubinage and
+polygamy--Sociological interpretation--Japan not exceptional--Actual
+morality of Old Japan--Modern growth of immorality--Note on the
+"Social Evil"--No ancient teaching in regard to masculine
+chastity--Mr. Hearn's mistaken contention--Filial obedience and
+prostitution--How could the social order produce two different moral
+ideals?--The new Civil Code on marriage--Divorce--Statistics--Modern
+advance of woman--Significance of the Imperial Silver Wedding--The
+Wedding of the Prince Imperial--Relation of Buddhism and Confucianism
+to moral ideals and practice--The new spirit of Buddhism--Christian
+influence on Shinto; Tenri Kyo--The ancient moralists confined their
+attention to the rulers--The Imperial Edict in regard to Moral
+Education, 258
+
+
+XXIV. MORAL PRACTICE
+
+The publicity of Japanese life--Public bathing--Personal experience at
+a hot-spring--Mr. Hearn on privacy--Individualism and variation from
+the moral standard--Standards advancing--Revenge--Modern liberty of
+travel--Increase of wealth--Increasing luxury and vice--Increase of
+concubinage--Native discussions--Statistics--Business honesty--A
+native paper quoted--Some experiences with Christians--Testimony of a
+Japanese consul--Difference of gifts to Buddhist and to Christian
+institutions--Christian condemnation of Doshisha
+mismanagement--Misappropriation of trust funds in the West--Business
+honesty and the social order--Fitness of Christianity to the new
+social order--A summary--Communal virtues--Individual Vices--The
+authority of the moral ideal--Moral characteristics are not inherent,
+but social, in nature, 273
+
+
+XXV. ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?
+
+Prof. Pfleiderer's view--Percival Lowell's definition of
+religion--Japanese appearance of irreligion due to many
+facts--Skeptical attitude of Confucius towards the gods--Ready
+acceptance of Western agnosticism--Prof. Chamberlain's assertion that
+the Japanese take their religion lightly--Statements concerning
+religion by Messrs. Fukuzawa, Kato, and Ito--Statements of Japanese
+irreligion are not to be lightly accepted--Incompetence of many
+critics--We must study all the religious
+phenomena--Pilgrimages--Statistics--Mr. Lowell's criticism of
+"peripatetic picnic parties"--Is religion necessarily gloomy?--God and
+Buddha shelves universal in Japan--Temples and shrines--Statistics,
+286
+
+
+XXVI. SOME RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA
+
+Stoical training conceals religious emotions--The earnestness of many
+suppliants--Buddhistic and Shinto practice of religious ecstasy--The
+revolt from Buddhism a religious movement--Muro Kyu-so
+quoted--"Heaven's Way"--"God's omnipresence"--Pre-Christian teachers
+of Christian truth--Interpretation of modern irreligious
+phenomena--Japanese apparent lack of reverence--Not an inherent racial
+characteristic--Sketch of Japanese religious
+history--Shinto--Buddhism--Confucianism--Christianity--Roman
+Catholicism--Protestantism--Religious characteristics are social, not
+essential or racial, 296
+
+
+XXVII. SOME RELIGIOUS CONCEPTIONS
+
+Japanese conceptions as to deity--The number and relation of the gods
+to the universe--Did the Japanese have the monotheistic
+conception?--Attractiveness of Christian monotheism--Confucian and
+Buddhist monism--Religious conception of man--Conception of
+sin--Defective terminology--Relation of sin to salvation--"Holy
+water"--Holy towels and the spread of disease--The slight connection
+between physical and moral pollution--W.E. Griffis quoted--Exaggerated
+cleanliness of the Japanese--Public bathing houses--Consciousness of
+sin in the sixteenth century--A recent experience--Doctrine of the
+future life--Salvation from fate--"Ingwa"--These are important
+doctrines--"Mei" (Heaven's decree)--Japan not unique--Sociological
+interpretations of religious characteristics, 310
+
+
+XXVIII. SOME RELIGIOUS PRACTICES
+
+Loyalty and filial piety as religious phenomena--Gratitude as a
+religions trait--Hearn quoted--Unpleasant experiences of
+ingratitude--Modern suppression of phallicism--Brothels and
+prostitutes at popular shrines--The failure of higher ethnic faiths to
+antagonize the lower--Suppression of phallicism due to Western
+opinion--The significance of this suppression to sociological
+theory--Religious liberty--Some history--Inconsistent attitude of the
+Educational Department--Virtual establishment of compulsory state
+religion--Review and summary--The Japanese ready learners of foreign
+religions--The significance of this to sociology--Japanese future
+religion is to be Christianity, 322
+
+
+XXIX. SOME PRINCIPLES OF NATIONAL EVOLUTION
+
+Progress is from smaller to larger communities--Arrest of
+development--The necessity of individualism--The relation of communal
+to individual development--A possible misunderstanding--The problem of
+distribution--Personality, 332
+
+
+XXX. ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?
+
+Assertion of Oriental impersonality--Quotations from Percival
+Lowell--Defective and contradictory definitions--Arguments for
+impersonality resting on mistaken interpretations--Children's
+festivals--Occidental and Oriental method of counting ages--Argument
+for impersonality from Japanese art--From the characteristics of the
+Japanese family--The bearing of divorce on this argument--Do Japanese
+"fall in love"?--Suicide and murder for love--Occidental approval and
+Oriental condemnation of "falling in love"--Sociological significance
+of divorce and of "falling in love," 344
+
+
+XXXI. THE JAPANESE NOT IMPERSONAL
+
+The problem stated--Definitions--Remarks on
+definitions--Characteristics of a person--Impersonality defined--A
+preliminary summary statement--Definitions of Communalism and
+Individualism--The argument for "impersonality" from Japanese
+politeness--Some difficulties of this interpretation--The sociological
+interpretation of politeness--The significance of Japanese
+sensitiveness--Altruism as a proof of impersonality--Japanese
+selfishness and self-assertiveness--Distinction between communal and
+individualistic altruism--Deficiency of personal pronouns as a proof
+of impersonality--A possible counter-argument--Substitutes for
+personal pronouns--Many personal words in Japanese--Origin of
+pronouns, personal and others--The relation of the social order to the
+use of personal pronouns--Japanese conceive Nationality only through
+Personality--"Strong" and "weak" personality--Strong personalities in
+Japan--Feudalism and strong personalities, 356
+
+
+XXXII. IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?
+
+Self-suppression as a proof of impersonality--Self-suppression cannot
+be ascribed to a primitive people--Esoteric Buddhism not
+popular--Buddhism emphasized introspection and self-consciousness--Mr.
+Lowell on the teaching of Buddha--Consciousness of union with the
+Absolute a developed, not a primitive, trait--Buddhist
+self-suppression proves a developed self--Buddhist self-salvation and
+Christian salvation by faith--Buddhism does not develop rounded
+personality--Buddhism attributes no worth to the self--Buddhist mercy
+rests on the doctrine of transmigration, not on the inherent worth of
+man--Analysis of the diverse elements in the asserted "Impersonality
+"--Why Buddhism attributed no value to the self--The Infinite Absolute
+Abstraction--Buddhism not impersonal but abstract--Buddhist doctrine
+of illusion--Popular Buddhism not philosophical--Relation of "ingwa,"
+Fate, to the development of personality--Relation of belief in freedom
+to the fact of freedom--Sociological consequences of Buddhist
+doctrine, 377
+
+
+XXXIII. TRACES OF PERSONALITY IN SHINTOISM, BUDDHISM, AND CONFUCIANISM
+
+Human illogicalness providential--Some devices for avoiding the evils
+of logical conclusions--Buddhistic actual appeal to personal
+self-activity--Practical Confucianism an antidote to Buddhist
+poison--Confucian ethics produced strong persons--The personal
+conception of deity is widespread--Shinto gods all persons--Popular
+Buddhist gods are personal--Confucian "Heaven" implies
+personality--The idea of personality not wholly wanting in the
+Orient--The idea of divine personality not difficult to impart to a
+Japanese--A conversation with a Buddhist priest--Sketch of the
+development of Japanese personality--Is personality
+inherent?--Intrinsic and phenomenal personality--Note on the doctrine
+of the personality of God, 389
+
+
+XXXIV. THE BUDDHIST WORLD-VIEW
+
+Comparison of Buddhist, Greek, and Christian conceptions of
+God--Nirvana--The Buddhistic Ultimate Reality absolute vacuity--Greek
+affirmation of intelligence in the Ultimate Reality--Christian
+affirmation of Divine Personality--The Buddhist universe is partly
+rational and ethical--The Greek universe is partly rational and
+ethical--Corresponding views of sin, salvation, change, and
+history--Resulting pessimism and optimism--Consequences to the
+respective civilizations and their social orders, 398
+
+
+XXXV. COMMUNAL AND INDIVIDUAL ELEMENTS IN THE EVOLUTION OF JAPANESE
+RELIGIOUS LIFE
+
+Japanese religious life has been predominantly communal--Shinto
+provided the sanctions for the social order--Recent abdication of
+Shinto as a religion--Primitive Shinto world--view--Shinto and modern
+science--Shinto sanctions for the modern social order--Buddhism is
+individualistic--Lacks social ideals and sanctions--Hence it could not
+displace Shinto--Shinto and Buddhism are supplementary--Produced a
+period of prosperity--The defect of Buddhist individualism--Imperfect
+acceptance of Shinto--Effect of political history--Confucianism
+restored the waning communal sanctions--The difference between Shinto
+and Confucian social ideals and sanctions--The difference between
+Shinto and Confucian world-views--Rejection of the Confucian social
+order--An interpretation--The failure of Confucianism to become a
+religion--Western intercourse re-established Shinto sanctions--Japan's
+modern religious problem--Difficulty of combining individual and
+communal religious elements--Christianity has accomplished
+it--Individualism in and through communalism--A modern expansion of
+communal religion--Shared by Japan--Some Japanese recognize the need
+of religion for Japan--Sociological function of individualistic
+religion in the higher human evolution--Obstacle to evolution through
+the development of intellect--The Japanese mind is outgrowing its old
+religious conceptions--The dependence of religious phenomena on the
+ideas dominating society--Note on National and Universal
+religions--Buddhism not properly classified as Universal--The
+classification of religions, 404
+
+
+XXXVI. WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT
+
+The conclusion reached in this work--Contrary to the opinion of
+tourists, residents, and many sociologists--Professor Le Bon
+quoted--Social psychic characteristics not inherent--Evolution and
+involution--Advocates of inherent Oriental traits should catalogue
+those traits--An attempt by the London _Daily Mail_--Is the East
+inherently intuitive, and the West logical?--The difficulty of
+becoming mutually acquainted--The secret of genuine acquaintance--Is
+the East inherently meditative and the West active?--Oriental unity
+and characteristics are social, not inherent--Isolated evolution is
+divergent--Mutual influence of the East and the West--Summary
+statement, 422
+
+
+XXXVII. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS
+
+Review of our course of thought--Purpose of this chapter--The problem
+studied in this work--Interrelation of social and psychic
+phenomena--Heredity defined and analyzed--Evolution defined--Exact
+definition of our question, and our reply--What would be an adequate
+disproof of our position--Reasons for limiting the discussion to
+advanced races--Divergent evolution dependent on
+segregation--Distinction between racial and social unity--Relation of
+the individual psychic character to the social order--"Race soul" a
+convenient fiction--Psychic function produces psychic organism--Causes
+and nature of plasticity and fixity of society--Relation of incarnate
+ideas to character and destiny--Valuelessness of "floating"
+ideas--Progress is at once communal and individual--Personality is its
+cause, aim, and criterion--Progress in personality is
+ethico-religious--Japanese social and psychic evolution not
+exceptional, 438
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The tragedy enacted in China during the closing year of the nineteenth
+century marks an epoch in the history of China and of the world. Two
+world-views, two types of civilization met in deadly conflict, and the
+inherent weakness of isolated, belated, superstitious and corrupt
+paganism was revealed. Moreover, during this, China's crisis, Japan
+for the first time stepped out upon the world's stage of political and
+military activity. She was recognized as a civilized nation, worthy to
+share with the great nations of the earth the responsibility of ruling
+the lawless and backward races.
+
+The correctness of any interpretation as to the significance of this
+conflict between the opposing civilizations turns, ultimately, on the
+question as to what is the real nature of man and of society. If it be
+true, as maintained by Prof. Le Bon and his school, that the mental
+and moral character of a people is as fixed as its physiological
+characteristics, then the conflict in China is at bottom a conflict of
+races, not of civilizations.
+
+The inadequacy of the physiological theory of national character may
+be seen almost at a glance by a look at Japan. Were an Oriental
+necessarily and unchangeably Oriental, it would have been impossible
+for Japan to have come into such close and sympathetic touch with the
+West.
+
+The conflict of the East with the West, however, is not an inherent
+and unending conflict, because it is not racial, but civilizational.
+It is a conflict of world-views and systems of thought and life. It is
+a conflict of heathen and Christian civilizations. And the conflict
+will come to an end as soon as, and in proportion as, China awakes
+from her blindness and begins to build her national temple on the
+bedrock of universal truth and righteousness. The conflict is
+practically over in Japan because she has done this. In loyally
+accepting science, popular education, and the rights of every
+individual to equal protection by the government, Japan has accepted
+the fundamental conceptions of civilization held in the West, and has
+thus become an integral part of Christendom, a fact of world-wide
+significance. It proves that the most important differences now
+separating the great races of men are civilizational, not
+physiological. It also proves that European, American, and Oriental
+peoples may be possessed by the same great ideals of life and
+principles of action, enabling them to co-operate as nations in great
+movements to their mutual advantage.
+
+While even we of the West may be long in learning the full
+significance of what has been and still is taking place in Japan and
+more conspicuously just now, because more tragically, in China, one
+thing is clear: steam and electricity have abolished forever the old
+isolation of the nations.
+
+Separated branches of the human race that for thousands of years have
+been undergoing divergent evolution, producing radically different
+languages, customs, civilizations, systems of thought and world-views,
+and have resulted even in marked physiological and psychological
+differences, are now being brought into close contact and inevitable
+conflict. But at bottom it is a conflict of ideas, not of races. The
+age of isolation and divergent evolution is passing away, and that of
+international association and convergent social evolution has begun.
+Those races and nations that refuse to recognize the new social order,
+and oppose the cosmic process and its forces, will surely be pushed to
+the wall and cease to exist as independent nations, just as, in
+ancient times, the tribes that refused to unite with neighboring
+tribes were finally subjugated by those that did so unite.
+
+Universal economic, political, intellectual, moral, and religious
+intercourse is the characteristic of the new æon on which we are
+entering. What are to be the final consequences of this wide
+intercourse? Can a people change its character? Can a nation fully
+possessed by one type of civilization reject it, and adopt one
+radically different? Do races have "souls" which are fixed and
+incapable of radical transformations? What has taken place in Japan, a
+profound, or only a superficial change in psychical character? Are the
+destinies of the Oriental races already unalterably determined?
+
+The answers to these questions have already been suggested in the
+preceding paragraphs, in regard to what has already taken place in
+Japan. But we may add that that answer really turns on our conception
+as to the nature of the characteristics separating the East from the
+West. In proportion as national character is reckoned to be
+biological, will it be considered fixed and the national destiny
+predetermined. In proportion as it is reckoned to be sociological,
+will it be considered alterable and the national destiny subject to
+new social forces. Now that the intercourse of widely different races
+has begun on a scale never before witnessed, it is highly important
+for us to know its probable consequences. For this we need to gain a
+clear idea of the nature both of the individual man and of society, of
+the relation of the social order to individual and to race character,
+and of the law regulating and the forces producing social evolution.
+Only thus can we forecast the probable course and consequences of the
+free social intercourse of widely divergent races.
+
+It is the belief of the writer that few countries afford so clear an
+illustration of the principles involved in social evolution as Japan.
+Her development has been so rapid and so recent that some principles
+have become manifest that otherwise might easily have escaped notice.
+The importance of understanding Japan, because of the light her recent
+transformations throw on the subject of social evolution and of
+national character and also because of the conspicuous rôle to which
+she is destined as the natural leader of the Oriental races in their
+adoption of Occidental modes of life and thought, justifies a careful
+study of Japanese character. He who really understands Japan, has
+gained the magic key for unlocking the social mysteries of China and
+the entire East. But the Japanese people, with their institutions and
+their various characteristics, merit careful study also for their own
+sakes. For the Japanese constitute an exceedingly interesting and even
+a unique branch of the human race. Japan is neither a purgatory, as
+some would have it, nor a paradise, as others maintain, but a land
+full of individuals in an interesting stage of social evolution.
+
+Current opinions concerning Japan, however, are as curious as they are
+contradictory. Sir Edwin Arnold says that the Japanese "Have the
+nature rather of birds or butterflies than of ordinary human beings."
+Says Mr. A.M. Knapp: "Japan is the one country in the world which does
+not disappoint ... It is unquestionably the unique nation of the
+globe, the land of dream and enchantment, the land which could hardly
+differ more from our own, were it located in another planet, its
+people not of this world." An "old resident," however, calls it "the
+land of disappointments." Few phenomena are more curious than the
+readiness with which a tourist or professional journalist, after a few
+days or weeks of sight-seeing and interviewing, makes up his mind in
+regard to the character of the people, unless it be the way in which
+certain others, who have resided in this land for a number of years,
+continue to live in their own dreamland. These two classes of writers
+have been the chief contributors of material for the omnivorous
+readers of the West.
+
+It appears to not a few who have lived many years in this Far Eastern
+land, that the public has been fed with the dreams of poets or the
+snap-judgments of tourists instead of with the facts of actual
+experience. A recent editorial article in the _Japan Mail_, than whose
+editor few men have had a wider acquaintance with the Japanese people
+or language, contains the following paragraph:
+
+ "In the case of such writers as Sir Edwin Arnold and Mr. Lafcadio
+ Hearn it is quite apparent that the logical faculty is in
+ abeyance. Imagination reigns supreme. As poetic nights or
+ outbursts, the works of these authors on Japan are delightful
+ reading. But no one who has studied the Japanese in a deeper
+ manner, by more intimate daily intercourse with all classes of the
+ people than either of these writers pretends to have had, can
+ possibly regard a large part of their description as anything more
+ than pleasing fancy. Both have given rein to the poetic fancy and
+ thus have, from a purely literary point of view, scored a success
+ granted to few.... But as exponents of Japanese life and thought
+ they are unreliable.... They have given form and beauty to much
+ that never existed except in vague outline or in undeveloped germs
+ in the Japanese mind. In doing this they have unavoidably been
+ guilty of misrepresentation.... The Japanese nation of Arnold and
+ Hearn is not the nation we have known for a quarter of a century,
+ but a purely ideal one manufactured out of the author's brains. It
+ is high time that this was pointed out. For while such works please
+ a certain section of the English public, they do a great deal of
+ harm among a section of the Japanese public, as could be easily
+ shown in detail, did space allow."--_Japan Mail, May 7, 1898_.
+
+But even more harmful to the reading public of England and America are
+the hastily formed yet, nevertheless, widely published opinions of
+tourists and newspaper correspondents. Could such writers realize the
+inevitable limitations under which they see and try to generalize, the
+world would be spared many crudities and exaggerations, not to say
+positive errors. The impression so common to-day that Japan's recent
+developments are anomalous, even contrary to the laws of national
+growth, is chiefly due to the superficial writings of hasty observers.
+Few of those who have dilated ecstatically on her recent growth have
+understood either the history or the genius of her people.
+
+ "To mention but one among many examples," says Prof. Chamberlain,
+ "the ingenious Traveling Commissioner of the _Pall Mall Gazette_,
+ Mr. Henry Norman, in his lively letters on Japan published nine or
+ ten years ago, tells the story of Japanese education under the
+ fetching title of 'A Nation at School'; but the impression left is
+ that they have been their own schoolmasters. In another letter on
+ 'Japan in Arms,' he discourses concerning 'The Japanese Military
+ Re-organizers,' 'The Yokosuka dockyard,' and other matters, but
+ omits to mention that the reorganizers were Frenchmen, and that the
+ Yokosuka dockyard was also a French creation. Similarly, when
+ treating of the development of the Japanese newspaper, he ignores
+ the fact that it owed its origin to an Englishman, which surely, to
+ a man whose object was reality, should have seemed an object worth
+ recording. These letters, so full and apparently so frank, really
+ so deceptive, are, as we have said, but one instance among many of
+ the way in which popular writers on Japan travesty history by
+ ignoring the part which foreigners have played. The reasons for
+ this are not far to seek. A wonderful tale will please folks at a
+ distance all the better if made more wonderful still. Japanese
+ progress, traced to its causes and explained by references to the
+ means employed, is not nearly such fascinating reading as when
+ represented in the guise of a fairy creation, sprung from nothing,
+ like Aladdin's palace."--"_Things Japanese," p. 116_.
+
+But inter-racial misunderstanding is not, after all, so very strange.
+Few things are more difficult than to accommodate one's self in
+speech, in methods of life, and even in thought, to an alien people;
+so identifying one's deepest interest with theirs as really to
+understand them. The minds of most men are so possessed by notions
+acquired in childhood and youth as to be unable to see even the
+plainest facts at variance with those notions. He who comes to Japan
+possessed with the idea that it is a dreamland and that its old social
+order was free from defects, is blind to any important facts
+invalidating that conception; while he who is persuaded that Japan,
+being Oriental, is necessarily pagan at heart, however civilized in
+form, cannot easily be persuaded that there is anything praiseworthy
+in her old civilization, in her moral or religious life, or in any of
+her customs.
+
+If France fails in important respects to understand England; and
+England, Germany; and Germany, its neighbors; if even England and
+America can so misunderstand one another as to be on the verge of war
+over the boundary dispute of an alien country, what hope is there that
+the Occident shall understand the Orient, or the Orient the Occident?
+
+Though the difficulty seems insurmountable, I am persuaded that the
+most fruitful cause of racial misunderstandings and of defective
+descriptions both of the West by Orientals, and of the East by
+Occidentals, is a well-nigh universal misconception as to the nature
+of man, and of society, and consequently of the laws determining their
+development. In the East this error arises from and rests upon its
+polytheism, and the accompanying theories of special national creation
+and peculiar national sanctity. On these grounds alien races are
+pronounced necessarily inferior. China's scorn for foreigners is due
+to these ideas.
+
+Although this pagan notion has been theoretically abandoned in the
+West, it still dominates the thought not only of the multitudes, but
+also of many who pride themselves on their high education and liberal
+sentiments. They bring to the support of their national or racial
+pride such modern sociological theories as lend themselves to this
+view. Evolution and the survival of the fittest, degeneration and the
+arrest of development, are appealed to as justifying the arrogance and
+domineering spirit of Western nations.
+
+But the most subtle and scholarly doctrine appealed to in support of
+national pride is the biological conception of society. Popular
+writers assume that society is a biological organism and that the laws
+of its evolution are therefore biological. This assumption is not
+strange, for until recent times the most advanced professional
+sociologists have been dominated by the same misconception. Spencer,
+for example, makes sociology a branch of biology. More recent
+sociological writers, however, such as Professors Giddings and
+Fairbanks, have taken special pains to assert the essentially psychic
+character of society; they reject the biological conception, as
+inadequate to express the real nature of society. The biological
+conception, they insist, is nothing more than a comparison, useful for
+bringing out certain features of the social life and structure, but
+harmful if understood as their full statement. The laws of psychic
+activity and development differ as widely from those of biologic
+activity and development as these latter do from those that hold in
+the chemical world. If the laws which regulate psychic development and
+the progress of civilization were understood by popular writers on
+Japan, and if the recent progress of Japan had been stated in the
+terms of these laws, there would not have been so much mystification
+in the West in regard to this matter as there evidently has been.
+Japan would not have appeared to have "jumped out of her skin," or
+suddenly to have escaped from the heredity of her past millenniums of
+development. This wide misunderstanding of Japan, then, is not simply
+due to the fact that "Japanese progress, traced to its causes and
+explained by reference to the means employed, is not nearly such
+fascinating reading as when represented in the guise of a fairy
+creation," but it is also due to the still current popular view that
+the social organism is biological, and subject therefore to the laws
+of biological evolution. On this assumption, some hold that the
+progress of Japan, however it may appear, is really superficial, while
+others represent it as somehow having evaded the laws regulating the
+development of other races. A nation's character and characteristics
+are conceived to be the product of brain-structure; these can change
+only as brain structure changes. Brain is held to determine
+civilization, rather than civilization brain. Hampered by this
+defective view, popular writers inevitably describe Japan to the West
+in terms that necessarily misrepresent her, and that at the same time
+pander to Occidental pride and prejudice.
+
+But this misunderstanding of Japan reveals an equally profound
+misunderstanding in regard to ourselves. Occidental peoples are
+supposed to be what they are in civilization and to have reached their
+high attainments in theoretical and applied science, in philosophy and
+in practical politics, because of their unique brain-structures,
+brains secured through millenniums of biological evolution. The
+following statement may seem to be rank heresy to the average
+sociologist, but my studies have led me to believe that the main
+differences between the great races of mankind to-day are not due to
+biological, but to social conditions; they are not
+physico-psychological differences, but only socio-psychological
+differences. The Anglo-Saxon is what he is because of his social
+heredity, and the Chinaman is what he is because of his social
+heredity. The profound difference between social and physiological
+heredity and evolution is unappreciated except by a few of the most
+recent sociological writers. The part that association, social
+segregation, and social heredity take in the maintenance, not only of
+once developed languages and civilizations, but even in their genesis,
+has been generally overlooked.
+
+But a still more important factor in the determination of social and
+psychic evolution, generally unrecognized by sociologists, is the
+nature and function of personality. Although in recent years it has
+been occasionally mentioned by several eminent writers, personality as
+a principle has not been made the core of any system of sociology. In
+my judgment, however, this is the distinctive characteristic of human
+evolution and of human association, and it should accordingly be the
+fundamental principle of social science. Many writers on the East have
+emphasized what they call its "impersonal" characteristics. So
+important is this subject that I have considered it at length in the
+body of this work.
+
+Sociological phenomena cannot be fully expressed by any combination of
+exclusively physical, biological, and psychic terms, for the
+significant element of man and of society consists of something more
+than these--namely, personality. It is this that differentiates human
+from animal evolution. The unit of human sociology is a
+self-conscious, self-determinative being. The causative factor in the
+social evolution of man is his personality. The goal of that evolution
+is developed personality. Personality is thus at once the cause and
+the end of social progress. The conditions which affect or determine
+progress are those which affect or determine personality.
+
+The biological evolution of man from the animal has been, it is true,
+frankly assumed in this work. No attempt is made to justify this
+assumption. Let not the reader infer, however, that the writer
+similarly assumes the adequacy of the so-called naturalistic or
+evolutionary origin of ethics, of religion, or even of social
+progress. It may be doubted whether Darwin, Wallace, Le Conte, or any
+exponent of biological evolution has yet given a complete statement of
+the factors of the physiological evolution of man. It is certain,
+however, that ethical, religious, and social writers who have striven
+to account for the higher evolution of man, by appealing to factors
+exclusively parallel to those which have produced the physiological
+evolution of man, have conspicuously failed. However much we may find
+to praise in the social interpretations of such eminent writers as
+Comte, Spencer, Ward, Fiske, Giddings, Kidd, Southerland, or even
+Drummond, there still remains the necessity of a fuller consideration
+of the moral and religious evolution of man. The higher evolution of
+man cannot be adequately expressed or even understood in any terms
+lower than those of personality.
+
+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE
+
+I
+
+PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS
+
+
+Said a well educated and widely read Englishman to the writer while in
+Oxford, "Can you explain to me how it is that the Japanese have
+succeeded in jumping out of their skins?" And an equally thoughtful
+American, speaking about the recent strides in civilization made by
+Japan, urged that this progress could not be real and genuine. "How
+can such a mushroom-growth, necessarily without deep roots in the
+past, be real and strong and permanent? How can it escape being
+chiefly superficial?" These two men are typical of much of the thought
+of the West in regard to Japan.
+
+Seldom, perhaps never, has the civilized world so suddenly and
+completely reversed an estimate of a nation as it has that with
+reference to Japan. Before the recent war, to the majority even of
+fairly educated men, Japan was little more than a name for a few small
+islands somewhere near China, whose people were peculiar and
+interesting. To-day there is probably not a man, or woman, or child
+attending school in any part of the civilized world, who does not know
+the main facts about the recent war: how the small country and the men
+of small stature, sarcastically described by their foes as "Wojen,"
+pygmy, attacked the army and navy of a country ten times their size.
+
+Such a universal change of opinion regarding a nation, especially
+regarding one so remote from the centers of Western civilization as
+Japan, could not have taken place in any previous generation. The
+telegraph, the daily paper, the intelligent reporters and writers of
+books and magazine articles, the rapid steam travel and the many
+travelers--all these have made possible this sudden acquisition of
+knowledge and startling reversal of opinion.
+
+There is reason, however, to think that much misapprehension and real
+ignorance still exists about Japan and her leap into power and
+world-wide prestige. Many seem to think that Japan has entered on her
+new career through the abandonment of her old civilization and the
+adoption of one from the West--that the victories on sea and land, in
+Korea, at Port Arthur, and a Wei-hai-wei, and more recently at
+Tientsin and Pekin, were solely due to her Westernized navy and army.
+Such persons freely admit that this process of Westernization had been
+going on for many years more rapidly than the world at large knew, and
+that consequently the reputation of Japan before the war was not such
+as corresponded with her actual attainments. But they assume that
+there was nothing of importance in the old civilization; that it was
+little superior to organized barbarism.
+
+These people conceive of the change which has taken place in Japan
+during the past thirty years as a revolution, not as an evolution; as
+an abandonment of the old, and an adoption of the new, civilization.
+They conceive the old tree of civilization to have been cut down and
+cast into the fire, and a new tree to have been imported from the West
+and planted in Japanese soil. New Japan is, from this view-point, the
+new tree.
+
+Not many months ago I heard of a wealthy family in Kyoto which did not
+take kindly to the so-called improvements imported from abroad, and
+which consequently persisted in using the instruments of the older
+civilization. Even such a convenience as the kerosene lamp, now
+universally adopted throughout the land of the Rising Sun, this family
+refused to admit into its home, preferring the old-style andon with
+its vegetable oil, dim light, and flickering flame. Recently, however,
+an electric-light company was organized in that city, and this
+brilliant illuminant was introduced not only into the streets and
+stores, but into many private houses. Shortly after its introduction,
+the family was converted to the superiority of the new method of
+illumination, and passed at one leap from the old-style lantern to the
+latest product of the nineteenth century. This incident is considered
+typical of the transformations characteristic of modern Japan. It is
+supposed that New Japan is in no proper sense the legitimate product
+through evolution of Old Japan.
+
+In important ways, therefore, Japan seems to be contradicting our
+theories of national growth. We have thought that no "heathen" nation
+could possibly gain, much less wield, unaided by Westerners, the
+forces of civilized Christendom. We have likewise held that national
+growth is a slow process, a gradual evolution, extending over scores
+and centuries of years. In both respects our theories seem to be at
+fault. This "little nation of little people," which we have been so
+ready to condemn as "heathen" and "uncivilized," and thus to despise,
+or to ignore, has in a single generation leaped into the forefront of
+the world's attention.
+
+Are our theories wrong? Is Japan an exception? Are our facts correct?
+We instinctively feel that something is at fault. We are not satisfied
+with the usual explanation of the recent history of Japan. We are
+perhaps ready to concede that "the rejection of the old and the
+adoption of Western civilization" is the best statement whereby to
+account for the new power of Japan and her new position among the
+nations, but when we stop to think, we ask whether we have thus
+explained that for which we are seeking an explanation? Do not the
+questions still remain--Why did the Japanese so suddenly abandon
+Oriental for Occidental civilization? And what mental and other traits
+enabled a people who, according to the supposition, were far from
+civilized, so suddenly to grasp and wield a civilization quite alien
+in character and superior to their own; a civilization ripened after
+millenniums of development of the Aryan race? And how far, as a matter
+of fact, has this assimilation gone? Not until these questions are
+really answered has the explanation been found, So that, after all,
+the prime cause which we must seek is not to be found in the external
+environment, but rather in the internal endowment.
+
+An effort to understand the ancient history of Japan encounters the
+same problem as that raised by her modern history. What mental
+characteristics led the Japanese a thousand years ago so to absorb the
+Chinese civilization, philosophy, and language that their own suffered
+a permanent arrest? What religious traits led them so to take on a
+religion from China and India that their own native religion never
+passed beyond the most primitive development, either in doctrine, in
+ethics, in ritual, or in organization? On the other hand, what mental
+characteristics enabled them to preserve their national independence
+and so to modify everything brought from abroad, from the words of the
+new language to the philosophy of the new religions, that Japanese
+civilization, language, and religion are markedly distinct from the
+Chinese? Why is it that, though the Japanese so fell under the bondage
+of the Chinese language as permanently to enslave and dwarf their own
+beautiful tongue, expressing the dominant thought of every sentence
+with characters (ideographs) borrowed from China, yet at the same time
+so transformed what they borrowed that no Chinaman can read and
+understand a Japanese book or newspaper?
+
+The same questions recur at this new period of Japan's national life.
+Why has she so easily turned from the customs of centuries? What are
+the mental traits that have made her respond so differently from her
+neighbor to the environment of the nineteenth-century civilization of
+the West Why is it that Japan has sent thousands of her students to
+these Western lands to see and study and bring back all that is good
+in them, while China has remained in stolid self-satisfaction, seeing
+nothing good in the West and its ways? To affirm that the difference
+is due to the environment alone is impossible, for the environment
+seems to be essentially the same. This difference of attitude and
+action must be traced, it would seem, to differences of mental and
+temperamental characteristics. Those who seek to understand the
+secret of Japan's newly won power and reputation by looking simply at
+her newly acquired forms of government, her reconstructed national
+social structure, her recently constructed roads and railroads,
+telegraphs, representative government, etc., and especially at her
+army and navy organized on European models and armed with European
+weapons, are not unlike those who would discover the secret of human
+life by the study of anatomy.
+
+This external view and this method of interpretation are, therefore,
+fundamentally erroneous. Never, perhaps, has the progress of a nation
+been so manifestly an evolution as distinguished from a revolution. No
+foreign conquerors have come in with their armies, crushing down the
+old and building up a new civilization. No magician's wand has been
+waved over the land to make the people forget the traditions of a
+thousand years and fall in with those of the new régime. No rite or
+incantation has been performed to charm the marvelous tree of
+civilization and cause it to take root and grow to such lofty
+proportions in an unprepared soil.
+
+In contrast to the defective views outlined above, one need not
+hesitate to believe that the actual process by which Old Japan has
+been transformed into New Japan is perfectly natural and necessary. It
+has been a continuous growth; it is not the mere accumulation of
+external additions; it does not consist alone of the acquisition of
+the machinery and the institutions of the Occident. It is rather a
+development from within, based upon already existing ideas and
+institutions. New Japan is the consequence of her old endowment and
+her new environment. Her evolution has been in progress and can be
+traced for at least a millennium and a half, during which she has been
+preparing for this latest step. All that was necessary for its
+accomplishment was the new environment. The correctness of this view
+and the reasons for it will appear as we proceed in our study of
+Japanese characteristics. But we need to note at this point the
+danger, into which many fall, of ascribing to Japan an attainment of
+western civilization which the facts will not warrant. She has
+secured much, but by no means all, that the West has to give.
+
+We may suggest our line of thought by asking what is the fundamental
+element of civilization? Does it consist in the manifold appliances
+that render life luxurious; the railroad, the telegraph, the post
+office, the manufactures, the infinite variety of mechanical and other
+conveniences? Or is it not rather the social and intellectual and
+ethical state of a people? Manifestly the latter. The tools indeed of
+civilization may be imported into a half-civilized, or barbarous
+country; such importation, however, does not render the country
+civilized, although it may assist greatly in the attainment of that
+result. Civilization being mental, social, and ethical, can arise only
+through the growth of the mind and character of the vast multitudes of
+a nation. Now has Japan imported only the tools of civilization? In
+other words, is her new civilization only external, formal, nominal,
+unreal? That she has imported much is true. Yet that her attainments
+and progress rest on her social, intellectual, and ethical development
+will become increasingly clear as we take up our successive chapters.
+Under the new environment of the past fifty years, this growth,
+particularly in intellectual, in industrial, and in political lines,
+has been exceedingly rapid as compared with the growths of other
+peoples.
+
+This conception of the rise of New Japan will doubtless approve itself
+to every educated man who will allow his thought to rest upon the
+subject. For all human progress, all organic evolution, proceeds by
+the progressive modification of the old organs under new conditions.
+The modern locomotive did not spring complete from the mind of James
+Watt; it is the result of thousands of years of human experience and
+consequent evolution, beginning first perhaps with a rolling log,
+becoming a rude cart, and being gradually transformed by successive
+inventions until it has become one of the marvels of the nineteenth
+century. It is impossible for those who have attained the view-point
+of modern science to conceive of discontinuous progress; of
+continually rising types of being, of thought, or of moral life, in
+which the higher does not find its ground and root and thus an
+important part of its explanation, in the lower. Such is the case not
+only with reference: to biological evolution; it is especially true of
+social evolution. He who would understand the Japan of to-day cannot
+rest with the bare statement that her adoption of the tools and
+materials of Western civilization has given her her present power and
+place among the nations. The student with historical insight knows
+that it is impossible for one nation, off-hand, without preparation,
+to "adopt the civilization" of another.
+
+The study of the evolution of Japan is one of unusual interest; first,
+because of the fact that Japan has experienced such unique changes in
+her environment. Her history brings into clear light some principles
+of evolution which the visual development of a people does not make so
+clear.
+
+In the second place, New Japan is in a state of rapid growth. She is
+in a critical period, resembling a youth, just coming to manhood, when
+all the powers of growth are most vigorous. The latent qualities of
+body and mind and heart then burst forth with peculiar force. In the
+course of four or five short years the green boy develops into a
+refined and noble man; the thoughtless girl ripens into the full
+maturity of womanhood and of motherhood. These are the years of
+special interest to those who would observe nature in her time of most
+critical activity.
+
+Not otherwise is it in the life of nations. There are times when their
+growth is phenomenally rapid; when their latent qualities are
+developed; when their growth can be watched with special ease and
+delight, because so rapid. The Renaissance was such a period in
+Europe. Modern art, science, and philosophy took their start with the
+awakening of the mind of Europe at that eventful and epochal period of
+her life. Such, I take it, is the condition of Japan to-day. She is
+"being born again"; undergoing her "renaissance." Her intellect,
+hitherto largely dormant, is but now awaking. Her ambition is equaled
+only by her self-reliance. Her self-confidence and amazing
+expectations have not yet been sobered by hard experience. Neither
+does she, nor do her critics, know how much she can or cannot do. She
+is in the first flush of her new-found powers; powers of mind and
+spirit, as well as of physical force. Her dreams are gorgeous with all
+the colors of the rainbow. Her efforts are sure, to be noble in
+proportion as her ambitions are high. The growth of the past
+half-century is only the beginning of what we may expect to see.
+
+Then again, this latest and greatest step in the evolution of Japan
+has taken place at a time unparalleled for opportunities of
+observation, under the incandescent light of the nineteenth century,
+with its thousands of educated men to observe and record the facts,
+many of whom are active agents in the evolution in progress. Hundreds
+of papers and magazines, native and European, read by tens of
+thousands of intelligent men and women, have kept the world aware of
+the daily and hourly events. Telegraphic dispatches and letters by the
+million have passed between the far East and the West. It would seem
+as if the modernizing of Japan had been providentially delayed until
+the last half of the nineteenth century with its steam and
+electricity, annihilators of space and time, in order that her
+evolution might be studied with a minuteness impossible in any
+previous age, or by any previous generation. It is almost as if one
+were conducting an experiment in human evolution in his own
+laboratory, imposing the conditions and noting the results.
+
+For still another reason is the evolution of New Japan of special
+interest to all intelligent persons. To illustrate great things by
+small, and human by physical, no one who has visited Geneva has failed
+to see the beautiful mingling of the Arve and the Rhone. The latter
+flowing from the calm Geneva lake is of delicate blue, pure and
+limpid. The former, running direct from the glaciers of Mont Blanc and
+the roaring bed of Chamouni, bears along in its rushing waters
+powdered rocks and loosened soil. These rivers, though joined in one
+bed, for hundreds of rods are quite distinct; the one, turbid; the
+other, clear as crystal; yet they press each against the other, now a
+little of the Rhone's clear current forces its way into the Arve, soon
+to be carried off, absorbed and discolored by the mass of muddy water
+around it. Now a little of the turbid Arve forces its way into the
+clear blue Rhone, to lose there its identity in the surrounding
+waters. The interchange goes on, increasing with the distance until,
+miles below, the two-rivers mingle as one. No longer is it the Arve or
+the old Rhone, but the new Rhone.
+
+In Japan there is going on to-day a process unique in the history of
+the human race. Two streams of civilization, that of the far East and
+that of the far West, are beginning to flow in a single channel. These
+streams are exceedingly diverse, in social structure, in government,
+in moral ideals and standards, in religion, in psychological and
+metaphysical conceptions. Can they live together? Or is one going to
+drive out and annihilate the other? If so, which will be victor? Or is
+there to be modification of both? In other words, is there to be a new
+civilization--a Japanese, an Occidento-Oriental civilization?
+
+The answer is plain to him who has eyes with which to see. Can the
+Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? No more can Japan
+lose all trace of inherited customs of daily life, of habits of
+thought and language, products of a thousand years of training in
+Chinese literature, Buddhist doctrine, and Confucian ethics. That "the
+boy is father to the man" is true of a nation no less than of an
+individual. What a youth has been at home in his habits of thought, in
+his purpose and spirit and in their manifestation in action, will
+largely determine his after-life. In like manner the mental and moral
+history of Japan has so stamped certain characteristics on her
+language, on her thought, and above all on her temperament and
+character, that, however she may strive to Westernize herself, it is
+impossible for her to obliterate her Oriental features. She will
+inevitably and always remain Japanese.
+
+Japan has already produced an Occidento-Oriental civilization. Time
+will serve progressively to Occidentalize it. But there is no reason
+for thinking that it will ever become wholly Occidentalized. A
+Westerner visiting Japan will always be impressed with its Oriental
+features, while an Asiatic will be impressed with its Occidental
+features. This progressive Occidentalization of Japan will take place
+according to the laws of social evolution, of which we must speak
+somewhat more fully in a later chapter.
+
+An important question bearing on this problem is the precise nature of
+the characteristics differentiating the Occident and the Orient. What
+exactly do we mean when we say that the Japanese are Oriental and will
+always bear the marks of the Orient in their civilization, however
+much they may absorb from the West? The importance and difficulty of
+this question have led the writer to defer its consideration till
+toward the close of this work.
+
+If one would gain adequate conception of the process now going on, the
+illustration already used of the mingling of two rivers needs to be
+supplemented by another, corresponding to a separate class of facts.
+Instead of the mingling of rivers, let us watch the confluence of two
+glaciers. What pressures! What grindings! What upheavals! What
+rendings! Such is the mingling of two civilizations. It is not smooth
+and Noiseless, but attended with pressure and pain. It is a collision
+in more ways than one. The unfortunates on whom the pressures of both
+currents are directed are often quite destroyed.
+
+Comparison is often made between Japan and India. In both countries
+enormous social changes are taking place; in both, Eastern and Western
+civilizations are in contact and in conflict. The differences,
+however, are even more striking than the likenesses. Most conspicuous
+is the fact that whereas, in India, the changes in civilization are
+due almost wholly to the force and rule of the conquering race, in
+Japan these changes are spontaneous, attributable entirely to the
+desire and initiative of the native rulers. This difference is
+fundamental and vital. The evolution of society in India is to a large
+degree compulsory; in a true sense it is an artificial evolution. In
+Japan, on the other hand, evolution is natural. There has not been
+the slightest physical compulsion laid on her from without. With two
+rare exceptions, Japan has never heard the boom of foreign cannon
+carrying destruction to her people. During these years of change,
+there have been none but Japanese rulers, and such has been the case
+throughout the entire period of Japanese history. Their native rulers
+have introduced changes such as foreign rulers would hardly have
+ventured upon. The adoption of the Chinese language, literature, and
+religions from ten to twelve centuries ago, was not occasioned by a
+military occupancy of Japanese soil by invaders from China. It was due
+absolutely to the free choice of their versatile people, as free and
+voluntary as was the adoption by Rome of Greek literature and
+standards of learning. The modern choice of Western material
+civilization no doubt had elements of fear as motive power. But
+impulsion through a knowledge of conditions differs radically from
+compulsion exercised by a foreign military occupancy. India
+illustrates the latter; Japan, the former.
+
+Japan and her people manifest amazing contrasts. Never, on the one
+hand, has a nation been so free from foreign military occupancy
+throughout a history covering more than fifteen centuries, and at the
+same time, been so influenced by and even subject to foreign psychical
+environment. What was the fact in ancient times is the fact to-day.
+The dominance of China and India has been largely displaced by that of
+Europe. Western literature, language, and science, and even customs,
+are being welcomed by Japan, and are working their inevitable effects.
+But it is all perfectly natural, perfectly spontaneous. The present
+choice by Japan of modern science and education and methods and
+principles of government and nineteenth-century literature and
+law,--in a word, of Occidental civilization,--is not due to any
+artificial pressure or military occupancy. But the choice and the
+consequent evolution are wholly due to the free act of the people. In
+this, as in several other respects, Japan reminds us of ancient
+Greece. Dr. Menzies, in his "History of Religion," says: "Greece was
+not conquered from the East, but stirred to new life by the
+communication of new ideas." Free choice has made Japan reject Chinese
+astronomy, surgery, medicine, and jurisprudence. The early choice to
+admit foreigners to Japan to trade may have been made entirely through
+fear, but is now accepted and justified by reason and choice.
+
+The true explanation, therefore, of the recent and rapid rise of Japan
+to power and reputation, is to be found, not in the externals of her
+civilization, not in the pressure of foreign governments, but rather
+in the inherited mental and temperamental characteristics, reacting on
+the new and stimulating environment, and working along the lines of
+true evolution. Japan has not "jumped out of her skin," but a new
+vitality has given that skin a new color.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HISTORICAL SKETCH
+
+
+How many of the stories of the Kojiki (written in 712 A.D.) and
+Nihongi (720 A.D.) are to be accepted is still a matter of dispute
+among scholars. Certain it is, however, that Japanese early history is
+veiled in a mythology which seems to center about three prominent
+points: Kyushu, in the south; Yamato, in the east central, and Izumo
+in the west central region. This mythological history narrates the
+circumstances of the victory of the southern descendants of the gods
+over the two central regions. And it has been conjectured that these
+three centers represent three waves of migration that brought the
+ancestors of the present inhabitants of Japan to these shores. The
+supposition is that they came quite independently and began their
+conflicts only after long periods of residence and multiplication.
+
+Though this early record is largely mythological, tradition shows us
+the progenitors of the modern Japanese people as conquerors from the
+west and south who drove the aborigines before them and gradually took
+possession of the entire land. That these conquerors were not all of
+the same stock is proved by the physical appearance of the Japanese
+to-day, and by their language. Through these the student traces an
+early mixture of races--the Malay, the Mongolian, and the Ural-Altaic.
+Whether the early crossing of these races bears vital relation to the
+plasticity of the Japanese is a question which tempts the scholar.
+
+Primitive, inter-tribal conflicts of which we have no reliable records
+resulted in increasing intercourse. Victory was followed by
+federation. And through the development of a common language, of
+common customs and common ideas, the tribes were unified socially and
+psychically. Consciousness of this unity was emphasized by the
+age-long struggle against the Ainu, who were not completely conquered
+until the eighteenth century.
+
+With the dawn of authentic history (500-600 A.D.) we find amalgamation
+of the conquering tribes, with, however, constantly recurring
+inter-clan and inter-family wars. Many of these continued for scores
+and even hundreds of years--proving that, in the modern sense, of the
+word, the Japanese were not yet a nation, though, through
+inter-marriage, through the adoption of important elements of
+civilization brought from China and India via Korea, through the
+nominal acceptance of the Emperor as the divinely appointed ruler of
+the land, they were, in race and in civilization, a fairly homogeneous
+people.
+
+The national governmental system was materially affected by the need,
+throughout many centuries, of systematic methods of defense against
+the Ainu. The rise of the Shogunate dates back to 883 A.D., when the
+chief of the forces opposing the Ainu was appointed by the Emperor and
+bore the official title, "The Barbarian-expelling Generalissimo." This
+office developed in power until, some centuries later, it usurped in
+fact, if not in name, all the imperial prerogatives.
+
+It is probable that the Chinese written language, literature, and
+ethical teachings of Confucius came to Japan from Korea after the
+Christian era. The oldest known Japanese writings (Japanese written
+with Chinese characters) date from the eighth century. In this period
+also Buddhism first came to Japan. For over a hundred years it made
+relatively little progress. But when at last in the ninth and tenth
+centuries native Japanese Buddhists popularized its doctrines and
+adopted into its theogony the deities of the aboriginal religion, now
+known as Shinto, Buddhism became the religion of the people, and
+filled the land with its great temples, praying priests, and gorgeous
+rituals.
+
+Even in those early centuries the contact of Japan with her Oriental
+neighbors revealed certain traits of her character which have been
+conspicuous in recent times--great capacity for acquisition, and
+readiness to adopt freely from foreign nations. Her contact with
+China, at that time so far in advance of herself in every element of
+civilization, was in some respects disastrous to her original growth.
+Instead of working out the problems of thought and life for herself,
+she took what China and Korea had to give. The result was an arrest in
+the development of everything distinctively native. The native
+religion was so absorbed by Buddhism that for a thousand years it lost
+all self-consciousness. Indeed the modern clear demarcation between
+the native and the imported religions is a matter of only a few
+decades, due to the researches of native scholars during the latter
+part of the last and the early part of this century. Even now,
+multitudes of the common people know no difference between the various
+elements of the composite religion of which they are the heirs.
+
+Moreover, early contact with China and her enormous literature checked
+the development of the native language and the growth of the native
+literature. The language suffered arrest because of the rapid
+introduction of Chinese terms for all the growing needs of thought and
+civilization. Modern Japanese is a compound of the original tongue and
+Japonicized Chinese. Native speculative thought likewise found little
+encouragement or stimulus to independent activity in the presence of
+the elaborate and in many respects profound philosophies brought from
+India and China.
+
+From earliest times the government of Japan was essentially feudal.
+Powerful families and clans disputed and fought for leadership, and
+the political history of Japan revolves around the varying fortunes of
+these families. While the Imperial line is never lost to sight, it
+seldom rises to real power.
+
+When, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Japan's conquering arm
+reached across the waters, to ravage the coast of China, to extend her
+influence as far south as Siam, and even to invade Korea with a large
+army in 1592, it looked as if she were well started on her career as a
+world-power. But that was not yet to be. The hegemony of her clans
+passed into the powerful and shrewd Tokugawa family, the policy of
+which was peace and national self-sufficiency.
+
+The representatives of the Occidental nations (chiefly of Spain and
+Portugal) were banished. The Christian religion (Roman Catholic),
+which for over fifty years had enjoyed free access and had made great
+progress, was forbidden and stamped out, not without much bloodshed.
+Foreign travel and commerce were strictly interdicted. A particular
+school of Confucian ethics was adopted and taught as the state
+religion. Feudalism was systematically established and intentionally
+developed. Each and every man had his assigned and recognized place in
+the social fabric, and change was not easy. It is doubtful if any
+European country has ever given feudalism so long and thorough a
+trial. Never has feudalism attained so complete a development as it
+did in Japan under the Tokugawa régime of over 250 years.
+
+During this period no influences came from other lands to disturb the
+natural development. With the exception of three ships a year from
+Holland, an occasional stray ship from other lands, and from fifteen
+to twenty Dutchmen isolated in a little island in the harbor of
+Nagasaki, Japan had no communication with foreign lands or alien
+peoples.
+
+Of this period, extending to the middle of the present century, the
+ordinary visitor and even the resident have but a superficial
+knowledge. All the changes that have taken place in Japan, since the
+coming of Perry in 1854, are attributed by the easy-going tourist to
+the external pressure of foreign nations. But such travelers know
+nothing of the internal preparations that had been making for
+generations previous to the arrival of Perry. The tourist is quite
+ignorant of the line of Japanese scholars that had been undermining
+the authority of the military rulers, "the Tokugawa," in favor of the
+Imperial line which they had practically supplanted.
+
+The casual student of Japan has been equally ignorant of the real
+mental and moral caliber of the Japanese. Dressed in clothing that
+appeared to us fantastic, and armed with cumbersome armor and
+old-fashioned guns, it was easy to jump to the conclusion that the
+people were essentially uncivilized. We did not know the intellectual
+discipline demanded of one, whether native or foreign, who would
+master the native language or the native systems of thought. We forgot
+that we appeared as grotesque and as barbarous to them as they to us,
+and that mental ability and moral worth are qualities that do not show
+on the surface of a nation's civilization. While they thought us to be
+"unclean," "dogs," "red-haired devils," we perhaps thought them to be
+clever savages, or at best half-civilized heathen, without moral
+perceptions or intellectual ability.
+
+Of Old Japan little more needs to be said. Without external commerce,
+there was little need for internal trade; ships were small; roads were
+footpaths; education was limited to the samurai, or military class,
+retainers of the daimyo, "feudal lords"; inter-clan travel was limited
+and discouraged; Confucian ethics was the moral standard. From the
+beginning of the seventeenth century Christianity was forbidden by
+edict, and was popularly known as the "evil way"; Japan was thought to
+be especially sacred, and the coming of foreigners was supposed to
+pollute the land and to be the cause of physical evils. Education, as
+in China, was limited to the Chinese classics. Mathematics, general
+history, and science, in the modern sense, were of course wholly
+unknown. Guns and powder were brought from the West in the sixteenth
+century by Spaniards and Portuguese, but were never improved.
+Ship-building was the same in the middle of the nineteenth century as
+in the middle of the sixteenth, perhaps even less advanced.
+Architecture had received its great impulse from the introduction of
+Buddhism in the ninth and tenth centuries and had made no material
+improvement thereafter.
+
+But while there was little progress in the external and mechanical
+elements of civilization, there was progress in other respects. During
+the "great peace," first arose great scholars. Culture became more
+general throughout the nation. Education was esteemed. The corrupt
+lives of the priests were condemned and an effort was made to reform
+life through the revival of a certain school of Confucian teachers
+known as "Shin-Gaku"--"Heart-Knowledge." Art also made progress, both
+pictorial and manual. It would almost seem as if modern artificers and
+painters had lost the skill of their forefathers of one or two hundred
+years ago.
+
+Many reasons explain the continuance of the old political and social
+order: the lack of a foreign foe to compel abandonment of the tribal
+organisation; the mountainous nature of the country with its slow,
+primitive means of intercommunication; the absence of all idea of a
+completely centralized nation. Furthermore, the principle of complete
+subordination to superiors and ancestors had become so strong that
+individual innovations were practically impossible. Japan thus lacked
+the indispensable key to further progress, the principle of
+individualism. The final step in the development of her nationality
+has been taken, therefore, only in our own time.
+
+Old Japan seemed absolutely committed to a thorough-going antagonism
+to everything foreign. New Japan seems committed to the opposite
+policy. What are the steps by which she has effected this apparent
+national reversal of attitude?
+
+We should first note that the absolutism of the Tokugawa Shogunate
+served to arouse ever-growing opposition because of its stern
+repression of individual opinion. It not only forbade the Christian
+religion, but also all independent thought in religious philosophy and
+in politics. The particular form of Confucian moral philosophy which
+it held was forced on all public teachers of Confucianism. Dissent was
+not only heretical, but treasonable. Although, by its military
+absolutism, the Tokugawa rule secured the great blessing of peace,
+lasting over two hundred years, and although the curse of Japan for
+well-nigh a thousand preceding years had been fierce inter-tribal and
+inter-family wars and feuds, yet it secured that peace at the expense
+of individual liberty of thought and act. It thus gradually aroused
+against itself the opposition of many able minds. The enforced peace
+rendered it possible for these men to devote themselves to problems of
+thought and of history. Indeed, they had no other outlet for their
+energies. As they studied the history of the past and compared their
+results with the facts of the present, it gradually dawned on the
+minds of the scholars of the eighteenth century, that the Tokugawa
+family were exercising functions of government which had never been
+delegated to them; and that the Emperor was a poverty-stricken puppet
+in the hands of a family that had seized the military power and had
+gradually absorbed all the active functions of government, together
+with its revenues.
+
+It is possible for us to see now that these early Japanese scholars
+idealized their ancient history, and assigned to the Emperor a place
+in ancient times which in all probability he has seldom held. But,
+however that may be, they thought their view correct, and held that
+the Emperor was being deprived of his rightful rule by the Tokugawa
+family.
+
+These ideas, first formulated in secret by scholars, gradually
+filtered down, still in secrecy, and were accepted by a large number
+of the samurai, the military literati of the land. Their opposition to
+the actual rulers of the land, aroused by the individual-crushing
+absolutism of the Tokugawa rule, naturally allied itself to the
+religious sentiment of loyalty to the Emperor. Few Westerners can
+appreciate the full significance of this fact. Throughout the
+centuries loyalty to the Emperor has been considered a cardinal
+virtue. With one exception, according to the popular histories, no one
+ever acknowledged himself opposed to the Emperor. Every rebellion
+against the powers in actual possession made it the first aim to gain
+possession of the Emperor, and proclaim itself as fighting for him.
+When, therefore, the scholars announced that the existing government
+was in reality a usurpation and that the Emperor was robbed of his
+rightful powers, the latent antagonism to the Tokugawa rule began to
+find both intellectual and moral justification. It could and did
+appeal to the religious patriotism of the people. It is perhaps not
+too much to say that the overthrow of the Tokugawa family and the
+restoration of the Imperial rule to the Imperial family would have
+taken place even though there had been no interference of foreign
+nations, no extraneous influences. But equally certain is it that
+these antagonisms to the ruling family were crystallized, and the
+great internal changes hastened by the coming in of the aggressive
+foreign nations. How this external influence operated must and can be
+told in a few words.
+
+When Admiral Perry negotiated his treaty with the Japanese, he
+supposed he was dealing with responsible representatives of the
+government. As was later learned, however, the Tokugawa rulers had not
+secured the formal assent of the Emperor to the treaty. The Tokugawa
+rulers and their counselors, quite as much as the clan-rulers, wished
+to keep the foreigners out of the country, but they realized their
+inability. The rulers of the clans, however, felt that the Tokugawa
+rulers had betrayed the land; they were, accordingly, in active
+opposition both to the foreigners and to the national rulers. When the
+foreigners requested the Japanese government, "the Tokugawa
+Shogunate," to carry out the treaties, it was unable to comply with
+the request because of the antagonism of the clan-rulers. When the
+clan-rulers demanded that the government annul the treaties and drive
+out the hated and much-feared foreigners, it found itself utterly
+unable to do so, because of the formidable naval power of the
+foreigners.
+
+As a consequence of this state of affairs, a few serious collisions
+took place between the foreigners and the two-sworded samurai,
+retainers of the clan-rulers. The Tokugawa rulers apparently did their
+best to protect the foreigners, and, when there was no possible method
+of evasion, to execute the treaties they had made. But they could not
+control the clans already rebellious. A few murders of foreigners,
+followed by severe reprisals, and two bombardments of native towns by
+foreign gunboats, began to reveal to the military class at large that
+no individual or local action against the foreigners was at all to be
+thought of. The first step necessary was the unification of the Empire
+under the Imperial rule. This, however, could be done only by the
+overthrow of the Tokugawa Shogunate; which was effected in 1867-68
+after a short struggle, marked by great clemency.
+
+We thus realize that the overthrow of the Shogunate as also the final
+abolishment of feudalism with its clans, lords, and hereditary rulers,
+and the establishment of those principles of political and personal
+centralization which lie at the foundation of real national unity, not
+only were hastened by, but in a marked degree dependent on, the
+stimulus and contribution of foreigners. They compelled a more
+complete Japanese unity than had existed before, for they demanded
+direct relations with the national head. And when treaty negotiations
+revealed the lack of such a head, they undertook to show its necessity
+by themselves punishing those local rulers who did not recognize the
+Tokugawa headship.
+
+With the establishment of the Emperor on the throne, began the modern
+era in Japanese history, known in Japan as "Meiji"--"Enlightened
+Rule."
+
+But not even yet was the purpose of the nation attained, namely, the
+expulsion of the polluters of the sacred soil of Japan. As soon as the
+new government was established and had turned its attention to foreign
+affairs, it found itself in as great a dilemma as had its
+predecessors, the Tokugawa rulers. For the foreign governments
+insisted that the treaties negotiated with the old government should
+be accepted in full by the new. It was soon as evident to the new
+rulers as it had been to the old that direct and forcible resistance
+to the foreigners was futile. Not by might were they to be overcome.
+Westerners had, however, supplied the ideals whereby national,
+political unity was to be secured. Mill's famous work on
+"Representative Government" was early translated, and read by all the
+thinking men of the day. These ideas were also keenly studied in their
+actual workings in the West. The consequence was that feudalism was
+utterly rejected and the new ideas, more or less modified, were
+speedily adopted, even down to the production of a constitution and
+the establishment of local representative assemblies and a national
+diet. In other words, the theories and practices of the West in regard
+to the political organization of the state supplied Japan with those
+new intellectual variations which were essential to the higher
+development of her own national unity.
+
+A further point of importance is the fact that at the very time that
+the West applied this pressure and supplied Japan with these political
+ideals she also put within her reach the material instruments which
+would enable her to carry them into practice. I refer to steam
+locomotion by land and sea, the postal and telegraphic systems of
+communication, the steam printing press, the system of popular
+education, and the modern organization of the army and the navy. These
+instruments Japan made haste to acquire. But for these, the rapid
+transformation of Old Japan into New Japan would have been an
+exceedingly long and difficult process. The adoption of these tools of
+civilization by the central authority at once gave it an immense
+superiority over any local force. For it could communicate speedily
+with every part of the Empire, and enforce its decisions with a
+celerity and a decisiveness before unknown. It became once more the
+actual head of the nation.
+
+We have thus reached the explanation of one of the most astonishing
+changes in national attitude that history has to record, and the new
+attitude seems such a contradiction of the old as to be inexplicable,
+and almost incredible. But a better knowledge of the facts and a
+deeper understanding of their significance will serve to remove this
+first impression.
+
+What, then, did the new government do? It simply said, "For us to
+drive out these foreigners is impossible; but neither is it desirable.
+We need to know the secrets of their power. We must study their
+language, their science, their machinery, their steamboats, their
+battle-ships. We must learn all their secrets, and then we shall be
+able to turn them out without difficulty. Let us therefore restrict
+them carefully to the treaty ports, but let us make all the use of
+them we can."
+
+This has virtually been the national policy of Japan ever since. And
+this policy gained the acceptance of the people as a whole with
+marvelous readiness, for a reason which few foreigners can appreciate.
+Had this policy been formulated and urged by the Tokugawa rulers,
+there is no probability that it would have been accepted. But because
+it was, ostensibly at least, the declared will of the Emperor, loyalty
+to him, which in Japan is both religion and patriotism, led to a
+hearty and complete acceptance which could hardly have been realized
+in any other land. During the first year of his "enlightened" rule
+(1868), the Emperor gave his sanction to an Edict, the last two
+clauses of which read as follows:
+
+ "The old, uncivilized way shall be replaced by the eternal
+ principles of the universe.
+
+ "The best knowledge shall be sought throughout the world, so as to
+ promote the Imperial welfare."
+
+It is the wide acceptance of this policy, which, however, is in accord
+with the real genius of the people, that has transformed Japan. It has
+sent hundreds of its young men to foreign lands to learn and bring
+back to Japan the secrets of Western power and wealth; it has
+established roads and railways, postal and telegraphic facilities, a
+public common-school system, colleges and a university in which
+Western science, history, and languages have been taught by foreign
+and foreign-trained instructors; daily, weekly, and monthly papers and
+magazines; factories, docks, drydocks; local and foreign commerce;
+representative government--in a word, all the characteristic features
+of New Japan. The whole of New Japan is only the practical carrying
+out of the policy adopted at the beginning of the new era, when it was
+found impossible to cast out the foreigners by force. Brute force
+being found to be out of the question, resort was thus made to
+intellectual force, and with real success.
+
+The practice since then has not been so much to retain the foreigner
+as to learn of him and then to eliminate him. Every branch of learning
+and industry has proved this to be the consistent Japanese policy. No
+foreigner may hope to obtain a permanent position in Japanese employ,
+either in private firms or in the government. A foreigner is useful
+not for what he can do, but for what he can teach. When any Japanese
+can do his work tolerably well, the foreigner is sure to be dropped.
+
+The purpose of this volume does not require of us a minute statistical
+statement of the present attainments of New Japan. Such information
+may be procured from Henry Norman's "Real Japan," Ransome's "Japan in
+Transition," and Newton's "Japan: Country, Court, and People." It is
+enough for us to realize that Japan has wholly abandoned or profoundly
+modified all the external features of her old, her distinctively
+Oriental civilization and has replaced them by Occidental features. In
+government, she is no longer arbitrary, autocratic, and hereditary,
+but constitutional and representative. Town, provincial, and national
+legislative assemblies are established, and in fairly good working
+order, all over the land. The old feudal customs have been replaced by
+well codified laws, which are on the whole faithfully administered
+according to Occidental methods. Examination by torture has been
+abolished. The perfect Occidentalization of the army, and the creation
+of an efficient navy, are facts fully demonstrated to the world. The
+limited education of the few--- and in exclusively Chinese
+classics--has given place to popular education. Common schools number
+over 30,000, taught by about 100,000 teachers (4278 being women),
+having over 4,500,000 pupils (over 1,500,000 being girls). The school
+accommodation is insufficient; it is said that 30,000 additional
+teachers are needed at once. Middle and high schools throughout the
+land are rejecting nearly one-half of the student applicants for lack
+of accommodation.
+
+Feudal isolation, repression, and seclusion have given way to free
+travel, free speech, and a free press. Newspapers, magazines, and
+books pour forth from the universal printing press in great profusion.
+Twenty dailies issue in the course of a year over a million copies
+each, while two of them circulate 24,000,000 and 21,000,000 copies,
+respectively.
+
+Personal, political, and religious liberty has been practically secure
+now for over two decades, guaranteed by the constitution, and enforced
+by the courts.
+
+Chinese medical practice has largely been replaced by that from the
+West, although many of the ignorant classes still prefer the old
+methods. The government enforces Western hygienic principles in all
+public matters, with the result that the national health has improved
+and the population is growing at an alarming rate. While in 1872 the
+people numbered 33,000,000, in 1898 they numbered 45,000,000. The
+general scale of living for the common people has also advanced
+conspicuously. Meat shops are now common throughout the land--a thing
+unknown in pre-Meiji times--and rice, which used to be the luxury of
+the wealthy few, has become the staple necessity of the many.
+
+Postal and telegraph facilities are quite complete. Macadamized roads
+and well-built railroads have replaced the old footpaths, except in
+the most mountainous districts. Factories of many kinds are appearing
+in every town and city. Business corporations, banks, etc., which
+numbered only thirty-four so late as 1864 are now numbered by the
+thousand, and trade flourishes as in no previous period of Japanese
+history. Instead of being a country of farmers and soldiers, Japan is
+to-day a land of farmers and merchants. Wealth is growing apace.
+International commerce, too, has sprung up and expanded phenomenally.
+Japanese merchant steamers may now be seen in every part of the world.
+
+All these changes have taken place within about three decades, and so
+radical have they been,--so productive of new life in Japan,--that
+some have urged the re-writing of Japanese history, making the first
+year of Meiji (1868) the year one of Japan, instead of reckoning from
+the year in which Jimmu Tenno is said to have ascended the throne,
+2560 years ago (B.C. 660).
+
+The way in which Japanese regard the transformations produced by the
+"restoration" of the present Emperor, upon the overthrow of the
+"Bakufu," or "Curtain Government," may be judged from the following
+graphic paragraph from _The Far East_:
+
+ "The Restoration of Meiji was indeed the greatest of revolutions
+ that this island empire ever underwent. Its magic wand left
+ nothing untouched and unchanged. It was the Restoration that
+ overthrew the Tokugawa Shogunate, which reigned supreme for over
+ two centuries and a half. It was the Restoration that brought us
+ face to face with the Occidentals. It was the Restoration that
+ pulled the demigods of the Feudal lords down to the level of the
+ commoners. It was the Restoration that deprived the samurai of
+ their fiefs and reduced them to penury. It was the Restoration that
+ taught the people to build their houses of bricks and stones and to
+ construct ships and bridges of iron instead of wood. It was the
+ Restoration that informed us that eclipses and comets are not to be
+ feared, and that earthquakes are not caused by a huge cat-fish in
+ the bottom of the earth. It was the Restoration that taught the
+ people to use the "drum-backing" thunder as their messenger, and to
+ make use of the railroad instead of the palanquin. It was the
+ Restoration that set the earth in motion, and proved that there is
+ no rabbit in the moon. It was the Restoration that bestowed on
+ Socrates and Aristotle the chairs left vacant by Confucius and
+ Mencius. It was the Restoration that let Shakspere and Goethe take
+ the place of Bakin and Chikamatsu. It was the Restoration that
+ deprived the people of the swords and topnots. In short, after the
+ Restoration a great change took place in administration, in art, in
+ science, in literature, in language spoken and written, in taste,
+ in custom, in the mode of living, nay in everything" (p. 541).
+
+A natural outcome of the Restoration is the exuberant patriotism that
+is so characteristic a feature of New Japan. The very term
+"ai-koku-shin" is a new creation, almost as new as the thing. This
+word is an incidental proof of the general correctness of the
+contention of this chapter that true nationality is a recent product
+in Japan. The term, literally translated, is "love-country heart"; but
+the point for us to notice particularly is the term for country,
+"koku"; this word has never before meant the country as a whole, but
+only the territory of a clan. If I wish to ask a Japanese what part
+of Japan is his native home, I must use this word. And if a Japanese
+wishes to ask me which of the foreign lands I am a native of, he must
+use the same word. The truth is that Old Japan did not have any common
+word corresponding to the English term, "My country." In ancient
+times, this could only mean, "My clan-territory." But with the passing
+away of the clans the old word has taken on a new significance. The
+new word, "ai-koku-shin," refers not to love of clan, but to love of
+the whole nation. The conception of national unity has at last seized
+upon the national mind and heart, and is giving the people an
+enthusiasm for the nation, regardless of the parts, which they never
+before knew. Japanese patriotism has only in this generation come to
+self-consciousness. This leads it to many a strange freak. It is
+vociferous and imperious, and often very impractical and Chauvinistic.
+It frequently takes the form of uncompromising disdain for the
+foreigner, and the most absolute loyalty to the Emperor of Japan; it
+demands the utmost respect of expression in regard to him and the form
+of government he has graciously granted the nation. The slightest hint
+or indirect suggestion of defect or ignorance, or even of limitation,
+is most vehemently resented.
+
+A few illustrations of the above statements from recent experience
+will not be out of place. In August, 1891, the Minister of Education,
+Mr. Y. Osaki, criticising the tendency in Japan to pay undue respect
+to moneyed men, said, in the course of a long speech, "You Japanese
+worship money even more reverently than the Americans do. If you had a
+republic as they have, I believe you would nominate an Iwazaki or a
+Mitsui to be president, whereas they don't think of nominating a
+Vanderbilt or a Gould." It was not long before a storm was raging
+around his head because of this reference to a republican form of
+government as a possibility in Japan. The storm became so fierce that
+he was finally compelled to resign his post and retire, temporarily,
+from political life.
+
+In October, 1898, the High Council of Education was required to
+consider various questions regarding the conduct of the educational
+department after the New Treaties should come into force. The most
+important question was whether foreigners should be allowed to have a
+part in the education of Japanese youth. The general argument, and
+that which prevailed, was that this should not be allowed lest the
+patriotism of the children be weakened. So far as appears but one
+voice was raised for a more liberal policy. Mr. Y. Kamada maintained
+that "patriotism in Japan was the outcome of foreign intercourse.
+Patriotism, that is to say, love of country--not merely of fief--and
+readiness to sacrifice everything for its sake, was a product of the
+Meiji era."
+
+In 1891 a teacher in the Kumamoto Boys' School gave expression to the
+thought in a public address that, as all mankind are brothers, the
+school should stand for the principle of universal brotherhood and
+universal goodwill to men. This expression of universalism was so
+obnoxious to the patriotic spirit of so large a number of the people
+of Kumamoto Ken, or Province, that the governor required the school to
+dismiss that teacher. There is to-day a strong party in Japan which
+makes "Japanism" their cry; they denounce all expressions of universal
+good-will as proofs of deficiency of patriotism. There are not wanting
+those who see through the shallowness of such views and who vigorously
+oppose and condemn such narrow patriotism. Yet the fact that it exists
+to-day with such force must be noted and its natural explanation, too,
+must not be forgotten. It is an indication of self-conscious
+nationality.
+
+That this love of country, even this conception of country, is a
+modern thing will appear from two further facts. Until modern times
+there was no such thing as a national flag. The flaming Sun on a field
+of white came into existence as a national flag only in 1859. The use
+of the Sun as the symbol for the Emperor has been in vogue since 700
+A.D., the custom having been adopted from China. "When in 1859 a
+national flag corresponding to those of Europe became necessary, the
+Sun Banner naturally stepped into the vacant place."[A]
+
+The second fact is the recent origin of the festival known as
+"Kigensetsu." It occurs on February 11 and celebrates the alleged
+accession of Jimmu Tenno, the first Emperor of Japan, to the throne
+2560 years ago (660 B.C.). The festival itself, however, was
+instituted by Imperial decree ten years ago (1890).
+
+The transformation which has come over Japan in a single generation
+requires interpretation. Is the change real or superficial? Is the new
+social order "a borrowed trumpery garment, which will soon be rent by
+violent revolutions," according to the eminent student of racial
+psychology, Professor Le Bon, or is it of "a solid nature" according
+to the firm belief of Mr. Stanford Ransome, one of the latest writers
+on Japan?
+
+This is the problem that will engage our attention more or less
+directly throughout this work. We shall give our chief thought to the
+nature and development of Japanese racial characteristics, believing
+that this alone gives the light needed for the solution of the
+problem.[B]
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS
+
+
+What constitutes progress? And what is the true criterion for its
+measurement? In adopting Western methods of life and thought, is Japan
+advancing or receding? The simplicity of the life of the common
+people, their freedom from fashions that fetter the Occidental, their
+independence of furniture in their homes, their few wants and fewer
+necessities--these, when contrasted with the endless needs and demands
+of an Occidental, are accepted by some as evidences of a higher stage
+of civilization than prevails in the West.
+
+The hedonistic criterion of progress is the one most commonly adopted
+in considering the question as to whether Japan is the gainer or the
+loser by her rapid abandonment of old ways and ideas and by her
+equally rapid adoption of Western ones in their place. Yet this appeal
+to happiness seems to me a misleading because vague, if not altogether
+false, standard of progress. Those who use it insist that the people
+of Japan are losing their former happiness under the stress of new
+conditions. Now there can be no doubt that during the "Kyu-han jidai,"
+the times before the coming in of Western waves of life, the farmers
+were a simple, unsophisticated people; living from month to month with
+little thought or anxiety. They may be said to have been happy. The
+samurai who lived wholly on the bounty of the daimyo led of course a
+tranquil life, at least so far as anxiety or toil for daily rice and
+fish was concerned. As the fathers had lived and fought and died, so
+did the sons. To a large extent the community had all things in
+common; for although the lord lived in relative luxury, yet in such
+small communities there never was the great difference between classes
+that we find in modern Europe and America. As a rule the people were
+fed, if there was food. The socialistic principle was practically
+universal. Especially was emphasis laid on kinship. As a result, save
+among the outcast classes, the extremes of poverty did not exist.
+
+Were we to rest our inquiries at this point, we might say that in
+truth the Japanese had attained the summit of progress; that nothing
+further could be asked. But pushing our way further, we find that the
+peace and quiet of the ordinary classes of society were accompanied by
+many undesirable features.
+
+Prominent among them was the domineering spirit of the military class.
+They alone laid claim to personal rights, and popular stories are full
+of the free and furious ways in which they used their swords. The
+slightest offense by one of the swordless men would be paid for by a
+summary act of the two-sworded swashbucklers, while beggars and
+farmers were cut down without compunction, sometimes simply to test a
+sword. In describing those times one man said to me, "They used to cut
+off the heads of the common people as farmers cut off the head of the
+daikon" (a variety of giant radish). I have frequently asked my
+Japanese friends and acquaintances, whether, in view of the increasing
+difficulties of life under the new conditions, the country would not
+like to return to ancient times and customs. But none have been ready
+to give me an affirmative reply. On detailed questioning I have always
+found that the surly, domineering methods, the absolutism of the
+rulers, and the defenselessness of the people against unjust arbitrary
+superiors would not be submitted to by a people that has once tasted
+the joy arising from individual rights and freedom and the manhood
+that comes from just laws for all.
+
+A striking feature of those Japanese who are unchanged by foreign ways
+is their obsequious manner toward superiors and officials. The lordly
+and oftentimes ruthless manner of the rulers has naturally cowed the
+subject. Whenever the higher nobility traveled, the common people were
+commanded to fall on the ground in obeisance and homage. Failure to do
+so was punishable with instant death at the hands of the retainers
+who accompanied the lord. During my first stay in Kumamoto I was
+surprised that farmers, coming in from the country on horseback,
+meeting me as I walked, invariably got down from their horses,
+unfastened the handkerchiefs from their heads, and even took off their
+spectacles if there were nothing else removable. These were signs of
+respect given to all in authority. Where my real status began to be
+generally known, these signs of politeness gave place to rude staring.
+It is difficult for the foreigner to appreciate the extremes of the
+high-handed and the obsequious spirit which were developed by the
+ancient form of government. Yet it is comparatively easy to
+distinguish between the evidently genuine humility of the non-military
+classes and the studied deference of the dominant samurai.
+
+Another feature of the old order of things was the emptiness of the
+lives of the people. Education was rare. Limited to the samurai, who
+composed but a fraction of the population, it was by no means
+universal even among them. And such education as they had was confined
+to the Chinese classics. Although there were schools in connection
+with some of the temples, the people as a whole did not learn to read
+or write. These were accomplishments for the nobility and men of
+leisure. The thoughts of the people were circumscribed by the narrow
+world in which they lived, and this allowed but an occasional
+glimpse of other clans through war or a chance traveler. For, in those
+times, freedom of travel was not generally allowed. Each man, as a
+rule, lived and labored and died where he was born. The military
+classes had more freedom. But when we contrast the breadth of thought
+and outlook enjoyed by the nation to-day, through newspapers and
+magazines, with the outlook and knowledge of even the most progressive
+and learned of those of ancient times, how contracted do their lives
+appear!
+
+A third feature of former times is the condition of women during those
+ages. Eulogizers of Old Japan not only seem to forget that working
+classes existed then, but also that women, constituting half the
+population, were essential to the existence of the nation. Though
+allowing more freedom than was given to women in other Oriental
+nations, Japan did not grant such liberty as is essential to the full
+development of her powers. "Woman is a man's plaything" expresses a
+view still held in Japan. "Woman's sole duty is the bearing and
+rearing of children for her husband" is the dominant idea that has
+determined her place in the family and in the state for hundreds of
+years. That she has any independent interest or value as a human being
+has not entered into national conception. "The way in which they are
+treated by the men has hitherto been such as might cause a pang to any
+generous European heart.... A woman's lot is summed up in what is
+termed 'the three obediences,' obedience, while yet unmarried, to a
+father; obedience, when married, to a husband; obedience, when
+widowed, to a son. At the present moment the greatest duchess or
+marchioness in the land is still her husband's drudge. She fetches and
+carries for him, bows down humbly in the hall when my lord sallies
+forth on his good pleasure."[C] "The Greater Learning for Women," by
+Ekken Kaibara (1630-1714), an eminent Japanese moralist, is the name
+of a treatise on woman's duties which sums up the ideas common in
+Japan upon this subject. For two hundred years or more it has been
+used as a text-book in the training of girls. It enjoins such abject
+submission of the wife to her husband, to her parents-in-law, and to
+her other kindred by marriage, as no self-respecting woman of Western
+lands could for a moment endure. Let me prove this through a few
+quotations.
+
+"A woman should look on her husband as if he were Heaven itself and
+never weary of thinking how she may yield to her husband, and thus
+escape celestial castigation." "Woman must form no friendships and no
+intimacy, except when ordered to do so by her parents or by the
+middleman. Even at the peril of her life, must she harden her heart
+like a rock or metal, and observe the rules of propriety." "A woman
+has no particular lord. She must look to her husband as her lord and
+must serve him with all reverence and worship, not despising or
+thinking lightly of him. The great life-long duty of a woman is
+obedience.... When the husband issues his instructions, the wife must
+never disobey them.... Should her husband be roused to anger at any
+time, she must obey him, with fear and trembling." Not one word in all
+these many and specific instructions hints at love and affection. That
+which to Western ears is the sweetest word in the English language,
+the foundation of happiness in the home, the only true bond between
+husband and wife, parents and children--LOVE--does not once appear in
+this the ideal instruction for Japanese women.
+
+Even to this day divorce is the common occurrence in Japan. According
+to Confucius there are seven grounds of divorce: disobedience,
+barrenness, lewd conduct, jealousy, leprosy or any other foul or
+incurable disease, too much talking, and thievishness. "In plain
+English, a man may send away his wife whenever he gets tired of her."
+
+Were the man's duties to the wife and to her parents as minutely
+described and insisted on as are those of the wife to the husband and
+to his parents, this "Greater Learning for Women" would not seem so
+deficient; but such is not the case. The woman's rights are few, yet
+she bears her lot with marvelous patience. Indeed, she has acquired a
+most attractive and patient and modest behavior despite, or is it
+because of, centuries of well-nigh tyrannical treatment from the male
+sex. In some important respects the women of Japan are not to be
+excelled by those of any other land. But that this lot has been a
+happy one I cannot conceive it possible for a European, who knows the
+meaning of love or home, to contend. The single item of one divorce
+for every three marriages tells a tale of sorrow and heartache that is
+sad to contemplate. Nor does this include those separations where
+tentative marriage takes place with a view to learning whether the
+parties can endure living together. I have known several such cases.
+Neither does this take account of the great number of concubines that
+may be found in the homes of the higher classes. A concubine often
+makes formal divorce quite superfluous.
+
+I by no means contend that the women of Old Japan were all and always
+miserable. There was doubtless much happiness and even family joy;
+affection between husband and wife could assuredly have been found in
+numberless cases. But the hardness of life as a whole, the low
+position held by woman in her relations to man, her lack of legal
+rights,[D] and her menial position, justify the assertion that there
+was much room for improvement.
+
+These three conspicuous features of the older life in Japan help us to
+reach a clear conception as to what constitutes progress. We may say
+that true progress consists in that continuous, though slow,
+transformation of the structure of society which, while securing its
+more thorough organization, brings to each individual the opportunity
+of a larger, richer, and fuller life, a life which increasingly calls
+forth his latent powers and capacities. In other words, progress is a
+growing organization of society, accompanied by a growing liberty of
+the individual resulting in richness and fullness of life. It is not
+primarily a question of unreflecting happiness, but a question of the
+wide development of manhood and womanhood. Both men and women have as
+yet unmeasured latent capacities, which demand a certain liberty,
+accompanied by responsibilities and cares, in order for their
+development. Intellectual education and a wide horizon are likewise
+essential to the production of such manhood and womanhood. In the long
+run this is seen to bring a deeper and a more lasting happiness than
+was possible to the undeveloped man or woman.
+
+The question of progress is confused and put on a wrong footing when
+the consciousness of happiness or unhappiness, is made the primary
+test. The happiness of the child is quite apart from that of the
+adult. Regardless of distressing circumstances, the child is able to
+laugh and play, and this because he is a child; a child in his
+ignorance of actual life, and in his inability to perceive the true
+conditions in which he lives. Not otherwise, I take it, was the
+happiness of the vast majority in Old Japan. Theirs was the happiness
+of ignorance and simple, undeveloped lives. Accustomed to tyranny,
+they did not think of rebellion against it. Familiar with brutality
+and suffering, they felt nothing of its shame and inhumanity. The
+sight of decapitated bodies, the torture of criminals, the despotism
+of husbands, the cringing obedience of the ruled, the haughtiness of
+the rulers, the life of hard toil and narrow outlook, were all so
+usual that no thought of escape from such an order of society ever
+suggested itself to those who endured it.
+
+From time to time wise and just rulers did indeed strive to introduce
+principles of righteousness into their methods of government; but
+these men formed the exception, not the rule. They were individuals
+and not the system under which the people lived. It was always a
+matter of chance whether or not such men were at the head of affairs,
+for the people did not dream of the possibility of having any voice in
+their selection. The structure of society was and always had been
+absolute militarism. Even under the most benevolent rulers the use of
+cruel torture, not only on convicted criminals, but on all suspected
+of crime, was customary. Those in authority might personally set a
+good example, but they did not modify the system. They owned not only
+the soil but practically the laborers also, for these could not leave
+their homes in search of others that were better. They were serfs, if
+not slaves, and the system did not tend to raise the standard of life
+or education, of manhood or womanhood among the people. The happiness
+of the people in such times was due in part to their essential
+inhumanity of heart and lack of sympathy with suffering and sorrow.
+Each individual bore his own sorrow and pain alone. The community, as
+such, did not distress itself over individuals who suffered. Sympathy,
+in its full meaning, was unknown in Old Japan. The barbarous custom of
+casting out the leper from the home, to wander a lonely exile, living
+on the charity of strangers, is not unknown even to this day. We are
+told that in past times the "people were governed by such strong
+aversion to the sight of sickness that travelers were often left to
+die by the roadside from thirst, hunger, or disease; and householders
+even went the length of thrusting out of doors and abandoning to utter
+destitution servants who suffered from chronic maladies." So universal
+was this heartlessness that the government at one time issued
+proclamations against the practices it allowed. "Whenever an epidemic
+occurred the number of deaths was enormous." Seven men of the outcast,
+"the Eta," class were authoritatively declared equal in value to one
+common man. Beggars were technically called "hi-nin," "not men."
+
+Those who descant on the happiness of Old Japan commit the great error
+of overlooking all these sad features of life, and of fixing their
+attention exclusively on the one feature of the childlike, not to say
+childish, lightness of heart of the common people. Such writers are
+thus led to pronounce the past better than the present time. They also
+overlook the profound happiness and widespread prosperity of the
+present era. Trade, commerce, manufactures, travel, the freest of
+intercommunication, newspapers, and international relations, have
+brought into life a richness and a fullness that were then unknown.
+But in addition, the people now enjoy a security of personal
+interests, a possession of personal rights and property, and a
+personal liberty, that make life far more worthy and profoundly
+enjoyable, even while they bring responsibilities and duties and not a
+few anxieties. This explains the fact that no Japanese has expressed
+to me the slightest desire to abandon the present and return to the
+life and conditions of Old Japan.
+
+Let me repeat, therefore, with all possible emphasis, that the problem
+of progress is not primarily one of increasing light-heartedness, pure
+and simple, nor yet a problem of racial unification or of political
+centralization; it is rather a problem of so developing the structure
+of society that the individual may have the fullest opportunity for
+development.
+
+The measure of progress is not the degree of racial unification, of
+political centralization, or of unreflective happiness, but rather the
+degree and the extent of individual personality. Racial unification,
+political centralization, and increasing happiness are in the
+attainment of progress, but they are not to be viewed as sufficient
+ends. Personality, can alone be that end. The wide development of
+personality, therefore, is at once the goal and the criterion of
+progress.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE METHOD OF PROGRESS
+
+
+Progress as an ideal is quite modern in its origin. For although the
+ancients were progressing, they did it unconsciously, blindly,
+stumbling on it by chance, forced to it, as we have seen, by the
+struggle for existence. True of the ancient civilizations of Europe
+and Western Asia and Africa, this is emphatically true of the Orient.
+Here, so far from seeking to progress, the avowed aim has been not to
+progress; the set purpose has been to do as the fathers did; to follow
+their example even in customs and rites whose meaning has been lost in
+the obscurity of the past. This blind adherence was the boast of those
+who called themselves religious. They strove to fulfill their duties
+to their ancestors.
+
+Under such conditions how was progress possible? And how has it come
+to pass that, ruled by this ideal until less than fifty years ago,
+Japan is now facing quite the other way? The passion of the nation
+to-day is to make the greatest possible progress in every direction.
+Here is an anomaly, a paradox; progress made in spite of its
+rejection; and, recently, a total volte-face. How shall we explain
+this paradox?
+
+In our chapter on the Principles of National Evolution,[E] we see that
+the first step in progress was made through the development of
+enlarging communities by means of extending boundaries and hardening
+customs. We see that, on reaching this stage, the great problem was so
+to break the "cake of custom" as to give liberty to individuals
+whereby to secure the needful variations. We do not consider how this
+was to be accomplished. We merely show that, if further progress was
+to be made, it could only be through the development of the
+individualistic principle to which we give the more exact name
+communo-individualism. This problem as to how the "cake of custom" is
+successfully broken must now engage our attention.
+
+Mr. Bagehot contends that this process consisted, as a matter of
+history, in the establishment of government by discussion. Matters of
+principle came to be talked over; the desirability of this or that
+measure was submitted to the people for their approval or disapproval.
+This method served to stimulate definite and practical thought on a
+wide scale; it substituted the thinking of the many for the thinking
+of the few; it stimulated independent thinking and consequently
+independent action. This is, however, but another way of saying that
+it stimulated variation. A government whose action was determined
+after wide discussion would be peculiarly fitted to take advantage of
+all useful variations of ideas and practice. Experience shows, he
+continues, that the difficulty of developing a "cake of custom" is far
+more easily surmounted than that of developing government by
+discussion; _i.e._, that it is far less difficult to develop
+communalism than communo-individualism. The family of arrested
+civilizations, of which China and India and Japan, until recent times,
+are examples, were caught in the net of what had once been the source
+of their progress. The tyranny of their laws and customs was such that
+all individual variations were nipped in the bud. They failed to
+progress because they failed to develop variations. And they failed in
+this because they did not have government by discussion.
+
+No one will dispute the importance of Mr. Bagehot's, contribution to
+this subject. But it may be doubted whether he has pointed out the
+full reason for the difficulty of breaking the "cake of custom" or
+manifested the real root of progress. To attain progress in the full
+sense, not merely of an oligarchy or a caste, but of the whole people,
+there must not only be government by discussion, but the
+responsibilities of the government must be snared more or less fully
+by all the governed.
+
+History, however, shows that this cannot take place until a
+conception of intrinsic manhood and womanhood has arisen, a conception
+which emphasizes their infinite and inherent worth. This conception is
+not produced by government by discussion, while government by
+discussion is the necessary consequence of the wide acceptance of this
+conception. It is therefore the real root of progress.
+
+As I look over the history of the Orient, I find no tendency to
+discover the inherent worth of man or to introduce the principle of
+government by discussion. Left to themselves, I see no probability
+that any of these nations would ever have been able to break the
+thrall of their customs, and to reach that stage of development in
+which common individuals could be trusted with a large measure of
+individual liberty. Though I can conceive that Japan might have
+secured a thorough-going political centralization under the old
+_régime_, I cannot see that that centralization would have been
+accompanied by growing liberty for the individual or by such
+constitutional rights for the common man as he enjoys to-day. Whatever
+progress she might have made in the direction of nationality it would
+still have been a despotism. The common man would have remained a
+helpless and hopeless slave. Art might have prospered; the people
+might have remained simple-minded and relatively contented. But they
+could not have attained that freedom and richness of life, that
+personality, which we saw in our last chapter to be the criterion and
+goal of true progress.
+
+If the reader judges the above contention correct and agrees with the
+writer that the conception of the inherent value of a human being
+could not arise spontaneously in Japan, he will conclude that the
+progress of Japan depended on securing this important conception from
+without. Exactly this has taken place. By her thorough-going
+abandonment of the feudal social order and adoption of the
+constitutional and representative government of Christendom, whether
+she recognizes it or not, she has accepted the principles of the
+inherent worth of manhood and womanhood, as well as government by
+discussion. Japan has thus, by imitation rather than by origination,
+entered on the path of endless progress.
+
+So important, however, is the step recently taken that further
+analysis of this method of progress is desirable for its full
+comprehension. We have already noted quite briefly[F] how Japan was
+supplied by the West with the ideal of national unity and the material
+instruments essential to its attainment. In connection with the high
+development of the nation as a whole, these two elements of progress,
+the ideal and the material, need further consideration.
+
+We note in the first place that both begin with imitation, but if
+progress is to be real and lasting, both must grow to independence.
+
+The first and by far the most important is the psychical, the
+introduction of new ideas. So long as the old, familiar ideas hold
+sway over the mind of a nation, there is little or no stimulus to
+comparison and discussion. Stagnation is well-nigh complete. But let
+new ideas be so introduced as to compel attention and comprehension,
+and the mind spontaneously awakes to wonderful activity. The old
+stagnation is no longer possible. Discussion is started; and in the
+end something must take place, even if the new ideas are not accepted
+wholly or even in part. But they will not gain attention if presented
+simply in the abstract, unconnected with real life. They must bring
+evidence that, if accepted and lived, they will be of practical use,
+that they will give added power to the nation.
+
+Exactly this took place in 1854 when Admiral Perry demanded entrance
+to Japan. The people suddenly awoke from their sleep of two and a half
+centuries to find that new nations had arisen since they closed their
+eyes, nations among which new sets of ideas had been at work, giving
+them a power wholly unknown to the Orient and even mysterious to it.
+Those ideas were concerned, not alone with the making of guns, the
+building of ships, the invention of machinery, the taming and using of
+the forces of nature, but also with methods of government and law,
+with strange notions, too, about religion and duty, about the family
+and the individual, which the foreigners said were of inestimable
+value and importance. It needed but a few years of intercourse with
+Western peoples to convince the most conservative that unless the
+Japanese themselves could gain the secret of their power, either by
+adopting their weapons or their civilization, they themselves must
+fade away before the stronger nations. The need of self-preservation
+was the first great stimulus that drove new thoughts into unwilling
+brains.
+
+There can be no doubt that the Japanese were right in this analysis of
+the situation. Had they insisted on maintaining their old methods of
+national life and social order and ancient customs, there can be no
+doubt as to the result. Africa and India in recent decades and China
+and Korea in the most recent years tell the story all too clearly.
+Those who know the course of treaty conferences and armed collisions,
+as at Shimonoseki and Kagoshima between Japan and the foreign nations,
+have no doubt that Japan, divided into clans and persisting in her
+love of feudalism, would long since have become the territory of some
+European Power. She was saved by the possession of a remarkable
+combination of national characteristics,--the powers of observation,
+of appreciation, and of imitation. In a word, her sensitiveness to her
+environment and her readiness to respond to it proved to be her
+salvation.
+
+But the point on which I wish to lay special emphasis is that the
+prime element of the form in which the deliverance came was through
+the acquisition of numerous new ideas. These were presented by persons
+who thoroughly believed in them and who admittedly had a power not
+possessed by the Japanese themselves. Though unable to originate these
+ideas, the Japanese yet proved themselves capable of understanding and
+appreciating them--in a measure at least. They were at first attracted
+to that which related chiefly to the externals of civilization, to
+that which would contribute immediately to the complete political
+centralization of the nation. With great rapidity they adopted Western
+ideas about warfare and weapons. They sent their young men abroad to
+study the civilization of the foreign nations. At great expense they
+also employed many foreigners to teach them in their own land the
+things they wished to learn. Thus have the Japanese mastered so
+rapidly the details of those ideas which, less than fifty years ago,
+were not only strange but odious to them.
+
+Under their influence, the conditions which history shows to be the
+most conducive to the continuous growth of civilization have been
+definitely accepted and adopted by the people, namely, popular rights,
+the liberty of individuals to differ from the past so far as this does
+not interfere with national unity, and the direct responsibility and
+relation of each individual to the nation without any mediating group.
+These rights and liberties are secured to the individual by a
+constitution and by laws enacted by representative legislatures.
+Government by discussion has been fairly inaugurated.
+
+During these years of change the effort has been to leave the old
+social order as undisturbed as possible. For example, it was hoped
+that the reorganization of the military and naval forces of the Empire
+would be sufficient without disturbing the feudal order and without
+abolishing the feudal states. But this was soon found ineffectual. For
+a time it was likewise thought that the adoption of Western methods of
+government might be made without disturbing the old religious ideas
+and without removing the edicts against Christianity. But experience
+soon showed that the old civilization was a unit. No part could be
+vitally modified without affecting the whole structure. Having knocked
+over one block in the long row that made up their feudal social order,
+it was found that each successive block was touched and fell, until
+nothing was left standing as before. It was found also that the old
+ideas of education, of travel, of jurisprudence, of torture and
+punishment, of social ranks, of the relation of the individual to the
+state, of the state to the family, and of religion to the family, were
+more or less defective and unsuited to the new civilization. Before
+this new movement all obstructive ideas, however, sanctioned by
+antiquity, have had to give way. The Japanese of to-day look, as it
+were, upon a new earth and a new heaven. Those of forty years ago
+would be amazed, not only at the enormous changes in the externals,
+life and government, but also at the transformation which has
+overtaken every element of the older civilization. Putting it rather
+strongly, it is now not the son who obeys the father, but the father
+the son. The rulers no longer command the people, but the people
+command the rulers. The people do not now toil to support the state;
+but the state toils to protect the people.
+
+Whether the incoming of these new ideas and practices be thought to
+constitute progress or not will depend on one's view of the aim of
+life. If this be as maintained in the previous chapter, then surely
+the transformation of Japan must be counted progress. That, however,
+to which I call attention is the fact that the essential requisite of
+progress is the attainment of new ideas, whatever be their source.
+Japan has not only taken up a great host of these, but in doing so she
+has adopted a social structure to stimulate the continuous production
+of new ideas, through the development of individuality. She is thus in
+the true line of continuously progressive evolution. Imitating the
+stronger nations, she has introduced into her system the life-giving
+blood of free discussion, popular education, and universal individual
+rights and liberty. In a word, she has begun to be an individualistic
+nation. She has introduced a social order fitted to a wide development
+of personality.
+
+The importance of the second line of progress, the physical, would
+seem to be too obvious to call for any detailed consideration. But so
+much has been said by both graceful and able writers on Japan as to
+the advantages she enjoys from her simple non-mechanical civilization,
+and the mistake she is making in adopting the mechanical civilization
+of the West, that it may not be amiss to dwell for a few moments upon
+it. I wish to show that the second element of progress consists in the
+_increasing use of mechanisms_.
+
+The enthusiastic admirer of Japan hardly finds words wherewith
+sufficiently to praise the simplicity of her pre-Meiji civilization.
+No furniture brings confusion to the room; no machinery distresses the
+ear with its groanings or the eye with its unsightliness. No factories
+blacken the sky with smoke. No trains screeching through the towns and
+cities disturb sleepers and frighten babies. The simple bed on the
+floor, the straw sandal on the foot, wooden chopsticks in place of
+knives and forks, the small variety of foods and of cooking utensils,
+the simple, homespun cotton clothing, the fascinating homes, so small
+and neat and clean--in truth all that pertains to Old Japan finds
+favor in the eyes of the enthusiastic admirer from the Occident. One
+such writer, in an elaborate paper intended to set forth the
+superiority of the original Japanese to the Occidental civilization,
+uses the following language: "Ability to live without furniture,
+without impedimenta, with the least possible amount of neat clothing,
+shows more than the advantage held by the Japanese race in the
+struggle of life; it shows also the real character of some of the
+weaknesses in our own civilization. It forces reflection upon the
+useless multiplicity of our daily wants. We must have meat and bread
+and butter; glass windows and fire; hats, white shirts, and woolen
+underwear; boots and shoes; trunks, bags, and boxes; bedsteads,
+mattresses, sheets, and blankets; all of which a Japanese can do
+without, and is really better off without."[G] Surely one finds much
+of truth in this, and there is no denying the charm of the simpler
+civilization, but the closing phrase of the quotation is the
+assumption without discussion of the disputed point. Are the Japanese
+really better off without these implements of Western civilization?
+Evidently they themselves do not think so. For, in glancing through
+the list as given by the writer quoted, one realizes the extent of
+Japanese adoption of these Western devices. Hardly an article but is
+used in Japan, and certainly with the supposition of the purchaser
+that it adds either to his health or his comfort. In witness are the
+hundreds of thousands of straw hats, the glass windows everywhere,
+and the meat-shops in each town and city of the Empire. The charm of a
+foreign fashion is not sufficient explanation for the rapidly
+spreading use of foreign inventions.
+
+That there are no useless or even evil features in our Western
+civilization is not for a moment contended. The stiff starched shirt
+may certainly be asked to give an account of itself and justify its
+continued existence, if it can. But I think the proposition is capable
+of defense that the vast majority of the implements of our Occidental
+civilization have their definite place and value, either in
+contributing directly to the comfort and happiness of their possessor,
+or in increasing his health and strength and general mental and
+physical power. What is it that makes the Occidental longer-lived than
+the Japanese? Why is he healthier? Why is he more intelligent? Why is
+he a more developed personality? Why are his children more energetic?
+Or, reversing the questions, why has the population of Japan been
+increasing with leaps and bounds since the introduction of Western
+civilization and medical science? Why is the rising generation so free
+from pockmarks? Why is the number of the blind steadily diminishing?
+Why are mechanisms multiplying so rapidly--the jinrikisha, the
+railroads, the roads, the waterworks and sewers, the chairs, the
+tables, the hats and umbrellas, lamps, clocks, glass windows and
+shoes? A hundred similar questions might be asked, to which no
+definite answers are needful.
+
+Further discussion of details seems unnecessary. Yet the full
+significance of this point can hardly be appreciated without a
+perception of the great principle that underlies it. The only way in
+which man has become and continues to be increasingly superior to
+animals is in his use of mechanisms. The animal does by brute force
+what man accomplishes by various devices. The inventiveness of
+different races differs vastly. But everywhere, the most advanced are
+the most powerful. Take the individual man of the more developed race
+and separate him from his tools and machines, and it is doubtless
+true that he cannot in some selected points compete with an individual
+of a less developed race. But let ten thousand men of the higher
+development compete with ten thousand of the lower, each using the
+mechanisms under his control, and can there be any doubt as to which
+is the superior?
+
+In other words, the method of human progress consists, in no small
+degree, in the progressive mastery of nature, first through
+understanding her and then through the use of her immense forces by
+means of suitable mechanisms. All the machines and furniture, and
+tools and clothing, and houses and canned foods, and shoes and boots,
+and railroads and telegraph lines, and typewriters and watches, and
+the ten thousand other so-called "impedimenta" of the Occidental
+civilization are but devices whereby Western man has sought to
+increase his health, his wealth, his knowledge, his comfort, his
+independence, his capacity of travel--in a word, his well-being.
+Through these mechanisms he masters nature. He extracts a rich living
+from nature; he annihilates time and space; he defies the storms; he
+tunnels the mountains; he extracts precious ores and metals from the
+rock-ribbed hills; with a magic touch he loosens the grip of the
+elements and makes them surrender their gold, their silver, and, more
+precious still, their iron; with these he builds his spacious cities
+and parks, his railroads and ocean steamers; he travels the whole
+world around, fearing neither beast nor alien man; all are subject to
+his command and will. He investigates and knows the constitution of
+stellar worlds no less than that of the world in which he lives. By
+his instruments he explores the infinite depths of heaven and the no
+less infinite depths of the microscopic world. All these reviled
+"impedimenta" thus bring to the race that has them a wealth of life
+both physical and psychical, practical and ideal, that is otherwise
+unattainable. By them he gains and gives external expression to the
+reality of his inner nature, his freedom, his personality. True,
+instead of bringing health and long life, knowledge and deep
+enjoyment, they may become the means of bitterest curses. But the
+lesson to learn from this fact is how to use these powers aright, not
+how to forbid their use altogether. They are not to be branded as
+hindrances to progress.
+
+The defect of Occidental civilization to-day is hot its multiplicity
+of machinery, but the defective view that still blinds the eyes of the
+multitude as to the true nature and the legitimate goal of progress.
+Individual, selfish happiness is still the ideal of too many men and
+women to permit of the ideal which carries the Golden Rule into the
+markets and factories, into the politics of parties and nations, which
+is essential to the attainment of the highest progress. But no one who
+casts his eyes over the centuries of struggle and effort through which
+man has been slowly working his way upward from the rank of a beast to
+that of a man, can doubt that progress has been made. The worth of
+character has been increasingly seen and its possession desired. The
+true end of effort and development was never more clear than it is at
+the close of the nineteenth century. Never before were the conditions
+of progress so bright, not only for the favored few in one or two
+lands, but for the multitudes the world over. Isolation and separation
+have passed from this world forever. Free social intercourse between
+the nations permits wide dissemination of ideas and their application
+to practical life in the form of social organization and mechanical
+invention. This makes it possible for nations more or less backward in
+social and civilizational development to gain in a relatively short
+time the advantages won by advanced nations through ages of toil and
+under favoring circumstances. Nation thus stimulates nation, each
+furnishing the other with important variations in ideas, customs,
+institutions, and mechanisms resulting from long-continued divergent
+evolution. The advantages slowly gained by advanced peoples speedily
+accrues through social heredity to any backward race really desiring
+to enter the social heritage.
+
+Thus does the paradox of Japan's recent progress become thoroughly
+intelligible.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+JAPANESE SENSITIVENESS TO ENVIRONMENT
+
+
+With this chapter we begin a more detailed study of Japanese social
+and psychic evolution. We shall take up the various characteristics of
+the race and seek to account for them, showing their origin in the
+peculiar nature of the social order which so long prevailed in Japan.
+This is a study of Japanese psychogenesis. The question to which we
+shall continually return is whether or not the characteristic under
+consideration is inherent and congenital and therefore inevitable. Not
+only our interpretation of Japanese evolution, past, present, and
+future, but also our understanding of the essential nature of social
+evolution in general, depends upon the answer to this question.
+
+We naturally begin with that characteristic of Japanese nature which
+would seem to be more truly congenital than any other to be mentioned
+later. I refer to their sensitiveness to environment. More quickly
+than most races do the Japanese seem to perceive and adapt themselves
+to changed conditions.
+
+The history of the past thirty years is a prolonged illustration of
+this characteristic. The desire to imitate foreign nations was not a
+real reason for the overthrow of feudalism, but there was, rather, a
+more or less conscious feeling, rapidly pervading the whole people,
+that the feudal system would be unable to maintain the national
+integrity. As intimated, the matter was not so much reasoned out as
+felt. But such a vast illustration is more difficult to appreciate
+than some individual instances, of which I have noted several.
+
+During a conversation with Drs. Forsythe and Dale, of Cambridge,
+England, I asked particularly as to their experience with the Japanese
+students who had been there to study. They both remarked on the fact
+that all Japanese students were easily influenced by those with whom
+they customarily associated; so much so that, within a short time,
+they acquired not only the cut of coats and trousers, but also the
+manner and accent, of those with whom they lived. It was amusing, they
+said, to see what transformations were wrought in those who went to
+the Continent for their long vacations. From France they returned with
+marked French manners and tones and clothes, while from Germany they
+brought the distinctive marks of German stiffness in manner and
+general bearing. It was noted as still more curious that the same
+student would illustrate both variations, provided he spent one summer
+in Germany and another in France.
+
+Japanese sensitiveness is manifested in many unexpected ways. An
+observant missionary lady once remarked that she had often wondered
+how such unruly, self-willed children as grow up under Japanese
+training, or its lack, finally become such respectable members of
+society. She concluded that instead of being punished out of their
+misbehaviors they were laughed out of them. The children are
+constantly told that if they do so and so they will be laughed at--a
+terrible thing.
+
+The fear of ridicule has thus an important sociological function in
+maintaining ethical standards. Its power may be judged by the fact
+that in ancient times when a samurai gave his note to return a
+borrowed sum, the only guarantee affixed was the permission to be
+laughed at in public in case of failure. The Japanese young man who is
+making a typewritten copy of these pages for me says that, when still
+young, he heard an address to children which he still remembers. The
+speaker asked what the most fearful thing in the world was. Many
+replies were given by the children--"snakes," "wild beasts,"
+"fathers," "gods," "ghosts," "demons," "Satan," "hell," etc. These
+were admitted to be fearful, but the speaker told the children that
+one other thing was to be more feared than all else, namely, "to be
+laughed at." This speech, with its vivid illustrations, made a lasting
+impression on the mind of the boy, and on reading what I had written
+he realized how powerful a motive fear of ridicule had been in his own
+life; also how large a part it plays in the moral education of the
+young in Japan.
+
+Naturally enough this fear of being laughed at leads to careful and
+minute observation of the clothing, manners, and speech of one's
+associates, and prompt conformity to them, through imitation. The
+sensitiveness of Japanese students to each new environment is thus
+easily understood. And this sensitiveness to environment has its
+advantages as well as its disadvantages. I have already referred to
+the help it gives to the establishment of individual conformity to
+ethical standards. The phenomenal success of many reforms in Japan may
+easily be traced to the national sensitiveness to foreign criticism.
+Many instances of this will be given in the course of this work, but
+two may well be mentioned at this point. According to the older
+customs there was great, if not perfect, freedom as to the use of
+clothing by the people. The apparent indifference shown by them in the
+matter of nudity led foreigners to call the nation uncivilized. This
+criticism has always been a galling one, and not without reason. In
+many respects their civilization has been fully the equal of that of
+any other nation; yet in this respect it is true that they resembled
+and still do resemble semi-civilized peoples. In response to this
+foreign criticism, however, a law was passed, early in the Meiji era,
+prohibiting nudity in cities. The requirement that public bathing
+houses be divided into two separate compartments, one for men and one
+for women, was likewise due to foreign opinion. That this is the case
+may be fairly inferred from the fact that the enforcement of these
+laws has largely taken places where foreigners abound, whereas, in the
+interior towns and villages they receive much less attention. It must
+be acknowledged, however, that now at last, twenty-five years after
+their passage, they are almost everywhere beginning to be enforced by
+the authorities.
+
+My other illustration of sensitiveness to foreign opinion is the
+present state of Japanese thought about the management of Formosa. The
+government has been severely criticised by many leading papers for its
+blunders there. But the curious feature is the constant reference to
+the contempt into which such mismanagement will bring Japan in the
+sight of the world--as if the opinion of other nations were the most
+important issue involved, and not the righteousness and probity of the
+government itself. It is interesting to notice how frequently the
+opinion of other nations with regard to Japan is a leading thought in
+the mind of the people.
+
+In this connection the following extract finds its natural place:
+
+ In a very large number of schools throughout the country special
+ instructions have been given to the pupils as to their behavior
+ towards foreigners. From various sources we have culled the
+ following orders bearing on special points, which we state as
+ briefly as possible.
+
+ (1) Never call after foreigners passing along the streets or roads.
+
+ (2) When foreigners make inquiries, answer them politely. If unable
+ to make them understand, inform the police of the fact.
+
+ (3) Never accept a present from a foreigner when there is no reason
+ for his giving it, and never charge him anything above what is
+ proper.
+
+ (4) Do not crowd around a shop when a foreigner is making
+ purchases, thereby causing him much annoyance. The continuance of
+ this practice disgraces us as a nation.
+
+ (5) Since all human beings are brothers and sisters, there is no
+ reason for fearing foreigners. Treat them as equals and act
+ uprightly in all your dealings with them. Be neither servile nor
+ arrogant.
+
+ (6) Beware of combining against the foreigner and disliking him
+ because he is a foreigner; men are to be judged by their conduct
+ and not by their nationality.
+
+ (7) As intercourse with foreigners becomes closer and extends over
+ a series of years, there is danger that many Japanese may become
+ enamored of their ways and customs and forsake the good old customs
+ of their forefathers. Against this danger you must be on your
+ guard.
+
+ (8) Taking off your hat is the proper way to salute a foreigner.
+ The bending of the body low is not be commended.
+
+ (9) When you see a foreigner be sure and cover up naked parts of
+ the body.
+
+ (10) Hold in high regard the worship of ancestors and treat your
+ relations with warm cordiality, but do not regard a person as your
+ enemy because he or she is a Christian.
+
+ (11) In going through the world you will often find a knowledge of
+ a foreign tongue absolutely essential.
+
+ (12) Beware of selling your souls to foreigners and becoming their
+ slaves. Sell them no houses or lands.
+
+ (13) Aim at not being beaten in your competition with foreigners.
+ Remember that loyalty and filial piety are our most precious
+ national treasures and do nothing to violate them.
+
+ Many of the above rules are excellent in tone. Number 7, however,
+ which hails from Osaka, is somewhat narrow and prejudiced. The
+ injunction not to sell houses to foreigners is, as the _Jiji
+ Shimpo_ points out, absurd and mischievous.[H]
+
+The sensitiveness of the people also works to the advantage of the
+nation in the social unity which it helps to secure. Indeed I cannot
+escape the conviction that the striking unity of the Japanese is
+largely due to this characteristic. It tends to make their mental and
+emotional activities synchronous. It retards reform for a season, to
+be sure, but later it accelerates it. It makes it difficult for
+individuals to break away from their surroundings and start out on new
+lines. It leads to a general progress while it tends to hinder
+individual progress. It tends to draw back into the general current of
+national life those individuals who, under exceptional conditions, may
+have succeeded in breaking away from it for a season. This, I think,
+is one of the factors of no little power at work among the Christian
+churches in Japan. It is one, too, that the Japanese themselves little
+perceive; so far as I have observed, foreigners likewise fail to
+realize its force.
+
+Closely connected with this sensitiveness to environment are other
+qualities which make it effective. They are: great flexibility,
+adjustability, agility (both mental and physical), and the powers of
+keen attention to details and of exact imitation.
+
+As opposed to all this is the Chinese lack of flexibility. Contrast a
+Chinaman and a Japanese after each has been in America a year. The one
+to all appearances is an American; his hat, his clothing, his manner,
+seem so like those of an American that were it not for his small size,
+Mongolian type of face, and defective English, he could easily be
+mistaken for one. How different is it with the Chinaman! He retains
+his curious cue with a tenacity that is as intense as it is
+characteristic. His hat is the conventional one adopted by all Chinese
+immigrants. His clothing likewise, though far from Chinese, is
+nevertheless entirely un-American. He makes no effort to conform to
+his surroundings. He seems to glory in his separateness.
+
+The Japanese desire to conform to the customs and appearances of those
+about him is due to what I have called sensitiveness; his success is
+due to the flexibility of his mental constitution.
+
+But this characteristic is seen in multitudes of little ways. The new
+fashion of wearing the hair according to the Western styles; of
+wearing Western hats, and Western clothing, now universal in the army,
+among policemen, and common among officials and educated men; the use
+of chairs and tables, lamps, windows, and other Western things is due
+in no small measure to that flexibility of mind which readily adopts
+new ideas and new ways; is ready to try new things and new words, and
+after trial, if it finds them convenient or useful or even amusing, to
+retain them permanently, and this flexibility is, in part, the reason
+why the Japanese are accounted a fickle people. They accept new ways
+so easily that those who do not have this faculty have no explanation
+for it but that of fickleness. A frequent surprise to a missionary in
+Japan is that of meeting a fine-looking, accomplished gentleman whom
+he knew a few years before as a crude, ungainly youth. I am convinced
+that it is the possession of this set of characteristics that has
+enabled Japan so quickly to assimilate many elements of an alien
+civilization.
+
+Yet this flexibility of mind and sensitiveness to changed conditions
+find some apparently striking exceptions. Notable among these are the
+many customs and appliances of foreign nations which, though adopted
+by the people, have not been completely modified to suit their own
+needs. In illustration is the Chinese ideograph, for the learning of
+which even in the modern common-school reader, there is no arrangement
+of the characters in the order of their complexity. The possibility of
+simplifying the colossal task of memorizing these uncorrelated
+ideographs does not seem to have occurred to the Japanese; though it
+is now being attempted by the foreigner. Perhaps a partial explanation
+of this apparent exception to the usual flexibility of the people in
+meeting conditions may be found in their relative lack of originality.
+Still I am inclined to refer it to a greater sensitiveness of the
+Japanese to the personal and human, than to the impersonal and
+physical environment.
+
+The customary explanation of the group of characteristics considered
+in this chapter is that they are innate, due to brain and nerve
+structure, and acquired by each generation through biological
+heredity. If closely examined, however, this is seen to be no
+explanation at all. Accepting the characteristics as empirical
+inexplicable facts, the real problem is evaded, pushed into
+prehistoric times, that convenient dumping ground of biological,
+anthropological, and sociological difficulties.
+
+Japanese flexibility, imitativeness, and sensitiveness to environment
+are to be accounted for by a careful consideration of the national
+environment and social order. Modern psychology has called attention
+to the astonishing part played by imitation, conscious and
+unconscious, in the evolution of the human race, and in the
+unification of the social group. Prof. Le Tarde goes so far as to make
+this the fundamental principle of human evolution. He has shown that
+it is ever at work in the life of every human being, modifying all his
+thoughts, acts, and feelings. In the evolution of civilization the
+rare man thinks, the millions imitate.
+
+A slight consideration of the way in which Occidental lands have
+developed their civilization will convince anyone that imitation has
+taken the leading part. Japan, therefore, is not unique in this
+respect. Her periods of wholesale imitation have indeed called special
+notice to the trait. But the rapidity of the movement has been due to
+the peculiarities of her environment. For long periods she has been in
+complete isolation, and when brought into contact with foreign
+nations, she has found them so far in advance of herself in many
+important respects that rapid imitation was the only course left her
+by the inexorable laws of nature. Had she not imitated China in
+ancient times and the Occident in modern times, her independence, if
+not her existence, could hardly have been maintained.
+
+Imitation of admittedly superior civilizations has therefore been an
+integral, conscious element of Japan's social order, and to a degree
+perhaps not equaled by the social order of any other race.
+
+The difference between Japanese imitation and that of other nations
+lies in the fact that whereas the latter, as a rule, despise foreign
+races, and do not admit the superiority of alien civilizations as a
+whole, imitating only a detail here and there, often without
+acknowledgment and sometimes even without knowledge, the Japanese, on
+the other hand, have repeatedly been placed in such circumstances as
+to see the superiority of foreign civilizations as a whole, and to
+desire their general adoption. This has produced a spirit of imitation
+among all the individuals of the race. It has become a part of their
+social inheritance. This explanation largely accounts for the striking
+difference between Japanese and Chinese in the Occident. The Japanese
+go to the West in order to acquire all the West can give. The Chinaman
+goes steeled against its influences. The spirit of the Japanese
+renders him quickly susceptible to every change in his surroundings.
+He is ever noting details and adapting himself to his circumstances.
+The spirit of the Chinaman, on the contrary, renders him quite
+oblivious to his environment. His mind is closed. Under special
+circumstances, when a Chinaman has been liberated from the
+prepossession of his social inheritance, he has shown himself as
+capable of Occidentalization in clothing, speech, manner, and thought
+as a Japanese. Such cases, however, are rare.
+
+But a still more effective factor in the development of the
+characteristics under consideration is the nature of Japanese
+feudalism. Its emphasis on the complete subordination of the inferior
+to the superior was one of its conspicuous features. This was a factor
+always and everywhere at work in Japan. No individual was beyond its
+potent influence. Attention to details, absolute obedience, constant,
+conscious imitation, secretiveness, suspiciousness, were all highly
+developed by this social system. Each of these traits is a special
+form of sensitiveness to environment. From the most ancient times the
+initiative of superiors was essential to the wide adoption by the
+people of any new idea or custom. Christianity found ready acceptance
+in the sixteenth century and Buddhism in the eighth, because they had
+been espoused by exalted persons. The superiority of the civilization
+of China in early times, and of the West in modern times, was first
+acknowledged and adopted by a few nobles and the Emperor. Having
+gained this prestige they promptly became acceptable to the rank and
+file of people who vied with each other in their adoption. A
+peculiarity of the Japanese is the readiness with which the ideas and
+aims of the rulers are accepted by the people. This is due to the
+nature of Japanese feudalism. It has made the body of the nation
+conspicuously subject to the ruling brain and has conferred on Japan
+her unique sensitiveness to environment.
+
+Susceptibility to slight changes in the feelings of lords and masters
+and corresponding flexibility were important social traits, necessary
+products of the old social order. Those deficient in these regards
+would inevitably lose in the struggle for social precedence, if not in
+the actual struggle for existence. These characteristics would,
+accordingly, be highly developed.
+
+Bearing in mind, therefore, the character of the factors that have
+ever been acting on the Japanese psychic nature, we see clearly that
+the characteristics under consideration are not to be attributed to
+her inherent race nature, but may be sufficiently accounted for by
+reference to the social order and social environment.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+WAVES OF FEELING--ABDICATION
+
+
+It has long been recognized that the Japanese are emotional, but the
+full significance of this element of their nature is far from
+realized. It underlies their entire life; it determines the mental
+activities in a way and to a degree that Occidentals can hardly
+appreciate. Waves of feeling have swept through the country, carrying
+everything before them in a manner that has oftentimes amazed us of
+foreign lands. An illustration from the recent political life of the
+nation comes to mind in this connection. For months previous to the
+outbreak of the recent war with China, there had been a prolonged
+struggle between the Cabinet and the political parties who were united
+in their opposition to the government, though in little else. The
+parties insisted that the Cabinet should be responsible to the party
+in power in the Lower House, as is the case in England, that thus they
+might stand and fall together. The Cabinet, on the other hand,
+contended that, according to the constitution, it was responsible to
+the Emperor alone, and that consequently there was no need of a change
+in the Cabinet with every change of party leadership. The nation waxed
+hot over the discussion. Successive Diets were dissolved and new Diets
+elected, in none of which, however, could the supporters of the
+Cabinet secure a majority; the Cabinet was, therefore, incapable of
+carrying out any of its distinctive measures. Several times the
+opposition went so far as to decline to pass the budget proposed by
+the Cabinet, unless so reduced as to cripple the government, the
+reason constantly urged being that the Cabinet was not competent to
+administer the expenditure of such large sums of money. There were no
+direct charges of fraud, but simply of incompetence. More than once
+the Cabinet was compelled to carry on the government during the year
+under the budget of the previous year, as provided by the
+constitution. So intense was the feeling that the capital was full of
+"soshi,"--political ruffians,--and fear was entertained as to the
+personal safety of the members of the Cabinet. The whole country was
+intensely excited over the matter. The newspapers were not loath to
+charge the government with extravagance, and a great explosion seemed
+inevitable, when, suddenly, a breeze from a new quarter arose and
+absolutely changed the face of the nation.
+
+War with China was whispered, and then noised around. Events moved
+rapidly. One or two successful encounters with the Chinese stirred the
+warlike passion that lurked in every breast. At once the feud with the
+Cabinet was forgotten. When, on short notice, an extra session of the
+Diet was called to vote funds for a war, not a word was breathed about
+lack of confidence in the Cabinet or its incompetence to manage the
+ordinary expenditures of the government; on the contrary, within five
+minutes from the introduction of the government bill asking a war
+appropriation of 150,000,000 yen, the bill was unanimously passed.
+
+Such an absolute change could hardly have taken place in England or
+America, or any land less subject to waves of emotion. So far as I
+could learn, the nation was a unit in regard to the war. There was not
+the slightest sign of a "peace party." Of all the Japanese with whom I
+talked only one ever expressed the slightest opposition to the war,
+and he on religious grounds, being a Quaker.
+
+The strength of the emotional element tends to make the Japanese
+extremists. If liberals, they are extremely liberal; if conservative,
+they are extremely conservative. The craze for foreign goods and
+customs which prevailed for several years in the early eighties was
+replaced by an almost equally strong aversion to anything foreign.
+
+This tendency to swing to extremes has cropped out not infrequently in
+the theological thinking of Japanese Christians. Men who for years
+had done effective work in upbuilding the Church, men who had lifted
+hundreds of their fellow-countrymen out of moral and religious
+darkness into light and life, have suddenly, as it has appeared, lost
+all appreciation of the truths they had been teaching and have swung
+off to the limits of a radical rationalism, losing with their
+evangelical faith their power of helping their fellow-men, and in some
+few cases, going over into lives of open sin. The intellectual reasons
+given by them to account for their changes have seemed insufficient;
+it will be found that the real explanation of these changes is to be
+sought not in their intellectual, but in their emotional natures.
+
+Care must be taken, however, not to over-emphasize this extremist
+tendency. In some respects, I am convinced that it is more apparent
+than real. The appearance is due to the silent passivity even of those
+who are really opposed to the new departure. It is natural that the
+advocates of some new policy should be enthusiastic and noisy. To give
+the impression to an outsider that the new enthusiasm is universal,
+those who do not share it have simply to keep quiet. This takes place
+to some degree in every land, but particularly so in Japan. The
+silence of their dissent is one of the striking characteristics of the
+Japanese. It seems to be connected with an abdication of personal
+responsibility. How often in the experience of the missionary it has
+happened that his first knowledge of friction in a church, wholly
+independent and self-supporting and having its own native pastor, is
+the silent withdrawal of certain members from their customary places
+of worship. On inquiry it is learned that certain things are being
+done or said which do not suit them and, instead of seeking to have
+these matters righted, they simply wash their hands of the whole
+affair by silent withdrawal.
+
+The Kumi-ai church, in Kumamoto, from being large and prosperous, fell
+to an actual active membership of less than a dozen, solely because,
+as each member became dissatisfied with the high-handed and radical
+pastor, he simply withdrew. Had each one stood by the church,
+realizing that he had a responsibility toward it which duty forbade
+him to shirk, the conservative and substantial members of the church
+would soon have been united in their opposition to the radical pastor
+and, being in the majority, could have set matters right. In the case
+of perversion of trust funds by the trustees of the Kumamoto School,
+many Japanese felt that injustice was being done to the American Board
+and a stain was being inflicted on Japan's fair name, but they did
+nothing either to express their opinions or to modify the results. So
+silent were they that we were tempted to think them either ignorant of
+what was taking place, or else indifferent to it. We now know,
+however, that many felt deeply on the matter, but were simply silent
+according to the Japanese custom.
+
+But silent dissent does not necessarily last indefinitely, though it
+may continue for years. As soon as some check has been put upon the
+rising tide of feeling, and a reaction is evident, those who before
+had been silent begin to voice their reactionary feeling, while those
+who shortly before had been in the ascendant begin to take their turn
+of silent dissent. Thus the waves are accentuated, both in their rise
+and in their relapse, by the abdicating proclivity of the people.
+
+Yet, in spite of the tendency of the nation to be swept from one
+extreme to another by alternate waves of feeling, there are many
+well-balanced men who are not carried with the tide. The steady
+progress made by the nation during the past generation, in spite of
+emotional actions and reactions, must be largely attributed to the
+presence in its midst of these more stable natures. These are the men
+who have borne the responsibilities of government. So far as we are
+able to see, they have not been led by their feelings, but rather by
+their judgments. When the nation was wild with indignation over
+Europe's interference with the treaty which brought the China-Japanese
+war to a close, the men at the helm saw too clearly the futility of an
+attempt to fight Russia to allow themselves to be carried away by
+sentimental notions of patriotism. Theirs was a deeper and truer
+patriotism than that of the great mass of the nation, who, flushed
+with recent victories by land and by sea, were eager to give Russia
+the thrashing which they felt quite able to administer.
+
+Abdication is such an important element in Japanese life, serving to
+throw responsibility on the young, and thus helping to emphasize the
+emotional characteristics of the people, that we may well give it
+further attention at this point. In describing it, I can do no better
+than quote from J.H. Gubbins' valuable introduction to his translation
+of the New Civil Code of Japan.[I]
+
+ "Japanese scholars who have investigated the subject agree in
+ tracing the origin of the present custom to the abdication of
+ Japanese sovereigns, instances of which occur at an early period of
+ Japanese history. These earlier abdications were independent of
+ religious influences, but with the advent of Buddhism abdication
+ entered upon a new phase. In imitation, it would seem, of the
+ retirement for the purpose of religious contemplation of the Head
+ Priests of Buddhist monasteries, abdicating sovereigns shaved their
+ heads and entered the priesthood, and when subsequently the custom
+ came to be employed for political purposes, the cloak of religion
+ was retained. From the throne the custom spread to Regents and high
+ officers of state, and so universal had its observance amongst
+ officials of the high ranks become in the twelfth century that, as
+ Professor Shigeno states, it was almost the rule for such persons
+ to retire from the world at the age of forty or fifty, and
+ nominally enter the priesthood, both the act and the person
+ performing it being termed 'niu do.' In the course of time, the
+ custom of abdication ceased to be confined to officials, and
+ extended to feudal nobility and the military class generally,
+ whence it spread through the nation, and at this stage of its
+ transition its connection with the phase it finally assumed becomes
+ clear. But with its extension beyond the circle of official
+ dignitaries, and its consequent severance from tradition and
+ religious associations, whether real or nominal abdication changed
+ its name. It was no longer termed 'niu do,' but 'in kio,' the old
+ word being retained only in its strict religious meaning, and
+ 'inkyo' is the term in use to-day.
+
+ "In spite of the religious origin of abdication, its connection
+ with religion has long since vanished, and it may be said without
+ fear of contradiction that the Japanese of to-day, when he or she
+ abdicates, is in no way actuated by the feeling which impelled
+ European monarchs in past times to end their days in the seclusion
+ of the cloister, and which finds expression to-day in the Irish
+ phrase, 'To make one's soul.' Apart from the influence of
+ traditional convention, which counts for something and also
+ explains the great hold on the nation which the custom has
+ acquired, the motive seems to be somewhat akin to that which leads
+ people in some Western countries to retire from active life at an
+ age when bodily infirmity cannot be adduced as the reason. But with
+ this great difference, that in the one case, that of Western
+ countries, it is the business or profession, the active work of
+ life, which is relinquished, the position of the individual
+ vis-à-vis the family being unaffected; in the other case, it is the
+ position of head of the family which is relinquished, with the
+ result of the complete effacement of the individual so far as the
+ family is concerned. Moreover, although abdication usually implies
+ the abandonment of the business, or profession, of the person who
+ abdicates, this does not necessarily follow, abdication being in no
+ way incompatible with the continuation of the active pursuits in
+ which the person-in question is engaged. And if an excuse be needed
+ in either case, there would seem to be more for the Japanese head
+ of family, who, in addition to the duties and responsibilities
+ incumbent upon his position, has to bear the brunt of the tedious
+ ceremonies and observances which characterize family life in Japan,
+ and are a severe tax upon time and energies, while at the same time
+ he is fettered by the restrictions upon individual freedom of
+ action imposed by the family system. That in many cases the reason
+ for abdication lies in the wish to escape from the tyrannical
+ calls of family life, rather than in mere desire for idleness and
+ ease, is shown by the fact that just as in past times the
+ abdication of an Emperor, a Regent, or a state dignitary, was often
+ the signal for renewed activity on his part, so in modern Japanese
+ life the period of a person's greatest activity not infrequently
+ dates from the time of his withdrawal from the headship of his
+ family."
+
+The abdicating proclivities of the nation in pre-Meiji times are well
+shown by the official list of daimyos published by the Shogunate in
+1862. To a list of 268 ruling daimyos is added a list of 104 "inkyo."
+
+In addition to what we may call political and family abdication,
+described above, is personal abdication, referred to on a previous
+page.
+
+Are the traits of Japanese character considered in this chapter
+inherent and necessary? Already our description has conclusively shown
+them to be due to the nature of the social order. This was manifestly
+the case in regard to political and family abdication. The like origin
+of personal abdication is manifest to him who learns how little there
+was in the ancient training tending to give each man a "feeling of
+independent responsibility to his own conscience in the sight of
+Heaven." He was taught devotion to a person rather than to a
+principle. The duty of a retainer was not to think and decide, but to
+do. He might in silence disapprove and as far as possible he should
+then keep out of his lord's way; should he venture to think and to act
+contrary to his lord's commands, he must expect and plan to commit
+"harakiri" in the near future. Personal abdication and silent
+disapproval, therefore, were direct results of the social order.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HEROES AND HERO-WORSHIP
+
+
+If a clew to the character of a nation is gained by a study of the
+nature of the gods it worships, no less valuable an insight is gained
+by a study of its heroes. Such a study confirms the impression that
+the emotional life is fundamental in the Japanese temperament. Japan
+is a nation of hero-worshipers. This is no exaggeration. Not only is
+the primitive religion, Shintoism, systematic hero-worship, but every
+hero known to history is deified, and has a shrine or temple. These
+heroes, too, are all men of conspicuous valor or strength, famed for
+mighty deeds of daring. They are men of passion. The most popular
+story in Japanese literature is that of "The Forty-seven Ronin," who
+avenged the death of their liege-lord after years of waiting and
+plotting. This revenge administered, they committed harakiri in
+accordance with the etiquette of the ethical code of feudal Japan.
+Their tombs are to this day among the most frequented shrines in the
+capital of the land, and one of the most popular dramas presented in
+the theaters is based on this same heroic tragedy.
+
+The prominence of the emotional element may be seen in the popular
+description of national heroes. The picture of an ideal Japanese hero
+is to our eyes a caricature. His face is distorted by a fierce frenzy
+of passion, his eyeballs glaring, his hair flying, and his hands hold
+with a mighty grip the two-handed sword wherewith he is hewing to
+pieces an enemy. I am often amazed at the difference between the
+pictures of Japanese heroes and the living Japanese I see. This
+difference is manifestly due to the idealizing process; for they love
+to see their heroes in their passionate moods and tenses.
+
+The craving for heroes, even on the part of those who are familiar
+with Western thought and customs, is a feature of great interest. Well
+do I remember the enthusiasm with which educated, Christian young men
+awaited the coming to Japan of an eminent American scholar, from whose
+lectures impossible things were expected. So long as he was in America
+and only his books were known, he was a hero. But when he appeared in
+person, carrying himself like any courteous gentleman, he lost his
+exalted position.
+
+Townsend Harris showed his insight into Oriental thought never more
+clearly than by maintaining his dignity according to Japanese
+standards and methods. On his first entry into Tokyo he states, in his
+journal, that although he would have preferred to ride on horseback,
+in order that he might see the city and the people, yet as the highest
+dignitaries never did so, but always rode in entirely closed
+"norimono" (a species of sedan chair carried by twenty or thirty
+bearers), he too would do the same; to have ridden into the limits of
+the city on horseback would have been construed by the Japanese as an
+admission that he held a far lower official rank than that of a
+plenipotentiary of a great nation.
+
+It is not difficult to understand how these ideals of heroes arose.
+They are the same in every land where militarism, and especially
+feudalism, is the foundation on which the social order rests.
+
+Some of the difficulties met by foreign missionaries in trying to do
+their work arise from the fact that they are not easily regarded as
+heroes by their followers. The people are accustomed to commit their
+guidance to officials or to teachers or advisers whom they can regard
+as heroes. Since missionaries are not officials and do not have the
+manners of heroes, it is not to be expected that the Japanese will
+accept their leadership.
+
+A few foreigners have, however, become heroes in Japanese eyes.
+President Clark and Rev. S.R. Brown had great influence on groups of
+young men in the early years of Meiji, while giving them secular
+education combined with Christian instruction. The conditions,
+however, were then extraordinarily exceptional, and it is a noticeable
+fact that neither man remained long in Japan at that time. Another
+foreigner who was exalted to the skies by a devoted band of students
+was a man well suited to be a hero--for he had the samurai spirit to
+the full. Indeed, in absolute fearlessness and assumption of
+superiority, he out-samuraied the samurai. He was a man of impressive
+and imperious personality. Yet it is a significant fact that when he
+was brought back to Japan by his former pupils, after an absence of
+about eighteen years, during which they had continued to extol his
+merits and revere his memory, it was not long before they discovered
+that he was not the man their imagination had created. Not many months
+were needed to remove him from his pedestal. It would hardly be a fair
+statement of the whole case to leave the matter here. So far as I
+know, President Clark and Rev. S.R. Brown have always retained their
+hold on the imagination of the Japanese. The foreigner who of all
+others has perhaps done the most for Japan, and whose services have
+been most heartily acknowledged by the nation and government, was Dr.
+Guido F. Verbeck, who began his missionary work in 1859; he was the
+teacher of large numbers of the young men who became leaders in the
+transformation of Japan; he alone of foreigners was made a citizen and
+was given a free and general pass for travel; and his funeral in 1898
+was attended by the nobility of the land, and the Emperor himself made
+a contribution toward the expenses. Dr. Verbeck is destined to be one
+of Japan's few foreign heroes.
+
+Among the signs of Japanese craving for heroes may be mentioned the
+constant experience of missionaries when search is being made for a
+man to fill a particular place. The descriptions of the kind of man
+desired are such that no one can expect to meet him. The Christian
+boys' school in Kumamoto, and the church with it, went for a whole
+year without principal and pastor because they could not secure a man
+of national reputation. They wanted a hero-principal, who would cut a
+great figure in local politics and also be a hero-leader for the
+Christian work in the whole island of Kyushu, causing the school to
+shine not only in Kumamoto, but to send forth its light and its fame
+throughout the Empire and even to foreign lands. The unpretentious,
+unprepossessing-looking man who was chosen temporarily, though endowed
+with common sense and rather unusual ability to harmonize the various
+elements in the school, was not deemed satisfactory. He was too much
+like Socrates. At last they found a man after their own heart. He had
+traveled and studied long abroad; was a dashing, brilliant fellow;
+would surely make things hum; so at least said those who recommended
+him (and he did). But he was still a poor student in Scotland; his
+passage money must be raised by the school if he was to be secured.
+And raised it was. Four hundred and seventy-five dollars those one
+hundred and fifty poor boys and girls, who lived on two dollars a
+month, scantily clothed and insufficiently warmed, secured from their
+parents and sent across the seas to bring back him who was to be their
+hero-principal and pastor. The rest of the story I need not tell in
+detail, but I may whisper that he was more of a slashing hero than
+they planned for; in three months the boys' school was split in twain
+and in less than three years both fragments of the school had not only
+lost all their Christian character, but were dead and gone forever.
+And the grounds on which the buildings stood were turned into mulberry
+fields.
+
+Talking not long since to a native friend, concerning the
+hero-worshiping tendency of the Japanese, I had my attention called to
+the fact that, while what has been said above is substantially correct
+as concerns a large proportion of the people, especially the young
+men, there is nevertheless a class whose ideal heroes are not
+military, but moral. Their power arises not through self-assertion,
+but rather through humility; their influence is due entirely to
+learning coupled with insight into the great moral issues of life.
+Such has been the character of not a few of the "moral" teachers. I
+have recently read a Japanese novel based upon the life of one such
+hero. Omi Seijin, or the "Sage of Omi," is a name well known among
+the people of Japan; and his fame rests rather on his character than
+on his learning. If tradition is correct, his influence on the people
+of his region was powerful enough to transform the character of the
+place, producing a paradise on earth whence lust and crime were
+banished. Whatever the actual facts of his life may have been, this is
+certainly the representation of his character now held up for honor
+and imitation. There are also indications that the ideal military hero
+is not, for all the people, the self-assertive type that I have
+described above, though this is doubtless the prevalent one. Not long
+since I heard the following couplet as to the nature of a true hero:
+
+ "Makoto no Ei-yu;
+Sono yo, aizen to shite shumpu no gotoshi;
+Sono shin, kizen to shite kinseki no gotoshi.
+
+ "The true Hero;
+In appearance, charming like the spring breeze.
+In heart, firm as a rock."
+
+Another phrase that I have run across relating to the ideal man is, "I
+atte takakarazu," which means in plain English, "having authority, but
+not puffed up." In the presence of these facts, it will not do to
+think that the ideal hero of all the Japanese is, or even in olden
+times was, only a military hero full of swagger and bluster; in a
+military age such would, of necessity, be a popular ideal; but just in
+proportion as men rose to higher forms of learning, and character, so
+would their ideals be raised.
+
+It is not to be lightly assumed that the spirit of hero-worship is
+wholly an evil or a necessarily harmful thing. It has its advantages
+and rewards as well as its dangers and evils. The existence of
+hero-worship in any land reveals a nature in the people that is
+capable of heroic actions. Men appreciate and admire that which in a
+measure at least they are, and more that which they aspire to become.
+The recent war revealed how the capacity for heroism of a warlike
+nature lies latent in every Japanese breast and not in the descendants
+of the old military class alone. But it is more encouraging to note
+that popular appreciation of moral heroes is growing.
+
+Education and religion are bringing forth modern moral heroes. The
+late Dr. Neesima, the founder of the Doshisha, is a hero to many even
+outside the Church. Mr. Ishii, the father of Orphan Asylums in Japan,
+promises to be another. A people that can rear and admire men of this
+character has in it the material of a truly great nation.
+
+The hero-worshiping characteristic of the Japanese depends on two
+other traits of their nature. The first is the reality of strong
+personalities among them capable of becoming heroes; the second is the
+possession of a strong idealizing tendency. Prof. G.T. Ladd has called
+them a "sentimental" people, in the sense that they are powerfully
+moved by sentiment. This is a conspicuous trait of their character
+appearing in numberless ways in their daily life. The passion for
+group-photographs is largely due to this. Sentimentalism, in the sense
+given it by Prof. Ladd, is the emotional aspect of idealism.
+
+The new order of society is reacting on the older ideal of a hero and
+is materially modifying it. The old-fashioned samurai, girded with two
+swords, ready to kill a personal foe at sight, is now only the ideal
+of romance. In actual life he would soon find himself deprived of his
+liberty and under the condemnation not only of the law, but also of
+public opinion. The new ideal with which I have come into most
+frequent contact is far different. Many, possibly the majority, of the
+young men and boys with whom I have talked as to their aim in life,
+have said that they desired to secure first of all a thorough
+education, in order that finally they might become great "statesmen"
+and might guide the nation into paths of prosperity and international
+power. The modern hero is one who gratifies the patriotic passion by
+bringing some marked success to the nation. He must be a gentleman,
+educated in science, in history, and in foreign languages; but above
+all, he must be versed in political economy and law. This new ideal of
+a national hero has been brought in by the order of society, and in
+proportion as this order continues, and emphasis continues to be laid
+on mental and moral power, rather than on rank or official position,
+on the intrinsic rather than on the accidental, will the old ideal
+fade away and the new ideal take its place. Among an idealizing and
+emotional people, such as the Japanese, various ideals will naturally
+find extreme expression. As society grows complex also and its various
+elements become increasingly differentiated, so will the ideals pass
+through the same transformations. A study of ideals, therefore, serves
+several ends; it reveals the present character of those whose ideals
+they are; it shows the degree of development of the social organism in
+which they live; it makes known, likewise, the degree of the
+differentiation that has taken place between the various elements of
+the nation.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+LOVE FOR CHILDREN
+
+
+An aspect of Japanese life widely remarked and praised by foreign
+writers is the love for children. Children's holidays, as the third
+day of the third moon and the fifth day of the fifth moon, are general
+celebrations for boys and girls respectively, and are observed with
+much gayety all over the land. At these times the universal aim is to
+please the children; the girls have dolls and the exhibition of
+ancestral dolls; while the boys have toy paraphernalia of all the
+ancient and modern forms of warfare, and enormous wind-inflated paper
+fish, symbols of prosperity and success, fly from tall bamboos in the
+front yard. Contrary to the prevailing opinion among foreigners, these
+festivals have nothing whatever to do with birthday celebrations. In
+addition to special festivals, the children figure conspicuously in
+all holidays and merry-makings. To the famous flower-festival
+celebrations, families go in groups and make an all-day picnic of the
+joyous occasion.
+
+The Japanese fondness for children is seen not only at festival times.
+Parents seem always ready to provide their children with toys. As a
+consequence toy stores flourish. There is hardly a street without its
+store.
+
+A still further reason for the impression that the Japanese are
+especially fond of their children is the slight amount of punishment
+and reprimand which they administer. The children seem to have nearly
+everything their own way. Playing on the streets, they are always in
+evidence and are given the right of way.
+
+That Japanese show much affection for their children is clear. The
+question of importance, however, is whether they have it in a marked
+degree, more, for instance, than Americans? And if so, is this due to
+their nature, or may it be attributed to their family life as molded
+by the social order? It is my impression that, on the whole, the
+Japanese do not show more affection for their children than
+Occidentals, although they may at first sight appear to do so. Among
+the laboring classes of the %est, the father, as a rule, is away from
+home all through the hours of the day, working in shop or factory. He
+seldom sees his children except upon the Sabbath. Of course, the
+father has then very little to do with their care or education, and
+little opportunity for the manifestation of affection. In Japan,
+however, the industrial organization of society is still such that the
+father is at home a large part of the time. The factories are few as
+yet; the store is usually not separate from the home, but a part of
+it, the front room of the house. Family life is, therefore, much less
+broken in upon by the industrial necessities of civilization, and
+there are accordingly more opportunities for the manifestation of the
+father's affection for the children. Furthermore, the laboring-people
+in Japan live much on the street, and it is a common thing to see the
+father caring for children. While I have seldom seen a father with an
+infant tied to his back, I have frequently seen them with their infant
+sons tucked into their bosoms, an interesting sight. This custom gives
+a vivid impression of parental affection. But, comparing the middle
+classes of Japan and the West, it is safe to say that, as a whole, the
+Western father has more to do by far in the care and education of the
+children than the Japanese father, and that there is no less of
+fondling and playing with children. If we may judge the degree of
+affection by the signs of its demonstrations, we must pronounce the
+Occidental, with his habits of kissing and embracing, as far and away
+more affectionate than his Oriental cousin. While the Occidental may
+not make so much of an occasion of the advent of a son as does the
+Oriental, he continues to remember the birthdays of all his children
+with joy and celebrations, as the Oriental does not. Although the
+Japanese invariably say, when asked about it, that they celebrate
+their children's birthdays, the uniform experience of the foreigner
+is that birthday celebrations play a very insignificant part in the
+joys and the social life of the home.
+
+It is not difficult to understand why, apart from the question of
+affection, the Japanese should manifest special joy on the advent of
+sons, and particularly of a first son. The Oriental system of
+ancestral worship, with the consequent need, both religious and
+political, of maintaining the family line, is quite enough to account
+for all the congratulatory ceremonies customary on the birth of sons.
+The fact that special joy is felt and manifested on the birth of sons,
+and less on the birth of daughters, clearly shows that the dominant
+conceptions of the social order have an important place in determining
+even so fundamental a trait as affection for offspring.
+
+Affection for children is, however, not limited to the day of their
+birth or the period of their infancy. In judging of the relative
+possession by different races of affection for children, we must ask
+how the children are treated during all their succeeding years. It
+must be confessed that the advantage is then entirely on the side of
+the Occidental. Not only does this appear in the demonstrations of
+affection which are continued throughout childhood, often even
+throughout life, but more especially in the active parental solicitude
+for the children's welfare, striving to fit them for life's duties and
+watching carefully over their mental and moral education. In these
+respects the average Occidental is far in advance of the average
+Oriental.
+
+I have been told that, since the coming in of the new civilization and
+the rise of the new ideas about woman, marriage, and home, there is
+clearly observable to the Japanese themselves a change in the way in
+which children are being treated. But, even still, the elder son takes
+the more prominent place in the affection of the family, and sons
+precede daughters.
+
+A fair statement of the case, therefore, is somewhat as follows: The
+lower and laboring classes of Japan seem to have more visible
+affection for their children than the same classes in the Occident.
+Among the middle and upper classes, however, the balance is in favor
+of the West. In the East, while, without doubt, there always has been
+and is now a pure and natural affection, it is also true that this
+natural affection has been more mixed with utilitarian considerations
+than in the West. Christian Japanese, however, differ little from
+Christian Americans in this respect. The differences between the East
+and the West are largely due to the differing industrial and family
+conditions induced by the social order.
+
+The correctness of this general statement will perhaps be better
+appreciated if we consider in detail some of the facts of Japanese
+family life. Let us notice first the very loose ties, as they seem to
+us, holding the Japanese family together. It is one of the constant
+wonders to us Westerners how families can break up into fragments, as
+they constantly do. One third of the marriages end in divorce; and in
+case of divorce, the children all stay with the father's family. It
+would seem as if the love of the mother for her children could not be
+very strong where divorce under such a condition is so common. Or,
+perhaps, it would be truer to say that divorce would be far more
+frequent than it is but for the mother's love for her children. For I
+am assured that many a mother endures most distressing conditions
+rather than leave her children. Furthermore, the way in which parents
+allow their children to leave the home and then fail to write or
+communicate with them, for months or even years at a time, is
+incomprehensible if the parental love were really strong. And still
+further, the way in which concubines are brought into the home,
+causing confusion and discord, is a very striking evidence of the lack
+of a deep love on the part of the father for the mother of his
+children and even for his own legitimate children. One would expect a
+father who really loved his children to desire and plan for their
+legitimacy; but the children by his concubines are not "ipso facto"
+recognized as legal. One more evidence in this direction is the
+frequency of adoption and of separation. Adoption in Japan is largely,
+though by no means exclusively, the adoption of an adult; the cases
+where a child is adopted by a childless couple from love of children
+are rare, as compared with similar cases in the United States, so far,
+at least, as my observation goes. I recently heard of a conversation
+on personal financial matters between a number of Christian
+evangelists. After mutual comparisons they agreed that one of their
+number was more fortunate than the rest in that he did not have to
+support his mother. On inquiring into the matter, the missionary
+learned that this evangelist, on becoming a Buddhist priest many years
+before, had secured from the government, according to the laws of the
+land, exemption from this duty. When he became a Christian it did not
+seem to occur to him that it was his duty and his privilege to support
+his indigent mother. I may add that this idea has since occurred to
+him and he is acting upon it.
+
+Infanticide throws a rather lurid light on Japanese affection. First,
+in regard to the facts: Mr. Ishii's attention was called to the need
+of an orphan asylum by hearing how a child, both of whose parents had
+died of cholera, was on the point of being buried alive with its dead
+mother by heartless neighbors when it was rescued by a fisherman.
+Certain parts of Japan have been notorious from of old for this
+practice. In Tosa the evil was so rampant that a society for its
+prevention has been in existence for many years. It helps support
+children of poor parents who might be tempted to dispose of them
+criminally. In that province from January to March, 1898, I was told
+that "only" four cases of conviction for this crime were reported. The
+registered annual birth rate of certain villages has increased from
+40-50 to 75-80, and this without any immigration from outside. The
+reason assigned is the diminution of infanticide.
+
+In speaking of infanticide in Japan, let us not forget that every race
+and nation has been guilty of the same crime, and has continued to be
+guilty of it until delivered by Christianity.
+
+Widespread infanticide proves a wide lack of natural affection.
+Poverty is, of course, the common plea. Yet infanticide has been
+practiced not so much by the desperately poor as by small
+land-holders. The amount of farming land possessed by each family was
+strictly limited and could feed only a given number of mouths. Should
+the family exceed that number, all would be involved in poverty, for
+the members beyond that limit did not have the liberty to travel in
+search of new occupation. Infanticide, therefore, bore direct relation
+to the rigid economic nature of the old social order.
+
+Whatever, therefore, be the point of view from which we study the
+question of Japanese affection for children, we see that it was
+intimately connected with the nature of the social order. Whether we
+judge such affection or its lack to be a characteristic trait of
+Japanese nature, we must still maintain that it is not an inherent
+trait of the race nature, but only a characteristic depending for its
+greater or less development on the nature of the social order.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+MARITAL LOVE
+
+
+If the Japanese are a conspicuously emotional race, as is commonly
+believed, we should naturally expect this characteristic to manifest
+itself in a marked degree in the relation of the sexes. Curiously
+enough, however, such does not seem to be the case. So slight a place
+does the emotion of sexual love have in Japanese family life that some
+have gone to the extreme of denying it altogether. In his brilliant
+but fallacious volume, entitled "The Soul of the Far East," Mr.
+Percival Lowell states that the Japanese do not "fall in love." The
+correctness of this statement we shall consider in connection with the
+argument for Japanese impersonality. That "falling in love" is not a
+recognized part of the family system, and that marriage is arranged
+regardless not only of love, but even of mutual acquaintance, are
+indisputable facts.
+
+Let us confine our attention here to Japanese post-marital emotional
+characteristics. Do Japanese husbands love their wives and wives their
+husbands? We have already seen that in the text-book for Japanese
+women, the "Onna Daigaku," not one word is said about love. It may be
+stated at once that love between husband and wife is almost as
+conspicuously lacking in practice as in precept. In no regard,
+perhaps, is the contrast between the East and the West more striking
+than the respective ideas concerning woman and marriage. The one
+counts woman the equal, if not the superior of man; the other looks
+down upon her as man's inferior in every respect; the one considers
+profound love as the only true condition of marriage; the other thinks
+of love as essentially impure, beneath the dignity of a true man, and
+not to be taken into consideration when marriage is contemplated; in
+the one, the two persons most interested have most to say in the
+matter; in the other, they have the least to say; in the one, a long
+and intimate previous acquaintance is deemed important; in the other,
+the need for such an acquaintance does not receive a second thought;
+in the one, the wife at once takes her place as the queen of the home;
+in the other, she enters as the domestic for her husband and his
+parents; in the one, the children are hers as well as his; in the
+other, they are his rather than hers, and remain with him in case of
+divorce; in the one, divorce is rare and condemned; in the other, it
+is common in the extreme; in the one, it is as often the woman as the
+man who seeks the divorce; in the other, until most recent times, it
+is the man alone who divorces the wife; in the one, the reasons for
+divorce are grave; in the other, they are often trivial; in the one,
+the wife is the "helpmate"; in the other, she is the man's
+"plaything"; or, at most, the means for continuing the family lineage;
+in the one, the man is the "husband"; in the other, he is the "danna
+san" or "teishu" (the lord or master); in the ideal home of the one,
+the wife is the object of the husband's constant affection and
+solicitous care; in the ideal home of the other, she ever waits upon
+her lord, serves his food for him, and faithfully sits up for him at
+night, however late his return may be; in the one, the wife is
+justified in resenting any unfaithfulness or immorality on the part of
+her husband; in the other, she is commanded to accept with patience
+whatever he may do, however many concubines he may have in his home or
+elsewhere; and however immoral he may be, she must not be jealous. The
+following characterization of the women of Japan is presumably by one
+who would do them no injustice, having himself married a Japanese wife
+(the editor of the _Japan Mail_).
+
+ "The woman of Japan is a charming personage in many ways--gracious,
+ refined, womanly before everything, sweet-tempered, unselfish,
+ virtuous, a splendid mother, and an ideal wife from the point of
+ view of the master. But she is virtually excluded from the whole
+ intellectual life of the nation. Politics, art, literature,
+ science, are closed books to her. She cannot think logically about
+ any of these subjects, express herself clearly with reference to
+ them, or take an intellectual part in conversations relating to
+ them. She is, in fact, totally disqualified to be her husband's
+ intellectual companion, and the inevitable result is that he
+ despises her."[J]
+
+In face of all these facts, it is evident that the emotional element
+of character which plays so large a part in the relation of the sexes
+in the West has little, if any, counterpart in the Far East. Where the
+emotional element does come in, it is under social condemnation. There
+are doubtless many happy marriages in Japan, if the wife is faithful
+in her place and fills it well; and if the master is honorable
+according to the accepted standards, steady in his business, not given
+to wine or women. But even then the affection must be different from
+that which prevails in the West. No Japanese wife ever dreams of
+receiving the loving care from her husband which is freely accorded
+her Western sister by her husband.[K]
+
+I wish, however, to add at once that this is a topic about which it is
+dangerous to dogmatize, for the customs of Japan demand that all
+expressions of affection between husband and wife shall be sedulously
+concealed from the outer world. I can easily believe that there is no
+little true affection existing between husband and wife. A Japanese
+friend with whom I have talked on this subject expresses his belief
+that the statement made above, to the effect that no Japanese wife
+dreams of receiving the loving care which is expected by her Western
+sister, is doubtless true of Old Japan, but that there has been a
+great change in this respect in recent decades; and especially among
+the Christian community. That Christians excel the others with whom I
+have come in contact, has been evident to me. But that even they are
+still very different from Occidentals in this respect, is also clear.
+Whatever be the affection lavished on the wife in the privacy of the
+home, she does not receive in public the constant evidence of special
+regard and high esteem which the Western wife expects as her right.
+
+How much affection can be expressed by low formal bows? The fact is
+that Japanese civilization has striven to crush out all signs of
+emotion; this stoicism is exemplified to a large degree even in the
+home, and under circumstances when we should think it impossible.
+Kissing was an unknown art in Japan, and it is still unknown, except
+by name, to the great majority of the people. Even mothers seldom kiss
+their infant children, and when they do, it is only while the children
+are very young.
+
+The question, however, which particularly interests us, is as to the
+explanation for these facts. Is the lack of demonstrative affection
+between husband and wife due to the inherent nature of the Japanese,
+or is it not due rather to the prevailing social order? If a Japanese
+goes to America or. England, for a few years, does he maintain his
+cold attitude toward all women, and never show the slightest tendency
+to fall in love, or exhibit demonstrative affection? These questions
+almost answer themselves, and with them the main question for whose
+solution we are seeking.
+
+A few concrete instances may help to illustrate the generalization
+that these are not fixed because racial characteristics, but variable
+ones dependent on the social order. Many years ago when the late Dr.
+Neesima, the founder, with Dr. Davis, of the Doshisha, was on the
+point of departure for the United States on account of his health, he
+made an address to the students. In the course of his remarks he
+stated that there were three principal considerations that made him
+regret the necessity for his departure at that time; the first was
+that the Doshisha was in a most critical position; it was but
+starting on its larger work, and he felt that all its friends should
+be on hand to help on the great undertaking. The second was that he
+was compelled to leave his aged parents, whom he might not find living
+on his return to Japan. The third was his sorrow at leaving his
+beloved wife. This public reference to his wife, and especially to his
+love for her, was so extraordinary that it created no little comment,
+not to say scandal; especially obnoxious was it to many, because he
+mentioned her after having mentioned his parents. In the reports of
+this speech given by his friends to the public press no reference was
+made to this expression of love for his wife. And a few months after
+his death, when Dr. Davis prepared a short biography of Dr. Neesima,
+he was severely criticised by some of the Japanese for reproducing the
+speech as Dr. Neesima gave it.
+
+Shortly after my first arrival in Japan, I was walking home from
+church one day with an English-speaking Japanese, who had had a good
+deal to do with foreigners. Suddenly, without any introduction, he
+remarked that he did not comprehend how the men of the West could
+endure such tyranny as was exercised over them by their wives. I, of
+course, asked what he meant. He then said that he had seen me
+buttoning my wife's shoes. I should explain that on calling on the
+Japanese, in their homes, it is necessary that we leave our shoes at
+the door, as the Japanese invariably do; this is, of course, awkward
+for foreigners who wear shoes; especially so is the necessity of
+putting them on again. The difficulty is materially increased by the
+invariably high step at the front door. It is hard enough for a man to
+kneel down on the step and reach for his shoes and then put them on;
+much more so is it for a woman. And after the shoes are on, there is
+no suitable place on which to rest the foot for buttoning and tying. I
+used, therefore, very gladly to help my wife with hers. Yet, so
+contrary to Japanese precedent was this act of mine that this
+well-educated gentleman and Christian, who had had much intercourse
+with foreigners, could not see in it anything except the imperious
+command of the wife and the slavish obedience of the husband. His
+conception of the relation between the Occidental husband and wife is
+best described as tyranny on the part of the wife.
+
+One of the early shocks I received on this general subject was due to
+the discovery that whenever my wife took my arm as we walked the
+street to and from church, or elsewhere, the people looked at us in
+surprised displeasure. Such public manifestation of intimacy was to be
+expected from libertines alone, and from these only when they were
+more or less under the influence of drink. Whenever a Japanese man
+walks out with his wife, which, by the way, is seldom, he invariably
+steps on ahead, leaving her to follow, carrying the parcels, if there
+are any. A child, especially a son, may walk at his side, but not his
+wife.
+
+Let me give a few more illustrations to show how the present family
+life of the Japanese checks the full and free development of the
+affections. In one of our out-stations I but recently found a young
+woman in a distressing condition. Her parents had no sons, and
+consequently, according to the custom of the land, they had adopted a
+son, who became the husband of their eldest daughter; the man proved a
+rascal, and the family was glad when he decided that he did not care
+to be their son any longer. Shortly after his departure a child was
+born to the daughter; but, according to the law, she had no husband,
+and consequently the child must either be registered as illegitimate,
+or be fraudulently registered as the child of the mother's father.
+There is much fraudulent registration, the children of concubines are
+not recognized as legitimate; yet it is common to register such
+children as those of the regular wife, especially if she has few or
+none of her own.
+
+An evangelist who worked long in Kyushu was always in great financial
+trouble because of the fact that he had to support two mothers,
+besides giving aid to his father, who had married a third wife. The
+first was his own mother, who had been divorced, but, as she had no
+home, the son took her to his. When the father divorced his second
+wife, the son was induced to take care of her also. Another
+evangelist, with whom I had much to do, was the adopted son of a
+scheming old man; it seems that in the earlier part of the present era
+the eldest son of a family was exempt from military draft. It often
+happened, therefore, that families who had no sons could obtain large
+sums of money from those who had younger sons whom they wished to have
+adopted for the purpose of escaping the draft. This evangelist, while
+still a boy, was adopted into such a family, and a certain sum was
+fixed upon to be paid at some time in the future. But the adopted son
+proved so pleasing to the adopting father that he did not ask for the
+money; by some piece of legerdemain, however, he succeeded in adopting
+a second son, who paid him the desired money. After some years the
+first adopted son became a Christian, and then an evangelist, both
+steps being taken against the wishes of the adopting father. The
+father finally said that he would forego all relations to the son, and
+give him back his original name, provided the son would pay the
+original sum that had been agreed on, plus the interest, which
+altogether would, at that time, amount to several hundred yen. This
+was, of course, impossible. The negotiations dragged on for three or
+four years. Meanwhile, the young man fell in love with a young girl,
+whom he finally married; as he was still the son of his adopting
+father, he could not have his wife registered as his wife, for the old
+man had another girl in view for him and would not consent to this
+arrangement. And so the matter dragged for several months more. Unless
+the matter could be arranged, any children born to them must be
+registered as illegitimate. At this point I was consulted and, for the
+first time, learned the details of the case. Further consultations
+resulted in an agreement as to the sum to be paid; the adopted son was
+released, and re-registered under his newly acquired name and for the
+first time his marriage became legal. The confusion and suffering
+brought into the family by this practice of adoption and of separation
+are almost endless.
+
+The number of cases in which beautiful and accomplished young women
+have been divorced by brutal and licentious husbands is appalling. I
+know several such. What wonder that Christians and others are
+constantly laying emphasis, in public lectures and sermons and private
+talks, on the crying need of reform in marriage and in the home?
+
+Throughout the land the newspapers are discussing the pros and cons of
+monogamy and polygamy. In January of 1898 the _Jiji Shimpo_, one of
+the leading daily papers of Tokyo, had a series of articles on the
+subject from the pen of one of the most illustrious educators of New
+Japan, Mr. Fukuzawa. His school, the "Keio Gijiku," has educated more
+thousands of young men than any other, notwithstanding the fact that
+it is a private institution. Though not a Christian himself, nor
+making any professions of advocating Christianity, yet Mr. Fukuzawa
+has come out strongly in favor of monogamy. His description of the
+existing social and family life is striking, not to say sickening. If
+I mistake not, it is he who tells of a certain noble lady who shed
+tears at the news of the promotion of her husband in official rank;
+and when questioned on the matter she confessed that, with added
+salary, he would add to the number of his concubines and to the
+frequency of his intercourse with famous dancing and singing girls.
+
+The distressing state of family life may also be gathered from the
+large numbers of public and secret prostitutes that are to be found in
+all the large cities, and the singing girls of nearly every town.
+According to popular opinion, their number is rapidly increasing.
+Though this general subject trenches on morality rather than on the
+topic immediately before us, yet it throws a lurid light on this
+question also. It lets us see, perhaps, more clearly than we could in
+any other way, how deficient is the average home life of the people. A
+professing Christian, a man of wide experience and social standing,
+not long since seriously argued at a meeting of a Young Men's
+Christian Association that dancing and singing girls are a necessary
+part of Japanese civilization to-day. He argued that they supply the
+men with that female element in social life which the ordinary woman
+cannot provide; were the average wives and daughters sufficiently
+accomplished to share in the social life of the men as they are in the
+West, dancing and singing girls, being needless, would soon cease to
+be.
+
+One further question in this connection merits our attention. How are
+we to account for an order of society that allows so little scope for
+the natural affections of the heart, unless by saying that that order
+is the true expression of their nature? Must we not say that the
+element of affection in the present social order is deficient because
+the Japanese themselves are naturally deficient? The question seems
+more difficult than it really is.
+
+In the first place, the affectionate relation existing between
+husbands and wives and between parents and children, in Western lands,
+is a product of relatively recent times. In his exhaustive work on
+"The History of Human Marriage," Westermarck makes this very plain.
+Wherever the woman is counted a slave, is bought and sold, is
+considered as merely a means of bearing children to the family, or in
+any essential way is looked down upon, there high forms of affection
+are by the nature of the case impossible, though some affection
+doubtless exists; it necessarily attains only a rudimentary
+development. Now it is conspicuous that the conception of the nature
+and purpose of woman, as held in the Orient, has always been debasing
+to her. Though individual women might rise above their assigned
+position the whole social order, as established by the leaders of
+thought, was against her. The statement that there was a primitive
+condition of society in Japan in which the affectionate relations
+between husband and wife now known in the West prevailed, is, I think,
+a mistake.
+
+We must remember, in the second place, what careful students of human
+evolution have pointed out, that those tribes and races in which the
+family was most completely consolidated, that is to say, those in
+which the power of the father was absolute, were the ones to gain the
+victory over their competitors. The reason for this is too obvious to
+require even a statement. Every conquering race has accordingly
+developed the "patria potestas" to a greater or less degree. Now one
+general peculiarity of the Orient is that that stage of development
+has remained to this day; it has not experienced those modifications
+and restrictions which have arisen in the West. The national
+government dealt with families and clans, not with individuals, as the
+final social unit. In the West, however, the individual has become the
+civil unit; the "patria potestas" has thus been all but lost. This,
+added to religious and ethical considerations, has given women and
+children an ever higher place both in society and in the home. Had
+this loss of authority by the father been accompanied with a weakening
+of the nation, it would have been an injury; but, in the West, his
+authority has been transferred to the nation. These considerations
+serve to render more intelligible and convincing the main proposition
+of these chapters, that the distinctive emotional characteristics of
+the Japanese are not inherent; they are the results of the social and
+industrial order; as this order changes, they too will surely change.
+The entire civilization of a land takes its leading, if not its
+dominant, color from the estimate set by the people as a whole on the
+value of human life. The relatively late development of the tender
+affections, even in the West, is due doubtless to the extreme slowness
+with which the idea of the inherent value of a human being, as such,
+has taken root, even though it was clearly taught by Christ. But the
+leaven of His teaching has been at work for these hundreds of years,
+and now at last we are beginning to see its real meaning and its vital
+relation to the entire progress of man. It may be questioned whether
+Christ gave any more important impetus to the development of
+civilization than by His teaching in regard to the inestimable worth
+of man, grounding it, as He did, on man's divine sonship. Those
+nations which insist on valuing human life only by the utilitarian
+standard, and which consequently keep woman in a degraded place,
+insisting on concubinage and all that it implies, are sure to wane
+before those nations which loyally adopt and practice the higher
+ideals of human worth. The weakness of heathen lands arises in no
+slight degree from their cheap estimate of human life.
+
+In Japan, until the Meiji era, human life was cheap. For criminals of
+the military classes, suicide was the honorable method of leaving this
+world; the lower orders of society suffered loss of life at the hands
+of the military class without redress. The whole nation accepted the
+low standards of human value; woman was valued chiefly, if not
+entirely, on a utilitarian basis, that, namely, of bearing children,
+doing house and farm work, and giving men pleasure. So far as I know,
+not among all the teachings of Confucius or Buddha was the supreme
+value of human life, as such, once suggested, much less any adequate
+conception of the worth and nature of woman. The entire social order
+was constructed without these two important truths.
+
+By a great effort, however, Japan has introduced a new social order,
+with unprecedented rapidity. By one revolution it has established a
+set of laws in which the equality of all men before the law is
+recognized at least; for the first time in Oriental history, woman is
+given the right to seek divorce. The experiment is now being made on a
+great scale as to whether the new social order adopted by the rulers
+can induce those ideas among the people at large which will insure its
+performance. Can the mere legal enactments which embody the principles
+of human equality and the value of human life, regardless of sex,
+beget those fundamental conceptions on which alone a steady and
+lasting government can rest? Can Japan really step into the circle of
+Western nations, without abandoning her pagan religions and pushing
+onward into Christian monotheism with all its corollaries as to the
+relations and mutual duties of man? All earnest men are crying out for
+a strengthening of the moral life of the nation through the reform of
+the family and are proclaiming the necessity of monogamy; but, aside
+from the Christians, none appear to see how this is to be done. Even
+Mr. Fukuzawa says that the first step in the reform of the family and
+the establishment of monogamy is to develop public sentiment against
+prostitution and plural or illegal marriage; and the way to do this
+is first to make evil practices secret. This, he says, is more
+important than to give women a higher education. He does not see that
+Christianity with its conceptions of immediate responsibility of the
+individual to God, the loving Heavenly Father, and of the infinite
+value of each human soul, thus doing away with the utilitarian scale
+for measuring both men and women, together with its conceptions of the
+relations of the sexes and of man to man, can alone supply that
+foundation for all the elements of the new social order, intellectual
+and emotional, which will make it workable and permanent, and of which
+monogamy is but one element.[L] He does not see that representative
+government and popular rights cannot stand for any length of time on
+any other foundation.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+CHEERFULNESS--INDUSTRY--TRUTHFULNESS--SUSPICIOUSNESS
+
+
+Many writers have dwelt with delight on the cheerful disposition that
+seems so common in Japan. Lightness of heart, freedom from all anxiety
+for the future, living chiefly in the present, these and kindred
+features are pictured in glowing terms. And, on the whole, these
+pictures are true to life. The many flower festivals are made
+occasions for family picnics when all care seems thrown to the wind.
+There is a simplicity and a freshness and a freedom from worry that is
+delightful to see. But it is also remarked that a change in this
+regard is beginning to be observed. The coming in of Western
+machinery, methods of government, of trade and of education, is
+introducing customs and cares, ambitions and activities, that militate
+against the older ways. Doubtless, this too is true. If so, it but
+serves to establish the general proposition of these pages that the
+more outstanding national characteristics are largely the result of
+special social conditions, rather than of inherent national character.
+
+The cheerful disposition, so often seen and admired by the Westerner,
+is the cheerfulness of children. In many respects the Japanese are
+relatively undeveloped. This is due to the nature of their social
+order during the past. The government has been largely paternal in
+form and fully so in theory. Little has been left to individual
+initiative or responsibility. Wherever such a system has been dominant
+and the perfectly accepted order, the inevitable result is just such a
+state of simple, childish cheerfulness as we find in Japan. It
+constitutes that golden age sung by the poets of every land. But being
+the cheerfulness of children, the happiness of immaturity, it is
+bound to change with growth, to be lost with coming maturity.
+
+Yet the Japanese are by no means given up to a cheerful view of life.
+Many an individual is morose and dejected in the extreme. This
+disposition is ever stimulated by the religious teachings of Buddhism.
+Its great message has been the evanescent character of the present
+life. Life is not worth living, it urges; though life may have some
+pleasures, the total result is disappointment and sorrow. Buddhism has
+found a warm welcome in the hearts of many Japanese. For more than a
+thousand years it has been exercising a potent influence on their
+thoughts and lives. Yet how is this consistent with the cheerful
+disposition which seems so characteristic of Japan? The answer is not
+far to seek. Pessimism is by its very nature separative, isolating,
+silent. Those oppressed by it do not enter into public joys. They hide
+themselves in monasteries, or in the home. The result is that by its
+very nature the actual pessimism of Japan is not a conspicuous feature
+of national character. The judgment that all Japanese are cheerful
+rests on shallow grounds. Because, forsooth, millions on holidays bear
+that appearance, and because on ordinary occasions the average man and
+woman seem cheerful and happy, the conclusion is reached that all are
+so. No effort is made to learn of those whose lives are spent in
+sadness and isolation. I am convinced that the Japan of old, for all
+its apparent cheer, had likewise its side of deep tragedy. Conditions
+of life that struck down countless individuals, and mental conditions
+which made Buddhism so popular, both point to this conclusion.
+
+Again I wish to call attention to the fact that the prominence of
+children and young people is in part the cause of the appearance of
+general happiness. The Japanese live on the street as no Western
+people do. The stores and workshops are the homes; when these are
+open, the homes are open. When the children go out of the house to
+play they use the streets, for they seldom have yards. Here they
+gather in great numbers and play most enthusiastically, utterly
+regardless of the passers-by, for these latter are all on foot or in
+jinrikishas, and, consequently, never cause the children any alarm.
+
+The Japanese give the double impression of being industrious and
+diligent on the one hand, and, on the other, of being lazy and utterly
+indifferent to the lapse of time. The long hours during which they
+keep at work is a constant wonder to the Occidental. I have often been
+amazed in Fukuoka to find stores and workshops open, apparently in
+operation, after ten and sometimes even until eleven o'clock at night,
+while blacksmiths and carpenters and wheelwrights would be working
+away as if it were morning. Many of the factories recently started
+keep very long hours. Indeed most of the cotton mills run day and
+night, having two sets of workers, who shift their times of labor
+every week. Those who work during the night hours one week take the
+day hours the following week. In at least one such factory, with which
+I am acquainted, the fifteen hundred girls who work from six o'clock
+Saturday evening until six o'clock Sunday morning, are then supposed
+to have twenty-four hours of rest before they begin their day's work
+Monday morning; but, as a matter of fact, they must spend three or
+four and sometimes five hours on Sunday morning cleaning up the
+factory.
+
+In a small silk-weaving factory that I know the customary hours for
+work were from five in the morning until nine at night, seven days in
+the week. The wife, however, of the owner became a Christian. Through
+her intervention time for rest was secured on Sunday long enough for a
+Bible class, which the evangelist of the place was invited to teach.
+After several months of instruction a number of the hands became
+Christian, and all were sufficiently interested to ask that the whole
+of the Sabbath be granted to them for rest; but in order that the
+master might not lose thereby, they agreed to begin work at four each
+morning and to work on until ten at night. With such hours one would
+have expected them to fall at once into their beds when the work of
+the day was over. But for many months, at ten o'clock in the evening,
+my wife and I heard them singing a hymn or two in their family
+worship before retiring for the night.
+
+In certain weaving factories I have been told that the girls are
+required to work sixteen hours a day; and that on Sundays they are
+allowed to have some rest, being then required to work but ten hours!
+The diligence of mail deliverers, who always run when on duty, the
+hours of consecutive running frequently performed by jin-irikisha men
+(several have told me that they have made over sixty miles in a single
+day), the long hours of persistent study by students in the higher
+schools, and many kindred facts, certainly indicate a surprising
+capacity for work.
+
+But there are equally striking illustrations of an opposite nature.
+The farmers and mechanics and carpenters, among regular laborers, and
+the entire life of the common people in their homes, give an
+impression of indifference to the flight of time, if not of absolute
+laziness. The workers seem ready to sit down for a smoke and a chat at
+any hour of the day. In the home and in ordinary social life, the loss
+of time seems to be a matter of no consequence whatever. Polite
+palaver takes unstinted hours, and the sauntering of the people
+through the street emphasizes the impression that no business calls
+oppress them.
+
+In my opinion these characteristics, also, are due to the conditions
+of society, past and present, rather than to the inherent nature of
+the people. The old civilization was easy-going; it had no clocks; it
+hardly knew the time of day; it never hastened. The hour was estimated
+and was twice as long as the modern hour. The structure of society
+demanded the constant observance of the forms of etiquette; this, with
+its numberless genuflections and strikings of the head on the floor,
+always demanded time. Furthermore, the very character of the footgear
+compelled and still compels a shuffling, ambling gait when walking the
+streets. The clog is a well-named hindrance to civilization in the
+waste of time it compels. The slow-going, time-ignoring
+characteristics of New Japan are social inheritances from feudal
+times, characteristics which are still hampering its development. The
+industrious spirit that is to be found in so many quarters to-day is
+largely the gift of the new civilization. Shoes are taking the place
+of clogs. The army and all the police, on ordinary duty, wear shoes.
+Even the industry of the students is largely due to the new conditions
+of student life. The way in which the Japanese are working to-day, and
+the feverish haste that some of them evince in their work, shows that
+they are as capable as Occidentals of acquiring the rush of
+civilization.
+
+The home life of the people gives an impression of listlessness that
+is in marked contrast to that of the West. This is partly due to the
+fact that the house work is relatively light, there being no furniture
+to speak of, the rooms small, and the cooking arrangements quite
+simple. Housewives go about their work with restful deliberation,
+which is trying, however, to one in haste. It is the experience of the
+housekeepers from the West that one Japanese domestic is able to
+accomplish from a third to a half of what is done by a girl in
+America. This is not wholly due to slowness of movement, however, but
+also to smallness of stature and corresponding lack of strength. On
+the other hand, the long hours of work required of women in the
+majority of Japanese homes is something appalling. The wife is
+expected to be up before the husband, to prepare his meals, and to
+wait patiently till his return at night, however late that may be. In
+all except the higher ranks of society she takes entire care of the
+children, except for the help which her older children may give her.
+During much of the time she goes about her work with an infant tied to
+her back. Though she does not work hard at any one time (and is it to
+be wondered at?) yet she works long. Especially hard is the life of
+the waiting girls in the hotels. I have learned that, as a rule, they
+are required to be up before daylight and to remain on duty until
+after midnight. In some hotels they are allowed but four or five hours
+out of the twenty-four. The result is, they are often overcome and
+fall asleep while at service. Sitting on the floor and waiting to
+serve the rice, with nothing to distract their thoughts or hold their
+attention, they easily lose themselves for a few moments.
+
+Two other strongly contrasted traits are found in the Japanese
+character, absolute confidence and trustfulness on the one hand, and
+suspicion on the other. It is the universal testimony that the former
+characteristic is rapidly passing away; in the cities it is well-nigh
+gone. But in the country places it is still common. The idea of making
+a bargain when two persons entered upon some particular piece of work,
+the one as employer, the other as employed, was entirely repugnant to
+the older generation, since it was assumed that their relations as
+inferior and superior should determine their financial relations; the
+superior would do what was right, and the inferior should accept what
+the superior might give without a question or a murmur. Among the
+samurai, where the arrangement is between equals, bargaining or making
+fixed and fast terms which will hold to the end, and which may be
+carried to the courts in case of differences, was a thing practically
+unknown in the older civilization. Everything of a business nature was
+left to honor, and was carried on in mutual confidence.
+
+A few illustrations of this spirit of confidence from my own
+experience may not be without interest. On first coming to Japan, I
+found it usual for a Japanese who wished to take a jinrikisha to call
+the runner and take the ride without making any bargain, giving him at
+the end what seemed right. And the men generally accepted the payment
+without question. I have found that recently, unless there is some
+definite understanding arrived at before the ride, there is apt to be
+some disagreement, the runner presuming on the hold he has, by virtue
+of work done, to get more than is customary. This is especially true
+in case the rider is a foreigner. Another set of examples in which
+astonishing simplicity and confidence were manifested was in the
+employment of evangelists. I have known several instances in which a
+full correspondence with an evangelist with regard to his employment
+was carried on, and the settlement finally concluded, and the man set
+to work without a word said about money matters. It need hardly be
+said that no foreigner took part in that correspondence.
+
+The simple, childlike trustfulness of the country people is seen in
+multiplied ways; yet on the whole I cannot escape the conviction that
+it is a trustfulness which is shown toward each other as equals.
+Certain farmers whom I have employed to care for a cow and to
+cultivate the garden, while showing a trustful disposition towards me,
+have not had the same feelings toward their fellows apparently.
+
+This confidence and trustfulness were the product of a civilization
+resting on communalistic feudalism; the people were kept as children
+in dependence on their feudal lord; they had to accept what he said
+and did; they were accustomed to that order of things from the
+beginning and had no other thought; on the whole too, without doubt,
+they received regular and kindly treatment. Furthermore, there was no
+redress for the peasant in case of harshness; it was always the wise
+policy, therefore, for him to accept whatever was given without even
+the appearance of dissatisfaction. This spirit was connected with the
+dominance of the military class. Simple trustfulness was, therefore,
+chiefly that of the non-military classes. The trustfulness of the
+samurai sprang from their distinctive training. As already mentioned,
+when drawing up a bond in feudal times, in place of any tangible
+security, the document would read, "If I fail to do so and so, you may
+laugh at me in public."
+
+Since the overthrow of communal feudalism and the establishment of an
+individualistic social order, necessitating personal ownership of
+property, and the universal use of money, trustful confidence is
+rapidly passing away. Everything is being more and more accurately
+reduced to a money basis. The old samurai scorn for money seems to be
+wholly gone, an astonishing transformation of character. Since the
+disestablishment of the samurai class many of them have gone into
+business. Not a few have made tremendous failures for lack of business
+instinct, being easily fleeced by more cunning and less honorable
+fellows who have played the "confidence" game most successfully;
+others have made equally great successes because of their superior
+mental ability and education. The government of Japan is to-day chiefly
+in the hands of the descendants of the samurai class. They have their
+fixed salaries and everything is done on a financial basis, payment
+being made for work only. The lazy and the incapable are being pushed
+to the wall. Many of the poorest and most pitiable people of the land
+to-day are the proud sons of the former aristocracy, who glory in the
+history of their ancestors, but are not able or willing to change
+their old habits of thought and manner of life.
+
+The American Board has had a very curious, not to say disastrous,
+experience with the spirit of trustful confidence that was the
+prevailing business characteristic of the older civilization.
+According to the treaties which Japan had made with foreign nations,
+no foreigner was allowed to buy land outside the treaty ports. As,
+however, mission work was freely allowed by the government and
+welcomed by many of the people in all parts of the land, and as it
+became desirable to have continuous missionary work in several of the
+interior towns, it seemed wise to locate missionaries in those places
+and to provide suitable houses for them. In order to do this, land was
+bought and the needed houses erected, and the title was necessarily
+held in the names of apparently trustworthy native Christians. The
+government was, of course, fully aware of what was being done and
+offered no objection. It was well understood that the property was not
+for the private ownership of the individual missionary, but was to be
+held by the Christians for the use of the mission to which the
+missionary belonged. For many years no questions were raised and all
+moved along smoothly. The arrangement between the missionaries and the
+Christian or Christians in whose names the property might be held was
+entirely verbal, no document being of any legal value, to say nothing
+of the fact that in those early days the mention of documentary
+relationships would have greatly hurt the tender feelings of honor
+which were so prominent a part of samurai character. The financial
+relations were purely those of honor and trust.
+
+Under this general method, large sums of money were expended by the
+American Board for homes for its missionaries in various parts of
+Japan, and especially in Kyoto. Here was the Doshisha, which grew from
+a small English school and Evangelists' training class to a prosperous
+university with fine buildings. Tens of thousands of dollars were put
+into this institution, besides the funds needful for the land and the
+houses for nine foreign families. An endowment was also raised, partly
+in Japan, but chiefly in America. In a single bequest, Mr. Harris of
+New London gave over one hundred thousand dollars for a School of
+Science. It has been estimated that, altogether, the American Board
+and its constituency have put into the Doshisha, including the
+salaries of the missionary teachers, toward a million dollars.
+
+In the early nineties the political skies were suddenly darkened. The
+question of treaty revision loomed up black in the heavens. The
+politicians of the land clamored for the absolute refusal of all right
+of property ownership by foreigners. In their political furore they
+soon began to attack the Japanese Christians who were holding the
+property used by the various missions. They accused them of being
+traitors to the country. A proposed law was drafted and presented in
+the National Diet, confiscating all such property. The Japanese
+holders naturally became nervous and desirous of severing the
+relationships with the foreigners as soon as possible. In the case of
+corporate ownership the trustees began to make assumptions of absolute
+ownership, regardless of the moral claims of the donors of the funds.
+In the earlier days of the trouble frequent conferences on the
+question were held by the missionaries of the American Board with the
+leading Christians of the Empire, and their constant statement was,
+"Do not worry; trust us; we are samurai and will do nothing that is
+not perfectly honorable." So often were these sentiments reiterated,
+and yet so steadily did the whole management of the Doshisha move
+further and further away from the honorable course, that finally the
+"financial honor of the samurai" came to have an odor far from
+pleasant. A deputation of four gentlemen, as representatives of the
+American Board, came from America especially to confer with the
+trustees as to the Christian principles of the institution, and the
+moral claims of the Board, but wholly in vain. The administration of
+the Doshisha became so distinctly non-Christian, to use no stronger
+term, that the mission felt it impossible to co-operate longer with
+the Doshisha trustees; the missionary members of the faculty
+accordingly resigned. In order to secure exemption from the draft for
+its students the trustees of the Doshisha abrogated certain clauses of
+the constitution relating to the Christian character of the
+institution, in spite of the fact that these clauses belonged to the
+"unchangeable" part of the constitution which the trustees, on taking
+office, had individually sworn to maintain. Again the Board sent out a
+man, now a lawyer vested with full power to press matters to a final
+issue. After months of negotiations with the trustees in regard to the
+restoration of the substance of the abrogated clauses, without result,
+he was on the point of carrying the case into the courts, when the
+trustees decided to resign in a body. A new board of trustees has been
+formed, who bid fair to carry on the institution in accord with the
+wishes of its founders and benefactors, as expressed in the original
+constitution. At one stage of the proceedings the trustees voted
+magnanimously, as they appeared to think, to allow the missionaries of
+the Board to live for fifteen years, rent free, in the foreign houses
+connected with the Doshisha; this, because of the many favors it had
+received from the Board! By this vote they maintained that they had
+more than fulfilled every requirement of honor. That they were
+consciously betraying the trust that had been reposed in them is not
+for a moment to be supposed.
+
+It would not be fair not to add that this experience in Kyoto does not
+exemplify the universal Japanese character. There are many Japanese
+who deeply deplore and condemn the whole proceeding. Some of the
+Doshisha alumni have exerted themselves strenuously to have
+righteousness done.
+
+Passing now from the character of trustful confidence, we take up its
+opposite, suspiciousness. The development of this quality is a natural
+result of a military feudalism such as ruled Japan for hundreds of
+years. Intrigue was in constant use when actual war was not being
+waged. In an age when conflicts were always hand to hand, and the man
+who could best deceive his enemy as to his next blow was the one to
+carry off his head, the development of suspicion, strategy, and deceit
+was inevitable. The most suspicious men, other things being equal,
+would be the victors; they, with their families, would survive and
+thus determine the nature of the social order. The more than two
+hundred and fifty clans and "kuni," "clan territory," into which the
+land was divided, kept up perpetual training in the arts of intrigue
+and subtlety which are inevitably accompanied by suspicion.
+
+Modern manifestations of this characteristic are frequent. Not a
+cabinet is formed, but the question of its make-up is discussed from
+the clannish standpoint. Even though it is now thirty years since the
+centralizing policy was entered upon and clan distinctions were
+effectually broken down, yet clan suspicion and jealousy is not dead.
+
+The foreigner is impressed by the constant need of care in
+conversation, lest he be thought to mean something more or other than
+he says. When we have occasion to criticise anything in the Japanese,
+we have found by experience that much more is inferred than is said.
+Shortly after my arrival in Japan I was advised by one who had been in
+the land many years to be careful in correcting a domestic or any
+other person sustaining any relation to myself, to say not more than
+one-tenth of what I meant, for the other nine-tenths would be
+inferred. Direct and perfectly frank criticism and suggestion, such as
+prevail among Anglo-Americans at least, seem to be rare among the
+Japanese.
+
+In closing, it is in order to note once again that the emotional
+characteristics considered in this chapter, although customarily
+thought to be deep-seated traits of race nature, are, nevertheless,
+shown to be dependent on the character of the social order. Change the
+order, and in due season corresponding changes occur in the national
+character, a fact which would be impossible were that character
+inherent and essential, passed on from generation to generation by the
+single fact of biological heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+JEALOUSY--REVENGE--HUMANE FEELINGS
+
+
+According to the teachings of Confucius, jealousy is one of the seven
+just grounds on which a woman may be divorced. In the "Greater
+Learning for Women,"[M] occur the following words: "Let her never even
+dream of jealousy. If her husband be dissolute, she must expostulate
+with him, but never either render her countenance frightful or her
+accents repulsive, which can only result in completely alienating her
+husband from her, and making her intolerable in his eyes." "The five
+worst maladies that afflict the female mind are indocility,
+discontent, slander, jealousy, and silliness. Without any doubt, these
+five maladies infest seven or eight out of every ten women, and it is
+from these that arises the inferiority of women to men ... Neither
+when she blames and accuses and curses innocent persons, nor when in
+her jealousy of others she thinks to set herself up alone, does she
+see that she is her own enemy, estranging others and incurring their
+hatred."
+
+The humiliating conditions to which women have been subjected in the
+past and present social order, and to which full reference has been
+made in previous chapters, give sufficient explanation of the jealousy
+which is recognized as a marked, and, as might appear, inevitable
+characteristic of Japanese women. Especially does this seem inevitable
+when it is remembered how slight is their hold on their husbands, on
+whose faithfulness their happiness so largely depends. Only as this
+order changes and the wife secures a more certain place in the home,
+free from the competition of concubines and harlots and dancing girls,
+can we expect the characteristic to disappear. That it will do so
+under such conditions, there is no reason to question. Already there
+are evidences that in homes where the husband and the wife are both
+earnest Christians, and where each is confident of the loyalty of the
+other, jealousy is as rare as it is in Christian lands.
+
+But is jealousy a characteristic limited to women? or is it not also a
+characteristic of men? I am assured from many quarters that men also
+suffer from it. The jealousy of a woman is aroused by the fear that
+some other woman may supplant her in the eyes of her husband; that of
+a man by the fear that some man may supplant him in rank or influence.
+Marital jealousy of men seems to be rare. Yet I heard not long since
+of a man who was so afraid lest some man might steal his wife's
+affections that he could not attend to his business, and finally,
+after three months of married wretchedness, he divorced her. A year
+later he married her again, but the old trouble reappeared, and so he
+divorced her a second time. If marital jealousy is less common among
+men than among women, the explanation is at hand in the lax moral
+standard for man. The feudal order of society, furthermore, was
+exactly the soil in which to develop masculine jealousy. In such a
+society ambition and jealousy go hand in hand. Wherever a man's rise
+in popularity and influence depends on the overthrow of someone
+already in possession, jealousy is natural. Connected with the spirit
+of jealousy is that of revenge. Had we known Japan only during her
+feudal days, we should have pronounced the Japanese exceedingly
+revengeful. Revenge was not only the custom, it was also the law of
+the land and the teaching of moralists. One of the proverbs handed
+down from the hoary past is: "Kumpu no ada to tomo ni ten we
+itadakazu." "With the enemy of country, or father, one cannot live
+under the same heaven." The tales of heroic Japan abound in stories of
+revenge. Once when Confucius was asked about the doctrine of Lao-Tse
+that one should return good for evil, he replied, "With what then
+should one reward good? The true doctrine is to return good for good,
+and evil with justice." This saying of Confucius has nullified for
+twenty-four hundred years that pearl of truth enunciated by Lao-Tse,
+and has caused it to remain an undiscovered diamond amid the rubbish
+of Taoism. By this judgment Confucius sanctified the rough methods of
+justice adopted in a primitive order of society. His dictum peculiarly
+harmonized with the militarism of Japan. Being, then, a recognized
+duty for many hundred years, it would be strange indeed were not
+revengefulness to appear among the modern traits of the Japanese.
+
+But the whole order of society has been transformed. Revenge is now
+under the ban of the state, which has made itself responsible for the
+infliction of corporal punishment on individual transgressors. As a
+result conspicuous manifestations of the revengeful spirit have
+disappeared, and, may we not rightly say, even the spirit itself? The
+new order of society leaves no room for its ordinary activity; it
+furnishes legal methods of redress. The rapid change in regard to this
+characteristic gives reason for thinking that if the industrial and
+social order could be suitably adjusted, and the conditions of
+individual thought and life regulated, this, and many other evil
+traits of human character, might become radically changed in a short
+time. Intelligent Christian Socialism is based on this theory and
+seems to have no little support for its position.
+
+Are Japanese cruel or humane? The general impression of the casual
+tourist doubtless is that they are humane. They are kind to children
+on the streets, to a marked degree; the jinrikisha runners turn out
+not only for men, women, and children, but even for dogs. The
+patience, too, of the ordinary Japanese under trying circumstances is
+marked; they show amazing tolerance for one another's failings and
+defects, and their mutual helpfulness in seasons of distress is often
+striking. To one traveling through New Japan there is usually little
+that will strike the eye as cruel.
+
+But the longer one lives in the country, the more is he impressed with
+certain aspects of life which seem to evince an essentially
+unsympathetic and inhumane disposition. I well remember the shock I
+received when I discovered, not far from my home in Kumamoto, an
+insane man kept in a cage. He was given only a slight amount of
+clothing, even though heavy frost fell each night. Food was given him
+once or twice a day. He was treated like a wild animal, not even being
+provided with bedding. This is not an exceptional instance, as might,
+perhaps, at first be supposed. The editor of the _Japan Mail_, who has
+lived in Japan many years, and knows the people well, says: "Every
+foreigner traveling or residing in Japan must have been shocked from
+time to time by the method of treating lunatics. Only a few months ago
+an imbecile might have been seen at Hakone confined in what was
+virtually a cage, where, from year's end to year's end, he received
+neither medical assistance nor loving tendance, but was simply fed
+like a wild beast in a menagerie. We have witnessed many such sights
+with horror and pity. Yet humane Japanese do not seem to think of
+establishing asylums where these unhappy sufferers can find refuge.
+There is only one lunatic asylum in Tokyo. It is controlled by the
+municipality, its accommodation is limited, and its terms place it
+beyond the reach of the poor." And the amazing part is that such
+sights do not seem to arouse the sentiment of pity in the Japanese.
+
+The treatment accorded to lepers is another significant indication of
+the lack of sympathetic and humane sentiments among the people at
+large. For ages they have been turned from home and house and
+compelled to wander outcasts, living in the outskirt of the villages
+in rude booths of their own construction, and dependent on their daily
+begging, until a wretched death gives them relief from a more wretched
+life. So far as I have been able to learn, the opening of hospitals
+for lepers did not take place until begun by Christians in recent
+times. This casting out of leper kindred was not done by the poor
+alone, but by the wealthy also, although I do hot affirm or suppose
+that the practice was universal. I am personally acquainted with the
+management of the Christian Leper Hospital in Kumamoto, and the sad
+accounts I have heard of the way in which lepers are treated by their
+kindred would seem incredible, were they not supported by the
+character of my informants, and by many other facts of a kindred
+nature.
+
+A history of Japan was prepared by Japanese scholars under appointment
+from the government and sent to the Columbian Exposition in 1893; it
+makes the following statement, already referred to on a previous page:
+"Despite the issue of several proclamations ... people were governed
+by such strong aversion to the sight of sickness that travelers were
+often left to die by the roadside from thirst, hunger, or disease, and
+householders even went to the length of thrusting out of doors and
+abandoning to utter destitution servants who suffered from chronic
+maladies.... Whenever an epidemic occurred, the number of deaths that
+resulted was enormous."[N] This was the condition of things after
+Buddhism, with its civilizing and humanizing influences, had been at
+work in the land for about four hundred years, and Old Japan was at
+the height of her glory, whether considered from the standpoint of her
+government, her literature, her religious development, or her art.
+
+Of a period some two hundred years earlier, it is stated that, by the
+assistance of the Sovereign, Buddhism established a charity hospital
+in Nara, "where the poor received medical treatment and drugs gratis,
+and an asylum was founded for the support of the destitute. Measures
+were also taken to rescue foundlings, and, in general, to relieve
+poverty and distress" (p. 92). The good beginning made at that time
+does not seem to have been followed up. As nearly as I can make out,
+relying on the investigations of Rev. J.H. Pettee and Mr. Ishii, there
+are to-day in Japan fifty orphan asylums, of which eleven are of
+non-Christian, and thirty-nine of Christian origin, support, and
+control. Of the non-Christian, five are in Osaka, two in Tokyo, four
+in Kyoto, and one each in Nagoya, Kumamoto, and Matsuye. Presumably
+the majority of these are in the hands of Buddhists. Of the Christian
+asylums twenty are Roman Catholic and nineteen are Protestant. It is a
+noteworthy fact that in this form of philanthropy and religious
+activity, as in so many others, Christians are the pioneers and
+Buddhists are the imitators. In a land where Buddhism has been so
+effective as to modify the diet of the nation, leading them in
+obedience to the doctrines of Buddha, as has been stated, to give up
+eating animal food, it is exceedingly strange that the people
+apparently have no regard for the pain of living animals. Says the
+editor of the _Mail_ in the article already quoted: "They will not
+interfere to save a horse from the brutality of its driver, and they
+will sit calmly in a jinrikisha while its drawer, with throbbing heart
+and straining muscles, toils up a steep hill." How often have I seen
+this sight! How the rider can endure it, I cannot understand, except
+it be that revolt at cruelty and sympathy with suffering do not stir
+within his heart. Of course, heartless individuals are not rare in the
+West also. I am speaking here, however, not of single individuals, but
+of general characteristics.
+
+But a still more conspicuous evidence of Japanese deficiency of
+sympathy is the use, until recently, of public torture. It was the
+theory of Japanese jurisprudence that no man should be punished, even
+though proved guilty by sufficient evidence, until he himself
+confessed his guilt; consequently, on the flimsiest evidence, and even
+on bare suspicion, he was tortured until the desired confession was
+extracted. The cruelty of the methods employed, we of the nineteenth
+century cannot appreciate. Some foreigner tells how the sight of
+torture which he witnessed caused him to weep, while the Japanese
+spectators stood by unmoved. The methods of execution were also
+refined devices of torture. Townsend Harris says that crucifixion was
+performed as follows: "The criminal is tied to a cross with his arms
+and legs stretched apart as wide as possible; then a spear is thrust
+through the body, entering just under the bottom of the shoulder blade
+on the left side, and coming out on the right side, just by the
+armpit. Another is then thrust through in a similar manner from the
+right to the left side. The executioner endeavors to avoid the heart
+in this operation. The spears are thrust through in this manner until
+the criminal expires, but his sufferings are prolonged as much as
+possible. Shinano told me that a few years ago a very strong man lived
+until the eleventh spear had been thrust through him."
+
+From these considerations, which might be supported by a multitude of
+illustrations, we conclude that in the past there has certainly been a
+great amount of cruelty exhibited in Japan, and that even to this day
+there is in this country far less sympathy for suffering, whether
+animal or human, than is felt in the West.
+
+But we must not be too quick to jump to the conclusion that in this
+regard we have discovered an essential characteristic of the Japanese
+nature. With reference to the reported savagery displayed by Japanese
+troops at Port Arthur, it has been said and repeated that you have
+only to scratch the Japanese skin to find the Tartar, as if the recent
+development of human feelings were superficial, and his real character
+were exhibited in his most cruel moments. To get a true view of the
+case let us look for a few moments at some other parts of the world,
+and ask ourselves a few questions.
+
+How long is it since the Inquisition was enforced in Europe? Who can
+read of the tortures there inflicted without shuddering with horror?
+It is not necessary to go back to the times of the Romans with their
+amphitheaters and gladiators, and with their throwing of Christians to
+wild animals, or to Nero using Christians as torches in his garden.
+How long is it since witches were burned, not only in Europe by the
+thousand, but in enlightened and Christian New England? although it is
+true that the numbers there burned were relatively few and the reign
+of terror brief. How long is it since slaves were feeling the lash
+throughout the Southern States of our "land of freedom"? How long is
+it since fiendish mobs have burned or lynched the objects of their
+rage? How long is it since societies for preventing cruelty to animals
+and to children were established in England and America? Is it not a
+suggestive fact that it was needful to establish them and that it is
+still needful to maintain them? The fact is that the highly developed
+humane sense which is now felt so strongly by the great majority of
+people in the West is a late development, and is not yet universal. It
+is not for us to boast, or even to feel superior to the Japanese,
+whose opportunities for developing this sentiment have been limited.
+
+Furthermore, in regard to Japan, we must not overlook certain facts
+which show that Japan has made gradual progress in the development of
+the humane feelings and in the legal suppression of cruelty. The Nihon
+Shoki records that, on the death of Yamato Hiko no Mikoto, his
+immediate retainers were buried alive in a standing position around
+the grave, presumably with the heads alone projecting above the
+surface of the ground. The Emperor Suijin Tenno, on hearing the
+continuous wailing day after day of the slowly dying retainers, was
+touched with pity and said that it was a dreadful custom to bury with
+the master those who had been most faithful to him when alive. And he
+added that an evil custom, even though ancient, should not be
+followed, and ordered it to be abandoned. A later record informs us
+that from this time arose the custom of burying images in the place of
+servants. According to the ordinary Japanese chronology, this took
+place in the year corresponding to 1 B.C. The laws of Ieyasu (1610
+A.D.) likewise condemn this custom as unreasonable, together with the
+custom in accordance with which the retainers committed suicide upon
+the master's death. These same laws also refer to the proverb on
+revenge, given in the third paragraph of this chapter, and add that
+whoever undertakes thus to avenge himself or his father or mother or
+lord or elder brother must first give notice to the proper office of
+the fact and of the time within which he will carry out his intention;
+without such a notice, the avenger will be considered a common
+murderer. This provision was clearly a limitation of the law of
+revenge. These laws of Ieyasu also describe the old methods of
+punishing criminals, and then add: "Criminals are to be punished by
+branding, or beating, or tying up, and, in capital cases, by spearing
+or decapitation; but the old punishments of tearing to pieces and
+boiling to death are not to be used." Torture was finally legally
+abolished in Japan only as late as 1877.
+
+It has already become quite clear that the prevalence of cruelty or of
+humanity depends largely upon the social order that prevails. It is
+not at all strange that cruelty, or, at least, lack of sympathy for
+suffering in man or beast, should be characteristic of an order based
+on constant hand-to-hand conflict. Still more may we expect to find a
+great indifference to human suffering wherever the value of man as man
+is slighted. Not until the idea of the brotherhood of man has taken
+full possession of one's heart and thought does true sympathy spring
+up; then, for the first time, comes the power of putting one's self in
+a brother's place. The apparently cruel customs of primitive times, in
+their treatment of the sick, and particularly of those suffering from
+contagious diseases, is the natural, not to say necessary, result of
+superstitious ignorance. Furthermore, it was often the only ready
+means to prevent the spread of contagious or epidemic diseases.
+
+In the treatment of the sick, the first prerequisite for the
+development of tenderness is the introduction of correct ideas as to
+the nature of disease and its proper treatment. As soon as this has
+been effectually done, a great proportion of the apparent indifference
+to human suffering passes away. The cruelty which is to-day so
+universal in Africa needs but a changed social and industrial order to
+disappear. The needed change has come to Japan. Physicians trained in
+modern methods of medical practice are found all over the land. In
+1894 there were 597 hospitals, 42,551 physicians, 33,921 nurses and
+midwives, 2869 pharmacists, and 16,106 druggists, besides excellent
+schools of pharmacy and medicine.[O]
+
+It is safe to say that nearly all forms of active cruelty have
+disappeared from Japan; some amount of active sympathy has been
+developed, though, as compared to that of other civilized lands, it is
+still small. But there can be no doubt that the rapid change which has
+come over the people during the past thirty years is not a change in
+essential innate character, but only in the social order. As soon as
+the idea takes root that every man has a mission of mercy, and that
+the more cruel are not at liberty to vent their barbarous feelings on
+helpless creatures, whether man or beast, a strong uprising of humane
+activity will take place which will demand the formation of societies
+for the prevention of cruelty and for carrying active relief to the
+distressed and wretched. Lepers will no longer need to eke out a
+precarious living by exhibiting their revolting misery in public;
+lunatics will no longer be kept in filthy cages and left with
+insufficient care or clothing. The stream of philanthropy will rise
+high, to be at once a blessing and a glory to a race that already has
+shown itself in many ways capable of the highest ideals of the West.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+AMBITION--CONCEIT
+
+
+Ambition is a conspicuous characteristic of New Japan. I have already
+spoken of the common desire of her young men to become statesmen. The
+stories of Neesima and other young Japanese who, in spite of
+opposition and without money, worked their way to eminence and
+usefulness, have fired the imagination of thousands of youths. They
+think that all they need is to get to America, when their difficulties
+will be at an end. They fancy that they have but to look around to
+find some man who will support them while they study.
+
+Not only individuals, but the people as a whole, have great ambitions.
+Three hundred years ago the Taiko, Hideyoshi, the Napoleon of Japan,
+and the virtual ruler of the Empire, planned, after subjugating Korea,
+to conquer China and make himself the Emperor of the East. He thought
+he could accomplish this in two years. During the recent war, it was
+the desire of many to march on to Pekin. Frequent expression was given
+to the idea that it is the duty of Japan to rouse China from her long
+sleep, as America roused Japan in 1854. It is frequently argued, in
+editorial articles and public speeches, that the Japanese are
+peculiarly fitted to lead China along the path of progress, not only
+indirectly by example, as they have been doing, but directly by
+teaching, as foreigners have led Japan. "The Mission of Japan to the
+Orient" is a frequent theme of public discourse. But national
+ambitions do not rest here. It is not seldom asserted that in Japan a
+mingling of the Occidental and Oriental civilizations is taking place
+under such favorable conditions that, for the first time in history,
+the better elements of both are being selected; and that before long
+the world will sit to learn at her feet. The lofty ambition of a group
+of radical Christians is to discover or create a new religion which
+shall unite the best features of Oriental and Occidental religious
+thought and experience. The religion of the future will be, not
+Christianity, nor Buddhism, but something better than either, more
+consistent, more profound, more universal; and this religion, first
+developed in Japan, will spread to other lands and become the final
+religion of the world.
+
+A single curious illustration of the high-flying thoughts of the
+people may well find mention here. When the Kumamoto Boys' School
+divided over the arbitrary, tyrannical methods of their newly secured,
+brilliant principal, already referred to in a previous chapter, the
+majority of the trustees withdrew and at once established a new school
+for boys. For some time they struggled for a name which should set
+forth the principles for which the school stood, and finally they
+fixed on that of "To-A Gakko." Translated into unpretentious English,
+this means "Eastern Asia School"; the idea was that the school stood
+for no narrow methods of education, and that its influence was to
+extend beyond the confines of Japan. This interpretation is not an
+inference, but was publicly stated oil various occasions. The school
+began with twenty-five boys, if my memory is correct, and never
+reached as many as fifty. In less than three years it died an untimely
+death through lack of patronage.
+
+The young men of the island of Kyushu, especially of Kumamoto and
+Kagoshima provinces, are noted for their ambitious projects. The once
+famous "Kumamoto Band" consisted entirely of Kyushu boys. Under the
+masterful influence of Captain Jaynes those high-spirited sons of
+samurai, who had come to learn foreign languages and science, in a
+school founded to combat Christianity and to upbuild Buddhism, became
+impressed with the immense superiority of foreign lands, which
+superiority they were led to attribute to Christianity. They
+accordingly espoused the Christian cause with great ardor, and, in
+their compact with one another, agreed to work for the reform of
+Japan. I have listened to many addresses by the Kumamoto schoolboys,
+and I have been uniformly impressed with the political and national
+tendencies of their thought.
+
+Accompanying ambition is a group of less admirable qualities, such as
+self-sufficiency and self-conceit. They are seldom manifested with
+that coarseness which in the West we associate with them, for the
+Japanese is usually too polished to be offensively obtrusive. He
+seldom indulges in bluster or direct assertion, but is contented
+rather with the silent assumption of superiority.
+
+I heard recently of a slight, though capital, illustration of my
+point. Two foreign gentlemen were walking through the town of Tadotsu
+some years since and observed a sign in English which read
+"Stemboots." Wondering what the sign could mean they inquired the
+business of the place, and learning that it was a steamboat office,
+they gave the clerk the reason for their inquiry, and at his request
+made the necessary correction. A few days later, however, on their
+return, they noticed that the sign had been re-corrected to
+"Stem-boats," an assumption of superior knowledge on the part of some
+tyro in English. The multitude of signboards in astonishing English,
+in places frequented by English-speaking people, is one of the amusing
+features of Japan. It would seem as if the shopkeepers would at least
+take the pains to have the signs correctly worded and spelled, by
+asking the help of some foreigner or competent Japanese. Yet they
+assume that they know all that is needful.
+
+Indications of perfect self-confidence crop out in multitudes of ways
+far too numerous to mention. The aspiring ambition spoken of in the
+immediately preceding pages is one indication of this characteristic.
+Another is the readiness of fledglings to undertake responsibilities
+far beyond them. Young men having a smattering of English, yet wholly
+unable to converse, set up as teachers. Youths in school not
+infrequently undertake to instruct their teachers as to what courses
+of study and what treatment they should receive. Still more
+conspicuous is the cool assumption of superiority evinced by so many
+Japanese in discussing intellectual and philosophical problems. The
+manner assumed is that of one who is complete master of the subject.
+The silent contempt often poured on foreigners who attempt to discuss
+these problems is at once amusing and illustrative of the
+characteristic of which I am speaking.[P]
+
+We turn next to inquire for the explanation of these characteristics.
+Are they inherent traits of the race? Or are they the product of the
+times? Doubtless the latter is the true explanation. It will be found
+that those individuals in whom these characteristics appear are
+descendants of the samurai. A small class of men freed from heavy
+physical toil, given to literature and culture, ever depending on the
+assumption of superiority for the maintenance of their place in
+society and defending their assumption by the sword--such a class, in
+such a social order, would develop the characteristics in question to
+a high degree. Should we expect an immediate change of character when
+the social order has been suddenly changed?
+
+In marked contrast to the lofty assumptions of superiority which
+characterized the samurai of Old Japan, was the equally marked
+assumption of inferiority which characterized the rest of the people,
+or nineteen-twentieths of the nation. I have already sufficiently
+dwelt on this aspect of national character. I here recur to it merely
+to enforce the truth that self-arrogation and self-abnegation,
+haughtiness and humility, proud, high-handed, magisterial manners, and
+cringing, obsequious obedience, are all elements of character that
+depend on the nature of the social order. They are passed on from
+generation to generation more by social than by biological heredity.
+Both of these sets of contrasted characteristics are induced by a
+full-fledged feudal system, and must remain for a time as a social
+inheritance after that system has been overthrown, particularly if its
+overthrow is sudden. In proportion as the principles of personal
+rights and individual worth on the basis of manhood become realized
+by the people and incorporated into the government and customs of the
+land, will abnegating obsequiousness, as well as haughty lordliness,
+be replaced by a straightforward manliness, in which men of whatever
+grade of society will frankly face each other, eye to eye.
+
+But what shall we say in regard to the assumption made by young Japan
+in its attitude to foreigners? Are the assumptions wholly groundless?
+Is the self-confidence unjustified? Far from it. When we study later
+the intellectual elements of Japanese character, we shall see some
+reasons for their feeling of self-reliance. The progress which the
+nation has made in many lines within thirty years shows that it has
+certain kinds of power and, consequently, some ground for
+self-reliance. Furthermore, self-reliance, if fairly supported by
+ability and zeal, is essential in the attainment of any end whatever.
+Faint heart never won fair lady. Confidence in self is one form of
+faith. No less of peoples than individuals is it true, that without
+faith in themselves they cannot attain their goal. The impression of
+undue self-confidence made by the Japanese may be owing partly to
+their shortness of stature. It is a new experience for the West to see
+a race of little people with large brains and large plans. Especially
+does it seem strange and conceited for a people whose own civilization
+is so belated to assume a rôle of such importance in the affairs of
+the world. Yet we must learn to dissociate physical size from mental
+or spiritual capacity. The future alone will disclose what Japanese
+self-reliance and energy can produce.
+
+The present prominence of this characteristic in Japan is still
+further to be accounted for by her actual recent history. The
+overthrow of the Shogunate was primarily the work of young men; the
+introduction of almost all the sweeping reforms which have transformed
+Japan has been the work of young men who, though but partly equipped
+for their work, approached it with energy and perfect confidence, not
+knowing enough perhaps to realize the difficulties they were
+undertaking. They had to set aside the customs of centuries; to do
+this required startling assumptions of superiority to their ancestors
+and their immediate parents. The young men undertook to dispute and
+doubt everything that stood in the way of national re-organization. In
+what nation has there ever been such a setting aside of parental
+teaching and ancestral authority? These heroic measures secured
+results in which the nation glories. Is it strange, then, that the
+same spirit should show itself in every branch of life, even in the
+attitude of the people to the Westerners who have brought them the new
+ways and ideas?
+
+The Japanese, however, is not the only conceited nation. Indeed, it
+would be near the truth to say that there is no people without this
+quality. Certainly the American and English, French and German nations
+cannot presume to criticise others. The reason why we think Japan
+unique in this respect is that in the case of these Western nations we
+know more of the grounds for national self-satisfaction than in the
+case of Japan. Yet Western lands are, in many respects, truly
+provincial to this very day, in spite of their advantages and
+progress; the difficulty with most of them is that they do not
+perceive it. The lack of culture that prevails among our working
+classes is in some respects great. The narrow horizon still bounding
+the vision of the average American or Briton is very conspicuous to
+one who has had opportunities to live and travel in many lands. Each
+country, and even each section of a country, is much inclined to think
+that it has more nearly reached perfection than any other.
+
+This phase of national and local feeling is interesting, especially
+after one has lived in Japan a number of years and has had
+opportunities to mingle freely with her people. For they, although
+self-reliant and self-conceited, are at the same time surprisingly
+ready to acknowledge that they are far behind the times. Their
+open-mindedness is truly amazing. In describing the methods of land
+tenure, of house-building, of farming, of local government, of
+education, of moral instruction, of family life, indeed, of almost
+anything in the West that has some advantageous feature, the remark
+will be dropped incidentally that these facts show how uncivilized
+Japan still is. In their own public addresses, if any custom is
+attacked, the severest indictment that can be brought against it is
+that it is uncivilized. In spite, therefore, of her self-conceit,
+Japan is in a fairer way of making progress than many a Western
+nation, because she is also so conscious of defects. A large section
+of the nation has a passion for progress. It wishes to learn of the
+good that foreign lands have attained, and to apply the knowledge in
+such wise as shall fit most advantageously into the national life.
+Although Japan is conceited, her conceit is not without reason, nor is
+it to be attributed to her inherent race nature. It is manifestly due
+to her history and social order past and present.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+PATRIOTISM--APOTHEOSIS--COURAGE
+
+
+No word is so dear to the patriotic Japanese as the one that leaps to
+his lips when his country is assailed or maligned, "Yamato-Damashii."
+In prosaic English this means "Japan Soul." But the native word has a
+flavor and a host of associations that render it the most pleasing his
+tongue can utter. "Yamato" is the classic name for that part of Japan
+where the divinely honored Emperor, Jimmu Tenno, the founder of the
+dynasty and the Empire, first established his court and throne.
+"Damashii" refers to the soul, and especially to the noble qualities
+of the soul, which, in Japan of yore, were synonymous with bravery,
+the characteristic of the samurai. If, therefore, you wish to stir in
+the native breast the deepest feelings of patriotism and courage, you
+need but to call upon his "Yamato-Damashii."
+
+There has been a revival in the use of this word during the last
+decade. The old Japan-Spirit has been appealed to, and the watchword
+of the anti-foreign reaction has been "Japan for the Japanese." Among
+English-speaking and English-reading Japanese there has been a
+tendency to give this term a meaning deeper and broader than the
+historic usage, or even than the current usage, will bear. One
+Japanese writer, for instance, defines the term as meaning, "a spirit
+of loyalty to country, conscience, and ideal." An American writer
+comes more nearly to the current usage in the definition of it as "the
+aggressive and invincible spirit of Japan." That there is such a
+spirit no one can doubt who has the slightest acquaintance with her
+past or present history.
+
+Concerning the recent rise of patriotism I have spoken elsewhere,
+perhaps at sufficient length. Nor is it needful to present extensive
+evidence for the statement that the Japanese have this feeling of
+patriotism in a marked degree. One or two rather interesting items
+may, however, find their place here.
+
+The recent war with China was the occasion of focusing patriotism and
+fanning it into flame. Almost every town street, and house, throughout
+the Empire, was brilliantly decked with lanterns and flags, not on a
+single occasion only, but continuously. Each reported victory, however
+small, sent a thrill of delight throughout the nation. Month after
+month this was kept up. In traveling through the land one would not
+have fancied that war was in progress, but rather, that a
+long-continued festival was being observed.
+
+An incident connected with sending troops to Korea made a deep
+impression on the nation. The Okayama Orphan Asylum under the
+efficient management of its founder, Mr. Ishii, had organized the
+older boys into a band, securing for them various kinds of musical
+instruments. These they learned to use with much success. When the
+troops were on the point of leaving, Mr. Ishii went with his band to
+the port of Hiroshima, erected a booth, prepared places for heating
+water, and as often as the regiments passed by, his little orphans
+sallied forth with their teapots of hot tea for the refreshment of the
+soldiers. Each regiment was also properly saluted, and if opportunity
+offered, the little fellows played the national anthem, "Kimi-ga yo,"
+which has been thus translated: "May Our Gracious Sovereign reign a
+thousand years, reign till the little stone grow into a mighty rock,
+thick velveted with ancient moss." And finally the orphans would raise
+their shrill voices with the rhythmical national shout, "Tei-koku
+Ban-zai, Tei-koku Ban-zai"; "Imperial-land, a myriad years,
+Imperial-land, a myriad years." This thoughtful farewell was
+maintained for the four or five days during which the troops were
+embarking for the seat of war, well knowing that some would never
+return, and that their children would be left fatherless even as were
+these who saluted them. So deep was the impression made upon the
+soldiers that many of them wept and many a bronzed face bowed in
+loving recognition of the patriotism of these Christian boys. It is
+said that the commander-in-chief of the forces himself gave the little
+fellows the highest military salute in returning theirs.
+
+Throughout the history of Japan, the aim of every rebellious clan or
+general was first to get possession of the Emperor. Having done this,
+the possession of the Imperial authority was unquestioned. Whoever was
+opposed to the Emperor was technically called "Cho-teki," the enemy of
+the throne, a crime as heinous as treason in the West. The existence
+of this sentiment throughout the Empire is an interesting fact. For,
+at the very same time, there was the most intense loyalty to the local
+lord or "daimyo." This is a fine instance of a certain characteristic
+of the Japanese of which I must speak more fully in another
+connection, but which, for convenience, I term "nominality." It
+accepts and, apparently at least, is satisfied with a nominal state of
+affairs, which may be quite different from the real. The theoretical
+aspect of a question is accepted without reference to the actual
+facts. The real power may be in the hands of the general or of the
+daimyo, but if authority nominally proceeds from the throne, the
+theoretical demands are satisfied. The Japanese themselves describe
+this state as "yumei-mujitsu." In a sense, throughout the centuries
+there has been a genuine loyalty to the throne, but it has been of the
+"yumei-mujitsu" type, apparently satisfied with the name only. In
+recent times, however, there has been growing dissatisfaction with
+this state of affairs. Some decades before Admiral Perry appeared
+there were patriots secretly working against the Tokugawa Shogunate.
+Called in Japanese "Kinnoka," they may be properly termed in English
+"Imperialists." Their aim was to overthrow the Shogunate and restore
+full and direct authority to the Emperor. Not a few lost their lives
+because of their views, but these are now honored by the nation as
+patriots.
+
+There is a tendency among scholars to-day to magnify the patriotism
+and loyalty of preceding ages, also to emphasize the dignity and
+Imperial authority of the Emperor. The patriotic spirit is now so
+strong that it blinds their eyes to many of the salient facts of
+their history. Their patriotism is more truly a passion than an idea.
+It is an emotion rather than a conception. It demands certain methods
+of treatment for their ancient history that Western scholarship cannot
+accept. It forbids any really critical research into the history of
+the past, since it might cast doubt on the divine descent of the
+Imperial line. It sums itself up in passionate admiration, not to say
+adoration, of the Emperor. In him all virtues and wisdom abound. No
+fault or lack in character can be attributed to him. I question if any
+rulers have ever been more truly apotheosized by any nation than the
+Emperors of Japan. The essence of patriotism to-day is devotion to the
+person of the Emperor. It seems impossible for the people to
+distinguish between the country and its ruler. He is the fountain of
+authority. Lower ranks gain their right and their power from him
+alone. Power belongs to the people only because, and in proportion as,
+he has conferred it upon them. Even the Constitution has its authority
+only because he has so determined. Should he at any time see fit to
+change or withdraw it, it is exceedingly doubtful whether one word of
+criticism or complaint would be publicly uttered, and as for forcible
+opposition, of such a thing no one would dream.
+
+Japanese patriotism has had some unique and interesting features. In
+some marked respects it is different from that of lands in which
+democratic thought has held sway. For 1500 years, under the military
+social order, loyalty has consisted of personal attachment to the
+lord. It has ever striven to idealize that lord. The "yumei-mujitsu"
+characteristic has helped much in this idealizing process, by bridging
+the chasm between the prosaic fact and the ideal. Now that the old
+form of feudalism has been abruptly abolished, with its local lords
+and loyalty, the old sentiment of loyalty naturally fixes itself on
+the Emperor. Patriotism has perhaps gained intensity in proportion as
+it has become focalized. The Emperor is reported to be a man of
+commanding ability and good sense. It is at least true that he has
+shown wisdom in selecting his councilors. There is general agreement
+that he is not a mere puppet in the hands of his advisers, but that he
+exercises a real and direct influence on the government of the day.
+During the late war with China it was currently reported that from
+early morning until late at night, week after week and month after
+month, he worked upon the various matters of business that demanded
+his attention. No important move or decision was made without his
+careful consideration and final approval. These and other noble
+qualities of the present Emperor have, without doubt, done much toward
+transferring the loyalty of the people from the local daimyo to the
+national throne.
+
+An event in the political world has recently occurred which
+illustrates pointedly the statements just made in regard to the
+enthusiastic loyalty of the people toward the Emperor. In spite of the
+fact that the national finances are in a distressing state of
+confusion, and notwithstanding the struggle which has been going on
+between successive cabinets and political parties, the former
+insisting on, and the latter refusing, any increase in the land tax,
+no sooner was it suggested by a small political party, to make a
+thank-offering to the Emperor of 20,000,000 yen out of the final
+payment of the war indemnity lately received, than the proposal was
+taken up with zeal by both of the great and utterly hostile political
+parties, and immediately by both houses of the Diet. The two reasons
+assigned were, "First, that the victory over China would never have
+been won, nor the indemnity obtained, had not the Emperor been the
+victorious, sagacious Sovereign that he is, and that, therefore, it is
+only right that a portion of the indemnity should be offered to him;
+secondly, that His Majesty is in need of money, the allowance granted
+by the state for the maintenance of the Imperial Household being
+insufficient, in view of the greatly enhanced prices of commodities
+and the large donations constantly made by His Majesty for charitable
+purposes."[Q] This act of the Diet appeals to the sentiment of the
+people as the prosaic, business-like method of the Occident would not
+do. The significance of the appropriation made by the Diet will be
+better realized if it is borne in mind that the post-bellum programme
+for naval and military expansion which was adopted in view of the
+large indemnity (being, by the way, 50,000,000 yen), already calls for
+an expenditure in excess of the indemnity. Either the grand programme
+must be reduced, or new funds be raised, yet the leading political
+parties have been absolutely opposed to any substantial increase of
+the land tax, which seems to be the only available source of increase
+even to meet the current expenses of the government, to say nothing of
+the post-bellum programme. So has a burst of sentiment buried all
+prudential considerations. This is a species of loyalty that
+Westerners find hard to appreciate. To them it would seem that the
+first manifestation of loyalty would be to provide the Emperor's
+Cabinet and executive officers with the necessary funds for current
+expenses; that the second would be to give the Emperor an allowance
+sufficient to meet his actual needs, and the third,--if the funds held
+out,--to make him a magnificent gift. This sentimental method of
+loyalty to the Emperor, however, is matched by many details of common
+life. A sentimental parting gift or speech will often be counted as
+more friendly than thoroughly business-like relations. The prosaic
+Occidental discounts all sentiment that has not first satisfied the
+demands of business and justice. Such a standard, however, seems to be
+repugnant to the average Japanese mind.
+
+The theory that all authority resides in the Emperor is also enforced
+by recent history. For the constitution was not wrung from an
+unwilling ruler by an ambitious people, but was conferred by the
+Emperor of his own free will, under the advice of his enlightened and
+progressive councilors.
+
+As an illustration of some of the preceding statements let me quote
+from a recent article by Mr. Yamaguchi, Professor of History in the
+Peeresses' School and Lecturer in the Imperial Military College. After
+speaking of the abolition of feudalism and the establishment of a
+constitutional monarchy, he goes on to say: "But we must not suppose
+that the sovereign power of the state has been transferred to the
+Imperial Diet. On the contrary, it is still in the hands of the
+Emperor as before.... The functions of the government are retained in
+the Emperor's own hands, who merely delegates them to the Diet, the
+Government (Cabinet), and the Judiciary, to exercise the same in his
+name. The present form of government is the result of the history of a
+country which has enjoyed an existence of many centuries. Each country
+has its own peculiar characteristics which differentiate it from
+others. Japan, too, has her history, different from that of other
+countries. Therefore we ought not to draw comparisons between Japan
+and other countries, as if the same principles applied to all
+indiscriminately. The Empire of Japan has a history of 3000 [!] years,
+which fact distinctly marks out our nationality as unique. The
+monarch, in the eyes of the people, is not merely on a par with an
+aristocratic oligarchy which rules over the inferior masses, or a few
+nobles who equally divide the sovereignty among themselves. According
+to our ideas, the monarch reigns over and governs the country in his
+own right, and not by virtue of rights conferred by the
+constitution.... Our Emperor possesses real sovereignty and also
+exercises it. He is quite different from other rulers who possess but
+a partial sovereignty.... He has inherited the rights of sovereignty
+from his ancestors. Thus it is quite legitimate to think that the
+rights of sovereignty exist in the Emperor himself.... The Empire of
+Japan shall be reigned over and governed by a line of Emperors
+unbroken for ages eternal. (Constitution, Art. LXXIII.) ... The
+sovereign power of the state cannot be dissociated from the Imperial
+Throne. It lasts forever, along with the Imperial line of succession,
+unbroken for ages eternal. If the Imperial house cease to exist, the
+Empire falls."
+
+In a land where adopted sons are practically equivalent to lineal
+descendants (another instance of the "yumei-mujitsu" type of thought),
+and where marriage is essentially polygamous, and where the
+"yumei-mujitsu" spirit has allowed the sovereignty to be usurped in
+fact, though it may not be in name, it is not at all wonderful that
+the nation can boast of a longer line of Emperors than any other land.
+But when monogamy becomes the rule in Japan, as it doubtless will some
+day, and if lineal descent should be considered essential to
+inheritance, as in the Occident, it is not at all likely that the
+Imperial line will maintain itself unbroken from father to son
+indefinitely. Although the present Emperor has at least five
+concubines besides his wife, the Empress, and has had, prior to 1896,
+no less than thirteen children by them, only two of these are still
+living, both of them the offspring of his concubines; one of these is
+a son born in 1879, proclaimed the heir in 1887, elected Crown Prince
+in 1889, and married in 1900; he is said to be in delicate health; the
+second child is a daughter born in 1890. Since 1896 several children
+have been born to the Emperor and two or three have died, so that at
+present writing there are but four living children. These are all
+offspring of concubines.[R]
+
+In speaking, however, of the Japanese apotheosis of their Emperor, we
+must not forget how the "divine right of kings" has been a popular
+doctrine, even in enlightened England, until the eighteenth century,
+and is not wholly unknown in other lands at the present day. Only in
+recent times has the real source of sovereignty been discovered by
+historical and political students. That the Japanese are not able to
+pass at one leap from the old to the new conception in regard to this
+fundamental element of national authority is not at all strange. Past
+history, together with that which is recent, furnishes a satisfactory
+explanation for the peculiar nature of Japanese patriotism. This is
+clearly due to the nature of the social order.
+
+A further fact in this connection is that, in a very real sense, the
+existence of Japan as a unified nation has depended on apotheosis. It
+is the method that all ancient nations have adopted at one stage of
+their social development for expressing their sense of national unity
+and the authority of national law. In that stage of social development
+when the common individual counts for nothing, the only possible
+conception of the authority of law is that it proceeds from a superior
+being--the highest ruler. And in order to secure the full advantage of
+authority, the supreme ruler must be raised to the highest possible
+pinnacle, must be apotheosized. That national laws should be the
+product of the unvalued units which compose the nation was unthinkable
+in an age when the worth of the individual was utterly unrecognized.
+The apotheosis of the Emperor was neither an unintelligible nor an
+unreasonable practice. But now that an individualistic, democratic
+organization of society has been introduced resting on a principle
+diametrically opposed to that of apotheosis, a struggle of most
+profound importance has been inaugurated. Does moral or even national
+authority really reside in the Emperor? The school-teachers are
+finding great difficulty in teaching morality as based exclusively on
+the Imperial Edict. The politicians of Japan are not content with
+leaving all political and state authority to the Emperor. Not long ago
+(June, 1898), for the first time in Japan, a Cabinet acknowledging
+responsibility to a political party took the place of one
+acknowledging responsibility only, to the Emperor. For this end the
+politicians have been working since the first meeting of the national
+Diet. Which principle is to succeed, apotheosis and absolute Imperial
+sovereignty, or individualism with democratic sovereignty? The two
+cannot permanently live together. The struggle is sure to be intense,
+for the question of authority, both political and moral, is inevitably
+involved.
+
+The parallel between Japanese and Roman apotheosis is interesting. I
+can present it no better than by quoting from that valuable
+contribution to social and moral problems, "The Genesis of the Social
+Conscience," by Prof. H.S. Nash: "Yet Rome with all her greatness
+could not outgrow the tribal principle.... We find something that
+reveals a fundamental fault in the whole system. It is the apotheosis
+of the Emperors. The process of apotheosis was something far deeper
+than servility in the subject conspiring with vanity in the ruler. It
+was a necessity of the state. There was no means of insuring the
+existence of the state except religion. In the worship of the Cæsars
+the Empire reverenced its own law. There was no other way in which
+pagan Rome could guarantee the gains she had made for civilization.
+Yet the very thing that was necessary to her was in logic her
+undoing.... The worship of the Emperor undid the definition of
+equality the logic of the Empire demanded. Again apotheosis violated
+the divine unity of humanity upon which alone the Empire could
+securely build."[S]
+
+That the final issue of Japan's experience will be like that of Rome I
+do not believe. For her environment is totally different. But the same
+struggle of the two conflicting principles is already on. Few, even
+among the educated classes, realize its nature or profundity. The
+thinkers who adhere to the principle of apotheosis do so admittedly
+because they see no other way in which to secure authority for law,
+whether political or moral. Here we see the importance of those
+conceptions of God, of law, of man, which Christianity alone can give.
+
+From patriotism we naturally pass to the consideration of courage.
+Nothing was more prized and praised in Old Japan. In those days it was
+the deliberate effort of parents and educators to develop courage in
+children. Many were their devices for training the young in bravery.
+Not content with mere precept, they were sent alone on dark stormy
+nights to cemeteries, to houses reputed to be haunted, to dangerous
+mountain peaks, and to execution grounds. Many deeds were required of
+the young whose sole aim was the development of courage and daring.
+The worst name you could give to a samurai was "koshinuke" (coward).
+Many a feud leading to a fatal end has resulted from the mere use of
+this most hated of all opprobrious epithets. The history of Japan is
+full of heroic deeds. I well remember a conversation with a son of the
+old samurai type, who told me, with the blood tingling in his veins,
+of bloody deeds of old and the courage they demanded. He remarked
+incidentally that, until one had slain his first foe, he was ever
+inclined to tremble. But once the deed had been done, and his sword
+had tasted the life blood of a man, fear was no more. He also told me
+how for the sake of becoming inured to ghastly sights under
+nerve-testing circumstances, the sons of samurai were sent at night to
+the execution grounds, there, by faint moonlight to see, stuck on
+poles, the heads of men who had been recently beheaded.
+
+The Japanese emotion of courage is in some respects peculiar. At least
+it appears to differ from that of the Anglo-Saxon. A Japanese seems to
+lose all self-control when the supreme moment comes; he throws himself
+into the fray with a frenzied passion and a fearless madness allied to
+insanity. Such is the impression I have gathered from the descriptions
+I have heard and the pictures I have seen. Even the pictures of the
+late war with China give evidence of this.
+
+But their courage is not limited to fearlessness in the face of death;
+it extends to complete indifference to pain. The honorable method by
+which a samurai who had transgressed some law or failed in some point
+of etiquette, might leave this world is well known to all, the
+"seppuku," the elegant name for the vulgar term "hara-kiri" or
+"belly-cutting." To one who is sensitive to tales of blood,
+unexpurgated Japanese history must be a dreadful thing. The vastness
+of the multitudes who died by their own hands would be incredible,
+were there not ample evidence of the most convincing nature. It may be
+said with truth that suicide became apotheosized, a condition that I
+suppose cannot be said to have prevailed in any other land.
+
+In thus describing the Japanese sentiment in regard to "seppuku,"
+there is, however, some danger of misrepresenting it. "Seppuku" itself
+was not honored, for in the vast majority of cases those who performed
+it were guilty of some crime or breach of etiquette. And not
+infrequently those who were condemned to commit "seppuku" were
+deficient in physical courage; in such cases, some friend took hold of
+the victim's hand and forced him to cut himself. Such cowards were
+always despised. To be condemned to commit "seppuku" was a disgrace,
+but it was much less of a disgrace than to be beheaded as a common
+man, for it permitted the samurai to show of what stuff he was made.
+It should be stated further that in the case of "seppuku," as soon as
+the act of cutting the abdomen had been completed, always by a single
+rapid stroke, someone from behind would, with a single blow, behead
+the victim. The physical agony of "seppuku" was, therefore, very
+brief, lasting but a few seconds.
+
+I can do no better than quote in this connection a paragraph from the
+"Religions of Japan" by W.E. Griffis:
+
+ "From the prehistoric days when the custom of 'Junshi,' or dying
+ with the master, required the interment of living retainers with
+ their dead lord, down through all the ages to the Revolution of
+ 1868, when at Sendai and Aidzu scores of men and boys opened their
+ bowels, and mothers slew their infant sons and cut their own
+ throats, there has been flowing a river of suicides' blood having
+ its springs in devotion of retainers to masters, and of soldiers to
+ a lost cause.... Not only a thousand, but thousands of thousands of
+ soldiers hated their parents, wife, child, friend, in order to be
+ disciples to the supreme loyalty. They sealed their creed by
+ emptying their own veins.... The common Japanese novels read like
+ records of slaughter-houses. No Molech or Shivas won more victims
+ to his shrine than has this idea of Japanese loyalty, which is so
+ beautiful in theory but so hideous in practice ... Could the
+ statistics of the suicides during this long period be collected,
+ their publication would excite in Christendom the utmost
+ incredulity."[T]
+
+I well remember the pride, which almost amounted to glee, with which a
+young blood gave me the account of a mere boy, perhaps ten or twelve
+years old, who cut his bowels in such a way that the deed was not
+quite complete, and then tying his "obi" or girdle over it, walked
+into the presence of his mother, explained the circumstances which
+made it a point of honor that he should commit "seppuku," and
+forthwith untied his "obi" and died in her presence.
+
+These are the ideals of courage and loyalty that have been held up
+before Japanese youth for centuries. Little comment is needful. From
+the evolutionary standpoint, it is relatively easy to understand the
+rise of these ideas and practices. It is clear that they depend
+entirely on the social order. With the coming in of the Western social
+order, feudal lords and local loyalty and the carrying of swords were
+abolished. Are the Japanese any less courageous now than they were
+thirty years ago? The social order has changed and the ways of showing
+courage have likewise changed. That is all that need be said.
+
+Are we to say that the Japanese are more courageous than other
+peoples? Although no other people have manifested such phenomena as
+the Japanese in regard to suicide for loyalty, yet any true
+appreciation of Western peoples will at once dispel the idea that they
+lack courage. Manifestations of courage differ according to the nature
+of the social order, but no nation could long maintain itself, to say
+nothing of coming into existence, without a high degree of this
+endowment.
+
+But Japanese courage is not entirely of the physical order, although
+that is the form in which it has chiefly shown itself thus far. The
+courage of having and holding one's own convictions is known in Japan
+as elsewhere. There has been a long line of martyrs. During the
+decades after the introduction of Buddhism, there was such opposition
+that it required much courage for converts to hold to their beliefs.
+So, too, at the time of the rise of the new Buddhist sects, there was
+considerable persecution, especially with the rise of the Nichiren
+Shu. And when the testing time of Christianity came, under the edict
+of the Tokugawas by which it was suppressed, tens of thousands were
+found who preferred death to the surrender of their faith. In recent
+times, too, much courage has been shown by the native Christians.
+
+As an illustration is the following: When an eminent American teacher
+of Japanese youth returned to Japan after a long absence, his former
+pupils gathered around him with warm admiration. They had in the
+interval of his absence become leaders among the trustees and faculty
+of the most prosperous Christian college in Japan. He was accordingly
+invited to deliver a course of lectures in the Chapel. It was
+generally known that he was no longer the earnest Christian that he
+had once been, when, as teacher in an interior town, he had inspired a
+band of young men who became Christians under his teaching and a power
+for good throughout the land. But no one was prepared to hear such
+extreme denunciations of Christianity and Christian missions and
+missionaries as constituted the substance of his lectures. At first
+the matter was passed over in silence. But, by the end of the second
+lecture, the missionaries entered a protest, urging that the Christian
+Chapel should not again be used for such lectures. The faculty,
+however, were not ready to criticise their beloved teacher. The third
+lecture proved as abusive as the others; the speaker seemed to have no
+sense of propriety. A glimpse of his thought, and method of expression
+may be gained from a single sentence: "I have been commissioned,
+gentlemen, by Jesus Christ, to tell you that there is no such thing as
+a soul or a future life." Although the missionary members of the
+faculty urged it, the Japanese members, most of whom were his former
+pupils, were unwilling to take any steps whatever to prevent the
+continuation of the blasphemous lectures. The students of the
+institution accordingly held a mass-meeting, in which the matter was
+discussed, and it was decided to inform the speaker that the students
+did not care to hear any more such lectures. The question then arose
+as to who would deliver the resolution. There was general hesitancy,
+and anyone who has seen or known the lecturer, and has heard him
+speak, can easily understand this feeling; for he is a large man with
+a most impressive and imperious manner. The young man, however, who
+had perhaps been most active in agitating the matter, and who had
+presented the resolution to the meeting, volunteered to go. He is
+slight and rather small, even for a Japanese. Going to the home of the
+lecturer, he delivered calmly the resolution of the students. To the
+demand as to who had drawn up and presented the resolution to the
+meeting, the reply was: "I, sir." That ended the conversation, but not
+the matter. From that day the idolized teacher was gradually lowered
+from his pedestal. But the moral courage of the young man who could
+say in his enraged presence, "I, sir," has not been forgotten. Neither
+has that of the young man who had acted as interpreter for the first
+lecture; not only did he decline to act in that capacity any longer,
+but, taking the first public opportunity, at the chapel service the
+following day, which proved to be Sunday, he went to the platform and
+asked forgiveness of God and of men that he had uttered such language
+as he had been compelled to use in his translating. Here, too, was
+moral courage of no mean order.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+FICKLENESS--STOLIDITY--STOICISM
+
+
+A frequent criticism of the Japanese is that they are fickle; that
+they run from one fad to another, from one idea to another, quickly
+tiring of each in turn. They are said to lack persistence in their
+amusements no less than in the most serious matters of life.
+
+None will deny the element of truth in this charge. In fact, the
+Japanese themselves recognize that of late their progress has been by
+"waves," and not a few lament it. A careful study of school attendance
+will show that it has been subject to alternate waves of popularity
+and disfavor. Private schools glorying in their hundreds of pupils
+have in a short time lost all but a few score. In 1873 there was a
+passion for rabbits, certain varieties of which were then for the
+first time introduced into Japan. For a few months these brought
+fabulous prices, and became a subject of the wildest speculation. In
+1874-75 cock-fighting was all the rage. Foreign waltzing and gigantic
+funerals were the fashion one year, while wrestling was the fad at
+another time, even the then prime minister, Count Kuroda, taking the
+lead. But the point of our special interest is as to whether
+fickleness is an essential element of Japanese character, and so
+dominant that wherever the people may be and whatever their
+surroundings, they will always be fickle; or whether this trait is due
+to the conditions of their recent history. Let us see.
+
+Prof. Basil H. Chamberlain says, "Japan stood still so long that she
+has to move quickly and often now to make up for lost time." This
+states the case pretty well. Had we known Japan only through her
+Tokugawa period, the idea of fickleness would not have occurred to us;
+on the contrary, the dominant impression would have been that of the
+permanence and fixity of her life and customs. This quality or
+appearance of fickleness is, then, a modern trait, due to the
+extraordinary circumstances in which Japan finds herself. The
+occurrence of wave after wave of fresh fashions and fads is neither
+strange nor indicative of an essentially fickle disposition. Glancing
+below the surface for a moment, we shall see that there is an
+earnestness of purpose which is the reverse of fickle.
+
+What nation, for example, ever voluntarily set itself to learn the
+ways and thoughts and languages of foreign nations as persistently as
+Japan? That there has been fluctuation of intensity is not so
+surprising as that, through a period of thirty years, she has kept
+steadily at it. Tens of thousands of her young men are now, able to
+read the English language with some facility; thousands are also able
+to read German and French. Foreign languages are compulsory in all the
+advanced schools. A regulation going into force in September, 1900,
+requires the study of two foreign languages. This has been done at a
+cost of many hundred thousands of dollars. There has been a fairly
+permanent desire and effort to learn all that the West has to teach.
+The element of fickleness is to be found chiefly in connection with
+the methods rather than in connection with the ends to be secured.
+From the moment when Japan discovered that the West had sources of
+power unknown to herself, and indispensable if she expected to hold
+her own with the nations of the world, the aim and end of all her
+efforts has been to master the secrets of that power. She has seen
+that education is one important means. That she should stumble in the
+adoption of educational methods is not strange. The necessary
+experience is being secured. But for a lesson of this sort, more than
+one generation of experience is required of a nation. For some time to
+come Japan is sure to give signs of unsteadiness, of lack of perfect
+balance.
+
+A pitiful sight in Japan is that of boys not more than five or six
+years of age pushing or pulling with all their might at heavily loaded
+hand-carts drawn by their parents. Yet this is typical of one aspect
+of Japanese civilization. The work is largely done by young people
+under thirty, and vast multitudes of the workers are under twenty
+years of age. This is true not only of menial labor, but also in
+regard to labor involving more or less responsibility. In the post
+offices, for instance, the great majority of the clerks are mere boys.
+In the stores one rarely sees a man past middle age conducting the
+business or acting as clerk. Why are the young so prominent? Partly
+because of the custom of "abdication." As "family abdication" is
+frequent, it has a perceptible effect on the general character of the
+nation, and accounts in part for rash business ventures and other
+signs of impetuosity and unbalanced judgment. Furthermore, under the
+new civilization, the older men have become unfitted to do the
+required work. The younger and more flexible members of the rising
+generation can quickly adjust themselves to the new conditions, as in
+the schools, where the older men, who had received only the regular
+training in Chinese classics, were utterly incompetent as teachers of
+science. Naturally, therefore, except for instruction in these
+classics, the common-school teachers, during the earlier decades, were
+almost wholly young boys. The extreme youthfulness of school-teachers
+has constantly surprised me. In the various branches of government
+this same phenomenon is equally common. Young men have been pushed
+forward into positions with a rapidity and in numbers unknown in the
+West, and perhaps unknown in any previous age in Japan.
+
+The rise and decline of the Christian Church in Japan has been
+instanced as a sign of the fickleness of the people. It is a mistaken
+instance, for there are many other causes quite sufficient to account
+for the phenomenon in question. Let me illustrate by the experience of
+an elderly Christian. He had been brought to Christ through the
+teachings of a young man of great brilliancy, whose zeal was not
+tempered with full knowledge--which, however, was not strange, in view
+of his limited opportunities for learning. His instruction was
+therefore narrow, not to say bigoted. Still the elderly gentleman
+found the teachings of the young man sufficiently strong and clear
+thoroughly to upset all his old ideas of religion, his polytheism, his
+belief in charms, his worship of ancestors, and all kindred ideas. He
+accepted the New Testament in simple unquestioning faith. But, after
+six or eight years, the young instructor began to lose his own
+primitive and simple faith. He at once proceeded to attack that which
+before he had been defending and expounding. Soon his whole
+theological position was changed. Higher criticism and religious
+philosophy were now the center of his preaching and writing. The
+result was that this old gentleman was again in danger of being upset
+in his religious thinking. He felt that his new faith had been
+received in bulk, so to speak, and if a part of it were false, as his
+young teacher now asserted, how could he know that any of it was true?
+Yet his heart's experience told him that he had secured something in
+this faith that was real; he was loath to lose it; consequently, for
+some years now, he has systematically stayed away from church
+services, and refrained from reading magazines in which these new and
+destructive views have been discussed; he has preferred to read the
+Bible quietly at home, and to have direct communion with God, even
+though, in many matters of Biblical or theoretical science, he might
+hold his mistaken opinions. A surface view of this man's conduct might
+lead one to think of him as fickle; but a deeper consideration will
+lead to the opposite conclusion.
+
+The fluctuating condition of the Christian churches is not cause for
+astonishment, nor is it to be wholly, if at all, attributed to the
+fickleness of the national character, but rather, in a large degree,
+to the peculiar conditions of Japanese life. The early Christians had
+much to learn. They knew, experimentally, but little of Christian
+truth. The whole course of Christian thought, the historical
+development of theology, with the various heresies, the recent
+discussions resting on the so-called "higher criticism" of the Bible,
+together with the still more recent investigations into the history
+and philosophy of religion in general, were of course wholly unknown
+to them. This was inevitable, and they were blameless. All could not
+be learned at once.
+
+Nor is there any blame attached to the missionaries. It was as
+impossible for them to impart to young and inexperienced Christians a
+full knowledge of these matters as it was for the latter to receive
+such information. The primary interest of the missionaries was in the
+practical and everyday duties of the Christian life, in the great
+problem of getting men and women to put away the superstitions and
+narrowness and sins springing from polytheism or practical atheism,
+and getting them started in ways of godliness. The training schools
+for evangelists were designed to raise up practical workers rather
+than speculative theologians. Missionaries considered it their duty
+(and they were beyond question right) to teach religion rather than
+the science and philosophy of religion. When, therefore, the
+evangelists discovered that they had not been taught these advanced
+branches of knowledge, it is not strange that some should rush after
+them, and, in their zeal for that which they supposed to be important,
+hasten to criticise their former teachers. As a result, they
+undermined both their own faith and that of many who had become
+Christians through their teaching.
+
+The dullness of the church life, so conspicuous at present in many of
+the churches, is only partly due to the fact that the Christians are
+tired of the services. It is true that these services no longer afford
+them that mental and spiritual stimulus which they found at the first,
+and that, lacking this, they find little inducement to attend. But
+this is only a partial explanation. Looking over the experience of the
+past twenty-five years, we now see that the intense zeal of the first
+few years was a natural result of a certain narrowness of view. It is
+an interesting fact that, during one of the early revivals in the
+Doshisha, the young men were so intense and excited that the
+missionaries were compelled to restrain them. These young Christians
+felt and said that the missionaries were not filled with the Holy
+Spirit; they accordingly considered it their duty to exhort their
+foreign leaders, even to chide them for their lack of faith. The
+extraordinary expectations entertained by the young Japanese workers
+of those days and shared by the missionaries, that Japan was to
+become a Christian nation before the end of the century, was due in
+large measure to an ignorance alike of Christianity, of human nature,
+and of heathenism, but, under the peculiar conditions of life, this
+was well-nigh inevitable. And that great and sudden changes in feeling
+and thought have come over the infant churches, in consequence of the
+rapid acquisition of new light and new experience, is equally
+inevitable. These changes are not primarily attributable to fickleness
+of nature, but to the extraordinary additions to their knowledge.
+
+There is good reason to think, however, that the period of these rapid
+fluctuations is passing away. All the various fads, fancies, and
+follies, together with the sciences, philosophies, ologies, and isms
+of the Western world, have already come to Japan, and are fairly well
+known. No essentially new and sudden experiences lie before the
+people.
+
+Furthermore, the young men are year by year growing older. Experience
+and age together are giving a soberness and a steadiness otherwise
+unattainable. In the schools, in the government, in politics, and in
+the judiciary, and in the churches, men of years and of training in
+the new order are becoming relatively numerous, and erelong they will
+be in the majority. We may expect to see Japan gradually settling down
+to a steadiness and a regularity that have been lacking during the
+past few decades. The newcomer to Japan is much impressed with the
+expressionless character of so many Japanese faces. They appear like
+the images of Buddha, who is supposed to be so absorbed in profound
+meditation that the events of the passing world make no impression
+upon him. I have sometimes heard the expression "putty face" used to
+describe the appearance of the common Japanese face. This immobility
+of the Oriental is more conspicuous to a newcomer than to one who has
+seen much of the people and who has learned its significance. But
+though the "putty" effect wears off, there remains an impression of
+stoicism that never fades away. These two features, stolidity and
+stoicism, are so closely allied in appearance that they are easily
+mistaken, yet they are really distinct. The one arises from
+stupidity, from dullness of mind. The other is the product of
+elaborate education and patient drill. Yet it is often difficult to
+determine where the one ends and the other begins.
+
+The stolidity of stupidity is, of course, commonest among the peasant
+class. For centuries they have been in closest contact with the soil;
+nothing has served to awaken their intellectual faculties. Reading and
+writing have remained to them profound mysteries. Their lives have
+been narrow in the extreme. But the Japanese peasant is not peculiar
+in this respect. Similar conditions in other lands produce similar
+results, as in France, according to Millet's famous painting, "The Man
+with the Hoe."
+
+It is an interesting fact, however, that this stolidity of stupidity
+can be easily removed. I have often heard comments on the marked
+change in the facial expression of those adults who learn to read the
+Bible. Their minds are awakened; a new light is seen in their eyes as
+new ideas are started in their minds.
+
+The impression of stolidity made on the foreigner is, due less,
+however, to stupidity than to a stoical education. For centuries the
+people have been taught to repress all expression of their emotions.
+It has been required of the inferior to listen quietly to his superior
+and to obey implicitly. The relations of superior and inferior have
+been drilled into the people for ages. The code of a military camp has
+been taught and enforced in all the homes. Talking in the presence of
+a superior, or laughter, or curious questions, or expressions of
+surprise, anything revealing the slightest emotion on the part of the
+inferior was considered a discourtesy.
+
+Education in these matters was not confined to oral instruction;
+infringements were punished with great rigor. Whenever a daimyo
+traveled to Yedo, the capital, he was treated almost as a god by the
+people. They were required to fall on their knees and bow their faces
+to the ground, and the death penalty was freely awarded to those who
+failed to make such expressions of respect.
+
+One source, then, of the systematic repression of emotional expression
+is the character of the feudal order of society that so long
+prevailed. The warrior who had best control of his facial expression,
+who could least expose to his foe or even to his ordinary friends the
+real state of his feelings, other things being equal, would come off
+the victor. In further explanation of this repression is the religion
+of Buddha. For 1200 years it has helped to mold the middle and the
+lower classes of the people. According to its doctrine, desire is the
+great evil; from it all other evils spring. For this reason, the aim
+of the religious life is to suppress all desire, and the most natural
+way to accomplish this is to suppress the manifestation of desire; to
+maintain passive features under all circumstances. The images of
+Buddha and of Buddhist saints are utterly devoid of expression. They
+indicate as nearly as possible the attainment of their desire, namely,
+freedom from all desire. This is the ambition of every earnest
+Buddhist. Being the ideal and the actual effort of life, it does
+affect the faces of the people. Lack of expression, however, does not
+prove absence of desire.
+
+Every foreigner has had amusing proof of this. A common experience is
+the passing of a group of Japanese who, apparently, give no heed to
+the stranger. Neither by the turn of the head nor by the movement of a
+single facial muscle do they betray any curiosity, yet their eyes take
+in each detail, and involuntarily follow the receding form of the
+traveler. In the interior, where foreigners are still objects of
+curiosity, young men have often run up from behind, gone to a distance
+ahead of me, then turned abruptly, as though remembering something,
+and walked slowly back again, giving me, apparently, not the slightest
+attention. The motive was the desire to get a better look at the
+foreigner. They hoped to conceal it by a ruse, for there must be no
+manifestation of curiosity.
+
+Phenomena which a foreigner may attribute to a lack of emotion of, at
+least, to its repression, may be due to some very different cause. Few
+things, for instance, are more astonishing to the Occidental than the
+silence on the part of the multitude when the Emperor, whom they all
+admire and love, appears on the street. Under circumstances which
+would call forth the most enthusiastic cheers from Western crowds, a
+Japanese crowd will maintain absolute silence. Is this from lack of
+emotion? By no means. Reverence dominates every breast. They would no
+more think of making noisy demonstrations of joy in the presence of
+the Emperor than a congregation of devout Christians would think of
+doing the same during a religious service. This idea of reverence for
+superiors has pervaded the social order--the intensity of the
+reverence varying with the rank of the superior. But a change has
+already begun. Silence is no longer enforced; no profound bowings to
+the ground are now demanded before the nobility; on at least one
+occasion during the recent China-Japan war the enthusiasm of the
+populace found audible expression when the Emperor made a public
+appearance. Even the stoical appearance of the people is passing away
+under the influence of the new order of society, with its new,
+dominant ideas. Education is bringing the nation into a large and
+throbbing life. Naturalness is taking the place of forced repression.
+A sense of the essential equality of man is springing up, especially
+among the young men, and is helping to create a new atmosphere in this
+land, where, for centuries, one chief effort has been to repress all
+natural expression of emotion.
+
+While touring in Kyushu several years ago, I had an experience which
+showed me that the stolidity, or vivacity, of a people is largely
+dependent on the prevailing social order rather than on inherent
+nature. Those who have much to do with the Japanese have noted the
+extreme quiet and reserve of the women. It is a trait that has been
+lauded by both native and foreign writers. Because of this
+characteristic it is difficult for a stranger, to carry on
+conversation with them. They usually reply in monosyllables and in low
+tones. The very expression of their faces indicates a reticence, a
+calm stolidity, and a lack of response to the stimulus of social
+intercourse that is striking and oppressive to an Occidental. I have
+always found it a matter of no little difficulty to become acquainted
+with the women, and especially with the young women, in the church
+with which I have been connected. With the older women this reticence
+is not so marked. Now for my story:
+
+One day I called on a family, expecting to meet the mother, with whom
+I was well acquainted. She proved to be out; but a daughter of whom I
+had not before heard was at home, and I began to talk with her.
+Contrary to all my previous experience, this young girl of less than
+twenty years looked me straight in the face with perfect composure,
+replied to my questions with clear voice and complete sentences, and
+asked questions in her turn without the slightest embarrassment. I was
+amazed. Here was a Japanese girl acting and talking with the freedom
+of an American. How was this to be explained? Difficult though it
+appeared, the problem was easily solved. The young lady had been in
+America, having spent several years in Radcliffe College. There it was
+that her Japanese demureness was dropped and the American frankness
+and vivacity of manner acquired. It was a matter simply of the
+prevailing social customs, and not of her inherent nature as a
+Japanese.
+
+And this conclusion is enforced by the further fact that there is a
+marked increase in vivacity in those who become Christian. The
+repressive social restraints of the old social order are somewhat
+removed. A freedom is allowed to individuals of the Christian
+community, in social life, in conversation between men and women, in
+the holding of private opinions, which the non-Christian order of
+society did not permit. Sociability between the sexes was not allowed.
+The new freedom naturally results in greater vivacity and a far freer
+play of facial expression than the older order could produce. The
+vivacity and sociability of the geisha (dancing and singing girls),
+whose business it is to have social relations with the men, freely
+conversing with them, still further substantiates the view that the
+stolid, irrepressive features of the usual Japanese woman are social,
+not essential, characteristics. The very same girls exhibit
+alternately stolidity and vivacity according as they are acting as
+geisha or as respectable members of society.
+
+This completes our direct study of the various elements characterizing
+the emotional nature of the Japanese. It is universally admitted that
+the people are conspicuously emotional. We have shown, however, that
+their feelings are subject to certain remarkable suppressions.
+
+It remains to be asked why the Japanese are more emotional than other
+races? One reason doubtless is that the social conditions were such as
+to stimulate their emotional rather than their intellectual powers.
+The military system upon which the social structure rested kept the
+nation in its mental infancy. Twenty-eight millions of farmers and a
+million and a half of soldiers was the proportion during the middle of
+the nineteenth century. Education was limited to the soldiers. But
+although they cultivated their minds somewhat, their very occupation
+as soldiers required them to obey rather than to think; their
+hand-to-hand conflicts served mightily to stimulate the emotions. The
+entire feudal order likewise was calculated to have the same effect.
+The intellectual life being low, its inhibitions were correspondingly
+weak. When, in the future, the entire population shall have become
+fairly educated, and taught to think independently; and when
+government by the people shall have become much more universal,
+throwing responsibility on the people as never before, and stimulating
+discussion of the general principles of life, of government, and of
+law, then must the emotional features of the nation become less
+conspicuous.
+
+It is a question of relative development. As children run to extremes
+of thought and action on the slightest occasion, simply because their
+intellects have not come into full activity, weeping at one moment and
+laughing at the next, so it is with national life. Where the general
+intellectual development of a people is retarded, the emotional
+manifestations are of necessity correspondingly conspicuous.
+
+Even so fundamental a racial trait, then, as the emotional, is seen to
+be profoundly influenced by the prevailing social order. The emotional
+characteristics which distinguish the Japanese from other races are
+due, in the last analysis, to the nature of their social order rather
+than to their inherent nature or brain structure.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+AESTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS
+
+
+In certain directions, the Japanese reveal a development of æsthetic
+taste which no other nation has reached. The general appreciation of
+landscape-views well illustrates this point. The home and garden of
+the average workman are far superior artistically to those of the same
+class in the West. There is hardly a home without at least a
+diminutive garden laid out in artistic style with miniature lake and
+hills and winding walks. And this garden exists solely for the delight
+of the eye.
+
+The general taste displayed in many little ways is a constant delight
+to the Western "barbarian" when he first comes to Japan. Nor does this
+delight vanish with time and familiarity, though it is tempered by a
+later perception of certain other features. Indeed, the more one knows
+of the details of their artistic taste, the more does he appreciate
+it. The "toko-no-ma," for example, is a variety of alcove usually
+occupying half of one side of a room. It indicates the place of honor,
+and guests are always urged to sit in front of it. The floor of the
+"toko-no-ma" is raised four or five inches above the level of the room
+and should never be stepped upon. In this "toko-no-ma" is usually
+placed some work of art, or a vase with flowers, and on the wall is
+hung a picture or a few Chinese characters, written by some famous
+calligraphist, which are changed with the seasons. The woodwork and
+the coloring of this part of the room is of the choicest. The
+"toko-no-ma" of the main room of the house is always restful to the
+eye; this "honorable spot" is found in at least one room in every
+house; and if the owner has moderate means, there are two or three
+such rooms. Only the homes of the poorest of the poor are without this
+ornament.
+
+The Japanese show a refined taste in the coloring and decoration of
+rooms; natural woods, painted and polished, are common; every post and
+board standing erect must stand in the position in which it grew. A
+Japanese knows at once whether a board or post is upside down, though
+it would often puzzle a Westerner to decide the matter. The natural
+wood ceilings and the soft yellows and blues of the walls are all that
+the best trained Occidental eye could ask. Dainty decorations called
+the "ramma," over the neat "fusuma," consist of delicate shapes and
+quaint designs cut in thin boards, and serve at once as picture and
+ventilator. The drawings, too, on the "fusuma" (solid thick paper
+sliding doors separating adjacent rooms or shutting off the closet)
+are simple and neat, as is all Japanese pictorial art.
+
+Japanese love for flowers reveals a high æsthetic development. Not
+only are there various flower festivals at which times the people
+flock to suburban gardens and parks, but sprays, budding branches, and
+even large boughs are invariably arranged in the homes and public
+halls. Every church has an immense vase for the purpose. The proper
+arrangement of flowers and of flowering sprays and boughs is a highly
+developed art. It is often one of the required studies in girls'
+schools. I have known two or three men who made their entire living by
+teaching this art. Miniature flowering trees are reared with
+consummate skill. An acquaintance of mine glories in 230 varieties of
+the plum tree, all in pots, some of them between two and three hundred
+years old. Shinto and Buddhist temples also reveal artistic qualities
+most pleasing to the eye.
+
+But the main point of our interest lies in the explanation of this
+characteristic. Is the æsthetic sense more highly developed in Japan
+than in the West? Is it more general? Is it a matter of inherent
+nature, or of civilization?
+
+In trying to meet these problems, I note, first of all, that the
+development of the Japanese æsthetic taste is one-sided; though
+advanced in certain respects it is belated in others. In illustration
+is the sense of smell. It will not do to say that "the Japanese have
+no use for the nose," and that the love of sweet smells is unknown.
+Sir Rutherford Alcock's off-quoted sentence that "in one of the most
+beautiful and fertile countries in the whole world the flowers have no
+scent, the birds no song, and the fruit and vegetables no flavor," is
+quite misleading, for it has only enough truth to make it the more
+deceptive. It is true that the cherry blossom has little or no odor,
+and that its beauty lies in its exquisite coloring and abounding
+luxuriance, but most of the native flowers are praised and prized by
+the Japanese for their odors, as well as for their colors, as the
+plum, the chrysanthemum, the lotus, and the rose. The fragrance of
+flowers is a frequent theme in Japanese poetry. Japanese ladies, like
+those of every land, are fond of delicate scents. Cologne and kindred
+wares find wide sale in Japan, and I am told that expensive musk is
+not infrequently packed away with the clothing of the wealthy.
+
+But in contrast to this appreciation is a remarkable indifference to
+certain foul odors. It is amazing what horrid smells the cultivated
+Japanese will endure in his home. What we conceal in the rear and out
+of the way, he very commonly places in the front yard; though this is,
+of course, more true of the country than of large towns or cities. It
+would seem as if a high æsthetic development should long ago have
+banished such sights and smells. As a matter of fact, however, the
+æsthetics of the subject does not seem to have entered the national
+mind, any more than have the hygienics of the same subject.
+
+In explanation of these facts, may it not be that the Japanese method
+of agriculture has been a potent hindrance to the æsthetic development
+of the sense of smell? In primitive times, when wealth was small, the
+only easy method which the people had of preserving the fertilizing
+properties of that which is removed from our cities by the
+sewer-system was such as we still find in use in Japan to-day. Perhaps
+the necessities of the case have toughened the mental, if not the
+physical, sense of the people. Perhaps the unæsthetic character of the
+sights and smells has been submerged in the great value of fertilizing
+materials. Then, too, with the Occidental, the thought is common that
+such odors are indications of seriously unhealthful conditions. We are
+accordingly offended not simply by the odor itself, but also by the
+associations of sickness and death which it suggests. Not so the
+unsophisticated Oriental. Such a correlation of ideas is only now
+arising in Japan, and changes are beginning to be made, as a
+consequence.
+
+I cannot leave this point without drawing attention to the fact that
+the development of the sense of smell in these directions is
+relatively recent, even in the West. Of all the non-European nations
+and races, I have no doubt Japan is most free from horrid smells and
+putrid odors. And in view of our own recent emancipation it is not for
+us to marvel that others have made little progress. Rather is it
+marvelous that we should so easily forget the hole from which we have
+been so recently digged.
+
+In turning to study certain features of Japanese pictorial art, we
+notice that a leading characteristic is that of simplicity. The
+greatest results are secured with the fewest possible strokes. This
+general feature is in part due to the character of the instrument
+used, the "fude," "brush." This same brush answers for writing. It
+admits of strong, bold outlines; and a large brush allows the
+exhibition of no slight degree of skill. As a result, "writing" is a
+fine art in Japan. Hardly a family that makes any pretense at culture
+but owns one or more framed specimens of writing. In Japan these rank
+as pictures do or mottoes in the West, and are prized not merely for
+the sentiment expressed, but also for the skill displayed in the use
+of the brush. Skillful writers become famous, often receiving large
+sums for small "pictures" which consist of but two or three Chinese
+characters.
+
+No doubt the higher development of appreciation for natural scenery
+among the people in general is largely due to the character of the
+scenery itself. Steep hills and narrow valleys adjoin nearly every
+city in the land. Seas, bays, lakes, and rivers are numerous;
+reflected mountain scenes are common; the colors are varied and
+marked. Flowering trees of striking beauty are abundant. Any people
+living under these physical conditions, and sufficiently advanced in
+civilization to have leisure and culture, can hardly fail to be
+impressed with such wealth of beauty in the scenery itself.
+
+In the artistic reproduction of this scenery, however, Japanese
+artists are generally supposed to be inferior to those of the West.
+
+As often remarked, Japanese art has directed its chief endeavor to
+animals and to nature, thus failing to give to man his share of
+attention. This curious one-sidedness shows itself particularly in
+painting and in sculpture. In the former, when human beings are the
+subject, the aim has apparently been to extol certain characteristics;
+in warriors, the military or heroic spirit; in wise men, their wisdom;
+in monks and priests, their mastery over the passions and complete
+attainment of peace; in a god, the moral character which he is
+supposed to represent. Art has consequently been directed to bringing
+into prominence certain ideal features which must be over-accentuated
+in order to secure recognition; caricatures, rather than lifelike
+forms, are the frequent results. The images of multitudes of gods are
+frightful to behold; the aim being to show the character of the
+emotion of the god in the presence of evil. These idols are easily
+misunderstood, for we argue that the more frightful he is, the more
+vicious must be the god in his real character; not so the Oriental. To
+him the more frightful the image, the more noble the character. Really
+evil gods, such as demons, are always represented, I think, as
+deformed creatures, partly human and partly beast. It is to be
+remembered, in this connection, that idols are an imported feature of
+Japanese religion; Shinto to this day has no "graven image." All idols
+are Buddhistic. Moreover, they are but copies of the hideous idols of
+India; the Japanese artistic genius has added nothing to their
+grotesque appearance. But the point of interest for us is that the
+æsthetic taste which can revel in flowers and natural scenery has
+never delivered Japanese art from truly unæsthetic representations of
+human beings and of gods.
+
+Standing recently before a toy store and looking at the numberless
+dolls offered for sale, I was impressed afresh with the lack of taste
+displayed, both in coloring and in form; their conventionality was
+exceedingly tiresome; their one attractive feature was their
+absurdity. But the moment I turned away from the imitations of human
+beings to look at the imitations of nature, the whole impression was
+changed. I was pleased with the artistic taste displayed in the
+perfectly imitated, delicately colored flowers. They were beautiful
+indeed.
+
+Why has Japanese art made so little of man as man? Is it due to the
+"impersonality" of the Orient, as urged by some? This suggests, but
+does not give, the correct interpretation of the phenomenon in
+question. The reason lies in the nature of the ruling ideas of
+Oriental civilization. Man, as man, has not been honored or highly
+esteemed. As a warrior he has been honored; consequently, when
+pictured or sculptured as a warrior, he has worn his armor; his face,
+if visible, is not the natural face of a man, but rather that of a
+passionate victor, slaying his foe or planning for the same. And so
+with the priests and the teachers, the emperors and the generals; all
+have been depicted, not for what they are in themselves, but for the
+rank which they have attained; they are accordingly represented with
+their accouterments and robes and the characteristic attitudes of
+their rank. The effort to preserve their actual appearance is
+relatively rare. Manhood and womanhood, apart from social rank, have
+hardly been recognized, much less extolled by art. This feature, then,
+corresponds to the nature of the Japanese social order. The art of a
+land necessarily reveals the ruling ideals of its civilization. As
+Japan failed to discover the inherent nature and value of manhood and
+womanhood, estimating them only on a utilitarian basis, so has her art
+reflected this failure.
+
+Apparently it has never attempted to depict the nude human form. This
+is partly explained, perhaps, by the fact that the development of a
+perfect physical form through exercise and training has not been a
+part of Oriental thought. Labor of every sort has been regarded as
+degrading. Training for military skill and prowess has indeed been
+common among the military classes; but the skill and strength
+themselves have been the objects of thought, rather than the beauty of
+the muscular development which they produce. When we recall the
+prominent place which the games of Greece took in her civilization
+previous to her development of art, and the stress then laid on
+perfect bodily form, we shall better understand why there should be
+such difference in the development of the art of these two lands. I
+have never seen a Japanese man or youth bare his arm to show with
+pride the development of his biceps; and so far as I have observed,
+the pride which students in the United States feel over well-developed
+calves has no counterpart in Japan--this, despite the fact that the
+average Japanese has calves which would turn the American youth green
+with envy.
+
+From the absence of the nude in Japanese art it has been urged that
+Japan herself is far more morally pure than the West. Did the moral
+life of the people correspond to their art in this respect, the
+argument would have force. Unfortunately, such does not seem to be the
+case. It is further suggested as a reason that the bodily form of
+Oriental peoples is essentially unæsthetic; that the men are either
+too fat or too lean, and the women too plump when in the bloom of
+youth and too wrinkled and flabby when the first bloom is over. The
+absurdity of this suggestion raises a smile, and a query as to the
+experience which its author must have had. For any person who has
+lived in Japan must have seen individuals of both sexes, whom the most
+fastidious painter or sculptor would rejoice to secure as models.
+
+It might be thought that a truly artistic people, who are also
+somewhat immoral, would have developed much skill in the portrayal of
+the nude female form. But such an attempt does not seem to have been
+made until recent times, and in imitation of Western art. At least
+such attempts have not been recognized as art nor have they been
+preserved as such. I have never seen either statue or picture of a
+nude Japanese woman. Even the pictures of famous prostitutes are
+always faultlessly attired. The number and size of the conventional
+hairpins, and the gaudy coloring of the clothing, alone indicate the
+immoral character of the woman represented.
+
+It is not to be inferred, however, that immoral pictures have been
+unknown in Japan, for the reverse is true. Until forcibly suppressed
+by the government under the incentive of Western criticism, there was
+perfect freedom to produce and sell licentious and lascivious
+pictures. The older foreign residents in Japan testify to the
+frequency with which immoral scenes were depicted and exposed for
+sale. Here I merely say that these were not considered works of art;
+they were reproduced not in the interests of the æsthetic sense, but
+wholly to stimulate the taste for immoral things.
+
+The absence of the nude from Japanese art is due to the same causes
+that led to the relative absence of all distinctively human nature
+from art. Manhood and womanhood, as such, were not the themes they
+strove to depict.
+
+A curious feature of the artistic taste of the people is the marked
+fondness for caricature. It revels in absurd accentuations of special
+features. Children with protruding foreheads; enormously fat little
+men; grotesque dwarf figures in laughable positions; these are a few
+common examples. Nearly all of the small drawings and sculpturings of
+human figures are intentionally grotesque. But the Japanese love of
+the grotesque is not confined to its manifestation in art. It also
+reveals itself in other surprising ways. It is difficult to realize
+that a people who revel in the beauties of nature can also delight in
+deformed nature; yet such is the case. Stunted and dwarfed trees,
+trees whose branches have been distorted into shapes and proportions
+that nature would scorn--these are sights that the Japanese seem to
+enjoy, as well as "natural" nature. Throughout the land, in the
+gardens of the middle and higher classes, may be found specimens of
+dwarfed and stunted trees which have required decades to raise. The
+branches, too, of most garden shrubs and trees are trimmed in
+fantastic shapes. What is the charm in these distortions? First,
+perhaps, the universal human interest in anything requiring skill.
+Think of the patience and persistence and experimentation necessary
+to rear a dwarf pear tree twelve or fifteen inches high, growing its
+full number of years and bearing full-size fruit in its season! And
+second is the no less universal human interest in the strange and
+abnormal. All primitive people have this interest. It shows itself in
+their religions. Abnormal stones are often objects of religious
+devotion. Although I cannot affirm that such objects are worshiped in
+Japan to-day, yet I can say that they are frequently set up in temple
+grounds and dedicated with suitable inscriptions. Where nature can be
+made to produce the abnormal, there the interest is still greater. It
+is a living miracle. Witness the cocks of Tosa, distinguished by their
+two or three tail feathers reaching the extraordinary length of ten or
+even fifteen feet, the product of ages of special breeding.
+
+According to the ordinary use of the term, æsthetics has to do with
+art alone. Yet it also has intimate relations with both speech and
+conduct. Poetry depends for its very existence on æsthetic
+considerations. Although little conscious regard is paid to æsthetic
+claims in ordinary conversation, yet people of culture do, as a matter
+of fact, pay it much unconscious attention. In conduct too, æsthetic
+ideas are often more dominant than we suppose. The objection of the
+cultured to the ways of the boorish rests on æsthetic grounds. This is
+true in every land. In the matter of conduct it is sometimes hard to
+draw the line between æsthetics and ethics, for they shade
+imperceptibly into one another; so much so that they are seen to be
+complementary rather than contradictory. Though it is doubtless true
+that conduct æsthetically defective may not be defective ethically,
+still is it not quite as true that conduct bad from the ethical is bad
+also from the æsthetical standpoint?
+
+In no land have æsthetic considerations had more force in molding both
+speech and conduct than in Japan. Not a sentence is uttered by a
+Japanese but has the characteristic marks of æstheticism woven into
+its very structure. By means of "honorifics" it is seldom necessary
+for a speaker to be so pointedly vulgar as even to mention self. There
+are few points in the language so difficult for a foreigner to
+master, whether in speaking himself, or in listening to others, as the
+use of these honorific words. The most delicate shades of courtesy and
+discourtesy may be expressed by them. Some writers have attributed the
+relative absence of the personal pronouns from the language to the
+dominating force of impersonal pantheism. I am unable to take this
+view for reasons stated in the later chapters on personality.
+
+Though the honorific characteristics of the language seem to indicate
+a high degree of æsthetic development, a certain lack of delicacy in
+referring to subjects that are ruled out of conversation by cultivated
+people in the West make the contrary impression upon the uninitiated.
+Such language in Japan cannot be counted impure, for no such idea
+accompanies the words. They must be described simply as æsthetically
+defective. Far be it from me to imply that there is no impure
+conversation in Japan. I only say that the particular usages to which
+I refer are not necessarily a proof of moral tendency. A realistic
+baldness prevails that makes no effort to conceal even that which is
+in its nature unpleasant and unæsthetic. A spade is called a spade
+without the slightest hesitation. Of course specific illustrations of
+such a point as this are out of place. Æsthetic considerations forbid.
+
+And how explain these unæsthetic phenomena? By the fact that Japan has
+long remained in a state of primitive development. Speech is but the
+verbal expression of life. Every primitive society is characterized by
+a bald literalism shocking to the æsthetic sense of societies which
+represent a higher stage of culture. In Japan, until recently, little
+effort has been made to keep out of sight objects and acts which we of
+the West have considered disagreeable and repulsive. Language alters
+more slowly than acts. Laws are making changes in the latter, and they
+in time will take effect in the former. But many decades will
+doubtless pass before the cultivated classes of Japan will reach, in
+this respect, the standard of the corresponding classes of the West.
+
+As for the æsthetics of conduct in Japan, enough is indicated by what
+has been said already concerning the æsthetics of speech. Speech and
+conduct are but diverse expressions of the same inner life. Japanese
+etiquette has been fashioned on the feudalistic theory of society,
+with its numberless gradations of inferior and superior. Assertive
+individualism, while allowed a certain range among the samurai, always
+had its well-marked limits. The mass of the people were compelled to
+walk a narrow line of respectful obedience and deference both in form
+and speech. The constant aim of the inferior was to please the
+superior. That individuals of an inferior rank had any inherent
+rights, as opposed to those of a superior rank, seldom occurred to
+them. Furthermore, this whole feudal system, with its characteristic
+etiquette of conduct and speech, was authoritatively taught by
+moralists and religious leaders, and devoutly believed by the noblest
+of the land. Ethical considerations, therefore, combined powerfully
+with those that were social and æsthetic to produce "the most polite
+race on the face of the globe." Recent developments of rudeness and
+discourtesy among themselves and toward foreigners have emphasized my
+general contention that these characteristics are not due to inherent
+race nature, but rather to the social order.
+
+How are we to account for the wide æsthetic development of all classes
+of the Japanese? As already suggested, the beautiful scenery explains
+much. But I pass at once to the significant fact that although the
+classes of Japanese society were widely differentiated in social rank,
+yet they lived in close proximity to each other. There was no spatial
+gulf of separation preventing the lower from knowing fully and freely
+the thoughts, ideals, and customs of the upper classes. The
+transmission of culture was thus an easy matter, in spite of social
+gradations.
+
+Moreover, the character of the building materials, and the methods of
+construction used by the more prosperous among the people, were easily
+imitated in kind, if not in costliness, by the less prosperous. Take,
+for example, the structure of the room; it is always of certain fixed
+proportions, that the uniform mats may be easily fitted to it. The
+mats themselves are always made of a straw "toko," "bed," and an
+"omote," "surface," of woven straw; they vary greatly in value, but,
+of whatever grade, may always be kept neat and fresh at comparatively
+small cost. The walls of the average houses are made of mud wattles.
+The outer layers of plaster consist of selected earth and tinted lime.
+Whether put up at large or small expense, these walls may be neat and
+attractive. So, too, with other parts of the house.
+
+The utter lack of independent thinking throughout the middle and lower
+classes, and the constant desire of the inferior to imitate the
+superior, have also helped to make the culture of the classes the
+possession of the masses. This subserviency and spirit of imitation
+has been further stimulated by the enforced courtesy and deference and
+obedience of the common people.
+
+In this connection it should be noted, however, that the universality
+of culture in Japan is more apparent than real. The appearance is due
+in part to the lack of furniture in the homes. Without chairs or
+tables, bedsteads or washstands, and the multitude of other things
+invariably found in the home of the Occidental, it is easy for the
+Japanese housewife to keep her home in perfect order. No special
+culture is needful for this.
+
+How it came about that the Japanese people adopted their own method of
+sitting on the feet, I cannot say; neither have I heard any plausible
+explanation of the practice. Yet this habit has relieved them of all
+necessity for heavy furniture. Given the custom of sitting on the
+feet, and a large part of the furniture of the house will be useless.
+Already is the introduction of furniture after Western patterns
+producing changes in the homes of the people; and it will be
+interesting to see whether the æsthetic sense of the Japanese will be
+able to assimilate and harmonize with itself these useful, but bulky
+and unæsthetic, elements of Occidental civilization.
+
+That no part of the fine taste of the Japanese is due to the general
+civilization, rather than to the individual possession of the æsthetic
+faculty, may be inferred from many little signs. In spite of the fact
+that, following the long-established social fashions, the women
+usually display good taste in the choice of colors for their clothing,
+it sometimes happens that they also manifest not the slightest sense
+of the harmony of colors. Daughters of wealthy families will array
+themselves in brilliant discordant hues, yet apparently without
+causing the wearers or their friends the slightest æsthetic
+discomfort. Little children are arrayed in clothing that would
+doubtless put Joseph's coat of many colors quite out of countenance.
+Combinations and brilliancy that to the Western eye of culture seem
+crude and gaudy, typical of barbaric splendor, are in constant use,
+and are apparently thought to be fine. The Japanese display both taste
+and its lack in the choice of colors for clothing; this contradiction
+is the more striking in view of the taste manifest in the decorations
+of the homes of all classes of the people. Few sights are more
+ludicrously unæsthetic than the red, yellow, and blue worsted
+crocheted caps and shawls for infants, which shock all our ideas of
+æsthetic harmony.
+
+In connection with Western ways or articles of clothing, the native
+æsthetic faculty often seems to take its flight. In a foreign house
+many a Japanese seems to lose his sense of fitness. I have had
+schoolboys, and even gentlemen, enter my home with hobnailed muddied
+boots, without wiping their feet on the conspicuous door mat, which is
+the more remarkable since, in their own homes, they invariably take
+off their shoes on entering. I have frequently noticed that in railway
+cars the first comers monopolize the seats, and the later ones receive
+not the slightest notice, being often compelled to stand for an hour
+at a time, although, with a little moving, there would be abundant
+room for all. I have noticed this so often that I cannot think it an
+exceptional occurrence. I do not believe it to be intentional
+rudeness, but to be due simply to a lack of real heart politeness. Yet
+a true and deep æsthetic development, so far at least as relates to
+conduct, to say nothing of the spirit of altruism, would not permit
+such indifference to another's discomfort.
+
+My explanation for this, and for all similar defects in etiquette, is
+somewhat as follows. Etiquette is popularly conceived as consisting of
+rules of conduct, rather than as the outward expression of the state
+of the heart. From time immemorial rules for the ordinary affairs of
+life have been formulated by superiors and have been taught the
+people. In all usual and conventional relations, therefore, the
+average farmer and peasant know how to express perfect courtesy. But
+in certain situations, as in foreign houses and the railroad car,
+where there are no precedents to follow, or rules to obey, all
+evidence of politeness takes its flight. The old rules do not fit the
+new conditions. Not being grounded on the inner principles of
+etiquette, the people are not able to formulate new rules for new
+conditions. To the Westerner, on the other hand, these seem to follow
+from the simplest principles of common sense and kindliness. The
+general collapse of etiquette in Japan, which native writers note and
+deplore, is due, therefore, not only to the withdrawal of feudal
+pressure, but also to introduction of strange circumstances for which
+the people have no rules, and to the fact that the people have not
+been taught those underlying principles of high courtesy which are
+applicable on all occasions.
+
+An impression seems to have gained currency in the United States that
+the unæsthetic features seen in Japan to-day are due to the debasing
+influences of Western art and Occidental intercourse. There can be no
+doubt that a certain type of tourist, ignorant of Japanese art, by
+greedily buying strange, gaudy things at high prices, has stimulated a
+morbid production of truly unæsthetic pseudo-Japanese art. But this
+accounts for only a small part of the grossly inartistic features of
+Japan. The instances given of hideous worsted bibs for babes and
+collars for dogs, combining in the closest proximity the most
+uncomplementary and mutually repellent colors, has nothing whatever to
+do with foreign art or foreign intercourse. What foreigner ever
+decorated a little lapdog with a red-green-yellow-blue-and purple
+crocheted collar, four or five inches wide?
+
+Westerners have been charmed with the exquisite colored photographs
+produced in Japan. It is strange, yet true, that the same artistic
+hand that produces these beautiful effects will also, by a slight
+change of tints, produce the most unnatural and spectral views. Yet
+the strangest thing is, not that he produces them, but that he does
+not seem conscious of the defect, for he will put them on sale in his
+own shop or send them to purchasers in America, without the slightest
+apparent hesitation. The constant care of the purchaser in selection
+and his insistence on having only truly artistic work are what keep
+the Japanese artist up to the standard.
+
+If other evidence is needed of æsthetic defect in the still
+unoccidentalized Japanese taste let the doubter go to any popular
+second-grade Shinto shrine or Buddhist temple. Here unæsthetic objects
+and sights abound. Hideous idols, painted and unpainted, big and
+little, often decorated with soiled bibs; decaying to-rii; ruined
+sub-shrines; conglomerate piles of cast-off paraphernalia, consisting
+of broken idols, old lanterns, stones, etc., filthy towels at the
+holy-water basins, piously offered to the gods and piously used by
+hundreds of dusty pilgrims; equally filthy bell-ropes hung in front of
+the main shrines, pulled by ten thousand hands to call the attention
+of the deity; travel-stained hands, each of which has left its mark on
+the once beautiful enormous tasselated cord; ex-voto tufts of human
+hair; scores of pictures, where the few may be counted works of art
+while the rest are hideous beyond belief; frightful faces of tengu,
+with their long noses and menacing teeth, decorated with scores of
+spit-balls or even with mud-balls; these are some of the more
+conspicuous unæsthetic features of multitudes of popular shrines and
+temples. And none of these can be attributed to the debasing influence
+of Western art. And these inartistic features will be found
+accompanying scrupulous neatness in well-swept walks, new sub-shrines,
+floral decorations, and much that pleases the eye--a strange compound
+of the beautiful and the ugly. Truly the æsthetic development of the
+Japanese is curiously one-sided.
+
+A survey of Japanese musical history leads to the conclusion that
+while the people are fairly developed in certain aspects of the
+æsthetics of music, such as rhythm, they are certainly undeveloped in
+other directions--in melody, for example, and in harmony. Their
+instrumental music is primitive and meager. They have no system of
+musical notation. The love of music, such as it is, is well-nigh
+universal. Their solo-vocal music, a semi-chanting in minors, has
+impressive elements; but these are due to the passionate outbursts and
+plaintive wails, rather than to the musically æsthetic character of
+the melodies. The universal twanging samisen, a species of guitar,
+accompanied by the shrill, hard voices of the geisha (singing girls),
+marks at once the universality of the love of music and the
+undeveloped quality of the musical taste, both vocal and instrumental.
+But in comparing the musical development of Japan with that of the
+West, we must not forget how recent is that of the former.
+
+The conditions which have served to develop musical taste in the West
+have but recently come to Japan. Sufficient time has not yet elapsed
+for the nation to make much visible progress in the lines of
+Occidental music. But it has already done something. The popularity of
+brass bands, the wide introduction of organs, their manufacture in
+this land, their use in all public schools, the exclusive use of
+Occidental music in Christian churches, the ability of trained
+individuals in foreign vocal and instrumental music--all these facts
+go to show that in time we may expect great musical evolution in
+Japan. Those who doubt this on the ground of inherent race nature may
+be reminded of the evolution which has taken place among the Hawaiians
+during the past two generations. From being a race manifesting marked
+deficiency in music they have developed astonishing musical taste and
+ability. During a recent visit to these islands after an absence of
+twenty-seven years, I attended a Sunday-school exhibition, which was
+largely a musical contest; the voices were sweet and rich; and the
+difficulty of the part songs, easily carried through by children and
+adults, revealed a musical sense that surpasses any ordinary Sunday
+school of the United States or England with which I am acquainted.
+
+The development of Japanese literature likewise conspicuously
+reflects the ruling ideas of the social order, and reveals the
+dependence of literary taste on the order. As in other aspects in
+Japanese æsthetic development, so in this do we see marked lack of
+balance. "It is wonderful what felicity of phrase, melody of
+versification, and true sentiment can be compressed within the narrow
+limits (of the Tanka). In their way nothing can be more perfect than
+some of these little poems."[U] The deficiencies of Japanese poetry
+have been remarked by the foreigners most competent to judge. The
+following general characterization from the volume just quoted merits
+attention.
+
+ "Narrow in its scope and resources, it is chiefly remarkable for
+ its limitations--for what it has not, rather than what it has. In
+ the first place there are no long poems. There is nothing which
+ even remotely resembles an epic--no Iliad or Divina Commedia--not
+ even a Nibelungen Lied or Chevy Chase. Indeed, narrative poems of
+ any kind are short and very few, the only ones which I have met
+ with being two or three ballads of a sentimental cast. Didactic,
+ philosophical, political, and satirical poems are also
+ conspicuously absent. The Japanese muse does not meddle with such
+ subjects, and it is doubtful whether, if it did, the native Pegasus
+ possesses sufficient staying power for them to be dealt with
+ adequately. For dramatic poetry we have to wait until the
+ fourteenth century. Even then there are no complete dramatic poems,
+ but only dramas containing a certain poetical element.
+
+ "Japanese poetry is, in short, confined to lyrics, and what, for
+ want of a better word, may be called epigrams. It is primarily an
+ expression of emotion. We have amatory verse poems of longing for
+ home and absent dear ones, praise of love and wine, elegies on the
+ dead, laments over the uncertainty of life. A chief place is given
+ to the seasons, the sound of purling streams, the snow of Mount
+ Fuji, waves breaking on the beach, seaweed drifting to the shore,
+ the song of birds, the hum of insects, even the croaking of frogs,
+ the leaping of trout in a mountain stream, the young shoots of fern
+ in spring, the belling of deer in autumn, the red tints of the
+ maple, the moon, flowers, rain, wind, mist; these are among the
+ favorite subjects which the Japanese poets delight to dwell upon.
+ If we add some courtly and patriotic effusions, a vast number of
+ conceits more or less pretty, and a very few poems of a religious
+ cast, the enumeration is tolerably complete. But, as Mr.
+ Chamberlain has observed, there are curious omissions. War
+ songs--strange to say--are almost wholly absent. Fighting and
+ bloodshed are apparently not considered fit themes for poetry."[V]
+
+The drama and the novel have both achieved considerable development,
+yet judged from Occidental standards, they are comparatively weak and
+insipid. They, of course, conspicuously reflect the characteristics of
+the social order to which they belong. Critics call repeated attention
+to the lack of sublimity in Japanese literature, and ascribe it to
+their inherent race nature. While the lack of sublimity in Japanese
+scenery may in fact account for the characteristic in question, still
+a more conclusive explanation would seem to be that in the older
+social order man, as such, was not known. The hidden glories of the
+soul, its temptations and struggles, its defects and victories, could
+not be the themes of a literature arising in a completely communal
+social order, even though it possessed individualism of the Buddhistic
+type.[W] These are the themes that give Western literature--poetic,
+dramatic, and narrative--its opportunity for sustained power and
+sublimity. They portray the inner life of the spirit.
+
+The poverty of poetic form is another point of Western criticism. Mr.
+Aston has shown how this poverty is directly due to the phonetic
+characteristics of the language. Diversities of both rhyme and rhythm
+are practically excluded from Japanese poetry by the nature of the
+language. And this in turn has led to the "preference of the national
+genius for short poems." But language is manifestly the combined
+product of linguistic heredity and the social order, and can in no
+sense be ascribed to inherent race nature. Thus directly are social
+heredity and social order determinative of the literary
+characteristics and æsthetic tastes of a nation.
+
+Even more manifestly may Japanese architectural development be traced
+to the social heredity derived from China and India. The needs of the
+developing internal civilization have determined its external
+manifestation. So far as Japanese differs from Chinese architecture,
+it may be attributed to Japan's isolation, to the different demands of
+her social order, to the difference of accessible building materials,
+and to the different social heredity handed down from prehistoric
+times. That the distinguishing characteristics of Japanese
+architecture are due to the inherent race nature cannot for a moment
+be admitted.
+
+We conclude that the Japanese are not possessed of a unique and
+inherent æsthetic taste. In some respects they are as certainly ahead
+of the Occidental as they are behind him in other respects. But this,
+too, is a matter of social development and social heredity, rather
+than of inherent race character, of brain structure. If æsthetic
+nature were a matter of inherited brain structure, it would be
+impossible to account for rapid fluctuations in æsthetic judgment, for
+the great inequality of æsthetic development in the different
+departments of life, or for the ease of acquiring the æsthetic
+development of alien races.[X]
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+MEMORY--IMITATION
+
+
+The differences which separate the Oriental from the Occidental mind
+are infinitesimal as compared with the likenesses which unite them.
+This is a fact that needs to be emphasized, for many writers on Japan
+seem to ignore it. They marvel at the differences. The real marvel is
+that the differences are so few and so superficial. The Japanese are a
+race whose ancestors were separated from their early home nearly three
+thousand years ago; during this period they have been absolutely
+prevented from intermarriage with the parent stock. Furthermore, that
+original stock was not the Indo-European race. And no one has ventured
+to suggest how long before the migration of the ancestors of the
+Japanese to Japan their ancestors parted from those who finally became
+the progenitors of modern Occidental peoples. For thousands of years,
+certainly, the Japanese and Anglo-Saxon races have had no ancestry in
+common. Yet so similar is the entire structure and working of their
+minds that the psychological textbooks of the Anglo-Saxon are adopted
+and perfectly understood by competent psychological students among the
+Japanese. I once asked a professor of psychology in the Matsuyama
+Normal School if he had no difficulty in teaching his classes the
+psychological system of Anglo-Saxon thinkers, if there were not
+peculiarities of the Anglo-Saxon mind which a Japanese could not
+understand, and if there were not psychological phenomena of the
+Japanese mind which were ignored in Anglo-Saxon psychological
+text-books. The very questions surprised him; to each he gave a
+negative reply. The mental differences that characterize races so
+dissimilar as the Japanese and the Anglo-Saxon, I venture to repeat,
+are insignificant as compared with their resemblances.
+
+Our discussions shall have reference, not to those general
+psychological characteristics which all races have in common, but only
+to those which may seem to stamp the Japanese people as peculiar. We
+wish to understand the distinguishing features of the Japanese mind.
+We wish to know whether they are due to brain structure, to inherent
+race nature, or whether they are simply the result of education, of
+social heredity. This is our ever-recurring question.
+
+First, in regard to Japanese brain development. Travelers have often
+been impressed with the unusual size of the Japanese head. It has
+sometimes been thought, however, that the size is more apparent than
+real, and the appearance has been attributed to the relatively short
+limbs of the people and to the unusual proportion of round heads which
+one sees everywhere. It may also be due to the shape of the head. But,
+after all has been said, it remains true that the Japanese head, as
+related to his body, is unexpectedly large.
+
+Prof. Marsh of Yale University is reported to have said that, on the
+basis of brain size, the Japanese is the race best fitted to survive
+in the struggle for existence, or at least in the struggle for
+pre-eminence.
+
+Statements have been widely circulated to the effect that not only
+relatively to the body, but even absolutely, the Japanese possess
+larger brains than the European, but craniological statistics do not
+verify the assertion. The matter has been somewhat discussed in
+Japanese magazines of late, to which, through the assistance of a
+Japanese friend, I am indebted for the following figures. They are
+given in Japanese measurements, but are, on this account, however,
+none the less satisfactory for comparative purposes.
+
+According to Dr. Davis, the average European male brain weighs 36,498
+momme, and the Australian, 22,413, while the Japanese, according to
+Dr. Taguchi weighs 36,205. Taking the extremes, the largest English
+male brain weighs 38,100 momme and the smallest 35,377, whereas the
+corresponding figures for Japan are 43,919 and 30,304, respectively,
+showing an astonishing range between extremes. According to Dr. E.
+Baelz of the Imperial University of Tokyo, the lower classes of Japan
+have a larger skull circumference than either the middle or upper
+classes (1.8414, 1.7905, and 1.8051 feet, respectively), and the Ainu
+(1.8579) exceed the Japanese. From these facts it might almost appear
+that brain size and civilizational development are in inverse ratio.
+Were the Japanese brain larger, then, than that of the European, it
+might plausibly be argued that they are therefore inferior in brain
+power. This would be in accord with certain of De Quatrefages's
+investigations. He has shown that negroes born in America have smaller
+brains, but are intellectually superior to their African brothers.
+"With them, therefore, intelligence increases, while the cranial
+capacity diminishes."[Y]
+
+Those who trace racial and civilizational nature to brain development
+cannot gain much consolation from a comparative statistical study of
+race brains. De Quatrefages's conclusion is repeatedly forced home:
+"We must confess that there can be no real relation between the
+dimension of the cranial capacity and social development."[Z] "The
+development of the intellectual faculties of man is, to a great
+extent, independent of the capacity of the cranium and the volume of
+the brain."[AA]
+
+We may conclude at once, then, that Japanese intellectual
+peculiarities are in no way due to the size of their brains, but
+depend rather on their social evolution. Yet it will not be amiss to
+study in detail the various mental peculiarities of the race, real and
+supposed, and to note their relation to the social order.
+
+In becoming acquainted with the Japanese and Chinese peoples, an
+Occidental is much impressed with their powers of memory, and this
+especially in connection with the written language, the far-famed
+"Chinese Character," or ideograph. My Chinese dictionary contains over
+50,000 different characters. The task of learning them is appalling.
+How the Japanese or Chinese do it is to us a constant wonder. We
+assume at once their possession of astonishing memories. We argue
+that, for hundreds of years, each generation has been developing
+powers of memory through efforts to conquer this cumbersome
+contrivance for writing, and that, as a consequence for the nations
+using this system, there is now prodigious ability to remember.
+
+It is my impression, however, that we greatly overrate these powers.
+In the first place, few Japanese claim any acquaintance with the
+entire 50,000 characters; only the educated make any pretense of
+knowing more than a few hundred, and a vast majority even of learned
+men do not know more than 10,000 characters. Some Japanese newspapers
+have undertaken to limit themselves in the use of the ideograph. It is
+said that between four and five thousand characters suffice for all
+the ordinary purposes of communication. These are, without doubt,
+fairly well known to the educated classes. But for the masses, there
+is need that the pronunciation be placed beside each printed
+character, before it can be read. Furthermore, we must remember that a
+Japanese youth gives the best years of his life to the bare memorizing
+of these symbols.[AB]
+
+Were European or American youth to devote to the study of Chinese the
+same number of hours each day for the same number of years, I doubt if
+there would be any conspicuous difference in the results. We should
+not forget also that some Occidentals manifest astonishing facility in
+memorizing Chinese characters.
+
+In this connection is the important fact that the social order serves
+to sift out individuals of marked mnemonic powers and bring them into
+prominence, while those who are relatively deficient are relegated to
+the background. The educated class is necessarily composed of those
+who have good powers of memory. All others fail and are rejected. We
+see and admire those who succeed; of those who fail we know nothing
+and we even forget that there are such.
+
+In response to my questions Japanese friends have uniformly assured me
+that they are not accustomed to think of the Japanese as possessed of
+better memories than the people of the West. They appear surprised
+that the question should be raised, and are specially surprised at our
+high estimate of Japanese ability in this direction.
+
+If, however, we inquire about their powers of memory in connection
+with daily duties and the ordinary acquisition of knowledge and its
+retention, my own experience of twelve years, chiefly with the middle
+and lower classes of society, has left the impression that, while some
+learn easily and remember well, a large number are exceedingly slow.
+On the whole, I am inclined to believe that, although the Japanese may
+be said to have good memories, yet it can hardly be maintained that
+they conspicuously exceed Occidentals in this respect.
+
+In comparing the Occidental with the Oriental, it is to be remembered
+that there is not among Occidental nations that attention to bare
+memorizing which is so conspicuous among the less civilized nations.
+The astonishing feats performed by the transmitters of ancient poems
+and religious teachings seem to us incredible. Professor Max Müller
+says that the voluminous Vedas have been handed down for centuries,
+unchanged, simply from mouth to mouth by the priesthood. Every
+progressive race, until it has attained a high development of the art
+of writing, has manifested similar power of memory. Such power is not,
+however, inherent; that is to say, it is not due to the innate
+peculiarity of brain structure, but rather to the nature of the social
+order which demands such expenditure of time and strength for the
+maintenance of its own higher life. Through the art of writing
+Occidental peoples have found a cheaper way of retaining their history
+and of preserving the products of their poets and religious teachers.
+Even for the transactions of daily life we have resorted to the
+constant use of pen and notebook and typewriter, by these devices
+saving time and strength for other things. As a result, our memories
+are developed in directions different from those of semi-civilized or
+primitive man. The differences of memory characterizing different
+races, then, are for the most part due to differences in the social
+order and to the nature of the civilization, rather than to the
+intrinsic and inherited structure of the brain itself.
+
+Since memory is the foundation of all mental operations, we have given
+to it the first place in the present discussion. And that the Japanese
+have a fair degree of memory argues well for the prospect of high
+attainment in other directions. With this in mind, we naturally ask
+whether they show any unusual proficiency or deficiency in the
+acquisition of foreign languages? In view of her protracted separation
+from the languages of other peoples, should we not expect marked
+deficiency in this respect? On the contrary, however, we find that
+tens of thousands of Japanese students have acquired a fairly good
+reading knowledge of English, French, and German. Those few who have
+had good and sufficient teaching, or who have been abroad and lived in
+Occidental lands, have in addition secured ready conversational use of
+the various languages. Indeed, some have contended that since the
+Japanese learn foreign languages more easily than foreigners learn
+Japanese, they have greater linguistic powers than the foreigner. It
+should be borne in mind, however, that in such a comparison, not only
+are the time required and the proficiency; attained to be considered,
+but also the inherent difficulty of the language studied and the
+linguistic helps provided the student.
+
+I have come gradually to the conclusion that the Japanese are neither
+particularly gifted nor particularly deficient in powers of language
+acquisition. They rank with Occidental peoples in this respect.
+
+To my mind language affords one of the best possible proofs of the
+general contention of this volume that the characteristics which
+distinguish the races are social rather than biological. The reason
+why the languages of the different races differ is not because the
+brain-types of the races are different, but only because of the
+isolated social evolution which the races have experienced. Had it
+been possible for Japan to maintain throughout the ages perfect and
+continuous social intercourse with the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon
+race, while still maintaining biological isolation, _i.e._, perfect
+freedom from intermarriage, there is no reason to think that two
+distinct languages so different as English and Japanese would have
+arisen. The fact that Japanese children can accurately acquire
+English, and that English or American children can accurately acquire
+Japanese, proves conclusively that diversities of language do not rest
+on brain differences and brain heredity, but exclusively on social
+differences and social heredity.
+
+If this is true, then the argument can easily be extended to all the
+features that differentiate the civilizations of different races; for
+the language of any race is, in a sense, the epitome of the
+civilization of that race. All its ideas, customs, theologies,
+philosophies, sciences, mythologies; all its characteristic thoughts,
+conceptions, ideals; all its distinguishing social features, are
+represented in its language. Indeed, they enter into it as determining
+factors, and by means of it are transmitted from age to age. This
+argument is capable of much extension and illustration.
+
+The charge that the Japanese are a nation of imitators has been
+repeated so often as to become trite, and the words are usually spoken
+with disdain. Yet, if the truth were fully told, it would be found
+that, from many points of view, this quality gives reason rather for
+congratulation. Surely that nation which can best discriminate and
+imitate has advantage over nations that are so fixed in their
+self-sufficiency as to be able neither to see that which is
+advantageous nor to imitate it. In referring to the imitative powers
+of the Japanese, then, I do not speak in terms of reproach, but rather
+in those of commendation. "Monkeyism" is not the sort of imitation
+that has transformed primitive Japan into the Japan of the early or
+later feudal ages, nor into the Japan of the twentieth century. Bare
+imitation, without thought, has been relatively slight in Japan. If it
+has been known at times, those times have been of short duration.
+
+In his introduction to "The Classic Poetry of the Japanese" Professor
+Chamberlain has so stated the case for the imitative quality of the
+people that I quote the following:
+
+ "The current impression that the Japanese are a nation of imitators
+ is in the main correct. As they copy us to-day, so did they copy
+ the Chinese and Koreans a millennium and a half ago. Religion,
+ philosophy, laws, administration, written characters, all arts but
+ the very simplest, all science, or at least what then went by that
+ name, everything was imported from the neighboring continent; so
+ much so that of all that we are accustomed to term 'Old Japan'
+ scarce one trait in a hundred is really and properly Japanese. Not
+ only are their silk and lacquer not theirs by right of invention,
+ nor their painting (albeit so often praised by European critics for
+ its originality), nor their porcelain, nor their music, but even
+ the larger part of their language consists of mispronounced
+ Chinese; and from the Chinese they have drawn new names for already
+ existing places, and new titles for their ancient Gods."
+
+While the above cannot be disputed in its direct statements, yet I can
+but feel that it makes, on the whole, a false impression. Were these
+same tests applied to any European people, what would be the result?
+Of what European nation may it be said that its art, or method of
+writing, or architecture, or science, or language even, is "its own by
+right of invention"? And when we stop to examine the details of the
+ancient Japanese civilization which is supposed to have been so,
+slavishly copied from China and India, we shall find that, though the
+beginnings were indeed imitated, there were also later developments of
+purely Japanese creation. In some instances the changes were vital.
+
+In examining the practical arts, while we acknowledge that the
+beginnings of nearly all came from Korea or China, we must also
+acknowledge that in many important respects. Japan has developed along
+her own lines. The art of sword-making, for instance, was undoubtedly
+imported; but who does not know of the superior quality and beauty of
+Japanese swords, the Damascus blades of the East? So distinct is this
+Japanese production that it cannot be mistaken for that of any other
+nation. It has received the impress of the Japanese social order. Its
+very shape is due to the habit of carrying the sheath in the "obi" or
+belt.
+
+If we study the home of the laborer, or the instruments in common use,
+we shall find proof that much more than imitation has been involved.
+
+Were the Japanese mere imitators, how could we explain their
+architecture, so different from that of China and Korea? How explain
+the multiplied original ways in which bamboo and straw are used?
+
+For a still closer view of the matter, let us consider the imported
+ethical and religious codes of the country. In China the emphasis of
+Confucianism is laid on the duty of filial piety. In Japan the primary
+emphasis is on loyalty. This single change transformed the entire
+system and made the so-called Confucianism of Japan distinct from that
+of China. In Buddhism, imported from India, we find greater changes
+than Occidental nations have imposed on their religion imported from
+Palestine. Indeed, so distinct has Japanese Buddhism become that it is
+sometimes difficult to trace its connections in China and India. And
+the Buddhistic sects that have sprung up in Japan are more radically
+diverse and antagonistic to each other and to primitive Buddhism than
+the denominations of Christianity are to each other and to primitive
+Christianity.
+
+In illustration is the most popular of all the Buddhist sects to-day,
+Shinshu. This has sometimes been called by foreigners "Reformed"
+Buddhism; and so similar are many of its doctrines to those of
+Christianity that some have supposed them to have been derived from
+it, but without the slightest evidence. All its main doctrines and
+practices were clearly formulated by its founder, Shinrah, six hundred
+years ago. The regular doctrines of Buddhism that salvation comes only
+through self-effort and self-victory are rejected, and salvation
+through the merits of another is taught. "Ta-riki," "another's power,"
+not "Ji-riki," "self-power," is with them the orthodox doctrine.
+Priests may marry and eat meat, practices utterly abhorrent to the
+older and more primitive Buddhism. The sacred books are printed in the
+vernacular, in marked contrast to the customs of the other sects.
+Women, too, are given a very different place in the social and
+religious scale and are allowed hopes of attaining salvation that are
+denied by all the older sects. "Penance, fasting, prescribed diet,
+pilgrimages, isolation from society, whether as hermits or in the
+cloister, and generally amulets and charms, are all tabooed by this
+sect. Monasteries imposing life vows are unknown within its pale.
+Family life takes the place of monkish seclusion. Devout prayer,
+purity, earnestness of life, and trust in Buddha himself as the only
+worker of perfect righteousness, are insisted on. Morality is taught
+as more important than orthodoxy."[AC] It is amazing how far the Shin
+sect has broken away from regular Buddhistic doctrine and practice.
+Who can say that no originality was required to develop such a system,
+so opposed at vital points to the prevalent Buddhism of the day?
+
+Another sect of purely Japanese origin deserving notice is the "Hokke"
+or "Nicheren." Its founder, known by the name of Nichiren, was a man
+of extraordinary independence and religious fervor. Wholly by his
+original questions and doubts as to the prevailing doctrines and
+customs of the then dominant sects, he was led to make independent
+examination into the history and meaning of Buddhistic literature and
+to arrive at conclusions quite different from those of his
+contemporaries. Of the truth and importance of his views he was so
+persuaded that he braved not only fierce denunciations, but prolonged
+opposition and persecution. He was rejected and cast out by his own
+people and sect; he was twice banished by the ruling military powers.
+But he persevered to the end, finally winning thousands of converts to
+his views. The virulence of the attacks made upon him was due to the
+virulence with which he attacked what seemed to him the errors and
+corruption of the prevailing sects. Surely his was no case of servile
+imitation. His early followers had also to endure opposition and
+severe persecution.
+
+Glancing at the philosophical ideas brought from China, we find here
+too a suggestion of the same tendency toward originality. It is true
+that Dr. Geo. Wm. Knox, in his valuable monograph on "A Japanese
+Philosopher," makes the statement that, "In acceptance and rejection
+alike no native originality emerges, nothing beyond a vigorous power
+of adoption and assimilation. No improvements of the new philosophy
+were even attempted. Wherein it was defective and indistinct,
+defective and indistinct it remained. The system was not thought out
+to its end and independently adopted. Polemics, ontology, ethics,
+theology, marvels, heroes--all were enthusiastically adopted on faith.
+It is to be added that the new system was superior to the old, and so
+much of discrimination was shown."[AD] And somewhat earlier he
+likewise asserts that "There is not an original and valuable
+commentary by a Japanese writer. They have been content to brood over
+the imported works and to accept unquestioningly politics, ethics, and
+metaphysics." After some examination of these native philosophers, I
+feel that, although not without some truth, these assertions cannot be
+strictly maintained. It is doubtless true that no powerful thinker and
+writer has appeared in Japan that may be compared to the two great
+philosophers of China, Shushi and Oyomei. The works and the system of
+the former dominated Japan, for the simple reason that governmental
+authority forbade the public teaching or advocacy of the other.
+Nevertheless, not a few Japanese thinkers rejected the teachings and
+philosophy of Shushi, regardless of consequences. Notable among those
+rejecters was Kaibara Yekken, whose book "The Great Doubt" was not
+published until after his death. In it he rejects in emphatic terms
+the philosophical and metaphysical ideas of Shushi. An article[AE] by
+Dr. Tetsujiro Inouye, Professor of Philosophy in the Imperial
+University in Tokyo, on the "Development of Philosophical Ideas in
+Japan," concludes with these words:
+
+ "From this short sketch the reader can clearly see that
+ philosophical considerations began in our country with the study of
+ Shushi and Oyomei. But many of our thinkers did not long remain
+ faithful to that tradition; they soon formed for themselves new
+ conceptions of life and of the world, which, as a rule, are not
+ only more practical, but also more advanced than those of the
+ Chinese."
+
+An important reason for our Western thought, that the Japanese have
+had no independence in philosophy, is our ignorance of the larger part
+of Japanese and Chinese literature. Oriental speculation was moving in
+a direction so diverse from that of the West that we are impressed
+more with the general similarity that prevails throughout it than with
+the evidences of individual differences. Greater knowledge would
+reveal these differences. In our generalized knowledge, we see the
+uniformity so strongly that we fail to discover the originality.
+
+As a traveler from the West, on reaching some Eastern land, finds it
+difficult at first to distinguish between the faces of different
+individuals, his mind being focused on the likeness pervading them
+all, so the Occidental student of Oriental thought is impressed with
+the remarkable similarity that pervades the entire Oriental
+civilization, modes of thought, and philosophy, finding it difficult
+to discover the differences which distinguish the various Oriental
+races. In like manner, a beginner in the study of Japanese philosophy
+hardly gives the Japanese credit for the modifications of Chinese
+philosophy which they have originated.
+
+In this connection it is well to remember that, more than any
+Westerner can realize, the Japanese people have been dependent on
+governmental initiative from time immemorial. They have never had any
+thought but that of implicit obedience, and this characteristic of the
+social order has produced its necessary consequences in the present
+characteristics of the people. Individual initiative and independence
+have been frowned upon, if not always forcibly repressed, and thus the
+habit of imitation has been stimulated. The people have been
+deliberately trained to imitation by their social system. The
+foreigner is amazed at the sudden transformations that have swept the
+nation. When the early contact with China opened the eyes of the
+ruling classes to the fact that China had a system of government that
+was in many respects better than their own, it was an easy thing to
+adopt it and make it the basis for their own government. This
+constituted the epoch-making period in Japanese history known as the
+Taikwa Reform. It occurred in the seventh century, and consisted of a
+centralizing policy; under which, probably for the first time in
+Japanese history, the country was really unified. Critics ascribe it
+to an imitation of the Chinese system. Imitation it doubtless was; but
+its significant feature was its imposition by the few rulers on the
+people; hence its wide prevalence and general acceptance.
+
+Similarly, in our own times, the Occidentalized order now dominant in
+Japan was adopted, not by the people, but by the rulers, and imposed
+by them on the people; these had no idea of resisting the new order,
+but accepted it loyally as the decision of their Emperor, and this
+spirit of unquestioning obedience to the powers that be is, I am
+persuaded, one of the causes of the prevalent opinion respecting
+Japanese imitativeness as well as of the fact itself.
+
+The reputation for imitativeness, together with the quality itself,
+is due in no small degree, therefore, to the long-continued dominance
+of the feudal order of society. In a land where the dependence of the
+inferior on the superior is absolute, the wife on the husband, the
+children on the parents, the followers on their lord, the will of the
+superior being ever supreme, individual initiative must be rare, and
+the quality of imitation must be powerfully stimulated.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+ORIGINALITY--INVENTIVENESS
+
+
+Originality is the obverse side of imitation. In combating the notion
+that Japan is a nation of unreflective imitators, I have given
+numerous examples of originality. Further extensive illustration of
+this characteristic is, accordingly, unnecessary. One other may be
+cited, however.
+
+The excellence of Japanese art is admitted by all. Japanese temples
+and palaces are adorned with mural paintings and pieces of sculpture
+that command the admiration of Occidental experts. The only question
+is as to their authors. Are these, properly speaking, Japanese works
+of art--or Korean or Chinese? That Japan received her artistic
+stimulus, and much of her artistic ideas and technique, from China is
+beyond dispute. But did she develop nothing new and independent? This
+is a question of fact. Japanese art, though Oriental, has a
+distinctive quality. A magnificent work entitled "Solicited Relics of
+Japanese Art" is issuing from the press, in which there is a large
+number of chromo-xylographic and collotype reproductions of the best
+specimens of ancient Japanese art. Reviewing this work, the _Japan
+Mail_ remarks:
+
+ "But why should the only great sculptors that China or Korea ever
+ produced have come to Japan and bequeathed to this country the
+ unique results of their genius? That is the question we have to
+ answer before we accept the doctrine that the noblest masterpieces
+ of ancient Japan were from foreign lands. When anything comparable
+ is found in China or Korea, there will be less difficulty in
+ applying this doctrine of over-sea-influence to the genius that
+ enriched the temples of antique Japan."[AF]
+
+Under the early influence of Buddhism (900-1200 A.D.) Japan fairly
+bloomed. Those were the days of her glory in architecture, literature,
+and art. But a blight fell upon her from which she is only now
+recovering. The causes of this blight will receive attention in a
+subsequent chapter. Let us note here only one aspect of it, namely,
+official repression of originality.
+
+Townsend Harris, in his journal, remarks on the way in which the
+Japanese government has interfered with the originality of the people.
+"The genius of their government seems to forbid any exercise of
+ingenuity in producing articles for the gratification of wealth and
+luxury. Sumptuary laws rigidly enforce the forms, colors, material,
+and time of changing the dress of all. As to luxury of furniture, the
+thing is unknown in Japan.... It would be an endless task to attempt
+to put down all the acts of a Japanese that are regulated by
+authority."
+
+The Tokugawa rule forbade the building of large ships; so that, by the
+middle of the nineteenth century, the art of ship-building was far
+behind what it had been two centuries earlier. Government authority
+exterminated Christianity in the early part of the seventeenth century
+and freedom of religious belief was forbidden. The same power that put
+the ban on Christianity forbade the spread of certain condemned
+systems of Confucianism. Even in the study of Chinese literature and
+philosophy, therefore, such originality as the classic models
+stimulated was discouraged by the all-powerful Tokugawa government.
+The avowed aim and end of the ruling powers of Japan was to keep the
+nation in its _status quo_. Originality was heresy and treason;
+progress was impiety. The teaching of Confucius likewise lent its
+support to this policy. To do exactly as the fathers did is to honor
+them; to do, or even to think, otherwise is to dishonor them. There
+have not been wanting men of originality and independence in both
+China and Japan; but they were not great enough to break over, or
+break down, the incrusted system in which they lived--the system of
+blind devotion to the past. This system, that deliberately opposed all
+invention and originality, has been the great incubus to national
+progress, in that it has rejected and repressed every tendency to
+variation. What results might not the country have secured, had
+Christianity been allowed to do its work in stimulating individual
+development and in creating the sense of personal responsibility
+towards God and man!
+
+A curious anomaly still remains in Japan on the subject of liberty in
+study and belief. Though perfect liberty is the rule, one topic is
+even yet under official embargo. No one may express public dissent
+from the authorized version of primitive Japanese history. A few years
+ago a professor in the Imperial University made an attempt to
+interpret ancient Japanese myths. His constructions were supposed to
+threaten the divine descent of the Imperial line, and he was summarily
+dismissed.
+
+Dr. E. Inouye, Professor of Buddhist Philosophy in the Imperial
+University, addressing a Teachers' Association of Sendai, delivered a
+conservative, indirectly anti-foreign speech. He insisted, as reported
+by a local English correspondent, that the Japanese people "were
+descended from the gods. In all other countries the sovereign or
+Emperor was derived from the people, but here the people had the honor
+of being derived from the Emperor. Other countries had filial piety
+and loyalty, but no such filial piety and loyalty as exist in Japan.
+The moral attainments of the people were altogether unique. He
+informed his audience that though they might adopt foreign ways of
+doing things, their minds needed no renovating; they were good enough
+as they were."[AG]
+
+As a result of this position, scholarship and credulity are curiously
+combined in modern historical production. Implicit confidence seems to
+be placed in the myths of the primitive era. Tales of the gods are
+cited as historical events whose date, even, can be fixed with some
+degree of accuracy. Although writing was unknown in Japan until early
+in the Christian era, the chronology of the previous six or eight
+hundred years is accepted on the authority of a single statement in
+the Kojiki, written 712 years A.D. This statement was reproduced from
+the memory of a single man, who remembered miraculously the contents
+of a book written shortly before, but accidentally destroyed by fire.
+In the authoritative history of Japan, prepared and translated into
+English at the command of the government for the Columbian Exposition,
+we find such statements as these:
+
+"From the time that Amaterasu-Omikami made Ninigi-no-mikoto to descend
+from the heavens and subject to his administrative sway
+Okini-nushi-no-mikoto and other offspring of the deities in the land,
+descendants of the divine beings have sat upon the throne, generation
+after generation in succession."[AH] "Descended in a direct line from
+the heavenly deities, the Emperor has stood unshaken in his high place
+through all generations, his prestige and dignity immutable from time
+immemorial and independent of all the vicissitudes of the world about
+him."[AI] "Never has there been found a single subject of the realm
+who sought to impair the Imperial prestige."[AJ] It is true that in a
+single passage the traditions of the "age of the Deities" are
+described as "strange and incredible legends," but it is added that,
+however singular they are, in order to understand the history of the
+Empire's beginnings, they must be studied. Then follows, without a
+word of criticism or dissent, the account of the doings of the
+heavenly deities, in creating Japan and its people, as well as the
+myriads of gods. There is no break between the age of the gods and the
+history of men. The first inventions and discoveries, such as those of
+fire, of mining, and of weaving are ascribed to Amate rasu-Omikami
+(the Sun Goddess). According to these traditions and the modern
+histories built upon them, the Japanese race came into existence
+wholly independently of all other races of men. Such is the
+authoritative teaching in the schools to-day.
+
+Occidental scholars do not accept these statements or dates. That the
+Japanese will evince historical and critical ability in the study of
+their own early history, as soon as the social order will allow it,
+can hardly be doubted. Those few who even now entertain advanced ideas
+do not dare to avow them. And this fact throws an interesting light on
+the way in which the social order, or a despotic government, may
+thwart for a time the natural course of development. The present
+apparent credulity of Japanese historical scholarship is due neither
+to race character nor to superstitions lodged in the inherited race
+brain, but simply to the social system, which, as yet, demands the
+inviolability of the Imperial line.
+
+Now that the Japanese have been so largely relieved from the incubus
+of the older social order, the question rises whether they are showing
+powers of originality. The answer is not doubtful, for they have
+already made several important discoveries and inventions. The Murata
+rifle, with which the army is equipped, is the invention of a
+Japanese. In 1897 Colonel Arisaka invented several improvements in
+this same rifle, increasing the velocity and accuracy, and lessening
+the weight. Still more recently he has invented a rapid-fire
+field-piece to superintend whose manufacture he has been sent to
+Europe. Mr. Shimose has invented a smokeless powder, which the
+government is manufacturing for its own use. Not infrequently there
+appear in the papers notices of new inventions. I have recently noted
+the invention of important improvements in the hand loom universally
+used in Japan, also a "smoke-consumer" which not only abolishes the
+smoke, but reduces the amount of coal used and consequently the
+expense. These are but a few of the ever-increasing number of Japanese
+inventions.
+
+In the, field of original scientific research is the famous
+bacteriologist, Dr. Kitazato. Less widely known perhaps, but none the
+less truly original explorers in the field of science, are Messrs.
+Hirase and Ikeno, whose discoveries of spermatozoids in Ginko and
+Cycas have no little value for botanists, especially in the
+development of the theory of certain forms of fertilization. These
+instances show that the faculty of original thought is not entirely
+lacking among the Japanese. Under favorable conditions, such as now
+prevail, there is good reason for holding that the Japanese will take
+their place among the peoples of the world, not only as skillful
+imitators and adapters, but also as original contributors to the
+progress of civilization and of science.
+
+Originality may be shown in imitation as well as in production, and
+this type of originality the Japanese have displayed in a marked way.
+They have copied the institutions of no single country. It might even
+be difficult to say which Western land has had the greatest influence
+in molding the new social order of Japan. In view of the fact that it
+is the English language which has been most in favor during the past
+thirty years, it might be assumed that England and America are the
+favored models. But no such hasty conclusion can be drawn. The
+Japanese have certainly taken ideas and teachers from many different
+sources; and they have changed them frequently, but not thoughtlessly.
+A writer in _The Far East_ brings this points out clearly:
+
+ "While Japan remained secluded from other countries, she had no
+ necessity for and scarcely any war vessels, but after the country
+ was opened to the free intercourse of foreign powers--immediately
+ she felt the urgent necessity of naval defense and employed a Dutch
+ officer to construct her navy. In 1871 the Japanese government
+ employed a number of English officers, and almost wholly
+ reconstructed her navy according to the English system. But in the
+ matter of naval education our rulers found the English system
+ altogether unsatisfactory, and adopted the American system for the
+ model of our naval academy. So, in discipline, our naval officers
+ found the German principle much superior to the English, and
+ adopted that in point of discipline. Thus the Japanese navy is not
+ wholly after the English system, or the American, or the French, or
+ the German system. But it has been so constructed as to include the
+ best portions of all the different systems. In the case of the
+ army, we had a system of our own before we began to utilize
+ gunpowder and foreign methods of discipline. Shortly before the
+ present era we reorganized our army by adopting the Dutch system,
+ then the English, then the French, and after the Franco-Prussian
+ war, made an improvement by adopting the German system. But on
+ every occasion of reorganization we retained the most advantageous
+ parts of the old systems and harmonized them with the new one. The
+ result has been the creation of an entirely new system, different
+ from any of those models we have adopted. So in the case of our
+ civil code, we consulted most carefully the laws of many civilized
+ nations, and gathered the cream of all the different codes before
+ we formulated our own suited to the customs of our people. In the
+ revision of our monetary system, our government appointed a number
+ of prominent economists to investigate the characteristics of
+ foreign systems, as to their merits and faults, and also the
+ different circumstances under which various systems present their
+ strength and weakness. The investigation lasted more than two
+ years, which finally culminated in our adoption of the gold in the
+ place of the old silver standard."
+
+This quotation gives an idea of the selective method that has been
+followed. There has been no slavish or unconscious imitation. On the
+contrary, there has been a constant conscious effort to follow the
+best model that the civilized world afforded. Of course, it may be
+doubted whether in fact they have always chosen the best; but that is
+a different matter. The Japanese think they have; and what foreigner
+can say that, under the circumstances and in view of the conditions of
+the people, they have not? One point is clear, that on the whole the
+nation has made great progress in recent decades, and that the conduct
+of the government cannot fail to command the admiration of every
+impartial student of Oriental lands. This is far from saying that all
+is perfection. Even the Japanese make no such claim. Nor is this
+equivalent to an assertion of Japan's equality with the leading lands
+of the West, although many Japanese are ready to assert this. But I
+merely say that the leaders of New Japan have revealed a high order of
+judicious originality in their imitation of foreign nations.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+INDIRECTNESS--"NOMINALITY"
+
+
+The Japanese have two words in frequent use which aptly describe
+certain striking aspects of their civilization. They are "tomawashi
+ni," "yumei-mujitsu," the first translated literally signifying
+"roundabout" or "indirect," the second meaning "having the name, but
+not the reality." Both these aspects of Japanese character are forced
+on the attention of any who live long in Japan.
+
+Some years ago I had a cow that I wished to sell. Being an American,
+my natural impulse was to ask a dairyman directly if he did not wish
+to buy; but that would not be the most Japanese method. I accordingly
+resorted to the help of a "go-between." This individual, who has a
+regular name in Japanese, "nakadachi," is indispensable for many
+purposes. When land was being bought for missionary residences in
+Kumamoto, there were at times three or even four agents acting between
+the purchaser and the seller and each received his "orei," "honorable
+politeness," or, in plain English, commission. In the purchase of two
+or three acres of land, dealings were carried on with some fifteen or
+more separate landowners. Three different go-betweens dealt directly
+with the purchaser, and each of these had his go-between, and in some
+cases these latter had theirs, before the landowner was reached. A
+domestic desiring to leave my employ conferred with a go-between, who
+conferred with his go-between, who conferred with me! In every
+important consultation a go-between seems essential in Japan. That
+vexatious delays and misunderstandings are frequent may be assumed.
+
+The system, however, has its advantages. In case of disagreeable
+matters the go-between can say the disagreeable things in the third
+person, reducing the unpleasant utterances to a minimum.
+
+I recall the case of two evangelists in the employ of the Kumamoto
+station. Each secured the other to act as go-between in presenting his
+own difficulties to me. To an American the natural course would have
+been for each man to state his own grievances and desires, and secure
+an immediate settlement.
+
+The characteristic of "roundaboutness" is not, however, confined to
+Japanese methods of action, but also characterizes their methods of
+speech. In later chapters on the alleged Japanese impersonality we
+shall consider the remarkable deficiency of personal pronouns in the
+language, and the wide use of "honorifics." This substitution of the
+personal pronouns by honorifics makes possible an indefiniteness of
+speech that is exceedingly difficult for an Anglo-Saxon to appreciate.
+Fancy the amount of implication in the statement, "Ikenai koto-we
+shimashita" which, strictly translated, means "Can't go thing have
+done." Who has done? you? or he? or I? This can only be inferred, for
+it is not stated. If a speaker wishes to make his personal allusion
+blind, he can always do so with the greatest ease and without the
+slightest degree of grammatical incorrectness. "Caught cold," "better
+ask," "honorably sorry," "feel hungry," and all the common sentences
+of daily life are entirely free from that personal definiteness which
+an Occidental language necessitates. We shall see later that the
+absence of the personal element from the wording of the sentence does
+not imply, or prove, its absence from the thought of either the
+speaker or hearer. The Japanese language abounds in roundabout methods
+of expression. This is specially true in phrases of courtesy. Instead
+of saying, "I am glad to see you," the Japanese say, "Well, honorably
+have come"; instead of, "I am sorry to have troubled you," they say,
+"Honorable hindrance have done"; instead of "Thank you," the correct
+expression is, "It is difficult."
+
+In a conversation once with a leading educator, I was maintaining that
+a wide study of English was not needful for the Japanese youth; that
+the majority of the boys would never learn enough English to make it
+of practical use to them in after-life, and that it would be wiser for
+them to spend the same amount of time on more immediately practical
+subjects. The reply was that the boys needed to have the drill in
+English in order to gain clear methods of thought: that the sharp
+distinctness of the English sentence, with its personal pronouns and
+tense and number, affords a mental drill which the Japanese can get in
+no other way; and that even if the boys should never make the
+slightest after-use of English in reading or conversation, the
+advantage gained was well worth the time expended. I have since
+noticed that those men who have spent some time in the study of a
+foreign language speak very much more clearly in Japanese than those
+who have not had this training. In the former case, the enunciation is
+apt to be more distinct, and the sentences rounded into more definite
+periods. The conversation of the average Japanese tends to ramble on
+in a never-ending sentence. But a marked change has come over vast
+numbers of the people during the last three decades. The
+roundaboutness of to-day is as nothing to that which existed under the
+old order of society. For the new order rests on radically different
+ideas; directness of speech and not its opposite is being cultivated,
+and in absolute contrast to the methods of the feudal era, directness
+of governmental procedure is well-nigh universal to-day. In trade,
+too, there has come a straightforwardness that is promising, though
+not yet triumphant. It is safe to assume that in all respectable
+stores the normal price is charged; for the custom of fixed prices has
+been widely adopted. If individuals are known to have the "beating
+down" habit, special prices are added for their sakes.
+
+A personal experience illustrates the point. My wife and I had priced
+several lamps, had made note of the most satisfactory, and had gone
+home without buying. The next day a domestic was sent to secure the
+one which pleased us best. He was charged more than we had been, and
+in surprise mentioned the sum which we had authorized him to pay. The
+shopkeeper explained by saying that he always told us the true price
+in the beginning, because we never tried to beat him down. In truth,
+modern industrial conditions have pretty well banished the old-time
+custom of haggling. A premium is set on straightforwardness in
+business unknown to the old social order.
+
+Roundaboutness is, however, closely connected with "yumei-mujitsu,"
+the other characteristic mentioned at the beginning of this chapter.
+This, for the sake of simplicity, I venture to call "nominality."
+Japanese history is a prolonged illustration of this characteristic.
+For over a thousand years "yumei-mujitsu" has been a leading feature
+in governmental life. Although the Emperor has ostensibly been seated
+on the throne, clothed with absolute power, still he has often reigned
+only in name.[AK] Even so early as 130 A.D., the two families of Oomi
+and Omuraji began to exercise despotic authority in the central
+government, and the feudal system, as thus early established,
+continued with but few breaks to the middle of the present century.
+There were also the great families which could alone furnish wives to
+the Imperial line. These early took possession of the person of the
+Emperor, and the fathers of the wives often exercised Imperial power.
+The country was frequently and long disturbed by intense civil wars
+between these rival families. In turn the Fujiwaras, the Minamotos,
+and the Tairas held the leading place in the control of the Emperor;
+they determined the succession and secured frequent abdication in
+favor of their infant sons, but within these families, in turn, there
+appeared the influence of the "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic. Lesser
+men, the retainers of these families, manipulated the family leaders,
+who were often merely figureheads of the contending families and
+clans. Emperors were made and unmade at the will of these men behind
+the scenes, most of whom are quite unknown to fame. The creation of
+infant Emperors, allowed to bear the Imperial name in their infancy
+and youth, but compelled to abdicate on reaching manhood, was a common
+device for maintaining nominal Imperialism with actual impotence.
+
+When military clans began to monopolize Imperial power, the people
+distinctly recognized the nature of their methods and gave it the name
+of "Bakufu" or "curtain government," a roundabout expression for
+military government. There has been a succession of these "curtain
+governments," the last and most successful being that of the Tokugawa,
+whose fall in 1867-68 brought the entire system to an end and placed
+the true Emperor on the throne.
+
+But this "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic of Japanese life has been by
+no means limited to the national government. Every daimyate was more
+or less blighted by it; the daimyo, or "Great Name," was in too many
+cases but a puppet in the hands of his "kerai," or family retainers.
+These men, who were entirely out of sight, were, in very many cases,
+the real holders of the power which was supposed to be exercised by
+the daimyo. The lord was often a "great name" and nothing more. That
+this state of affairs was always attended with evil results is by no
+means the contention of these pages. Not infrequently the people were
+saved by it from the incompetence and ignorance and selfishness of
+hereditary rulers. Indeed, this system of "yumei-mujitsu" government
+was one of the devices whereby the inherent evils of hereditary rulers
+were more or less obviated. It may be questioned, however, whether the
+device did not in the long run cost more than it gained. Did it not
+serve to maintain, if not actually to produce, a system of
+dissimulation and deception which could but injure the national
+character? It certainly could not stimulate the straightforward
+frankness and outspoken directness and honesty so essential to the
+well-being of the human race.
+
+Although "yumei-mujitsu" government is now practically extinct in
+Japan, yet in the social structure it still survives.
+
+The Japanese family is a maze of "nominality." Full-grown young men
+and women are adopted as sons and daughters, in order to maintain the
+family line and name.
+
+A son is not a legal son unless he is so registered, while an
+illegitimate child is recognized as a true son if so registered. A man
+may be the legal son of his grandmother, or of his sister, if so
+registered. Although a family may have no children, it does not die
+out unless there has been a failure to adopt a son or daughter, and an
+extinct family may be revived by the legal appointment of someone to
+take the family name and worship at the family shrine. The family
+pedigree, therefore, does not describe the actual ancestry, but only
+the nominal, the fictitious. There is no deception in this. It is a
+well-recognized custom of Old Japan. Its origin, moreover, is not
+difficult to explain. Nor is this kind of family peculiar to Japan. It
+is none the less a capital illustration of the "yumei-mujitsu"
+characteristic permeating the feudal civilization, and still exerting
+a powerful influence. Even Christians are not free from "nominalism,"
+as we have frequently found in our missionary work.
+
+A case in mind is of an evangelist employed by our mission station. He
+was to receive a definite proportion of his salary from the church for
+which he worked and the rest from the station. On inquiry I learned
+that he was receiving only that provided by the station, and on
+questioning him further he said that probably the sum promised by the
+church was being kept as his monthly contribution to the expenses of
+the church! Instances of this kind are not infrequent. While in Kyushu
+I more than once discovered that a body of Christians, whose
+evangelists we were helping to support proportionately, were actually
+raising not a cent of their proportion. On inquiry, I would be told
+that the evangelists themselves contributed out of their salary the
+sums needed, and that, therefore, the Christians did not need to raise
+it.
+
+The mission, at one time, adopted the plan of throwing upon the local
+churches the responsibility of deciding as to the fitness of young men
+for mission aid in securing a theological education. It was agreed by
+representatives of the churches and the mission that each candidate
+should secure the approval of the deacons of the church of which he
+was a member, and that the church should pay a certain proportion of
+the candidate's school expenses. It was thought that by this method
+the leading Christians of the young man's acquaintance would become
+his sponsors, and that they would be unwilling to take this
+responsibility except for men in whom they had personal confidence,
+and for whom they would be willing to make personal contributions. In
+course of time the mission discovered that the plan was not working as
+expected. The young men could secure the approval of the deacons of
+their church without any difficulty; and as for the financial aid from
+the church, that could be very easily arranged for by the student's
+making a monthly contribution to the church of the sum which the
+church should contribute toward his expenses. Although this method
+seems to the average Occidental decidedly deceptive, it seemed to the
+Japanese perfectly proper. The arrangement, it is needless to state,
+was not long continued. I am persuaded that the correct explanation of
+these cases is "yumei-mujitsu."
+
+Not long since express trains were put on between Kobe and Tokyo. One
+morning at Osaka I planned to take the early express to Kyoto, distant
+about thirty miles. These are the second and third cities of Japan,
+and the travel between them is heavy. On applying for a ticket I was
+refused and told there was no train for Kyoto. But as multitudes were
+buying tickets, and going out upon the platform, I asked an official
+what the trouble was, and received the explanation that for this
+express train no tickets could be sold for less than forty miles; but
+if I would buy a ticket for the next station beyond Kyoto, it would be
+all right; I could get off at Kyoto. I was assured that I would be
+allowed to land and leave the station at Kyoto. This I did then, and
+have repeatedly done since. The same absurd rule is applied, I am
+told, between Yokohama and Tokyo.
+
+But our interest in these illustrations is the light they shed on
+Japanese character. They indicate the intellectual angle from which
+the people have looked out on life. What is the origin of the
+characteristic? Is it due to deep-lying race nature, to the quality of
+the race brain? Even more clearly than in the case of
+"roundaboutness," it seems to me that "nominality" is due to the
+nature of the old social order. Feudalism has always exhibited more or
+less of these same features. To Anglo-Saxons, reared in a land blessed
+by direct government of the people, by the people, and for the people,
+such methods were not only needless but obnoxious. Nominal
+responsibility without real power has been seen to breed numberless
+evils. We have learned to hate all nominalism, all fiction in
+government, in business and, above all, in personal character. But
+this is due to the Anglo-Saxon social order, the product in large
+measure of centuries of Christian instruction.
+
+Through contact with Westerners and the ideas they stand for,
+directness and reality are being assimilated and developed by the
+Japanese. This would be impossible were the characteristic in question
+due to inherent race nature necessarily bequeathed from generation to
+generation by intrinsic heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+INTELLECTUALITY
+
+
+Some writers hold that the Japanese are inherently deficient in the
+higher mental faculties. They consider mediocre mentality to be an
+inborn characteristic of Japan and assert that it lies at the root of
+the civilizational differences distinguishing the East from the West.
+The puerility of Oriental science in all its departments, the
+prevalence of superstition even among the cultivated, the lack of
+historical insight and interpretation of history are adduced as
+conclusive evidences of this view.
+
+Foreign teachers in Japanese employ have told me that Japanese
+students, as compared with those of the West, manifest deficient
+powers of analysis and of generalization. Some even assert that the
+Japanese have no generalizing ability whatever, their progress in
+civilization being entirely due to their remarkable power of clever
+imitation. Mr. W.G. Aston, in ascribing the characteristic features of
+Japanese literature to the fundamental nature of the race, says they
+are "hardly capable of high intellectual achievement."[AL]
+
+While we may admit that the Japanese do not seem to have at present
+the same power of scientific generalization as Occidentals, we
+naturally ask ourselves whether the difference is due to natal
+deficiency, or whether it may not be due to difference in early
+training. We must not forget that the youth who come under the
+observation of foreign teachers in Japanese schools are already
+products of the Japanese system of education, home and school, and
+necessarily are as defective as it is.
+
+In a previous chapter a few instances of recent invention and
+important scientific discovery were given.
+
+These could not have been made without genuine powers of analysis and
+generalization. We need not linger to elaborate this point.
+
+Another set of facts throwing light on our problem is the success of
+so many Japanese students, at home and in foreign lands, in mastering
+modern thought. Great numbers have come back from Europe and America
+with diplomas and titles; not a few have taken high rank in their
+classes. The Japanese student abroad is usually a hard worker, like
+his brother at home. I doubt if any students in the new or the old
+world study more hours in a year than do these of Japan. It has often
+amazed me to learn how much they are required to do. This is one fair
+sign of intellectuality. The ease too with which young Japan, educated
+in Occidental schools and introduced to Occidental systems of thought,
+acquires abstruse speculations, searching analyses, and generalized
+abstractions proves conclusively Japanese possession of the higher
+mental faculties, in spite of the long survival in their civilization
+of primitive puerility and superstitions and the lack of science,
+properly so called.
+
+Japanese youths, furthermore, have a fluency in public speech
+decidedly above anything I have met with in the United States. Young
+men of eighteen or twenty years of age deliver long discourses on
+religion or history or politics, with an apparent ease that their
+uncouth appearance would not lead one to expect. In the little school
+of less than 150 boys in Kumamoto there were more individuals who
+could talk intelligibly and forcefully on important themes of national
+policy, the relation of religion and politics, the relation of Japan
+to the Occident and the Orient, than could be found in either of the
+two colleges in the United States with which I was connected. I do not
+say that they could bring forth original ideas on these topics. But
+they could at least remember what they had heard and read and could
+reproduce the ideas with amazing fluency.
+
+A recent public meeting in Tokyo in which Christian students of the
+University spoke to fellow-students on the great problems of religion,
+revealed a power of no mean order in handling the peculiar
+difficulties encountered by educated young men. A competent listener,
+recently graduated from an American university and widely acquainted
+with American students, declared that those Japanese speakers revealed
+greater powers of mind and speech than would be found under similar
+circumstances in the United States.
+
+The fluency with which timid girls pray in public has often surprised
+me. Once started, they never seem to hesitate for ideas or words. The
+same girls would hardly be able to utter an intelligible sentence in
+reply to questions put to them by the pastor or the missionary, so
+faint would be their voices and so hesitating their manner.
+
+The question as to whether the Japanese have powers of generalization
+receives some light from a study of the language of the people. An
+examination of primitive Japanese proves that the race, prior to
+receiving even the slightest influence from China, had developed
+highly generalized terms. It is worth while to call attention here to
+a simple fact which most writers seem to ignore, namely, that all
+language denotes and indeed rests on generalization. Consider the word
+"uma," "horse"; this is a name for a whole class of objects, and is
+therefore the product of a mind that can generalize and express its
+generalization in a concept which no act of the imagination can
+picture; the imagination can represent only individuals; the mind that
+has concepts of classes of things, as, for instance, of horses,
+houses, men, women, trees, has already a genuine power of
+generalization. Let me also call attention to such words as "wake,"
+"reason"; "mono," "thing"; "koto," "fact"; "aru," "is"; "oro,"
+"lives"; "aru koto," "is fact," or "existence"; "ugoku koto,"
+"movement"; "omoi," "thought"; this list might be indefinitely
+extended. Let the reader consider whether these words are not highly
+generalized; yet these are all pure Japanese words, and reveal the
+development of the Japanese mind before it was in the least influenced
+by Chinese thought. Evidently it will not do to assert the entire lack
+of the power of generalization to the Japanese mind.
+
+Still further evidence proving Japanese possession of the higher
+mental faculties may be found in the wide prevalence and use of the
+most highly generalized philosophical terms. Consider for instance,
+"Ri" and "Ki," "In" and "Yo." No complete translation can be found for
+them in English; "Ri" and "Ki" may be best translated as the rational
+and the formative principles in the universe, while "In" and "Yo"
+signify the active and the passive, the male and the female, the light
+and the darkness; in a word, the poles of a positive and negative. It
+is true that these terms are of Chinese origin as well as the thoughts
+themselves, but they are to-day in universal use in Japan. Similar
+abstract terms of Buddhistic origin are the possession of the common
+people.
+
+Of course the possession of these Chinese terms is not offered as
+evidence of independent generalizing ability. But wide use proves
+conclusively the possession of the higher mental faculties, for,
+without such faculties, the above terms would be incomprehensible to
+the people and would find no place in common speech. We must be
+careful not to give too much weight to the foreign origin of these
+terms. Chinese is to Japanese what Latin and Greek are to modern
+European languages. The fact that a term is of Chinese origin proves
+nothing as to the nature of the modern Japanese mind. The developing
+Japanese civilization demanded new terms for her new instruments and
+increasing concepts. These for over fifteen centuries have been
+borrowed from, or constructed out of, Chinese in the same way that all
+our modern scientific terms are constructed out of Latin and Greek. It
+is doubtful if any of the Chinese terms, even those borrowed bodily,
+have in Japan the same significance as in China. If this is true, then
+the originating feature of Japanese power of generalization becomes
+manifest.
+
+Indeed from this standpoint, the fact that the Japanese have made such
+extensive use of the Chinese language shows the degree to which the
+Japanese mind has outgrown its primitive development, demanding new
+terms for the expression of its expanding life. But mental growth
+implies energy of acquisition. The adoption of Chinese terms is not a
+passive but an active process.
+
+Acquisition of generalized terms can only take place with the
+development of a generalizing mind. Foreign terms may help, but they
+do not cause that development.
+
+In a study of the question whether or not the Japanese possess
+independent powers of analysis and generalization, we must ever
+remember the unique character of the social environment to which they
+have been subjected. Always more or less of an isolated nation, they
+have been twice or thrice suddenly confronted with a civilization much
+superior to that which they in their isolation had developed. Under
+such circumstances, adoption and modification of ideas and language as
+well as of methods and machinery were the most rational and natural
+courses.
+
+The explanation usually given for the puerilities of Oriental science,
+history, and religion has been short and simple, namely, the inherent
+nature of the Oriental races, as if this were the final fact, needing
+and admitting no further explanation. That the Orient has not
+developed history or science is doubtless true, but the correct
+explanation of this fact is, in my opinion, that the educational
+method of the entire Orient has rested on mechanical memorization;
+during the formative period of the mind the exclusive effort of
+education has been to develop a memory which acts by arbitrary or
+fanciful connections and relations. A Japanese boy of Old Japan, for
+instance, began his education at from seven to eight years of age and
+spent three or four years in memorizing the thousands of Chinese
+hieroglyphic characters contained in the Shisho and Gokyo, nine of the
+Chinese classics. This completed, his teacher would begin to explain
+to him the meaning of the characters and sentences. The entire
+educational effort was to develop the powers of observing and
+memorizing accidental, superficial, or even purely artificial
+relations. This double faculty of observing trifling and irrelevant
+details, and of remembering them, became phenomenally and abnormally
+developed.
+
+Recent works on the psychology of education, however, have made plain
+how an excessive development of a child's lower mental faculties may
+arrest its later growth in all the higher departments of its
+intellectual nature; the development of a mechanical memory is well
+known as a serious obstacle to the higher activities of reason. Now
+Japanese education for centuries, like Chinese, has developed such
+memory. It trained the lower and ignored the higher. Much of the
+Japanese education of to-day, although it includes mathematics,
+science, and history, is based on the mechanical memory method. The
+Orient is thus a mammoth illustration of the effects of
+over-development of the mechanical memory, and the consequent arrest
+of the development of the remaining powers of the mind.
+
+Encumbered by this educational ideal and system, how could the ancient
+Chinese and Japanese men of education make a critical study of
+history, or develop any science worthy of the name? The childish
+physics and astronomy, the brutal therapeutics and the magical and
+superstitious religions of the Orient, are a necessary consequence of
+its educational system, not of its inherent lack of the higher mental
+powers.
+
+If Japanese children brought up from infancy in American homes, and
+sent to American schools from kindergarten days onward, should still
+manifest marked deficiencies in powers of analysis and generalization,
+as compared with American children, we should then be compelled to
+conclude that this difference is due to diverse natal psychic
+endowment. Generalizations as to the inherent intellectual
+deficiencies of the Oriental are based on observations of individuals
+already developed in the Oriental civilization, whose psychic defects
+they accordingly necessarily inherit through the laws of social
+heredity. Such observations have no relevancy to our main problem. We
+freely admit that Oriental civilization manifests striking
+deficiencies of development of the higher mental faculties, although
+it is not nearly so great as many assert; but we contend that these
+deficiencies are due to something else than the inherent psychic
+nature of the Oriental individual. Innumerable causes have combined to
+produce the Oriental social order and to determine its slow
+development. These cannot be stated in a sentence, nor in a paragraph.
+
+In the final analysis, however, the causes which produce the
+characteristic features of Japanese social order are the real sources
+of the differentiating intellectual traits now characterizing the
+Japanese. Introduce a new social heredity,--a new system of
+education,--one which relegates a mechanical memory to the
+background,--one which exalts powers of rational observation of the
+profound causal relations of the phenomena of nature, and which sets a
+premium on such observation, analysis, and generalization, and the
+results will show the inherent psychic nature of the Oriental to be
+not different from that of the Occidental.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+PHILOSOPHICAL ABILITY
+
+
+We are now prepared to consider whether or not the Japanese have
+philosophical ability. The average educated Japanese believe such to
+be the case. The rapidity and ease with which the upper classes have
+abandoned their superstitious faiths is commonly attributed by
+themselves to the philosophical nature of their minds. Similarly the
+rapid spread of so-called rationalism and Unitarian thought and Higher
+Criticism among once earnest Christians, during the past decade, they
+themselves ascribe to their interest in philosophical questions, and
+to their ability in handling philosophical problems.
+
+Foreigners, on the other hand, usually deny them the possession of
+philosophical ability.
+
+Dr. Peery, in his volume entitled "The Gist of Japan," says: "By
+nature, I think, they are more inclined to be practical than
+speculative. Abstract theological ideas have little charm for them.
+There is a large element in Japan that simulates a taste for
+philosophical study. Philosophy and metaphysics are regarded by them
+as the profoundest of all branches of learning, and in order to be
+thought learned they profess great interest in these studies. Not only
+are the highly metaphysical philosophies of the East studied, but the
+various systems of the West are looked into likewise. Many of the
+people are capable of appreciating these philosophies, too; but they
+do it for a purpose." Other writers make the same general charge of
+philosophical incompetence. One or two quotations from Dr. Knox's
+writings were given on this subject, under the head of Imitation.[AM]
+
+What, then, are the facts? Do the Japanese excel in philosophy, or
+are they conspicuously deficient? In either case, is the
+characteristic due to essential race nature or to some other cause?
+
+We must first distinguish between interest in philosophical problems
+and ability in constructing original philosophical systems. In this
+distinction is to be found the reconciliation of many conflicting
+views. Many who argue for Japanese philosophical ability are impressed
+with the interest they show in metaphysical problems, while those who
+deny them this ability are impressed with the dependence of Japanese
+on Chinese philosophy.
+
+The discussions of the previous chapter as to the nature of Japanese
+education and its tendency to develop the lower at the expense of the
+higher mental faculties, have prepared us not to expect any
+particularly brilliant history of Japanese philosophy. Such is indeed
+the case. Primitive Japanese cosmology does not differ in any
+important respect from the primitive cosmology of other races. The
+number of those in Old Japan who took a living interest in distinctly
+metaphysical problems is indisputably small. While we admit them to
+have manifested some independence and even originality, as Professor
+Inouye urges,[AN] yet it can hardly be maintained that they struck out
+any conspicuously original philosophical systems. There is no
+distinctively Japanese philosophy.
+
+These facts, however, should not blind us to the distinction between
+latent ability in philosophical thought and the manifestation of that
+ability. The old social order, with its defective education, its habit
+of servile intellectual dependence on ancestors, and its social and
+legal condemnation of independent originality, particularly in the
+realm of thought, was a mighty incubus on speculative philosophy.
+Furthermore, crude science and distorted history could not provide the
+requisite material from which to construct a philosophical
+interpretation of the universe that would appeal to the modern
+Occidental.
+
+
+In spite, however, of social and educational hindrances, the Japanese
+have given ample evidence of interest in metaphysical problems and of
+more or less ability in their solution. Religious constructions of the
+future life, conceptions as to the relations of gods and men and the
+universe, are in fact results of the metaphysical operations of the
+mind. Primitive Japan was not without these. As she developed in
+civilization and came in contact with Chinese and Hindu metaphysical
+thought, she acquired their characteristic systems. Buddhist first,
+and later Confucian, metaphysics dominated the thought of her educated
+men. In view of the highly metaphysical character of Buddhist
+doctrines and the interest they have produced at least among the
+better trained priests, the assertion that the Japanese have no
+ability in metaphysics cannot be maintained.
+
+At one period in the history of Buddhism in Japan, prolonged public
+discussions were all the fashion. Priests traveled from temple to
+temple to engage in public debate. The ablest debater was the abbot,
+and he had to be ready to face any opponent who might appear. If a
+stranger won, the abbot yielded his place and his living to the
+victor. Many an interesting story is told of those times, and of the
+crowds that would gather to hear the debates. But our point is that
+this incident in the national life shows the appreciation of the
+people for philosophical questions. And although that particular
+fashion has long since passed away, the national interest in
+discussions and arguments still exists. No monks of the West ever
+enjoyed hair-splitting arguments more than do many of the Japanese.
+They are as adept at mental refinements and logical juggling as any
+people of the West, though possibly the Hindus excel them.
+
+If it be said that Confucianism was not only non-metaphysical, but
+uniquely practical, and for this reason found wide acceptance in
+Japan, the reply must be first that, professing to be
+non-metaphysical, it nevertheless had a real metaphysical system of
+thought in the background to which it ever appealed for authority, a
+system, be it noted, more in accord with modern science and philosophy
+than Buddhist metaphysics; and secondly, although Confucianism became
+the bulwark of the state and the accepted faith of the samurai, it
+was limited to them. The vast majority of the nation clung to their
+primitive Buddhistic cosmology. That Confucianism rested on a clearly
+implied and more or less clearly expressed metaphysical foundation may
+be seen in the quotations from the writings of Muro Kyuso which are
+given in chapter xxiv. We should note that the revolt of the educated
+classes of Japan from Buddhism three hundred years ago, and their
+general adoption of Confucian doctrine, was partly in the interests of
+religion and partly in the interests of metaphysics. In both respects
+the progressive part of the nation had become dissatisfied with
+Buddhism. The revolt proves not lack of religious or metaphysical
+interest and insight, but rather the reverse.
+
+Not a little of the teaching of Shushi (1130-1200 A.D.) and of Oyomei
+(1472-1528 A.D.), Chinese philosophical expounders of Confucianism, is
+metaphysical. The doctrine of the former was widely studied and was
+the orthodox doctrine in Japan for more than two centuries, all other
+doctrine and philosophy being forbidden by the state. It is true that
+the central interest in this philosophical instruction was the
+ethical. It was felt that the entire ethical system rested on the
+acceptance of a particular metaphysical system. But so far from
+detracting from our argument this statement rather adds. For in what
+land has not the prime interest in metaphysics been ethical? A study
+of the history of philosophy shows clearly that philosophy and
+metaphysics arose out of religious and ethical problems, and have ever
+maintained their hold on thinking men, because of their mutually vital
+relations. In Japan it has not been otherwise. If anyone doubts this
+he should read the Japanese philosophers--in the original, if
+possible; if not, then in such translations and extracts as Dr. Knox
+has given us in his "A Japanese Philosopher," and Mr. Aston in his
+"Japanese Literature." The ethical interest is primary, and the
+metaphysical interest is secondary,[AO] to be sure, but not to be
+denied.
+
+Occidental philosophy has found many earnest and capable Japanese
+students. The Imperial University has a strong corps of philosophical
+instructors. Occidental metaphysical thought, both materialistic and
+idealistic, has found many congenial minds. Indeed, it is not rash to
+say that in the thought of New Japan the distinguishing Oriental
+metaphysical conceptions of the universe have been entirely displaced
+by those of the West. Christians, in particular, have entirely
+abandoned the old polytheistic, pantheistic, and fatalistic
+metaphysics and have adopted thoroughgoing monotheism.
+
+Ability to understand and sufficient interest to study through
+philosophical and metaphysical systems of foreign lands indicate a
+mental development of no slight order, whatever may be the ability, or
+lack of it, in making original contributions to the subject. That
+educated Japanese have shown real ability in the former sense can
+hardly be doubted by those who have read the writings of such men as
+Goro Takahashi, ex-president Hiroyuki Kato, Prof. Yujiro Motora, Prof.
+Rikizo Nakashima, or Dr. Tetsujiro Inouye. The philosophical
+brightness of many of Japan's foreign as well as home-trained scholars
+argues well for the philosophical ability of the nation.
+
+A recent conversation with a young Japanese gives point to what has
+just been said. The young man suddenly appeared at my study door, and,
+with unusually brief salutations, said that he wished me to talk to
+him about religion. In answer to questions he explained that he had
+been one of my pupils ten years ago in the Kumamoto Boys' School; that
+he had been baptized as a Christian at that time, but had become cold
+and filled with doubts; that he had been studying ever since, having
+at one time given considerable attention to the Zen sect of Buddhism;
+but that he had found no satisfaction there. He accordingly wished to
+study Christianity more carefully. For three hours we talked, he
+asking questions about the Christian conception of God, of the
+universe, of man, of sin, of evolution, of Christ, of salvation, of
+the object of life, of God's purpose in creation, of the origin and
+nature of the Bible. Toward the latter part of our conversation,
+referring to one idea expressed, he said, "That is about what Hegel
+held, is it not?" As he spoke he opened his knapsack, which I then saw
+to be full of books, and drew out an English translation of Hegel's
+"Philosophy of History"; he had evidently read it carefully, making
+his notes in Japanese on the margin. I asked him if he had read it
+through. "Yes," he replied, "three times." He also incidentally
+informed me that he had thought of entering our mission theological
+training class during the previous winter, but that he was then in the
+midst of the study of the philosophy of Kant, and had accordingly
+decided to defer entering until the autumn. How thoroughly he had
+mastered these, the most profound and abstruse metaphysicians that the
+West can boast, I cannot state. But this at least is clear; his
+interest in them was real and lasting. And in his conversation he
+showed keen appreciation of philosophical problems. It is to be noted
+also that he was a self-taught philosopher--for he had attended no
+school since he studied elementary English, ten years before, while a
+lad of less than twenty.
+
+As a sample of the kind of men I not infrequently meet, let me cite
+the case of a young business man who once called on me in the hotel at
+Imabari, popularly called "the little philosopher." He wished to talk
+about the problem of the future life and to ask my personal belief in
+the matter. He said that he believed in God and in Jesus as His unique
+son and revealer, but that he found great difficulty in believing in
+the continued life of the soul after death. His difficulty arose from
+the problems of the nature of future thinking; shall we continue to
+think in terms of sense perception, such as time, space, form, color,
+pleasure, and pain? If not, how can we think at all? And can we then
+remember our present life? If we do, then the future life will not be
+essentially different from this, _i.e._, we must still have physical
+senses, and continue to live in an essentially physical world. Here
+was a set of objections to the doctrine of the future life that I
+have never heard as much as mentioned by any Occidental youth. Though
+without doubt not original with him, yet he must have had in some
+degree both philosophical ability and interest in order to appreciate
+their force and to seek their solution.
+
+In conversation not long since with a Buddhist priest of the Tendai
+sect, after responding to his request for a criticism of Buddhism, I
+asked him for a similarly frank criticism of Christianity. To my
+surprise, he said that while Christianity was far ahead of Buddhism in
+its practical parts and in its power to mold character, it was
+deficient in philosophical insight and interest. This led to a
+prolonged conversation on Buddhistic philosophy, in which he explained
+the doctrines of the "Ku-ge-chu," and the "Usa and Musa." Without
+attempting to explain them here, I may say that the first is amazingly
+like Hegel's "absolute nothing," with its thesis, antithesis, and
+synthesis, and the second a psychological distinction between
+volitional and spontaneous emotions.
+
+In discussing Japanese philosophical ability, a point often forgotten
+is the rarity of philosophical ability or even interest in the West.
+But a small proportion of college students have the slightest interest
+in philosophical or metaphysical problems. The majority do not
+understand what the distinctive metaphysical problems are. In my
+experience it is easier to enter into a conversation with an educated
+man in Japan on a philosophical question than with an American. If
+interest in philosophical and metaphysical questions in the West is
+rare, original ability in their investigation is still rarer.
+
+We conclude, then, that in regard to philosophical ability the
+Japanese have no marked racial characteristic differentiating them
+from other races. Although they have not developed a distinctive
+national philosophy, this is not due to inherent philosophical
+incompetence. Nor, on the other hand, is the relatively wide interest
+now manifest in philosophical problems attributable to the inherent
+philosophical ability of the race. So far as Japan is either behind or
+in advance of other races, in this respect, it is due to her social
+order and social inheritance, and particularly to the nature, methods,
+and aims of the educational system, but not to her intrinsic psychic
+inheritance.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+IMAGINATION
+
+
+In no respect, perhaps, have the Japanese been more sweepingly
+criticised by foreigners than in regard to their powers of imagination
+and idealism. Unqualified generalizations not only assert the entire
+lack of these powers, but they consider this lack to be the
+distinguishing inherent mental characteristic of the race. The
+Japanese are called "prosaic," "matter-of-fact," "practical,"
+"unimaginative."
+
+Mr. Walter Dening, describing Japanese mental characteristics, says:
+
+ "Neither their past history nor their prevailing tastes show any
+ tendency to idealism. They are lovers of the practical and the
+ real; neither the fancies of Goethe nor the reveries of Hegel are
+ to their liking. Our poetry and our philosophy and the mind that
+ appreciates them are alike the results of a network of subtle
+ influences to which the Japanese are comparative strangers. It is
+ maintained by some, and we think justly, that the lack of idealism
+ in the Japanese mind renders the life of even the most cultivated a
+ mechanical, humdrum affair when compared with that of Westerners.
+ The Japanese cannot understand why our controversialists should wax
+ so fervent over psychological, ethical, religious, and
+ philosophical questions, failing to perceive that this fervency is
+ the result of the intense interest taken in such subjects. The
+ charms that the cultured Western mind finds in the world of fancy
+ and romance, in questions themselves, irrespective of their
+ practical bearings, is for the most part unintelligible to the
+ Japanese."[AP]
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell expends an entire chapter in his "Soul of the Far
+East," in showing how important imagination is as a factor in art,
+religion, science, and civilization generally, and how strikingly
+deficient Japanese are in this faculty. "The Far Orientals," he
+argues, "ought to be a particularly unimaginative set of people. Such
+is precisely what they are. Their lack of imagination is a
+well-recognized fact."[AQ]
+
+Mr. Aston, characterizing Japanese literature, says:
+
+ "A feature which strikingly distinguishes the Japanese poetic muse
+ from that of Western nations is a certain lack of imaginative
+ power. The Japanese are slow to endow inanimate objects with life.
+ Shelley's 'Cloud,' for example, contains enough matter of this kind
+ for many volumes of Japanese verse. Such lines as:
+
+ 'From my wings are shaken
+ The dews that waken
+ The sweet buds every one,
+ When rocked to rest
+ On their mother's breast
+ As she dances about the sun,'
+
+ would appear to them ridiculously overcharged with metaphor, if not
+ absolutely unintelligible."[AR]
+
+
+On the other hand, some writers have called attention to the contrary
+element of Japanese mental nature. Prof. Ladd, for instance, maintains
+that the characteristic mental trait of the Japanese is their
+sentimentality. He has shown how their lives are permeated with and
+regulated by sentiment. Ancestral worship, patriotism, Imperial
+apotheosis, friendship, are fashioned by idealizing sentiment. In our
+chapters on the emotional elements of Japanese character we have
+considered how widespread and powerful these ideals and sentiments
+have been and still are.
+
+Writers who compare the Chinese with the Japanese remark the practical
+business nature of the former and the impractical, visionary nature of
+the latter.
+
+For a proper estimate of our problem we should clearly distinguish
+between the various forms of imagination. It reveals itself not merely
+in art and literature, in fantastic conception, in personification and
+metaphor, but in every important department of human life. It is the
+tap-root of progress, as Mr. Lowell well points out. It pictures an
+ideal life in advance of the actual, which ideal becomes the object of
+effort. The forms of imagination may, therefore, be classified
+according to the sphere of life in which it appears. In addition to
+the poetic fancy and the idealism of art and literature generally, we
+must distinguish the work of imagination in the æsthetic, in the
+moral, in the religious, in the scientific, and in the political life.
+The manifestation of the imaginative faculty in art and in literature
+is only one part of the æsthetic imagination.
+
+In studying Japanese æsthetic characteristics, we noted how unbalanced
+was the development of their æsthetic sense. This proposition of
+unbalanced development applies with equal force to the imaginative
+faculty as a whole. Conspicuously lacking in certain directions, it is
+as conspicuously prominent in others. Rules of etiquette are the
+products of the æsthetic imagination, and in what land has etiquette
+been more developed than in feudal Japan? Japanese imagination has
+been particularly active in the political world. The passionate
+loyalty of retainers to their lord, of samurai to their daimyo, of all
+to their "kuni," or clan, in ancient times, and now, of the people to
+their Emperor, are the results of a vivid political idealizing
+imagination. Imperial apotheosis is a combination of the political and
+religious imagination. And in what land has the apotheosizing
+imagination been more active than in Japan? Ambition and self-conceit
+are likewise dependent on an active imaginative faculty.
+
+There can be no doubt the writers quoted above have drawn attention to
+some salient features of Japanese art. In the literature of the past,
+the people have not manifested that high literary imagination that we
+discover in the best literature of many other nations.
+
+This fact, however, will not justify the sweeping generalizations
+based upon it. Judging from the pre-Elizabethan literature, who would
+have expected the brilliancy of the Elizabethan period? Similarly in
+regard to the Victorian period of English literature. Because the
+Japanese have failed in the past to produce literature equal to the
+best of Western lands, we are not justified in asserting that she
+never will and that she is inherently deficient in literary
+imagination. In regard to certain forms of light fancy, all admit that
+Japanese poems are unsurpassed by those of other lands. Japanese
+amative poetry is noted for its delicate fancies and plays on words
+exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, of translation, or even of
+expression, to one unacquainted with the language.
+
+The deficiencies of Japanese literature, therefore, are not such as to
+warrant the conclusion that they both mark and make a fundamental
+difference in the race mind. For such differences as exist are capable
+of a sociological explanation.
+
+The prosaic matter-of-factness of the Japanese mind has been so widely
+emphasized that we need not dwell upon it here. There is, however,
+serious danger of over-emphasis, a danger into which all writers fall
+who make it the ground for sweeping condemnatory criticism.
+
+They are right in ascribing to the average Japanese a large amount of
+unimaginative matter-of-factness, but they are equally wrong in
+unqualified dogmatic generalizations. They base their inductions on
+insufficient facts, a habit to which foreigners are peculiarly liable,
+through ignorance of the language and also of the inner thoughts and
+life of the people.
+
+The prosaic nature of the Japanese has not impressed me so much as the
+visionary tendency of the people, and their idealism. The Japanese
+themselves count this idealism a national characteristic. They say
+that they are theorizers, and numberless experiences confirm this
+view.
+
+They project great undertakings; they scheme; they discuss
+contingencies; they make enormous plans; all with an air of
+seriousness and yet with a nonchalance which shows a semi-conscious
+sense of the unreality of their proposals. In regard to Korea and
+China and Formosa, they have hatched political and business schemes
+innumerable. The kaleidoscopic character of Japanese politics is in
+part due to the rapid succession of visionary schemes. One idea reigns
+for a season, only to be displaced by another, causing constant
+readjustment of political parties. Frequent attacks on government
+foreign policy depend for their force on lordly ideas as to the part
+Japan should play in international relations. Writing about the recent
+discussions in the public press over the question of introducing
+foreign capital into Japan, one contributor to the _Far East_ remarks
+that "It has been treated more from a theoretical than from a
+practical standpoint.... This seems to me to arise from a peculiar
+trait of Japanese mind which is prone to dwell solely on the
+theoretical side until the march of events compels a sudden leap
+toward the practical." This visionary faculty of the Japanese is
+especially conspicuous in the daily press. Editorials on foreign
+affairs and on the relations of Japan to the world are full of it.
+
+I venture to jot down a few illustrations of impractical idealism out
+of my personal knowledge. An evangelist in the employ of the Kumamoto
+station exemplified this visionary trait in a marked degree. Nervous
+in the extreme, he was constantly having new ideas. For some reason
+his attention was turned to the subject of opium and the evils China
+was suffering from the drug, forced on her by England. Forthwith he
+came to me for books on the subject; he wished to become fully
+informed, and then he proposed to go to China and preach on the
+subject. For a few weeks he was full of his enterprise. It seemed to
+him that if he were only allowed the opportunity he could convince the
+Chinese of their error, and the English of their crime. One of his
+plans was to go to England and expostulate with them on their
+un-Christian dealings with China. A few weeks later his attention was
+turned to the wrongs inflicted on the poor on account of their
+ignorance about law and their inability to get legal assistance. This
+idea held him longer than the previous.
+
+He desired to study law and become a public pleader in order to
+defend the poor against unjust men of wealth. In his theological ideas
+he was likewise extreme and changeable; swinging from positive and
+most emphatic belief to extreme doubt, and later back again. In his
+periods of triumphant faith it seemed to him that he could teach the
+world; and his expositions of truth were extremely interesting. He
+proposed to formulate a new theology that would dissolve forever the
+difficulties of the old theology. In his doubts, too, he was no less
+interesting and assertive. His hold on practical matters was
+exceedingly slender. His salary, though considerably larger than that
+of most of the evangelists, was never sufficient. He would spend
+lavishly at the beginning of the month so long as he had the money,
+and then would pinch himself or else fall into debt.
+
+Mr. ----, the head of the Kumamoto Boys' School during the period of
+its fierce struggles and final collapse, whom I have already referred
+to as the Hero-Principal,[AS] is another example of this impractical
+high-strung visionariness. No sooner had he reached Kumamoto, than
+there opened before our enchanted eyes the vision of this little
+insignificant school blooming out into a great university. True, there
+had been some of this bombast before his arrival; but it took on new
+and gorgeous form under his master hand. The airs that he put on,
+displaying his (fraudulent) Ph.D., and talking about his schemes, are
+simply amusing to contemplate from this distance. His studies in the
+philosophy of religion had so clarified his mind that he was going to
+reform both Christianity and Buddhism. His sermons of florid eloquence
+and vociferous power, never less than an hour in length, were as
+marked in ambitious thoughts as in pulpit mannerisms. He threw a spell
+over all who came in contact with him. He overawed them by his
+vehemence and tremendous earnestness and insistence on perfect
+obedience to his masterful will. In one of his climactic sermons,
+after charging missionaries with teaching dangerous errors, he said
+that while some were urging that the need of the times was to "his
+back to Luther," and others were saying, that we must "his back to
+Christ" (these English words being brought into his Japanese sermon),
+they were both wrong; we must "hie back to God"; and he prophesied a
+reformation in religion, beginning there in Kumamoto, in that school,
+which would be far and away more important in the history of the world
+than was the Lutheran Reformation.
+
+The recent history of Christianity in Japan supplies many striking
+instances of visionary plans and visionary enthusiasts. The confident
+expectation entertained during the eighties of Christianizing the
+nation before the close of the century was such a vision. Another,
+arising a few years later, was the importance of returning all foreign
+missionaries to their native lands and of intrusting the entire
+evangelistic work to native Christians, and committing to them the
+administration of the immense sums thus set free. For it was assumed
+by these brilliant Utopians that the amount of money expended in
+supporting missionaries would be available for aggressive work should
+the missionaries be withdrawn, and that the Christians in foreign
+lands would continue to pour in their contributions for the
+evangelization of Japan.
+
+Still another instance of utopian idealism is the vision that Japan
+will give birth to that perfect religion, meeting the demands of both
+heart and head, for which the world waits. In January, 1900, Prof. T.
+Inouye, of the Imperial University, after showing quite at length, and
+to his own satisfaction, the inadequacy of all existing religions to
+meet the ethical and religious situation in Japan, maintained this
+ambitious view.
+
+Some Japanese Christians are declaring the need of Japonicized
+Christianity. "Did not the Greeks transform Christianity before they
+accepted it? And did not the Romans, and finally the Germans, do the
+same? Before Japan will or can accept the religion of Christ, it must
+be Japonicized." So they argue; "and who so fit to do it as we?" lies
+in the background of their thought.
+
+Many a Christian pastor and evangelist, although not sharing the
+ambition of Prof. Inouye, nevertheless glows with the confident
+expectation that Japonicized Christianity will be its most perfect
+type. "No one need wonder if Japan should be destined to present to
+the world the best type of Christianity that has yet appeared in
+history," writes an exponent of this view, at one time a Christian
+pastor. In this connection the reader may recall what was said in
+chapter xiv. on Japanese Ambition and Conceit, qualities depending on
+the power of seeing visions. We note, in passing, the optimistic
+spirit of New Japan. This is in part due, no doubt, to ignorance of
+the problems that lie athwart their future progress, but it is also
+due to the vivid imaginative faculty which pictures for them the
+glories of the coming decades when they shall lead not only the
+Orient, but also the Occident, in every line of civilization, material
+and spiritual, moral and religious. A dull, unimaginative, prosaic
+nature cannot be exuberantly optimistic. It is evident that writers
+who proclaim the unimaginative matter-of-factness of the Japanese as
+universal and absolute, have failed to see a large side of Japanese
+inner life.
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell states that the root of all the peculiarities of
+Oriental peoples is their marked lack of imagination. This is the
+faculty that "may in a certain sense be said to be the creator of the
+world." The lack of this faculty, according to Mr. Lowell, is the root
+of the Japanese lack of originality and invention; it gives the whole
+Oriental civilization its characteristic features. He cites a few
+words to prove the essentially prosaic character of the Japanese mind,
+such as "up-down" for "pass" (which word, by the way, is his own
+invention, and reveals his ignorance of the language), "the being (so)
+is difficult," in place of "thank you." "A lack of any fanciful
+ideas," he says, "is one of the most salient traits of all Far Eastern
+peoples, if indeed a sad dearth can properly be called salient.
+Indirectly, their want of imagination betrays itself in their everyday
+sayings and doings, and more directly in every branch of thought." I
+note, in passing, that Mr. Lowell does not distinguish between fancy
+and imagination. Though allied faculties, they are distinct. Mr.
+Lowell's extreme estimate of the prosaic nature of the Japanese mind I
+cannot share. Many letters received from Japanese friends refute this
+view by their fanciful expressions. The Japanese language, too, has
+many fanciful terms. Why "pass" is any more imaginative than
+"up-down," to accept Mr. Lowell's etymology, or "the being (so) is
+difficult" than "thank you," I do not see. To me the reverse
+proposition would seem the truer. And are not "breaking-horns" for "on
+purpose," and "breaking-bones" for "with great difficulty," distinctly
+imaginative terms, more imaginative than the English? In the place of
+our English term "sun," the Japanese have several alternative terms in
+common use, such as "_hi_," "day," "_Nichirin_," "day-ball," "_Ten-to
+Sama_," "the god of heaven's light;" and for "moon," it has "_tsuki_,"
+"month," "_getsu-rin_," "month ball." The names given to her
+men-of-war also indicate a fanciful nature. The torpedo destroyers are
+named "Dragon-fly," "Full Moon," "The Moon in the Cloud," "Seabeach,"
+"Dawn of Day," "Clustering Clouds," "Break of Day," "Ripples,"
+"Evening Mist," "Dragon's Lamp," "Falcon," "Magpie," "White-naped
+Crane," and "White Hawk." Surely, it cannot be maintained that the
+Japanese are utterly lacking in fancy.
+
+Distinguishing between fancy as "the power of forming pleasing,
+graceful, whimsical, or odd mental images, or of combining them with
+little regard to rational processes of construction," and imagination,
+in its more philosophical use, as "the act of constructive intellect
+in grouping the materials of knowledge or thought into new, original,
+and rational systems," we assert without fear of successful
+contradiction, that the Japanese race is not without either of these
+important mental faculties.
+
+In addition to the preceding illustrations of visionary and fanciful
+traits, let the reader reflect on the significance of the comic and of
+caricature in art. Japanese _Netsuke_ (tiny carvings of exquisite
+skill representing comical men, women, and children) are famous the
+world over. Surely, the fancy is the most conspicuous mental
+characteristic revealed in this branch of Japanese art. In Japanese
+poetry "a vast number of conceits, more or less pretty," are to be
+found, likewise manifesting the fancy of both the authors who wrote
+and the people who were pleased with and preserved their writings.[AT]
+The so-called "impersonal habit of the Japanese mind," with a
+corresponding "lack of personification of abstract qualities,"
+doubtless prevents Japanese literature from rising to the poetic
+heights attained by Western nations. But this lack does not prove the
+Japanese mind incapable of such flights. As describing the actual
+characteristics of the literature of the past the assertion of "a lack
+of imaginative power" is doubtless fairly correct. But the inherent
+nature of the Japanese mind cannot be inferred from the deficiencies
+of its past literature, without first examining the relation between
+its characteristic features and the nature of the social order and the
+social inheritance.
+
+Are the Japanese conspicuously deficient in imagination, in the sense
+of the definition given above? The constructive imagination is the
+creator of civilization. Not only art and literature, but, as already
+noted, science, philosophy, politics, and even the practical arts and
+prosaic farming are impossible without it. It is the tap-root of
+invention, of discovery, of originality.
+
+It is needless to repeat what has been said in previous chapters[AU]
+on Japanese imitation, invention, discovery, and originality. Yet, in
+consideration of the facts there given, are we justified in counting
+the Japanese so conspicuously deficient in constructive, imagination
+as to warrant the assertion that such a lack is the fundamental
+characteristic of the race psychic nature?
+
+As an extreme case, look for a moment at their imitativeness. Although
+imitation is considered a proof of deficient originality, and thus of
+imagination, yet reflection shows that this depends on the nature of
+the imitation. Japanese imitation has not been, except possibly for
+short periods, of that slavish nature which excludes the work of the
+imagination. Indeed, the impulse to imitation rests on the
+imagination. But for this faculty picturing the state of bliss or
+power secured in consequence of adopting this or that feature of an
+alien civilization, the desire to imitate could not arise. In view,
+moreover, of the selective nature of Japanese imitation, we are
+further warranted in ascribing to the people no insignificant
+development of the imagination.
+
+In illustration, consider Japan's educational system. Established no
+doubt on Occidental models, it is nevertheless a distinctly Japanese
+institution. Its buildings are as characteristically Japonicized
+Occidental school buildings as are its methods of instruction.
+Japanese railroads and steamers, likewise constructed in Japan, are
+similarly Japonicized--adapted to the needs and conditions of the
+people. To our eyes this of course signifies no improvement, but
+assuredly, without such modification, our Western railroads and
+steamers would be white elephants on their hands, expensive and
+difficult of operation.
+
+What now is the sociological interpretation of the foregoing facts?
+How are the fanciful, visionary, and idealistic characteristics, on
+the one hand, and, on the other, the prosaic, matter-of-fact, and
+relatively unimaginative characteristics, related to the social order?
+
+It is not difficult to account for the presence of accentuated
+visionariness in Japan. Indeed, this quality is conspicuous among the
+descendants of the military and literary classes; and this fact
+furnishes us the clew. "From time immemorial," to use a phrase common
+on the lips of Japanese historians, up to the present era, the samurai
+as a class were quite separated from the practical world; they were
+comfortably supported by their liege lords; entirely relieved from the
+necessity of toiling for their daily bread, they busied themselves not
+only with war and physical training, but with literary accomplishments,
+that required no less strenuous mental exertions.
+
+Furthermore, in a class thus freed from daily toil, there was sure to
+arise a refined system of etiquette and of rank distinctions. Even a
+few centuries of life would, under such conditions, develop highly
+nervous individuals in large numbers, hypersensitive in many
+directions. These men, by the very development of their nervous
+constitutions, would become the social if not the practical leaders of
+their class; high-spirited, and with domineering ideas and scheming
+ambitions, they would set the fashion to all their less nervously
+developed fellows. Freed from the exacting conditions of a practical
+life, they would inevitably fly off on tangents more or less
+impractical, visionary.
+
+If, therefore, this trait is more marked in Japanese character than in
+that of many other nations, it may be easily traced to the social
+order that has ruled this land "from time immemorial." More than any
+other of her mental characteristics, impractical visionariness may be
+traced to the development of the nervous organization at the expense
+of the muscular. This characteristic accordingly may be said to be
+more inherently a race characteristic than many others that have been
+mentioned. Yet we should remember that the samurai constitute but a
+small proportion of the people. According to recent statistics (1895)
+the entire class to-day numbers but 2,050,000, while the common people
+number over 40,000,000. It is, furthermore, to be remembered that not
+all the descendants of the samurai are thus nervously organized. Large
+numbers have a splendid physical endowment, with no trace of abnormal
+nervous development. While the old feudal order, with its constant
+carrying of swords, and the giving of honor to the most impetuous,
+naturally tended to push the most high-strung individuals into the
+forefront and to set them up as models for the imitation of the young,
+the social order now regnant in Japan faces in the other direction.
+Such visionary men are increasingly relegated to the rear. Their
+approach to insanity is recognized and condemned. Even this trait of
+character, therefore, which seems to be rooted in brain and nerve
+structure is, nevertheless, more subject to the prevailing social
+order than would at first seem possible.
+
+Its rise we have seen was due to that order, and the setting aside of
+these characteristics as ideals at least, and thus the bringing into
+prominence of more normal and healthy ideals, is due to the coming in
+of a new order.
+
+Japanese prosaic matter-of-factness may similarly be shown to have
+intimate relations to the nature of the social order. Oppressive
+military feudalism, keeping the vast majority of the people in
+practical bondage, physical, intellectual, and spiritual, would
+necessarily render their lives and thoughts narrow in range and
+spiritless in nature. Such a system crushes out hope. From sunrise to
+sunset, "_nembyaku nenju_," "for a hundred years and through all the
+year," the humdrum duties of daily life were the only psychic stimuli
+of the absolutely uneducated masses. Without ambition, without
+self-respect, without education or any stimulus for the higher mental
+life, what possible manifestation of the higher powers of the mind
+could be expected? Should some "sport" appear by chance, it could not
+long escape the sword of domineering samurai. Even though originally
+possessing some degree of imagination, cringing fear of military
+masters, with the continuous elimination by ruthless slaughter of the
+more idealizing, less submissive, and more self-assertive individuals
+of the non-military classes, would finally produce a dull, imitative,
+unimaginative, and matter-of-fact class such as we find in the
+hereditary laboring and merchant classes.
+
+Furthermore, Japanese civilization, like that of the entire Orient,
+with its highly communalized social order, is an expression of passive
+submission to superior authority. Although an incomplete
+characterization, there is still much truth in saying that the Orient
+is an expression of Fate, the Occident of Freedom. We have seen that a
+better contrasted characterization is found in the terms communal and
+individual. The Orient has known nothing of individualism. It has not
+valued the individual nor sought his elevation and freedom. In every
+way, on the contrary, it has repressed and opposed him. The high
+development of the individual culminating in powerful personality has
+been an exceptional occurrence, due to special circumstances. A
+communal social order, often repressing and invariably failing to
+evoke the higher human faculties, must express its real nature in the
+language, literature, and customs of the people. Thus in our chapter
+on the Æsthetic Characteristics of the Japanese[AV] we saw how the
+higher forms of literature were dependent on the development of
+manhood and on a realization of his nature. A communal social order
+despising, or at least ignoring the individual, cannot produce the
+highest forms of literature or art, because it does not possess the
+highest forms of psychic development. Take from Western life all that
+rests on or springs from the principles of individual worth, freedom,
+and immortality, and how much of value or sublimity will remain? The
+absence from Japanese literature and language of the higher forms of
+fancy, metaphor, and personification on the one hand, and, on the
+other, the presence of widespread prosaic matter-of-factness, are thus
+intimately related to the communal nature of Japan's long dominant
+social order.
+
+Similarly, in regard to the constructive imagination, whose
+conspicuous lack in Japan is universally asserted by foreign critics,
+we reply first that the assertion is an exaggeration, and secondly,
+that so far as it is fact, it is intimately related to the social
+order. In our discussions concerning Japanese Intellectuality and
+Philosophical Ability,[AW] we saw how intimate a relation exists
+between the social order, particularly as expressed in its educational
+system, and the development of the higher mental faculties. Now a
+moment's reflection will show how the constructive imagination,
+belonging as it does to the higher faculties, was suppressed by the
+system of mechanical and superficial education required by the social
+order. Religion apotheosized ancestral knowledge and customs, thus
+effectively condemning all conscious use of this faculty. So far as it
+was used, it was under the guise of reviving old knowledge or of
+expounding it more completely.
+
+This, however, has been the experience of every race in certain
+stages of its development. Such periods have been conspicuously
+deficient in powerful literature, progressive science, penetrating
+philosophy, or developing political life. When a nation has once
+entered such a social order it becomes stagnant, its further
+development is arrested. The activity of the higher faculties of the
+mind are in abeyance, but not destroyed. It needs the electric shock
+of contact and conflict with foreign races to startle the race out of
+its fatal repose and start it on new lines of progress by demanding,
+on pain of death, or at least of racial subordination, the
+introduction of new elements into its social order by a renewed
+exercise of the constructive imagination. For without such action of
+the constructive imagination a radical and voluntary modification of
+the dominant social order is impossible.
+
+Old Japan experienced this electric shock and New Japan is the result.
+She is thus a living witness to the inaccuracy of those sweeping
+generalizations as to her inherent deficiency of constructive
+imagination.
+
+It is by no means our contention that Japanese imagination is now as
+widely and profoundly exercised as that of the leading Western
+nations. We merely contend that the exercise of this mental faculty is
+intimately related to the nature of the whole social order; that under
+certain circumstances this important faculty may be so suppressed as
+to give the impression to superficial observers of entire absence, and
+that with a new environment necessitating a new social order, this
+faculty may again be brought into activity.
+
+The inevitable conclusion of the above line of thought is that the
+activity and the manifestation of the higher faculties is so
+intimately related to the nature of the social order as to prevent our
+attributing any particular mental characteristics to a race as its
+inherent and unchangeable nature. The psychic characteristics of a
+race at any given time are the product of the inherited social order.
+To transform those characteristics changes in the social order,
+introduced either from without, or through individuals within the
+race, are alone needful. This completes our specific study of the
+intellectual characteristics of the Japanese. It may seem, as it
+undoubtedly is, quite fragmentary. But we have purposely omitted all
+reference to those characteristics which the Japanese admittedly have
+in common with other races. We have attempted the consideration of
+only the more outstanding characteristics by which they seem to be
+differentiated from other races. We have attempted to show that in so
+far as they are different, the difference is due not to inherent
+psychic nature transmitted by organic heredity, but to the nature of
+the social order, transmitted by social heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+MORAL IDEALS
+
+
+Even a slight study of Japanese history suffices to show that the
+faculty of moral discrimination was highly developed in certain
+directions. In what land have the ideal and practice of loyalty been
+higher? The heroes most lauded by the Japanese to-day are those who
+have proved their loyalty by the sacrifice of their lives. When
+Masashige Kusunoki waged a hopeless war on behalf of one branch of the
+then divided dynasty, and finally preferred to die by his own hand
+rather than endure the sight of a victorious rebel, he is considered
+to have exhibited the highest possible evidence of devoted loyalty.
+One often hears his name in the sermons of Christian preachers as a
+model worthy of all honor. The patriots of the period immediately
+preceding the Meiji era, known as the "Kinnoka," some of whom lost
+their lives because of their devotion to the cause of their then
+impotent Emperor, are accorded the highest honor the nation can give.
+
+The teachings of the Japanese concerning the relations that should
+exist between parents, and children, and, in multitudes of instances,
+their actual conduct also, can hardly be excelled. We can assert that
+they have a keen moral faculty, however further study may compel us to
+pronounce its development and manifestations to be unbalanced.
+
+Better, however, than generalizations as to the ethical ideals of
+Japan, past and present, are actual quotations from her moral
+teachers. The following passages are taken from "A Japanese
+Philosopher," by Dr. Geo. W. Knox, the larger part of the volume
+consisting of a translation of one of the works of Muro Kyuso--who
+lived from 1658 to 1734. It was during his life that the famous
+forty-seven ronin performed their exploit, and Kyu-so gave them the
+name by which they are still remembered, Gi-shi, the "Righteous
+Samurai." The purpose of the work is the defense of the Confucian
+faith and practice, as interpreted by Tei-shu, the philosopher of
+China whom Japan delighted to honor. It discusses among other things
+the fundamental principles of ethics, politics, and religion. Dr. Knox
+has done all earnest Western students of Japanese ethical and
+religious ideas an inestimable service in the production of this work
+in English.
+
+ "The 'Way' of Heaven and Earth is the 'Way' of Gyo and Shun
+ [semi-mythical rulers of ancient China idealized by Confucius]; the
+ 'Way' of Gyo and Shun is the 'Way' of Confucius and Mencius, and
+ the 'Way' of Confucius and Mencius is the 'Way' of Tei-Shu.
+ Forsaking Tei-Shu, we cannot find Confucius and Mencius; forsaking
+ Confucius and Mencius, we cannot find Gyo and Shun; and forsaking
+ Gyo and Shun, we cannot find the 'Way' of Heaven and Earth. Do not
+ trust implicitly an aged scholar; but this I know, and therefore I
+ speak. If I say that which is false, may I be instantly punished by
+ Heaven and Earth."[AX]
+
+ "Recently I was astounded at the words of a philosopher: 'The "Way"
+ comes not from Heaven,' he said, 'it was invented by the sages. Nor
+ is it in accord with nature; it is a mere matter of æsthetics and
+ ornament. Of the five relations, only the conjugal is natural,
+ while loyalty, filial obedience, and the rest were invented by the
+ sages, and have been maintained by their authority ever since.'
+ Surely, among all heresies from ancient days until now, none has
+ been so monstrous as this."[AY]
+
+ "Kujuro, a lad of fifteen years, quarreled with a neighbor's son
+ over a game of _go_, lost his self-control, and before he could be
+ seized, drew his sword and cut the boy down. While the wounded boy
+ was under the surgeon's care, Kujuro was in custody, but he showed
+ no fear, and his words and acts were calm beyond his years. After
+ some days the boy died, and Kujuro was condemned to hara-kiri. The
+ officers in charge gave him a farewell feast the night before he
+ died. He calmly wrote to his mother, took ceremonious farewell of
+ his keeper and all in the house, and then said to the guests: 'I
+ regret to leave you all, and should like to stay and talk till
+ daybreak; but I must not be sleepy when I commit hara-kiri
+ to-morrow, so I'll go to bed at once. Do you stay at your ease and
+ drink the wine.' So he went to his room and fell asleep, all being
+ filled with admiration as they heard him snore. On the morrow he
+ rose early, bathed and dressed himself with care, made all his
+ preparations with perfect calmness, and then, quiet and composed,
+ killed himself. No old, trained, self-possessed samurai could have
+ excelled him. No one who saw it could speak of it for years without
+ tears.... I have told you this that Kujuro may be remembered. It
+ would be shameful were it to be forgotten that so young a boy
+ performed such a deed."[AZ]
+
+ "We are not to cease obeying for the sake of study, nor must we
+ establish the laws before we begin to obey. In obedience we are to
+ establish its Tightness and wrongness."[BA]
+
+ "We learn loyalty and obedience as we are loyal and obedient.
+ To-day I know yesterday's short-comings, and to-morrow I shall know
+ to-day's.... In our occupations we learn whether conduct conforms
+ to right and so advance in the truth by practice."[BB]
+
+ "Besides a few works on history, like the Sankyo Ega Monogatari,
+ which record facts, there are no books worth reading in our
+ literature. For the most part they are sweet stories of the
+ Buddhas, of which one soon wearies. But the evil is traditional,
+ long-continued, and beyond remedy. And other books are full of
+ lust, not even to be mentioned, like the Genji Monogatari, which
+ should never be shown to a woman or a young man. Such books lead to
+ vice. Our nobles call the Genji Monogatari a national treasure,
+ why, I do not know, unless it is that they are intoxicated with its
+ style. That is like plucking the spring blossom unmindful of the
+ autumn's fruit. The book is full of adulteries from beginning to
+ end. Seeing the right, ourselves should become good, seeing the
+ wrong, we should reprove ourselves. The Genji Monogatari, Chokonka,
+ and Seishoki are of a class, vile, mean, comparable to the books of
+ the sages as charcoal to ice, as the stench of decay to the perfume
+ of flowers."[BC]
+
+ "To the samurai, first of all is righteousness; next life, then
+ silver and gold. These last are of value, but some put them in the
+ place of righteousness. But to the samurai even life is as dirt
+ compared to righteousness. Until the middle part of the middle ages
+ customs were comparatively pure, though not really righteous.
+ Corruption has come only during this period of government by the
+ samurai. A maid servant in China was made ill with astonishment
+ when she saw her mistress, soroban (abacus) in hand, arguing prices
+ and values. So was it once with the samurai. They knew nothing of
+ trade, were economical and content."[BD]
+
+ "Even in the days of my youth, young folks never mentioned the
+ price of anything; and their faces reddened if the talk was of
+ women. Their joy was in talk of battles and plans for war. And they
+ studied how parents and lords should be obeyed, and the duty of
+ samurai. But nowadays the young men talk of loss and gain, of
+ dancing girls and harlots and gross pleasures. It is a complete
+ change from fifty or sixty years ago.... Said Aochi to his son:
+ 'There is such a thing as trade. See that you know nothing of it.
+ In trade the profit should always go to the other side.... To be
+ proud of buying high-priced articles cheap is the good fortune of
+ merchants, but should be unknown to samurai. Let it not be even so
+ much as mentioned.... Samurai must have a care of their words, and
+ are not to speak of avarice, cowardice, or lust.'"[BE]
+
+A point of considerable interest to the student of Japanese ethical
+ideals is the fact that the laws of Old Japan combined legal and moral
+maxims. Loyalty and morality were conceived as inseparable. Ieyasu
+(abdicated in 1605, and died in 1616), the founder of the Tokugawa
+Shogunate, left a body of laws to his successors as his last will, in
+accordance with which they should rule the land. These laws were not
+made public, but were kept strictly for the guidance of the rulers.
+They are known as the Testament or "Honorable Will" of Ieyasu, and
+consist of one hundred rules. It will serve our purpose here to quote
+some of those that refer to the moral ideal.
+
+ "No one is to act simply for the gratification of his own desires,
+ but he is to strive to do what may be opposed to his desires,
+ _i.e_., to exercise self-control, in order that everyone may be
+ ready for whatever he may be called upon by his superiors to do."
+
+ "The aged, whether widowers or widows, and orphans, and persons
+ without relations, every one should assist with kindness and
+ liberality; for justice to these four is the root of good
+ government."
+
+ "Respect the gods [or God], keep the heart pure, and be diligent in
+ business during the whole life."
+
+ "When I was young I determined to fight and punish all my own and
+ my ancestors' enemies, and I did punish them; but afterwards, by
+ deep consideration, I found that the way of heaven was to help the
+ people, and not to punish them. Let my successors follow out this
+ policy, or they are not of my line. In this lies the strength of
+ the nation."
+
+ "To insure the Empire peace, the foundation must be laid in the
+ ways of holiness and religion, and if men think they can be
+ educated, and will not remember this, it is as if a man were to go
+ to a forest to catch fish, or thought he could draw water out of
+ fire. They must follow the ways of holiness."
+
+ "Japan is the country of the gods [or God--'Shinkoku']. Therefore,
+ we have among us Confucianism, Buddhism, and Shintoism, and other
+ sects. If we leave our gods [or God] it is like refusing the wages
+ of our master and taking them from another."
+
+ "In regard to dancing women, prostitutes, brothels, night work,
+ and all other improper employments, all these are like caterpillars
+ or locusts in the country. Good men and writers in all times have
+ written against them."
+
+ "It is said that the Mikado, looking down on his people, loves them
+ as a mother does her children. The same may be said of me and my
+ government. This benevolence of mind is called Jin. This Jin may be
+ said to consist of five parts; these are humanity, integrity,
+ courtesy, wisdom, and truth. My mode of government is according to
+ the way of heaven. This I have done to show that I am impartial,
+ and am not assisting my own relatives and friends only."[BF]
+
+These quotations are perhaps sufficient, though one more from a recent
+writer has a peculiar interest of its own, from the fact that the
+purpose of the book from which the quotation is taken was the
+destruction of the tendencies toward approval of Western thought. It
+was published in 1857. The writer, Junzo Ohashi, felt himself to be a
+witness for truth and righteousness, and, in the spirit of the
+doctrine he professed, sealed his faith with a martyr's suffering and
+death, dying (in August, 1868) from the effect of repeated examination
+by torture for a supposed crime, innocence of which he maintained to
+the end. It is interesting to note that two of his granddaughters,
+"with the physics and astronomy of the West, have accepted its
+religion."
+
+ "The West knows not the 'Ri'[BG] of the virtues of the heart which
+ are in all men unchangeably the same. Nor does it know that the
+ body is the organ of the virtues, however careful its analysis of
+ the body may be. The adherents of the Western Philosophy indeed
+ study carefully the outward appearances, but they have no right to
+ steal the honored name of natural philosophy. As when 'Ki' is
+ destroyed, 'Ri' too disappears, so, with their analysis of 'Ki,'
+ they destroy 'Ri,' and thus this learning brings benevolence and
+ righteousness and loyalty and truth to naught. Among the
+ Westerners who from of old have studied details minutely, I have
+ not heard of one who was zealous for the Great Way, for
+ benevolence, righteousness, loyalty, and truth, and who opposed the
+ absurdities of the Lord of Heaven [God].'[BH] 'Let then the child
+ make its parent, Heaven; the retainer, his lord; the wife, her
+ husband; and let each give up life for righteousness. Thus will
+ each serve Heaven. But if we exalt Heaven above parent or lord, we
+ shall come to think that we can serve it though they be disobeyed,
+ and like wolf or tiger shall rejoice to kill them. To such fearful
+ end does the Western learning lead."[BI]
+
+The foregoing quotations reveal the exalted nature of the ideals held
+by at least some of the leaders of ethical thought in Japan. Taken as
+a whole, the moral ideals characterizing the Japanese during their
+entire historical period have been conspicuously communal. The feudal
+structure of society has determined the peculiar character of the
+moral ideal. Loyalty took first rank in the moral scale; the
+subordination of the inferior to the superior has come next, including
+unquestioning obedience of children to parents, and of wife to
+husband. The virtues of a military people have been praised and often
+gloriously exemplified. The possession of these various ideals and
+their attainment in such high degree have given the nation its
+cohesiveness. They make the people a unit. The feudal training under
+local daimyos was fitting the people for the larger life among the
+nations of the world on which they are now entering. Especially is
+their sense of loyalty, as exhibited toward the Emperor, serving them
+well in this period of transition from Oriental to Occidental social
+ideals.
+
+Let us now examine some defective moral standards and observe their
+origin in the social order. Take, for instance, the ideal of
+truthfulness. Every Occidental remarks on the untruthfulness of the
+Japanese. Lies are told without the slightest apparent compunction;
+and when confronted with the charge of lying, the culprit often seems
+to feel little sense of guilt. This trait of character was noted
+repeatedly by the early negotiators with Japan. Townsend Harris and
+Sir Rutherford Alcock made frequent mention of it. When we inquire as
+to the moral ideal and actual instruction concerning truthfulness, we
+are amazed to find how inadequate it was. The inadequacy of the
+teaching, however, was not the primal cause of the characteristic.
+There is a far deeper explanation, yet very simple, namely, the nature
+of the social order. The old social order was feudal, and not
+industrial or commercial. History shows that industrial and commercial
+nations develop the virtue of truthfulness far in advance of military
+nations. For these virtues are essential to them; without them they
+could not long continue to prosper.
+
+So in regard to all the aspects of business morality, it must be
+admitted that, from the Occidental standpoint, Old Japan was very
+deficient. But it must also be stated that new ideals are rapidly
+forming. Buying and selling with a view to making profit, though not
+unknown in Old Japan, was carried on by a despised section of the
+community. Compared with the present, the commercial community of
+feudal times was mean and small. Let us note somewhat in detail the
+attitude of the samurai toward the trader in olden times, and the
+ideals they reveal.
+
+The pursuit of business was considered necessarily degrading, for he
+who handled money was supposed to be covetous. The taking of profit
+was thought to be ignoble, if not deceitful. They who condescended to
+such an occupation were accordingly despised and condemned to the
+lowest place in the social scale. These ideas doubtless helped to make
+business degrading; traders were doubtless sordid and covetous and
+deceitful. In the presence of the samurai they were required to take
+the most abject postures. In addressing him, they must never stand,
+but must touch the ground with their foreheads; while talking with him
+they must remain with their hands on the ground. Even the children of
+samurai always assumed the lordly attitude toward tradesmen. The sons
+of tradesmen might not venture into a quarrel with the sons of
+samurai, for the armed children of the samurai were at liberty to cut
+down and kill the children of the despicable merchant, should they
+insult or even oppose them.
+
+All this, however, has passed away. Commerce is now honored; trade and
+manufacture are recognized not only as laudable, but as the only hope
+of Japan for the future. The new social order is industrial and
+commercial. The entire body of the former samurai, now no longer
+maintaining their distinctive name, are engaged in some form of
+business. Japan is to-day a nation of traders and farmers.
+Accompanying the changes in the social order, new standards as to
+honesty and business integrity are being formulated and enforced.[BJ]
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+MORAL IDEALS
+
+(_Continued_)
+
+
+An Occidental is invariably filled with astonishment on learning that
+a human being, as such, had no value in Old Japan. The explanation
+lies chiefly in the fact that the social order did not rest on the
+inherent worth of the individual. As in all primitive lands and times,
+the individual was as nothing compared to the family and the tribe. As
+time went on, this principle took the form of the supreme worth of the
+higher classes in society. Hence arose the liberty allowed the samurai
+of cutting down, in cold blood, a beggar, a merchant, or a farmer on
+the slightest provocation, or simply for the purpose of testing his
+sword.
+
+Japanese social and religious philosophy had not yet discovered that
+the individual is of infinite worth in himself, apart from all
+considerations of his rank in society. As we have seen, the absence of
+this idea from Japanese civilization resulted in various momentous
+consequences, of which the frequency of murder and suicide is but one.
+
+Another, and this constitutes one of the most striking differences
+between the moral ideals of the East and the West, is the low estimate
+put upon the inherent nature and value of woman, by which was
+determined her social position and the moral relations of the sexes.
+Japan seems to have suffered somewhat in this respect from her
+acceptance of Hindu philosophy. For there seems to be considerable
+unanimity among historians that in primitive times in Japan there
+prevailed a much larger liberty, and consequently a much higher
+regard, for woman than in later ages after Buddhism became powerful.
+With regard, however, to that earlier period of over a thousand years
+ago, it is of little use to speculate. I cannot escape the feeling,
+however, that the condition of woman then has been unconsciously
+idealized, in order to make a better showing in comparison with the
+customs of Western lands. Be that as it may, the notions and ideals
+presented by Buddhism in regard to woman are clear, and clearly
+degrading. She is the source of temptation and sin; she is essentially
+inferior to man in every respect. Before she may hope to enter Nirvana
+she must be born again as man. How widely these extreme views of woman
+have found acceptance in Japan, I am not in a position to state. It is
+my impression, however, that they never received as full acceptance
+here as in India. Nevertheless, as has already been shown,[BK] the
+ideals of what a woman should do and be make it clear that her social
+position for centuries has been relatively low; as wife she is a
+domestic rather than a helpmeet. The "three obediences," to parents,
+to husband, to son, set forth the ideal, although, without doubt, the
+strict application of the third, obedience to one's son after he
+becomes the head of the household, is relatively rare.
+
+What especially strikes the notice of the Occidental is the slight
+amount of social intercourse that prevails to-day between men and
+women. Whenever women enter into the social pleasures of men, they do
+so as professional singers and dancers, they being mere girls and
+unmarried young women; this social intercourse is all but invariably
+accompanied with wine-drinking, even if it does not proceed to further
+licentiousness. The statement that woman is man's plaything has been
+often heard in Japan. Confucian no less than Buddhistic ethics must
+bear the responsibility for putting and keeping woman on so low a
+level. Concubinage, possibly introduced from China, was certainly
+sanctioned by the Chinese classics.
+
+
+The Lei-ki allows an Emperor to have in addition to the Empress three
+consorts, nine maids of high rank, and twenty-seven maids of lower
+rank, all of whom rank as wives, and, beside these, eighty-one other
+females called concubines. Concubinage and polygamy, being thus
+sanctioned by the classics, became an established custom in Japan.
+
+The explanation for this ideal and practice is not far to seek. It
+rests in the communal character of the social order. The family was
+the social unit of Japan. No individual member was of worth except the
+legal head and representative, the father. A striking proof of the
+correctness of this explanation is the fact that even the son is
+obeyed by the father in case he has become "in kio,"[BL] that is, has
+abdicated; the son then becomes the authoritative head. The ideals
+regarding woman then were not unique; they were part of the social
+order, and were determined by the principle of "communalism"
+unregulated by the principle of "individualism." Ideals respecting man
+and woman were equally affected. So long as man is not valued as a
+human being, but solely according to his accidental position in
+society, woman must be regarded in the same way. She is valued first
+as a begetter of offspring, second as a domestic. And when such
+conceptions prevail as to her nature and function in society,
+defective ideals as to morality in the narrower sense of this term,
+leading to and justifying concubinage, easy divorce, and general loose
+morality are necessary consequences.
+
+But this moral or immoral ideal is by no means peculiar to Japan. The
+peculiarity of Japan and the entire Orient is that the social order
+that fostered it lasted so long, before forces arose to modify it.
+But, as will be shown later,[BM] the great problem of human evolution,
+after securing the advantages of "communalism," and the solidification
+of the nation, is that of introducing the principle of individualism
+into the social order. In the Orient the principle of communalism
+gained such headway as effectually to prevent the introduction of this
+new principle. There is, in my opinion, no probability that Japan,
+while maintaining her isolation, would ever have succeeded in making
+any radical change in her social order; her communalism was too
+absolute. She needed the introduction of a new stimulus from without.
+It was providential that this stimulus came from the Anglo-Saxon race,
+with its pronounced principle of "individualism" wrought out so
+completely in social order, in literature, and in government. Had
+Russia or Turkey been the leading influences in starting Japan on her
+new career, it is more than doubtful whether she would have secured
+the principles needful for her healthful moral development.
+
+Justice to the actual ideals and life of Old Japan forbids me to
+leave, without further remark, what was said above regarding the
+ideals of morality in the narrower significance of this word.
+Injunctions that women should be absolutely chaste were frequent and
+stringent. Nothing more could be asked in the line of explicit
+teaching on this theme. And, furthermore, I am persuaded, after
+considerable inquiry, that in Old Japan in the interior towns and
+villages, away from the center of luxury and out of the beaten courses
+of travel, there was purity of moral life that has hardly been
+excelled anywhere. I have repeatedly been assured that if a youth of
+either sex were known to have transgressed the law of chastity, he or
+she would at once be ostracised; and that such transgressions were,
+consequently, exceedingly rare. It is certainly a fact that in the
+vast majority of the interior towns there have never, until recent
+times, been licensed houses of prostitution. Of late there has been a
+marked increase of dancing and singing girls, of whom it is commonly
+said that they are but "secret prostitutes." These may to-day be found
+in almost every town and village, wherever indeed there is a hotel.
+Public as well as secret prostitution has enormously increased during
+the last thirty or forty years.[BN]
+
+Thanks to Mr. Murphy's consecrated energy, the appalling legalized
+and hopeless slavery under which these two classes of girls exist is
+at last coming to light. He has shown, by several test cases, that
+although the national laws are good to look at they are powerless
+because set aside by local police regulations over which the courts
+are powerless! In September, 1900, however, in large part due no doubt
+to the facts made public by him, and backed up by the public press,
+and such leaders of Japan's progressive elements as Shimada Sabur, the
+police regulations were modified, and with amazing results. Whereas,
+previous to that date, the average monthly suicides throughout the
+land among the public prostitutes were between forty and fifty, during
+the two months of September and October there were none! In that same
+period, out of about five thousand prostitutes in the city of Tokyo,
+492 had fled from their brothels and declared their intentions of
+abandoning the "shameful business," as the Japanese laws call it, and
+in consequence a prominent brothel had been compelled to stop the
+business! We are only in the first flush of this new reform as these
+lines are written, so cannot tell what end the whole movement will
+reach. But the conscience of the nation is beginning to waken on this
+matter and we are confident it will never tolerate the old slavery of
+the past, enforced as it was by local laws, local courts, so that
+girls were always kept in debt, and when they fled were seized and
+forced back to the brothels in order to pay their debts!
+
+But in contrast to the undoubted ideal of Old Japan in regard to the
+chastity of women, must be set the equally undoubted fact that the
+sages have very little to say on the subject of chastity for men.
+Indeed there is no word in the Japanese language corresponding to our
+term "chastity" which may be applied equally to men and women. In his
+volume entitled "Kokoro," Mr. Hearn charges the missionaries with the
+assertion that there is no word for chastity in Japanese. "This," he
+says, "is true in the same sense only that we might say that there is
+no word for chastity in the English language, because such words as
+honor, virtue, purity, chastity have been adopted into English from
+other languages."[BO] I doubt if any missionary has made such a
+statement. His further assertion, that "the word most commonly used
+applies to both sexes," would have more force, if Mr. Hearn had stated
+what the word is. His English definition of the term has not enabled
+me to find the Japanese equivalent, although I have discussed this
+question with several Japanese. It is their uniform confession that
+the Japanese language is defective in its terminology on this topic,
+the word with which one may exhort a woman to be chaste being
+inapplicable to a man. The assertion of the missionaries has nothing
+whatever to do with the question as to whether the terms used are pure
+Japanese or imported Chino-Japanese; nor has it any reference to the
+fact that the actual language is deficient in abstract terms. It is
+simply that the term applicable to a woman is not applicable to a man.
+And this in turn proves sharp contrasts between the ideals regarding
+the moral duties of men and of women.
+
+An interesting point in the Japanese moral ideal is the fact that the
+principle of filial obedience was carried to such extremes that even
+prostitution of virtue at the command of the parents, or for the
+support of the parents, was not only permitted but, under special
+conditions, was highly praised. Modern prostitution is rendered
+possible chiefly through the action of this perverted principle.
+Although the sale of daughters for immoral purposes is theoretically
+illegal, yet, in fact, it is of frequent occurrence.
+
+Although concubinage was not directly taught by Confucius, yet it was
+never forbidden by him, and the leaders and rulers of the land have
+lent the custom the authority and justification of their example. As
+we have already seen, the now ruling Emperor has several concubines,
+and all of his children are the offspring of these concubines. In Old
+Japan, therefore, there were two separate ideals of morality for the
+two sexes.
+
+The question may be raised how a social order which required such
+fidelity on the part of the woman could permit such looseness on the
+part of the man, whether married or not. How could the same social
+order produce two moral ideals? The answer is to be found in several
+facts. First, there is the inherent desire of each husband to be the
+sole possessor of his wife's affections. As the stronger of the two,
+he would bring destruction on an unfaithful wife and also on any who
+dared invade his home. Although the woman doubtless has the same
+desire to be the sole possessor of her husband's affection, she has
+not the same power, either to injure a rival or to punish her
+faithless husband. Furthermore, licentiousness in women has a much
+more visibly disastrous effect on her procreative functions than equal
+licentiousness in man. This, too, would serve to beget and maintain
+different ethical standards for the two sexes. Finally, and perhaps no
+less effective than the two preceding, is the fact that the general
+social consciousness held different conceptions in regard to the
+social positions of man and woman. The one was the owner of the
+family, the lord and master; to him belonged the freedom to do as he
+chose. The other was a variety of property, not free in any sense to
+please herself, but to do only as her lord and master required.
+
+An illustration of the first reason given above came to my knowledge
+not long since. Rev. John T. Gulick saw in Kanagawa, in 1862, a man
+going through the streets carrying the bloody heads of a man and a
+woman which he declared to be those of his wife and her seducer, whom
+he had caught and killed in the act of adultery. This act of the
+husband's was in perfect accord with the practices and ideals of the
+time, and not seldom figures in the romances of Old Japan.
+
+The new Civil Code adopted in 1898 furnishes an authoritative
+statement of many of the moral ideals of New Japan. For the following
+summary I am indebted to the _Japan Mail_.[BP] In regard to marriage
+it is noteworthy that the "prohibited degrees of relationship are the
+same as those in England"--including the deceased wife's sister. "The
+minimum age for legal marriage is seventeen in the case of a man and
+fifteen in the case of a woman, and marriage takes effect on
+notification to the registrar, being thus a purely civil contract. As
+to divorce, it is provided that the husband and wife may effect it by
+mutual consent, and its legal recognition takes the form of an entry
+by the registrar, no reference being necessary to the judicial
+authorities. Where mutual consent is not obtained, however, an action
+for divorce must be brought, and here it appears that the rights of
+the woman do not receive the same recognition as those of the man.
+Thus, although adultery committed by the wife constitutes a valid
+ground of divorce, we do not find that adultery on the husband's part
+furnishes a plea to the wife. Ill-treatment or gross insult, such as
+renders living together impracticable, or desertion, constitutes a
+reason for divorce from the wife's point of view." The English
+reviewer here adds that "since no treatment can be worse nor any
+insult grosser than open inconstancy on the part of a husband, it is
+conceivable that a judge might consider that such conduct renders
+living together impracticable. But in the presence of an explicit
+provision with regard to the wife's adultery and in the absence of any
+such provision with regard to the husband's, we doubt whether any
+court of law would exercise discretion in favor of the woman." The
+gross "insult of inconstancy" on the part of the husband is a plea
+that has never yet been recognized by Japanese society. The reviewer
+goes on to say: "One cannot help wishing that the peculiar code of
+morality observed by husbands in this country had received some
+condemnation at the hands of the framers of the new Code. It is
+further laid down that a 'person who is judicially divorced or
+punished because of adultery cannot contract a marriage with the other
+party to the adultery.' If that extended to the husband it would be an
+excellent provision, well calculated to correct one of the worst
+social abuses of this country. Unfortunately, as we have seen, it
+applies apparently to the case of the wife only." The provision for
+divorce by "mutual consent" is striking and ominous. It makes divorce
+a matter of entirely private arrangement, unless one of the parties
+objects. In a land where women are so docile, is it likely that the
+wife would refuse to consent to divorce when her lord and master
+requests or commands her to leave his home? "There are not many women
+in Japan who could refuse to become a party to the 'mutual consent'
+arrangement if they were convinced that they had lost their husband's
+affection and that he could not live comfortably with them." It would
+appear that nothing whatever is said by the Code with reference to
+concubinage, either allowing or forbidding it. Presumably a man may
+have but one legitimate wife, and children by concubines must be
+registered as illegitimate. Nothing, however, on this point seems to
+be stated, although provision is made for the public acknowledgment of
+illegitimate children. "Thus, a father can acknowledge a natural
+child, making what is called a 'shoshi,' and if, subsequent to
+acknowledgment, the father and mother marry, the 'shoshi,' acquires
+the status of a legitimate child, such status reckoning back,
+apparently to the time of birth." Evidently, this provision rests on
+the implication that the mother is an unmarried woman--presumably a
+concubine.
+
+Recent statistics throw a rather lurid light on these provisions of
+the Code. The Imperial Cabinet for some years past has published in
+French and Japanese a résumé of national statistics. Those bearing on
+marriage and divorce, in the volume published in 1897, may well be
+given at this point.
+
+ MARRIAGES DIVORCES LEGITIMATE BIRTHS ILLEGITIMATE
+ 1890 325,141 109,088 1,079,121 66,253
+ 1891 325,651 112,411 1,033,653 64,122
+ 1892 349,489 133,498 1,134,665 72,369
+ 1893 358,398 116,775 1,105,119 73,677
+ 1894 361,319 114,436 1,132,897 76,407
+ 1895 365,633 110,838 1,166,254 80,168
+ 1897 395,207 124,075 1,335,125 89,996[BQ]
+
+These authoritative statistics show how divorce is a regular part of
+the Japanese family system, one out of three marriages proving
+abortive.
+
+Morally Japan's weak spot is the relation of the sexes, both before
+and after marriage. Strict monogamy, with the equality of duties of
+husband and wife, is the remedy for the disease.
+
+This slight sketch of the provision of the new Code as it bears on the
+purity of the home, and on the development of noble manhood and
+womanhood, shows that the Code is very defective. It practically
+recognizes and legalizes the present corrupt practices of society, and
+makes no effort to establish higher ideals. Whether anything more
+should be expected of a Code drawn up under the present circumstances
+is, of course, an open question. But the Code reveals the
+astonishingly low condition of the moral standards for the home, one
+of the vital weaknesses of New Japan. The defectiveness of the new
+Code in regard to the matters just considered must be argued, however,
+not from the failure to embody Occidental moral standards, but rather
+from the failure to recognize the actual nature of the social order of
+New Japan. While the Code recognizes the principle of individualism
+and individual rights and worth in all other matters, in regard to the
+home, the most important social unit in the body politic, the Code
+legalizes and perpetuates the old pre-Meiji standards. Individualism
+in the general social order demands its consistent recognition in
+every part.
+
+We cannot conclude our discussion of Japanese ideas as to woman, and
+the consequent results to morality, without referring to the great
+changes which are to-day taking place. Although the new Civil Code has
+not done all that we could ask, we would not ignore what it has
+secured. Says Prof. Gubbins in the excellent introduction to his
+translation of the Codes:
+
+"In no respect has modern progress in Japan made greater strides than
+in the improvement of the position of woman. Though she still labors
+under certain disabilities, a woman can now become a head of a family,
+and exercise authority as such; she can inherit and own property and
+manage it herself; she can exercise parental authority; if single, or
+a widow, she can adopt; she is one of the parties to adoption effected
+by her husband, and her consent, in addition to that of her husband,
+is necessary to the adoption of her child by another person; she can
+act as guardian, or curator, and she has a voice in family councils."
+In all these points the Code marks a great advance, and reveals by
+contrast the legally helpless condition of woman prior to 1898. But in
+certain respects practice is preceding theory. We would call special
+attention to the exalted position and honor publicly accorded to the
+Empress. On more than one historic occasion she has appeared at the
+Emperor's side, a thing unknown in Old Japan. The Imperial Silver
+Wedding (1892) was a great event, unprecedented in the annals of the
+Orient. Commemorative postage stamps were struck off which were first
+used on the auspicious day.
+
+The wedding of the Prince Imperial (in May, 1900) was also an event of
+unique importance in Japanese social and moral history. Never before,
+in the 2600 years claimed by her historians, has an heir to the throne
+been honored by a public wedding. The ceremony was prepared _de novo_
+for the occasion and the pledges were mutual. In the reception that
+followed, the Imperial bride stood beside her Imperial husband. On
+this occasion, too, commemorative postage stamps were issued and first
+used on the auspicious day; the entire land was brilliantly decorated
+with flags and lanterns. Countless congratulatory meetings were held
+throughout the country and thousands of gifts, letters, and
+telegraphic messages expressed the joy and good will of the people.
+
+But the chief significance of these events is the new and exalted
+position accorded to woman and to marriage by the highest personages
+of the land. It is said by some that the ruling Emperor will be the
+last to have concubines. However that may be, woman has already
+attained a rank and marriage an honor unknown in any former age in
+Japan, and still quite unknown in any Oriental land save Japan.
+
+A serious study of Japanese morality should not fail to notice the
+respective parts taken by Buddhism and Confucianism. The contrast is
+so marked. While Confucianism devoted its energies to the inculcation
+of proper conduct, to morality as contrasted to religion, Buddhism
+devoted its energies to the development of a cultus, paying little
+attention to morality. A recent Japanese critic of Buddhism remarks
+that "though Buddhism has a name in the world for the excellence of
+its ethical system, yet there exists no treatise in Japanese which
+sets forth the distinctive features of Buddhist ethics." Buddhist
+literature is chiefly occupied with mythology, metaphysics, and
+eschatology, ethical precepts being interwoven incidentally. The
+critic just quoted states that the pressing need of the times is that
+Buddhist ethics should be disentangled from Buddhist mythology. The
+great moralists of Japan have been Confucianists. Distinctively
+Japanese morality has derived its impulse from Confucian classics. A
+new spirit, however, is abroad among the Buddhist priesthood. Their
+preaching is increasingly ethical. The common people are saying that
+the sermons heard in certain temples are identical with those of
+Christians. How widely this imitation of Christian preaching has
+spread I cannot say; but that Christianity has in any degree been
+imitated is significant, both ethically and sociologically.
+
+Buddhism is not alone, however, in imitating Christianity. A few years
+ago Dr. D.C. Greene attended the preaching services of a modern Shinto
+sect, the "Ten-Ri-Kyo," the Heaven-Reason-Teaching, and was surprised
+to hear almost literal quotations from the "Sermon on the Mount"; the
+source of the sentiment and doctrine was not stated and very likely
+was not known to the speaker. Dr. Greene, who has given this sect
+considerable study, is satisfied that the insistence of its teachers
+on moral conduct is general and genuine. When I visited their
+headquarters, not far from Nara, in 1895, and inquired of one of the
+priests as to the chief points of importance in their teaching, I was
+told that the necessity of leading an honorable and correct life was
+most emphasized. There are reasons for thinking that the Kurozumi sect
+of Shintoism, with its emphasis on morality, is considerably indebted
+to Christianity both for its origin and its doctrine.
+
+It is evident that Christianity is having an influence in Japan, far
+beyond the ranks of its professed believers. It is proving a stimulus
+to the older faiths, stirring them up to an earnestness in moral
+teaching that they never knew in the olden times. It is interesting to
+note that this widespread emphasis on ethical truth comes at a time
+when morality is suffering a wide collapse.
+
+An important point for the sociological student of Japanese moral
+ideals is the fact that her moralists have directed their attention
+chiefly to the conduct of the rulers. The ideal of conduct as stated
+by them is for a samurai. If any action is praised, it is said that it
+becomes a samurai; if condemned, it is on the ground that it is not
+becoming to a samurai. Anything wrong or vulgar is said to be what you
+might expect of the common man. All the terms of the higher morality,
+such as righteousness, duty, benevolence, are expounded from the
+standpoint of a samurai, that is, from the standpoint of loyalty. The
+forty-seven ronin were pronounced "righteous samurai" because they
+avenged the death of their lord, even though in doing so they
+committed deeds that, by themselves, would have been condemned.
+Japanese history and literature proclaim the same ideal. They are
+exclusively concerned with the deeds of the higher class, the court
+and the samurai. The actual condition of the common people in ancient
+times is a matter not easily determined. The morality of the common
+people was more a matter of unreasoning custom than of theory and
+instruction. But these facts are susceptible of interpretation if we
+remember that the interest of the historian and the moralist was not
+in humanity, as such, but in the external features of the social
+order. Their gaze was on the favored few, on the nobility, the court,
+and the samurai.
+
+In closing our discussion of Japanese moral ideals it may not be amiss
+to append the Imperial Edict concerning the moral education of the
+youth of Japan, issued by the Emperor November 31, 1890. This is
+supposed to be the distilled essence of Shinto and Confucian teaching.
+It is to-day the only authoritative teaching on morality given in the
+public schools. It is read with more reverence than is accorded to the
+Bible in England or America. It is considered both holy and inspired.
+
+
+ IMPERIAL EDICT ON MORAL EDUCATION
+
+ "We consider that the Founder of Our Empire and the ancestors of
+ Our Imperial House placed the foundation of the country on a grand
+ and permanent basis, and established their authority on the
+ principles of profound humanity and benevolence.
+
+ "That Our subjects have throughout ages deserved well of the state
+ by their loyalty and piety, and by their harmonious co-operation,
+ is in accordance with the essential character of Our nation; and on
+ these very same principles Our education has been founded.
+
+ "You, Our subjects, be therefore filial to your parents; be
+ affectionate to your brothers; be harmonious as husbands and wives;
+ and be faithful to your friends; conduct yourselves with propriety
+ and carefulness; extend generosity and benevolence toward your
+ neighbors; attend to your studies and follow your pursuits;
+ cultivate your intellects and elevate your morals; advance public
+ benefits and promote social interests; be always found in the good
+ observance of the laws and constitution of the land; display your
+ personal courage and public spirit for the sake of the country
+ whenever required; and thus support the Imperial prerogative,
+ which is coexistent with the Heavens and the Earth.
+
+ "Such conduct on your part will not only strengthen the character
+ of Our good and loyal subjects, but conduce also to the maintenance
+ of the fame of your worthy forefathers.
+
+ "This is the instruction bequeathed by Our ancestors and to be
+ followed by Our subjects; for it is the truth which has guided and
+ guides them in their own affairs and their dealings toward aliens.
+
+ "We hope, therefore, that We and Our subjects will regard these
+ sacred precepts with one and the same heart in order to attain the
+ same ends."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+MORAL PRACTICE
+
+
+One noticeable characteristic of the Japanese is the publicity of the
+life of the individual. He seems to feel no need for privacy. Houses
+are so constructed that privacy is practically impossible. The slight
+paper shoji and fusuma between the small rooms serve only partially to
+shut out peering eyes; they afford no protection from listening ears.
+Moreover, these homes of the middle and lower classes open upon public
+streets, and a passer-by may see much of what is done within. Even the
+desire for privacy seems lacking. The publicity of the private (?)
+baths and sanitary conveniences which the Occidental puts entirely out
+of sight has already been noted.
+
+I once passed through a village and was not a little amazed to see two
+or three bathtubs on the public road, each occupied by one or more
+persons; nor were the occupants children alone, but men and women
+also. Calling at the home of a gentleman in Kyushu with whom I had
+some business, and gaining no notice at the front entrance, I went
+around to the side of the house only to discover the lady of the place
+taking her bath with her children, in a tub quite out of doors, while
+a manservant chopped wood but a few paces distant.
+
+The natural indifference of the Japanese to the exposure of the
+unclothed body is an interesting fact. In the West such indifference
+is rightly considered immodest. In Japan, however, immodesty consists
+entirely in the intention of the heart and does not arise from the
+accident of the moment or the need of the occasion. With a fellow
+missionary, I went some years since to some famous hot springs at the
+foot of Mount Ase, the smoking crater of Kyushu. The spot itself is
+most charming, situated in the center of an old crater, said to be the
+largest in the world. Wearied with a long walk, we were glad to find
+that one of the public bath tubs or tanks, some fifteen by thirty feet
+in size, in a bath house separate from other houses, was quite
+unoccupied; and on inquiry we were told that bathers were few at that
+hour of the day, so that we might go in without fear of disturbance.
+It seems that in such places the tiers of boxes for the clothing on
+either side of the door, are reserved for men and women respectively.
+Ignorant of this custom, we deposited our clothing in the boxes on the
+left hand, and as quickly as we could accommodate ourselves to the
+heat of the water, we got into the great tank. We were scarcely in,
+when a company of six or eight men and women entered the bath house;
+they at once perceived our blunder, but without the slightest
+hesitation, the women as well as the men went over to the men's side
+and proceeded to undress and get into the tank with us, betraying no
+consciousness that aught was amiss. So far as I could see there was
+not the slightest self-consciousness in the entire proceeding. In the
+tank, too, though it is customary for women to occupy the left side,
+on this occasion they mingled freely with the men. I suppose it is
+impossible in England or America to conceive of such a state of
+unconsciousness. Yet it seems to be universal in Japan. It is
+doubtless explained by the custom, practiced from infancy, not only of
+public bathing, but also of living together so unreservedly. The heat
+of the summer and the nature of Japanese clothing, so easily thrown
+off, has accustomed them to the greater or less exposure of the
+person. All these customs have prevented the development of a sense of
+modesty corresponding to that which has developed in the West. Whether
+this familiarity of the sexes is conducive to purity of life or not,
+is a totally different question, on which I do not here enter.
+
+In this connection I can do no better than quote from a popular, and
+in many respects deservedly popular, writer on Japan. Says Mr. Hearn,
+"There is little privacy of any sort in Japan. Among the people,
+indeed, what we term privacy in the Occident does not exist. There are
+only walls of paper dividing the lives of men; there are only sliding
+screens instead of doors; there are neither locks nor bolts to be used
+by day; and whenever the weather permits, the fronts and perhaps even
+the sides of the houses are literally removed, and its interior widely
+opened to the air, the light, and the public gaze. Within a hotel or
+even a common dwelling house, nobody knocks before entering your room;
+there is nothing to knock at except a shoji or a fusuma, which cannot
+be knocked at without being broken. And in this world of paper walls
+and sunshine, nobody is afraid or ashamed of fellow-man or
+fellow-woman. Whatever is done is done after a fashion in public. Your
+personal habits, your idiosyncrasies (if you have any), your foibles,
+your likes and dislikes, your loves and your hates must be known to
+everybody. Neither vices nor virtues can be hidden; there is
+absolutely nowhere to hide them.... There has never been, for the
+common millions at least, even the idea of living unobserved." The
+Japanese language has no term for "privacy," nor is it easy to convey
+the idea to one who does not know the English word. They lack the term
+and the clear idea because they lack the practice.
+
+These facts prove conclusively that the Japanese individual is still a
+gregarious being, and this fact throws light on the moral life of the
+people. It follows of necessity that the individual will conform
+somewhat more closely to the moral standards of the community, than a
+man living in a strong segregarious community.
+
+The converse of this principle is that in a community whose
+individuals are largely segregarious, enjoying privacy, and thus
+liberty of action, variations from the moral standards will be
+frequent and positive transgressions not uncommon. In the one case,
+where "communalism" reigns, moral action is, so to speak, automatic;
+it requires no particular assertion of the individual will to do
+right; conformity to the standard is spontaneous. In the latter case,
+however, where "individualism" is the leading characteristic of the
+community, the acceptance of the moral standards usually requires a
+definite act of the individual will.
+
+The history of Japan is a capital illustration of this principle. The
+recent increase of immorality and crime is universally admitted. The
+usual explanation is that in olden times every slight offense was
+punished with death; the criminal class was thus continuously
+exterminated. Nowadays a robber can ply his trade continuously, though
+interrupted by frequent intervals of imprisonment. In former times,
+once caught, he never could steal again, except in the land of the
+shades. While this explanation has some force, it does not cover the
+ground. A better explanation for the modern increase of lawlessness is
+the change in the social order itself. The new order gives each man
+wider liberty of individual action. He is free to choose his trade and
+his home. Formerly these were determined for him by the accident of
+his birth. His freedom is greater and so, too, are his temptations.
+
+Furthermore, the standards of conduct themselves have been changing.
+Certain acts which would have brought praise and honor if committed
+fifty years ago, such, for instance, as "kataki uchi," revenge, would
+to-day soon land one behind prison doors. In a word, "individualism"
+is beginning to work powerfully on conduct; it has not yet gained the
+ascendancy attained in the West; it is nevertheless abroad in the
+land. The young are especially influenced by it. Taking advantage of
+the liberty it grants, many forms of immorality seem to be on the
+increase. So far as I can gather by inquiry, there has been a great
+collapse not only in honesty, but also in the matter of sexual
+morality. It will hardly do to say dogmatically that the national
+standards of morality have been lowered, but it is beyond question
+that the power of the community to enforce those standards has
+suddenly come to naught by reason of the changing social order.
+Western thought and practice as to the structure of society and the
+freedom of the individual have been emphasized; Spencer and Mill and
+Huxley have been widely read by the educated classes.[BR]
+
+Furthermore, freedom and ease of travel, and liberty to change one's
+residence at will, and thus the ability to escape unpleasant
+restraints, have not a little to do with this collapse in morality.
+Tens of thousands of students in the higher schools are away from
+their homes and are entirely without the steadying support that home
+gives. Then, too, there is a wealth among the common people that was,
+never known in earlier times. Formerly the possession of means was
+limited to a relatively small number of families. To-day we see
+general prosperity, and a consequent tendency to luxury that was
+unknown in any former period.
+
+To be specific, let us note that in feudal times there were some 270
+daimyo living in the utmost luxury. About 1,500,000 samurai were
+dependent on them as retainers, while 30,000,000 people supported
+these sons of luxury. In 1863 the farmers of Japan raised 30,000,000
+koku of rice, and paid 22,000,000 of it to the government as taxes.
+Taxed at the same rate to-day the farmers would have to pay
+280,000,000 yen, whereas the actual payment made by them is only
+38,000,000 yen. "The farmer's manner of life has radically changed. He
+is now prosperous and comfortable, wearing silk where formerly he
+could scarcely afford cotton, and eating rice almost daily, whereas
+formerly he scarcely knew its taste."[BS]
+
+It is stated by the _Japan Mail_ that whereas but "one person out of
+ten was able thirty years ago to afford rice, the nine being content
+to live from year's end to year's end on barley alone or barley mixed
+with a modicum of rice, six persons to-day out of ten count it a
+hardship if they cannot sit down to a square meal of rice daily....
+Rice is no longer a luxury to the mass of the people, but has become a
+necessity."
+
+Financially, then, the farming and middle classes are incomparably
+better off to-day than in olden times. The amount of ready money which
+a man can earn has not a little to do with his morality. If his
+uprightness depends entirely or chiefly on his lack of opportunity to
+do wrong, he will be a moral man so long as he is desperately poor or
+under strict control. But give him the chance to earn ready cash,
+together with the freedom to live where he chooses, and to spend his
+income as he pleases, and he is sure to develop various forms of
+immorality.
+
+I have made a large number of inquiries in regard to the increase or
+decrease of concubinage during the present era. Statistics on this
+subject are not to be had, for concubines are not registered as such
+nor yet as wives. If a concubine lives in the home of the man, she is
+registered as a domestic, and her children should be registered as
+hers, although I am told that they are very often illegally registered
+as his. If she lives in her own home, the concubine still retains the
+name and registry of her own parents. The government takes no notice
+of concubinage, and publishes no statistics in regard to it. The
+children of concubines who live with their own parents are, I am told,
+usually registered as the children of the mother's father; otherwise
+they are registered as illegitimate; statistics, therefore, furnish no
+clew as to the increase or decrease or amount of concubinage and
+illegitimacy, most important questions in Japanese sociology. But my
+informants are unanimous in the assertion that there has been a marked
+increase of concubinage during recent years. The simple and uniform
+explanation given is that multitudes of merchants and officials, and
+even of farmers, can afford to maintain them to-day who formerly were
+unable to do so. The older ideals on this subject were such as to
+allow of concubinage to the extent of one's financial ability.
+
+During the year 1898 the newspapers and leading writers of Japan
+carried on a vigorous discussion concerning concubinage. The _Yorozu
+Choho_ published an inventory of 493 men maintaining separate
+establishments for their concubines, giving not only the names and
+the business of the men, but also the character of the women chosen to
+be concubines. Of these 493 men, 9 are ministers of state and
+ex-ministers; 15 are peers or members of House of Peers; 7 are
+barristers; 3 are learned doctors; the rest are nearly all business
+men. The women were, previous to concubinage, Dancing girls, 183;
+Servants, 69; Prostitutes, 17; "Ordinary young girls," 91; Adopted
+daughters, 15; Widows, 7; Performers, 7; Miscellaneous, 104. In this
+discussion it has been generally admitted that concubinage has
+increased in modern times, and the cause attributed is "general
+looseness of morals." Some of the leading writers maintain that the
+concubinage of former times was largely confined to those who took
+concubines to insure the maintenance of the family line; and also that
+the taking of dancing girls was unknown in olden times.
+
+It is interesting to note in this connection that some of those who
+defend the practice of concubinage appeal to the example of the Old
+Testament, saying that what was good enough for the race that gave to
+Christians the greater part of their Bible is good enough for the
+Japanese. Another point in the discussion interesting to the
+Occidental is the repeated assertion that there is no real difference
+between the East and the West in point of practice; the only
+difference is that whereas in the East all is open and above board, in
+the West extra-marital relations are condemned by popular opinion, and
+are therefore concealed.[BT] A few writers publicly defend
+concubinage; most, however, condemn it vigorously, even though making
+no profession of Christian faith. Of the latter class is Mr. Fukuzawa,
+one of Japan's leaders of public opinion. In his most trenchant
+attack, he asserts that if Japan is to progress in civilization she
+must abandon her system of concubinage. That new standards in regard
+to marital relations are arising in Japan is clear; but they have as
+yet little force; there is no consensus of opinion to give them
+force. He who transgresses them is still recognized as in good
+standing in the community.
+
+Similarly, with respect to business honesty, it is the opinion of all
+with whom I have conversed on the subject that there has been a great
+decline in the honesty of the common people. In feudal days thefts and
+petty dishonesty were practically unknown. To-day these are
+exceedingly common. Foreign merchants complain that it is impossible
+to trust Japanese to carry out verbal or written promises, when the
+conditions of the market change to their disadvantage. It is
+accordingly charged that the Japanese have no sense of honor in
+business matters.
+
+The _Kokumin Shinbun_ (People's News) has recently discussed the
+question of Japanese commercial morality, with the following results:
+It says, first, that goods delivered are not up to sample; secondly,
+that engagements as to time are not kept; thirdly, that business men
+have no adequate appreciation of the permanent interests of business;
+fourthly, that they are without ability to work in common; and
+fifthly, that they do not get to know either their customers or
+themselves.[BU]
+
+"The Japanese consul at Tientsin recently reported to the Government
+that the Chinese have begun to regard Japanese manufactures with
+serious distrust. Merchandise received from Japan, they allege, does
+not correspond with samples, and packing is, in almost all cases,
+miserably unsubstantial. The consul expresses the deepest regret that
+Japanese merchants are disposed to break their faith without regard to
+honor."[BV]
+
+In this connection it may not be amiss to revert to illustrations that
+have come within my own experience. I have already cited instances of
+the apparent duplicity to which deacons and candidates for the
+ministry stoop. I do not believe that either the deacons or the
+candidates had the slightest thought that they were doing anything
+dishonorable. Nor do I for a moment suppose that the President and the
+Trustees of the Doshisha at all realized the gravity of the moral
+aspect of the course they took in diverting the Doshisha from its
+original purposes. They seemed to think that money, once given to the
+Doshisha, might be used without regard to the wishes of the donors. I
+cannot help wondering how much of their thought on this subject is due
+to the custom prevalent in Japan ever since the establishment of
+Buddhist temples and monasteries, of considering property once given
+as irrevocable, so that the individuals who gave it or their heirs,
+have no further interest or right in the property. Large donations in
+Japan have, from time immemorial, been given thus absolutely; the
+giver assumed that the receiver would use it aright; specific
+directions were not added as to the purposes of the gift. American
+benefactors of the Doshisha have given under the standards prevailing
+in the West. The receivers in Japan have accepted these gifts under
+the standards prevailing in the East. Is not this in part the cause of
+the friction that has arisen in recent years over the administration
+of funds and lands and houses held by Japanese for mission purposes?
+
+In this connection, however, I should not fail to refer to the fact
+that the Christians of the Kumiai churches,[BW] in their annual
+meeting (1898), took strong grounds as to the mismanagement of the
+Doshisha by the trustees. The action of the latter in repealing the
+clause of the constitution which declared the six articles of the
+constitution forever unchangeable, and then of striking out the word
+"Christian" in regard to the nature of the moral education to be given
+in all departments of the institution, was characterized as "fu-ho,"
+that is to say, unlawful, unrighteous, or immoral. Resolutions were
+also passed demanding that the trustees should either restore the
+expunged words or else resign and give place to men who would restore
+them and carry out the will of the donors. This act on the part of a
+large majority of the delegates of the churches shows that a standard
+of business morality is arising in Japan that promises well for the
+future.
+
+Before leaving this question, it is important for us to consider how
+widely in lands which have long been both Christian and commercial,
+the standards of truthfulness and business morality are transgressed.
+I for one do not feel disposed to condemn Japanese failure very
+severely, when I think of the failure in Western lands. Then, again,
+when we stop to think of it, is it not a pretty fine line that we draw
+between legitimate and illegitimate profits? What a relative
+distinction this is! Even the Westerner finds difficulty in
+discovering and observing it, especially so when the man with whom he
+is dealing happens to be ignorant of the real value of the goods in
+question. Let us not be too severe, then, in condemning the Japanese,
+even though we must judge them to be deficient in ideals and conduct.
+The explanation for the present state of Japan in regard to business
+morality is neither far to seek nor hard to find. It has nothing
+whatever to do with brain structure or inherent race character, but is
+wholly a matter of changing social order. Feudal communalism has given
+way to individualistic commercialism. The results are inevitable.
+Japan has suddenly entered upon that social order where the
+individuals of the nation are thrown upon their own choice for
+character and life as they have been at no previous time. Old men, as
+well as young, are thrown off their feet by the new temptations into
+which they fall.
+
+One of the strongest arguments in my mind for the necessity of a rapid
+introduction into Japan of the Gospel of Christ, is to be built on
+this fact. An individualistic social order demands an individualizing
+religion. So far as I know, the older religions, with the lofty moral
+teachings which one may freely admit them to have, make no determined
+or even distinct effort to secure the activity of the individual will
+in the adoption of moral ideals. The place both of "conversion" and of
+the public avowal of one's "faith" in the establishment of individual
+character, and the peculiar fitness of a religion having such
+characteristics to a social order in which "individualism" is the
+dominant principle, have not yet been widely recognized by writers on
+sociology. These practices of the Protestant churches are,
+nevertheless, of inestimable value in the upbuilding both of the
+individual and of society. And Japan needs these elements at the
+earliest possible date in order to supplement the new order of society
+which is being established. Without them it is a question whether in
+the long run this new order may not prove a step downward rather than
+upward.
+
+This completes our detailed study of Japanese moral characteristics as
+revealed alike in their ideals and their practices. Let us now seek
+for some general statement of the facts and conclusions thus far
+reached. It has become clear that Japanese moralists have placed the
+emphasis of their ethical thinking on loyalty; subordinated to this
+has been filial piety. These two principles have been the pivotal
+points of Japanese ethics. All other virtues flowed out of them, and
+were intimately dependent upon them. These virtues are especially
+fitted to upbuild and to maintain the feudal order of society. They
+are essentially communal virtues. The first group, depending on and
+growing out of loyalty, was concerned with the maintenance of the
+larger communal unity, formerly the tribe, and now the nation. The
+virtues connected with the second principle--filial piety--were
+concerned with the maintenance of the smaller unit of society--- the
+family. Righteousness and duty, of which much was made by Japanese
+moralists, consisted in the observance of these two ideals.
+
+The morality of individualism was largely wanting. From this lack
+sprang the main defects of the moral ideal and of the actual practice.
+The chief sins of Old Japan--and, as a matter of fact, of all the
+heathen world, as graphically depicted by Mr. Dennis in his great work
+on "Christian Missions and Social Progress"--were sins of omission and
+commission against the individual. The rights of inferiors practically
+received no consideration at the hands of the moralists. In the
+Japanese conception of righteousness and duty, the rights and value of
+the individual, as such, whatever his social standing or sex, were not
+included.
+
+One class of defects in the Japanese moral ideal arose out of the
+feudal order itself, namely, its scorn of trade. Trade had no vital
+relation to the communal unity; hence it found and developed no moral
+sanctions for its guidance. The West conceives of business deceit as
+concerned not only with the integrity of the community, but also with
+the rights of the individual. The moral ideals and sanctions for
+business honesty are therefore doubly strong with us. The old order of
+Japan was in no way dependent for its integrity on business honor and
+honesty, and, as we have seen, individuals, as such, were not thought
+to have inherent rights. Under such conditions, it is difficult to
+conceive how universal moral ideals and sanctions for business
+relations could be developed and maintained.
+
+One further point demands attention. We naturally ask what the grounds
+were on which the ethical ideals were commonly supposed to have
+authority. So far as my knowledge goes, this question received almost
+no consideration by the ordinary person, and but little from the
+moralist. Old Japan was not accustomed to ask "Why?" It accepted
+everything on the authority of the teacher, as children do, and as all
+primitive peoples do. There was little or no thought as to the source
+of the moral ideals or as to the nature or the function of the social
+sanctions. If, as in a few instances, the questions were raised as to
+their authority, the reply ordinarily would be that they had derived
+their teachings from ancient times. And, if the matter were pressed,
+it would be argued that the most ancient times were nearer the
+beginning of men, and, therefore, nearer to Heaven, which decreed that
+all the duties and customs of men; in the final resort, therefore,
+authority would be attributed to Heaven. But such a questioner was
+rare. Moral law was unhesitatingly accepted on the authority of the
+teacher, and no uncomfortable questions were asked. It is easy to see
+that both of the pivotal moral ideals, _i.e._, loyalty and filial
+piety, would support this unquestioning habit of mind, for to ask
+questions as to authority is the beginning both of disloyalty to the
+master and of irreverence to the parents and ancestors.
+
+The whole social order, being one of authority, unquestioned and
+absolute, moral standards were accepted on the ipse dixit of great
+teachers.
+
+In closing, we revert to our ever-recurring question: Are the moral
+characteristics wherein the Japanese differ from other races inherent
+and necessary, as are their physiological characteristics, or are they
+incidental and transient, liable to transformation? Light has been
+thrown on this problem by every illustration adduced. We have seen in
+detail that every characteristically Japanese moral trait is due to
+the nature of her past social order, and is changing With that order.
+Racial moral traits, therefore, are not due to inherent nature, to
+essential character, to brain structure, nor are they transmitted from
+father to son by the mere fact of physical generation. On the
+contrary, the distinguishing ethical characteristics of races, as seen
+in their ethical ideals and their moral conduct, are determined by the
+dominant social order, and vary with it. Ethical characteristics are
+transmitted by association, transmission is therefore not limited to
+the relation of parents and children. The bearing of this fact on the
+problem of the moral transformation of races could be easily shown.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?
+
+
+Said Prof. Pfleiderer to the writer in the winter of 1897: "I am sorry
+to know that the Japanese are deficient in religious nature." In an
+elaborate article entitled, "Wanted, a Religion," a missionary
+describes the three so-called religions of Japan, Buddhism,
+Confucianism, and Shintoism, and shows to his satisfaction that none
+of these has the essential characteristics of religion.
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell has said that "Sense may not be vital to religion,
+but incense is."[BX] In my judgment, this is the essence of nonsense,
+and is fitted to incense a man's sense.
+
+The impression that the Japanese people are not religious is due to
+various facts. The first is that for about three hundred years the
+intelligence of the nation has been dominated by Confucian thought,
+which rejects active belief in supra-human beings. When asked by his
+pupils as to the gods, Confucius is reported to have said that men
+should respect them, but should have nothing to do with them. The
+tendency of Confucian ethics, accordingly, is to leave the gods
+severely alone, although their existence is not absolutely denied.
+When Confucianism became popular in Japan, the educated part of the
+nation broke away from Buddhism, which, for nearly a thousand years,
+had been universally dominant. To them Buddhism seemed superstitious
+in the extreme. It was not uncommon for them to criticise it severely.
+Muro Kyu-so,[BY] speaking of the immorality that was so common in the
+native literature, says: "Long has Buddhism made Japan to think of
+nothing as important except the worship of Buddha.
+
+So it is that evil customs prevail, and there is no one who does not
+find pleasure in lust.... Take out the lust and Buddhism from that
+book, and the scenery and emotions are well described.... Had he
+learned in the 'Way' of the sages, he had not fallen into
+Buddhism."[BZ] The tendency of all persons trained in Confucian
+classics was toward thoroughgoing skepticism as to divine beings and
+their relation to this world. For this reason, beyond doubt, has
+Western agnosticism found so easy an entrance into Japan. This ready
+acceptance of Western agnosticism is a second fact that has tended to
+give the West the impression referred to above. Complete indifference
+to religion is characteristic of the educated classes of to-day.
+Japanese and foreigners, Christians and non-Christians, alike, unite
+in this opinion. The impression usually conveyed by this statement,
+however, is that agnosticism is a new thing in Japan. In point of
+fact, the old agnosticism is merely re-enforced by the support it
+receives from the agnosticism of the West.
+
+The Occidental impression of Japanese irreligious race nature is
+further strengthened by the frequent assertion of it by writers, some
+of whom at least are neither partial nor ignorant. Prof. Basil H.
+Chamberlain, for instance, repeatedly makes the assertion or
+necessitates the inference. Speaking of pilgrimages, he remarks that
+the Japanese "take their religion lightly." Discussing the general
+question of religion, he speaks of the Japanese as "essentially
+undevotional," but he guards against the inference that they are
+therefore specially immoral. Yet, in the same paragraph, he adds,
+"Though they pray little and make light of supernatural dogma, the
+religion of the family binds them down in truly social bonds."
+Percival Lowell also, as we have seen, makes light of Japanese
+religion.
+
+This conclusion of foreigner observers is rendered the more convincing
+to the average reader when he learns that such an influential man as
+Mr. Fukuzawa declares that "religion is like tea," it serves a social
+end, and nothing more; and that Mr. Hiroyuki Kato, until recently
+president of the Imperial University, and later Minister of Education,
+states that "Religion depends on fear." Marquis Ito, Japan's most
+illustrious statesman, is reported to have said: "I regard religion
+itself as quite unnecessary for a nation's life; science is far above
+superstition, and what is religion--Buddhism or Christianity--but
+superstition, and therefore a possible source of weakness to a nation?
+I do not regret the tendency to free thought and atheism, which is
+almost universal in Japan, because I do not regard it as a source of
+danger to the community."[CA]
+
+If leaders of national thought have such conceptions as to the nature
+and origin of religion, is it strange that the rank and file of
+educated people should have little regard for it, or that foreigners
+generally should believe the Japanese race to be essentially
+non-religious?
+
+But before we accept this conclusion, various considerations demand
+our notice. Although the conception of religion held by the eminent
+Japanese gentlemen just quoted is not accepted by the writer as
+correct, yet, even on their own definitions, a study of Japanese
+superstitions and religious ceremonies would easily prove the people
+as a whole to be exceedingly religious. Never had a nation so many
+gods. It has been indeed "the country of the gods." Their temples and
+shrines have been innumerable. Priests have abounded and worshipers
+swarmed. For worship, however indiscriminate and thoughtless, is
+evidence of religious nature.
+
+Furthermore, utterances like those quoted above in regard to the
+nature and function of religion, are frequently on the lips of
+Westerners also, multitudes of whom have exceedingly shallow
+conceptions of the real nature of religion or the part it plays in the
+development of society and of the individual. But we do not pronounce
+the West irreligious because of such utterances. We must not judge the
+religious many by the irreligious few.
+
+Again, are they competent judges who say the Japanese are
+non-religious? Can a man who scorns religion himself, who at least
+reveals no appreciation of its real nature by his own heart
+experience, judge fairly of the religious nature of the people? Still
+further, the religious phenomena of a people may change from age to
+age. In asking, then, whether a people is religious by nature, we must
+study its entire religious history, and not merely a single period of
+it. The life of modern Japan has been rudely shocked by the sudden
+accession of much new intellectual light. The contents of religion
+depends on the intellect; sudden and widespread accession of knowledge
+always discredits the older forms of religious expression. An
+undeveloped religion, still bound up with polytheistic symbolism, with
+its charms and mementoes, inevitably suffers severely at the hands of
+exact modern science. For the educated minority, especially, the
+inevitable reaction is to complete skepticism, to apparent irreligion.
+For the time being, religion itself may appear to have been
+discredited. In an advancing age, prophets of religious dissolution
+are abundant. Such prophecies, with reference to Christianity, have
+been frequent, and are not unheard even now. Particular beliefs and
+practices of religion have indeed changed and passed away, even in
+Christianity. But the essentially religious nature of man has
+re-asserted itself in every case, and the outward expressions of that
+nature have thereby only become freer from elements of error and
+superstition. Exactly this is taking place in Japan to-day. The
+apparent irreligion of to-day is the groundwork of the purer religion
+of to-morrow.
+
+If the Japanese are emotional and sentimental, we should expect them
+to be, perhaps more than most peoples, religious. This expectation is
+not disappointed by a study of their history. However imperfect as a
+religion we must pronounce original Shinto to have been, consisting of
+little more than a cultus and a theogony, yet even with this alone the
+Japanese should be pronounced a religious people. The universality of
+the respect and adoration, not to say love, bestowed throughout the
+ages of history on the "Kami" (the multitudinous Gods of Shintoism),
+is a standing witness to the depth of the religious feeling in the
+Japanese heart. True, it is associated with the sentiments of love of
+ancestors and country, with filial piety and loyalty; but these, so
+far from lowering the religion, make it more truly religious?
+
+Unending lines of pilgrims, visiting noted Shinto temples and climbing
+sacred mountain peaks, arrest the attention of every thoughtful
+student of Japan. These pilgrims are numbered by the hundreds of
+thousands every year. The visitors to the great shrine at Kizuki of
+Izumo number about 250,000 annually. "The more prosperous the season,
+the larger the number of pilgrims. It rarely falls below two hundred
+thousand." In his "Occult Japan," Mr. Lowell has given us an
+interesting account of the "pilgrim clubs," The largest known to him
+numbered about twelve thousand men, but he thinks they average from
+one hundred to about five hundred persons each. The number of yearly
+visitors to the Shinto shrines at Ise is estimated at half a million,
+and ten thousand pilgrims climb Mt. Fuji every summer. The number of
+pilgrims to Kompira, in Shikoku, is incredibly large; according to the
+count taken during the first half of 1898, the first ever taken, the
+average for six months was 2500 each day; at this rate the number for
+the year is nearly 900,000. The highest for a single day was over
+12,000. These figures were given me by the chief official of this
+district. The highest mountain in Shikoku, Ishidzuchi San, some six
+thousand feet in height, is said to be ascended by ten thousand
+pilgrims each summer. These pilgrims eat little or nothing at hotels,
+depending rather on what they carry until they return from their
+arduous three days' climb; nor do they take any prolonged rest until
+they are on the homeward way. The reason for this is that the climb is
+supposed to be a test of the heart; if the pilgrim fail to reach the
+summit, the inference is that he is at fault, and that the god does
+not favor him. They who offer their prayers from the summit are
+supposed to be assured of having them answered.
+
+But beside these greater pilgranages to mountain summits and national
+shrines, innumerable lesser ones are made. Each district has a more or
+less extended circuit of its own. In Shikoku there is a round known as
+the "Hachi-Ju-hakka sho mairi," or "The Pilgrimage to the 88 Places,"
+supposed to be the round once made by Kobo Daishi (A.D. 774-834), the
+founder of the Shinton sect of Buddhism. The number of pilgrims who
+make this round is exceedingly large, since it is a favorite circuit
+for the people not only of Shikoku, but also of central and western
+Japan. Many of the pilgrims wear on the back, just below the neck, a
+pair of curious miniature "waraji" or straw sandals, because Kobo
+Daishi carried a real pair along with him on his journey. I never go
+to Ishite Temple (just out of Matsuyama), one of the eighty-eight
+places of the circuit, without seeing some of these pilgrims. But this
+must suffice. The pilgrim habit of the Japanese is a strong proof of
+widespread religious enthusiasm, and throws much light on the
+religious nature of the people. There seems to be reason for thinking
+that the custom existed in Japan even before the introduction of
+Buddhism. If this is correct, it bears powerful testimony to the
+inherently religious nature of the Japanese race.
+
+The charge has been made that these pilgrimages are mere pleasure
+excursions. Mr. Lowell says, facetiously, that "They are peripatetic
+picnic parties, faintly flavored with piety; just a sufficient
+suspicion of it to render them acceptable to the easy-going gods."
+Beneath this light alliterative style, which delights the literary
+reader, do we find the truth? To me it seems like a slur on the
+pilgrims, evidently due to Mr. Lowell's idea that a genuine religious
+feeling must be gloomy and solemn. Joy may seem to him incompatible
+with heartfelt religion and aspiration. That these pilgrims lack the
+religious aspiration characteristic of highly developed Christians of
+the West, is, of course, true; but that they have a certain type of
+religious aspiration is equally indisputable. They have definite and
+strong ideas as to the advantage of prayer at the various shrines;
+they confidently believe that their welfare, both in this world and
+the next, will be vitally affected by such pilgrimages and such a
+faithful worship. It is customary for pilgrims, who make extended
+journeys, to carry what may be called a passbook, in which seals are
+placed by the officials of each shrine. This is evidence to friends
+and to the pilgrim himself, in after years, of the reality of his long
+and tedious pilgrimage. Beggars before these shrines are apt to
+display these passbooks as an evidence of their worthiness and need.
+For many a pilgrim supports himself, during his pilgrimage, entirely
+by begging.
+
+Pilgrims also buy from each shrine of note some charm, "o mamori,"
+"honorable preserver," and "o fuda," "honorable ticket," which to them
+are exceedingly precious. There is hardly a house in Japan but has
+some, often many, of these charms, either nailed on the front door or
+placed on the god-shelf. I have seen a score nailed one above another.
+In some cases the year-names are still legible, and show considerable
+age. The sale of charms is a source of no little revenue to the
+temples, in some cases amounting to thousands of yen annually. We may
+smile at the ignorance and superstition which these facts reveal, but,
+as I already remarked, these are external features, the material
+expression or clothing, so to speak, of the inner life. Their
+particular form is due to deficient intellectual development. I do not
+defend them; I merely maintain that their existence shows conclusively
+the possession by the people at large of a real religious emotion and
+purpose. If so, they, are not to be sneered at, although the mood of
+the average pilgrim may be cheerful, and the ordinary pilgrimage may
+have the aspect of a "peripatetic picnic, faintly flavored with
+piety." The outside observer, such as the foreigner of necessity is,
+is quick to detect the picnic quality, but he cannot so easily discern
+the religious significance or the inner thoughts and emotions of the
+pilgrims. The former is discernible at a glance, without knowledge of
+the Japanese language or sympathy with the religious heart; the latter
+can be discovered only by him who intimately understands the people,
+their language and their religion.
+
+If religion were necessarily gloomy, festivals and merry-making would
+be valid proof of Japanese religious deficiency. But such is not the
+case. Primitive religions, like primitive people, are artless and
+simple in religious joy as in all the aspects of their life. Developed
+races increasingly discover the seriousness of living, and become
+correspondingly reflective, if not positively gloomy. Religion shares
+this transformation. But those religions in which salvation is a
+prominent idea, and whose nature is such as to satisfy at once the
+head and the heart, restore joyousness as a necessary consequence.
+While certain aspects of Christianity certainly have a gloomy
+look,--which its critics are much disposed to exaggerate, and then to
+condemn,--yet Christianity at heart is a religion of profound joy, and
+this feature shows itself in such universal festivals as Christmas and
+Easter. Even though the Japanese popular religious life showed itself
+exclusively in festivals and on occasions of joy, therefore, that
+would not prove them to be inherently lacking in religious nature.
+
+But there is another set of phenomena, even more impressive to the
+candid and sympathetic student. It is the presence in every home of
+the "Butsu-dan," or Buddha shelf, and the "Kami-dana," or God shelf.
+The former is Buddhist, and the latter Shinto. Exclusive Shintoists,
+who are rare, have the latter alone. Where both are found, the
+"I-hai," ancestral memorial tablets, are placed on the "Butsu-dan";
+otherwise they are placed on the "Kami-dana." The Kami-dana are always
+quite simple, as are all Shinto charms and utensils. The Butsu-dan are
+usually elaborate and beautiful, and sometimes large and costly. The
+universality of these tokens of family religion, and the constant and
+loving care bestowed upon them, are striking testimony to the
+universality of the religion in Japan. The pathos of life is often
+revealed by the faithful devotion of the mother to these silent
+representatives of divine beings and departed ancestors or children. I
+have no hesitation in saying that, so far as external appearances go,
+the average home in Japan is far more religious than the average home
+in enlightened England or America, especially when compared with such
+as have no family worship. There may be a genuine religious life in
+these Western homes, but it does not appear to the casual visitor. Yet
+no casual visitor can enter a Japanese home, without seeing at once
+the evidences of some sort, at least, of religious life.
+
+It is impossible for me to believe, as many assert, that all is mere
+custom and hollow form, without any kernel of meaning or sincerity.
+Customs may outlast beliefs for a time, and this is particularly the
+case with religious customs; for the form is so often taken to involve
+the very essence of the reality. But customs which have lost all
+significance, and all belief, inevitably dwindle and fade away, even
+if not suddenly rejected; they remain them; they leave their trace
+indeed, but so faintly that only the student of primitive customs can
+detect them and recognize their original nature and purpose. The
+Butsu-dan and Kami-dana do not belong to this order of beliefs. The
+average home of Japan would feel itself desecrated were these to be
+forcibly removed. The piety of the home centers, in large measure,
+about these expressions of the religious heart. Their practical
+universality is a significant witness to the possession by the people
+at large of a religious nature.
+
+If it is fair to argue that the Christian religion has a vital hold on
+the Western peoples because of the cathedrals and churches to be found
+throughout the length and breadth of Christendom, a similar argument
+applies to Japan and the hold of the religions of this land upon its
+people. For over a thousand years the external manifestations of
+religion in architecture have been elaborate. Temples of enormous
+size, comparing not unfavorably with the cathedrals of Europe as
+regards the cost of erection, are to be found in all parts of the
+land. Immense temple bells of bronze, colossal statues of Buddha, and
+lesser ones of saints and worthies innumerable, bear witness to the
+lavish use of wealth in the expression of religious devotion. It is
+sometimes said that Buddhism is moribund in Japan. It is seriously
+asserted that its temples are falling into decay. This is no more true
+of the temples of Buddhism in Japan, than of the cathedrals Of
+Christendom. Local causes greatly affect the prosperity of the various
+temples. Some are falling into decay, but others are being repaired,
+and new ones are being built. No one can have visited any shrine of
+note without observing the large number of signboards along either
+side of the main approach, on which are written the sums contributed
+for the building or repairing of the temple. These gifts are often
+munificent, single gifts sometimes reaching the sum of a thousand yen;
+I have noticed a few exceeding this amount. The total number of these
+temples and shrines throughout the country is amazing. According to
+government statistics, in 1894 the Buddhist temples numbered 71,831;
+and the Shinto temples and shrines which have received official
+registration reached the vast number of 190,803. The largest temple in
+Japan, costing several million dollars, the Nishihongwanji in Kyoto,
+has been built during the past decade. Considering the general poverty
+of the nation, the proportion of gifts made for the erection and
+maintenance of these temples and shrines is a striking testimony to
+the reality of some sort of religious zeal. That it rests entirely on
+form and meaningless rites, is incredible.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+SOME RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA
+
+
+Without doubt, many traits are attributed to the Japanese by the
+casual observer or captious critic, through lack of ability to read
+between the lines. We have already seen how the stoical element of
+Japanese character serves to conceal from the sociologist the
+emotional nature of the people. If a Japanese conceals his ordinary
+emotions, much more does he refrain from public exhibition of his
+deeper religious aspirations. Although he may feel profoundly, his
+face and manner seldom reveal it. When torn with grief over the loss
+of a parent or son, he will tell you of his loss with smiles, if not
+with actual laughter. "The Japanese smile" has betrayed the solemn
+foreigner into many an error of individual and racial character
+interpretation. Particularly frequent have been such errors in matters
+of religion.
+
+Although the light and joyous, "smiling" aspect of Japanese religious
+life is prominent, the careful observer will come incidentally and
+unexpectedly on many signs of an opposite nature, if he mingle
+intimately with the people. Japan has its sorrows and its tragedies,
+no less than other lands. These have their part in determining
+religious phenomena.
+
+The student who takes his stand at a popular shrine and watches the
+worshipers come and go will be rewarded by the growing conviction
+that, although many are manifestly ceremonialists, others are clearly
+subjects of profound feeling. See that mother leading her toddling
+child to the image of Binzuru, the god of healing, and teaching it to
+rub the eyes and face of the god and then its own eyes and face. See
+that pilgrim before a bare shrine repeating in rapt devotion the
+prayer he has known from his childhood, and in virtue of which he has
+already received numberless blessings. Behold that leper pleading with
+merciful Kwannon of the thousand hands to heal his disease. Hear that
+pitiful wail of a score of fox-possessed victims for deliverance from
+their oppressor. Watch that tearful maiden performing the hundred
+circuits of the temple while she prays for a specific blessing for
+herself or some loved one. Observe that merchant solemnly worshiping
+the god of the sea, with offering of rice and wine. Count those
+hundreds of votive pictures, thanksgiving remembrances of the sick who
+have been healed, in answer, as they firmly believe, to their prayers
+to the god of this particular shrine. These are not imaginary cases.
+The writer has seen these and scores more like them. Here is a serious
+side to Japanese religious life easily overlooked by a casual or
+unsympathetic observer.
+
+In addition to these simpler religious phenomena, we find in Japan, as
+in other lands, the practice of ecstatic union with the deity. In
+Shinto it is called "Kami-oroshi," the bringing down of the gods. It
+is doubtless some form of hypnotic trance, yet the popular
+interpretation of the phenomenon is that of divine possession.
+
+Among Buddhists, the practice of ecstasy takes a different form. The
+aim is to attain absolute vacuity of mind and thus complete union with
+the Absolute. When attained, the soul becomes conscious of blissful
+superiority to all the concerns of this mundane life, a foretaste of
+the Nirvana awaiting those who shall attain to Buddhahood. The actual
+attainment of this experience is practically limited to the
+priesthood, who alone have the time and freedom from the cares of the
+world needful for its practice. For it is induced only by long and
+profound "meditation." Especially is this experience the desire of the
+Zen sect, which makes it a leading aim, taking its name "zen" (to sit)
+from this practice. To sit in religious abstraction is the height of
+religious bliss.
+
+The practical business man of the West may perhaps find some
+difficulty in seeing anything particularly religious in ecstasy or
+mental vacuity. But if I mistake not, this religious phenomenon of the
+Orient does not differ in essence from the mystical religious
+experience so common in the middle and subsequent ages in Europe, and
+represented to-day by mystical Christians. Indeed, some of the finest
+religious souls of Western lands have been mystics. Mystic
+Christianity finds ready acceptance with certain of the Japanese.
+
+The critical reader may perhaps admit, in view of the facts thus far
+presented, that the ignorant millions have some degree of religious
+feeling and yet, in view of the apparently irreligious life of the
+educated, he may still feel that the religious nature of the race is
+essentially shallow. He may feel that as soon as a Japanese is lifted
+out of the superstitious beliefs of the past, he is freed from all
+religious ideas and aspirations. I admit at once that there seems to
+be some ground for such an assertion. Yet as I study the character of
+the samurai of the Tokugawa period, who alone may be called the
+irreligious of the olden times, I see good reasons for holding that,
+though rejecting Buddhism, they were religious at heart. They
+developed little or no religious ceremonial to replace that of
+Buddhism, yet there were indications that the religious life still
+remained. Intellectual and moral growth rendered it impossible for
+earnest and honest men to accept the old religious expressions. They
+revolted from religious forms, rather than from religion, and the
+revolt resulted not in deeper superstitions and a poorer life, but in
+a life richer in thought and noble endeavor. Muro Kyu-so, the
+"Japanese Philosopher" to whom we have referred more than once,
+rejected Buddhism, as we have already seen. The high quality of his
+moral teachings we have also noticed. Yet he had no idea that he was
+"religious." Those who reject Buddhism often use the term
+"Shukyo-kusai," "stinking religion." For them religion is synonymous
+with corrupt and superstitious Buddhism. To have told Muro that he was
+religious would doubtless have offended him, but a few quotations
+should satisfy anyone that at heart he was religious in the best sense
+of the term.
+
+"Consider all of you. Whence is fortune? From Heaven. Even the world
+says, Fortune is in Heaven. So then there is no resource save prayer
+to Heaven. Let us then ask: what does Heaven hate, and what does
+Heaven love? It loves benevolence and hates malevolence. It loves
+truth and hates untruth.... That which in Heaven begets all things, in
+man is called love. So doubt not that Heaven loves benevolence and
+hates its opposite. So too is it with truth. For countless ages sun
+and moon and stars constantly revolve and we make calendars without
+mistake. Nothing is more certain. It is the very truth of the
+universe.... I have noticed prayers for good luck, brought year by
+year from famous temples and hills, decorating the entrances to the
+homes of famous samurai. But none the less they have been killed or
+punished, or their line has been destroyed and house extinguished. Or
+at least to many, shame and disgrace have come. They have not learned
+fortune, but foolishly depend on prayers and charms. Confucius said:
+'When punished by Heaven there is no place for prayer.' Women of
+course follow the temples and trust in charms, but not so should men.
+Alas! Now all are astray, those who should be teachers, the samurai
+and those higher still" (pp. 63-5). "Sin is the source of pain and
+righteousness of happiness. This is the settled law. The teaching of
+the sages and the conduct of superior men is determined by principles
+and the result is left to Heaven. Still, we do not obey in the hope of
+happiness, nor do we forbear to sin from fear. Not with this meaning
+did Confucius and Mencius teach that happiness is in virtue and pain
+in sin. But the 'way' is the law of man. It is said, 'The way of
+Heaven blesses virtue and curses sin.' That is intended for the
+ignorant multitude. Yet it is not like the Buddhist 'hoben' (pious
+device), for it is the determined truth" (p. 66). "Heaven is forever
+and is not to be understood at once, like the promises of men.
+Shortsighted men consider its ways and decide that there is no reward
+for virtue or vice. So they doubt when the good are virtuous and fear
+not when the wicked sin. They do not know that there is no victory
+against Heaven when it decrees" (p. 67). "Reason comes from Heaven,
+and is in men.... The philosopher knows the truth as the drinker knows
+the taste of _saké_ and the abstainer the taste of sweets. How shall
+he forget it? How shall he fall into error? Lying down, getting up,
+moving, resting, all is well. In peace, in trouble, in death, in joy,
+in sorrow, all is well. Never for a moment will he leave this 'way.'
+This is to know it in ourselves" (p. 71).
+
+One day, five or six students remained after the lecture to ask Kyu-so
+about his view as to the gods, stating their own dissatisfaction with
+the fantastic interpretations given to the term "Shinto" by the native
+scholars. Making some quotations from the Chinese classics, he went on
+to say for himself:
+
+"I cannot accept that which is popularly called Shinto.... I do not
+profess to understand the profound reason of the deities, but in
+outline this is my idea: The Doctrine of the Mean speaks of the
+'virtue of the Gods' and Shu-shi explains this word 'virtue' to mean
+the 'heart and its revelation.' Its meaning is thus stated in the
+Saden: 'God is pure intelligence and justice.' Now all know that God
+is just, but do not know that he is intelligent. But there is no such
+intelligence elsewhere as God's. Man hears by the ear and where the
+ear is not he hears not ...; man sees with his eyes, and where they
+are not he sees not ...; with his heart man thinks and the swiftest
+thought takes time. But God uses neither ear nor eye, nor does he pass
+over in thought. Directly he feels, and directly does he respond....
+Is not this the divinity of Heaven and Earth? So the Doctrine of the
+Mean says: 'Looked for it cannot be seen, listened to it cannot be
+heard. It enters into all things. There is nothing without it.' ...
+'Everywhere, everywhere, on the right and on the left.' This is the
+revealing of God, the truth not to be concealed. Think not that God is
+distant, but seek him in the heart, for the heart is the House of God.
+Where there is no obstacle of lust, there is communion of one spirit
+with the God of Heaven and Earth.... And now for the application.
+Examine yourselves, make the truth of the heart the foundation,
+increase in learning and at last you will attain. Then will you know
+the truth of what I speak" (pp. 50-52).
+
+In the above passage Dr. Knox has translated the term "Shin," the
+Chinese ideograph for the Japanese word "Kami," by the English
+singular, God. This lends to the passage a fullness of monotheistic
+expression which the original hardly, if at all, justifies. The
+originals are indefinite as to number and might with equal truth be
+translated "gods," as Dr. Knox suggests himself in a footnote.
+
+These and similar passages are of great interest to the student of
+Japanese religious development. They should be made much of by
+Christian preachers and missionaries. Such writers and thinkers as
+Muro evidently was might not improperly be called the pre-Christian
+Christians of Japan. They prepared the way for the coming of more
+light on these subjects. Japanese Christian apologists should collect
+such utterances from her wise men of old, and by them lead the nation
+to an appreciation of the truths which they suggest and for which they
+so fitly prepare the way. Scattered as they now are, and seldom read
+by the people, they lie as precious gems imbedded in the hills, or as
+seed safely stored. They can bear no harvest till they are sown in the
+soil and allowed to spring up and grow.
+
+The more I have pondered the implications of these and similar
+passages, the more clear has it become that their authors were
+essentially religious men. Their revolt from "religion" did not spring
+from an irreligious motive, but from a deeper religious insight than
+was prevalent among Buddhist believers. The irrational and often
+immoral nature of many of the current religious expressions and
+ceremonials and beliefs became obnoxious to the thinking classes, and
+were accordingly rejected. The essence of religion, however, was not
+rejected. They tore off the accumulated husks of externalism, but kept
+intact the real kernel of religion.
+
+The case for the religious nature of modern, educated Japan is not so
+simple. Irreligious it certainly appears. Yet it, too, is not so
+irreligious as perhaps the Occidental thinks. Though immoral, a
+Japanese may still be a filial son and a loyal subject,
+characteristics which have religious value in Japan, Old and New. It
+would not be difficult to prove that many a modern Japanese writer who
+proclaims his rejection of religion--calling all religion but
+superstition and ceremony--is nevertheless a religious man at heart.
+The religions he knows are too superstitious and senseless to satisfy
+the demands of his intellectually developed religious nature. He does
+not recognize that his rejection of what he calls "religion" is a real
+manifestation of his religious nature rather than the reverse.
+
+The widespread irreligious phenomena of New Japan are, therefore, not
+difficult of explanation, when viewed in the light of two thousand
+years of Japanese religious history. They cannot be attributed to a
+deficient racial endowment of religious nature. They are a part of
+nineteenth-century life by no means limited to Japan. If the
+Anglo-Saxon race is not to be pronounced inherently irreligious,
+despite the fact that irreligious phenomena and individuals are in
+constant evidence the world over, neither can New Japan be pronounced
+irreligious for the same reason. The irreligion now so rampant is a
+recent phenomenon in Japan. It may not immediately pass away, but it
+must eventually. Religion freed from superstition and ceremonialism,
+resting in reality, identifying moral and scientific with religious
+truth, is already finding hearty support from many of Japan's educated
+men. If appeal is made under the right conditions, the Japanese
+manifest no lack of a genuine religious nature. That they seem to be
+deficient in the sense of reverence is held by some to be proof
+presumptive of a deficient religious nature. A few illustrations will
+make clear what the critic means and will guide us to an
+interpretation of the phenomena. Occidentals are accustomed to
+consider a religious service as a time of solemn quiet, for we feel
+ourselves in a special sense in the presence of God; His majesty and
+glory are realities to the believing worshiper. But much occurs during
+a Christian service in Japanese churches which would seem to indicate
+a lack of this feeling. It is by no means uncommon for little children
+to run about without restraint during the service, for mothers to
+nurse their infants, and for adults to converse with each other in an
+undertone, though not so low but that the sound of the conversation
+may be heard by all. I know a deacon occupying a front mat in church
+who spends a large part of service time during the first two sabbaths
+of each month in making out the receipts of the monthly contributions
+and distributing them among the members. His apparent supposition is
+that he disturbs no one (and it is amazing how undisturbed the rest of
+the congregation is), but also that he is in no way interfering with
+the solemnity or value of the service. The freedom, too, with which
+individuals come and go during the service is in marked contrast to
+our custom. From our standpoint, there is lack of reverence.
+
+I recently attended a young men's meeting at which the places for each
+were assigned by written quotations, from the Bible, one-half of which
+was given to the individual and the other half placed at the seat. One
+quotation so used was the text, "The birds of the air have nests, but
+the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head." It would hardly seem
+as if earnest Christians could have made such use of this text. Some
+months ago at a social gathering held in connection with the annual
+meeting of the churches of Shikoku, one of the comic performances
+consisted in the effort on the part of three old men to sing through
+to the end without a break-down the song which to us is so sacred,
+"Rock of Ages, cleft for me." Only one man succeeded, the others going
+through a course of quavers and breaks which was exceedingly
+laughable, but absolutely irreverent. The lack of reverence which has
+sometimes characterized the social side of the Christmas services in
+Japan has been the source of frequent regret to the missionaries. In a
+social gathering of earnest young Christians recently, a game
+demanding forfeits was played; these consisted of the recitation of
+familiar texts from the Bible. There certainly seems to be a lack of
+the sense of the fitness of things.
+
+But the question is, are these practices due to an inherent
+deficiency of reverence, arising from the character of the Japanese
+nature, or are they due rather to the religious history of the past
+and the conditions of the present? That the latter seems to me the
+correct view I need hardly state. The fact that the Japanese are an
+emotional people renders it probable, a priori, that under suitable
+conditions they would be especially subject to the emotion of
+reverence. And when we look at their history, and observe the actual
+reverence paid by the multitudes to the rulers, and by the
+superstitious worshipers to the "Kami" and "Hotoke," it becomes
+evident that the apparent irreverence in the Christian churches must
+be due to peculiar conditions. Reverence is a subtle feeling; it
+depends on the nature of the ideas that possess the mind and heart.
+From the very nature of the case, Japanese Christians cannot have the
+same set of associations clustering around the church, the service,
+the Bible, or any of the Christian institutions, as the Occidental who
+has been reared from childhood among them, and who has derived his
+spiritual nourishment from them. All the wealth of nineteen centuries
+of experience has tended to give our services and our churches special
+religious value in our eyes. The average Christian in Japan and in any
+heathen land cannot have this fringe of ideas and subtle feelings so
+essential to a profound feeling of reverence. But as the significance
+of the Christian conception of God, endowed with glory and honor,
+majesty and might, is increasingly realized, and as it is found that
+the spirit of reverence is one that needs cultivation in worship, and
+especially as it is found that the spirit of reverence is important to
+high spiritual life and vitalizing spiritual power, more and more will
+that spirit be manifested by Japanese Christians. But its possession
+or its lack is due not to the inherent character of the people, but
+rather to the character of the ideas which possess them. In taking now
+a brief glance at the nature and history of the three religions of
+Japan it seems desirable to quote freely from the writings of
+recognized authorities on the subject.
+
+ "_Shinto_, which means literally 'the way of the Gods,' is the name
+ given to the mythology and vague ancestor-and nature-worship which
+ preceded the introduction of Buddhism into Japan--Shinto, so often
+ spoken of as a religion, is hardly entitled to that name. It has no
+ set of dogmas, no sacred book, no moral code. The absence of a
+ moral code is accounted for in the writings of modern native
+ commentators by the innate perfection of Japanese humanity, which
+ obviates the necessity for such outward props.... It is necessary,
+ however, to distinguish three periods in the existence of Shinto.
+ During the first of these--roughly speaking, down to A.D. 550--the
+ Japanese had no notion of religion as a separate institution. To
+ pay homage to the gods, that is, to the departed ancestors of the
+ Imperial family, and to the names of other great men, was a usage
+ springing from the same soil as that which produced passive
+ obedience to, and worship of, the living Mikado. Besides this,
+ there were prayers to the wind-gods, to the god of fire, to the god
+ of pestilence, to the goddess of food, and to deities presiding
+ over the sauce-pan, the caldron, the gate, and the kitchen. There
+ were also purifications for wrongdoing.... But there was not even a
+ shadowy idea of any code of morals, or any systematization of the
+ simple notions of the people concerning things unseen. There was
+ neither heaven nor hell--only a kind of neutral-tinted Hades. Some
+ of the gods were good and some were bad; nor was the line between
+ men and gods at all clearly drawn."
+
+The second period of Shinto began with the introduction of Buddhism
+into Japan, in which period Shinto became absorbed into Buddhism
+through the doctrine that the Shinto deities were ancient incarnations
+of Buddhas. In this period Shinto retained no distinctive feature.
+"Only at court and at a few great shrines, such as those of Ise and
+Idzumo, was a knowledge of Shinto in its native simplicity kept up;
+and it is doubtful whether changes did not creep in with the lapse of
+ages. Most Shinto temples throughout the country were served by
+Buddhist priests, who introduced the architectural ornaments and the
+ceremonial of their own religion. Thus was formed the Ryobu Shinto--a
+mixed religion founded on a compromise between the old creed and the
+new, and hence the tolerant ideas on theological subjects of most of
+the middle-lower classes, who worship indifferently at the shrines of
+either faith."
+
+The third period began about 1700. It was introduced by the scholarly
+study of history. "Soon the movement became religious and
+political--above all, patriotic.... The Shogunate was frowned on,
+because it had supplanted the autocracy of the heaven-descended
+Mikados. Buddhism and Confucianism were sneered at because of their
+foreign origin. The great scholars Mabuchi (1697-1769), Motoori
+(1730-1801), and Hirata (1776-1843) devoted themselves to a religious
+propaganda--if that can be called a religion which sets out from the
+principle that the only two things needful are to follow one's natural
+impulses and to obey the Mikado. This order triumphed for a moment in
+the revolution of 1868." It became for a few months the state
+religion, but soon lost its status.[CB]
+
+_Buddhism_ came to Japan from Korea _via_ China in 552 A.D. It was
+already a thousand years old and had, before it reached Japan, broken
+up into numerous sects and subsects differing widely from each other
+and from the original teaching of Sakya Muni. After two centuries of
+propagandism it conquered the land and absorbed the religious life of
+the people, though Shinto was never entirely suppressed. "All
+education was for centuries in Buddhist hands; Buddhism introduced
+art, and medicine, molded the folklore of the country, created its
+dramatic poetry, deeply influenced politics and every sphere of social
+and intellectual activity. In a word, Buddhism was the teacher under
+whose instruction the Japanese nation grew up. As a nation they are
+now grossly forgetful of this fact. Ask an educated Japanese a
+question about Buddhism, and ten to one he will smile in your face. A
+hundred to one that he knows nothing about the subject and glories in
+his nescience." "The complicated metaphysics of Buddhism have awakened
+no interest in the Japanese nation. Another fact, curious but true, is
+that these people have never been at the trouble to translate the
+Buddhist canon into their own language. The priests use a Chinese
+version, and the laity no version at all, though ... they would seem
+to have been given to searching the Scriptures a few hundred years
+ago. The Buddhist religion was disestablished and disendowed during
+the years 1871-74, a step taken in consequence of the temporary
+ascendency of Shinto." Although Confucianism took a strong hold on the
+people in the early part of the seventeenth century, yet its influence
+was limited to the educated and ruling classes. The vast multitude
+still remained Shinto-Buddhists.
+
+As for doctrine, philosophic Buddhism with its dogmas of salvation
+through intellectual enlightenment, by means of self-perfecting, with
+its goal of absorption into Nirvana, has doubtless been the belief and
+aim of the few. But such Buddhism was too deep for the multitudes. "By
+the aid of hoben, or pious devices, the priesthood has played into the
+hands of popular superstition. Here, as elsewhere, there have been
+evolved charms, amulets, pilgrimages, and gorgeous temple services, in
+which the people worship not only the Buddha, who was himself an
+agnostic, but his disciple, and even such abstractions as Amida, which
+are mistaken for actual divine personages."[CC] The deities of Shinto
+have been more or less confused with those of popular Buddhism; in
+some cases, inextricably so.
+
+_Confucianism_, as known in Japan, was the elaborated doctrine of
+Confucius. "He confined himself to practical details of morals and
+government, and took submission to parents and political rulers as the
+corner stone of his system. The result is a set of moral truths--some
+would say truisms--of a very narrow scope, and of dry ceremonial
+observances, political rather than personal." "Originally introduced
+into Japan early in the Christian era, along with other products of
+Chinese civilization, the Confucian philosophy lay dormant during the
+middle ages, the period of the supremacy of Buddhism. It awoke with a
+start in the early part of the seventeenth century when Iccasu, the
+great warrior, ruler, and patron of learning, caused the Confucian
+classics to be printed in Japan for the first time. During the two
+hundred and fifty years that followed, the intellect of the country
+was molded by Confucian ideas. Confucius himself had, it is true,
+labored for the establishment of a centralized monarchy. But his main
+doctrine of unquestioning submission to rulers and parents fitted in
+perfectly with the feudal ideas of Old Japan; and the conviction of
+the paramount importance of such subordination lingers on, an element
+of stability, in spite of the recent social cataclysm which has
+involved Japanese Confucianism, properly so-called, in the ruin of all
+other Japanese institutions."[CD]
+
+_Christianity_ was first brought to Japan by Francis Xavier, who
+landed in Kagoshima in 1549. His zeal knew no bounds and his results
+were amazing. "The converts were drawn from all classes alike.
+Noblemen, Buddhist priests, men of learning, embraced the faith with
+the same alacrity as did the poor and ignorant.... One hundred and
+thirty-eight European missionaries" were then on the field. "Until the
+breaking out of the persecution of 1596 the work of evangelization
+proceeded apace. The converts numbered ten thousand yearly, though all
+were fully aware of the risk to which they exposed themselves by
+embracing the Catholic faith." "At the beginning of the seventeenth
+century, the Japanese Christians numbered about one million, the fruit
+of half a century of apostolic labor accomplished in the midst of
+comparative peace. Another half-century of persecution was about to
+ruin this flourishing church, to cut off its pastors, more than two
+hundred of whom suffered martyrdom, and to leave its laity without the
+offices of religion.... The edicts ordering these measures remained in
+force for over two centuries." Tens of thousands of Christians
+preferred death to perjury. It was supposed that Christianity was
+entirely exterminated by the fearful and prolonged persecutions. Yet
+in the vicinity of Nagasaki over four thousand Christians were
+discovered in 1867, who were again subject to persecution until the
+pressure of foreign lands secured religious toleration in Japan.
+
+Protestant Christianity came to Japan with the beginning of the new
+era, and has been preached with much zeal and moderate success. For a
+time it seemed destined to sweep the land even more astonishingly than
+did Romanism in the sixteenth century. But in 1888 an anti-foreign
+reaction began in every department of Japanese life and thought which
+has put a decided check on the progress of Christian missions.
+
+This must suffice for our historical review of the religious life of
+the Japanese. Were we to forget Japan's long and repeated isolations,
+and also to ignore fluctuations of belief and of other religious
+phenomena in other lands, we might say, as many do, that the Japanese
+have inherently shallow and changeable religious convictions. But
+remembering these facts, and recalling the persecutions of Buddhists
+by each other, of Christianity by the state, and knowing to-day many
+earnest, self-sacrificing and persistent Christians, I am convinced
+that such a judgment is mistaken. There are other and sufficient
+reasons to account for this appearance of changeableness in religion.
+
+I close this chapter with a single observation on the religious
+history just outlined. Bearing in mind the great changes that have
+come over Japanese religious thinking and forms of religion I ask if
+religious phenomena are the expressions of the race nature, as some
+maintain, and if this nature is inherent and unchangeable, how are
+such profound changes to be accounted for? If the religious character
+of the Japanese people is inherent, how is it conceivable that they
+should so easily adopt foreign religions, even to the exclusion of
+their own native religion, as did those who became Buddhist or
+Confucian or Christian? I conclude from these facts, and they are
+paralleled in the history of many other peoples, that even religious
+characteristics are not dependent on biological, but are wholly
+dependent on social evolution. It seems to me capable of the clearest
+proof that the religious phenomena of any age are dependent on the
+general development of the intellect, on the ruling ideas, and on the
+entire conditions of the civilization of the age rather than on brain
+structure or essential race nature.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+SOME RELIGIOUS CONCEPTIONS
+
+
+The conceptions of the common people in regard to deity are chaotic.
+They believe in local spirits who are to be worshiped; some of these
+are of human origin, and some antedate all human life. The gods of the
+Shinto pantheon are "yaoyorodzu" in number, eight thousand myriads;
+yet in their "norito," or prayer rituals, reference is made not only
+to the "yaoyorodzu" who live in the air, but also to the "yaoyorodzu"
+who live on earth, and even to the "yaoyorodzu" who live beneath the
+earth. If we add these together there must be at least twenty-four
+thousand myriads of gods. These of course include sun, moon, stars,
+and all the forces of nature, as well as the spirits of men. Popular
+Buddhism accepts the gods of Shinto and brings in many more,
+worshiping not only the Buddha and his immediate "rakan," disciples,
+five hundred in number, but numberless abstractions of ideal
+qualities, such as the varieties of Kwannon (Avelokitesvara, gods and
+goddesses of mercy), Amida (Amitabha, the ideal of boundless light),
+Jizo (Kshitigarbha, the helper of those in trouble, lost children, and
+pregnant women), Emma O (Yama-raja, ruler of Buddhist hells), Fudo
+(Achala, the "immovable," "unchangeable"), and many others. Popular
+Buddhism also worships every man dead or living who has become a
+"hotoke," that is, has attained Buddhahood and has entered Nirvana.
+The gods of Japan are innumerable in theory and multitudinous in
+practice. Not only are there gods of goodness but also gods of lust
+and of evil, to whom robbers and harlots may pray for success and
+blessing.
+
+In the Japanese pantheon there is no supreme god, such, for instance,
+as the Roman Jupiter, or the Greek Chronos, nor is there a
+thoroughgoing divine hierarchy.
+
+According to the common view (although there is no definite thought
+about it), the idea seems to be that the universe with its laws and
+nature were already existent before the gods appeared on the scene;
+they created specific places, such as Japan, out of already existing
+material. Neither in Shinto nor in popular Buddhism is the conception
+formed of a primal fount of all being with its nature and laws. In
+this respect Japanese thought is like all primitive religious thought.
+There is no word in the Japanese language corresponding to the English
+term "God." The nearest approach to it are the Confucian terms
+"Jo-tei," "Supreme Emperor," "Ten," "Heaven," and "Ten-tei," "Heavenly
+Emperor"; but all of these terms are Chinese, they are therefore of
+late appearance in Japan, and represent rather conceptions of educated
+and Confucian classes than the ideas of the masses. These terms
+approach closely to the idea of monotheism; but though the doctrine
+may be discovered lying implicit in these words and ideas it was never
+developed. Whether "Heaven" was to be conceived as a person, or merely
+as fate, was not clearly thought out; some expressions point in one
+direction while others point in the other.
+
+I may here call attention to a significant fact in the history of
+recent Christian work in Japan. Although the serious-minded Japanese
+is first attracted to Christianity by the character of its ethical
+thought--so much resembling, also so much surpassing that of
+Confucius, it is none the less true that monotheism is another
+powerful source of attraction. I have been repeatedly told by
+Christians that the first religious satisfaction they ever experienced
+was upon their discovery of monotheism. How it affected Dr. Neesima,
+readers of his life cannot have overlooked. He is a type of
+multitudes. In the earlier days of Christian work many felt that they
+had become Christians upon rejection of polytheism and acceptance of
+monotheism. And in truth they were so far forth Christian, although
+they knew little of Christ, and felt little need of His help as a
+personal Saviour. The weakness of the Church in recent years is due in
+part, I doubt not, to the acceptance into its membership of numbers
+who were, properly speaking, monotheistic, but not in the complete
+sense of the term Christian. Their discovery later that more was
+needed than the intellectual acceptance of monotheism ere they could
+be considered, or even be, truly "Christian," has led many such
+"believers" to abandon their relations with the Church. This, while on
+many accounts to be regretted, was nevertheless inevitable. The bare
+acceptance of the monotheistic idea does not secure that
+transformation of heart and produce that warmth of living faith which
+are essential elements in the altruistic life demanded of the
+Christian.
+
+Nor is it difficult to understand why monotheism has proved such an
+attraction to the Japanese when we consider that through it they first
+recognized a unity in the universe and even in their own lives.
+Nature, and human nature took on an intelligibility which they never
+had had under the older philosophy. History likewise was seen to have
+a meaning and an order, to say nothing of a purpose, which the
+non-Christian faiths did not themselves see and could not give to
+their devotees. Furthermore the monotheistic idea furnished a
+satisfactory background and explanation for the exact sciences. If
+there is but one God, who is the fount and cause of all being, it is
+easy to see why the truths of science should be universal and
+absolute, rather than local and diverse, as they would be were they
+subject to the jurisdiction of various local deities. The universality
+of nature's laws was inconceivable under polytheism. Monotheism thus
+found a ready access to many minds. Polytheism pure and simple is the
+belief of no educated Japanese to-day. He is a monist of some kind or
+other. Philosophic Buddhism always was monistic, but not monotheistic.
+Thinking Confucianists were also monistic. But neither philosophic
+Buddhism nor Confucianism emphasized their monistic elements; they did
+not realize the importance to popular thought of monistic conceptions.
+But possessing these ideas, and being now in contact with aggressive
+Christian monotheism, they are beginning to emphasize this truth.
+
+As Japan has had no adequate conception of God, her conception of man
+has been of necessity defective. Indeed, the cause of her inadequate
+conception of God is due in large measure to her inadequate conception
+of man, which we have seen to be a necessary consequence of the
+primitive communal order. Since, however, we have already given
+considerable attention to Japan's inadequate conception of man, we
+need do no more than refer to it in this connection.
+
+Corresponding to her imperfect doctrines of God and of man is her
+doctrine of sin. That the Japanese sense of sin is slight is a fact
+generally admitted. This is the universal experience of the
+missionary. Many Japanese with whom I have conversed seem to have no
+consciousness of it whatever. Indeed, it is a difficult matter to
+speak of to the Japanese, not only because of the etiquette involved,
+but for the deeper reason of the deficiency of the language. There
+exists no term in Japanese which corresponds to the Christian word
+"sin." To tell a man he is a sinner without stopping to explain what
+one means would be an insult, for he is not conscious of having broken
+any of the laws of the land. Yet too much stress must not be laid on
+this argument from the language, for the Buddhistic vocabulary
+furnishes a number of terms which refer to the crime of transgressing
+not the laws of the land, but those of Buddha.
+
+In Shinto, sin is little, if anything, more than physical impurity.
+Although Buddhism brought a higher conception of religion for the
+initiated few, it gave no help to the ignorant multitudes, rather it
+riveted their superstitions upon them. It spoke of law indeed, and
+lust and sin; and of dreadful punishments for sin; but when it
+explained sin it made its nature too shallow, being merely the result
+of mental confusion; salvation, then, became simply intellectual
+enlightenment; it also made the consequences of sin too remote and the
+escape from them too easy. The doctrine of "Don," suddenness of
+salvation, the many external and entirely formal rites, short
+pilgrimages to famous shrines, the visiting of some neighboring temple
+having miniature models of all the other efficacious shrines
+throughout the land, the wearing of charms, the buying of "o fuda,"
+and even the single utterance of certain magic prayers, were taught
+to be quite enough for the salvation of the common man from the worst
+of sins. Where release is so easily obtained, the estimate of the
+heinousness of sin is correspondingly slight. How different was the
+consciousness of sin and the conception of its nature developed by the
+Jewish worship with its system of sin offerings! Life for life.
+Whatever we may think of the efficacy of offering an animal as an
+expiation for sin, it certainly contributed far more toward deepening
+the sense of sin than the rites in common practice among the
+Buddhists. So far as I know, human or animal sacrifice has never been
+known in Japan.
+
+In response to the not unlikely criticism that sacrifice is the result
+of profound sense of sin and not its cause, I reply that it is both.
+The profound sense is the experience of the few at the beginning; the
+practice educates the multitudes and begets that feeling in the
+nation.
+
+Ceremonial purification is an old rite in Japan. In this connection we
+naturally think of the "Chozu-bachi" which may be found before every
+Shinto shrine, containing the "holy water" with which to rinse the
+mouth and wash the hands. Pilgrims and worshipers invariably make use
+of this water, wiping their hands on the towels provided for the
+purpose by the faithful. To our eyes, few customs in Japan are more
+conducive to the spread of impurity and infectious disease than this
+rite of ceremonial purification. No better means could be devised for
+the wide dissemination of the skin diseases which are so common. The
+reformed religion of New Japan--whether Buddhist, Shinto, or
+Christian--could do few better services for the people at large than
+by entering on a crusade against this religious rite. It could and
+should preach the doctrine that sin and defilement of the hearts are
+not removed by such an easy method as the rite implies and the masses
+believe. If retained as a symbol, the purification rite should at
+least be reformed as a practice.
+
+Whether the use of purificatory water is to be traced to the sense of
+moral or spiritual sin is doubtful to my mind; in view of the general
+nature of primitive Shinto. The interpretation given the system by
+W.E. Griffis, in his volume on the "Religions of Japan," is
+suggestive, but in view of all the facts does not seem conclusive.
+"One of the most remarkable features of Shinto" he writes, "was the
+emphasis laid on cleanliness. Pollution was calamity, defilement was
+sin, and physical purity at least was holiness. Everything that could
+in any way soil the body or clothing was looked upon with abhorrence
+and detestation."[CE] The number of specifications given in this
+connection is worthy of careful perusal. But it is a strange nemesis
+of history that the sense of physical pollution should develop a
+religious rite fitted to become the very means for the dissemination
+of physical pollution and disease.
+
+Japanese personal cleanliness is often connected in the descriptions
+of foreigners with ceremonial purification, but the facts are much
+exaggerated. In contrast to nearly if not quite all non-Christian
+peoples, the Japanese are certainly astonishingly cleanly in their
+habits. But it is wholly unnecessary to exaggerate the facts. The
+"tatami," or straw-mats, an inch or more in thickness, give to the
+room an appearance of cleanliness which usually belies the truth. The
+multitudes of fleas that infest the normal Japanese home are
+convincing proof of the real state of the "tatami." There are those
+who declare that a Japanese crowd has the least offensive odor of any
+people in the world. One writer goes so far as to state that not only
+is there no unpleasant odor whatever, but that there is even a
+pleasant intimation of lavender about their exhalations. This exactly
+contradicts my experience. Not to mention the offensive oil with which
+all women anoint their hair to give it luster and stiffness, the
+Japanese habit of wearing heavy cotton wadded clothing, with little or
+no underwear, produces the inevitable result in the atmosphere of any
+closed room. In cold weather I always find it necessary to throw open
+all the doors and windows of my study or parlor, after Bible classes
+of students or even after the visits of cultured and well-to-do
+guests. That the Japanese bathe so frequently is certainly an
+interesting fact and a valuable feature of their civilization; it
+indicates no little degree of cleanliness; but for that, their
+clothing would become even more disagreeable than it is, and the evil
+effect upon themselves of wearing soiled garments would be much
+greater. In point of fact, their frequent baths do not wholly remove
+the need of change in clothing. To a Japanese the size of the weekly
+wash of a foreigner seems extravagant.
+
+As to the frequent bathing, its cleanliness is exaggerated by Western
+thought, for instead of supplying fresh water for each person, the
+Japanese public baths consist usually of a large tank used by
+multitudes in common. Clean water is allowed for the face, but the
+main tank is supplied with clean hot water only once each day. In
+Kumamoto, schoolgirls living with us invariably asked permission to go
+to the bath early in the day that they might have the first use of the
+water. They said that by night it was so foul they could not bear to
+use it. Each hotel has its own private bath for guests; this is
+usually heated in the afternoon, and the guests take their baths from
+four o'clock on until midnight, the waiting girls of the hotel using
+it last. My only experience with public baths has been mentioned
+already. At first glance the conditions were reassuring, for a large
+stream of hot water was running in constantly, and the water in the
+tank itself was quite transparent. But on entering I was surprised,
+not to say horrified, to see floating along the margin of the tank and
+on the bottom of it suggestive proofs of previous bathers. On inquiry
+I learned that the tank was never washed out, nor the water entirely
+discharged at a single time; the natural overflow along the edge of
+the tank being considered sufficient. In the interest of accuracy it
+is desirable to add that New Japan is making progress in the matter of
+public baths. In some of the larger cities, I am told, provision is
+sometimes made for entirely fresh water for each bather in separate
+bathrooms.
+
+In view of these facts--as unpleasant to mention as they are essential
+to a faithful description of the habits of the people--it is clear
+that the "horror of physical impurity" has not been, and is not now,
+so great as some would have us believe. Whatever may have been the
+condition in ancient times, it would be difficult to believe that the
+rite of ceremonial purification could arise out of the present
+practices and habits of thought. One may venture the inquiry whether
+the custom of using the "purificatory water" may not have been
+introduced from abroad.
+
+But whatever be the present thought of the people, on the general
+subject of sin, it may be shown to be due to the prevailing system of
+ideas, moral and religious, rather than to the inherent racial
+character. In an interesting article by Mr. G. Takahashi on the "Past,
+Present, and Future of Christianity in Japan" I find the statement
+that the preaching of the monks who came to Japan in the sixteenth
+century was of such a nature as to produce a very deep consciousness
+of sin among the converts. "The Christians or martyrs repeatedly cried
+out 'we miserable sinners,' 'Christ died for us,' etc., as their
+letters abundantly prove. It was because of this that their
+consciences were aroused by the burning words of Christ, and kept
+awake by means of contrition and confession." Among modern Christians
+the sense of sin is much more clear and pronounced than among the
+unconverted. Individual instances of extreme consciousness of sin are
+not unknown, especially under the earlier Protestant preaching. If the
+Christians of the last decade have less sense of sin, it is due to the
+changed character of recent preaching, in consequence of the changed
+conception of Christianity widely accepted in Protestant lands. Who
+will undertake to say that Christians in New England of the nineteenth
+century have the same oppressive sense of sin that was customary in
+the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries? The sense of sin
+is due more to the character of the dominant religious ideas of the
+age than to brain structure or to race nature. I cannot agree with Mr.
+Takahashi that "To be religious one needs a Semitic tinge of mind." It
+is not a question of mind, of race nature, but of dominant ideas.
+
+In this connection I may refer to an incident that came under my
+notice some years ago. A young man applied for membership in the
+Kumamoto Church, who at one time had been a student in one of my Bible
+classes. I had not known that he had received any special help from
+his study with me, until I heard his statement as to how he had
+discovered his need of a Saviour, and had found that need satisfied in
+Christ. In his statement before the examining committee of the church,
+he said that when he first read the thirteenth chapter of 1
+Corinthians, he was so impressed with its beauty as a poem that he
+wrote it out entire on one of the fusuma (light paper doors) of his
+room, and each morning, as he arose, he read it. This practice
+continued several weeks. Then, as we continued our study of the Bible,
+we took up the third chapter of John, and when he came to the
+sixteenth verse, he was so impressed with its statement that he wrote
+that beside the poem from Corinthians, and read them together.
+Gradually this daily reading, together with the occasional sermons and
+other Christian addresses which he heard at the Boys' School, led him
+to desire to secure for himself the love described by Paul, and to
+know more vitally the love of God described by John. It occurred to
+him, that, to secure these ends, he should pray. Upon doing so he said
+that, for the first time in his life, his unworthiness and his really
+sinful nature overwhelmed him. This was, of course, but the beginning
+of his Christian life. He began then to search the Scriptures in
+earnest, and with increasing delight. It was not long before he wished
+to make public confession of his faith, and thus identify himself with
+the Christian community. This brief account of the way in which this
+young man was brought to Christ illustrates a good many points, but
+that for which I have cited it is the testimony it bears to the fact
+that under similar circumstances the human heart undergoes very much
+the same religious experience, whatever be the race or nationality of
+the individual.
+
+In regard to the future life, Shinto has little specific doctrine. It
+certainly implies the continued existence of the soul after death, as
+its ancestral worship shows, but its conception as to the future state
+is left vague in the extreme. Confucius purposely declined to teach
+anything on this point, and, in part, for this reason, it has been
+maintained that Confucianism cannot properly be called a religion.
+Buddhism brought to Japan an elaborate system of eschatological ideas,
+and so far as the common people of Japan have any conception of the
+future life, it may be attributed to Buddhistic teachings. Into their
+nature I need not inquire at any length. According to popular
+Buddhism, the future world, or more properly speaking, worlds (for
+there are ten of them, into any one of which a soul may be born either
+immediately or in the course of its future transmigrations), does not
+differ in any vital way from the present world. It is a world of
+material blessings or woes; the successive stages or worlds are graded
+one above the other in fantastic ways. Salvation consists in passing
+to higher grades of life, the final or perfect stage being paradise,
+which, once attained, can never be lost. Transmigration is universal,
+the period of life in each world being determined by the merits and
+demerits of the individual soul.
+
+Here we must consider two widely used terms "ingwa" and "mei." The
+first of these is Buddhistic and the other Confucianistic; though
+differing much in origin and meaning, yet in the end they amount to
+much the same thing. "Ingwa" is the law of cause and effect. According
+to the Buddhistic teaching, however, the "in," or cause, is in one
+world, while the "gwa," or effect, is in the other. The suffering, for
+instance, or any misfortune that overtakes one in this present life,
+is the "gwa" or effect of what was done in the previous, and is thus
+inevitable. The individual is working off in this life the "gwa" of
+his last life, and he is also working up the "in" of the next He is
+thus in a kind of vise. His present is absolutely determined for him
+by his past, and in turn is irrevocably fixing his future. Such is the
+Buddhistic "wheel of the law." The common explanation of misfortune,
+sickness, or disease, or any calamity, is that it is the result of
+"ingwa," and that there is, therefore, no help for it. The paralyzing
+nature of this conception on the development of character, or on
+activity of any kind, is apparent not only theoretically but actually.
+As an escape from the inexorable fatality of this scheme of thought,
+the Buddhist faith of the common people has resorted to magic. Magic
+prayers, consisting of a few mystic syllables of whose meaning the
+worshiper may be quite ignorant, are the means for overcoming the
+inexorableness of "ingwa," both for this life and the next. "Namu
+Amida Butsu," "Namu Myo Ho Ren Ge Kyo," "Namu Hen Jo Kongo," are the
+most common of such magic formulæ. These prayers are heard on the lips
+of tens of thousands of pious pilgrims, not only at the temples, but
+as they pass along the highways. It is believed that each repetition
+secures its reward. Popular Buddhism's appeal to magic was not only
+winked at by philosophical Buddhism, but it was encouraged. Magic was
+justified by religious philosophy, and many a "hoben," "pious device,"
+for saving the ignorant was invented by the priesthood. It will be
+apparent that while Buddhism has in certain respects a vigorous system
+of punishment for sin, yet its method of relief is such that the
+common people can gain only the most shallow and superficial views of
+salvation. Buddhism has not served to deepen the sense of
+responsibility, nor helped to build up character. That the more
+serious-minded thinkers of the nation have, as a rule, rejected
+Buddhism is not strange.
+
+One point of great interest for us is the fact that this
+eschatological and soteriological system was imported, and is not the
+spontaneous product of Japan. The wide range of national religious
+characteristics thus clearly traceable to Buddhistic influence shows
+beyond doubt how large a part of a nation's character is due to the
+system of thought that for one reason or another prevails, rather than
+to the essential race character.
+
+The other term mentioned above, "mei," literally means "command" or
+"decree"; but while the English terms definitely imply a real being
+who decides, decrees, and commands, the term "mei" is indeterminate on
+this point. It is frequently joined to the word "Ten," or Heaven;
+"Ten-mei," Heaven's decree, seeming to imply a personality in the
+background of the thought. Yet, as I have already pointed out, it is
+only implied; in actual usage it means the fate decreed by Heaven;
+that is, fated fate, or absolute fate. The Chinese and the Japanese
+alike failed to inquire minutely as to the implication of the deepest
+conceptions of their philosophy. But "mei" is commonly used entirely
+unconnected with "Ten," and in this case its best translation into
+English is probably "fate." In this sense it is often used. Unlike
+Buddhism, however, Confucianism provided no way of escape from "mei"
+except moral conduct. One of its important points of superiority was
+its freedom from appeal to magic in any form, and its reliance on
+sincerity of heart and correctness of conduct.
+
+Few foreigners have failed to comment on the universal use by the
+Japanese of the phrase "Shikataga nai," "it can't be helped." The
+ready resignation to "fate," as they deem it, even in little things
+about the home and in the daily life, is astonishing to Occidentals.
+Where we hold ourselves and each other to sharp personal
+responsibility, the sense of subjection to fate often leads them to
+condone mistakes with the phrase "Shikataga nai."
+
+But this characteristic is not peculiar to Japan. China and India are
+likewise marked by it. During the famines in India, it was frequently
+remarked how the Hindus would settle down to starve in their huts in
+submission to fate, where Westerners would have been doing something
+by force, fighting even the decrees of heaven, if needful. But it is
+important to note that this characteristic in Japan is undergoing
+rapid change. The spirit of absolute submission, so characteristic of
+the common people of Old Japan, is passing away and self-assertion is
+taking its place. Education and developing intelligence are driving
+out the fear of fate. Had our estimate of the Japanese race character
+been based wholly on the history of Old Japan, it might have been easy
+to conclude that the spirit of submission to rulers and to fate was a
+national characteristic due to racial nature; but every added year of
+New Japan shows how erroneous that view would have been. Thus we see
+again that the characteristics of Japan, Old and New, are not due to
+race nature, but to the prevailing civilization in the broadest sense
+of the term. The religious characteristics of a people depend
+primarily on the dominant religious ideas, not on the inherent
+religious nature.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+SOME RELIGIOUS PRACTICES
+
+
+Among the truly religious sentiments of the Japanese are those of
+loyalty and filial piety. Having already given them considerable
+attention, we need not delay long upon them here. The point to be
+emphasized is that these two principles are exalted into powerful
+religious sentiments, which have permeated and dominated the entire
+life of the nation. Not only were they at the root of courage, of
+fidelity, of obedience, and of all the special virtues of Old Japan,
+but they were also at the root of the larger part of her religion.
+These emotions, sentiments, and beliefs have built 190,000 Shinto
+shrines. Loyalty to the daimyo was the vital part of the religion of
+the past, as loyalty to the Emperor is the vital part of the popular
+religion of to-day. Next to loyalty came filial piety; it not only
+built the cemeteries, but also maintained god-shelves and family
+ancestral worship throughout the centuries. One of the first questions
+which many an inquirer about Christianity has put to me is as to the
+way we treat our parents living and dead, and the tombs and memories
+of our ancestors. These two religious sentiments of loyalty and filial
+piety were essential elements of primitive Shinto. The imported
+religions, particularly Confucianism and Christianity, served to
+strengthen them. In view of the indubitable religious nature of these
+two sentiments it is difficult to see how anyone can deny the name of
+religion to the religions that inculcate them, Shinto and
+Confucianism. It shows how defective is the current conception of the
+real nature of religion.
+
+Despite the reality of these religious, sentiments, however, many
+things are done in Japan quite opposed to them. Of course this is so.
+These violations spring from irreligion, and irreligion is found in
+every land. Furthermore, many things done in the name of loyalty and
+piety seem to us Westerners exceedingly whimsical and illogical. Deeds
+which to us seem disloyal and unfilial receive no rebuke. Filial piety
+often seems to us more active toward the dead than toward the living.
+
+Closely connected with loyalty and filial piety, and in part their
+expression, is one further religious sentiment, namely, gratitude. In
+his chapter in "Kokoro" "About Ancestor-Worship," Mr. Hearn makes some
+pertinent remarks as to the nature of Shinto. "Foremost among the
+moral sentiments of Shinto is that of loving gratitude to the past."
+This he attributes to the fact that "To Japanese thought the dead are
+not less real than the living. They take part in the daily life of the
+people, sharing the humblest sorrows and the humblest joys ... and
+they are universally thought of as finding pleasure in the offerings
+made to them or the honors conferred upon them." There is much truth
+in these statements, though I by no means share the opinion that in
+connection with the Japanese belief in the dead there "have been
+evolved moral sentiments wholly unknown to Western civilization," or
+that their "loving gratitude to the past" is "a sentiment having no
+real correspondence in our own emotional life." Mr. Hearn may be
+presumed to be speaking for himself in these matters; but he certainly
+does not correctly represent the thought or the feelings of the circle
+of life known to me. The feeling of gratitude of Western peoples is as
+real and as strong as that of the Japanese, though it does not find
+expression in the worship of the dead. That the Japanese are profuse
+in their expressions of gratitude to the past and to the powers that
+be is beyond dispute. It crops out in sermons and public speeches, as
+well as in the numberless temples to national heroes.
+
+But it is a matter of surprise to note how often there is apparent
+ingratitude toward living benefactors. Some years ago I heard a
+conversation between some young men who had enjoyed special
+opportunities of travel and of study abroad by the liberality of
+American gentlemen.
+
+It appeared that the young men considered that instead of receiving
+any special favors, they were conferring them on their benefactors by
+allowing the latter to help such brilliant youth as they, whose
+subsequent careers in Japan would preserve to posterity the names of
+their benefactors. I have had some experience in the line of giving
+assistance to aspiring students, in certain cases helping them for
+years; a few have given evidence of real gratitude; but a large
+proportion have seemed singularly deficient in this grace. It is my
+impression that relatively few of the scores of students who have
+received a large proportion of their expenses from the mission, while
+pursuing their studies, have felt that they were thereby under any
+special debt of gratitude. An experience that a missionary had with a
+class to which he had been teaching the Bible in English for about a
+year is illustrative. At the close of the school year they invited him
+to a dinner where they made some very pleasant speeches, and bade each
+other farewell for the summer. The teacher was much gratified with the
+result of the year's work, feeling naturally that these boys were his
+firm friends. But the following September when he returned, not only
+did the class not care to resume their studies with him, but they
+appeared to desire to have nothing whatever to do with him. On the
+street many of them would not even recognize him. Other similar cases
+come to mind, and it should be remembered that missionaries give such
+instruction freely and always at the request of the recipient. In the
+case cited the teacher came to the conclusion that the elaborate
+dinner and fine farewell speeches were considered by the young men as
+a full discharge of all debts of gratitude and a full compensation for
+services. This, however, is to be said: the city itself was at that
+time the seat of a determined antagonism to Christianity and, of
+course, to the Christian missionary; and this fact may in part, but
+not wholly, account for the appearance of ingratitude.
+
+The Japanese pride themselves on their gratitude. It is, however,
+limited in its scope. It is vigorous toward the dead and toward the
+Emperor, but as a grace of daily life it is not conspicuous.
+
+Few achievements of the Japanese have been more remarkable than the
+suppression of certain religious phenomena. Any complete statement of
+the religious characteristics of the Japanese fifty years ago would
+have included most revolting and immoral practices under the guise of
+religion. Until suppressed by the government in the early years of
+Meiji there were in many parts of Japan phallic shrines of
+considerable popularity, at which, on festivals at least, sexual
+immorality seemed to be an essential part of the worship. At Uji, not
+far from Kyoto, the capital of the Empire, for a thousand years and
+more, and the center of Buddhism, there was a shrine of great repute
+and popularity. Thither resorted the multitudes for bacchanalian
+purposes. Under the auspices of the Goddess Hashihime and the God
+Sumiyoshi, free rein was given to lust. Since the beginning of the new
+régime such revels have been forbidden and apparently stopped; the
+phallic symbols themselves are no longer visible, although it is
+asserted by the keeper of the shrine that they are still there,
+concealed in the boxes on the pedestals formerly occupied by the
+symbols. When I visited the place some years since with a fellow
+missionary we were told that multitudes still come there to pray to
+the deities; those seeking divorce pray to the female deity, while
+those seeking a favorable marriage pray to the male deity; on asking
+as to the proportion of the worshipers, we were told that there are
+about ten of the former to one of the latter, a significant indication
+of the unhappiness of many a home. Prof. Edmund Buckley has made a
+special study of the subject of phallic worship in Japan; in his
+thesis on the topic he gives a list of thirteen places where these
+symbols of phallic worship might be seen a few years since. It is
+significant that at Uji, not a stone's throw from the phallic shrine,
+is a temple to the God Agata, whose special function is the cure of
+venereal diseases.
+
+But though phallic worship and its accompanying immorality have been
+extirpated, immorality in connection with religion is still rampant in
+certain quarters. Not far from the great temples at Ise, the center of
+Shintoism and the goal for half a million pilgrims yearly, are large
+and prosperous brothels patronized by and existing for the sake of
+the pilgrims. A still more popular resort for pilgrims is that at
+Kompira, whither, as we have seen, some 900,000 come each year; here
+the best hotels, and presumably the others also, are provided with
+prostitutes who also serve as waiting girls; on the arrival of a guest
+he is customarily asked whether or not the use of a prostitute shall
+be included in his hotel bill. It seems strange, indeed, that the
+government should take such pains to suppress phallicism, and allow
+such immorality to go on under the eaves of the greatest national
+shrines; for these shrines are not private affairs; the government
+takes possession of the gifts, and pays the regular salaries of the
+attending priests. It would appear from its success in the
+extermination of distinctly phallic worship that the government could
+put a stop to all public prostitution in connection with religion if
+it cared to do so.
+
+One point of interest in connection with the above facts is that the
+old religions, however much of force, beauty, and truth we may concede
+to them, have never made warfare against these obscene forms of
+worship, nor against the notorious immorality of their devotees.
+Whatever may be said of the profound philosophy of life involved in
+phallic worship, for many hundreds of years it has been a source of
+outrageous immorality. Nevertheless, there has never been any
+continued and effective effort on the part of the higher types of
+religion to exterminate the lower. But Japan is not peculiar in this
+respect. India is even now amazingly immoral in certain forms of her
+worship.
+
+Another point of interest in this connection is that the change of the
+nation in its attitude to this form of religion was due largely,
+probably wholly, to contact with the nations of the West. The
+uprooting of phallic worship was due, not to a moral reformation, but
+to a political ambition. It was carried out, not in deference to
+public opinion, but wholly by government command, though without doubt
+the nobler opinion of the land approved of the government action. But
+even this nobler public sentiment was aroused by the Occidental
+stimulus. The success of the effort must be attributed not a little to
+the age-long national custom of submitting absolutely to governmental
+initiative and command.
+
+Another point of interest is that, in consequence of official
+pressure, the religious character of a large number of the people
+seems to have undergone a radical change. The ordinary traveler in
+Japan would not suspect that phallicism had ever been a prominent
+feature of Japanese religious life. Only an inquisitive seeker can now
+find the slightest evidences of this once popular cult. Here we have
+an apparent change in the character of a people sudden and complete,
+induced almost wholly by external causes. It shows that the previous
+characteristic was not so deeply rooted in the physical or spiritual
+nature of the race as many would have us believe. Can we escape the
+conclusion that national characteristics are due much more to the
+circle of dominant ideas and actual practices, than to the inherent
+race nature?
+
+The way in which phallicism has been suppressed during the present era
+raises the general question of religious liberty in Japan. In this
+respect, no less than in many others, a change has taken place so
+great as to amount to a revolution. During two hundred and fifty years
+Christianity was strictly forbidden on pain of extreme penalties. In
+1872 the edict against Christianity was removed, free preaching was
+allowed, and for a time it seemed as if the whole nation would become
+Christian in a few decades; even non-Christians urged that
+Christianity be made the state religion. What an amazing volte-face!
+Religious liberty is now guaranteed by the constitution promulgated in
+1888. There are those who assert that until Christianity invaded
+Japan, religious freedom was perfect; persecutions were unknown. This
+is a mistake. When Buddhism came to Japan, admission was first sought
+from the authorities, and for a time was refused. When various sects
+arose, persecutions were severe. We have seen how belief in
+Christianity was forbidden under pain of death for more than two
+hundred and fifty years. Under this edict, many thousand Japanese
+Christians and over two hundred European missionaries were put to
+death. Yet, on the whole, it may be said that Old Japan enjoyed no
+little religious freedom. Indeed, the same man might worship freely
+at all the shrines and temples in the land. To this day multitudes
+have never asked themselves whether they are Shinto or Buddhist or
+Confucianist. The reason for this religious eclecticism was the
+fractional character of the old religions; they supplemented each
+other. There was no collision between them in doctrine or in morals.
+The religious freedom was, therefore, not one of principle but of
+indifference. As Rome was tolerant of all religions which made no
+exclusive claims, but fiercely persecuted Christianity, so Japan was
+tolerant of the two religions that found their way into her territory
+because they made no claims of exclusiveness. But a religion that
+demanded the giving up of rivals was feared and forbidden.
+
+New Japan, however, following Anglo-Saxon example, has definitely
+adopted religious freedom as a principle. First tacitly allowed after
+the abolition of the edict against Christianity in 1872, it was later
+publicly guaranteed by the constitution promulgated in 1888. Since
+that date there has been perfect religious liberty for the individual.
+
+Yet this statement must be carefully guarded. If we may judge from
+some recent decrees of the Educational Department, it would appear
+that a large and powerful section of the nation is still ignorant of
+the real nature and significance of "religious liberty." Under the
+plea of maintaining secular education, the Educational Department has
+forbidden informal and private Christian teaching, even in private
+schools. An adequate statement of the present struggle for complete
+religious liberty would occupy many pages. We note but one important
+point.
+
+In the very act of forbidding religious instruction in all schools the
+Educational Department is virtually establishing a brand-new religion
+for Japan, a religion based on the Imperial Educational Edict.[CF] The
+essentially religious nature of the attitude taken by the government
+toward this Edict has become increasingly clear in late years. In the
+summer of 1898 one who has had special opportunities of information
+told me that Mr. Kinoshita, a high official in the Educational
+Department, suggested the ceremonial worship of the Emperor's picture
+and edict by all the schools, for the reason that he saw the need of
+cultivating the religious spirit of reverence together with the need
+for having religious sanctions for the moral law. He felt convinced
+that a national school system without any such sanctions would be
+helpless in teaching morality to the pupils. His suggestion was
+adopted by the Educational Department and has been enforced.
+
+In this attitude toward the religious character of entirely private
+schools, the government is materially abridging the religious liberty
+of the people. It is abridging their liberty of carrying belief into
+action in one important respect, that, namely, of giving a Christian
+education. It virtually insists on the acceptance of that form of
+religion which apotheosizes the Emperor, and finds the sanctions for
+morality in his edict; it excludes from the schools every other form
+of religion. It should, of course, be said that this attitude is
+maintained not only toward Christian schools, but theoretically also
+toward all religious schools. It, however, operates more severely on
+Christian schools than upon others, because Christians are the only
+ones who establish high-grade schools for secular education under
+religious influences.
+
+It is evident, therefore, that in the matter of religious liberty the
+present attitude of the government is paradoxical, granting in one
+breath, what, in an important respect, it denies in the next. But
+throughout all these changes and by means of them we see more and more
+clearly that even religious tolerance is a matter of the prevailing
+social ideas and of the dominant social order, rather than of inherent
+race character. By a single transformation of the social order, Japan
+passed from a state of perfect religious intolerance to one just the
+reverse, so far as individual belief was concerned.
+
+Taking a comprehensive review of our study thus far, we see that the
+forms of Japanese religious life have been determined by the history,
+rather than by any inherent racial character of the people. Although
+they had a religion prior to the coming of any external influence,
+yet they have proved ready disciples of the religions of other lands.
+The religion of India, its esoteric, and especially its exoteric
+forms, has found wide acceptance and long-continued popularity. The
+higher life of the nation readily took on in later times the religious
+characteristics of the Chinese, predominantly ethical, it is true, and
+only slightly religious as to forms of worship. When Roman Catholic
+Christianity came to Japan in the sixteenth century, it, too, found
+ready acceptance. It is true that it presented a view of the nature of
+religion not very different from that held by Buddhism in many
+respects, yet in others there was a marked divergence, as for
+instance, in the doctrine of God, of individual sin, and of the nature
+and method of salvation. The Japanese have thus shown themselves ready
+assimilators of all these diverse systems of religious expression.
+Just at present a new presentation of Christianity is being made to
+the Japanese; some are urging upon them the acceptance of the Roman
+Catholic form of it; others are urging the Greek; and still others are
+presenting the Protestant point of view. Each of these groups of
+missionaries seems to be reaping good harvests. Speaking from my own
+experience, I may say, that many of the Japanese show as great an
+appreciation of the essence of the religious life, and find the ideas
+and ideals, doctrines and ceremonies, of Christianity as fitted to
+their heart's deepest needs, as do any in the most enlightened parts
+of Christendom. It is true that the Christian system is so opposed to
+the Buddhistic and Shinto, and in some respects to the Confucian, that
+it is an exceedingly difficult matter at the beginning to give the
+Buddhist or Shintoist any idea of what Christianity is. Yet the
+difficulty arises not from the structure of the brain, nor from the
+inherent race character, but solely from the diversity of hitherto
+prevailing systems of thought. When once the passage from the one
+system of thought to the other has been effected, and the significance
+of the Christian system and life has been appreciated,--in other
+words, when the Japanese Buddhist or Shintoist or Confucianist has
+become a Christian,--he is as truly a Christian and as faithful as is
+the Englishman or American.
+
+Of course I do not mean to say that he looks at every doctrine and at
+every ceremony in exactly the same way as an Englishman or American.
+But I do say that the different point of view is due to the differing
+social and religious history of the past and the differing
+surroundings of the present, rather than to inherent racial character
+or brain structure. The Japanese are human beings before they are
+Japanese.
+
+For these reasons have I absolute confidence in the final acceptance
+of Christianity by the Japanese. There is no race characteristic in
+true Christianity that bars the way. Furthermore, the very growth of
+the Japanese in recent years, intellectually and in the reorganization
+of the social order, points to their final acceptance of Christianity
+and renders it necessary. The old religious forms are not satisfying
+the religious needs of to-day. And if history proves anything, it
+proves that only the religion of Jesus can do this permanently.
+Religion is a matter of humanity, not of nationality. It is for this
+reason that the world over, religions, though of so many forms, are
+still so much alike. And it is because the religion of Jesus is
+pre-eminently the religion of humanity and has not a trace of
+exclusive nationality about it, that it is the true religion, and is
+fitted to satisfy the deepest religious wants of the most highly
+developed as well as the least developed man of any and every race and
+nation. In proportion as man develops, he grows out of his narrow
+surroundings, both physical and mental and even moral; he enters a
+larger and larger world. The religious expressions of his nature in
+the local provincial and even national stages of his life cannot
+satisfy his larger potential life. Only the religion of humanity can
+do this. And this is the religion of Jesus. The white light of
+religion, no less than that of scientific truth, has no local or
+national coloring. Perfect truth is universal, eternal, unchangeable.
+Occidental or Oriental colorations are in reality defects,
+discolorations.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+SOME PRINCIPLES OF NATIONAL EVOLUTION
+
+
+And now, having studied somewhat in detail various distinctive
+Japanese characteristics, it is important that we gain an insight into
+the general principles which govern the development of unified,
+national life. These principles render Japanese history luminous.
+
+Let us first fix our attention on the fact that every step in the
+progress of mankind has been from smaller to larger communities. In
+other words, human progress has been through the increasing extension
+of the communal principle. The primitive segregative man, if there
+ever really was such a being, hardly deserves to be called man. Social
+qualities he had very slight, if at all; his altruistic actions and
+emotions were of the lowest and feeblest type. His life was so
+self-centered--we may not call it selfish, for he was not conscious of
+his self-centeredness--that he was quite sufficient to himself except
+for short periods of time. It was a matter of relative indifference to
+him whether his kinsmen survived or perished. His life was in only the
+slightest degree involved in theirs. The first step of progress for
+him depended on the development of some form of communal life. The
+primary problem of the social evolution of man was that of taking the
+wild, self-centered, self-sufficient man, and of teaching him to move
+in line with his fellow-men. And this problem confronted not only
+mankind at the beginning, but it has also been the great problem of
+each successive stage. After the individual has been taught to live
+with, to work with and for, and to love, his immediate kinsmen (in
+other words to merge his individual interests in those of the family,
+and to count the family interests of more importance than his own),
+the next step was to induce the family to look beyond its little
+world and be willing to work with and for neighboring families. When,
+after ages of conflict, this step was in a measure secured and the
+family-tribe was fairly formed, this group in turn must be taught to
+take into its view a still larger group, the tribal nation. Throughout
+the ages the constant problem has been the development of larger and
+larger communal groups. This general process has been very aptly
+called by Mr. Bagehot the taming process. The selfward thoughts and
+ambitions of the individual man have been thus far driven more and
+more into the background of fact, if not of consciousness. The
+individual has been brought into vital and organic relations with
+ever-increasing multitudes of his fellow-men. It is, therefore,
+pre-eminently a process of social or associational development. It not
+only develops social relations in an ever-increasing scale, but also
+social qualities and ideals and desires.
+
+Now this taming, this socializing process, has been successful because
+it has had back of it, always enforcing it, the law of the survival of
+the strongest. What countless millions of men must have perished in
+the first step! They consisted of the less fit; of those who would
+not, or did not, learn soon enough the secret of existence through
+permanent family union. And what countless millions of families must
+have perished because they did not discover the way, or were too
+independent, to unite with kindred families in order to fight a common
+foe or develop a common food supply. And still later, what countless
+tribes must have perished before the secret of tribal federation was
+widely accepted! In each case the problem has been to secure the
+subordination of the interests of the smaller and local community to
+those of the larger community. Death to self and life to the larger
+interest was often the condition of existence at all. How slow men
+always have been and still are to learn this great lesson of history!
+
+The method whereby this taming process has been carried on has been
+through the formation of increasingly comprehensive and rigid customs
+and ideas. Through the development and continued existence of a common
+language, series of common customs, and sets of common ideas, unity
+was secured for the community; these, indeed, are the means whereby a
+group is transformed into a community. As the smaller community gave
+way to the larger, so the local languages, customs, and ideas had to
+break up and become so far modified as to form a new bond of unity.
+Until this unity was secured the new community was necessarily weak;
+the group easily broke up into its old constituent elements. We here
+gain a glimpse into one reason why the development of large composite
+communities, uniting and for the most part doing away with smaller
+ones, was so difficult and slow.
+
+The process of absorption of smaller groups and their unification into
+larger ones, when carried out completely in any land, tends to arrest
+all further growth, not simply because there is no further room for
+expansion by the absorption of other divergent tribes, but also
+because the "cake of custom" is apt to become so hard, the uniformity
+enforced on all the individuals is liable to become so binding, that
+fruitful variation from within is effectually cut off. The evolution
+of relatively isolated or segregated groups necessarily produces
+variety; and the process whereby these divergent types of life and
+thought and organization are gradually brought together into one large
+community provides wide elements of variation, in the selection and
+general adoption of which the evolution of the whole community may be
+secured. But let the divergent elements of the lesser groups once be
+entirely absorbed by the composite community and let the "cake of
+custom" become so rigid that every individual who varies from it is
+branded as a heretic and a traitor, and the progressive evolution of
+that community must cease.
+
+The great problem, therefore, which then confronts man and seems to
+threaten all further progress is, how to break the bondage of custom
+so as to secure local or individual variations. This can be done only
+through some form of individualism. The individual must be free to
+think and act as experience or fancy may suggest, without fear of
+being branded as a traitor, or at least he must have the courage to do
+so in spite of such fears. And to produce an effect on the community
+he must also be more or less protected in his idiosyncrasies by
+popular toleration.
+
+He must be allowed to live and work out his theories, proving whether
+they are valuable or not. But since individualism is just what all
+previous communal development has been most assiduous in crushing out,
+how is the rise of individualism possible, or even desirable? If the
+first and continued development of man depended on the attainment and
+the maintenance of the communal principle, we may be sure that his
+further progress will not consist in the reversal of that principle.
+If, therfore, individualism must be developed, it must manifestly be
+of a variety which does not conflict with or abrogate communalism.
+Only as the individualistic includes the communal principle will it be
+a source of strength; otherwise it can only be a source of weakness to
+the community. But is not this an impossible condition to satisfy?
+Certainly, before the event, it would seem to be so. The rarity with
+which this step in human evolution has been taken would seem to show
+that it is far more difficult to accomplish than any of the previous
+steps. To give it a name we may call it communo-individualism. What
+this variety of individualism is, how this forward step was first
+actually taken, and how it is maintained and extended to-day, we shall
+consider in a later chapter. In the present place its importance for
+us is twofold. First we must realize the logical difficulty of the
+step--its apparently self-contradictory nature. And secondly we need
+to see that fully developed and continuously progressive national life
+is impossible without it. The development of a nation under the
+communal principle may advance far, even to the attainment of a
+relatively high grade of civilization. But the fully centralized and
+completely self-conscious nation cannot come into existence except on
+the basis of this last step of communo-individualism. The growth of
+nationalism proper, and the high development of civilization through
+the rise of the sciences and the arts based upon individualism, all
+await the dawn of the era of which communo-individualism is the
+leading, though at first unrecognized, characteristic.
+
+This individualistic development of the communal principle is its
+intensive development; it is the focalizing and centralizing of the
+consciousness of the national unity in each individual member. The
+extensive process of communal enlargement must ever be accompanied by
+the intensive establishment in the individual of the communal ideal,
+the objective by the subjective, the physical by the psychical, if the
+accidental association for individual profit is to develop into the
+permanent association for the national as well as the individual life.
+The intensive or subjective development of the communal principle
+does, as a matter of fact, take place in all growing communities, but
+it is largely unconscious. Not until the final stages of national
+development does it become a self-conscious process, deserving the
+distinctive name I have given it here, communo-individualism.[CG]
+
+The point just made is, however, only one aspect of a more general
+fact, too, of cardinal importance for the sociologist and the student
+of human evolution. It is that, throughout the entire period of the
+expansion of the community, there has been an equally profound,
+although wholly unconscious, development of the individual. This fact
+seems to have largely escaped the notice of all but the most recent
+thinkers and writers on the general topic of human and social
+evolution. The fact and the importance of the communal life have been
+so manifest that, in important senses, the individual has been almost,
+if not wholly, dropped out of sight. The individual has been
+conceived to have been from the very beginning of social evolution
+fully endowed with mind, ideas, and brains, and to be perfectly
+regardless of all other human beings. The development of the community
+has accordingly been conceived to be a progressive taming and subduing
+of this wild, self-centered, primitive man; a process of eliminating
+his individualistic instincts. So far as the individual is concerned,
+it has been conceived to be chiefly a negative process; a process of
+destroying his individual desires and plans and passions. Man's
+natural state has been supposed to be that of absolute selfishness.
+Only the hard necessity of natural law succeeded in forcing him to
+curb his natural selfish desires and to unite with his fellows. Only
+on these terms could he maintain even an existence. Those who have not
+accepted these terms have been exterminated. Communal life in all its
+forms, from the family upward to the most unified and developed
+nation, is thus conceived as a continued limiting of the individual--a
+necessity, indeed, to his existence, but none the less a limitation.
+
+I am unable to take this view, which at best is a one-sided statement.
+It appears to me capable of demonstration, that communal and
+individual development proceed pari passu; that every gain in the
+communal life is a gain to the individual and vice versa. They are
+complementary, not contradictory processes. Neither can exist, in any
+proper sense, apart from the other; and the degree of the development
+of the one is a sure index of the degree of the development of the
+other. So important is this matter that we must pause to give it
+further consideration.
+
+Consider, first, man in his earliest stage of development. A
+relatively segregarious animal; with a few ideas about the nuts and
+fruits and roots on which he lives; with a little knowledge as to
+where to find them; the subject of constant fear lest a stronger man
+may suddenly appear to seize and carry off his wife and food;
+possessing possibly a few articulate sounds answering to words; such
+probably was primitive man. He must have been little removed from the
+ape. His "self," his mind, was so small and so empty of content that
+we could hardly recognize him as a man, should we stumble on him in
+the forest.
+
+Look next upon him after he has become a family-man. Living in the
+group, his life enlarges; his existence broadens; his ideas multiply;
+his vocabulary increases with his ideas and experiences; he begins to
+share the life and thinking and interests and joys and sorrows of
+others; their ideas and experiences become his, to his enormous
+advantage. What he now is throws into the shade of night what he used
+to be. So far from being the loser by his acceptance of even this
+limited communal life, he is a gainer in every way. He begins to know
+what love is, and hate; what joy is, and sorrow; what kindness is, and
+cruelty; what altruism is, and selfishness. Thus, not only in ideas
+and language, in industry and property, but also in emotions, in
+character, in morality, in religion, in the knowledge of self, and
+even in opportunity for selfishness, he is the gainer. In just the
+degree that communal life is developed is the life of the individuals
+that compose it extended both subjectively and objectively. Human
+psychogenesis takes place in the communal stage of his life. Human
+association is its chief external cause.
+
+It matters not at what successive stage of man's developing life we
+may choose to look at him, the depth and height and breadth, in a
+word, the fullness and vigor and character of the inner and private
+life of the individual, will depend directly on the nature and
+development of the communal life. As the community expands, taking in
+new families or tribes or nations, reaching out to new regions,
+learning new industries, developing new ideas of man, of nature, of
+the gods, of duty, inventing new industries, discovering new truths,
+and developing a new language, all these fresh acquirements of the
+community become the possession of its individual members. In the
+growing complexity of society the individual unit, it is true, is
+increasingly lost among the millions of his fellow-units, yet all
+these successive steps serve to render his life the larger and richer.
+His horizon is no longer the little family group in which he was born;
+he now looks out over large and populous regions and feels the thrill
+of his growing life as he realizes the unity and community of his
+life and interests with those of his fellow-countrymen. His language
+is increasingly enriched; it serves to shape all his thinking and thus
+even the structure of his mind. His knowledge reaches far beyond his
+own experience; it includes not only that of the few persons whom he
+knows directly, but also that of unnumbered millions, remote in time
+and space. He increasingly discovers, though he never has analyzed,
+and is perhaps wholly unable to analyze, the discovery that he is not
+a thing among things; his life has a universal aspect. He lives more
+and more the universal life, subjecting the demands of the once
+domineering present to decisions of a cool judgment that looks back
+into the past and carefully weighs the interests of the future,
+temporal and eternal. Every advance made by the community is thus
+stored up to the credit of its individual members. So far, then, from
+the development of the communal principle consisting of and coming
+about through a limitation of the individual, it is exactly the
+reverse. Only as the individual develops are communal unity and
+progress possible. And on the other hand, only where the communal
+principle has reached its highest development, both extensively and
+intensively, do we find the most highly developed personality. The one
+is a necessary condition of the other. The deepest, blackest
+selfishness, even, can only come into existence where the communal
+principle has reached its highest development.
+
+The preceding statement, however, is not equivalent to saying that
+when communalism and individualism arose in human consciousness they
+were both accepted as equally important. The reverse seems always to
+have been the case. As soon as the two principles are distinguished in
+thought, the communal is at once ranked as the higher, and the
+individual principle is scorned if not actually rejected. And the
+reason for this is manifest. From earliest times the constant foe
+which the community has had to fight and exterminate has been the
+wanton, selfish individual. Individualism of this type was the
+spontaneous contrast to the communal life, and was ever manifesting
+itself. No age or race has been without it, nor ignorant of it. As
+soon as the two principles became clearly contrasted in thought,
+therefore, because of his actual experience, man could conceive of
+individualism only as the antithesis to communalism; it was felt that
+the two were mutually destructive. It inevitably followed that
+communalism as a principle was accepted and individualism condemned.
+In their minds not only social order, but existence itself, was at
+stake. And they were right. Egoistic individualism is necessarily
+atomistic. No society can long maintain its life as a unified and
+peaceful society, when such a principle has been widely accepted by
+its members. The social ills of this and of every age largely arise
+from the presence of this type of men, who hold this principle of
+life.
+
+If, therefore, after a fair degree of national unity has been
+attained, the higher stages of national evolution depend on the higher
+development of individualism, and if the only kind of individualism of
+which men can conceive is the egoistic, it becomes evident that
+further progress must cease. Stagnation, or degeneration, must follow.
+This is what has happened to nearly all the great nations and races of
+the world. They progressed well up to a certain point. Then they
+halted or fell back. The only possible condition under which a new
+lease of progressive life could be secured by them was a new variety
+of individualism, which would unite the opposite and apparently
+contradictory poles of communalism and egoism, namely,
+communo-individualism. Inconceivable though it be to those men and
+nations who have not experienced this type of life, it is nevertheless
+a fact, and a mighty factor in human and in national evolution. In its
+light we are able to see that the communal life itself has not reached
+its fullest development until the individualistic principle has been
+not only recognized in thought, but exalted, both in theory and in
+fact, to its true and coordinate position beside the communal
+principle. Only then does the nation become fully and completely
+organized. Only then does the national organism contain within itself
+the means for an endless, because a self-sustained, life.
+
+It is important to guard against a misunderstanding of the principles
+just enunciated which may easily arise. In saying that the
+development of the individual has proceeded pari passu with that of
+the community, that every gain by the community has contributed
+directly to the development of the individual, I do not say that the
+communal profits are at once distributed among all the members of the
+group, or that the distribution is at all equal. Indeed, such is far
+from the case. Some few individuals seem to appropriate a large and
+unfair proportion of the communal bank account. So far as a people
+live a simple and relatively undifferentiated life, all sharing in
+much the same kind of pursuits, and enjoying much the same grade of
+life,--such as prevailed in a large measure in the earlier times, and
+decreasingly as society has become industrial,--and so far also as the
+new acquirements of thought are transformed into practical life and
+common language, all the members of the community share these
+acquirements in fairly equal measure. So far, however, as the communal
+profits consist of more or less abstract ideas, embodied in religious
+and philosophic thought, and stored away in books and literature
+accessible only to scholars, they are distributed very unequally. The
+more highly developed and consequently differentiated the society, the
+more difficult does distribution become. The very structure of the
+highly differentiated communal organism forbids the equal distribution
+of these goods. The literary and ruling minority have exclusive access
+to the treasures. The industrial majority are more and more rigidly
+excluded from them. Thus, although it is strictly true that every
+advance in the communal principle accrues to the benefit of the
+individual, it is not true that such advance necessarily accrues to
+the benefit of every individual, or equally to all individuals. In its
+lowest stages, developing communalism lifts all its individual members
+to about the same level of mental and moral acquirement. In its middle
+stages it develops all individuals to a certain degree, and certain
+individuals to a high degree. In its highest stages it develops among
+all its members a uniformly high grade of personal worth and
+acquirement.
+
+Now the great problem on whose solution depends the possibility of
+continued communal evolution is, from this view-point, the problem of
+distributing the gains of the community to all its members more and
+more equally. It is the problem of giving to each human unit all the
+best and truest thought and character, all the highest and noblest
+ideals and motives, which the most advanced individuals have secured.
+If we stop to inquire minutely and analytically just what is the
+nature of the greatest attainments made by the community, we discover
+that it is not the possession of wealth in land or gold, it is not the
+accident of social rank, it is not any incident of temporal happiness
+or physical ease of life. It consists, on the contrary, in the
+discovery of the real nature of man. He is no mere animal, living in
+the realm of things and pleasures, limited by the now and the here. He
+is a person, a rational being. His thoughts and desires can only be
+expressed in terms of infinity. Nothing short of the infinite can
+satisfy either his reason or his heart Though living in nature and
+dependent on it, he is above it, and may and should understand it and
+rule it. His thoughts embrace all time and all being. In a very real
+sense he lives an infinite and eternal life, even here in this passing
+world.
+
+The discovery of this set of facts, slowly emerging into
+consciousness, is the culmination of all past history, and the
+beginning of all man's higher life. It is the turning point in the
+history of the human race. Every onward step in man's preceding life,
+whereby he has united to form higher and higher groups, has been
+leading onward and upward to the development of strong personality, to
+the development of individuals competent to make this great discovery.
+But this is not enough.
+
+The next step is to discover the fact, _and to believe it_, that this
+infinite life is the potential possession of every member of the
+community; that the bank account which the community has been storing
+up for ages is for the use not only of a favored few, but also of the
+masses. That since every man is a man, he has an infinite and an
+eternal life and value, which no accident of birth, or poverty, can
+annul. Each man needs to discover himself. The great problem, then,
+which confronts progressive communal evolution is to take this
+enlarged definition of the individual and scatter it broadcast over
+the land, persuading all men to accept and believe it both for
+themselves and for others. This definition must be carried in full
+confidence to the lowest, meanest, most ignorant man that lives in the
+community, and by its help this down-most man must be shown his
+birthright, and in the light of it he must be raised to actual
+manhood. He must "come to himself"; only so can he qualify for his
+heritage.
+
+After a nation, therefore, has secured a large degree of unity, of the
+confederated tribal type, the step which must be taken, before it can
+proceed to more complete nationalization even, is, first, the
+discovery of personality as the real and essential characteristic of
+men, and secondly the discovery that high-grade personality may and
+can and must be developed in all the members of the community. In
+proportion as the members of the community become conscious persons,
+fully self-conscious and self-regulating, fully imbued with the idea
+and the spirit of true personality, of communo-individualism, in that
+proportion will the community be unified and centralized, as well as
+capable of the most complex and differentiated internal structure. The
+strength of such a nation will be indefinitely greater than that of
+any other less personalized and so less communalized nation.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?
+
+
+Few phases of the Japanese character have proved so fascinating to the
+philosophical writer on Japan as that of the personality of this Far
+Eastern people. From the writings of Sir Rutherford Alcock, the first
+resident English minister in Japan, down to the last publication that
+has come under my eye, all have something to say on this topic. One
+writer, Mr. Percival Lowell, has devoted an entire volume to it under
+the title of "The Soul of the Far East," in which he endeavors to
+establish the position that the entire civilization of the Orient, in
+its institutions, such as the family and the state, in the structure
+of its language, in its conceptions of nature, in its art, in its
+religion, and finally in its inherent mental nature, is essentially
+_impersonal_. One of the prominent and long resident missionaries in
+Japan once delivered a course of lectures on the influence of
+pantheism in the Orient, in which he contended, among other things,
+that the lack of personal pronouns and other phenomena of Japanese
+life and religion are due to the presence and power in this land of
+pantheistic philosophy preventing the development of personality.
+
+The more I have examined these writings and their fundamental
+assumptions, the more manifest have ambiguities and contradictions in
+the use of terms become. I have become also increasingly impressed
+with the failure of advocates of Japanese "impersonality" to
+appreciate the real nature of the phenomena they seek to explain. They
+have not comprehended the nature or the course of social evolution,
+nor have they discovered the mutual relation existing between the
+social order and personality. The arguments advanced for the
+"impersonal" view are more or less plausible, and this method of
+interpreting the Orient appeals for authority to respectable
+philosophical writers. No less a philosopher than Hegel is committed
+to this interpretation. The importance of this subject, not only for a
+correct understanding of Japan, but also of the relation existing
+between individual, social, and religious evolution, requires us to
+give it careful attention. We shall make our way most easily into this
+difficult discussion by considering some prevalent misconceptions and
+defective arguments. I may here express my indebtedness to the author
+of "The Soul of the Far East" for the stimulus received from his
+brilliant volume, differ though I do from his main thesis. We begin
+this study with a few quotations from Mr. Lowell's now classic work.
+
+"Capability to evolve anything is not one of the marked
+characteristics of the Far East. Indeed, the tendency to spontaneous
+variation, Nature's mode of making experiments, would seem there to
+have been an enterprising faculty that was early exhausted. Sleepy, no
+doubt, from having got up betimes with the dawn, these inhabitants of
+the land of the morning began to look upon their day as already far
+spent before they had reached its noon. They grew old young, and have
+remained much the same age ever since. What they were centuries ago,
+that at bottom they are to-day. Take away the European influences of
+the past twenty years, and each man might almost be his own
+great-grandfather. In race character, he is yet essentially the same.
+The traits that distinguished these peoples in the past have been
+gradually extinguishing them ever since. Of these traits, stagnating
+influences upon their career, perhaps the most important is the great
+quality of "impersonality."[CGa] "The peoples inhabiting it [the
+northern hemisphere] grow steadily more personal as we go West. So
+unmistakable is this gradation that we are almost tempted to ascribe
+it to cosmical rather than to human causes.... The sense of self grows
+more intense as we follow the wake of the setting sun, and fades
+steadily as we advance into the dawn. America, Europe, the Levant,
+India, Japan, each is less personal than the one before. We stand at
+the nearer end of the scale, the Far Orientals at the other. If with
+us the 'I' seems to be the very essence of the soul, then the soul of
+the Far East may be said to be 'Impersonality.'"[CH]
+
+Following the argument through the volume we see that individual
+physical force and aggressiveness, deficiency of politeness, and
+selfishness are, according to this line of thought, essential elements
+of personality. The opposite set of qualities constitutes the essence
+of impersonality. "The average Far Oriental, indeed, talks as much to
+no purpose as his Western cousin, only in his chit-chat politeness
+takes the place of personalities. With him, self is suppressed, and an
+ever-present regard for others is substituted in its stead. A lack of
+personality is, as we have seen, the occasion of this courtesy; it is
+also its cause.... Considered a priori, the connection between the two
+is not far to seek. Impersonality, by lessening the interest in one's
+self, induces one to take an interest in others. Introspection tends
+to make a man a solitary animal, the absence of it a social one. The
+more impersonal the people, the more will the community supplant the
+individual in the popular estimation.... Then, as the social desires
+develop, politeness, being the means of their enjoyment, develops
+also."[CI]
+
+Let us take a look at some definitions:
+
+"Individuality, personality, and the sense of self, are only three
+aspects of the same thing. They are so many various views of the soul,
+according as we regard it from an intrinsic, an altruistic, or an
+egoistic standpoint.... By individuality we mean that bundle of ideas,
+thoughts, and day-dreams which constitute our separate identity, and
+by virtue of which we feel each one of us at home within himself....
+Consciousness is the necessary attribute of mental action. Not only is
+it the sole way we have of knowing mind; without it there would be no
+mind to know. Not to be conscious of one's self is, mentally
+speaking, not to be. This complex entity, this little cosmos of a
+world, the 'I,' has for its very law of existence, self-consciousness,
+while personality is the effect it produces upon the consciousness of
+others."[CJ]
+
+The more we study the above definitions, the more baffling they
+become. Try as I may, I have not been able to fit them, not only to
+the facts of my own experience, which may not be strange, but I cannot
+reconcile them even to each other. There seem to me inherent
+ambiguities and self-contradictions lurking beneath their scientific
+splendor. Individuality is stated to be "that bundle of ideas,
+thoughts, and day-dreams which constitute our separate identity." This
+seems plain and straightforward, but is it really so? Consciousness is
+stated to be not only "the necessary attribute of mental action" (to
+which exception might be taken on the ground of abundant proof of
+unconscious mental action), but it is also considered to be the very
+cause of mind itself. Not only by consciousness do we know mind, but
+the consciousness itself constitutes the mind; "without it there would
+be no mind to know." "Not to be conscious of one's self is not to be."
+Do we then cease to be, when we sleep? or when absorbed in thought or
+action? And do we become new-created when we awake? What is the bond
+of connection that binds into one the successive consciousnesses of
+the successive days? Does not that "bundle of ideas" become broken
+into as many wholly independent fragments as there are intervals
+between our sleepings? Or rather is not each fragment a whole in
+itself, and is not the idea of self-continuity from day to day and
+from week to week a self-delusion? How can it be otherwise if
+consciousness constitutes existence? For after the consciousness has
+ceased and "the bundle of ideas," which constitutes the individuality
+of that day, has therefore gone absolutely out of existence, it is
+impossible that the old bundle shall be resurrected by a new
+consciousness. Only a new bundle can be the product of a new
+consciousness. Evidently there is trouble somewhere. But let us pass
+on.
+
+"The 'I' has for its very law of existence self-consciousness." Is
+not "self-consciousness" here identified with "consciousness" in the
+preceding sentence? The very existence of the mind, the "I," is
+ascribed to each in turn. Is there, then, no difference between
+consciousness and self-consciousness? Finally, personality is stated
+to be "the effect it [the "I"] produces on the self-consciousness of
+others." I confess I gain no clear idea from this statement. But
+whatever else it may mean, this is clear, that personality is not a
+quality or characteristic of the "I," but only some effect which the
+"I" produces on the consciousness of another. Is it a quality, then,
+of the other person? And does impersonality mean the lack of such an
+effect? But does not this introduce us to new confusion? When a human
+being is wholly absorbed in an altruistic act, for instance, wholly
+forgetful of self, he is, according to a preceding paragraph, quite
+impersonal; yet, according to the definition before us, he cannot be
+impersonal, for he is producing most lively effects on the
+consciousness of the poor human being he is befriending; in his
+altruistic deed he is strongly personal, yet not he, for personality
+does not belong to the person acting, but somehow to the person
+affected. How strange that the personality of a person is not his own
+characteristic but another's!
+
+But still more confusing is the definition when we recall that if the
+benevolent man is wholly unconscious of self, and is thinking only of
+the one whom he is helping, then he himself is no longer existing. But
+in that case how can he help the poor man or even continue to think of
+him? Perfect altruism is self-annihilation! Knowledge of itself by the
+mind is that which constitutes it! But enough. It has become clear
+that these terms have not been used consistently, nor are the
+definitions such as to command the assent of any careful psychologist
+or philosopher. What the writer means to say is, I judge, that the
+measure of a man's personality is the amount of impression he makes on
+his fellows. For the whole drift of his argument is that both the
+physical and mental aggressiveness of the Occidental is far greater
+than that of the Oriental; this characteristic, he asserts, is due to
+the deficient development of personality in the Orient, and this
+deficient development he calls "impersonality." If those writers who
+describe the Orient as "impersonal" fail in their definition of the
+term "personal," their failure to define "impersonal" is even more
+striking. They use the term as if it were so well known as to need no
+definition; yet their usage ascribes to it contrary conceptions. As a
+rule they conceive of "impersonality" as a deficiency of development;
+yet, when they attempt to describe its nature, they speak of it as
+self-suppression. A clear statement of this latter point may be found
+in a passage already quoted: "Politeness takes the place of
+personalities. With him [the Oriental], self is suppressed, and an
+ever-present regard for others is substituted." "Impersonality, by
+lessening the interest in one's self, induces one to take interest in
+others." In this statement it will be noted the "_self is
+suppressed_." Does "impersonality" then follow personality, as a
+matter of historical development? It would so appear from this and
+kindred passages. But if this is true, then Japan is _more_ instead of
+less developed than the Occident. Yet this is exactly the reverse of
+that for which this school of thought contends.
+
+Let us now examine some concrete illustrations adduced by those who
+advocate Japanese impersonality. They may be arranged in two classes:
+those that are due wholly to invention, and those that are doubtless
+facts, but that may be better accounted for by some other theory than
+that of "impersonality."
+
+Mr. Lowell makes amusing material out of the two children's festivals,
+known by the Japanese as "Sekku," occurring on March 3 and June 5 (old
+calendar). Because the first of these is exclusively for the girls and
+the second is exclusively for the boys, Mr. Lowell concludes that they
+are general birthdays, in spite of the fact which he seems to know
+that the ages are not reckoned from these days. He calls them "the
+great impersonal birthdays"; for, according to his supposition, all
+the girls celebrate their birthdays on the third day of the third moon
+and all the boys celebrate theirs on the fifth day of the fifth moon,
+regardless of the actual days on which they may have been born. With
+regard to this understanding of the significance of the festival, I
+have asked a large number of Japanese, not one of whom had ever heard
+of such an idea. Each one has insisted that individual birthdays are
+celebrated regardless of these general festivals; the ages of children
+are never computed from these festivals; they have nothing whatever to
+do with the ages of the children.[CK]
+
+The report of the discussions of the Japanese Society of Comparative
+Religion contains quite a minute statement of all the facts known as
+to these festivals, much too long in this connection, but among them
+there is not the slightest reference to the birthday feature
+attributed to them by Mr. Lowell.[CL]
+
+Mr. Lowell likewise invents another fact in support of his theory by
+his interpretation of the Japanese method of computing ages. Speaking
+of the advent of an infant into the home he says, that "from the
+moment he makes his appearance he is spoken of as a year old, and this
+same age he continues to be considered in most simple cases of
+calculation, till the beginning of the next calendar year. When that
+epoch of general rejoicing arrives, he is credited with another year
+himself. So is everybody else. New Year's day is a common birthday for
+the community, a sort of impersonal anniversary for his whole world."
+Now this is a very entertaining conceit, but it will hardly pass
+muster as a serious argument with one who has any real understanding
+of Japanese ideas on the subject. The simple fact is that the Japanese
+does not ordinarily tell you how old the child is, but only in how
+many year periods he has lived. Though born December 31, on January 1
+he has undoubtedly lived in two different year periods. This method of
+counting, however, is not confined to the counting of ages, but it
+characterizes all their counting. If you ask a man how many days
+before a certain festival near at hand he will say ten where we would
+say but nine. In other words, in counting periods the Japanese count
+all, including both the first and the last, whereas we omit the first.
+This as a custom is an interesting psychological problem, but it has
+not the remotest connection with "personality" or "impersonality."
+Furthermore, the Japanese have another method of signifying the age of
+a child which corresponds exactly to ours. You have but to ask what is
+the "full" age of a child to receive a statement which satisfies our
+ideas of the problem. The idea of calling New Year's day a great
+"impersonal" birthday because forsooth all the members of the
+community and the nation then enter on a new year period, and of using
+that as an argument for the "impersonality" of the whole race, is as
+interesting as it is inconclusive.
+
+Much is made of the fact that Japanese art has paid its chief
+attention to nature and to animals, and but little to man. This
+proves, it is argued, that the Japanese artist and people are
+"impersonal"--that they are not self-conscious, for their gaze is
+directed outward, toward "impersonal" nature; had they been an
+aggressive personal people, a people conscious of self, their art
+would have depicted man. The cogency of this logic seems questionable
+to me. Art is necessarily objective, whether it depicts nature or man;
+the gaze is always and necessarily outward, even when it is depicting
+the human form. In our consideration of the æsthetic elements of
+Japanese character[CM] we gave reasons for the Japanese love of
+natural beauty and for their relatively slight attention to the human
+form. If the reasons there given were correct, the fact that Japanese
+art is concerned chiefly with nature has nothing whatever to do with
+the "impersonality" of the people. If "impersonality" is essentially
+altruistic, if it consists of self-suppression and interest in others,
+then it is difficult to see how art that depicts the form even of
+human beings can escape the charge of being "impersonal" except when
+the artist is depicting himself. If, again, supreme interest in
+objective "impersonal" nature proves the lack of "personality," should
+we not argue that the West is supremely "impersonal" because of its
+extraordinary interest in nature and in the natural and physical
+sciences? Are naturalists and scientists "impersonal," and are
+philosophers and psychologists "personal" in nature? If it be argued
+that art which depicts the human emotions is properly speaking
+subjective, and therefore a proof of developed personality, will it be
+maintained that Japan is devoid of such art? How about the pictures
+and the statues of warriors? How about the passionate features of the
+Ni-o, the placid faces of the Buddhas and other religious imagery? Are
+there not here the most powerful representations possible of human
+emotions, both active and passive? But even so, is not the gaze of the
+artist still _outward_ on others, _i.e._, is he not altruistic; and,
+therefore, "impersonal," according to this method of thought and use
+of terms? Are European artists who revel in landscape and animal
+scenes deficient in "personal" development, and are those who devote
+their lives to painting nude women particularly developed in
+"personality"? Truly, a defective terminology and a distorted
+conception of what "personality" is, land one in most contradictory
+positions.
+
+Those who urge the "impersonality" of the Orient make much of the
+Japanese idea of the "family," with the attendant customs. The fact
+that marriage is arranged for by the parents, and that the two
+individuals most concerned have practically no voice in the matter,
+proves conclusively, they argue, that the latter have little
+"personality." Here again all turns on the definition of this
+important word. If by "personality" is meant consciousness of one's
+self as an independent individual, then I do not see what relation the
+two subjects have. If, however, it means the willingness of the
+subjects of marriage to forego their own desires and choices; because
+indeed they do not have any of their own, then the facts will not bear
+out the argument. These writers skillfully choose certain facts out of
+the family customs whereby to illustrate and enforce this theory, but
+they entirely omit others having a significant bearing upon it. Take,
+for instance, the fact that one-third of the marriages end in divorce.
+What does this show? It shows that one-third of the individuals in
+each marriage are so dissatisfied with the arrangements made by the
+parents that they reject them and assert their own choice and
+decision. According to the argument for "impersonality" in marriage,
+these recalcitrant, unsubmissive individuals have a great amount of
+"personality," that is, consciousness of self; and this consciousness
+of self produces a great effect on the other party to the marriage;
+and the effect on the other party (in the vast majority of the cases
+women), that is to say, the effect of the divorce on the consciousness
+of the women, constitutes the personality of the men! The marriage
+customs cited, therefore, do not prove the point, for no account is
+taken of the multitudinous cases in which one party or the other
+utterly refuses to carry out the arrangements of the parents. Many a
+girl declines from the beginning the proposals of the parents. These
+cases are by no means few. Only a few days before writing the present
+lines a waiting girl in a hotel requested me to find her a place of
+service in some foreign family. On inquiry she told me how her parents
+wished her to marry into a certain family; but that she could not
+endure the thought and had run away from home. One of the facts which
+strike a missionary, as he becomes acquainted with the people, is the
+frequency of the cases of running away from home. Girls run away,
+probably not as frequently as boys, yet very often. Are we to believe
+that these are individuals who have an excessive amount of
+"personality"? If so, then the development of "personality" in Japan
+is far more than the advocates of its "impersonality" recognize or
+would allow us to believe. Mr. Lowell devotes three pages to a
+beautiful and truthful description of the experience known in the West
+as "falling in love." Turning his attention to the Orient, because of
+the fact that marriages are arranged for by the families concerned, he
+argues that: "No such blissful infatuation falls to the lot of the Far
+Oriental. He never is the dupe of his own desire, the willing victim
+of his self-delusion. He is never tempted to reveal himself, and by
+thus revealing, realize.... For she is not his love; she is only his
+wife; and what is left of a romance when the romance is left out?"
+Although there is an element of truth in this, yet it is useless as a
+support for the theory of Japanese "impersonality." For it is not a
+fact that the Japanese do not fall in love; it is a well-known
+experience to them. It is inconceivable how anyone at all acquainted
+with either Japanese life or literature could make such an assertion.
+The passionate love of a man and a woman for each other, so strong
+that in multitudes of cases the two prefer a common death to a life
+apart, is a not uncommon event in Japan. Frequently we read in the
+daily papers of a case of mutual suicide for love. This is
+sufficiently common to have received a specific name "joshi."[CN]
+
+
+So far as the argument for "impersonality" is concerned this
+illustration from the asserted lack of love is useless, for it is one
+of those manufactured for the occasion by imaginative and resourceful
+advocates of "impersonality."
+
+But I do not mean to say that "falling in love" plays the same
+important part in the life and development of the youth in Japan that
+it does in the West. It is usually utterly ignored, so far as parental
+planning for marriage is concerned. Love is not recognized as a proper
+basis for the contraction of marriage, and is accordingly frowned
+upon. It is deemed a sign of mental and moral weakness for a man to
+fall in love. Under these conditions it is not at all strange that
+"falling in love" is not so common an experience as in the West.
+Furthermore, this profound experience is not utilized as it is in the
+West as a refining and elevating influence in the life of a young man
+or woman. In a land where "falling in love" is regarded as an immoral
+thing, a breaking out of uncontrollable animal passion, it is not
+strange that it should not be glorified by moralists or sanctified by
+religion. There are few experiences in the West so ennobling as the
+love that a young man and a young woman bear to each other during the
+days of their engagement and lasting onward throughout the years of
+their lengthening married life. The West has found the secret of
+making use of this period in the lives of the young to elevate and
+purify them of which the East knows little.
+
+But there are still other and sadder consequences following from the
+attitude of the Japanese to the question of "falling in love." It can
+hardly be doubted that the vast number of divorces is due to the
+defective method of betrothal, a method which disregards the free
+choice of the parties most concerned. The system of divorce is, we may
+say, the device of society for remedying the inherent defects of the
+betrothal system. It treats both the man and the woman as though they
+were not persons but unfeeling machines. Personality, for a while
+submissive, soon asserts its liberty, in case the married parties
+prove uncongenial, and demands the right of divorce. Divorce is thus
+the device of thwarted personality. But in addition to this evil,
+there is that of concubinage or virtual polygamy, which is often the
+result of "falling in love." And then, there is the resort of
+hopelessly thwarted personality known in the West as well as in the
+East, murder and suicide, and oftentimes even double suicide, referred
+to above. The marriage customs of the Orient are such that hopeless
+love, though mutual, is far more frequent than in the West, and the
+death of lovers in each other's arms, after having together taken the
+fatal draught, is not rare. The number of suicides due to hopeless
+love in 1894 was 407, and the number of murders for the same cause was
+94. Here is a total of over five hundred deaths in a single year, very
+largely due to the defective marriage system. Do not these phenomena
+refute assertions to the effect that the Japanese are so impersonal as
+not to know what it is to "fall in love"? If the question of the
+personality of the Japanese is to be settled by the phenomena of
+family life and the strength of the sexual emotion, would we not have
+to pronounce them possessed of strongly developed personality?
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+THE JAPANESE NOT IMPERSONAL
+
+
+We must now face the far more difficult task of presenting a positive
+statement in regard to the problem of personality in the Orient. We
+need to discover just what is or should be meant by the terms
+"personality" and "impersonality." We must also analyze this Oriental
+civilization and discover its elementary factors, in order that we may
+see what it is that has given the impression to so many students that
+the Orient is "impersonal." In doing this, although our aim is
+constructive, we shall attain our end with greater ease if we rise to
+positive results through further criticism of defective views. We
+naturally begin with definitions.
+
+"Individuality" is defined by the Standard Dictionary as "the state or
+quality of being individual; separate or distinct existence."
+"Individual" is defined as "Anything that cannot be divided or
+separated into parts without losing identity.... A single person,
+animal, or thing." "Personality" is defined as "That which constitutes
+a person; conscious, separate existence as an intelligent and
+voluntary being." "Person" is defined as "Any being having life,
+intelligence, will, and separate individual existence." On these
+various definitions the following observations seem pertinent.
+
+"Individuality" has reference only to the distinctions existing
+between different objects, persons, or things. The term draws
+attention to the fact of distinctness and difference and not to the
+qualities which make the difference, and least of all to the
+consciousness of identity by virtue of which "we feel each one of us
+at home within himself."
+
+"Personality" properly has reference only to that which constitutes a
+person. As contrasted with an animal a person has not only life, but
+also a highly developed and self-conscious intelligence, feeling, and
+will; these involve moral relations toward other persons and religious
+relations toward God.
+
+Consciousness is not attendant on every act of the person, much less
+is self-consciousness, although both are always potential and more or
+less implicit. A person is often so absorbed in thought or act as to
+be wholly unconscious of his thinking or acting; the consciousness is,
+so to speak, submerged for the time being. Self-consciousness implies
+considerable progress in reflection on one's own states of mind, and
+in the attainment of the consciousness of one's own individuality. It
+is the result of introspection. Self-consciousness, however, does not
+constitute one's identity; it merely recognizes it.
+
+The foundation for a correct conception of the term "personality"
+rests on the conception of the term "soul" or "spirit." In my
+judgment, each human being is to be conceived as being a separate
+"soul," endowed by its very nature with definite capacities or
+qualities or attributes which we describe as mental, emotional, and
+volitional, having powers of consciousness more or less developed
+according to the social evolution of the race, the age of the
+individual, his individual environment, and depending also on the
+amount of education he may have received. The possession of a soul
+endowed with these qualities constitutes a person; their possession in
+marked measure constitutes developed personality, and in defective
+measure, undeveloped personality.
+
+The unique character of a "person" is that he combines perfect
+separateness with the possibility and more or less of the actuality of
+perfect universality. A "person" is in a true sense a universal, an
+infinite being. He is thus through the constitution of his psychic
+nature a thinking, feeling, and willing being. Through his intellect
+and in proportion to his knowledge he becomes united with the whole
+objective universe; through his feelings he may become united in
+sympathy and love with all sentient creation, and even with God
+himself, the center and source of all being; through his active will
+he is increasingly creator of his environment. Man is thus in a true
+sense creating the conditions which make him to be what he is. Thus
+in no figurative sense, but literally and actually, man is in the
+process of creating himself. He is realizing the latent and hitherto
+unsuspected potentialities of his nature. He is creating a world in
+which to express himself; and this he does by expressing himself. In
+proportion as man advances, making explicit what is implicit in his
+inner nature, is he said to grow in personality. A man thus both
+possesses personality and grows in personality. He could not grow in
+it did he not already actually possess it. In such growth both
+elements of his being, the individual and the universal, develop
+simultaneously. A person of inferior personal development is at once
+less individual and less universal. This is a matter, however, not of
+endowment but of development. We thus distinguish between the original
+personal endowment, which we may call intrinsic or inherent
+personality, and the various forms in which this personality has
+manifested and expressed itself, which we may call extrinsic or
+acquired personality. Inherent personality is that which
+differentiates man from animal. It constitutes the original involution
+which explains and even necessitates man's entire evolution. There may
+be, nay, must be, varying degrees of expression of the inherent
+personality, just as there may be and must be varying degrees of
+consciousness of personality. These depend on the degree of evolution
+attained by the race and by the individuals of the race.
+
+It is no part of our plan to justify this conception of the nature of
+personality, or to defend these brief summary statements as to its
+inherent nature. It is enough if we have gained a clear idea of this
+conception on which the present chapter, and indeed this entire work,
+rests. In discussing the question as to personality in the Orient, it
+is important for us ever to bear in mind the distinctions between the
+inherent endowment that constitutes personal beings, the explicit and
+external expression of that endowment, and the possession of the
+consciousness of that endowment. For these are three things quite
+distinct, though intimately related.
+
+The term "impersonality" demands special attention, being the most
+misused and abused term of all. The first and natural signification of
+the word is the mere negation of personality; as a stone, for
+instance, is strictly "impersonal." This is the meaning given by the
+dictionaries. But in this sense, of course, it is inapplicable to
+human beings. What, then, is the meaning when applied to them? When
+Mr. Lowell says, "If with us [of the West] the 'I' seems to be of the
+very essence of the soul, then the soul of the Far East may be said to
+be 'impersonal,'" what does he mean? He certainly does not mean that
+the Chinese and Japanese and Hindus have no emotional or volitional
+characteristics, that they are strictly "impersonal"; nor does he mean
+that the Oriental has less development of powers of thinking, willing,
+feeling, or of introspective meditation. The whole argument shows that
+he means that _their sense of the individuality or separateness of the
+Ego is so slight that it is practically ignored; and this not by their
+civilization alone, but by each individual himself_. The supreme
+consciousness of the individual is not of himself, but of his family
+or race; or if he is an intensely religious man, his consciousness is
+concerned with his essential identity with the Absolute and Ultimate
+Being, rather than with his own separate self. In other words, the
+term "impersonal" is made to do duty for the non-existent negative of
+"individual." "Impersonal" is thus equivalent to "universal" and
+personal to "individual." To change the phraseology, the term
+"impersonal" is used to signify a state of mind in which the
+separateness or individuality of the individual ego is not fully
+recognized or appreciated even by the individual himself. The
+prominent element of the individual's consciousness is the unity or
+the universalism, rather than the multiplicity or individualism.
+
+Mr. Lowell in effect says this in his closing chapter entitled
+"Imagination." His thesis seems to be that the universal mind, of
+which, each individual receives a fragment, becomes increasingly
+differentiated as the race mind evolves. In proportion as the
+evolution has progressed does the individual realize his
+individuality--his separateness; this individualization, this
+differentiation of the individual mind is, in his view, the measure as
+well as the cause of the higher civilization. The lack of such
+individualization he calls "impersonality"; in such a mind the
+dominant thought is not of the separateness between, but of the unity
+that binds together, himself and the universal mind.
+
+If the above is a correct statement of the conception of those who
+emphasize the "impersonality" of the Orient, then there are two things
+concerning it which may be said at once. First, the idea is a
+perfectly clear and intelligible one, the proposition is definite and
+tangible. But why do they not so express it? The terms "personality"
+and "individuality" are used synonymously; while "impersonal" is
+considered the equivalent of the negative of individual,
+un-individual--a word which has not yet been and probably never will
+be used. But the negation of individual is universal; "impersonal,"
+therefore, according to the usage of these writers, becomes equivalent
+to universal.
+
+But, secondly, even after the use of terms has become thus understood,
+and we are no longer confused over the words, having arrived at the
+idea they are intended to convey, the idea itself is fundamentally
+erroneous. I freely admit that there is an interesting truth of which
+these writers have got a glimpse and to which they are striving to
+give expression, but apparently they have not understood the real
+nature of this truth and consequently they are fundamentally wrong in
+calling the Far East "impersonal," even in their sense of the word.
+They are furthermore in error, in ascribing this "impersonal"
+characteristic of the Japanese to their inherent race nature, If they
+are right, the problem is fundamentally one of biological evolution.
+
+In contrast to this view, it is here contended, first, that the
+feature they are describing is not such as they describe it; second,
+that it is not properly called "impersonality"; third, that it is not
+a matter of inherent race nature, of brain structure, or of mind
+differentiation, but wholly a matter of social evolution; and, fourth,
+that if there is such a trait as they describe, it is not due to a
+deficiently developed but on the contrary to a superlatively developed
+personality, which might better be called super-personality. To state
+the position here advocated in a nutshell, it is maintained that the
+asserted "impersonality" of the Japanese is the result of the
+communalistic nature of the social order which has prevailed down to
+the most recent times; it has put its stamp on every feature of the
+national and individual life, not omitting the language, the
+philosophy, the religion, or even the inmost thoughts of the people.
+This dominance of the communalistic type of social order has doubtless
+had an effect on the physical and psychic, including the brain,
+development of the people. These physical and psychical developments,
+however, are not the cause, but the product, of the social order. They
+are, furthermore, of no superlative import, since they offer no
+insuperable obstacle to the introduction of a social order radically
+different from that of past millenniums.
+
+Before proceeding to elaborate and illustrate this general position,
+it seems desirable to introduce two further definitions.
+
+Communalism and individualism are the two terms used throughout this
+work to describe two contrasted types of social order.
+
+By communalism I mean that order of society, whether family, tribal,
+or national, in which the idea and the importance of the community are
+more or less clearly recognized, and in which this idea has become the
+constructive principle of the social order, and where at the same time
+the individual is practically ignored and crushed.
+
+By individualism I mean that later order of society in which the worth
+of the individual has been recognized and emphasized, to the extent of
+radically modifying the communalism, securing a liberty for individual
+act and thought and initiative, of which the old order had no
+conception, and which it would have considered both dangerous and
+immoral. Individualism is not that atomic social order in which the
+idea of the communal unity has been rejected, and each separate human
+being regarded as the only unit. Such a society could hardly be called
+an order, even by courtesy. Individualism is that developed stage of
+communalism, wherein the advantages of close communal unity have been
+retained, and wherein, at the same time, the idea and practice of the
+worth of the individual and the importance of giving him liberty of
+thought and action have been added. Great changes in the internal
+structure, of society follow, but the communial unity or idea is
+neither lost nor injured. In taking up our various illustrations
+regarding personality in Japan, three points demand our attention;
+what are the facts? are they due to, and do they prove, the asserted
+"impersonality" of the people? and are the facts sufficiently
+accounted for by the communal theory of the Japanese social order?
+
+Let us begin, then, with the illustration of which advocates of
+"impersonality" make so much, Japanese politeness. As to the reality
+of the fact, it is hardly necessary that I present extended proof.
+Japanese politeness is proverbial. It is carried into the minutest
+acts of daily life; the holding of the hands, the method of entering a
+room, the sucking in of the breath on specific occasions, the
+arrangement of the hair, the relative places of honor in a
+sitting-room, the method of handing guests refreshments, the exchange
+of friendly gifts--every detail of social life is rigidly dominated by
+etiquette. Not only acts, but the language of personal address as
+well, is governed by ideas of politeness which have fundamentally
+affected the structure of the language, by preventing the development
+of personal pronouns.
+
+Now what is the cause of this characteristic of the Japanese? It is
+commonly attributed by writers of the impersonal school to the
+"impersonality" of the Oriental mind. "Impersonality" is not only the
+occasion, it is the cause of the politeness of the Japanese people.
+"Self is suppressed, and an ever-present regard for others is
+substituted in its stead." "Impersonality, by lessening the interest
+in one's self, induces one to take interest in others."[CO] Politeness
+is, in these passages, attributed to the impersonal nature of the
+Japanese mind. The following quotations show that this characteristic
+is conceived of as inherent in race and mind structure, not in the
+social order, as is here maintained. "The nation grew up to man's
+estate, keeping the mind of its childhood."[CP] "In race
+characteristics, he is yet essentially the same.... Of these traits
+... perhaps the most important is the great quality of
+impersonality."[CQ] "The peoples inhabiting it [the earth's temperate
+zone] grow steadily more personal as we go West. So unmistakable is
+this gradation that one is almost tempted to ascribe it to cosmical
+rather than human causes.... The essence of the soul of the Far East
+may be said to be impersonality."[CR]
+
+In his chapter on "Imagination," Mr. Lowell seeks to explain the cause
+of the "impersonality" of the Orient. He attributes it to their marked
+lack of the faculty of "imagination"--the faculty of forming new and
+original ideas. Lacking this faculty, there has been relatively little
+stimulus to growth, and hence no possibility of differentiation and
+thus of individualization.
+
+If politeness were due to the "impersonal" nature of the race mind, it
+would be impossible to account for the rise and decline of Japanese
+etiquette, for it should have existed from the beginning, and
+continued through all time, nor could we account for the gross
+impoliteness that is often met with in recent years. The Japanese
+themselves deplore the changes that have taken place. They testify
+that the older forms of politeness were an integral element of the
+feudal system and were too often a thin veneer of manner by no means
+expressive of heart interest. None can be so absolutely rude as they
+who are masters of the forms of politeness, but have not the kindly
+heart. The theory of "impersonality" does not satisfactorily account
+for the old-time politeness of Japan.
+
+The explanation here offered for the development and decline of
+politeness is that they are due to the nature of the social order.
+Thoroughgoing feudalism long maintained, with its social ranks and
+free use of the sword, of necessity develops minute unwritten rules of
+etiquette; without the universal observance of these customs, life
+would be unbearable and precarious, and society itself would be
+impossible. Minute etiquette is the lubricant of a feudal social
+order. The rise and fall of Japan's phenomenal system of feudal
+etiquette is synchronous with that of her feudal system, to which it
+is due rather than to the asserted "impersonality" of the race mind.
+
+The impersonal theory is amazingly blind to adverse phenomena. Such a
+one is the marked sensitiveness of the middle and upper classes to the
+least slight or insult. The gradations of social rank are scrupulously
+observed, not only on formal occasions, but also in the homes at
+informal and social gatherings. Failure to show the proper attention,
+or the use of language having an insufficient number of honorific
+particles and forms, would be instantly interpreted as a personal
+slight, if not an insult.[CS]
+
+Now if profuse courtesy is a proof of "impersonality," as its
+advocates argue, what does morbid sensitiveness prove but highly
+developed personality? But then arises the difficulty of understanding
+how the same individuals can be both profusely polite and morbidly
+sensitive at one and the same time? Instead of inferring
+"impersonality" from the fact of politeness, from the two facts of
+sensitiveness and politeness we may more logically infer a
+considerable degree of personality. Yet I would not lay much stress on
+this argument, for oftentimes (or is it always true?) the weaker and
+more insignificant the person, the greater the sensitiveness. Extreme
+sensitiveness is as natural and necessary a product of a highly
+developed feudalism as is politeness, and neither is particularly due
+to the high or the low development of personality.
+
+Similarly with respect to the question of altruism, which is
+practically identified with politeness by expounders of Oriental
+"impersonality." They make this term (altruism) the virtual
+equivalent of "impersonality"--interest in others rather than in self,
+an interest due, according to their view, to a lack of differentiation
+of the individual minds; the individuals, though separate, still
+retain the universalism of the original mind-stuff. This use of the
+term altruism makes it a very different thing from the quality or
+characteristic which in the West is described by this term.
+
+But granting that this word is used with a legitimate meaning, we ask,
+is altruism in this sense an inherent quality of the Japanese race?
+Let the reader glance back to our discussion of the possession by the
+Japanese of sympathy, and the humane feelings.[CT] We saw there marked
+proofs of their lack. The cruelty of the old social order was such as
+we can hardly realize. Altruism that expresses itself only in polite
+forms, and does not strive to alleviate the suffering of fellow-men,
+can have very little of that sense, which this theory requires. So
+much as to the fact. Then as to the theory. If this alleged altruism
+were inherent in the mental structure, it ought to be a universal
+characteristic of the Japanese; it should be all-pervasive and
+permanent. It should show itself toward the foreigner as well as
+toward the native. But such is far from the case. Few foreigners have
+received a hearty welcome from the people at large. They are suspected
+and hated; as little room as possible is made for them. The less of
+their presence and advice, the better. So far as there is any interest
+in them, it is on the ground of utility, and not of inherent good will
+because of a feeling of aboriginal unity. Of course there are many
+exceptions to these statements, especially among the Christians. But
+such is the attitude of the people as a whole, especially of the
+middle and upper classes toward the foreigners.
+
+If we turn our attention to the opposite phase of Japanese character,
+namely their selfishness, their self-assertiveness, and their
+aggressiveness, whether as a nation or as individuals, and consider at
+the same time the recent rise of this spirit, we are again impressed
+both with the narrow range of facts to which the advocates of
+"impersonality" call our attention, and also with the utter
+insufficiency of their theory to account for the facts they overlook.
+According to the theory of altruism and "impersonality," these are
+characteristics of undeveloped races and individuals, while the
+reverse characteristics, those of selfishness and self-assertiveness,
+are the products of a later and higher development, marks of strong
+personality. But neither selfishness nor individual aggressiveness is
+a necessary element of developed "personality." If it were, children
+who have never been trained by cultivated mothers, but have been
+allowed to have their own way regardless of the rights or desires of
+others, are more highly developed in "personality" than the adult who
+has, through a long life of self-discipline and religious devotion,
+become regardless of his selfish interests and solicitous only for the
+welfare of others. If the high development of altruism is equivalent
+to the development of "impersonality," then those in the West who are
+renowned for humanity and benevolence are "impersonal," while robbers
+and murderers and all who are regardless of the welfare of others are
+possessed of the most highly developed "personality." And it also
+follows that highly developed altruistic benefactors of mankind are
+such, after all, because they are _undeveloped_,--their minds are
+relatively undifferentiated,--hence their fellow-feeling and kindly
+acts. There is a story of some learned wit who met a half-drunken
+boor; the latter plunged ahead, remarking, "I never get out of the way
+of a fool"; to which the quick reply came, "I always do." According to
+this argument based on self-assertive aggressiveness, the boor was the
+man possessed of a strong personality, while the gentleman was
+relatively "impersonal." If pure selfishness and aggressiveness are
+the measure of personality, then are not many of the carnivorous
+animals endowed with a very high degree of "personality"?
+
+The truth is, a comprehensive and at the same time correct contrast
+between the East and the West cannot be stated in terms of personality
+and impersonality. They fail not only to take in all the facts, but
+they fail to explain even the facts they take in. Such a contrast of
+the East and the West can be stated only in the terms of communalism
+and individualism. As we have already seen,[CU] every nation has to
+pass through the communal stage, in order to become a nation at all.
+The families and tribes of which it is composed need to become
+consolidated in order to survive in the struggle for existence with
+surrounding families, tribes, and nations. In this stage the
+individual is of necessity sunk out of sight in the demands of the
+community. This secures indeed a species of altruism, but of a
+relatively low order. It is communal altruism which nature compels on
+pain of extermination. This, however, is very different from the
+altruism of a high religious experience and conscious ethical
+devotion. This latter is volitional, the product of character. This
+altruism can arise chiefly in a social order where individualism to a
+large extent has gained sway. It is this variety of altruism that
+characterizes the West, so far as the West is altruistic. But on the
+other hand, in a social order in which individualism has full swing,
+the extreme of egoistic selfishness can also find opportunity for
+development. It is accordingly in the West that extreme selfishness,
+the most odious of sins, is seen at its best, or rather its worst.
+
+So again we see that selfish aggressiveness and an exalted
+consciousness of one's individuality or separateness are not necessary
+marks of developed personality, nor their opposite the marks of
+undeveloped personality--so-called "impersonality." On the contrary,
+the reverse statement would probably come nearer the truth. He who is
+intensely conscious of the great unities of nature and of human
+nature, of the oneness that unites individuals to the nation and to
+the race, and who lives a corresponding life of goodness and kindness,
+is by far the more developed personality. But the manifestations of
+personality will vary much with the nature of the social order. This
+may change with astonishing rapidity. Such a change has come over the
+social order of the Japanese nation during the past thirty years,
+radically modifying its so-called impersonal features. Their primitive
+docility, their politeness, their marriage customs, their universal
+adoption of Chinese thoughts, language, and literature, and now, in
+recent times, their rejection of the Chinese philosophy and science,
+their assertiveness in Korea and China and their aggressive attitude
+toward the whole world--all these multitudinous changes and complete
+reversals of ideals and customs, point to the fact that the former
+characteristics of their civilization were not "impersonal," but
+communal, and that they rested on social development rather than on
+inherent nature or on deficient mental differentiation.
+
+A common illustration of Japanese "impersonality," depending for its
+force wholly on invention, is the deficiency of the Japanese language
+in personal pronouns and its surplus of honorifics. At first thought
+this argument strikes one as very strong, as absolutely invincible
+indeed. Surely, if there is a real lack of personal pronouns, is not
+that proof positive that the people using the language, nay, the
+authors of the language, must of necessity be deficient in the sense
+of personality? And if the verbs in large numbers are impersonal, does
+not that clinch the matter? But further consideration of the argument
+and its illustrations gradually shows its weakness. At present I must
+confess that the argument seems to me utterly fallacious, and for the
+sufficient reason that the personal element is introduced, if not
+always explicitly yet at least implicitly, in almost every sentence
+uttered. The method of its expression, it is true, is quite different
+from that adopted by Western languages, but it is none the less there.
+It is usually accomplished by means of the titles, "honorific"
+particles, and honorific verbs and nouns. "Honorable shoes" can't by
+any stretch of the imagination mean shoes that belong to me; every
+Japanese would at once think "your shoes"; his attention is not
+distracted by the term "honorable" as is that of the foreigner; the
+honor is largely overlooked by the native in the personal element
+implied. The greater the familiarity with the language the more clear
+it becomes that the impressions of "impersonality" are due to the
+ignorance of the foreigner rather than to the real "impersonal"
+character of the Japanese thought or mind. In the Japanese methods of
+linguistic expression, politeness and personality are indeed,
+inextricably interwoven; but they are not at all confused. The
+distinctions of person and the consciousness of self in the Japanese
+_thought_ are as clear and distinct as they are in the English
+thought. In the Japanese _sentence_, however, the politeness and the
+personality cannot be clearly separated. On that account, however,
+there is no more reason for denying one element than the other.
+
+So far from the deficiency of personal pronouns being a proof of
+Japanese "impersonality," _i.e._, of lack of consciousness of self,
+this very deficiency may, with even more plausibility, be used to
+establish the opposite view. Child psychology has established the fact
+that an early phenomenon of child mental development is the emphasis
+laid on "meum" and "tuum," mine and yours. The child is a
+thoroughgoing individualist in feelings, conceptions, and language.
+The first personal pronoun is ever on his lips and in his thought.
+Only as culture arises and he is trained to see how disagreeable in
+others is excessive emphasis on the first person, does he learn to
+moderate his own excessive egoistic tendency. Is it not a fact that
+the studied evasion of first personal pronouns by cultured people in
+the West is due to their developed consciousness of self? Is it
+possible for one who has no consciousness of self to conceive as
+impolite the excessive use of egoistic forms of speech? From this
+point of view we might argue that, because of the deficiency of her
+personal pronouns, the Japanese nation has advanced far beyond any
+other nation in the process of self-consciousness. But this too would
+be an error. Nevertheless, so far from saying that the lack of
+personal pronouns is a proof of the "impersonality" of the Japanese, I
+think we may fairly use it as a disproof of the proposition.
+
+The argument for the inherent impersonality of the Japanese mind
+because of the relative lack of personal pronouns is still further
+undermined by the discovery, not only of many substitutes, but also of
+several words bearing the strong impress of the conception of self.
+There are said to be three hundred words which may be used as personal
+pronouns--"Boku," "servant," is a common term for "I," and "kimi,"
+"Lord," for "you"; these words are freely used by the student class.
+Officials often use "Konata," "here," and "Anata," "there," for the
+first and second persons. "Omaye," "honorably in front," is used both
+condescendingly and honorifically; "you whom I condescend to allow in
+my presence," and "you who confer on me the honor of entering your
+presence." The derivation of the most common word for I, "Watakushi,"
+is unknown, but, in addition to its pronominal use, it has the meaning
+of "private." It has become a true personal pronoun and is freely used
+by all classes.
+
+In addition to the three hundred words which may be used as personal
+pronouns the Japanese language possesses an indefinite number of ways
+for delicately suggesting the personal element without its express
+utterance. This is done either by subtle praise, which can then only
+refer to the person addressed or by more or less bald
+self-depreciation, which can then only refer to the first person. "Go
+kanai," "honorable within the house," can only mean, according to
+Japanese etiquette, "your wife," or "your family," while "gu-sai,"
+"foolish wife," can only mean "my wife." "Gufu," "foolish father,"
+"tonji," "swinish child," and numberless other depreciatory terms such
+as "somatsu na mono," "coarse thing," and "tsumaranu mono," "worthless
+thing," according to the genius of the language can only refer to the
+first person, while all appreciative and polite terms can only refer
+to the person addressed. The terms, "foolish," "swinish," etc., have
+lost their literal sense and mean now no more than "my," while the
+polite forms mean "yours." To translate these terms, "my foolish
+wife," "my swinish son," is incorrect, because it twice translates the
+same word. In such cases the Japanese _thought_ is best expressed by
+using the possessive pronoun and omitting the derogative adjective
+altogether. Japanese indirect methods for the expression of the
+personal relation are thus numberless and subtile. May it not be
+plausibly argued since the European has only a few blunt pronouns
+wherewith to state this idea while the Japanese has both numberless
+pronouns and many other delicate ways of conveying the same idea, that
+the latter is far in advance of the European in the development of
+personality? I do not use this argument, but as an argument it seems
+to me much more plausible than that which infers from the paucity of
+true pronouns the absence, or at least the deficiency, of personality.
+
+Furthermore, Japanese possesses several words for self. "Onore,"
+"one's self," and "Ware," "I or myself," are pure Japanese, while "Ji"
+(the Chinese pronunciation for "onore"), "ga," "self," and "shi" (the
+Chinese pronunciation of "watakushi," meaning private) are
+Sinico-Japanese words, that is, Chinese derived words. These
+Sinico-Japanese terms are in universal use in compound words, and are
+as truly Japanese as many Latin, Greek and Norman-derived words are
+real English. "Ji-bun," "one's self"; "jiman," "self-satisfaction";
+"ji-fu," "self-assertion"; "jinin," "self-responsibility"; "ji-bo
+ji-ki," "self-destruction, self-abandonment"; "ji-go ji-toku,"
+"self-act, self-reward"--always in a bad sense; "ga-yoku," "selfish
+desire"; "ga-shin," "selfish heart"; "ga we oru," "self-mastery";
+"muga," "unselfish"; "shi-shin shi-yoku," "private or self-heart,
+private or self-desire," that is, selfishness"; "shi-ai shi-shin,"
+"private-or self-love, private-or-self heart," _i.e._,
+selfishness--these and countless other compound words involving the
+conception of self, can hardly be explained by the "impersonal,"
+"altruistic" theory of Japanese race mind and language. In truth, if
+this theory is unable to explain the facts it recognizes, much less
+can it account for those it ignores.
+
+To interpret correctly the phenomena we are considering, we must ask
+ourselves how personal pronouns have arisen in other languages. Did
+the primitive Occidental man produce them outright from the moment
+that he discovered himself? Far from it. There are abundant reasons
+for believing that every personal pronoun is a degenerate or, if you
+prefer, a developed noun. Pronouns are among the latest products of
+language, and, in the sphere of language, are akin to algebraic
+symbols in the sphere of mathematics or to a machine in the sphere of
+labor. A pronoun, whether personal, demonstrative, or relative, is a
+wonderful linguistic invention, enabling the speaker to carry on long
+trains of unbroken thought. Its invention was no more connected with
+the sense of self, than was the invention of any labor-saving device.
+The Japanese language is even more defective for lack of relative
+pronouns than it is for lack of personal pronouns. Shall we argue from
+this that the Japanese people have no sense of relation? Of course
+personal pronouns could not arise without or before the sense of self,
+but the problem is whether the sense of self could arise without or
+exist before that particular linguistic device, the personal pronoun?
+On this problem the Japanese language and civilization throw
+conclusive light.
+
+The fact is that the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon and Japanese peoples
+parted company so long ago that in the course of their respective
+linguistic evolutions, not only have all common terms been completely
+eliminated, but even common methods of expression. The so-called
+Indo-European races hit upon one method of sentence structure, a
+method in which pronouns took an important part and the personal
+pronoun was needed to express the personal element, while the Japanese
+hit upon another method which required little use of pronouns and
+which was able to express the personal element wholly without the
+personal pronoun. The sentence structure of the two languages is thus
+radically different.
+
+Now the long prevalent feudal social order has left its stamp on the
+Japanese language no less than on every other feature of Japanese
+civilization. Many of the quasi personal pronouns are manifestly of
+feudal parentage. Under the new civilization and in contact with
+foreign peoples who can hardly utter a sentence without a personal
+pronoun, the majority of the old quasi personal pronouns are dropping
+out of use, while those in continued use are fast rising to the
+position of full-fledged personal pronouns. This, however, is not due
+to the development of self-consciousness on the part of the people,
+but only to the development of the language in the direction of
+complete and concise expression of thought. It would be rash to say
+that the feudal social order accounts for the lack of pronouns,
+personal or others, from the Japanese language, but it is safe to
+maintain that the feudal order, with its many gradations of social
+rank, minute etiquette, and refined and highly developed personal
+sensitiveness would adopt and foster an impersonal and honorific
+method of personal allusion. Even though we may not be able to explain
+the rise of the non-pronominal method of sentence structure, it is
+enough if we see that this is a problem in the evolution of language,
+and that Japanese pronominal deficiency is not to be attributed to
+lack of consciousness of self, much less to the inherent
+"impersonality" of the Japanese mind.
+
+An interesting fact ignored by advocates of the "impersonal" theory is
+the Japanese inability of conceiving nationality apart from
+personality. Not only is the Emperor conceived as the living symbol of
+Japanese nationality, but he is its embodiment and substance. The
+Japanese race is popularly represented to be the offspring of the
+royal house. Sovereignty resides completely and absolutely in him.
+Authority to-day is acknowledged only in those who have it from him.
+Popular rights are granted the people by him, and exist because of his
+will alone. A single act of his could in theory abrogate the
+constitution promulgated in 1889 and all the popular rights enjoyed
+to-day by the nation. The Emperor of Japan could appropriate, without
+in the least shocking the most patriotic Japanese, the long-famous
+saying of Louis XIV., "L'état, c'est moi." Mr. H. Kato, ex-president
+of the Imperial University, in a recent work entitled the "Evolution
+of Morality and Law" says this in just so many words: "Patriotism in
+this country means loyalty to the throne. To the Japanese, the Emperor
+and the country are the same. The Emperor of Japan, without the
+slightest exaggeration, can say, 'L'état, c'est moi.' The Japanese
+believe that all their happiness is bound up with the Imperial line
+and have no respect for any system of morality or law that fails to
+take cognizance of this fact."
+
+Mr. Yamaguchi, professor of history in the Peeresses' School and
+lecturer in the Imperial Military College, thus writes in the _Far
+East_: "The sovereign power of the State cannot be dissociated from
+the Imperial Throne. It lasts forever along with the Imperial line of
+succession, unbroken for ages eternal. If the Imperial House cease to
+exist, the Empire falls." "According to our ideas the monarch reigns
+over and governs the country in his own right.... Our Emperor
+possesses real sovereignty and also exercises it. He is quite
+different from other rulers, who possess but a partial sovereignty."
+This is to-day the universally accepted belief in Japan. It shows
+clearly that national unity and sovereignty are not conceived in Japan
+apart from personality.
+
+One more point demands our attention before bringing this chapter to a
+close. If "impersonality" were an inherent characteristic of Japanese
+race nature, would it be possible for strong personalities to arise?
+
+Mr. Lowell has described in telling way a very common experience.
+"About certain people," he says, "there exists a subtle something
+which leaves its impress indelibly upon the consciousness of all who
+come in contact with them. This something is a power, but a power of
+so indefinable a description that we beg definition by calling it
+simply the personality of the man.... On the other hand, there are
+people who have no effect upon us whatever. They come and they go with
+a like indifference.... And we say that the difference is due to the
+personality or the want of personality of the man."[CV] The first
+thing to which I would call attention is the fact that "personality"
+is here used in its true sense. It has no exclusive reference to
+consciousness of self, nor does it signify the effect of
+self-consciousness on the consciousness of another. It here has
+reference to those inherent qualities of thinking and feeling and
+willing which we have seen to be the essence of personality. These
+qualities, possessed in a marked way or degree, make strong
+personalities. Their relative lack constitutes weak personality. Bare
+consciousness of self is a minor evidence of personality and may be
+developed to a morbid degree in a person who has a weak personality.
+
+In the second place this distinction between weak and strong
+personalities is as true of the Japanese as of the Occidental. There
+have been many commanding persons in Japanese history; they have been
+the heroes of the land. There are such to-day. The most commanding
+personality of recent times was, I suppose, Takamori Saigo, whose very
+name is an inspiration to tens of thousands of the choicest youth of
+the nation. Joseph Neesima was such a personality. The transparency of
+his purpose, the simplicity of his personal aim, his unflinching
+courage, fixedness of belief, lofty plans, and far-reaching ambitions
+for his people, impressed all who came into contact with him. No one
+mingles much with the Japanese, freely speaking with them in their own
+language, but perceives here and there men of "strong personality" in
+the sense of the above-quoted passage. Now it seems to me that if
+"impersonality" in the corresponding sense were a race characteristic,
+due to the nature of their psychic being, then the occurrence of so
+many commanding personalities in Japan would be inexplicable. Heroes
+and widespread hero-worship[CW] could hardly arise were there no
+commanding personalities. The feudal order lent itself without doubt
+to the development of such a spirit. But the feudal order could hardly
+have arisen or even maintained itself for centuries without commanding
+personalities, much less could it have created them. The whole feudal
+order was built on an exalted oligarchy. It was an order which
+emphasized persons, not principles; the law of the land was not the
+will of the multitudes, but of a few select persons. While, therefore,
+it is beyond dispute that the old social order was communal in type,
+and so did not give freedom to the individual, nor tend to develop
+strong personality among the masses, it is also true that it did
+develop men of commanding personality among the rulers. Those who from
+youth were in the hereditary line of rule, sons of Shoguns, daimyos,
+and samurai, were forced by the very communalism of the social order
+to an exceptional personal development. They shot far ahead of the
+common man. Feudalism is favorable to the development of personality
+in the favored few, while it represses that of the masses.
+Individualism, on the contrary, giving liberty of thought and act,
+with all that these imply, is favorable to the development of the
+personality of all.
+
+In view of the discussions of this chapter, is it not evident that
+advocates of the "impersonal" theory of Japanese mind and civilization
+not only ignore many important elements of the civilization they
+attempt to interpret, but also base their interpretation on a mistaken
+conception of personality? We may not, however, leave the discussion
+at this point, for important considerations still demand our attention
+if we would probe this problem of personality to its core.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?
+
+
+Advocates of Japanese "impersonality" call attention to the phenomena
+of self-suppression in religion. It seems strange, however, that they
+who present this argument fail to see how "self-suppression"
+undermines their main contention. If "self-suppression" be actually
+attained, it can only be by a people advanced so far as to have passed
+through and beyond the "personal" stage of existence.
+"Self-suppression" cannot be a characteristic of a primitive people, a
+people that has not yet reached the stage of consciousness of self. If
+the alleged "impersonality" of the Orient is that of a primitive
+people that has not yet reached the stage of self-consciousness, then
+it cannot have the characteristic of "self-suppression." If, on the
+other hand, it is the "impersonality" of "self-suppression," then it
+is radically different from that of a primitive people. Advocates of
+"impersonality" present both conceptions, quite unconscious apparently
+that they are mutually exclusive. If either conception is true, the
+other is false.
+
+Furthermore, if self-suppression is a marked characteristic of
+Japanese politeness and altruism (as it undoubtedly is when these
+qualities are real expressions of the heart and of the general
+character), it is a still more characteristic feature of the higher
+religious life of the people, which certainly does not tend to
+"impersonality." The ascription of esoteric Buddhism to the common
+people by advocates of the "impersonal" theory is quite a mistake, and
+the argument for the "impersonality" of the race on this ground is
+without foundation, for the masses of the people are grossly
+polytheistic, wholly unable to understand Buddhistic metaphysics, or
+to conceive of the nebulous, impersonal Absolute of Buddhism. Now if
+consciousness of the unity of nature, and especially of the unity of
+the individual soul with the Absolute, were a characteristic of
+undeveloped, that is, of undifferentiated mind, then all primitive
+peoples should display it in a superlative degree. It should show
+itself in every phase of their life. The more primitive the people,
+the more divine their life--because the less differentiated from the
+original divine mind! Such are the requirements of this theory. But
+what are the facts? The primitive undeveloped mind is relatively
+unconscious of self; it is wholly objective; it is childlike; it does
+not even know that there is self to suppress. Primitive religion is
+purely objective. Implicit, in primitive religion without doubt, is
+the fact of a unity between God and man, but the primitive man has not
+discovered this implication of his religious thinking. This is the
+state of mind of a large majority of Japanese.
+
+Yet this is by no means true of all. No nation, with such a continuous
+history as Japan has had, would fail to develop a class capable of
+considerable introspection. In Japan introspection received early and
+powerful impetus from the religion of Buddha. It came with a
+philosophy of life based on prolonged and profound introspection. It
+commanded each man who would know more than the symbols, who desired,
+like Buddha, to attain the great enlightenment and thus become a
+Tathagata, a Blessed one, a Buddha, an Enlightened one, to know and
+conquer himself. The emphasis laid by thoughtful Buddhism on the need
+of self-knowledge, in order to self-suppression, is well recognized by
+all careful students. Advocates of Oriental "impersonality" are not
+one whit behind others in recognizing it. In this connection we can
+hardly do better than quote a few of Mr. Lowell's happy descriptions
+of the teaching of philosophic Buddhism.
+
+"This life, it says, is but a chain of sorrows.... These desires that
+urge us on are really causes of all our woe. We think they are
+ourselves. We are mistaken. They are all illusion.... This
+personality, this sense of self, is a cruel deception.... Realize once
+the true soul behind it, devoid of attributes ... an invisible part of
+the great impersonal soul of nature, then ... will you have found
+happiness in the blissful quiescence of Nirvana" [p. 186]. "In desire
+alone lies all the ill. Quench the desire, and the deeds [sins of the
+flesh] will die of inanition. Get rid, then, said Buddha, of these
+passions, these strivings, for the sake of self. As a man becomes
+conscious that he himself is something distinct from his body, so if
+he reflect and ponder, he will come to see that in like manner, his
+appetites, ambitions, hopes, are really extrinsic to the spirit
+proper.... Behind desire, behind even the will, lies the soul, the
+same for all men, one with the soul of the universe. When he has once
+realized this eternal truth, the man has entered Nirvana.... It
+[Nirvana] is simply the recognition of the eternal oneness of the two
+[the individual and the universal soul]" [p. 189].
+
+Accepting this description of philosophic Buddhism as fairly accurate,
+it is plain that the attainment of this consciousness of the unity of
+the individual self with the universal is the result, according to
+Buddha, and also according to the advocates of "impersonality," of a
+highly developed consciousness of self. It is not a simple state of
+undifferentiated mind, but a complex and derivative one--absolutely
+incomprehensible to a primitive people. The means for this suppression
+of self _depends entirely on the development of the consciousness of
+self_. The self is the means for casting out the self, and it is done
+by that introspection which ultimately leads to the realization of the
+unity. If, then, Japanese Buddhism seeks to suppress the self, this
+very effort is the most conclusive proof we could demand of the
+possession by this people of a highly developed consciousness of self.
+
+It is one of the boasts of Buddhism that a man's saviour is himself;
+no other helper, human or divine, can do aught for him. Those who
+reject Christianity in Christian lands are quite apt to praise
+Buddhism for this rejection of all external help. They urge that by
+the very nature of the case salvation is no external thing; each one
+must work out his own salvation. It cannot be given by another.
+Salvation through an external Christ who lived 1900 years ago is an
+impossibility. Such a criticism of Christianity shows real
+misunderstanding of the Christian doctrine and method of salvation.
+Yet the point to which attention is here directed is not the
+correctness or incorrectness of these characterizations of
+Christianity, but rather to the fact that "ji-riki," salvation through
+self-exertion, which is the boast of Buddhism, is but another proof of
+the essentially self-conscious character of Buddhism. It aims at
+Nirvana, it is true, at self-suppression, but it depends on the
+attainment of clear self-consciousness in the first place, and then on
+prolonged self-exertion for the attainment of that end. In proportion
+as Buddhism is esoteric is it self-conscious.
+
+Such being the nature of Buddhism, we naturally ask whether or not it
+is calculated to develop strongly personalized men and women. If
+consciousness of self is the main element of personality, we must
+pronounce Buddhism a highly personal rather than impersonal religion,
+as is commonly stated. But a religion of the Buddhistic type, which
+casts contempt on the self, and seeks its annihilation as the only
+means of salvation, has ever tended to destroy personality; it has
+made men hermits and pessimists; it has drawn them out of the great
+current of active life, and thus has severed them from their
+fellow-men. But a prime condition of developed personalities is
+largeness and intensity of life, and constant intercourse with
+mankind. Personality is developed in the society of persons, not in
+the company of trees and stones. Buddhism, which runs either to gross
+and superstitious polytheism on its popular side or to pessimistic
+introspection on its philosophical side, may possibly, by a stretch of
+the term, be called "impersonal" in the sense that it does not help in
+the production of strong, rounded personality among its votaries, but
+not in the sense that it does not produce self-consciousness.
+Buddhism, therefore, cannot be accurately described in terms of
+personality or impersonality.
+
+We would do well in this connection to ponder the fact that although
+Buddhism in its higher forms does certainly develop consciousness of
+self, it does not attribute to that self any worth. In consequence of
+this, it never has modified, and however long it might be allowed to
+run its course, never could modify, the general social order in the
+direction of individualism. This is one reason why the whole Orient
+has maintained to modern times its communal nature, in spite of its
+high development in so many ways, even in introspection and
+self-consciousness.
+
+This failure of Buddhism is all the more striking when we stop to
+consider how easy and, to us, natural an inference it would have been
+to pass from the perception of the essential unity between the
+separate self and the universal soul, to the assertion of the supreme
+worth of that separate soul because of the fact of that unity. But
+Buddhism never seems to have made that inference. Its compassion on
+animals and even insects depended on its doctrine of the
+transmigration of souls, not on its doctrine of universal soul unity.
+Its mercy was shown to animals in certain whimsical ways, but the
+universal lack of sympathy for suffering man, man who could suffer the
+most exquisite pains, exposed the shallowness of its solicitude about
+destroying life. The whole influence of Buddhism on the social order
+was not conducive to the development of personality in the Orient. The
+so-called impersonal influence of Buddhism upon the Eastern peoples,
+then, is not due to its failure to recognize the separateness of the
+human self, on the one hand, nor to its emphasis on the universal
+unity subsisting between the separate finite self and the infinite
+soul, on the other; but only on its failure to see the infinite worth
+of the individual; and in consequence of this failure, its inability
+to modify the general social order by the introduction of
+individualism.
+
+The asserted "impersonal" characteristic of Buddhism and of the
+Orient, therefore, I am not willing to call "impersonality"; for it is
+a very defective description, a real misnomer. I think no single term
+can truly describe the characteristic under consideration. As regards
+the general social order, the so-called impersonal characteristic is
+its communal nature; as regards the popular religious thought, whether
+of Shintoism or Buddhism, its so-called impersonality is its simple,
+artless objectivity; as regards philosophic Buddhism its so-called
+impersonality is its morbid introspective self-consciousness, leading
+to the desire and effort to annihilate the separateness of the self.
+These are different characteristics and cannot be described by any
+single term. So far as there are in Japan genuine altruism, real
+suppression of selfish desires, and real possession of kindly feelings
+for others and desires to help them, and so far as these qualities
+arise through a sense of the essential unity of the human race and of
+the unity of the human with the divine soul, this is not
+"impersonality"--but a form of highly developed personality--not
+infra-personality, but true personality.
+
+We have noted that although esoteric Buddhism developed a highly
+accentuated consciousness of self, it attributed no value to that
+self. This failure will not appear strange if we consider the
+historical reasons for it. Indeed, the failure was inevitable. Neither
+the social order nor the method of introspective thought suggested it.
+Both served, on the contrary, absolutely to preclude the idea.
+
+When introspective thought began in India the social order was already
+far beyond the undifferentiated communal life of the tribal stage.
+Castes were universal and fixed. The warp and woof of daily life and
+of thought were filled with the distinctions of castes and ranks.
+Man's worth was conceived to be not in himself, but in his rank or
+caste. The actual life of the people, therefore, did not furnish to
+speculative thought the slightest suggestion of the worth of man as
+man. It was a positive hindrance to the rise of such an idea.
+
+Equally opposed to the rise of this idea was the method of that
+introspective thought which discovered the fact of the self. It was a
+method of abstraction; it denied as part of the real self everything
+that could be thought of as separate; every changing phase or
+expression of the self could not be the real self, it was argued,
+because, if a part of the real self, how could it sometimes be and
+again not be? Feeling cannot be a part of the real self, for sometimes
+I feel and sometimes I do not. Any particular desire cannot be a part
+of my real self, for sometimes I have it and sometimes I do not. A
+similar argument was applied to every objective thing. In the famous
+"Questions of King Melinda," the argument as to the real chariot is
+expanded at length; the wheels are not the chariot; the spokes are not
+the chariot; the seat is not the chariot; the tongue is not the
+chariot; the axle is not the chariot; and so, taking up each
+individual part of the chariot, the assertion is made that it is not
+the chariot. But if the chariot is not in any of its parts, then they
+are not essential parts of the chariot. So of the soul--the self; it
+does not consist of its various qualities or attributes or powers;
+hence they are not essential elements of the self. The real self
+exists apart from them.
+
+Now is it not evident that such a method of introspection deprives the
+conception of self of all possible value? It is nothing but a bare
+intellectual abstraction. To say that this self is a part of the
+universal self is no relief,--brings no possible worth to the separate
+self,--for the conception of the universal soul has been arrived at by
+a similar process of thought. It, too, is nothing but a bare
+abstraction, deprived of all qualities and attributes and powers. I
+can see no distinction between the absolute universal soul of
+Brahmanism and Buddhism, and the Absolute Nothing of Hegel.[CX]
+
+Both are the farthest possible abstraction that the mind can make. The
+Absolute Soul of Buddhism, the Atman of Brahmanism, and Hegel's
+Nothing are the farthest possible remove from the Christian's
+conception of God. The former is the utter emptiness of being; the
+latter the perfect fullness of being and completeness of quality. The
+finite emptiness receives and can receive no richness of life or
+increase in value by its consciousness of unity with the infinite
+emptiness; whereas the finite limited soul receives in the Christian
+view an infinite wealth and value by reason of the consciousness of
+its unity with the divine infinite fullness. The usual method of
+stating the difference between the Christian conception of God and the
+Hindu conception of the root of all being is that the one is personal
+and the other impersonal. But these terms are inadequate. Rather say
+the one is perfectly personal and the other perfectly abstract.
+Impersonality, even in its strictest meaning, _i.e._, without
+"conscious separate existence as an intelligent and voluntary being,"
+only partially expresses the conception of Buddhism. The full
+conception rejects not only personality, but also every other quality;
+the ultimate and the absolute of Buddhism--we may not even call it
+being--is the absolutely abstract.
+
+With regard, then, to the conception of the separate self and of the
+supreme self, the Buddhistic view may be called "impersonal," not in
+the sense that it lacks the consciousness of a separate self; not in
+the sense that it emphasizes the universal unity--nay, the identity of
+all the separate abstract selves and the infinite abstract self; but
+in the sense that all the qualities and characteristics of human
+beings, such as consciousness, thought, emotion, volition, and even
+being itself, are rejected as unreal. The view is certainly
+"impersonal," but it is much more. My objection to the description of
+Buddhism as "impersonal," then, is not because the word is too strong,
+but because it is too weak; it does not sufficiently characterize its
+real nature. It is as much below materialism, as materialism is below
+monotheism. Such a scheme of thought concerning the universe
+necessarily reacts on those whom it possesses, to destroy what sense
+they may have of the value of human personality; that which we hold to
+be man's glory is broken into fragments and thrown away.
+
+But this does not constitute the whole of the difficulty. This method
+of introspective thought necessarily resulted in the doctrine of
+Illusion. Nothing is what it seems to be. The reality of the chariot
+is other than it appears. So too with the self and everything we see
+or think. The ignoant are perfectly under the spell of the illusion
+and cannot escape it. The deluded mind creates for itself the world of
+being, with all its woes and evils. The great enlightenment is the
+discovery of this fact and the power it gives to escape the illusion
+and to see that the world is nothing but illusion. To see that the
+illusion is an illusion destroys it as such. It is then no longer an
+illusion, but only a passing shadow. We cannot now stop to see how
+pessimism, the doctrine of self-salvation, and the nature of that
+salvation through contemplation and asceticism and withdrawal from
+active life, all inevitably follow from such a course of thought. That
+which here needs emphasis is that all this thinking renders it still
+more impossible to think of the self as having any intrinsic worth.
+On-the contrary, the self is the source of evil, of illusion. The
+great aim of Buddhism is necessarily to get rid of the self, with all
+its illusions and pains and disappointments.
+
+Is it now clear why Buddhism failed to reach the idea of the worth of
+the individual self? It was due to the nature of the social order, and
+the nature of its introspective and speculative thinking. Lacking,
+therefore, the conception of individual worth, we see clearly why it
+failed, even after centuries of opportunity, to secure individualism
+in the social order and a general development of personality either as
+an idea or as a fact among any of the peoples to which it has gone. It
+is not only a fact of history, but we have seen that it could not have
+been otherwise. The very nature of its conception of self and, in
+consequence, the nature of its conception of salvation absolutely
+prohibited it.[CY]
+
+We have thus far confined our view entirely to philosophic Buddhism.
+It is important, therefore, to state again that very few of the
+Japanese people outside of the priesthood have any such ideas with
+regard to the abstract nature of the individual, of the absolute self,
+and of their mutual relations as I have just described. These ideas
+are a part of esoteric Buddhism, the secret truth, which is an
+essential part of the great enlightenment, but far too profound for
+the vulgar multitudes. The vast majority, even of the priesthood, I am
+told, do not get far enough to be taught these views. The sweep of
+such conceptions, therefore, is very limited. That they are held,
+however, by the leaders, that they are the views of the most learned
+expounders and the most advanced students of Buddhism serves to
+explain why Buddhism has never been, and can never become, a power in
+reorganizing society in the direction of individualism.
+
+Popular Buddhism contains many elements alien to philosophic Buddhism.
+For a full study of the subject of this chapter we need to ask whether
+popular Buddhism tended to produce "impersonality," and if so, in what
+sense. The doctrine of "ingwa,"[CZ] with its consequences on
+character, demands fresh attention at this point. According to this
+doctrine every event of this life, even the minutest, is the result of
+one's conduct in a previous life, and is unalterably fixed by
+inflexible law. "Ingwa" is the crude idea of fate held by all
+primitive peoples, stated in somewhat philosophic and scientific form.
+It became a central element in the thought of Oriental peoples. Each
+man is born into his caste and class by a law over which neither he
+nor his parents have any control, and for which they are without
+responsibility. The misfortunes of life, and the good fortunes as
+well, come by the same impartial, inflexible laws. By this system of
+thought moral responsibility is practically removed from the
+individual's shoulders. This doctrine is held in Japan far more widely
+than the philosophic doctrine of the self, and is correspondingly
+baleful.
+
+This system of thought, when applied to the details of life, means
+that individual choice and will, and their effect in determining both
+external life and internal character have been practically lost sight
+of. As a sociological fact the origin of this conception is not
+difficult to understand. The primitive freedom of the individual in
+the early communal order of the tribe became increasingly restricted
+with the multiplication and development of the Hindu peoples; each
+class of society became increasingly specialized. Finally the
+individual had no choice whatever left him, because of the extreme
+rigidity of the communal order. As a matter of fact, the individual
+choice and will was allowed no play whatever in any important matter.
+Good sense saw that where no freedom is, there moral responsibility
+cannot be. All one's life is predetermined by the powers that be. Thus
+we again see how vital a relation the social order bears to the
+innermost thinking and belief of a people.
+
+Still further. Once let the idea be firmly grounded in an individual
+that he has no freedom of belief, of choice, or of act, and in the
+vast majority of cases, as a matter of fact, he will have none. "As a
+man thinketh in his heart, so is he." "According to your faith be it
+unto you." This doctrine of individual freedom is one of those that
+cannot be forced on a man who does not choose to believe it. In a true
+sense, it is my belief that I am free that makes me free. As Prof.
+James well says, the doctrine of the freedom of the will cannot be
+rammed down any man's intellectual throat, for that very act would
+abridge his real freedom. Man's real freedom is proved by his freedom
+to reject even the doctrine of his freedom. But so long as he rejects
+it, his freedom is only potential. Because of his belief in his
+bondage he is in bondage. Now this doctrine of fate has been the warp
+and woof of the thinking of the bulk of the Japanese people in their
+efforts to explain all the vicissitudes of life. Not only, therefore,
+has it failed to stimulate the volitional element of the psychic
+nature, but in the psychology of the Orient little if any attention
+has been given to this faculty. Oriental psychology practically knows
+nothing of personality because it has failed to note one of its
+central elements, the freedom of the will. The individual, therefore,
+has not been appealed to to exercise his free moral choice, one of
+the highest prerogatives of his nature. Moral responsibility has not
+been laid on his individual shoulders. A method of moral appeal fitted
+to develop the deepest element of his personality has thus been
+precluded.
+
+It thus resulted that although philosophic Buddhism developed a high
+degree of self-consciousness, yet because it failed to discover
+personal freedom it did not deliver popular Buddhism from its grinding
+doctrine of fate, rather it fastened this incubus of social progress
+more firmly upon it. Philosophic and popular Buddhism alike thus threw
+athwart the course of human and social evolution the tremendous
+obstacle of fatalism, which the Orient has never discovered a way
+either to surmount or evade. Buddhism teaches the impotence of the
+individual will; it destroys the sense of moral responsibility; it
+thus fails to understand the real nature of man, his glory and power
+and even his divinity, which the West sums up in the term personality.
+In this sense, then, the influence of Buddhism and the condition of
+the Orient may be called "impersonal," but it is the impersonality of
+a defective religious psychology, and of communalism in the social
+order. Whether it is right to call this feature of Japan
+"impersonality," I leave with the reader to judge.
+
+We draw this chapter to a close with a renewed conception of the
+inadequacy of the "impersonal" theory to explain Japanese religious
+and social phenomena. Further considerations, however, still merit
+attention ere we leave this subject.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+TRACES OF PERSONALITY IN SHINTOISM, BUDDHISM, AND CONFUCIANISM
+
+
+Regret as we sometimes must the illogicalness of the human mind, yet
+it is a providential characteristic of our as yet defective nature;
+for thanks to it few men or nations carry out to their complete
+logical results erroneous opinions and metaphysical speculations.
+Common sense in Japan has served more or less as an antidote for
+Buddhistic poison. The blighting curse of logical Buddhism has been
+considerably relieved by various circumstances. Let us now consider
+some of the ways in which the personality-destroying characteristics
+of Buddhism have been lessened by other ideas and influences.
+
+First of all there is the distinction, so often noted, between
+esoteric and popular Buddhism. Esoteric Buddhism was content to allow
+popular Buddhism a place and even to invent ways for the salvation of
+the ignorant multitudes who could not see the real nature of the self.
+Resort was had to the use of magic prayers and symbols and idols.
+These were bad enough, but they did not bear so hard on the
+development of personality as did esoteric Buddhism.
+
+The doctrine of the transmigration of the soul was likewise a relief
+from the pressure of philosophic Buddhism, for, according to this
+doctrine, the individual soul continues to live its separate life, to
+maintain its independent identity through infinite ages, while passing
+through the ten worlds of existence, from nethermost hell to highest
+heaven; and the particular world into which it is born after each
+death is determined by the moral character of its life in the
+immediately preceding stage. By this doctrine, then, a practical
+appeal is made to the common man to exert his will, to assert his
+personality, and so far forth it was calculated to undo a part of the
+mischief done by the paralyzing doctrine of fate and illusion.
+
+But a more important relief from the blight of Buddhistic doctrine was
+afforded by its own practice. At the very time that it declared the
+worthlessness of the self and the impotence of the will, it declared
+that salvation can come only from the self, by the most determined
+exercise of the will. What more convincing evidence of powerful,
+though distorted, wills could be asked than that furnished by Oriental
+asceticism? Nothing in the West exceeds it. As an _idea_, then,
+Buddhism interfered with the development of the conception of
+personality; but by its _practice_ it helped powerfully to develop it
+as a fact in certain phases of activity. The stoicism of the Japanese
+is one phase of developed personality. It shows the presence of a
+powerful, disciplined will keeping the body in control, so that it
+gives no sign of the thoughts and emotions going on in the mind,
+however fierce they may be.
+
+That in Japan, however, which has interfered most powerfully with the
+spread and dominance of Buddhism has been the practical and prosaic
+Confucian ethics. Apparently, Confucius never speculated. Metaphysics
+and introspection alike had no charm for him. He was concerned with
+conduct. His developed doctrine demanded of all men obedience to the
+law of the five relations. In spite, therefore, of the fact that he
+said nothing about individuality and personality, his system laid real
+emphasis on personality and demanded its continuous activity. In all
+of his teachings the idea of personality in the full and proper sense
+of this word is always implicit, and sometimes is quite distinct.
+
+The many strong and noble characters which glorify the feudal era are
+the product of Japonicized Confucianism, "Bushido," and bear powerful
+witness to its practical emphasis on personality. The loyalty, filial
+piety, courage, rectitude, honor, self-control, and suicide which it
+taught, defective though we must pronounce them from certain points of
+view, were yet very lofty and noble, and depended for their
+realization on the development of personality.
+
+Advocates of the "impersonal" interpretation of the Orient have much
+to say about pantheism. They assert the difficulty of conveying to the
+Oriental mind the idea of the personality of the Supreme Being.
+Although some form of pantheism is doubtless the belief of the
+learned, the evidence that a personal conception of deity is
+widespread among the people seems so manifest that I need hardly do
+more than call attention to it. This belief has helped to neutralize
+the paralyzing tendency of Buddhist fatalistic pantheism.
+
+Shinto is personal from first to last. Every one of its myriads of
+gods is a personal being, many of them deified men.
+
+The most popular are the souls of men who became famous for some
+particularly noble, brave, or admirable deed. Hero-worship is nothing
+if not personal. Furthermore, in its doctrine of "San-shin-ittai,"
+"three gods, one body," it curiously suggests the doctrine of the
+Trinity.
+
+Popular Buddhism holds an equally personal conception of deity. The
+objects of its worship are personifications of various qualities.
+"Kwannon," the goddess of mercy; "Jizo," the guardian of travelers and
+children; "Emma O," "King of Hell," who punishes sinners; "Fudo Sama,"
+"The Immovable One," are all personifications of the various
+attributes of deity and are worshiped as separate gods, each being
+represented by a uniform type of idol. It is a curious fact that
+Buddhism, which started out with such a lofty rejection of deity,
+finally fell to the worship of idols, whereas Shinto, which is
+peculiarly the worship of personality, has never stooped to its
+representation in wood or stone.
+
+Confucianism, however, surpasses all in its intimations of the
+personality of the Supreme Being. Although it never formulated this
+doctrine in a single term, nor definitely stated it as a tenet of
+religion, yet the entire ethical and religious thinking of the
+classically educated Japanese is shot through with the idea. Consider
+the Chinese expression "Jo-Tei," which the Christians of Japan freely
+use for God; it means literally "Supreme Emperor," and refers to the
+supreme ruler of the universe; he is here conceived in the form of a
+human ruler having of course human, that is to say, personal,
+attributes. A phrase often heard on the lips of the Japanese is:
+
+"Aoide Ten ni hajizu; fushite Chi ni hajizu."
+
+"Without self-reproach, whether looking up to Heaven, or down to
+Earth."
+
+This phrase has reference to the consciousness of one's life and
+conduct, such that he is neither ashamed to look up in the face of
+Heaven nor to look about him in the presence of man. Paul expressed
+this same idea when he wrote "having a conscience void of offense to
+God and to man." Or take another phrase:
+
+"Ten-mo kwaikwai so ni shite morasazu."
+
+"Heaven's net is broad as earth; and though its meshes are large, none
+can escape it." This is constantly used to illustrate the certainty
+that Heaven punishes the wicked.
+
+"Ten ni kuchi ari; kabe ni mimi ari."
+
+"Heaven has a mouth and even the wall has ears," signifies that all
+one does is known to the ruler of heaven and earth. Another still more
+striking saying ascribing knowledge to Heaven is the "Yoshin no
+Shichi," "the four knowings of Yoshin." This sage was a Chinaman of
+the second century A.D. Approached with a large bribe and urged to
+accept it with the assurance that no one would know it, he replied,
+"Heaven knows it; Earth knows it; you know it; and I know it. How say
+you that none will know it?" This famous saying condemning bribery is
+well known in Japan. The references to "Heaven" as knowing, seeing,
+doing, sympathizing, willing, and always identifying the activity of
+"Heaven" with the noblest and loftiest ideals of man, are frequent in
+Chinese and Japanese literature. The personality of God is thus a
+doctrine clearly foreshadowed in the Orient. It is one of those great
+truths of religion which the Orient has already received, but which in
+a large measure lies dormant because of its incomplete expression. The
+advent of the fully expressed teaching of this truth, freed from all
+vagueness and ambiguity, is a capital illustration of the way in which
+Christianity comes to Japan to fulfill rather than to destroy; it
+brings that fructifying element that stirs the older and more or less
+imperfectly expressed truths into new life, and gives them adequate
+modes of expression. But the point to which I am here calling
+attention is the fact that the idea of the personality of the Supreme
+Being is not so utterly alien to Oriental thought as some would have
+us think. Even though there is no single word with which conveniently
+to translate the term, the idea is perfectly distinct to any Japanese
+to whom its meaning is explained.
+
+The statement is widely made that because the Japanese language has no
+term for "personality" the people are lacking in the idea; that
+consequently they have difficulty in grasping it even when presented
+to them, and that as a further consequence they are not to be
+criticised for their hesitancy in accepting the doctrine of the
+"Personality of God." It must be admitted that if "personality" is to
+be defined in the various ambiguous and contradictory ways in which we
+have seen it defined by advocates of Oriental "impersonality" much can
+be said in defense of their hesitancy. Indeed, no thinking Christian
+of the Occident for a moment accepts it. But if "personality" is
+defined in the way here presented, which I judge to be the usage of
+thoughtful Christendom, then their hesitancy cannot be so defended. It
+is doubtless true that there is in Japanese no single word
+corresponding to our term "personality." But that is likewise true of
+multitudes of other terms. The only significance of this fact is that
+Oriental philosophy has not followed in exactly the same lines as the
+Occidental. As a matter of fact I have not found the idea of
+personality to be a difficult one to convey to the Japanese, if clear
+definitions are used. The Japanese language has, as we have seen, many
+words referring to the individuality, to the self of manhood; it
+merely lacks the general abstract term, "personality." This is,
+however, in keeping with the general characteristics of the language.
+Abstract terms are, compared with English, relatively rare. Yet with
+the new civilization they are being coined and introduced.
+Furthermore, the English term "personality" is readily used by the
+great majority of educated Christians just as they use such words as
+"life," "power," "success," "patriotism," and "Christianity."
+
+In the summer of 1898, with the Rev. C.A. Clark I was invited to speak
+on the "Outlines of Christianity" in a school for Buddhist priests. At
+the close of our thirty-minute addresses, a young man arose and spoke
+for fifty minutes, outlining the Buddhist system of thought; his
+address consisted of an exposition of the law of cause and effect; he
+also stated some of the reasons why the Christian conception of God
+and the universe seemed to him utterly unsatisfactory; the objections
+raised were those now current in Japan--such, for example, as that if
+God really were the creator of the universe, why are some men rich and
+some poor, some high-born and some low-born. He also asked the
+question who made God? In a two-minute reply I stated that his
+objections showed that he did not understand the Christian's position;
+and I asked in turn what was the origin of the law of cause and
+effect. The following day the chief priest, the head of the school and
+its most highly educated instructor, dined with us. We of course
+talked of the various aspects of Christian and Buddhist doctrine.
+Finally he asked me how I would answer the question as to who created
+God, and as to the origin of the law of cause and effect. I explained
+as clearly as I could the Christian view of God, in his personality
+and as being the original and only source of all existence, whether of
+physical or of human nature. He seemed to drink it all in and
+expressed his satisfaction at the close in the words, "Taihen ni man
+zoku shimashita," "That is exceedingly satisfactory"; these words he
+repeated several times. This is not my first personal proof of the
+fact that the idea of personality is not alien or incomprehensible to
+the Orient, nor even to a Buddhist priest, steeped in Buddhist
+speculation, provided the idea is clearly stated.
+
+Before bringing to a close this discussion of the problem of
+personality in Japan, it would seem desirable to trace the history of
+the development of Japanese personality. In view of all that has now
+been said, and not forgetting what was said as to the principles of
+National Evolution,[DA] this may be done in a paragraph.
+
+The amalgamation of tribes, the development of large clans, and
+finally the establishment of the nation, with world-wide relations,
+has reacted on the individual members of the people, giving them
+larger and richer lives. This constitutes one important element of
+personal development. The subordination of individual will to that of
+the group, the desire and effort to live for the advantage, not of the
+individual self, but of the group, whether family, tribe, clan,
+nation, or the world, is not a limitation of personality. On the
+contrary, it is its expansion and development. Shinto and Japonicized
+Confucianism contributed powerful motives to this subordination, and
+thus to this personal development. These were attended, however, by
+serious limitations in that they confined their attention to the upper
+and ruling classes. The development of personality was thus extremely
+limited. Buddhism contributed to the development of Japanese
+personality in so far as it taught Japanese the marvels revealed by
+introspection and self-victory. Its contribution, however, was
+seriously hampered by defects already sufficiently emphasized. Japan
+has developed personality to a high degree in a few and to a
+relatively low degree in the many. The problem confronting New Japan
+is the development of a high degree of personality among the masses.
+This is to be accomplished by the introduction of an individualistic
+social order.
+
+One further topic demands our attention in closing. What is the nature
+of personal heredity? Is it biological and inherent, or, like all the
+characteristics of the Japanese people thus far studied, is
+personality transmitted by social heredity? Distinguishing between
+intrinsic or inherent personality,[DB] which constitutes the original
+endowment differentiating man from animal, and extrinsic or acquired
+personality, which consists of the various forms in which the inherent
+personality has manifested itself in the different races of men and
+the different ages of "history, it is safe to say that the latter is
+transmitted according to the laws of association or social heredity.
+Intrinsic personality can be inherited only by lineal offspring,
+passing from father to son. Extrinsic personality may fail to be
+inherited by lineal descendants and may be inherited by others than
+lineal descendants. It is transmitted and determined by social
+inheritance. Yet it is through personality that the individual may
+break away from the dominant currents of the social order, and become
+thus the means for the transformation of that order. The secret of
+social progress lies in personality. In proportion as the social order
+is fitted, accordingly, widely to develop high-grade personality,[DC]
+is its own progress rapid and safe.
+
+Does acquired personality react on intrinsic personality? This is the
+problem of "the inheritance of acquired characteristics." Into this
+problem I do not enter further than to note that in so far as newly
+developed personal traits produce transformations of body and brain
+transmittable from parent to offspring by the bare fact of parentage,
+in that degree does acquired pass over into intrinsic personality and
+thereby become intrinsic. In regard to the degree in which acquired
+has passed over into intrinsic personality, thus differentiating the
+leading races of mankind, we contend that it is practically
+non-existent. The phenomena of personality characterizing the chief
+races of men are due, not to intrinsic, but to acquired personality;
+in other words they are the products of the respective social orders
+and are transmitted from generation to generation by social rather
+than by biological heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+THE BUDDHIST WORLD-VIEW
+
+
+Fully to comprehend the genius and history of Japan and her social
+order, we need to gain a still more thorough insight into the various
+conceptions of the universe that have influenced the people. What have
+been their views as to the nature of the ultimate reality lying behind
+all phenomena? What as to the relation of mankind to that Ultimate
+Reality? And what has been the relation of these world-views to the
+social order? To prepare the way for our final answer to these
+questions, we confine ourselves in this chapter to a study of the
+inner nature of the Buddhist world-view.
+
+Since the Buddhist conception of the Ultimate Reality and of the
+universe is one of the three important types of world-views dominating
+the human mind, a type too that is hardly known in Western lands, in
+order to set it forth in terms intelligible to the Occidental and the
+Christian, it will be necessary in expounding it to contrast it with
+the two remaining types; namely, the Greek and the Christian. As
+already pointed out, according to the Buddhistic conception, the
+Ultimate is a thoroughgoing Abstraction. All the elements of
+personality are denied. It is perfectly passionless, perfectly
+thoughtless, and perfectly motionless. It has neither feeling, idea,
+nor will. As a consequence, the phenomena of the universe are wholly
+unrelated to it; all that is, is only illusion; it has no reality of
+being. Human beings who think the world real, and who think even
+themselves real, are under the spell. This illusion is the great
+misery and source of pain. Salvation is the discovery of the illusion;
+and this discovery is the victory over it; for no one fears the lion's
+skin, however much he may fear the lion. This discovery secures the
+dropping back from the little, limited, individual self-line, into
+the infinite passionless, thoughtless, and motionless existence of the
+absolute being, Nirvana.
+
+The Ancient Greek and not a little modern thought, conceived of the
+Ultimate as a thorough-going intellectualism. One aspect of
+personality was perceived and emphasized. God was conceived as a
+thinker, as one who contemplates the universe. He does not create
+matter, nor force, nor does he rule them. They are eternal and real,
+and subject to fate. God simply observes. He is absolute reason. The
+Greek view is thus essentially dualistic. Sin, from the Greek point of
+view, is merely ignorance, and salvation the attainment of knowledge.
+
+In vital and vitalizing contrast to both the Buddhist and Greek
+conceptions is the Judæo-Christian. To the Christian the Ultimate is a
+thoroughgoing personality. To him the central element in God is will,
+guided by reason and controlled by love and righteousness. God creates
+and rules everything. There is nothing that is not wholly subject to
+him. There is no dualism for the Christian, nor any illusion. Sin is
+an act of human will, not an illusion nor a failure of intellect.
+Salvation is the correction of the will, which comes about through a
+"new birth."
+
+The elemental difference, then, between these three conceptions of the
+Ultimate is that in Buddhism the effort to rationalize and ethicize
+the universe of experience is abandoned as a hopeless task; the world
+entirely and completely resists the rational and ethical process. The
+universe is pronounced completely irrational and non-moral. Change is
+branded as illusion. There is no room for progress in philosophic,
+thoroughgoing Buddhism.
+
+In the Greek view the universe is subject in part to the rationalizing
+process; but only in part. The effort at ethicization is entirely
+futile. The Greek view, equally with the Buddhistic, is at a loss to
+understand change. It does not brand it as unreal, but change produced
+by man is branded as a departure from nature. Greeks and Hindus alike
+have no philosophy of history. In the Christian view the universe is
+completely subject to the rational and ethical process. God is creator
+of all that is and it is necessarily good. God is an active will and
+He is, therefore, still in the process of creating; hence change,
+evolution, is justified and understood. History is rational and has a
+philosophy. Evolution and revelation have their place at the very
+heart of the universe. Hence it is that science, philosophy, and
+history, in a word a high-grade civilization, finds its intellectual
+justification, its foundation, its primary postulates, its
+possibility, only in a land permeated with the Christian idea of God.
+
+In the Buddhistic conception God is an abstract vacuity; in the Greek,
+a static intellect; in the Christian, a dynamic will. As is the
+conception of God, so is the conception and character of man. The two
+are so intimately interdependent that it is useless at this time to
+discuss which is the cause and which the result. They are doubtless
+the two aspects of the same movement of thought. The following
+differences are necessary characteristics of the three religions:
+
+The Buddhist seeks salvation through the attainment of
+vacuity--Nirvana--in order to escape from the world in which he says
+there is no reason and no morality. The Greek seeks salvation through
+the activity of the intellect; all that is needful to salvation is
+knowledge of the truth. The Christian seeks salvation through the
+activity of the will; this is secured through the new birth. The
+Buddhist leaves each man to save himself from his illusion by the
+discovery that it is an illusion. The Greek relies on intellectual
+education, on philosophy--the Christian recreates the will. The
+Buddhist and Greek gods make no effort to help the lost man. The
+Christian God is dominated by love; He is therefore a missionary God,
+sending even His only begotten Son to reconcile and win the world of
+sinning, willful children back to Himself.
+
+In Buddhism salvation is won only by the few and after ages of toil
+and ceaseless re-births. In the Greek plan only the philosopher who
+comes to full understanding can attain salvation. In the Christian
+plan salvation is for all, for all are sons of God, in fact, and may
+through Christ become so in consciousness. In the Buddhistic plan the
+hopeless masses resort to magic and keep on with their idolatry and
+countless gross superstitions. In the Greek plan the hopeless resort
+to the "mysteries" for the attainment of salvation. In the Christian
+plan there are no hopeless masses, for all may gain the regenerated
+will and become conscious sons of God.
+
+The Buddhist mind gave up all effort to grasp or even to understand
+reality. The Greek mind thought it could arrive at reality through the
+intellect. But two thousand years of philosophic study and evolution
+drove philosophy into the absurd positions of absolute subjective
+idealism on the one hand and sensationalism and absolute materialism
+on the other. The Christian mind lays emphasis on the will and
+accordingly is alone able to reach reality, a reality justifiable
+alike to the reason and to the heart. For will is the creative faculty
+in man as well as in God. As God through His will creates reality, so
+man through his will first comes to know reality. Mere intellect can
+never pass over from thought to being. Being can be known as a reality
+only through the will.
+
+In consequence of the above-stated methods of thought, the Buddhist
+was of necessity a pessimist; the Greek only less so; while the Jew
+and the Christian could alone be thoroughgoing optimists. The Buddhist
+ever asserts the is-not; the Greek, the is; while the Jew and
+Christian demand the ought-to be, as the supreme thing. Hence flows
+the perennial life of the Christian civilization.
+
+Those races and civilizations whose highest and deepest conception of
+the ultimate is that of mere reason, no less than those races and
+civilizations whose highest and deepest conception of reality is that
+of an abstract emptiness, must be landed in an unreal world, must
+arrive at irrational results, for they have not taken into account the
+most vital element of thought and life. Such races and civilizations
+cannot rise to the highest levels of which man is capable; they must
+of necessity give way to those races and that civilization which build
+on larger and more complete foundations, which worship Will, Human and
+Divine, and seek for its larger development both in self and in all
+mankind.
+
+But I must not pause to trace the contrasts further. Enough has been
+said to show the source of Occidental belief in the infinite worth of
+man. In almost diametrical contrast to the Buddhist conception,
+according to the Christian view, man is a real being, living in a real
+world, involved in a real intellectual problem, fighting a real
+battle, on whose issue hang momentous, nay, infinite results. So great
+is man's value, not only to himself, but also to God, his Father, that
+the Father himself suffers with him in his sin, and for him, to save
+him from his sin. The question will be asked how widely the Buddhistic
+interpretation of the universe has spread in Japan. The doctrine of
+illusion became pretty general. We may doubt, however, whether the
+rationale of the philosophy was very generally understood. One Sutra,
+read by all Japanese sects, is taught to all who would become
+acquainted with the essentials of Buddhist doctrine. It is so short
+that I give it in full.[DD]
+
+
+THE SMALLER-PRAGNA-PARAMITA-HRIDYA-SUTRA
+
+ "Adoration to the Omniscient. The venerable Bodhisattva
+ Avalokitesvara performing his study in the deep Pragna-paramita
+ [perfection of Wisdom] thought thus: There are the five Skandhas,
+ and these he considered as by their nature empty [phenomenal]. O
+ Sariputra, he said, form here is emptiness, and emptiness indeed is
+ form. Emptiness is not different from form, and form is not
+ different from emptiness. What is form that is emptiness, what is
+ emptiness that is form. The same applies to perception, name,
+ conception, and knowledge.
+
+ "Here, O Sariputra, all things have the character of emptiness;
+ they have no beginning, no end, they are faultless and not
+ faultless, they are not imperfect and not perfect. Therefore, O
+ Sariputra, in this emptiness there is no form, no perception, no
+ name, no concepts, no knowledge. No eye, ear, nose, tongue, body,
+ mind. No form, sound, smell, taste, touch, objects.... There is no
+ knowledge, no ignorance, no destruction of knowledge, no
+ destruction of ignorance, etc., there is no decay and death, no
+ destruction of decay and death; there are not the four truths,
+ viz., that there is pain, the origin of pain, stopping of pain, and
+ the path to it. There is no knowledge, no obtaining of Nirvana.
+
+ "A man who has approached the Pragna-paramita of the Bodhisattva
+ dwells enveloped in consciousness. But when the envelop of
+ consciousness has been annihilated, then he becomes free of all
+ fear, beyond the reach of change, enjoying final Nirvana. All
+ Buddhas of the past, present, and future, after approaching the
+ Pragna-paramita, have awakened to the highest perfect knowledge.
+
+ "Therefore one ought to know the great verse of the
+ Pragna-paramita, the verse of the great wisdom, the unsurpassed
+ verse, the peerless verse, which appeases all pain; it is truth
+ because it is not false; the verse proclaimed in the
+ Pragna-paramita: 'O wisdom, gone, gone, gone, to the other shore,
+ landed at the other shore, Shava.'
+
+ "Thus ends the heart of the Pragna-paramita."
+
+A study of this condensed and widely read Buddhist Sutra will convince
+anyone that the ultimate conceptions of the universe and of the final
+reality, are as described above. However popular Buddhism might differ
+from this, it would be the belief of the thoughtless masses, to whom
+the rational and ethical problems are of no significance or concern,
+and who contribute nothing to the development of thought or of the
+social order. Those nobler and more earnestly inquiring souls whose
+energy and spiritual longing might have been used for the benefit of
+the masses, were shunted off on a side track that led only into the
+desert of atomistic individualism, abandonment of society, ecstatic
+contemplation, and absolute pessimism. The Buddhist theory of the
+universe and method of thought denied all intelligible reality, and
+necessitated the conclusion that the universe of experience is neither
+rational nor ethical. The common beliefs of the unreflective and
+uninitiated masses in the ultimate rationality and morality of the
+universe were felt to have no foundation either in religion or
+philosophy and were accordingly pronounced mere illusions.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+COMMUNAL AND INDIVIDUAL ELEMENTS IN THE EVOLUTION OF JAPANESE
+RELIGIOUS LIFE
+
+
+Our study of Japanese religion and religious life thus far has been
+almost, if not exclusively, from the individualistic standpoint. An
+adequate statement, however, cannot be made from this standpoint
+alone, for religion through its mighty sanctions exerts a powerful
+influence on the entire communal life. Indeed, the leading
+characteristic of primitive religions is their communal nature. The
+science of religion shows how late in human history is the rise of
+individualistic religions.
+
+In the present chapter we propose to study Japanese religious history
+from the communal standpoint. This will lead us to study her present
+religious problem and the nature of the religion required to solve it.
+
+The real nature of the religious life of Japan has been and still is
+predominantly communal. Individualism has had a place, but, as we have
+repeatedly seen, only a minor place in forming the nation. From the
+communo-individualistic standpoint, in the study of Japan's religious
+and social evolution, not only can we see clearly that the three
+religions of Japan are real religions, but we can also understand the
+nature of the relations of these three religions to each other and the
+reasons why they have had such relations. Japanese religious history
+and its main phenomena become luminous in the light of
+communo-individualistic social principles.
+
+Shinto, the primitive religion of Japan, corresponded well with the
+needs of primitive times, when the development of strong communal life
+was the prime problem and necessity. It furnished the religious
+sanctions for the social order in its customs of worshiping not only
+the gods, but also the Emperor and ancestors. It gave the highest
+possible justification of the national social order in its deification
+of the supreme ruler. Shinto was so completely communal in its nature
+that the individual aspect of religion was utterly ignored. It
+developed no specific moral code, no eschatological and soteriological
+systems, no comprehensive view of nature or of the gods. These
+deficiencies, however, are no proofs that it was not a religion in the
+proper sense of the term. The real question is, did it furnish any
+supra-mundane, supra-legal, supra-communal sanctions both for the
+conduct of the individual in his social relations and for the fact and
+the right of the social order. Of this there can be no doubt. Those
+who deny it the name of a religion do so because they judge religion
+only from the point of view of a highly developed individualistic
+religion.
+
+In view of this undoubted fact, it is a strange commentary on the
+failure of Shinto leaders to realize the real function of the faith
+they profess that they have sought and obtained from the government
+the right to be considered and classified no longer as a religion, but
+only as a society for preserving the memories and shrines of the
+ancestors of the race. Thus has modern Shinto, so far as it is
+organized and has a mouth with which to speak, following the
+abdicating proclivities of the ancient social order, excommunicated
+itself from its religious heritage, aspiring to be nothing more than a
+gate-keeper of cemeteries.
+
+The sources of the power of the Shinto sanctions lies in the nature of
+its conception of the universe. Although it attempted no
+interpretation of the universe as a whole, it conceived of the origin
+of the country and people of Japan as due to the direct creative
+energy of the gods. Japan was accordingly conceived as a divine land
+and the people a divine people. The Emperor was thought to have
+descended in direct line from the gods and thus to be a visible
+representative of the gods to the people, and to possess divine power
+and authority with which to rule the people. Whenever Japanese came
+into contact with foreign peoples, it was natural to consider them
+outside of the divine providence, aliens, whose presence in the
+divine land was more or less of a pollution. This world-view was well
+calculated to develop a spirit of submissive obedience and loyal
+adherence to the hereditary rulers of the land, and of fierce
+antagonism to foreigners. This view constituted the moral foundation
+for the social order, the intellectual framework within which the
+state developed. Paternal feudalism was the natural, if not the
+necessary, accompaniment of this world-view. Even to this day the
+scholars of the land see no other ground on which to found Imperial
+authority, no other basis for ethics and religion, than the divine
+descent of the Emperor.[DE]
+
+The Shinto world-view, conceiving of men as direct offspring of the
+gods, has in it potentially the doctrine of the divine nature of all
+men, and their consequent infinite worth. Shinto never developed this
+truth, however. It did not discover the momentous implications of its
+view. Failing to discover them, it failed to introduce into the social
+order that moral inspiration, that social leaven which would have
+gradually produced the individualistic social order.
+
+No attempt has been made either in ancient or modern times to square
+this Shinto world-view with advancing knowledge of the world,
+particularly with the modern scientific conception of the universe.
+Anthropology, ethnology, and the doctrine of evolution both cosmic and
+human, are all destructive of the primitive Shinto world-view. It
+would not be difficult to show, however, that in this world-view
+exists a profound element of truth. The Shinto world-conception needs
+to be expanded to take the universe and all races of men into its
+view; and to see that Japan is not alone the object of divine
+solicitude, but that all races likewise owe their origin to that same
+divine power, and that even though the Emperor is not more directly
+the offspring of the gods than are all men, yet in the providence of
+Him who ruleth the affairs of men, the Emperor is in fact the visible
+representative of authority and power for the people over whom he
+reigns. With this expansion and the consequences that flow from it,
+the world-view that has cradled Old Japan will come into accord with
+the scientific Christian world-view, and become fitted to be the
+foundation for the new and individualistic social order, now arising
+in Japan, granting full liberty of thought and action, knowing that
+only so can truth come out of error, and assured that truth is the
+only ground of permanent welfare.
+
+Throughout the centuries including the present era of Meiji, it is the
+Shinto religion that has provided and that still provides religious
+sanctions for the social order--even for the new social order that has
+come in from the West. It is the belief of the people in the divine
+descent of the Emperor, and his consequent divine right, that to-day
+unifies the nation and causes it to accept so readily the new social
+order; desired by him, they raise no questions, make no opposition,
+even though in some respects it brings them trouble and anxiety.
+
+Our study of Buddhism has brought to light its extremely
+individualistic nature, and its lack of asocial ideal. Its world-view
+we have sufficiently examined in the preceding chapter. We are told
+that when Buddhism came to Japan it made little headway until it
+adopted the Shinto deities into its theogony. What does this mean?
+That only on condition of accepting the Shinto sanctions for the
+communal order of society was it able to commend itself to the people
+at large. And Buddhism had no difficulty in fulfilling this condition,
+because it had no ideal order of society to present and no religious
+sanctions for any kind of social order; in this respect Buddhism had
+no ground for conflict with Shinto. Shinto had the field to itself;
+and Buddhism was perfectly at liberty to adopt, or at least to allow,
+any social order that might present itself. Furthermore, by its
+doctrines of incarnation and transmigration, according to which noble
+souls might appear and reappear in different worlds and different
+lands, Buddhism could identify Shinto deities with its own deities of
+Hindu origin, asserting their pre-incarnation. Having accepted the
+Shinto deities, ideals, and sanctions for the social order, Buddhism
+became not only tolerable to the people, but also exceedingly popular.
+
+The Shinto-Buddhistic was in truth a new religion, each of the old
+religions supplying an essential element.
+
+One real reason, beside its accommodation to Shintoism, why Buddhism
+was so popular was that it brought an indispensable element into the
+national life. For the first time emphasis began to be laid on the
+individual. Introspection and deliberate meditation were brought into
+play. Arts demanding individual skill were fostered. A gorgeous
+ritual, elaborate architecture, complex religious organism, letters
+and literature, all gave play to individual activity and development
+whether in manual, in mental, or in æsthetic lines. The hitherto
+cramped and primitive life of the Japanese responded to these appeals
+and opportunities with profound joy. The upper classes especially felt
+themselves growing in richness and fullness of life. They felt the
+stimulus in many directions. The reason, then, why Buddhism flourished
+so mightily, and at the same time caused the nation to bloom, was
+because it helped develop the individual. The reason, on the other
+hand, why it failed to carry the nation on from its first bloom into
+full fruitage was because it failed to develop individualism in the
+social order. Its religious individualism was, as we have seen, in
+reality defective. It was abstract and one-sided. It did not discover
+the whole of the individual. It did not know anything of personality,
+either human or divine. It accordingly could not recognize the
+individual's worth, but only his separateness and his weakness. It
+taught an abstract impoverished idea of self, and made, as the whole
+aim of the salvation it offered, the final annihilation of all
+separateness of this individual self. We can now see that its
+individualism was essentially defective in that it poured contempt on
+the self, and that if its individualizing salvation were consistently
+carried out, it was not only no help to the social order, but a
+positive injury to it. Its individualism was of a nature which could
+not become an integral part of any social order.
+
+This character led to another inevitable difficulty. Although Buddhism
+ostensibly adopted Shinto deities and the Shinto sanctions for the
+social order, it could not wholeheartedly accept the sanctions nor
+take the deities into full and legitimate partnership. It found no
+place in its circle of doctrine to teach the important tenets of
+Shintoism.
+
+It left them to survive or perish as chance would have it. In
+proportion as Buddhism absorbed the life and love of the people,
+Shinto fell into decay and with it its sanctions. Then came the
+centuries of civil war during which Imperial power and authority sank
+to a minimum, and Japan's ignominy and disorder reached their maximum.
+What the land now needed was the re-introduction, first, of social
+order, even though it must be by the hand of a dictator, and second,
+the development of religious sanctions for the order that should be
+established. The first was secured by those three great generals of
+Japan, Oda Nobunaga, the Taiko Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu. "The
+first conceived the idea of centralizing all the authority of the
+state in a single person; the second, who has been called the Napoleon
+of Japan, actually put the idea into practice," but died before
+consolidating his work; the third, by his unsurpassed skill as a
+diplomat and administrator, carried the idea completely out, arranging
+the details of the new order so that, without special military genius
+or power on the part of his successors, the order maintained itself
+for 250 years.
+
+Yet it is doubtful if this long maintenance of the social order
+introduced by Ieyasu would have been possible had he not found ready
+to hand a system of essentially religious sanctions for the social
+order he had established by force. Confucianism had lain for a
+thousand years a dormant germ, receiving some study from learned men,
+but having no special relation to the education of the day or to the
+political problems that became each century more pressing. In the
+Confucian doctrines of loyalty to ruler and piety to parents, a
+doctrine sanctioned by Heaven and by the customs of all the ancients,
+Ieyasu, with the insight of a master mind, found just the sanctions he
+desired. He had the Confucian classics printed--it is said for the
+first time in Japan--"and the whole intellect of the country became
+molded by Confucian ideas." The classics, edited with diacritical
+marks for Japanese students, "formed the chief vehicle of every boy's
+education." These were interpreted by learned Chinese commentators.
+The intelligence of the land drank of this stream as the European mind
+refreshed itself with the classic waters of the Renaissance. The
+Japanese were weary of Buddhistic puerilities and transcendental
+doctrines that led nowhere. They demanded sanctions for the moral life
+and the social order; in response to this need Buddhism gave them
+Nirvana--absolute mental and moral vacuity. Confucianism gave them
+principles whose working and whose results they could see and
+understand. Its sanctions appealed both to the imagination and to the
+reason, antiquity and learning and piety being all in their favor. The
+sanctions were also seen to be wholly independent of puerile
+superstitions and foolish fears. The Confucian ideals and sanctions,
+moreover, coincided with the essential elements of the old Shinto
+world-view and sanctions. In a true sense, the doctrines of Confucius
+were but the elaborated and succinctly stated implications of their
+primitive faith. Confucianism, therefore, swept the land. _It was
+_accepted as the groundwork and authority for the most flourishing
+feudal order the world has ever seen. Japan bloomed again.[DF]
+
+This difference, however, is to be noted between the Shinto ideal
+social order and the Confucian, or rather that development of
+Confucian ethics and civics which arose during the Tokugawa Shogunate;
+Shinto appears to have been, properly speaking, nationalistic, while
+feudal Confucianism was tribal. Although in Confucian theory the
+supreme loyalty may have been due the Emperor, in point of fact it was
+shown to the local daimyo. Confucian ethics was communal and might
+easily have turned in the direction of national communalism; it would
+then have coincided completely with Shinto in this respect. But for
+various reasons it did not so turn, but developed an intensely local,
+a tribal communalism, and pushed loyalty to the Emperor as a vital
+reality entirely into the background. This was one of the defects of
+feudal Confucianism which finally led to its own overthrow. Shinto,
+as we have seen, had long been pushed aside by Buddhism and was
+practically forgotten by the people. The zeal for Confucian doctrine
+brought, therefore, no immediate revival to the Shinto cultus,
+although it did revive the essential elements of the old communal
+religion. We might say that the old religion was revived under a new
+name; having a new name and a new body, the real and vital connection
+between the two was not recognized. We thus discern how the religious
+history of Japan was not a series of cataclysms or of disconnected
+leaps in the dark, but an orderly development, one step naturally
+following the next, as the sun follows the dawn. The different stages
+of Japan's religious progress have received different names, because
+due to specific stimuli brought from abroad; the religious life
+itself, however, has been a continuous development.
+
+Another difference between Shinto and Confucianism as it existed in
+Japan should not escape our attention, namely, in regard to their
+respective world-views. Shinto was confessedly a religion; it frankly
+believed in gods, whom it worshiped and on whose help it relied.
+Confucianism, or to use the Japanese name, Bushido, was confessedly
+agnostic. It did not assume to understand the universe, as Buddhism
+assumed. Nor did it admit the practical existence of gods or their
+power in this world, as Shinto believed. It maintained that, "if only
+the heart follows the way of truth, the gods will protect one even
+though he does not pray." It laid stress on practical moralities,
+regardless of their philosophical presumptions, into which it would
+not probe. When pressed it would ascribe all to "Heaven," and, as we
+have seen, it had many implications that would lead the inquiring mind
+to a belief in the personal nature of "Heaven." Had it developed these
+implications, Bushido would have become a genuine religion. It was
+indeed a system of ethics touched with emotion, it was religious, but
+it failed to become the religion it might have become because it
+insisted on its agnosticism and refused to worship the highest and
+best it knew.
+
+It is interesting to observe that the ideals and sanctions of
+Confucianism produced effects which proved its ruin. They did this in
+two ways; first, by developing the prolonged peace necessary for a
+high grade of scholarship which, turning its attention to ancient
+history, discovered that the Shogunate was assuming powers not in
+accord with the primitive practice nor in accord with the theory of
+the divine descent of the Imperial house. Imperialistic patriots
+arose, whose aim was to overthrow the Shogunate and restore the
+Emperor. They felt that, doing this, they were right; that is to say,
+they became inspired by the Shinto sanctions for a national life. They
+thus discovered the defect of the disjointed feudal system sanctioned
+by feudal Confucianism. The second cause of its undoing grew out of
+the first. The scholarship which led the patriots against the usurper
+in political life led them also against all foreign innovations such
+as Buddhism and Confucianism, which they scorned as modern and
+anti-imperial. The Shinto cultus thus received a powerful revival.
+With the overthrow of the Shogunate in 1868 Confucianism naturally
+went with it, and for a time Shinto was the state religion. But its
+poverty in every line, except the communal sanctions, caused it in a
+short time to lose its place.
+
+The two causes just assigned for the fall of Bushido, however, could
+hardly have wrought its ruin had it been more than a utilitarian and
+agnostic system of morality, calculated to maintain the social
+ascendency of a small fraction of the nation. As a religion, Bushido
+would have secured a conservative power enabling it to survive, by
+adapting itself to a changed social order. As it was, Bushido was
+snuffed out by a single breath of the breeze that began to blow from
+foreign lands. As an ethical system it has conferred a blessing on
+Japan that should never be forgotten. But its identification with a
+class and a clan social order rendered it too narrow for the national
+and international life into which the nation was forced by
+circumstances beyond its control, and its agnostic utilitarianism did
+not provide it with sufficient moral power to cope with the problems
+of the new individualistic age that had suddenly burst upon it. In all
+Japan there remains to the present day only one of those old
+Confucian schools with its temple to Confucius. All the rest have
+fallen into ruins or have been used for other purposes, while the
+gold-covered statues of the once deified teacher have been sold to
+curio-dealers or for their bullion value. In the worship of Confucius,
+Bushido almost became a religion, but it worshiped the teacher instead
+of the Creator, maintaining its agnosticism as to the Creator, as to
+"Heaven," to the end, and thus lapsed from the path of religious
+evolution.
+
+This brings us down to modern times--into the seventies. Already in
+the sixties Japan had discovered herself in a totally new environment.
+She found that foreign nations had made great progress in every
+direction since she shut them out two hundred and fifty years before.
+She discovered her helplessness, she discovered, too, that the social
+order of Western peoples was totally distinct from hers. These
+discoveries served to break down all the remaining sanctions for her
+particular type of social order--Confucianistic feudalism. The whole
+nation was eager to know the political systems of the West. So long as
+the Shinto ideal of nationalism was not interfered with, the nation
+was free to adopt any new social order. Japan's political and
+commercial intercourse being with England and America, the social
+order of the Anglo-Saxon had the greatest influence on the Japanese
+mind. Japan accordingly has become predominantly Anglo-Saxon in its
+social ideas. Much has been made of the fact that the new social order
+has come in so easily; that the people have gained rights without
+fighting for them; and this has been attributed to the peculiarity of
+Japanese human nature. This is an error. The real reason for the ease
+with which the individualistic Anglo-Saxon social order has been
+introduced has been the collapse of the sanctions for the Confucian
+order. No one had any ground of duty on which to stand and fight. The
+national mind was open to any newcomer that might have appeared. I am
+referring, of course, to the thinking classes. All the rest,
+accustomed to submissive obedience, never thought of any other course
+than to accept the will of superiors.
+
+Furthermore, the new social order in one important respect fell in
+with and helped to re-establish the old Shinto ideal, that, namely, of
+nationalism. In the treaty negotiations, the West would deal with no
+intermediaries, only with the responsible national head. Western
+ideals, too, demanded a strong national unity. In this respect, then,
+the foreign ideals and foreign social order were powerful influences
+in building up the new patriotism, in re-enforcing the old Shinto
+social sanctions.
+
+Thus has Japan come to the parting of the ways. What Japan needs
+to-day is a religion satisfying the intellect as to its world-view,
+and thus justifying the sanctions it holds out. These must be neither
+exclusively communal, like those of Shinto, nor exclusively
+individual, like those of Buddhism. While maintaining at their full
+value the sanctions for the social life, it must add thereto the
+sanctions for the individual. It must not look upon the individual as
+a being whose salvation depends on his being isolated from, taken out
+of the community, as Buddhism did and does, nor yet as a mere fraction
+of the community, as Confucianism did, but as a complete, imperishable
+unit of infinite worth, necessarily living a double life, partly
+inseparable from the social order and partly superior to it. This
+religion must provide not only sanctions, but ideals, for a perfect
+social order in which, while the most complex organization of society
+shall be possible, the freedom and the high development of the
+individual's personality shall also be secured.
+
+The fulfillment of such conditions would at first thought seem to be
+impossible. How can a religion give sanctions which at the very time
+that they authorize the fullest development and organization of
+society, apparently making society its chief end, also assume the
+fullest liberty and development of the individual, making him and his
+salvation its chief end? Are not these ends incompatible? What has
+been said already along this general line of thought has prepared us
+to see that they are not. The great, though unconscious, need of the
+ages, and the unconscious effort of all religious evolution has been
+the development of just such a religion. As the "cake" of social
+custom was at first the great need for, and afterwards the great
+obstacle in the way of, social evolution, so the sanctions of a
+communal religion were at first the great need for, and afterwards the
+great obstacle in the way of, religious evolution and of personal
+development. Through its sanctions religion is the most powerful of
+all the factors of the higher human evolution, either helping it
+onward or holding it back.
+
+Has, then, any religion secured such a dual development as we have
+just seen to be necessary? As a matter of fact, one and only one has
+done so, Christianity. This religion clearly attains and maintains the
+apparently impossible combination of individualism and communalism by
+the nature of its conception of the method of individual salvation.
+Its communalism is guaranteed by, because it rests on, its
+individualism. At the very moment that it pronounces the individual of
+inestimable worth,--a son of God,--it commands him to show that
+sonship by loving all God's other sons, and by serving them to the
+extent of self-sacrifice, and of death if need be. Its communalism is
+thus inseparable from its individualism and its individualism from its
+communalism.
+
+Christian individualism embraces and includes thoroughgoing
+communalism. True and full Christians are the most devoted patriots.
+As the acorn sends forth far-reaching; roots into the soil for
+moisture and nourishment, and a mighty trunk and spreading branches
+upward for air and sunlight, so the seed of Christian life develops in
+two directions, individualism as the root and communalism as the
+beautiful tree. They are not contradictory, but supplementary
+principles. While his own final gain is a real aim of the individual,
+it is only a part of his aim; he also desires and labors for the gain
+of all; and even the individual gain, he well knows, can be secured
+only through the communal principle, through service to his
+fellow-men. His own welfare, whether temporal or eternal, is
+inseparably bound up with that of his fellows.
+
+The Christian religion finds the sanctions for any and every social
+order that history knows, in the fact that all physical and social
+laws and organisms are part of the divine plan. Because any particular
+social order is the association of imperfect men and women, it must be
+more or less imperfect. But the Christian, even while he is seeking
+to reform the social order and to bring it up to his ideal, must be
+loyal to it. And for this loyalty to fellow-men and to God, the
+highest conceivable sanctions are held out, namely, an endless and
+infinite life of conscious, joyous fellowship with souls made perfect
+in the Kingdom of God, and with God himself.
+
+A comprehensive study, therefore, of the real nature and the true
+function of religion in relation to man's development, whether
+individual or communal, shows that Christianity fulfills the
+conditions. A comparative study would show that, of all the existing
+religions, Christianity alone does this. It alone combines in perfect
+proportion the individual and the communal elements, and the requisite
+sanctions.
+
+An expansion of communal religion is taking place in modern times. The
+community now arising is international in scope, interracial and
+universal in character. Cultivated men and women the world around are
+beginning to talk of national rights and national duties. Europe is
+thought to be justified in suppressing the slave trade and its
+accompanying horrors in Africa, and condemned for not preventing the
+Turk from carrying on his wholesale slaughter of innocent Armenians.
+The Spaniard is despised and condemned for his prolonged inhumanities
+in Cuba and the Philippines, and the American is approved in warring
+for humanity and justified in interfering with Spain's sovereignty.
+The conscience of the world is beginning to discover that no nation,
+though sovereign, has an absolute right over its people. Right is only
+measured by righteousness. International righteousness, duty and
+rights, regardless of military power, are coming to the forefront of
+the thinking of advanced nations.
+
+Looked at closely, and studied in its implications, what is this but a
+developing form of communal religion? No nation is conceived as
+existing apart; each exists as but one fraction of the world-wide
+community; in its relations it has both rights and duties. Does this
+not mean that appeal has been made from the communal sanctions of
+might to the supra-communal sanctions of right? We do not simply ask
+what do other nations think of this or that national act, but what is
+right, in view of the whole order of the nature which has brought man
+into being and set him in families and nations. In other words,
+national rights and duties are felt to flow from the supra-mundane
+source, God the Creator of heaven and earth and all that in them is.
+The sanctions for national rights and duties are religious sanctions
+and rest on a religious world-view.
+
+Now the point, of interest for us is the fact that Japan has entered
+into this universal community and is feeling the sanctions of this
+universal communal religion. The international rights and duties of
+Japan are a theme of frequent discourse and conversation. Japan
+stoutly maintained that the war with China was a "gi-sen," a righteous
+war, waged primarily for the sake of Korea. Many a Japanese waxes
+indignant over the cruelty of the Turk, the savage barbarity of the
+Spaniard, and the impotence and supineness of England and Europe. I
+have already spoken of the young man who became so indignant at
+England's compelling China to take Indian opium, that he proposed to
+go to England to preach an anti-opium crusade. Japan is beginning to
+enter into the larger communal life of the world, although, of course,
+she has as yet little perception of its varied implications.
+
+Many a student of New Japan perceives that she is abandoning her old
+religious conceptions, and that many moral and social evils are
+entering the land, who yet does not see that the wide acceptance of
+some new religion by the people is important for the maintenance of
+the nation. Some earnest Japanese thinkers are beginning to realize
+that religion is, indeed, needful to steady the national life, but
+they fail to see that Christianity alone fulfills the condition. Many
+are saying that a religion scientifically constructed must be
+manufactured especially for Japan.
+
+The reason why individualistic religion takes such an important part
+in the higher evolution of man is, in a word, because the religious
+sanctions are so much more powerful than all others, either legal or
+social. For the legal sanctions are chiefly negative; they are also
+partial and uncertain, and easily evaded by the selfish individual.
+The social sanctions, too, are often far from just or impartial or
+wise. Furthermore, the rise of individualism in the social order
+secures privacy for the individual, and so far forth removes him from
+the restraints and stimuli of the social sanctions. It is the
+religious sanctions alone that follow the man in every waking moment.
+Not one of all his acts escapes the eye of the religious judgment. He
+is his own judge, and he cannot escape bearing witness against
+himself.
+
+Now, it is manifest that where superior beings and man's relation to
+these and the corresponding religious sanctions are defectively
+conceived, as, for instance, quite apart either from the individual or
+the communal life, they are valueless to the higher evolution of man
+and have little interest for the student of social evolution. In
+proportion, however, as man advances in intellectual grasp of
+religious truths and in susceptibility to the moral ideas and
+religious sanctions they provide, conceiving of morality and religion
+as inseparable parts of the same system, the more powerfully does
+religion enter into and promote man's higher evolution. An
+individualistic social order demands the religious sanctions more
+imperatively than a communal social order; for, in proportion as it is
+individualistic, the social order is weak in compelling, through the
+legal and social sanctions alone, the communal or altruistic activity
+of the individual. Altruistic spirit and action, however, are
+essential to the maintenance even of that individualistic order. The
+more highly society develops, therefore, the more religious must each
+member of the society become.
+
+The same truth may be stated from another standpoint. The higher man
+develops, the more impatient he becomes with illogical reasonings and
+defective conceptions; he thus becomes increasingly skeptical in
+regard to current traditional religions with their crude, primitive
+ideas; he is accordingly increasingly freed from the restraints they
+impose. But unless he finds some new religious sanctions for the
+communal life, for social conduct, and for the individual
+life,--ideals and sanctions that command his assent and direct his
+life,--he will drop back into a thoroughgoing atomic, individualistic,
+selfish life, which can be only a hindrance to the higher development
+both of society and of the individual. In order that men advancing in
+intellectual ability may remain useful members of society, they must
+remain subject to those ideals and sanctions which will actually
+secure social conduct. While disregarding the chaff of primitive
+religious superstitions and ceremonials man must retain the wheat; he
+must feel the force of the religious spirit in a deeper and
+profounder, because more personal way than did his ancestors.
+Increasing intellectual power and knowledge must be balanced by
+increasing individual experience of the religious motives and spirit.
+This is the reason why each advancing age should study afresh the
+whole religious problem, and state in the terms of its own experience
+the prominent and permanent religious truths of all the ages and the
+sanctions that flow from them. Hence it is that a religion only
+traditional and ceremonial is quite unfitted for a developing life.
+
+Japan is no exception to the general laws of human evolution. As her
+intellectual abilities increase, the forms of her old religious life
+will become increasingly unacceptable to the people at large. If, in
+rejecting the obsolete forms of religious thought, she rejects
+religion and its sanctions altogether, atomistic individualism can be
+the only result, and with it wide moral corruption will eat out the
+vitality of the national life.
+
+That Christianity alone, of all the religions of the world, fulfills
+the conditions will not need many words to prove. As a matter of fact
+Christianity alone has succeeded in surviving the criticism of the
+nineteenth century. In Christendom, all religions but Christianity
+have perished. This is a mere matter of fact. As for the reason,
+Christianity alone gives complete intellectually satisfactory
+sanctions for both the communal and the individualistic principles of
+social progress. Christianity, as we have sufficiently shown, has both
+principles not unrelated to each other, but vitally interrelated. For
+these reasons it is safe to maintain not only that Japan needs to find
+a new religion, but that the religion must be Christianity in
+substance, whatever be the name given it.
+
+The Japanese have been described as essentially irreligious in nature.
+We have seen how defective such a description is. But have we not now
+traced one root of this seeming characteristic of New Japan? The old
+religious conceptions have been largely outgrown by the educated. They
+have come to the conclusion that the old religious forms constitute
+the whole of religion, and that consequently they are unworthy of
+attention. The spirit of New Japan is indifferent to religion; but
+this is not due to an inherently non-religious or irreligious nature,
+but to the empty externalism and shallow puerilities of the only
+religions they know. How can they be zealous for them or recognize any
+authority in them? Those few Japanese who have come within the
+influence of the larger conception of religion brought to Japan by
+Christianity are showing a religious zeal and power supporting the
+contention that the generally asserted lack of a religious nature is
+only apparent and temporary. Preaching the right set of ideas, those
+which appeal to the national sense of communal needs, by supplying the
+demand for sanctions for the social order; ideas which appeal to
+intellects molded by modern thought, by supplying such an intellectual
+understanding of the universe as justifies the various supra-communal
+sanctions; and ideas which appeal to the heart, by supplying the
+personal demand of each individual for a larger life, for intercourse
+with the Father of all Spirits and for strength for the prolonged
+battle of life--preach these and kindred ideas, and the Japanese will
+again become as conspicuously a religious people as they were when
+Buddhism came to Japan a thousand years ago.[DG]
+
+But if the real nature of a full and perfect religion is to save not
+only the individual, providing sanctions for his conduct, but also to
+justify the social order, and to provide sanctions that shall secure
+its maintenance, any religion which fails to have both characteristics
+can hardly claim the name universal. We have seen that Buddhism lacks
+one of these elements. In my judgment it is not properly universal. So
+long as it exists in or goes to a land already provided with other
+religions securing the social order, it may continue to thrive. But,
+on the one hand, it can never become the exclusive religion of any
+land for it cannot do without and therefore it cannot depose the other
+religions; and, on the other hand, it must give way before the
+stronger religion which has both the individual and communal elements
+combined. Buddhism, therefore, lacks a vital characteristic of a
+universal religion. It may better be called a non-local, or an
+international religion. We now see another reason why Buddhism,
+although found in many Oriental lands, has never annihilated any of
+the pre-existing religions, but has only added one more to the many
+varieties already existing. It is so in Thibet, in China, in Burmah,
+and in Japan. And in India, its home, it has utterly died out.
+
+Many of the efforts made by students of comparative religion to
+classify the various religions, seem to the writer defective through
+lack of the perception that social and religious evolution are vitally
+connected. From this point of view, the classification of religions as
+communal, individual, and communo-individual, would seem to be the
+best.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT?
+
+We have now passed in rather detailed review the emotional, æsthetic,
+intellectual, moral, and religious characteristics of the Japanese
+race. We have, furthermore, given considerable attention to the
+problem of personality. We have tried to understand the relation of
+each characteristic to the Japanese feudal system and social order.
+
+The reader will perhaps feel some dissatisfaction with the results of
+this study. "Are there, then," he may say, "no distinctive Japanese
+psychical characteristics by which this Eastern race is radically
+differentiated from those of the Occident?" "Are there no peculiar
+features of an Oriental, mental and moral, which infallibly and always
+distinguish him from an Occidental?" The reply to this question given
+in the preceding chapters of this work is negative. For the sake,
+however, of the reader who may not yet be thoroughly satisfied, it may
+be well to examine this problem a little further, analyzing some of
+the current characterizations of the Orient.
+
+That Oriental and Occidental peoples are each possessed of certain
+unique psychic characteristics, sharply and completely differentiating
+them from each other, is the opinion of scientific sociologists as
+well as of more popular writers. An Occidental entering the Orient is
+well-nigh overwhelmed with amusement and surprise at the antipodal
+characteristics of the two civilizations. Every visible expression of
+Oriental civilization, every mode of thought, art, architecture;
+conceptions of God, man, and nature; pronunciation and structure of
+the language--all seem utterly different from their corresponding
+elements in the West. Furthermore, as he visits one Oriental country
+after another, although he discovers differences between Japanese,
+Koreans, Chinese, and Hindus, yet he is impressed with a strange, a
+baffling similarity.
+
+The tourist naturally concludes that the unity characterizing the
+Orient is fundamental; that Oriental civilization is due to Oriental
+race brain, and Occidental civilization is due to Occidental race
+brain.
+
+This impression and this conclusion of the tourist are not, however,
+limited to him. The "old resident" in the East becomes increasingly
+convinced with every added year that an Oriental is a different kind
+of human being from a Westerner. As he becomes accustomed to the
+externals of the Oriental civilization, he forgets its comical
+aspects, he even comes to appreciate many of its conveniences. But in
+proportion as he becomes familiar with its languages, its modes of
+thought and feeling, its business methods, its politics, its
+literature, its amusements, does he increasingly realize the gulf set
+between an Oriental and an Occidental. The inner life of the spirit of
+an Oriental would be utterly inane, spiritless to the average
+Occidental. The "old resident" accordingly knows from long experience
+what the tourist only guesses from a hasty glance, that the
+characteristic differences distinguishing the peoples of the East and
+the West are racial and ineradicable. An Oriental is an Oriental, and
+that is the ultimate, only thoroughgoing explanation of his nature.
+
+The conception of the tourist and the "old resident" crops up in
+nearly every article and book touching on Far Eastern peoples.
+Whatever the point of remark or criticism, if it strikes the writer as
+different from the custom of Occidentals, it is laid to the account of
+Orientalism.
+
+This conception, however, of distinguishing Oriental characteristics,
+is not confined to popular writers and unscientific persons. Even
+professed and eminent sociologists advocate it. Prof. Le Bon, in his
+sophistic volume on the "Psychology of Peoples," advocates it
+strenuously. A few quotations from this interesting work may not be
+out of place.
+
+"The object of this work is to describe the psychological
+characteristics which constitute the soul of races, and to show how
+the history of a people and its civilization is determined by these
+characteristics."[DH] "The point that has remained most clearly fixed
+in mind, after long journeys through the most varied countries, is
+that each people possesses a mental constitution as unaltering as its
+anatomical characteristics, a constitution which is the source of its
+sentiments, thoughts, institutions, beliefs, and arts."[DI]
+
+"The life of a people, its institutions, beliefs, and arts, are but
+the visible expression of its invisible soul. For a people to
+transform its institutions, beliefs, and arts it must first transform
+its soul."[DJ]
+
+"Each race possesses a constitution as unvarying as its anatomical
+constitution. There seems to be no doubt that the former corresponds
+to a certain special structure of the brain."[DK]
+
+"A negro or a Japanese may easily take a university degree or become a
+lawyer; the sort of varnish he thus acquires is, however, quite
+superficial and has no influence on his mental constitution. What no
+education can give him, because they are created by heredity alone,
+are the forms of thought, the logic, and above all the character of
+the Western man."[DL]
+
+"Cross-breeding constitutes the only infallible means at our disposal
+of transforming in a fundamental manner the character of a people,
+heredity being the only force powerful enough to contend with
+heredity. Cross-breeding allows of the creation of a new race,
+possessing new physical and psychological characteristics."[DM]
+
+Such, then, being the opinion of travelers, residents, and
+professional sociologists, it is not to be lightly rejected. Nor has
+it been lightly rejected by the writer. For years he agreed with this
+view, but repeated study of the problem has convinced him of the
+fallacy of both the conception and the argument, and has brought him
+to the position maintained in this work.
+
+The characteristics differentiating Occidental and
+
+Oriental peoples and civilizations are undoubtedly great. But they
+are differences of social evolution and rest on social, not on
+biological heredity. Anatomical differences are natal, racial, and
+necessary. Not so with social characteristics and differences. These
+are acquired by each individual chiefly after birth, and depend on
+social environment which determines the education from infancy upward.
+Furthermore, an entire nation or race, if subjected to the right
+social environment, may profoundly transform its institutions,
+beliefs, and arts, which in turn transform what Prof. Le Bon and
+kindred writers call the invisible "race soul." Racial activity
+produces race character, for "Function produces organism." I cannot
+agree with these writers in the view that the race soul is a given
+fixed entity. Social psychogenesis is a present and a progressive
+process. Japan is a capital illustration of it. In the development of
+races and civilizations involution is as continuous a process as
+evolution. Evolution is, indeed, only one-half of the process. Without
+involution, evolution is incomprehensible. And involution is the more
+interesting half, as it is the more significant. In modern discussion
+much that passes by the name of evolution is, in reality, a discussion
+of involution.
+
+The attentive reader will have discovered that the real point of the
+discussion of Japanese characteristics given in the preceding chapters
+has been on the point of involution. How have these characteristics
+arisen? has been our ever-recurring question. The answer has
+invariably tried to show their relation to the social order. In this
+way we have traversed a large number of leading characteristics of the
+Japanese. We have seen how they arose, and also how they are now being
+transformed by the new Occidentalized social order. We have seen that
+not one of the characteristics examined is inherent, that is, due to
+brain structure, to biological heredity. We have concluded, therefore,
+that the psychical characteristics which differentiate races are all
+but wholly social.
+
+It is incumbent on advocates of the biological view to point out in
+detail the distinguishing inherent traits of the Orient. Let them also
+catalogue the essential psychic characteristics of Occidentals. Such
+an attempt is seldom made. And when it is made it is singularly
+unconvincing. Although Prof. Le Bon states that the mental
+constitution of races is as distinctive and unaltering as their
+anatomical characteristics, he fails to tell us what they are. This is
+a vital omission. If the differences are as distinct as he asserts, it
+would seem to be an easy matter to describe them. Whatever the
+clothing adopted, it is an easy matter for one to distinguish a
+European from an Asiatic, an Englishman from an Italian, a Japanese
+from a Korean, a Chinaman from a Hindu. The anatomical characteristics
+of races are clear and easily described. If the psychic
+characteristics are equally distinct, why do not they who assert this
+distinctness describe and catalogue these differences?
+
+Occasionally a popular writer makes something of an attempt in this
+direction, but with astonishingly slight results. A recent writer in
+the London _Daily Mail_ has illustrated afresh the futility of all
+attempts to catalogue the distinguishing characteristics of the
+Oriental. He names the inferior position assigned to women, the
+licentiousness of men, licensed prostitution, lack of the play
+instinct among Oriental boys, scorn of Occidental civilization, and
+the rude treatment of foreigners. Many of his statements of facts are
+sadly at fault. But supposing them to be true, are they the
+differentiating characteristics of the Orient? Consider for a moment
+what was the position of woman in ancient times in the Occident, and
+what was the moral character of Occidental men? Is not prostitution
+licensed to-day in the leading cities of Europe? And is there not an
+unblushing prostitution in the larger cities of England and America
+which would put to shame the licensed prostitution of Japan? Are
+Orientals and their civilization universally esteemed and
+considerately treated in the Occident? Surely none of these are
+uniquely Oriental characteristics, distinguishing them from Occidental
+peoples as clearly as the anatomical characteristics of oblique eyes
+and yellow skin.
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell has made a careful philosophical effort to
+discover the essential psychic nature of the Orient. He describes it,
+as we have seen, as "Impersonality." The failure of his effort we
+have sufficiently considered.
+
+There remain a few other characterizations of the Orient that we may
+well examine briefly.
+
+It has been stated that the characteristic psychic trait
+distinguishing the East from the West is that the former is intuitive,
+while the latter is logical. In olden times Oriental instruction
+relied on the intuitions of the student. No reliance was placed on the
+logical process. Religion, so far as it was not ceremony and magic,
+was intuitional, "Satori," "Enlightenment," was the keyword. Each man
+attains enlightenment by himself--through a flash of intuition. Moral
+instruction likewise was intuitional. Dogmatic statements were made
+whose truth the learner was to discover for himself; no effort was
+made to explain them. Teaching aimed to go direct to the point, not
+stopping to explain the way thither.
+
+That this was and is a characteristic of the Orient cannot be
+disputed. The facts are abundant and clear. But the question is
+whether this is a racial psychic characteristic, such that it
+inevitably controls the entire thinking of an Oriental, whatever his
+education, and also whether the Occident is conspicuously deficient in
+this psychic characteristic. Thus stated, the question almost answers
+itself.
+
+Orientals educated in Western methods of thought acquire logical
+methods of reasoning and teaching. The old educational methods of
+Japan are now obsolete. On the other hand, intuitionalism is not
+unknown in the West. Mystics in religion are all conspicuously
+intuitional. So too are Christian scientists, faith-healers, and
+spiritualists. Great preachers and poets are intuitionalists rather
+than logicians.
+
+Furthermore, if we look to ancient times, we shall see that even
+Occidentals were dominated by intuitionalism. All primitive knowledge
+was dominated by intuitions, and was as absurd as many still prevalent
+Oriental conceptions of nature. The bane of ancient science and
+philosophy was its reliance on a priori considerations; that is, on
+intuition. Inductive, carefully logical methods of thought, of
+science, of philosophy, and even of religion, are relatively modern
+developments of the Occidental mind. We have learned to doubt
+intuitions unverified by investigation and experimental evidence. The
+wide adoption of the inductive method is a recent characteristic of
+the West.
+
+Modern progress has consisted in no slight degree in the development
+of logical powers, and particularly in the power of doubting and
+examining intuitions. To say that the East is conspicuously
+intuitional and the West is conspicuously logical is fairly true, but
+this misses the real difference. The West is intuitional plus logical.
+It uses the intuitional method in every department of life, but it
+does not stop with it. An intuition is not accepted as truth until it
+has been subjected by the reason to the most thorough criticism
+possible. The West distrusts the unverified and unguided intuitive
+judgment. On the other hand, the East is not inherently deficient in
+logical power. When brought into contact with Occidental life, and
+especially when educated in Occidental methods of thought, the
+Oriental is not conspicuously deficient in logical ability.
+
+This line of thought leads to the conclusion that the psychic
+characteristics distinguishing the East from the West, profound though
+they are, are sociological rather than biological. They are the
+characteristics of the civilization rather than of essential race
+nature.
+
+A fact remarked by many thoughtful Occidentals is the astonishing
+difficulty--indeed the impossibility--of becoming genuinely and
+intimately acquainted with the Japanese. Said a professor of Harvard
+University to the writer some years ago: "Do you in Japan find it
+difficult to become truly acquainted with the Japanese? We see many
+students here, but we are unable to gain more than a superficial
+acquaintance. They seem to be incrusted in a shell that we are unable
+to pierce." The editor of the _Japan Mail_, speaking of the difficulty
+of securing "genuinely intimate intercourse with the Japanese people,"
+says: "The language also is needed. Yet even when the language is
+added, something still remains to be achieved, and what that something
+is we have never been able to discover, though we have been
+considering the subject for thirty-three years. No foreigner has ever
+yet succeeded in being admitted into the inner circle of Japanese
+intercourse."
+
+Is this a fact? If not, why is it so widespread a belief? If it is a
+fact, what is the interpretation? Like most generalizations it
+expresses both a truth and an error. As the statement of a general
+experience, I believe it to be true. As an assertion of universal
+application I believe it to be false. As a truth, how is it to be
+explained? Is it due to difference of race soul, and thus to racial
+antipathy, as some maintain? If so, it must be a universal fact. This,
+however, is an error, as we shall see. The explanation is not so hard
+to find as at first appears.
+
+The difficulty under consideration is due to two classes of facts. The
+first is that the people have long been taught that Occidentals desire
+to seize and possess their land. Although the more enlightened have
+long since abandoned this fear and suspicion, the people still suspect
+the stranger; they do not propose to admit foreigners to any leading
+position in the political life of the land. They do not implicitly
+trust the foreigners, even when taken into their employ. That
+foreigners should not be admitted to the inner circle of Japanese
+political life, therefore, is not strange. Nor is it unique to Japan.
+It is not done in any land except the United States. Secondly, the
+diverse methods of social intercourse characterizing the East and the
+West make a deep chasm between individuals of these civilizations on
+coming into social relations. The Oriental bows low, utters
+conventional "aisatsu" salutations, listens respectfully, withholds
+his own opinion, agrees with his vis-à-vis, weighs every word uttered
+with a view to inferring the real meaning, for the genius of the
+language requires him to assume that the real meaning is not on the
+surface, and chooses his own language with the same circumspection.
+The Occidental extends his hand for a hearty shake--if he wishes to be
+friendly--looks his visitor straight in the eye, speaks directly from
+his heart, without suspicion or fear of being misunderstood, expresses
+his own opinions unreservedly. The Occidental, accustomed to this
+direct and open manner, spontaneously doubts the man who lacks it. It
+is impossible for the Occidental to feel genuinely acquainted with an
+Oriental who does not respond in Occidental style of frank open
+intercourse. Furthermore, it is not Japanese custom to open one's
+heart, to make friends with everyone who comes along. The
+hail-fellow-well-met characteristic of the Occident is a feature of
+its individualism, that could not come into being in a feudal
+civilization in which every respectable man carried two swords with
+which to take instant vengeance on whoever should malign or doubt him.
+Universal secretiveness and conventionality, polite forms and veiled
+expressions, were the necessary shields of a military feudalism. Both
+the social order and the language were fitted to develop to a high
+degree the power of attention to minutest details of manner and speech
+and of inferring important matters from slight indications. The whole
+social order served to develop the intuitional method in human
+relations. Reliance was placed more on what was not said than on what
+was clearly expressed. A doubting state of mind was the necessary
+psychological prerequisite for such an inferential system. And doubt
+was directly taught. "Hito wo mireba dorobo to omoye," "when you see a
+man, count him a robber," may be an exaggeration, but this ancient
+proverb throws much light on the Japanese chronic state of mind.
+Mutual suspicion--and especially suspicion of strangers--was the rule
+in Old Japan. Among themselves the Japanese make relatively few
+intimate friends. They remark on Occidental skill in making friends.
+
+That the foreigner is not admitted to the inner social life of the
+Japanese is likewise not difficult of explanation, if we bear in mind
+the nature of that social life. Is it possible for one who keeps
+concubines, who takes pleasure in geisha, and who visits houses of
+prostitution, to converse freely and confidentially with those who
+condemn these practices? Can he who stands for a high-grade morality,
+who criticises in unsparing measure the current morality of Japanese
+society, expect to be admitted to its inner social circles?
+Impossible. However friendly the relations of Japanese and foreigners
+may be in business and in the diplomatic corps, the moral chasm
+separating the social life of the Occident from that of the Orient
+effectually prevents a foreigner from being admitted to its inner
+social life.
+
+It might be thought that immoral Occidentals would be so admitted. Not
+so. The Japanese distinguish between Occidentals. They know well that
+immoral Occidentals are not worthy of trust. Although for a season
+they may hobnob together, the intimacy is shallow and short-lived; it
+rests on lust and not on profound sympathies of head and heart.
+
+And this suggests the secret of genuine acquaintance. Men become
+profoundly acquainted in proportion as they hold in common serious
+views of life, and labor together for the achievement of great moral
+ends. Now a gulf separates the ordinary Japanese, even though
+educated, from the serious-minded Occidental. Their views of life are
+well-nigh antipodal. If their social intercourse is due only to the
+accident of business or of social functions, what true intimacy can
+possibly arise? The acquaintance can only be superficial. Nothing
+binds the two together beyond the temporary and accidental. Let them,
+however, become possessed of a common and a serious view of life; let
+them strive for the attainment of some great moral reform, which they
+feel of vital importance to the welfare of the nation and the age, and
+immediately a bond of connection and intercourse will be established
+which will ripen into real intimacy.
+
+I dispute the correctness of the generalization above quoted, however,
+not only on theoretical considerations, but also as a matter of
+experience. Among Christians, the conditions are fulfilled for
+intimate relations between Occidentals and Orientals which result, as
+a matter of fact, in genuine and intimate friendship. The relations
+existing between many missionaries and the native Christians and
+pastors refute the assertion of the editor of the _Japan Mail_ that,
+"no foreigner has ever yet succeeded in being admitted into the inner
+circle of Japanese intercourse." This assertion is doubtless true in
+regard to the relation of foreigners to non-Christian society. The
+reason, for the fact, however, is not because one is Occidental and
+the other Oriental in psychic nature, but solely because of diverse
+moral views, aims, and conduct.
+
+It is not the contention of these pages, however, that intimate
+friendships between Occidental and Oriental Christians are as easily
+formed as between members of two Occidental nations. Although common
+views of life, and common moral aims and conduct may provide the
+requisite foundations for such intimate friendships, the diverse
+methods of thought and of social intercourse may still serve to hinder
+their formation. It is probably a fact that missionaries experience
+greater difficulty in making genuine intimate friendships with
+Japanese Christians than with any other race on the face of the globe.
+The reasons for this fact are manifold. The Japanese racial ambition
+manifests itself not only in the sphere of political life; it does not
+take kindly to foreign control in any line. The churches manifest this
+characteristic. It is a cause of suspicion of the foreign missionary
+and separation from him; it has broken up many a friendship. Intimacy
+between missionaries and leading native pastors and evangelists was
+more common in the earlier days of Christian work than more recently,
+because the Japanese church organization has recently developed a
+self-consciousness and an ambition for organic independence which have
+led to mutual criticisms.
+
+Furthermore, Japanese Christians are still Japanese. Their methods of
+social intercourse are Oriental; they bow profoundly, they repeat
+formal salutations, they refrain from free expression of personal
+opinion and preference. The crust of polite etiquette remains. The
+foreigner must learn to appreciate it before he can penetrate to the
+kindly, sincere, earnest heart. This the foreigner does not easily do,
+much to the detriment of his work.
+
+And on the other hand, before the Oriental can penetrate to the
+kindly, sincere, and earnest heart of the Occidental, he must abandon
+the inferential method; he must not judge the foreigner by what is
+left unsaid nor by slight turns of that which is said, but by the
+whole thought as fully expressed. In other words, as the Occidental
+must learn and must trust to Oriental methods of social intercourse,
+so the Oriental must learn and must trust to the corresponding
+Occidental methods. The difficulty is great in either case, though of
+an opposite nature. Which has the greater difficulty is a question I
+do not attempt to solve.
+
+Another generalization as to the essential difference marking Oriental
+and Occidental psychic natures is that the former is meditative and
+appreciative, and the latter is active. This too is a characterization
+of no little truth. The easy-going, time-forgetting, dreaming
+characteristics of the Orient are in marked contrast to the rush,
+bustle, and hurry of the Occident. One of the first and most forcible
+impressions made on the Oriental visiting the West is the tremendous
+energy displayed even in the ordinary everyday business. In the home
+there is haste; on the streets men, women, and children are "always on
+the run." It must seem to be literally so, when the walk of the
+Occidental is compared with the slow, crawling rate at which the
+Oriental moves. Horse cars, electric cars, steam cars, run at high
+speed through crowded streets. Conversation is short and hurried.
+Visits are curtailed--hardly more than glimpses. Everyone is so
+nervously busy as to have no time for calm, undisturbed thought. So
+does the Orient criticise and characterize the Occident.
+
+In the Orient, on the contrary, time is nothing. Walking is slow,
+business is deliberate, visiting is a fine art of bows and
+conventional phrases preliminary to the real purpose of the call;
+amusements even are long-drawn-out, theatrical performances requiring
+an entire day. In the home there is no hurry, on the street there is
+no rush. To the Occidental, the Oriental seems so absorbed in a dream
+life that the actual life is to him but a dream.
+
+If the characterization we are considering is meant to signify that
+the Orient possesses a power of appreciation not possessed by the
+West, then it seems to me an error. The Occident is not deficient in
+appreciation. A better statement of the difference suggested by the
+above characterization is that Western civilization is an expression
+of Will, whereas Eastern civilization is an expression of
+subordination to the superior--to Fate. This feature of Oriental
+character is due to the fact that the Orient is still as a whole
+communal in its social order, whereas the Occident is individualistic.
+In the West each man makes his own fortune; his position in society
+rests on his own individual energy. He is free to exert it at will.
+Society praises him in proportion as he manifests energy, grit,
+independence, and persistence. The social order selects such men and
+advances them in political, in business, in social, and in academic
+life. The energetic, active characteristics of the West are due, then,
+to the high development of individualism. The entire Occidental
+civilization is an expression of free will.
+
+The communal nature of the Orient has not systematically given room
+for individual progress. The independent, driving man has been
+condemned socially. Submission, absolute and perpetual, to parents, to
+lord, to ancestors, to Fate, has been the ruling idea of each man's
+life. Controlled by such ideas, the easy-going, time-ignoring,
+dreaming, contemplative life--if you so choose to call it--of the
+Orient is a necessary consequence.
+
+But has this characteristic become congenital, or is it still only
+social? Is dreamy appreciation now an inborn racial characteristic of
+Oriental mind, while active driving energy is the corresponding
+essential trait of Occidental mind? Or may these characteristics
+change with the social order? I have no hesitancy whatever in
+advocating the latter position. The way in which Young Japan, clad in
+European clothing, using watches and running on "railroad time," has
+dropped the slow-going style of Old Japan and has acquired habits of
+rapid walking, direct clear-cut conversation, and punctuality in
+business and travel (comparatively speaking) proves conclusively the
+correctness of my contention. New Japan is entering into the hurry and
+bustle of Occidental life, because, in contact with the West, she has
+adopted in a large measure, though not yet completely, the
+individualism of the West.
+
+As time goes on, Japanese civilization will increasingly manifest the
+phenomena of will, and will proportionally become assimilated to the
+civilization of the West. But the ultimate cause of this
+transformation in civilization will be the increasing introduction of
+individualism into the social order. And this is possible only because
+the so-called racial characteristics are sociological, and not
+biological. The transformation of "race soul" therefore does not
+depend on the intermarriage of diverse races, but only on the adoption
+of new ideas and practices through social intercourse.
+
+We conclude, then, that the only thoroughgoing interpretation of the
+differences characterizing Eastern and Western psychic nature is a
+social one, and that social differences can be adequately expressed
+only by contrasting the fundamental ideas ruling their respective
+social orders, namely, communalism for the East and individualism for
+the West.
+
+The unity that pervades the Orient, if it is not due to the
+inheritance of a common psychic nature, to what is it due? Surely to
+the possession of a common civilization and social order. It would be
+hard to prove that Japanese, Koreans, Chinese, Siamese, Burmese,
+Hindus (and how many distinct races does the ethnologist find in
+India), Persians, and Turks are all descendants from a common ancestry
+and are possessed therefore by physical heredity of a common racial
+psychic nature. Yet such is the requirement of the theory we are
+opposing. That the races inhabiting the Asiatic continent have had
+from ancient times mutual social intercourse, whereby the
+civilization, mental, moral, and spiritual, of the most developed has
+passed to the other nations, so that China has dominated Eastern Asia,
+and India has profoundly influenced all the races inhabiting Asia, is
+an indisputable fact. The psychic unity of the Orient is a
+civilizational, a social unity, as is also the psychic unity of the
+Occident. The reason why the Occident is so distinct from the Orient
+in social, in psychic, and in civilizational characteristics is
+because these two great branches of the human race have undergone
+isolated evolution. Isolated biological evolution has produced the
+diverse races. These are now fixed physical types, which can be
+modified only by intermarriage. But although isolated social evolution
+has produced diverse social and psychic characteristics these are not
+fixed and unalterable. To transform psychic and social
+characteristics, intimate social intercourse, under special
+conditions, is needful alone.
+
+If the characteristics differentiating the Eastern from the Western
+peoples are only social, it might be supposed that the results of
+association would be mutual, the East influencing the West as much as
+the West influences the East, both at last finding a common level.
+Such a result, however, is impossible, from the laws regulating
+psychic and social intercourse. The less developed psychic nature can
+have no appreciable effect on the more highly developed, just as
+undeveloped art cannot influence highly developed art, nor crude
+science and philosophy highly developed science and philosophy. The
+law governing the relations of diverse civilizations when brought into
+contact is not like the law of hydrostatics, whereby two bodies of
+water of different levels, brought into free communication, finally
+find a common level, determined by the difference in level and their
+respective masses. In social intercourse the higher civilization is
+unaffected by the lower, in any important way, while the lower is
+mightily modified, and in sufficient time is lifted to the grade of
+the higher in all important respects. This is a law of great
+significance. The Orient is becoming Occidentalized to a degree and at
+a rate little realized by travelers and not fully appreciated by the
+Orientals themselves. They know that mighty changes have taken place,
+and are now taking place, but they do not fully recognize their
+nature, and the multitudes do not know the source of these changes. In
+so far as the East has surpassed the West in any important direction
+will the East influence the West.
+
+In saying, then, as we did in our first chapter, that the Japanese
+have already formed an Occidento-Oriental civilization, we meant that
+Japan has introduced not only the external and mechanical elements of
+Western civilization into her new social order, but also its inner and
+determinative principle--individualism. In saying that, as the
+Ethiopian cannot change his skin nor the leopard his spots, so Japan
+will never become thoroughly Occidentalized, we did not intend to say
+that she was so Oriental in her physiological nature, in her "race
+soul," that she could make no fundamental social transformation; but
+merely that she has a social heredity that will always and inevitably
+modify every Occidental custom and conception that may be brought to
+this land. Although in time Japan may completely individualize her
+social order, it will never be identical with that of the West. It
+will always bear the marks of her Oriental social heredity in
+innumerable details. The Occidental traveler will always be impressed
+with the Orientalisms of her civilization. Although the Oriental
+familiar with the details of the pre-Meiji social order will be
+impressed with what seems to him the complete Occidentalization of her
+new civilization and social order, although to-day communalism and
+individualism are the distinguishing characteristics respectively of
+the East and the West, they are not necessary characteristics due to
+inherent race nature. The Orient is sure to become increasingly
+individualistic. The future evolution of the great races of the earth
+is to be increasingly convergent in all the essentials of individual
+and racial prosperity, but in countless non-essential details the
+customs of the past will remain, to give each race and nation
+distinctive psychic and social characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+GENERAL CONCLUSIONS
+
+
+The aim of the present work has been to gain insight into the real
+nature of both Japanese character and its modern transformation.
+
+In doing this we have necessarily entered the domain of social
+science, where we have been compelled to take issue with many, to us,
+defective conceptions. Our discussions of social principles have,
+however, been narrowly limited. We have confined our attention to the
+interpretation of those social and psychic characteristics
+differentiating the Japanese from other races. Our chief contention
+has been that these characteristics are due to the nature of the
+social order that has prevailed among them, and not to the inherent
+nature of the people; and that the evolution of the psychic
+characteristics of all races is due to social more than to biological
+evolution.
+
+This position and the discussions offered to prove it imply more than
+has been explicitly stated. In this closing chapter it seems desirable
+to state concisely, and therefore with technical terminology, some of
+the more fundamental principles of social philosophy assumed or
+implied in this work. Brevity requires that this statement take the
+form of dogmatic propositions and unillustrated abstractions. The
+average reader will find little to interest him, and is accordingly
+advised to omit it entirely.
+
+Let us first clearly see that we have made no effort to account for
+the origin or inherent nature of psychic life. That association or the
+social order is the original producing cause of psychic life is by no
+means our contention. Given the psychic nature as we find it in man,
+the problem is to account for its diverse manifestation in the
+different races and civilizations. This, and this alone, has been our
+problem.
+
+Psychic nature is the sole and final cause of social life. Without
+psychic nature there could be no association. Personalized psychic
+nature is the sole and final cause of human social life. Numberless
+conditions determine by stimulation or imitation the manifestation of
+psychic life. These conditions differ for different lands, peoples,
+ages, and political relations, producing diverse social orders for
+each separated group. These diverse social orders determine the
+psychic characteristics differentiating the various groups. Social
+life and social order are objective expressions of a reality of which
+psychic nature is the subjective and therefore deeper reality. The two
+cannot be ruthlessly torn apart and remain complete, nor can they be
+understood, or completely interpreted, apart from each other. They are
+correlative and complementary expressions for the same reality.
+
+Similarly physical and psychical life are to be conceived as
+profoundly interrelated, being respectively objective and subjective
+expressions of a reality incapable of separate interpretation. Yet
+each has markedly distinct characteristics and is the subject of
+distinct laws of activity and development.
+
+Heredity is of two kinds, biological heredity, transmitting innate
+characters, and social heredity, transmitting acquired habits and
+their physiological results.
+
+The innate characters transmitted by biological heredity are either
+physiological, anatomical, or psychical.
+
+The acquired habits transmitted by social heredity are essentially
+psychical: but they may result in acquired physiological, or even
+anatomical, characters. Here belong the physiological effects of diet,
+housing, clothing, occupation, education, etc., which have not yet
+been taken up and incorporated into the innate physiological
+constitution by biological heredity. The physiological effects of
+social heredity are through the daily physical life and activity of
+each individual, in accordance with the requirements of the social
+order in which he is reared; and these are reached through its
+influence on the acquired psychical habits, which are transmitted
+through association, imitation, and the control of activities by
+language and education. In biological heredity the transmission is
+exclusively prior to birth, while in social heredity it is chiefly, if
+not entirely, after birth.
+
+In social heredity the transmission is not determined by
+consanguinity, and therefore extends to members of alien races when
+they are incorporated in the social organization.
+
+While the transmission of biological inheritance to each offspring is
+inevitable and complete, that of social inheritance is largely
+voluntary. It is also more or less complete, according to the
+knowledge, purpose, and effort of the individuals concerned. The
+transmission of acquired social and psychic characteristics even from
+parents to offspring depends on their association, and the imposition
+on their offspring by parents of their own modes of life. Sharing with
+parents their bodily activities, their language and their environment,
+both social and psychical, the offspring necessarily develop psychic
+and social characteristics similar to those of the parents.
+
+Evolution takes place through the transformation of inheritance. The
+evolution of _innate_ physiological, anatomical, and psychical
+characters takes place through the transformation of biological
+inheritance; and the evolution of society and of _acquired_ characters
+chiefly through the transformation of social inheritance.
+
+Nearly all biologists admit that change in the form of natural
+selection is one of the principles transforming biological
+inheritance; but whether the _acquired_ characters of parents are even
+in the least degree inherited by the offspring, thus becoming _innate_
+characters, is one of the important biological problems of recent
+years. Into this problem we have not entered, though we recognize that
+it must have important bearings on sociological science. Briefly
+stated, it is this: Do social and psychic characteristics, acquired by
+individuals or by groups of individuals, affect the intrinsic
+inherited and transmissible psychic nature in such ways that
+offspring, by the mere fact of being offspring, necessarily manifest
+those characteristics, regardless of the particular social environment
+in which they may be reared? Into this problem, thus broadly stated,
+we do not enter. Limiting our view to those advanced races which
+manifest practically equal physiological development, we ask whether
+or not their differentiating psychic characteristics are due to
+modifications of their inherited and intrinsic psychic nature, such
+that those characteristics are necessarily transmitted to offspring
+through intrinsic biological heredity. Current popular and scientific
+sociology seems to give an affirmative answer to this question. The
+reply of this work emphasizes the negative. Although it is not
+maintained that there is absolutely no difference whatever in the
+psychic nature of the different races, or that the psychic differences
+distinguishing the races are entirely transmitted by social heredity,
+it is maintained that this is very largely the case--far more largely
+than is usually perceived or admitted. Such inherent differences, if
+they exist, are so vague and intangible as practically to defy
+discovery and clear statement, and may be practically ignored.
+
+The only adequate disproof of the position here maintained would be
+about as follows. Let a Japanese infant be reared in an American home
+from infancy, not only fed and clothed as an American, but loved as a
+member of the family and trained as carefully and affectionately as
+one's own child. The full conditions require that not only the child
+himself, but everyone else, be ignorant of his parentage and race in
+order that he be thought to be, and be treated as though he were, a
+genuine member of his adopting home and people. What would be the
+psychic characteristics of that child when grown to manhood? If he
+should manifest psychic traits like those of his Japanese parents, if
+he should think in the Japanese order, if he should have a tendency to
+use prepositions as postpositions, if he should drop pronouns and
+should use honorific words in their place, if he should be markedly
+suspicious and inferential, if he should bow in making his salutations
+rather than shake hands, if he should show marked preference for
+sitting on the floor rather than on chairs, and for chopsticks to
+knives and forks, and if developing powers as an artist he should
+naturally paint Japanese pictures, Japanese landscapes, and Japanese
+faces, finding himself unable to draw according to the canons of
+Western art, if on developing poetic tastes he should find special
+pleasure in seventeen syllable or thirty-one syllable exclamatory
+poems, finding little interest in Longfellow or Shakespeare, if, in
+short, he should develop a predilection for any distinctive Japanese
+custom, habit of thought, method of speech, emotion or volition, it
+would evidently be due to his intrinsic heredity. If in all these
+matters, however, he should prove to be like an American, acquiring an
+American education like any American boy, and if on being brought to
+Japan, at, say, thirty years of age, still supposing himself to be an
+American, he should have equal difficulty with any American in
+mastering the language and adapting himself to and understanding the
+Japanese people, then it would follow that his psychic characteristics
+have been inherited socially and he is what he is, nationally, because
+of his social heritage. Such a result would show that the psychic
+traits differentiating races are social and not intrinsic.
+
+We have limited our discussion to the advanced races because the
+problem is then relatively simple, the material abundant, and the
+issue clear. Much discussion in theology, psychology, and sociology is
+futile because it concerns that practically mythical being, the
+aboriginal man, about whose social and psychic life no one knows
+anything, and any theorizer can say what he chooses without fear of
+shipwreck on incontrovertible facts. Whether the lowest races known
+to-day are differentiated from the highest only by acquired social and
+psychic characteristics, or also by differences of psychic nature, may
+perhaps be an open question. However this may be, the case is fairly
+clear in regard to the higher races inhabiting the earth. Their
+differentiating psychic characteristics are, for the most part, not
+due to diverse psychic nature, but to diverse social orders, while the
+transmission of these characteristics takes place, as a matter of
+observation, through social heredity.
+
+The discussions of this work are exclusively concerned with the
+evolution of society and of psychic characteristics. But even in this
+limited field we have not attempted to cover the whole ground. We have
+given our chief attention to the interdependence of social phenomena
+and psychic characteristics. The causes of evolution in the social
+order have not been the main subject under discussion.
+
+Segregation is the essential condition on which divergent evolution is
+dependent. Many forms of segregation may be specified, under each of
+which evolution proceeds on a different principle. In brief, it may be
+said that biological segregation prevents the swamping of incipient
+organic divergences, by preventing the intermarriage of those
+possessing such divergences, while social segregation prevents the
+swamping of incipient social divergences and their corresponding
+incipient psychic characteristics by preventing the inter-association
+of those having such tendencies.
+
+Biologically segregated groups undergo divergent biological evolution
+through segregated marriage, producing distinct physiological unities
+or racial types. These racial types are now relatively fixed and can
+be appreciably modified only by the intermarriage of different races.
+
+Socially segregated groups undergo divergent social evolution through
+the segregated social intercourse of the members of each group,
+producing distinct civilizational and psychic unities. The differences
+between these social or psychic groups are relatively plastic and are
+the subject of constant variation. The modification of the social and
+psychic characteristics of a group takes place through a change in the
+physical or social environment of the group, or through the rise of
+strong personalities within the group.
+
+Biologically distinct groups may thus be unified biologically only by
+intermarriage, while socially physically distinct groups may be
+unified socially and psychically without intermarriage, but
+exclusively through association.
+
+The psychic defects of the offspring of interracial marriages may be
+largely due to the defective social heredity transmitted by the
+parents, rather than to mixed intrinsic inheritance.
+
+The term "race soul" is a convenient, though delusive, because highly
+figurative, expression for the psychic unity of a social group. The
+unity is due entirely to the more or less complete possession by the
+individual members of the group, of common ideas, ideals, methods of
+thought, emotions, volitions, customs, institutions, arts, and
+beliefs.
+
+Each individual is molded psychically to the type of the social group
+in which he is reared. The "race soul" is thus imposed on the
+individual by conscious and unconscious education.
+
+The psychic evolution of social groups is divergent so long as
+isolation is fairly complete, but becomes convergent in proportion to
+association. Perfect association produces complete psychic unity,
+though it should be noted that perfect association of geographically
+separated social groups is practically unattainable.
+
+The essential elements constituting national unity are psychic and
+social, not biological. Racial unity is biological. The same race may
+accordingly separate into different social and psychic groups. And
+members of different races may belong to the same social psychic
+group.
+
+The so-called "race soul" of many sociologists is, therefore, a
+fiction and indicates mental confusion. The term refers not to the
+racial unity of inherent psychic nature, but only to the social unity
+of socially inherited psychic characteristics. Groups thus socially
+unified may or may not be racially homogeneous. In point of fact no
+race is strictly homogeneous biologically, nor is any social group
+completely unified psychically.
+
+In sociology as in biology function produces organism, that is to say,
+activity produces the organ or faculty fitted to perform the
+activity.[2] The psychic characteristics differentiating social groups
+are chiefly, and perhaps exclusively, due to diverse social
+activities. These activities are determined by innumerable causes,
+geographical, climatic, economic, political, intellectual, emotional,
+and personal.
+
+The plasticity of a psychic group is due to the plasticity of the
+infant mind and brain, which is wonderfully capable of acquiring the
+language, thought forms, and differentiating characteristics of any
+group in which it may be reared. To what extent this plasticity
+extends only carefully conducted experiments can show. In the higher
+Asiatic and European races we find it to be much greater than is
+generally supposed to be the case, but it is not improbable that the
+lowest races possess it in a much lower degree.
+
+The relative fixity of a psychic group is due to the fact that in
+full-grown adults, who form the majority of every group, function has
+produced structure. Body, brain, and mind have "set" or crystallized
+in the mold provided by the social order. Influences sufficiently
+powerful to transform the young have little effect on the adult. The
+relative fixity of a psychic group is also due to the
+difficulty--well-nigh impossibility--of bringing new psychic
+influences to bear on all members of the group simultaneously. The
+majority, being oblivious to the new psychic forces, maintain the old
+psychic régime. The difficulty of reform, of transforming a social
+order, is principally due to these two causes.
+
+The "character" of a people (psychic group) consists of its more or
+less unconscious, because structuralized or incarnate, ideas,
+emotions, and volitions. Chief among them are those concerning the
+character of God, the nature and value of man and woman, the necessary
+relation of character to destiny, the nature and meaning of life and
+death, and the nature and the authority of moral law. In proportion as
+the social order incorporates high or low views on these vital
+subjects, is the character of the people elevated and strong, or
+debased and weak.
+
+The destiny of a people, and the rôle it plays in history, are
+determined not by chance nor yet by environment, but in the last
+analysis by its own character. Yet this character is not something
+given it complete at the start, an intrinsic psychical inheritance,
+nor is it dependent for transmission on biological heredity, passing
+only from parents to offspring. Character belongs to the sphere of
+social psychic life and is the subject of social heredity. Through
+social intercourse the moral character dominating a psychic group may
+be transmitted to members of an alien psychic group. This usually
+takes place through missionary activity. The moral character of a
+psychic group may in this way be fundamentally transformed, and with
+character, destiny.
+
+Floating ideas, not yet woven into the warp and woof of life, not yet
+incarnate in the individual or in the social order, have little
+influence on the character of the individual or the group, however
+beautiful, true, or elevating such ideas may be in themselves. The
+character of a people is to be judged, therefore, not by the beauty or
+elevation of every idea that may be found in its literature, but only
+by those ideas that have been assimilated, that have become
+incorporated into the social order. These determine a people's
+character and destiny. According as these ideas persist in the social
+order, is its character permanent.
+
+Progress consists of expanding life, communal and individual,
+extensive and intensive, physical and psychical. True progress is
+balanced. High communal development, that is, highly organized
+society, is impossible without the wide attainment of highly developed
+individuals. Progressive mastery of nature likewise is impossible
+apart from growing psychic development in all its branches, emotional,
+intellectual and volitional, communal and individual.
+
+Historically, communalism is the first principle to emerge in
+consciousness. To succeed, however, it must be accompanied by at least
+a certain degree of individualism, even though it be quite implicit.
+The full development of the communal principle is impossible apart
+from the correspondingly full development of the individual principle.
+These are complementary principles of progress. Each alone is
+impossible. In proportion as either is emphasized at the expense of
+the other, is progress impeded. Arrested civilizations are due to the
+disproportionate and excessive development of one or the other of
+these principles.
+
+Personality, expressing and realizing itself in communal and
+individual life, in objective and subjective forms, is at once the
+cause and the goal of progress. Social and psychic evolution are,
+therefore, in the last analysis, personal processes. The irreducible
+and final factor in social evolution and in social science is
+personality; for personality is the determinative factor of a human
+being.
+
+Progress in personal development consists of increasing extent and
+accuracy of knowledge, refinement and elevation of emotions, and
+nobility and reliability of volitions. Progress in personal
+development requires the individual to pass from objective
+heterocratic to subjective autocratic or self-regulative ethical life.
+He must pass from the traditional to the enlightened, from the
+communal to the individualistic stage in ethics and religion. He must
+feel with increasing force the binding nature of the supra-communal
+sanctions for communal and individual life, accepting the highest
+dictates of the enlightened moral consciousness as the laws of the
+universe. But this means that the individual must secure increasing
+insight into the immutable and eternal laws of spiritual being and
+must identify his personal interests, his very self with those laws,
+with the Heart of the. Universe, with God himself. Only so will he
+become completely autonomous, self-regulative. Only thus will the
+individual become and remain an altruistic communo-individual, fitted
+to meet and survive the relaxation of the historic communal and
+supra-communal sanctions for communal and individual life, a
+relaxation induced by growing political liberty and growing
+intellectual rejection of primitive or defective religious beliefs.
+
+Progress in personality is thus at bottom an ethico-religious process.
+The wide attainment of developed personality permits the formation of
+enlarging highly organized psychic groups, accompanied by increasing
+specialization of its individual members. This communal expansion,
+ramifying organization and individual specialization, secures
+increasing extensive and intensive intellectual understanding of the
+universe, and this in turn active mastery of nature, with all the
+consequences of growing ease and richness of life.
+
+Ethico-religious, autonomous personality is thus the tap-root of
+highly developed and permanently progressive civilizations.
+Personality is, therefore, the criterion of progress. Mere ease of
+physical life, freedom from anxiety, light-hearted, care-free
+happiness, mastery of nature, material civilization, highly developed
+art, literature, and music, or even refined culture, are partial and
+inadequate, if not positively false, criteria.
+
+Personality, as a nature, is an inherent psychic heritage shared by
+all human beings. It is transmitted only from parents to offspring,
+and its transmission depends only on that relation. Personality, as a
+varying psychic characteristic, is a matter of social inheritance, and
+is profoundly dependent, therefore, on the nature of the social order
+and the social evolution.
+
+Religion, as incorporated in life, is the most important single factor
+determining the personality and character of its adherents, either
+hindering or promoting their progress.
+
+Japanese social and psychic evolution have in no respects violated the
+universal laws of evolution. Japanese personal and other psychic
+characteristics are the product not of essential, but of social
+inheritance and social evolution. Japan has recently entered into a
+new social inheritance from which she is joyfully accepting new
+conceptions and principles of communal and individual life. These she
+is working into her social organism.
+
+Already these are producing profound, and we may believe permanent,
+transformations in her social order and correspondingly profound and
+permanent transformations of her character and destiny.
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+"Abdication": in church work, 84;
+ due to past social conditions, 86;
+ explains prominence of young men, 86, 161
+
+Æsthetic characteristics: development unbalanced, 174;
+ speech and conduct, 178;
+ development of masses, 180;
+ development, social not racial, 188
+
+Adoption; family maintained, 215
+
+Affection: post-marital, 102;
+ its expression, 105
+
+Agnosticism, old not new, 247
+
+Alcock, Sir Rutherford: quotation misleading, 172;
+ on untruthfulness, 255
+
+Altruism, social or racial? 365
+
+Ambition, 137
+
+Ancestral worship and the importance of sons, 98
+
+Apotheosis, 147;
+ "Divine right of kings," 151;
+ in Japan expresses unity, 152
+
+Architectural development and social heredity, 188
+
+Arisaka, Colonel, inventions, 207
+
+Arnold, Sir Edwin, 16, 17
+
+Art; simplicity its characteristic, 173;
+ lacking the nude, 175-177;
+ its ideal in representing gods and men, 174;
+ defects, 184;
+ original or imitative? 203;
+ not "impersonal," 351
+
+Artistic and inartistic contrasts, 184
+
+Aston, Mr. W.G.: on poetic form, 187;
+ intellectual inferiority of Japanese claimed, 218;
+ "Japanese Literature," 228
+
+Baelz, Dr. E., measurements of skull, 191
+
+"Bakufu," "curtain government," 214
+
+Bargaining, a personal experience, 212
+
+Baths, public, 274;
+ cleanliness, 316
+
+Birthday festivals, 349;
+ method of reckoning age, 350
+
+Brain weights, comparative figures, 190
+
+Brown, Rev. S.R., 90
+
+Buckley, Prof. E., Phallic worship, 325
+
+Buddhism: relation to the family, 112;
+ suppression of emotion, 166;
+ modified in Japan, 197;
+ early influence, 204;
+ teachings about woman, 259;
+ lack of moral teachings, 269;
+ religious ecstasy, 297;
+ nature and history, 306, 307;
+ terms "ingwa" and "mei," 319;
+ "impersonal"? 377-388;
+ introspection, 378;
+ salvation through self, 379;
+ consciousness of self, highly developed, 379-380;
+ attributes no worth to self, 380;
+ failure of its influence, 381;
+ mercy to animals and shallow reasoning, 381;
+ thought of self an intellectual abstraction, 383;
+ not impersonal, but abstract, 384;
+ doctrine of illusion, 384;
+ failure of social order, 385;
+ popular acceptance not philosophical, 386;
+ not logically
+ carried out, 389-390.
+ appeal to personal activity, 390.
+ conversion of a priest to Christianity, 394.
+ conception of God, 398.
+ the universe characterized, 400.
+ Nirvana, 400.
+ supplementary to Shintoism, 407.
+ popularity explained, 408.
+ individualism defective, 408.
+ not exclusive in any land, 421.
+
+Buddhistic doctrines and sociological consequences, 388.
+
+
+
+Caricature in art: its prominence, 177.
+
+Cary's, Rev. Otis, "Japan and Its Regeneration," 10.
+
+Chamberlain, Prof. B.H., 17, 55, 159.
+ quotation on imitation,--over-emphasis, 196.
+ people irreligious, 287.
+
+Character and destiny, 445.
+ how judged, 446
+
+Children: their festivals, 96.
+ love for the young in Occident and Orient compared, 97.
+ infanticide, 100.
+
+Chinese characters and the common schools, 192.
+
+Chinese philosophy not accepted without question, 200.
+
+Christianity: relation to the family, 111-114.
+ the support of new ideals, 112.
+ fluctuating interest in, 162, 163.
+ influence on woman, 168.
+ criticised by a Japanese, 231.
+ relation to new social order, 282.
+ its growth in Japan, 308.
+ monotheism, its attraction, 311.
+ its view of the universe, 399.
+ involving communalism and individualism, 415.
+
+Civilization: two types in conflict, 13.
+ social not racial, 28.
+ its rapid modernization, 30.
+
+Clark, Pres., 90
+
+Cleanliness: exaggerated reputation, 315, 316.
+
+Cocks of Tosa: the abnormal, 178.
+
+Communalism: and human progress, 332, 333.
+ defined, 361.
+ its altruism, 367.
+ throws light on religious history, 404.
+ difficulty of combining it with individualistic religious elements, 414.
+ Japan appreciates its spirit, 417
+
+Comte, 22.
+
+Conceit, 139.
+ not the only conceited nation, 142.
+
+Concubinage: children of the Emperor, 151.
+ Buddhistic and Confucian teaching, 259.
+ its sociological interpretation, 260.
+ increase of, 278.
+ statistics of, 279.
+
+Confidence and suspicion, 120.
+ feudal explanation, 121.
+
+Confucian ethics: leave gods alone, 286, 287.
+ antidote to Buddhism, 390.
+
+Confucianism: its relation to the family, 112.
+ modified in Japan, 197.
+ metaphysical foundation of, 228.
+ its relation to morality, 269.
+ nature and history of, 307, 308.
+ its doctrines restored, 409.
+ its limitations, 410.
+ not a religion, 411.
+ cause of failure, 412.
+
+Confucius and Lao-tse about returning good for evil, 128.
+ influence opposed to progress, 204.
+
+Constitution, authority from Emperor, 149.
+
+Conversation: realistic baldness, 179.
+
+Courtesy: conventional not racial, 182.
+ phrases of, 211.
+ not proof of "impersonality," 362, 363.
+
+Culture: more apparent than real, 181.
+
+Curiosity: real though concealed,--illustration, 166.
+
+"Curtain government," its significance, 214.
+
+
+
+Daimyo, a figurehead, 214.
+
+Darwin, 22
+
+Decoration of rooms, 171
+
+Dening, Mr, Walter, lack of idealism, 233
+
+De Quatrefages, African brains, 191
+
+Deity: conception of, 310;
+ monotheistic terms, 311;
+ common people, 391
+
+Disposition: apparently cheerful, 115;
+ pessimists out of sight, 116
+
+Divorce: grounds for, 56;
+ frequency of, 99;
+ Civil Code of 1898, 265;
+ statistics, 267;
+ divorce and "impersonality," 352, 355
+
+Doshisha, endangered, 123, 124;
+ American benefactors of, 281
+
+Drama and novel: weakness explained, 187
+
+Drummond, 22
+
+Dwarfed plants,--delight in the abnormal, 177
+
+
+
+Eastern and Western civilizations blending, 30-32
+
+Educational Department and Imperial Edict, 328
+
+Emotional nature, 82-84;
+ due to social order, 169
+
+Emperor: concubines and children of, 151
+
+English study and methods of thinking, 212
+
+Ethics: pivotal points, 283
+
+Etiquette: superficial not radical requirements, 183;
+ its collapse explained, 183;
+ relation to imagination, 235
+
+Evolution: real explanation of progress, 24-27, 33-34;
+ national, 332-343;
+ intellectual, 419;
+ Involution one half the process, 425;
+ defined, 440
+
+Express train, "nominal" destination, 216
+
+
+
+Fairbanks, Prof., 20
+
+"Falling in love" not recognized, 102
+
+Family life: false registration checks affection, 107
+
+_Far East_: quotation from, adaptation of foreign systems, 208
+
+Farmer, higher rank than merchant, 257 (note)
+
+Fate: "Ingwa," in development of personality, 386
+
+Feudal times: moderation, 118;
+ courage cultivated, 153, 154;
+ trade, 284
+
+Fickleness: its manifestation, 159;
+ a modern trait, 160;
+ shown chiefly in methods, 160;
+ among Christians, apparent not real, 161
+
+Filial obedience: extreme application, 263;
+ piety, moral ideal, 249;
+ piety and religion, 322
+
+Fiske, 22
+
+Flexibility of mental constitution, 77-78
+
+Flowering trees, 171
+
+Forty-seven Ronin, 89, 250
+
+Freedom: relation of belief to the fact, 387
+
+Fukuzawa, Mr., on monogamy, 109, 112;
+ condemning concubinage, 279;
+ on religion, 287
+
+Furniture; recent introduction, 181
+
+Future life: Shinto, Confucian, 318;
+ Buddhistic, 319
+
+
+
+"Geisha," dancing girl, vivacity, 168
+
+Generalization, capacity for, 220;
+ use of philosophical terms, 221
+
+Giddings, Prof., 19, 22
+
+"Go-between," illustrations, 210;
+ advantages, 211
+
+God: Greek, Buddhist, Christian, 399;
+ conceptions compared, 400
+
+Governmental initiative: explains rapid reforms, 201
+
+Gratitude: religious sentiment, 323;
+ ingratitude shown 324
+
+Greek universe characterized, 400
+
+Green, T.H., 397 (note)
+
+Greene, Dr. D.C., teaching of Shinto sect, 269
+
+Griffis, W.E., on suicide, 155;
+ on religions, 315
+
+Gubbins, introduction to translation of New Civil Code of Japan, 86;
+ on woman's position, 268
+
+
+
+Harris, Townsend, quoted, 132;
+ regulation by authority, 204;
+ as to untruthfulness, 256
+
+Hawaii, musical development, 185
+
+Head, size of, 190
+
+Hearn, Mr. Lafcadio, 16, 17, 68;
+ mistaken contention, 263;
+ privacy, 275;
+ gratitude, 323
+
+Hegel, 345; "Nothing" and Universal Soul of Buddhism, 383 (note)
+
+Heredity: social and physiological contrasted, 21;
+ defined and analyzed, 439
+
+Heroes and hero-worship, 89-95;
+ "The forty-seven Ronin" as heroes, 89;
+ craving for modern heroes, 90-92;
+ Omi Sajin, 93;
+ Dr. Neesima, 375
+
+Hirase, Mr., scientist, 207
+
+History, research suppressed, 205;
+ its claims, 206;
+ apparent credulity of scholars due to social system, 207
+
+"Holy towels," physical disease, 314
+
+Honesty: decline of, 280;
+ explanation, 282
+
+"Honorifics," shades of courtesy, 179;
+ indefiniteness of speech, 211
+
+Houses, privacy impossible, 273
+
+Housewife, simple requirements, 181
+
+
+
+Idealizing tendency, 94, 236
+
+Idols, imported feature of Japanese religion, 174
+
+Ikeno, Mr., scientific discovery, 207
+
+Illusion, 398
+
+Imagination: is it lacking? 233;
+ shown in etiquette, political life, ambition, self-conceit, etc., 235;
+ seen in optimism, 240;
+ related to fancy,--caricature, 241;
+ not disproved by imitation, 242;
+ sociological explanation, 243;
+ constructive, 246;
+ suppression of, 246
+
+Imitation in Japanese progress, 78-81;
+ creditable characteristic, 196
+
+Immorality, increase of, 261
+
+Impassiveness, "putty-face," 164
+
+Imperial and popular sovereignty, conflict between, 152-153
+
+Imperial Edict, 328
+
+Imperialists during the Shogunate, 146
+
+Imperial succession of Oriental type, 150
+
+"Impersonality": Hegel, 345:
+ definitions contradictory, 347, 348;
+ related, to art, 351;
+ family life, 352;
+ divorce, 352;
+ "falling in love," 354;
+ definition, 359, 360;
+ outcome of social order, 361;
+ not proved by courtesy of people, 362, 363,
+ nor by lack of personal pronouns, 368;
+ arguments against, 377;
+ diverse elements analyzed, 381;
+ objection to term, 385
+
+"Impersonality" and altruism, 365
+
+Impractical idealism: claimed by Japanese, 236;
+ illustrations, 237, 238
+
+"In," and "Yo," significance of, 221
+
+India and Japan contrasted, 32-34
+
+Indirectness, 210
+
+Individual, small value, 258
+
+Individualism: expressed, 245, 246;
+ changing social order and honesty, 282;
+ importance of, 334;
+ how possible, 335;
+ defined, 361;
+ easy acceptance explained, 413
+
+Individualistic religion as a sociological factor in higher, human
+ evolution, 418
+
+Infanticide, 100-101
+
+"Ingwa," fate, 386
+
+Inouye, Dr. T., Japonicized Christianity, 39;
+ claims for Japanese, 205;
+ philosophical writer, 229
+
+Intellectual characteristics, social, 244
+
+Inventions: originality, 207
+
+Irreligious phenomena explained, 302, 303
+
+Ishii, Mr., father of orphan asylums in Japan, 94, 131, 145
+
+Isolation of nations impossible, 71
+
+Ito, Marquis, on religion, 288
+
+Iyeyasu: his testament, 253;
+ use of Confucian doctrines, 409
+
+
+
+Japanese people: international responsibility, 13;
+ need of understanding them, 15-20;
+ change of opinion regarding, 23-25;
+ defects, conscious of, 143;
+ acquaintance with, 428;
+ reasons for difficulty in, acquaintance with, 429, 430;
+ secret of acquaintance, 431
+
+_Japan Mail_: quotation, 130;
+ originality of Japanese art, 203:
+ on wealth, 277;
+ on honesty, 280;
+ on acquaintance, 428
+
+Jealousy and women, 127-128
+
+
+
+Kato, Mr. H., 229;
+ on religion, 288;
+ patriotism is loyalty to throne, 373
+
+"Ki," defined, 221
+
+Kidd, 22
+
+Kissing unknown, 105
+
+Kitazato, Dr., scientific research, 207
+
+Knapp, Mr. A.M., 16
+
+Knox, Dr. G.W., quotation, 199;
+ "A Japanese Philosopher," 228;
+ translator of Muro Kyuso, 249
+
+
+
+Ladd, Prof. G.T., 94;
+ sentimentality of Japanese, 234
+
+Language: its acquirement and Japanese students, 194;
+ diversities of, not due to diversities in brain type, 195
+
+Lao-tse, on doing good in return for evil, 128
+
+Le Bon's physiological theory of character inadequate, 13-20;
+ quotation, 51;
+ dissent from opinion, 168;
+ quotation, 424
+
+Le Conte, 22
+
+Literature, ancient, its impurity, 253
+
+Lowell, Mr. Percival, "The Soul of the Far East," 103, 344;
+ Japanese unimaginative, 234;
+ opinion criticised, 241;
+ "sense and incense," 286;
+ pilgrimages, 291;
+ "impersonality," 359, 363, 374;
+ teaching of philosophic Buddhism, 378
+
+Loyalty and religion, 322;
+ sentimental, 148, 149
+
+Lunatics and lepers, cruel treatment, 130
+
+
+
+Magic formulæ, 320
+
+Man and nature: differing artistic treatment of, 175
+
+Manners; influenced by Western ways, 182
+
+Marriage, Civil Code of 1898, 265
+
+Marsh, Prof., size of Japanese brain, 190
+
+"Matter-of-factness" explained, 245
+
+Memorizing: mechanical, 222;
+ defective method, 223;
+ as related to higher mental powers, 223
+
+Memory; power overrated, 192;
+ in daily affairs not exceedng
+
+Occidental, 193;
+ characteristics sociological, not biological, 194
+
+Mnemonic power and social selection, 193
+
+Mencius, teaching, the "Way" of Heaven and Earth, 250
+
+Mental faculties: are the Japanese deficient? 218;
+ power of generalization, 221
+
+Metaphysical tendencies, 227:
+ denial of ability unjustifiable, 227
+
+Metaphysics and ethics, 228
+
+Monotheism, why attractive, 312
+
+Morality: courage in persecucution, 156;
+ illustration, 158;
+ discrimination developed, 249;
+ parents, children, patriots, 249;
+ ideals communal, 255;
+ standards differing for men and women, 263;
+ teaching focused on rulers, 270;
+ Imperial Edict, 271;
+ standards of, and individualism, 275, 276;
+ social, not racial, 283;
+ on authority, 284;
+ morality and Old Japan, 261, 264
+
+Motora, Prof. Y., 229
+
+Müller, Prof. Max, statement about Vedas, 193
+
+Murata rifle, invention of, 207
+
+Muro Kyuso, philosopher, 249;
+ ancient books condemned, 252;
+ on immorality, 286;
+ teachings, 299, 300
+
+Music, Japanese deficiency, 185
+
+
+
+Nakashima, Prof. Rikizo, 229
+
+Nash, Prof. H.S., on Apotheosis in Rome, 153
+
+
+National life, stimulus from the West, 43-48
+
+Natural scenery in art, 173
+
+Neesima, Dr., founder of the Doshisha, 94;
+ monotheism, 311;
+ his character, 375
+
+"Netsuke," comical carvings, 241
+
+New æon, characterized, 14;
+ the consequences, 15
+
+Newton's, Rev. J.C.E., "Japan: Country, Court, and People" 10, 46
+
+"Nichiren," a sect, 198
+
+Nirvana characterized, 400
+
+Nitobe's, Prof. J., "Bushido: The Soul of Japan," 10
+
+"Nominal": Pedigree, 215;
+ church contributions, 216;
+ express train, 216
+
+"Nominality": illustrated in history, 213;
+ in family life, 214;
+ in Christian work, 216;
+ explained by old order, 217;
+ giving way under Western influence, 217
+
+Norman, Mr. Henry, 17;
+ his "Real Japan," 46
+
+Nude in art: its lack, 175-177
+
+
+
+Obsequiousness, 140
+
+Occident and Orient: conflict not unending, 13;
+ social intercourse and mutual influence, 436
+
+Occidental civilization; a defect in, 71
+
+Ohashi, Junzo, opposed to Western thought, 254
+
+Old Japan, 35-37;
+ its oppression, 53, 54;
+ emptiness of common life, 54;
+ condition of woman, 54, 56;
+ divorce, 56, 57;
+ moral and legal maxims, 252, 253;
+ its morality, 244, 261
+
+"Omi Sajin," Sage of Omi, 93
+
+Oriental characteristics: are they distinctive? 422;
+ general opinion of, 423;
+ view of author, 425;
+ social, not racial, 425, 434
+
+Originality in art, 203;
+ judicious imitation, 209
+
+Orphan asylums, 131
+
+Oyomei, 228
+
+
+
+Patriotism, 48-51;
+ relation to apotheosis, 144, 158;
+ to war, 145;
+ Christian orphans, 145
+
+Peasants, stolidity, 165
+
+Pedigree, "nominal" not actual ancestry, 215
+
+Peery, Dr., Japanese philosophical incompetence, 225
+
+Personality: 21-22;
+ importance of, 342;
+ defined, 356-357;
+ characteristics of, 358;
+ "strong" and "weak," 374, 375;
+ Confucian ethics, 390;
+ Supreme Being, 391;
+ gods of popular Buddhism, 391;
+ idea grasped by Japanese, 393;
+ sketch of development, 394;
+ racial or social inheritance, 395;
+ progress in ethico-religious process, 447;
+ the criterion of progress, 447
+
+Personality in conception of nationality, 373
+
+Personal pronouns, their lack possible proof of personality, 369;
+ "honorific" particles, 368;
+ substitutes, 370, 371
+
+Pfleiderer, Prof., religious deficiency of Japanese, 286
+
+Phallicism: its suppression, 325;
+ Western influence, 326
+
+Philosophy: Occidental ignorance of its history in Japan, 200;
+ terms used, 221;
+ Japanese students of, 229;
+ individuals interested, 229
+
+Philosophical ability, 225-232;
+ Japanese claims, 225;
+ constructive power, 226;
+ writers mentioned, 229;
+ East and West compared, 231
+
+Pilgrimages: statistics, 290-291;
+ immorality, 326
+
+Poetry characterized, 186
+
+Powder, smokeless, invention of, 207
+
+Pride, sociological explanation, 19, 21
+
+Progress, modern characteristic, 52-60;
+ defined, 57;
+ light-heartedness no proof of, 59;
+ its method, 61-71;
+ recognition of individual worth, 63-67;
+ knowledge of implements and methods, 67-70;
+ imitation, 78-81;
+ passion for it, 143
+
+Psychic nature and social life, 439
+
+Psychic evolution, 444
+
+Psychic function and psychic organism, 445
+
+Psychological similarities, Japanese and Anglo-Saxon, 189
+
+Public speaking, fluency, 219
+
+"Putty-face," 164
+
+
+
+"Race-soul," 444
+
+Ransome, Mr. Stanford, quoted, 51;
+ "Japan in Transition," 46
+
+Reforms, governmental initiative, 201
+
+Religion: its characteristics social, not racial, 309;
+ loyalty and filial piety, 322;
+ liberty in belief, 327;
+ the Imperial Edict, 328;
+ forms determined by history, 329;
+ the problem of to-day, 414;
+ Religions classified, 421
+
+Religious or not? appearances explained, 286;
+ judged by phenomena, 288;
+ prayer, shrines, charms, 292;
+ Buddha-shelves, God-shelves, 293;
+ emotion and social training, 296;
+ emotion shown in abstraction, 297
+
+Religious life, 404, 421;
+ communal, 404;
+ present difficulty in Japan, 420
+
+Renaissance of Japan, 29-30
+
+Revenge: the ancient law, 128;
+ teachings of Confucius and Lao-tse, 128-129
+
+Reverence, apparent lack of, 304
+
+"Ri" defined, 221
+
+Roman alphabet: adoption recommended by many, 192
+
+"Roundaboutness": characteristic of speech and action, 211;
+ recent improvement, 212
+
+
+
+Sadness and isolation of many, 116
+
+Sage of Omi, _see_ "Omi Sajin."
+
+Salvation and sin, 314;
+ Buddhist and Christian, 379
+
+Samurai: high mental power,
+ social leaders, impractical,
+ 244; their relation to trade,
+ 252; new ideals, 256; revolt
+ from religious forms, 298
+
+Segregation and divergent evolution, 443
+
+Self-confidence not without
+ grounds, 141, 143; reorganization
+ by young men, 141-142
+
+Self-control: moral teaching,
+ 250; Kujuro, the self-controlled, 251
+
+Sensitiveness to environment,
+ 72, 81; illustrated by students
+ abroad, 73, by life in Japan, 73-77
+
+Shimose, Mr., invention, smokeless powder, 207
+
+"Shinshu," "Reformed" Buddhism, 198
+
+Shinto: nature and history,
+ 305, 306; personal gods, 391;
+ communal, 405; no longer a
+ religion, 405; world view,
+ 406; religious sanction for
+ social order, 407; revived, 412
+
+Sin, terminology, 313; consciousness
+ of, 317; instance of conversion, 318
+
+Shusi, 228
+
+Social evil, the, 261 (note)
+
+Social segregation and social divergence, 21
+
+Social and racial unity distinguished, 443
+
+Social evolution convergent,
+ 14; principle revealed, 15;
+ personal process, 446
+
+Social heredity, transmitting results of toil, 71
+
+Social intercourse of Occident and Orient, 436
+
+Social order from the West,
+ 413; the parting of the ways, 414
+
+Sociological theory of: character,
+ 14, 446; pride, 30; fear
+ of ridicule, 73; cruelty, 135;
+ kindness, 136; stolidity, 163;
+ power of generalization, 222;
+ philosophical development,
+ 231; apparent deficiency in
+ imagination, 236; differences
+ characterizing Eastern and
+ Western psychic nature, 247,
+ 435; untruthfulness, 256; concubinage,
+ 260; religious characteristics,
+ 309, 321; the suppression
+ of Phallicism, 327;
+ religious tolerance, 329; divorce
+ and "falling in love,"
+ 355; courtesy, 363, 364; the
+ personal pronoun, 372; the
+ failure of Buddhism, 385;
+ the conception of Fate, 387
+
+Sociology and individual religion, 405;
+ and Shintoism, 407
+
+Southerland, 23
+
+"Soul of Japan," the, 144
+
+"Soul of the Far East," quotation, 234
+
+Spencer, 22
+
+Stolidity: easily distinguished
+ from stoicism, 164, 165; the
+ peasants, 165; social, not
+ racial, 167; cultivated, 168
+
+Students: testimony of foreign
+ teachers, 218; at home and abroad, 219
+
+Suicide, a matter of honor, 154-156
+
+Sutra, translation of, 402
+
+Suspiciousness and military feudalism, 125-126
+
+
+
+Taguchi, Dr., brain statistics, 190
+
+Tai-ku Reform, epoch-making period, 201
+
+Takahashi, Mr. G., 229; the
+ monks and consciousness of sin, 317
+
+Taste and lack of taste in woman's dress, 182
+
+Temples, statistics, 296
+
+Tokugawa Shogunate, 38-40;
+ how overthrown, 40-43; prohibitive
+ of progress, 204; last
+ of "Curtain governments," 214
+
+Torture, in Japan, 132; in Europe, 133
+
+Toys and toy-stores, 96
+
+Trade estimates, 256; Old Japan,
+ the Greeks, the Jews
+ compared, 257, note; trade
+ and the feudal order, 284
+
+Transmigration, 319; theory
+ illogical, but helpful, 389
+
+Truthfulness, undeveloped, 255
+
+Tyranny and Western wives 106
+
+
+
+Unæsthetic phenomena, 179
+
+
+
+Verbeck, Dr. G.F., 91
+
+Visionary tendency, 236, 237
+
+Vivacity, Geisha girl, 168
+
+
+Wallace, 22
+
+Ward, 22
+
+"Way," _see_ Muro Kyuso, 250;
+ reference to, 287
+
+Wealth increasing, 277
+
+Wedding, Prince Imperial, 268;
+ Imperial silver wedding, 268
+
+Woman: obedience, 55, 56;
+ estimates of East and West
+ contrasted, 102-103; Western
+ estimates, recent growth,
+ 111, 113 (note); Buddhist and
+ Confucian teaching, 112, 259;
+ jealousy, 127; her position,
+ 258; influenced by Hindu
+ philosophy, 258; improvement, 268
+
+Writing, a fine art, 173
+
+
+
+Xavier, Francis, 308
+
+
+
+Yamaguchi, Mr., quotation, 149;
+ the Imperial throne, 373
+
+"Yamato Damashii," _see_ "The Soul of Japan."
+
+"Yumei-mujitsu," _see_ "Nominality."
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote A: "Things Japanese," p. 156.]
+
+[Footnote B: Let not the reader gather from the very brief glance at
+the attainments of New Japan, that she has overtaken the nations of
+Christendom in all important respects; for such is far from the case.
+He needs to be on his guard not to overestimate what has been
+accomplished.]
+
+[Footnote C: Prof. B.H. Chamberlain.]
+
+[Footnote D: Only since the coming of the new period has it become
+possible for a woman to gain a divorce from her husband.]
+
+[Footnote E: Chapter xxix. Some may care to read this chapter at this
+point.]
+
+[Footnote F: _Cf._ chapter ii.]
+
+[Footnote G: "Kokoro," by L. Hearn, p. 31.]
+
+[Footnote H: _Japan Mail_, September 30, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote I: Part II. p. xxxii.]
+
+[Footnote J: _Japan Mail_, June 4, 1898, p. 586.]
+
+[Footnote K: If all that has been said above as to the relative lack
+of affection between husband and wife is true, it will help to make
+more credible, because more intelligible, the preceding chapter as to
+the relative lack of love for children. Where the relation between
+husband and wife is what we have depicted it, where the children are
+systematically taught to feel for their father respect rather than
+love, the relation between the father and the children, or the mother
+and the children, cannot be the same as in lands where all these
+customs are reversed.]
+
+[Footnote L: The effect of Christian missions cannot be measured by
+the numbers of those who are to be counted on the church rolls; almost
+unconsciously the nation is absorbing Christian ideals from the
+hundreds of Christian missionaries and tens of thousands of Christian
+natives. The necessities of the new social order make their teachings
+intelligible and acceptable as the older social order did not and
+could not. This accounts for the astonishing change in the
+anti-Christian spirit of the Japanese. This spirit did not cease at
+once on the introduction of the new social order, nor indeed is it now
+entirely gone. But the change from the Japan of thirty years ago to
+the Japan of to-day, in its attitude toward Christianity, is more
+marked than that of any great nation in history. A similar change in
+the Roman Empire took place, but it required three hundred years. This
+change in Japan may accordingly be called truly miraculous, not in the
+sense, however, of a result without a cause, for the causes are well
+understood.
+
+Among the Christians, especially, the old order is rapidly giving way
+to the new. Christianity has brought a new conception of woman and her
+place in the home and her relation to her husband. Japanese Christian
+girls, and recently non-Christian girls, are seeking an education
+which shall fit them for their enlarging life. Many of the more
+Christian young men do not want heathen wives, with their low estimate
+of themselves and their duties, and they are increasingly unwilling to
+marry those of whom they know nothing and for whom they care not at
+all. Already the idea that love is the only safe foundation for the
+home is beginning to take root in Japan. This changing ideal is
+bringing marked social changes. In some churches an introduction
+committee is appointed whose special function is to introduce
+marriageable persons and to hold social meetings where the young
+people may become acquainted. Here an important evolution in the
+social order is taking place before our eyes, but not a few of the
+world's wise men are too exalted to see it. Love and demonstrative
+affection between husband and wife will doubtless become as
+characteristic of Japan in the future as their absence has been
+characteristic in the past. To recapitulate: these distinctive
+characteristics of the emotional life of the Japanese might at first
+seem to be so deep-rooted as to be inherent, yet they are really due
+to the ideas and customs of the social order, and are liable to change
+with any new system of ideas and customs that may arise. The higher
+development of the emotional life of the Japanese waits now on the
+reorganization of the family life; this rests on a new idea as to the
+place and value of woman as such and as a human being; this in turn
+rests on the wide acceptance of Christian ideals as to God and their
+mutual relations. It involves, likewise, new ideals as to man's final
+destiny. In Japan's need of these Christian ideals we find one main
+ground and justification, if justification be needed, for missionary
+enterprise among this Eastern people.]
+
+[Footnote M: Chapter v. p. 82.]
+
+[Footnote N: P. 133]
+
+[Footnote O: "Résumé Statistique l'Empire du Japan," published by the
+Imperial Cabinet, 1897.]
+
+[Footnote P: As illustrating the point under discussion see portions
+of addresses reported in "The World's Parliament of Religions," vol.
+ii. pp. 1014, 1283.]
+
+[Footnote Q: _Japan Mail_, December 10, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote R: I have found it difficult to secure exact information on
+the subject of the Imperial concubines (who, by the way, have a
+special name of honor), partly for the reason that this is not a
+matter of general information, and partly because of the unwillingness
+to impart information to a foreigner which is felt to tarnish the
+luster of the Imperial glory. A librarian of a public library refused
+to lend a book containing the desired facts, saying that foreigners
+might be freely informed of that which reveals the good, the true, and
+the beautiful of Japanese history, customs, and character, but nothing
+else. By the educated and more earnest members of the nation much
+sensitiveness is felt, especially in the presence of the Occidental,
+on the subject of the Imperial concubinage. It is felt to be a blot on
+Japan's fair name, a relic of her less civilized days, and is,
+accordingly, kept in the background as much as possible. The
+statements given in the text in regard to the number of the concubines
+and children are correct so far as they go. A full statement might
+require an increase in the figures given.]
+
+[Footnote S: P. 59.]
+
+[Footnote T: P. 119.]
+
+[Footnote U: Aston's "Japanese Literature," p. 29.]
+
+[Footnote V: "Japanese Literature," p. 24.]
+
+[Footnote W: _Cf._ chapter xxxiii.]
+
+[Footnote X: Gustave Le Bon maintains, in his brilliant, but
+sophistical, work on "The Psychology of Peoples," that the "soul of a
+race" unalterably determines even its art. He states that a Hindu
+artist, in copying an European model several times, gradually
+eliminates the European characteristics, so that, "the second or third
+copy ... will have become exclusively Hindu." His entire argument is
+of this nature; I must confess that I do not in the least feel its
+force. The reason the Hindu artist transforms a Western picture in
+copying it is because he has been trained in Hindu art, not because he
+is a Hindu physiologically. If that same Hindu artist, taken in
+infancy to Europe and raised as a European and trained in European
+art, should still persist in replacing European by Hindu art
+characteristics, then the argument would have some force, and his
+contention that the "soul of races" can be modified only by
+intermarriage of races would seem more reasonable.]
+
+[Footnote Y: "The Human Species," p. 283.]
+
+[Footnote Z: _Ibid._, p. 282.]
+
+[Footnote AA: _Ibid._, p. 384.]
+
+[Footnote AB: The manuscript of this work was largely prepared in 1897
+and 1898. Since writing the above lines, a vigorous discussion has
+been carried on in the Japanese press as to the advantages and
+disadvantages of the present system of writing. Many have advocated
+boldly the entire abandonment of the Chinese character and the
+exclusive use of the Roman alphabet. The difficulties of such a step
+are enormous and cannot be appreciated by anyone not familiar with the
+written language of Japan. One or the strongest arguments for such a
+course, however, has been the obstacle placed by the Chinese in the
+way of popular education, due to the time required for its mastery and
+the mechanical nature of the mind it tends to produce. In August of
+1900 the Educational Department enacted some regulations that have
+great significance in this connection. Perhaps the most important is
+the requirement that not more than one thousand two hundred Chinese
+characters are to be taught to the common-school children, and the
+form of the character is not to be taught independently of the
+meaning. The remarks in the text above are directed chiefly to the
+ancient methods of education.]
+
+[Footnote AC: Griffis' "Religions of Japan," p. 272.]
+
+[Footnote AD: P. 24.]
+
+[Footnote AE: _Far East_ for January, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote AF: January 20, 1900.]
+
+[Footnote AG: _Japan Mail_, November 12, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote AH: P. 17.]
+
+[Footnote AI: P. 18.]
+
+[Footnote AJ: P. 18.]
+
+[Footnote AK: "History of the Empire of Japan," compiled and
+translated for the Imperial Japanese Commission of the World's
+Columbian Exposition.]
+
+[Footnote AL: "Japanese Literature," p. 4.]
+
+[Footnote AM: _Cf._ chapter xvi. p. 199.]
+
+[Footnote AN: _Cf._ chapter xvii.]
+
+[Footnote AO: Quotations from "A Japanese Philosopher" will be found
+in chapters xxiv. and xxvi.]
+
+[Footnote AP: "Things Japanese," p. 133.]
+
+[Footnote AQ: P. 213.]
+
+[Footnote AR: P. 30.]
+
+[Footnote AS: _Cf._ chapter vii.]
+
+[Footnote AT: _Cf._ chapter xv. pp. 186, 187.]
+
+[Footnote AU: _Cf._ chapters xvi. and xvii.]
+
+[Footnote AV: Chapter xv.]
+
+[Footnote AW: Chapters xix. and xx.]
+
+[Footnote AX: P. 39.]
+
+[Footnote AY: P. 36.]
+
+[Footnote AZ: Pp. 42, 43.]
+
+[Footnote BA: P. 45.]
+
+[Footnote BB: P. 61.]
+
+[Footnote BC: P. 120.]
+
+[Footnote BD: P. 129.]
+
+[Footnote BE: P. 130.]
+
+[Footnote BF: Dickenson's "Japan," chapter vii.]
+
+[Footnote BG: _Cf._ chapter xxi.]
+
+[Footnote BH: P. 163.]
+
+[Footnote BI: P. 169.]
+
+[Footnote BJ: It is interesting to observe that the contempt of Old
+Japan for trade, and the feeling that interest and profit by commerce
+were in their nature immoral, are in close accord with the old Greek
+and Jewish ideas regarding property profits and interest. Aristotle
+held, for instance, that only the gains of agriculture, of fishing,
+and of hunting are natural gains. Plato, in the Laws, forbids the
+taking of interest. Cato says that lending money on interest is
+dishonorable, is as bad as murder. The Old Testament, likewise,
+forbids the taking of interest from a Jew. The reason for this
+universal feeling of antiquity, both Oriental and Occidental, lies in
+the fact that trade and money were not yet essential parts of the
+social order. Positive production, such as hunting and farming, seemed
+the natural method of making a living, while trade seemed
+unnatural--living upon the labor of others. That Japan ranked the
+farmer higher in the social scale than the merchant is, thus, natural.
+In moral character, too, it is altogether probable that they were much
+higher.]
+
+[Footnote BK: _Cf_. chapter ix. p. 103.]
+
+[Footnote BL: Chapter vi.]
+
+[Footnote BM: Chapter xxix. p. 339.]
+
+[Footnote BN: An anonymous writer, in a pamphlet entitled "How the
+Social Evil is Regulated in Japan," gives some valuable facts on this
+subject. He describes the early history of the "Social Evil," and the
+various classes of prostitutes. He distinguishes between the "jigoku"
+(unlicensed prostitutes), the "shogi" (licensed prostitutes), and the
+"geisha" (singing and dancing girls). He gives translations of the
+various documents in actual use at present, and finally attempts to
+estimate the number of women engaged in the business. The method of
+reaching his conclusions does not commend itself to the present writer
+and his results seem absurdly wide of the mark, when compared with
+more carefully gathered figures. They are hardly worth quoting, yet
+they serve to show what exaggerated views are held by some in regard
+to the numbers of prostitutes in Japan. He tells us that a moderate
+estimate for licensed prostitutes and for geisha is 500,000 each,
+while the unlicensed number at least a million, making a total of
+2,000,000 or 10 per cent. of the total female population of Japan! A
+careful statistical inquiry on this subject has been recently made by
+Rev. U.G. Murphy. His figures were chiefly secured from provincial
+officers. According to these returns the number of licensed
+prostitutes is 50,553 and of dancing girls is 30,386. Mr. Murphy's
+figures cannot be far astray, and furnish us something of a basis for
+comparison with European countries. Statistics regarding unlicensed
+prostitutes are naturally not to be had.]
+
+[Footnote BO: P. 148.]
+
+[Footnote BP: June 25, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote BQ: The last line of figures, those for 1897, is taken from
+Rev. U.G. Murphy's statistical pamphlet on "The Social Evil in
+Japan."]
+
+[Footnote BR: It is stated that Mill's work on "Representative
+Government," which, translated, fills a volume of five hundred pages
+in Japanese, has reached its third edition.]
+
+[Footnote BS: The _Japan Mail_ for February 5, 1896; quoting from the
+_Jiji Shimpo_.]
+
+[Footnote BT: The best summary of this discussion which I have seen in
+English is found in the _Japan Mail_ for February 4, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote BU: _Japan Mail, _January 14, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote BV: _Japan Mail, _June 24, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote BW: The constituency of the Doshisha consists principally of
+Kumiai Christians.]
+
+[Footnote BX: "Occult Japan," p. 23.]
+
+[Footnote BY: _Cf._ chapter xxiv.]
+
+[Footnote BZ: "A Japanese Philosopher," p. 120.]
+
+[Footnote CA: In immediate connection with this oft-quoted statement,
+however, I would put the following, as much more recent, and probably
+representing more correctly the Marquis's matured opinion. Mr. Kakehi,
+for some time one of the editors of the Osaka _Mainichi Shinbun_
+(Daily News), after an interview with the illustrious statesman in
+which many matters of national importance were discussed, was asked by
+the Marquis where he had been educated. On learning that he was a
+graduate of the Doshisha, the Marquis remarked: "The only true
+civilization is that which rests on Christian principles, and that
+consequently, as Japan must attain her civilization on these
+principles, those young men who receive Christian education will be
+the main factors in the development of future Japan."]
+
+[Footnote CB: Chamberlain's "Things Japanese," p. 358.]
+
+[Footnote CC: "Things Japanese," p. 70, and Murray's "Hand-book for
+Japan," p. 37.]
+
+[Footnote CD: "Things Japanese," p. 93.]
+
+[Footnote CE: P. 85.]
+
+[Footnote CF: _Cf._ chapter xxiii. p. 271.]
+
+[Footnote CG: By the term "centralization" I mean personal
+centralization. Political centralization is the gathering of all the
+lines of governmental authority to a single head or point. Personal
+centralization, on the contrary, is the development in the individual
+of enlarging and joyous consciousness of his relations with his
+fellow-countrymen, and the bringing of the individual into
+increasingly immediate relations of interdependence with
+ever-increasing numbers of his fellow-men, economically,
+intellectually, and spiritually. These enlarging relations and the
+consciousness of them must be loyally and joyfully accepted. They
+should arouse enthusiasm. The real unity of society, true national
+centralization, includes both the political and the personal phase.
+The more conscious the process and the relation, the more real is the
+unity. By this process each individual becomes of more importance to
+the entire body, as well as more dependent upon it. While each
+individual becomes with increasing industrial development more
+specialized in economic function, if his personal development has been
+properly carried on, he also becomes in mind and in character a
+micro-community, summing up in his individual person the national
+unity with all its main interests, knowledge, and character.]
+
+[Footnote CGa: P. 14.]
+
+[Footnote CH: P. 15.]
+
+[Footnote CI: Pp. 88, 89.]
+
+[Footnote CJ: Pp. 203, 204.]
+
+[Footnote CK: _Cf._ chapter viii.]
+
+[Footnote CL: See the _Rikugo Zasshi_ for March, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote CM: _Cf._ chapter xv.]
+
+[Footnote CN: Buddhism is largely responsible for the wide practice of
+"joshi," through its doctrine that lovers whom fate does not permit to
+be married in this world may be united in the next because of the
+strength of their love.]
+
+[Footnote CO: P. 88.]
+
+[Footnote CP: P. 12.]
+
+[Footnote CQ: P. 14.]
+
+[Footnote CR: P. 15.]
+
+[Footnote CS: In their relations with foreigners, the people, but
+especially the Christians, are exceedingly lenient, forgiving and
+overlooking our egregious blunders both of speech and of manner,
+particularly if they feel that we have a kindly heart. Yet it is the
+uniform experience of the missionary that he frequently hurts unawares
+the feelings of his Japanese fellow-workers. Few thoughts more
+frequently enter the mind of the missionary, as he deals with
+Christian workers, than how to say this needful truth and do that
+needful deed so as not to hurt the feelings of those whom he would
+help. The individual who feels slighted or insulted will probably give
+no active sign of his wound. He is too polite or too politic for that.
+He will merely close like a clam and cease to have further cordial
+feelings and relations with the person who has hurt him.]
+
+[Footnote CT: _Cf._ chapter xiii.]
+
+[Footnote CU: See chapter xxix.]
+
+[Footnote CV: P. 201.]
+
+[Footnote CW: _Cf._ chapter vii.]
+
+[Footnote CX: It seems desirable to guard against an inference that
+might be made from what I have said about Hegel's "Nothing." Hegel saw
+clearly that his "Nothing" was only the farthest limit of abstraction,
+and that it was consequently absolutely empty and worthless. It was
+only his starting point of thought, not his end, as in the case of
+Brahmanism and of Buddhism. Only after Hegel had passed the "Nothing"
+through all the successive stages of thesis, antithesis, and
+synthesis, and thus clothed it with the fullness of being and
+character, did he conceive it to be the concrete, actual Absolute.
+There is, therefore, the farthest possible difference between Hegel's
+Absolute Being and Buddha's Absolute. Hegel sought to understand and
+state in rational form the real nature of the Christian's conception
+of God. Whether he did so or not, this is not the place to say.]
+
+[Footnote CY: I remark, in passing, that Western non-Christian thought
+has experienced, and still experiences, no little difficulty in
+conceiving the ultimate nature of being, and thus in solving the
+problem, into which, as a cavernous tomb, the speculative religions of
+the Orient have fallen. Western non-Christian systems, whether
+materialism, consistent agnosticism, impersonal pantheism, or other
+systems which reject the Christian conception of God as perfect
+personality endowed with all the fullness of being and character,
+equally with philosophic Buddhism, fail to provide any theoretic
+foundation for the doctrine of the value of man as man, and
+consequently fail to provide any guarantee for individualism in the
+social order and the wide development of personality among the
+masses.]
+
+[Footnote CZ: _Cf._ chapter vi.]
+
+[Footnote DA: Foot of chapter xxix.]
+
+[Footnote DB: Chapter xxxiii. p. 498.]
+
+[Footnote DC: It seems desirable to append a brief additional
+statement on the doctrine of the "personality of God," and its
+acceptability to the Japanese. I wish to make it clear, in the first
+place, that the difficulties felt by the Japanese in adopting this
+doctrine are not due primarily to the deficiency either of the
+Japanese language or to the essential nature of the Japanese mind,
+that is to say, because of its asserted structural "impersonality." We
+have seen how the entire thought of the people, and even the direct
+moral teachings, imply both the fact of personality in man, and also
+its knowledge. The religious teachings, likewise, imply the
+personality even of "Heaven."
+
+That there are philosophical or, more correctly speaking, metaphysical
+difficulties attending this doctrine, I am well aware; and that they
+are felt by some few Japanese, I also know. But I maintain that these
+difficulties have been imported from the West. The difficulties raised
+by a sensational philosophy which results in denying the reality even
+of man's psychic nature, no less than the difficulties due to a
+thoroughgoing idealism, have both been introduced among educated
+Japanese and have found no little response. I am persuaded that the
+real causes of the doubt entertained by a few of the Christians in
+Japan as to the personality of God are of foreign origin. These doubts
+are to be answered in exactly the same way as the same difficulties
+are answered in other lands. It must be shown that the sensational and
+"positive" philosophies, ending in agnosticism as to all the great
+problems of life and of reality, are essentially at fault in not
+recognizing the nature of the mind that knows. The searching criticism
+of these assumptions and methods made by T.H. Green and other careful
+thinkers, and to which no answer has been made by the sensational and
+agnostic schools of thought, needs to be presented in intelligible
+Japanese for the fairly educated Japanese student and layman. So, too,
+the discussions of such writers and philosophical thinkers as Seth,
+and Illingworth, and especially Lotze, whose discussions of
+"personality" are unsurpassed, should be presented to Japanese
+thinkers in native garb. But, again I repeat, it seems to me that the
+difficulty felt in Japan on these subjects is due not to the
+"impersonality" of the language or the native mind, or to the hitherto
+prevalent religions, but wholly to the imported philosophies and
+sciences. The individuals who feel or at least express any sense of
+difficulty on these topics--so far at least as my knowledge of the
+subject goes--are not those who know nothing but their own language
+and their own native religions, but rather those who have had
+exceptional advantages in foreign study, many of them having spent
+years abroad in Western universities. They furnish a fresh revelation
+of the quickness with which the Japanese take up with new ideas. They
+did not evolve these difficulties for themselves, but gathered them
+from their reading of Western literature and by their mingling with
+men of unevangelical temper and thought in the West.]
+
+[Footnote DD: "Sacred Books of the East," vol. xlix, part ii. p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote DE: _Cf._ chapters xiii. and xxxi.]
+
+[Footnote DF: It is not strange that in all the centers of this new
+learning Confucius was deified and worshiped. In connection with many
+schools established for the study of his works, temples were built to
+his honor, in which his statue alone was placed, before which a
+stately religious service was performed at regular intervals. Thus did
+Confucianism become a living and vitalizing, although, as we shall
+soon see, an incomplete religion.]
+
+[Footnote DG: Writers on the history and philosophy of religion have
+much to say about the differences between national and universal
+religions. The three religions which they pronounce universal are
+Mahomedanism, Buddhism, and Christianity. The ground for this
+statement is the fact that each of these religions has developed
+strong individualistic characteristics. They are concerned with
+individual salvation. The importance of this element none will deny,
+least of all the writer. But I question the correctness of the
+descriptive adjective. Because of their individualistic character they
+are fitted to leap territorial boundaries and can find acceptance in
+every community; for this they are not dependent on the territorial
+expansion of the communities in which they arose.]
+
+[Footnote DH: P. xvii.]
+
+[Footnote DI: P. xviii.]
+
+[Footnote DJ: P. 19.]
+
+[Footnote DK: P. 6.]
+
+[Footnote DL: P. 37.]
+
+[Footnote DM: P. 83.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Whether or not the activity modifies the transmissible
+nature is the problem as to the inheritance of acquired
+characteristics. The dictum that function produces organism does not
+say whether that organism is transmissible or not, either in biology
+or sociology.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And
+Psychic, by Sidney L. Gulick
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And
+Psychic, by Sidney L. Gulick
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And Psychic
+
+Author: Sidney L. Gulick
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2004 [EBook #13831]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE, ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Michael Ciesielski and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>Evolution of the Japanese</h1>
+
+ <h2><i>Social and Psychic</i></h2>
+
+ <h3>BY</h3>
+
+ <h2>SIDNEY L. GULICK, M.A.</h2>
+
+ <h3><i>Missionary of the American Board in Japan</i></h3>
+
+ <p class="ctr">NEW YORK CHICAGO TORONTO</p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">Fleming H. Revell Company</p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">LONDON AND EDINBURGH</p>
+
+ <div id="places">
+ New York: 158 Fifth Avenue<br />
+ Chicago: 63 Washington Street<br />
+ Toronto: 27 Richmond Street, W.<br />
+ London: 21 Paternoster Square<br />
+ Edinburgh: 30 St. Mary Street
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div id='advert'>
+ <p class="ctr">THE GROWTH OF THE KINGDOM OF GOD</p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">By</p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">SIDNEY L. GULICK, M.A.</p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">Illustrated with Twenty-six Diagrams <i>12
+ mo, Cloth, $1.50</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">&ldquo;Commends itself to thoughtful,
+ earnest men of any nation as a most valuable missionary
+ paper. Mr. Gulick traces the Christian religion through
+ history and up to now. The survey is calm, patient,
+ thoroughly honest, and quietly assured.&rdquo;<br />
+ --<i>Evangelist</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ctr">FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY<br />
+ Publishers</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <div>
+ <a name='PREFACE'
+ id="PREFACE"></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <h2><a name='Page_-1'
+ id="Page_-1"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+ <p>The present work is an attempt to interpret the
+ characteristics of modern Japan in the light of social science.
+ It also seeks to throw some light on the vexed question as to
+ the real character of so-called race-nature, and the processes
+ by which that nature is transformed. If the principles of
+ social science here set forth are correct, they apply as well
+ to China and India as to Japan, and thus will bear directly on
+ the entire problem of Occidental and Oriental social
+ intercourse and mutual influence.</p>
+
+ <p>The core of this work consists of addresses to American and
+ English audiences delivered by the writer during his recent
+ furlough. Since returning to Japan, he has been able to give
+ but fragments of time to the completion of the outlines then
+ sketched, and though he would gladly reserve the manuscript for
+ further elaboration, he yields to the urgency of friends who
+ deem it wise that he delay no longer in laying his thought
+ before the wider public.</p>
+
+ <p>To Japanese readers the writer wishes to say that although
+ he has not hesitated to make statements painful to a lover of
+ Japan, he has not done it to condemn or needlessly to
+ criticise, but simply to make plain what seem to him to be the
+ facts. If he has erred in his facts or if his interpretations
+ reflect unjustly on the history or spirit of Japan, no one will
+ be more glad than he for corrections. Let the Japanese be
+ assured that his ruling motive, both in writing about Japan and
+ in spending his life in this land, is profound love for the
+ Japanese people. The term "native" has been freely used because
+ it is the only natural correlative for "foreign." It may be
+ well to say that neither the one nor <a name='Page_0'
+ id="Page_0"></a>the other has any derogatory implication,
+ although anti-foreign natives, and anti-native foreigners,
+ sometimes so use them.</p>
+
+ <p>The indebtedness of the writer is too great to be
+ acknowledged in detail. But whenever he has been conscious of
+ drawing directly from any author for ideas or suggestions,
+ effort has been made to indicate the source.</p>
+
+ <p>Since the preparation of the larger part of this work
+ several important contributions to the literature on Japan have
+ appeared which would have been of help to the writer, could he
+ have referred to them during the progress of his undertaking.
+ Rev. J.C.C. Newton's "Japan: Country, Court, and People"; Rev.
+ Otis Cary's "Japan and Its Regeneration"; and Prof. J. Nitobe's
+ "Bushido: The Soul of Japan," call for special mention. All are
+ excellent works, interesting, condensed, informative, and
+ well-balanced. Had the last named come to hand much earlier it
+ would have received frequent reference and quotation in the
+ body of this volume, despite the fact that it sets forth an
+ ideal rather than the actual state of Old Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Special acknowledgment should be made of the help rendered
+ by my brothers, Galen M. Fisher and Edward L. Gulick, and by my
+ sister, Mrs. F.F. Jewett, in reading and revising the
+ manuscript. Acknowledgment should also be made of the
+ invaluable criticisms and suggestions in regard to the general
+ theory of social evolution advocated in these pages made by my
+ uncle, Rev. John T. Gulick, well known to the scientific world
+ for his contributions to the theory as well as to the facts of
+ biological evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>S.L.G.</p>
+
+ <p>MATSUYAMA, JAPAN.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <div>
+ <a name='CONTENTS'
+ id="CONTENTS"></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <h2><a name='Page_1'
+ id="Page_1"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+ <p><a href='#INTRODUCTION'>INTRODUCTION</a> 13</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#I'>I. PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Occidental conceptions of the recent history of
+ Japan&mdash;Japan seems to be contradicting our theory of
+ national evolution&mdash;Similarities of ancient and modern
+ Japan&mdash;Japanese evolution is "natural"&mdash;The study of
+ Japanese social evolution is of unusual interest, because it
+ has experienced such marked changes&mdash;Because it is now in
+ a stage of rapid growth&mdash;And is taking place before our
+ eyes&mdash;Also because here is taking place a unique union of
+ Occidental and Oriental civilizations&mdash;Comparison between
+ India and Japan, 23</p>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#II'>II. HISTORICAL SKETCH</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Mythology and tradition&mdash;Authentic history&mdash;Old
+ Japan&mdash;The transition from Old to New Japan&mdash;New
+ Japan&mdash;Compelled by foreign nations to
+ centralize&mdash;Ideals and material instruments supplied from
+ abroad&mdash;Exuberant Patriotism&mdash;"Ai-koku-shin," 35</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#III'>III. THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Is Japan making progress?&mdash;Happiness as a
+ criterion&mdash;The oppressive rule of militarism&mdash;The
+ emptiness of the ordinary life&mdash;The condition of
+ woman&mdash;"The Greater Learning for
+ Woman"&mdash;Divorce&mdash;Progress defined&mdash;Deficiency of
+ the hedonistic criterion of progress, 52</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#IV'>IV. THE METHOD OF PROGRESS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Progress a modern conception and ideal&mdash;How was the
+ "cake of custom" broken?&mdash;"Government by discussion" an
+ insufficient principle of progress&mdash;Two lines of
+ <a name='Page_2'
+ id="Page_2"></a>progress, Ideal and Material&mdash;The
+ significance of Perry's coming to Japan&mdash;Effect on
+ Japan of Occidental ideas&mdash;The material element of
+ progress&mdash;Mistaken praise of the simplicity of Old
+ Japan, L. Hearn&mdash;The significance of the material
+ element of civilization&mdash;Mastery of nature&mdash;The
+ defect of Occidental civilization, 61</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#V'>V. JAPANESE SENSITIVENESS TO
+ ENVIRONMENT</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Our main question&mdash;Illustrations&mdash;Japanese
+ students abroad&mdash;Sensitiveness to
+ ridicule&mdash;Advantages and disadvantages of this
+ characteristic&mdash;National sensitiveness to foreign
+ criticism&mdash;Nudity&mdash;Formosa&mdash;Mental and physical
+ flexibility&mdash;Adjustability&mdash;Some apparent
+ exceptions&mdash;Chinese ideographs&mdash;How account for these
+ characteristics, 72</p>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#VI'>VI. WAVES OF
+ FEELING&mdash;ABDICATION</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese are emotional&mdash;An illustration from
+ politics&mdash;The tendency to run to extremes&mdash;Danger of
+ overemphasizing this tendency&mdash;Japanese silent
+ dissent&mdash;Men of balance in public
+ life&mdash;Abdication&mdash;Gubbins quoted&mdash;Is abdication
+ an inherent trait? 82</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#VII'>VII. HEROES AND HERO-WORSHIP</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Popular national heroes&mdash;The craving for modern
+ heroes&mdash;Townsend Harris's insight into Oriental
+ character&mdash;Hero-worship an obstacle to missionary
+ work&mdash;Capt. Jaynes&mdash;An experience in
+ Kumamoto&mdash;"The sage of Omi"&mdash;"The true
+ hero"&mdash;Moral heroes in Japan&mdash;The advantage and
+ disadvantage of hero-worship&mdash;Modern moral
+ heroes&mdash;Hero-worship depends on personality and
+ idealism&mdash;The new social order is producing new ideals and
+ new heroes, 89</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#VIII'>VIII. LOVE FOR CHILDREN</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Japanese love for children&mdash;Children's
+ festivals&mdash;Toys and toy-stores&mdash;Do Japanese love
+ children more than Americans do?&mdash;Importance in Japan of
+ maintaining the family line&mdash;The looseness of the Japanese
+ family tie&mdash;Early cessation of demonstrative
+ affection&mdash;Infanticide, 96</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_3'
+ id="Page_3"></a><b><a href='#IX'>IX. MARITAL
+ LOVE</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Affection between husband and wife&mdash;Occidental and
+ Oriental estimate of woman contrasted&mdash;This a subject
+ easily-misunderstood&mdash;Kissing a social habit unknown in
+ Japan&mdash;Demonstrative affection a social, not a racial
+ characteristic&mdash;Some specific illustrations, Dr.
+ Neesima&mdash;A personal experience&mdash;Illegitimate
+ children&mdash;Fraudulent registration&mdash;Adult
+ adoption&mdash;Divorce&mdash;Monogamy, polygamy, and
+ prostitution&mdash;Race character, social order, and
+ affection&mdash;Position of women&mdash;The social order and
+ affection&mdash;The social order and the valuation of man and
+ woman&mdash;The new social order and the valuation of
+ man&mdash;The spread of Christian ideals and the
+ re-organization of the family, 102</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#X'>X.
+ CHEERFULNESS&mdash;INDUSTRY&mdash;TRUTHFULNESS&mdash;SUSPICIOUSNESS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Japanese cheerfulness&mdash;Festivals&mdash;Pessimism
+ existent, but easily overlooked&mdash;The ubiquity of children
+ gives an appearance of
+ cheerfulness&mdash;Industry&mdash;Illustrations&mdash;Easy-going&mdash;Sociological
+ interpretation&mdash;Mutual confidence and
+ trustfulness&mdash;Relation to communalistic
+ feudalism&mdash;Changes in the social order and in
+ character&mdash;The American Board's experience in trusting
+ Japanese honor&mdash;The Doshisha and its
+ difficulties&mdash;Suspiciousness&mdash;Necessary under the old
+ social order&mdash;The need of constant care in conversation,
+ 115</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XI'>XI. JEALOUSY&mdash;REVENGE&mdash;HUMANE
+ FEELINGS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Jealousy particularly ascribed to women&mdash;How related to
+ the social order&mdash;Is jealousy limited to
+ women?&mdash;Revenge&mdash;Taught as a moral duty&mdash;Revenge
+ and the new social order&mdash;Are the Japanese
+ cruel?&mdash;First impressions&mdash;Treatment of the
+ insane&mdash;Of lepers&mdash;The cruelty and hardness of heart
+ of Old Japan&mdash;Buddhistic teaching and
+ practice&mdash;Buddhist and Christian Orphan
+ Asylums&mdash;Treatment of horses&mdash;Torture in Old
+ Japan&mdash;Crucifixion and transfixion by
+ spears&mdash;Hard-heartedness cultivated under
+ feudalism&mdash;Cruelty and the humane feelings in the
+ Occident&mdash;Abolition of cruel customs in ancient and in Old
+ Japan&mdash;Cruelty a sociological, not a biological
+ characteristic&mdash;The rise of humane feelings&mdash;Doctors
+ and hospitals&mdash;Philanthropy, 127 <a name='Page_4'
+ id="Page_4"></a></p>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XII'>XII. AMBITION&mdash;CONCEIT</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Ambition, both individual and national&mdash;The "Kumamoto
+ Band"&mdash;Self-confidence and conceit&mdash;Refined in
+ nature&mdash;Illustrations in the use of
+ English&mdash;Readiness of young men to assume grave
+ responsibilities&mdash;A product of the social
+ order&mdash;Assumptions of inferiority by the common
+ people&mdash;Obsequiousness&mdash;Modern self-confidence and
+ assumptions not without ground&mdash;Self-confidence and
+ success&mdash;Self-confidence and physical size&mdash;Young men
+ and the recent history of Japan&mdash;The self-confidence and
+ conceit of Western nations&mdash;The open-mindedness of most
+ Japanese, 137</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XIII'>XIII.
+ PATRIOTISM&mdash;APOTHEOSIS&mdash;COURAGE</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>"Yamato-Damashii": "The Soul of Japan"&mdash;Patriotism and
+ the recent war with China&mdash;Patriotism of Christian
+ orphans&mdash;Mr. Ishii&mdash;Patriotism is for a person, not
+ for country&mdash;National patriotism is
+ modern&mdash;Passionate devotion to the Emperor&mdash;A gift of
+ 20,000,000 yen to the Emperor&mdash;The constitution derives
+ its authority from the Emperor&mdash;A quotation from Prof.
+ Yamaguchi&mdash;Japanese Imperial succession is of Oriental
+ type&mdash;Concubines and children of the reigning
+ Emperor&mdash;Apotheosis, Oriental and
+ Occidental&mdash;Apotheosis and national unity&mdash;The
+ political conflict between Imperial and popular
+ sovereignty&mdash;Japanese and Roman apotheosis&mdash;Prof.
+ Nash quoted&mdash;Courage&mdash;Cultivated in ancient
+ times&mdash;A peculiar feature of Japanese
+ courage&mdash;"Harakiri"&mdash;E. Griffis quoted&mdash;A boy
+ hero&mdash;Relation of courage to social order&mdash;Japanese
+ courage not only physical&mdash;modern instance of moral
+ courage, 144</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XIV'>XIV.
+ FICKLENESS&mdash;STOLIDITY&mdash;STOICISM</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Illustrations of fickleness&mdash;Prof. Chamberlain's
+ explanation&mdash;Fickleness a modern trait&mdash;Continuity of
+ purpose in spite of changes of method&mdash;The youth of those
+ on whom responsibility rests&mdash;Fluctuation of interest in
+ Christianity not a fair illustration&mdash;The period of
+ fluctuation is passing away&mdash;Impassiveness&mdash;"Putty
+ faces"&mdash;Distinguish between stupidity and
+ stoicism&mdash;Stupid stolidity among the farmers&mdash;Easily
+ removed&mdash;Social stolidity cultivated&mdash;Demanded by the
+ old social order&mdash;The influence of Buddhism in suppressing
+ expression of emotion&mdash;An illustration of suppressed
+ curiosity&mdash;Lack of emotional manifestations when the
+ Em<a name='Page_5'
+ id="Page_5"></a>peror appears in public&mdash;Stolidity a
+ social, not a racial trait&mdash;A personal
+ experience&mdash;The increased vivacity of Christian
+ women&mdash;Relations of emotional to intellectual
+ development and to the social order, 159</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XV'>XV. &AElig;STHETIC
+ CHARACTERISTICS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>The wide development of the &aelig;sthetic sense in
+ Japan&mdash;Japanese &aelig;sthetic development is
+ unbalanced&mdash;The sense of
+ smell&mdash;Painting&mdash;Japanese art pays slight attention
+ to the human form&mdash;Sociological interpretation&mdash;The
+ nude in Japanese art&mdash;Relation to the social
+ order&mdash;Art and immorality&mdash;Caricature&mdash;Fondness
+ for the abnormal in nature&mdash;Abnormal stones&mdash;Tosa
+ cocks&mdash;&AElig;sthetics of speech&mdash;The &aelig;sthetic
+ sense and the use of personal pronouns&mdash;Deficiency of the
+ &aelig;sthetic development in regard to
+ speech&mdash;Sociological explanations&mdash;Close relation of
+ &aelig;sthetics and conduct&mdash;Sociological explanation for
+ the wide development of the &aelig;sthetic sense&mdash;The
+ classes lived in close proximity&mdash;The spirit of dependence
+ and imitation&mdash;Universality of culture more apparent than
+ real&mdash;Defects of &aelig;sthetic taste&mdash;Defective
+ etiquette&mdash;How accounted for&mdash;Old and new
+ conditions&mdash;"Western taste debasing Japanese
+ art"&mdash;Illustration of aboriginal &aelig;sthetic
+ defects&mdash;Colored photographs&mdash;&AElig;sthetic defects
+ of popular shrines&mdash;The &aelig;sthetics of
+ music&mdash;Experience of the Hawaiian people&mdash;Literary
+ &aelig;sthetic development&mdash;Aston
+ quoted&mdash;Architectural &aelig;sthetic
+ development&mdash;&AElig;sthetic development is sociological
+ rather than biological, 170</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XVI'>XVI. MEMORY&mdash;IMITATION</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Psychological unity of the East and the West&mdash;Brain
+ size and social evolution&mdash;The size of the Japanese
+ brain&mdash;Memory&mdash;Learning Chinese
+ characters&mdash;Social selection and mnemonic
+ power&mdash;Japanese memory in daily life&mdash;Memory of
+ uncivilized and semi-civilized peoples&mdash;Hindu
+ memory&mdash;Max M&uuml;ller quoted&mdash;Japanese acquisition
+ of foreign languages&mdash;The argument from language for the
+ social as against the biological distinction of races&mdash;The
+ faculty of imitation; is not to be despised&mdash;Prof.
+ Chamberlain's over-emphasis of Japanese
+ imitation&mdash;Originality in adopting Confucianism and
+ Buddhism&mdash;"Shinshu"&mdash;"Nichirenshu"&mdash;Adoption of
+ Chinese philosophy&mdash;Dr. Knox's over-emphasis of servile
+ adoption&mdash;Our ignorance of Japanese history of
+ thought&mdash;A reason for Occidental
+ misunderstanding&mdash;The incubus of governmental
+ initiative&mdash;Relation of imitation to the social order, 189
+ <a name='Page_6'
+ id="Page_6"></a></p>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XVII'>XVII.
+ ORIGINALITY&mdash;INVENTIVENESS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Originality in art&mdash;Authoritative suppression of
+ originality&mdash;Townsend Harris quoted&mdash;Suppression of
+ Christianity and of heterodox Confucianism&mdash;Modern
+ suppression of historical research&mdash;Yet Japan is not
+ wholly lacking in originality&mdash;Recent discoveries and
+ inventions&mdash;Originality in borrowing from the
+ West&mdash;Quotations from a native paper, 203</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XVIII'>XVIII.
+ INDIRECTNESS&mdash;"NOMINALITY"</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>"Roundaboutness"&mdash;Some advantages of this
+ characteristic&mdash;Illustrations&mdash;Study of English for
+ direct and accurate habits of thought&mdash;Rapid modern growth
+ of directness&mdash;"Nominality"&mdash;All Japanese history an
+ illustration&mdash;The Imperial rule only nominal&mdash;The
+ daimyo as a figure-head&mdash;"Nominality" in ordinary
+ life&mdash;In family relations&mdash;Illustrations in Christian
+ work&mdash;A "nominal" express train&mdash;"Nominality" and the
+ social order, 210</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XIX'>XIX. INTELLECTUALITY</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Do Japanese lack the higher mental faculties?&mdash;Evidence
+ of inventions&mdash;Testimony of foreign
+ teachers&mdash;Japanese students, at home and
+ abroad&mdash;Readiness in public speech&mdash;Powers of
+ generalization in primitive Japan&mdash;"Ri" and "Ki," "In" and
+ "Yo"&mdash;Japanese use of Chinese generalized philosophical
+ terms&mdash;Generalization and the social order&mdash;Defective
+ explanation of puerile Oriental science&mdash;Relation to the
+ mechanical memory method of education&mdash;High
+ intellectuality dependent on social order, 218</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XX'>XX. PHILOSOPHICAL ABILITY</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Do Japanese lack philosophical ability?&mdash;Some
+ opinions&mdash;Some distinctions&mdash;Japanese interest in
+ metaphysical problems&mdash;Buddhist and Confucian
+ metaphysics&mdash;Metaphysics and ethics&mdash;Japanese
+ students of Occidental philosophy&mdash;A personal
+ experience&mdash;"The little philosopher"&mdash;A Buddhist
+ priest&mdash;Rarity of original philosophical ability and even
+ interest&mdash;Philosophical ability and the social order in
+ the West, 225</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXI'>XXI. IMAGINATION</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Some criticisms of Japanese mental traits&mdash;Wide range
+ of imaginative activity&mdash;Some salient
+ points&mdash;Unbalanced <a name='Page_7'
+ id="Page_7"></a>imaginative development&mdash;Prosaic
+ matter-of-factness&mdash;Visionariness&mdash;Impractical
+ idealism&mdash;Illustrations&mdash;An evangelist&mdash;A
+ principal&mdash;Visionariness in Christian
+ work&mdash;Visionariness in national
+ ambition&mdash;Imagination and optimism&mdash;Mr. Lowell's
+ opinion criticised&mdash;Fancy and
+ imagination&mdash;Caricature&mdash;Imagination and
+ imitation&mdash;Sociological interpretation of
+ visionariness&mdash;And of prosaic
+ matter-of-factness&mdash;Communalism and the higher mental
+ powers&mdash;Suppression of the constructive
+ imagination&mdash;Racial intellectual characteristics are
+ social rather than inherent, 233</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXII'>XXII. MORAL IDEALS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Loyalty and filial piety as moral ideals&mdash;Quotations
+ from an ancient moralist, Muro Kyuso&mdash;On the heavenly
+ origin of moral teaching&mdash;On self-control&mdash;Knowledge
+ comes through obedience&mdash;On the impurity of ancient
+ literature&mdash;On the ideal of the samurai in relation to
+ trade&mdash;Old Japan combined statute and ethical
+ law&mdash;"The testament of Iyeyasu"&mdash;Ohashi's
+ condemnation of Western learning for its impiety&mdash;Japanese
+ moral ideals were communal&mdash;Truthfulness
+ undeveloped&mdash;Relations of samurai to tradesman&mdash;The
+ business standards are changing with the social
+ order&mdash;Ancient Occidental contempt for trade&mdash;Plato
+ and Aristotle, 249</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXIII'>XXIII. MORAL IDEALS
+ (<i>Continued</i>)</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>The social position of woman&mdash;Valuation of the
+ individual&mdash;Confucian and Buddhistic teaching in regard to
+ concubinage and polygamy&mdash;Sociological
+ interpretation&mdash;Japan not exceptional&mdash;Actual
+ morality of Old Japan&mdash;Modern growth of
+ immorality&mdash;Note on the "Social Evil"&mdash;No ancient
+ teaching in regard to masculine chastity&mdash;Mr. Hearn's
+ mistaken contention&mdash;Filial obedience and
+ prostitution&mdash;How could the social order produce two
+ different moral ideals?&mdash;The new Civil Code on
+ marriage&mdash;Divorce&mdash;Statistics&mdash;Modern advance of
+ woman&mdash;Significance of the Imperial Silver
+ Wedding&mdash;The Wedding of the Prince Imperial&mdash;Relation
+ of Buddhism and Confucianism to moral ideals and
+ practice&mdash;The new spirit of Buddhism&mdash;Christian
+ influence on Shinto; Tenri Kyo&mdash;The ancient moralists
+ confined their attention to the rulers&mdash;The Imperial Edict
+ in regard to Moral Education, 258</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXIV'>XXIV. MORAL PRACTICE</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>The publicity of Japanese life&mdash;Public
+ bathing&mdash;Personal experience at a hot-spring&mdash;Mr.
+ Hearn on privacy&mdash;Indi<a name='Page_8'
+ id="Page_8"></a>vidualism and variation from the moral
+ standard&mdash;Standards
+ advancing&mdash;Revenge&mdash;Modern liberty of
+ travel&mdash;Increase of wealth&mdash;Increasing luxury and
+ vice&mdash;Increase of concubinage&mdash;Native
+ discussions&mdash;Statistics&mdash;Business honesty&mdash;A
+ native paper quoted&mdash;Some experiences with
+ Christians&mdash;Testimony of a Japanese
+ consul&mdash;Difference of gifts to Buddhist and to
+ Christian institutions&mdash;Christian condemnation of
+ Doshisha mismanagement&mdash;Misappropriation of trust funds
+ in the West&mdash;Business honesty and the social
+ order&mdash;Fitness of Christianity to the new social
+ order&mdash;A summary&mdash;Communal
+ virtues&mdash;Individual Vices&mdash;The authority of the
+ moral ideal&mdash;Moral characteristics are not inherent,
+ but social, in nature, 273</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXV'>XXV. ARE THE JAPANESE
+ RELIGIOUS?</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Prof. Pfleiderer's view&mdash;Percival Lowell's definition
+ of religion&mdash;Japanese appearance of irreligion due to many
+ facts&mdash;Skeptical attitude of Confucius towards the
+ gods&mdash;Ready acceptance of Western agnosticism&mdash;Prof.
+ Chamberlain's assertion that the Japanese take their religion
+ lightly&mdash;Statements concerning religion by Messrs.
+ Fukuzawa, Kato, and Ito&mdash;Statements of Japanese irreligion
+ are not to be lightly accepted&mdash;Incompetence of many
+ critics&mdash;We must study all the religious
+ phenomena&mdash;Pilgrimages&mdash;Statistics&mdash;Mr. Lowell's
+ criticism of "peripatetic picnic parties"&mdash;Is religion
+ necessarily gloomy?&mdash;God and Buddha shelves universal in
+ Japan&mdash;Temples and shrines&mdash;Statistics, 286</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXVI'>XXVI. SOME RELIGIOUS
+ PHENOMENA</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Stoical training conceals religious emotions&mdash;The
+ earnestness of many suppliants&mdash;Buddhistic and Shinto
+ practice of religious ecstasy&mdash;The revolt from Buddhism a
+ religious movement&mdash;Muro Kyu-so quoted&mdash;"Heaven's
+ Way"&mdash;"God's omnipresence"&mdash;Pre-Christian teachers of
+ Christian truth&mdash;Interpretation of modern irreligious
+ phenomena&mdash;Japanese apparent lack of reverence&mdash;Not
+ an inherent racial characteristic&mdash;Sketch of Japanese
+ religious
+ history&mdash;Shinto&mdash;Buddhism&mdash;Confucianism&mdash;Christianity&mdash;Roman
+ Catholicism&mdash;Protestantism&mdash;Religious characteristics
+ are social, not essential or racial, 296</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXVII'>XXVII. SOME RELIGIOUS
+ CONCEPTIONS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Japanese conceptions as to deity&mdash;The number and
+ relation of the gods to the universe&mdash;Did the Japanese
+ have the monotheistic conception?&mdash;Attractiveness of
+ Christian <a name='Page_9'
+ id="Page_9"></a>monotheism&mdash;Confucian and Buddhist
+ monism&mdash;Religious conception of man&mdash;Conception of
+ sin&mdash;Defective terminology&mdash;Relation of sin to
+ salvation&mdash;"Holy water"&mdash;Holy towels and the
+ spread of disease&mdash;The slight connection between
+ physical and moral pollution&mdash;W.E. Griffis
+ quoted&mdash;Exaggerated cleanliness of the
+ Japanese&mdash;Public bathing houses&mdash;Consciousness of
+ sin in the sixteenth century&mdash;A recent
+ experience&mdash;Doctrine of the future life&mdash;Salvation
+ from fate&mdash;"Ingwa"&mdash;These are important
+ doctrines&mdash;"Mei" (Heaven's decree)&mdash;Japan not
+ unique&mdash;Sociological interpretations of religious
+ characteristics, 310</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXVIII'>XXVIII. SOME RELIGIOUS
+ PRACTICES</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Loyalty and filial piety as religious
+ phenomena&mdash;Gratitude as a religions trait&mdash;Hearn
+ quoted&mdash;Unpleasant experiences of ingratitude&mdash;Modern
+ suppression of phallicism&mdash;Brothels and prostitutes at
+ popular shrines&mdash;The failure of higher ethnic faiths to
+ antagonize the lower&mdash;Suppression of phallicism due to
+ Western opinion&mdash;The significance of this suppression to
+ sociological theory&mdash;Religious liberty&mdash;Some
+ history&mdash;Inconsistent attitude of the Educational
+ Department&mdash;Virtual establishment of compulsory state
+ religion&mdash;Review and summary&mdash;The Japanese ready
+ learners of foreign religions&mdash;The significance of this to
+ sociology&mdash;Japanese future religion is to be Christianity,
+ 322</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXIX'>XXIX. SOME PRINCIPLES OF NATIONAL
+ EVOLUTION</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Progress is from smaller to larger communities&mdash;Arrest
+ of development&mdash;The necessity of individualism&mdash;The
+ relation of communal to individual development&mdash;A possible
+ misunderstanding&mdash;The problem of
+ distribution&mdash;Personality, 332</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXX'>XXX. ARE THE JAPANESE
+ IMPERSONAL?</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Assertion of Oriental impersonality&mdash;Quotations from
+ Percival Lowell&mdash;Defective and contradictory
+ definitions&mdash;Arguments for impersonality resting on
+ mistaken interpretations&mdash;Children's
+ festivals&mdash;Occidental and Oriental method of counting
+ ages&mdash;Argument for impersonality from Japanese
+ art&mdash;From the characteristics of the Japanese
+ family&mdash;The bearing of divorce on this argument&mdash;Do
+ Japanese "fall in love"?&mdash;Suicide and murder for
+ love&mdash;Occidental approval and Oriental condemnation of
+ "falling in love"&mdash;Sociological significance of divorce
+ and of "falling in love," 344 <a name='Page_10'
+ id="Page_10"></a></p>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXI'>XXXI. THE JAPANESE NOT
+ IMPERSONAL</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>The problem stated&mdash;Definitions&mdash;Remarks on
+ definitions&mdash;Characteristics of a
+ person&mdash;Impersonality defined&mdash;A preliminary summary
+ statement&mdash;Definitions of Communalism and
+ Individualism&mdash;The argument for "impersonality" from
+ Japanese politeness&mdash;Some difficulties of this
+ interpretation&mdash;The sociological interpretation of
+ politeness&mdash;The significance of Japanese
+ sensitiveness&mdash;Altruism as a proof of
+ impersonality&mdash;Japanese selfishness and
+ self-assertiveness&mdash;Distinction between communal and
+ individualistic altruism&mdash;Deficiency of personal pronouns
+ as a proof of impersonality&mdash;A possible
+ counter-argument&mdash;Substitutes for personal
+ pronouns&mdash;Many personal words in Japanese&mdash;Origin of
+ pronouns, personal and others&mdash;The relation of the social
+ order to the use of personal pronouns&mdash;Japanese conceive
+ Nationality only through Personality&mdash;"Strong" and "weak"
+ personality&mdash;Strong personalities in Japan&mdash;Feudalism
+ and strong personalities, 356</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXII'>XXXII. IS BUDDHISM
+ IMPERSONAL?</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Self-suppression as a proof of
+ impersonality&mdash;Self-suppression cannot be ascribed to a
+ primitive people&mdash;Esoteric Buddhism not
+ popular&mdash;Buddhism emphasized introspection and
+ self-consciousness&mdash;Mr. Lowell on the teaching of
+ Buddha&mdash;Consciousness of union with the Absolute a
+ developed, not a primitive, trait&mdash;Buddhist
+ self-suppression proves a developed self&mdash;Buddhist
+ self-salvation and Christian salvation by faith&mdash;Buddhism
+ does not develop rounded personality&mdash;Buddhism attributes
+ no worth to the self&mdash;Buddhist mercy rests on the doctrine
+ of transmigration, not on the inherent worth of
+ man&mdash;Analysis of the diverse elements in the asserted
+ "Impersonality "&mdash;Why Buddhism attributed no value to the
+ self&mdash;The Infinite Absolute Abstraction&mdash;Buddhism not
+ impersonal but abstract&mdash;Buddhist doctrine of
+ illusion&mdash;Popular Buddhism not
+ philosophical&mdash;Relation of "ingwa," Fate, to the
+ development of personality&mdash;Relation of belief in freedom
+ to the fact of freedom&mdash;Sociological consequences of
+ Buddhist doctrine, 377</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXIII'>XXXIII. TRACES OF PERSONALITY IN
+ SHINTOISM, BUDDHISM, AND CONFUCIANISM</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Human illogicalness providential&mdash;Some devices for
+ avoiding the evils of logical conclusions&mdash;Buddhistic
+ actual appeal to personal self-activity&mdash;Practical
+ Confucianism <a name='Page_11'
+ id="Page_11"></a>an antidote to Buddhist
+ poison&mdash;Confucian ethics produced strong
+ persons&mdash;The personal conception of deity is
+ widespread&mdash;Shinto gods all persons&mdash;Popular
+ Buddhist gods are personal&mdash;Confucian "Heaven" implies
+ personality&mdash;The idea of personality not wholly wanting
+ in the Orient&mdash;The idea of divine personality not
+ difficult to impart to a Japanese&mdash;A conversation with
+ a Buddhist priest&mdash;Sketch of the development of
+ Japanese personality&mdash;Is personality
+ inherent?&mdash;Intrinsic and phenomenal
+ personality&mdash;Note on the doctrine of the personality of
+ God, 389</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXIV'>XXXIV. THE BUDDHIST
+ WORLD-VIEW</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Comparison of Buddhist, Greek, and Christian conceptions of
+ God&mdash;Nirvana&mdash;The Buddhistic Ultimate Reality
+ absolute vacuity&mdash;Greek affirmation of intelligence in the
+ Ultimate Reality&mdash;Christian affirmation of Divine
+ Personality&mdash;The Buddhist universe is partly rational and
+ ethical&mdash;The Greek universe is partly rational and
+ ethical&mdash;Corresponding views of sin, salvation, change,
+ and history&mdash;Resulting pessimism and
+ optimism&mdash;Consequences to the respective civilizations and
+ their social orders, 398</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXV'>XXXV. COMMUNAL AND INDIVIDUAL ELEMENTS IN
+ THE EVOLUTION OF JAPANESE RELIGIOUS LIFE</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Japanese religious life has been predominantly
+ communal&mdash;Shinto provided the sanctions for the social
+ order&mdash;Recent abdication of Shinto as a
+ religion&mdash;Primitive Shinto world&mdash;view&mdash;Shinto
+ and modern science&mdash;Shinto sanctions for the modern social
+ order&mdash;Buddhism is individualistic&mdash;Lacks social
+ ideals and sanctions&mdash;Hence it could not displace
+ Shinto&mdash;Shinto and Buddhism are
+ supplementary&mdash;Produced a period of prosperity&mdash;The
+ defect of Buddhist individualism&mdash;Imperfect acceptance of
+ Shinto&mdash;Effect of political history&mdash;Confucianism
+ restored the waning communal sanctions&mdash;The difference
+ between Shinto and Confucian social ideals and
+ sanctions&mdash;The difference between Shinto and Confucian
+ world-views&mdash;Rejection of the Confucian social
+ order&mdash;An interpretation&mdash;The failure of Confucianism
+ to become a religion&mdash;Western intercourse re-established
+ Shinto sanctions&mdash;Japan's modern religious
+ problem&mdash;Difficulty of combining individual and communal
+ religious elements&mdash;Christianity has <a name='Page_12'
+ id="Page_12"></a>accomplished it&mdash;Individualism in and
+ through communalism&mdash;A modern expansion of communal
+ religion&mdash;Shared by Japan&mdash;Some Japanese recognize
+ the need of religion for Japan&mdash;Sociological function
+ of individualistic religion in the higher human
+ evolution&mdash;Obstacle to evolution through the
+ development of intellect&mdash;The Japanese mind is
+ outgrowing its old religious conceptions&mdash;The
+ dependence of religious phenomena on the ideas dominating
+ society&mdash;Note on National and Universal
+ religions&mdash;Buddhism not properly classified as
+ Universal&mdash;The classification of religions, 404</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXVI'>XXXVI. WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL
+ CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>The conclusion reached in this work&mdash;Contrary to the
+ opinion of tourists, residents, and many
+ sociologists&mdash;Professor Le Bon quoted&mdash;Social psychic
+ characteristics not inherent&mdash;Evolution and
+ involution&mdash;Advocates of inherent Oriental traits should
+ catalogue those traits&mdash;An attempt by the London <i>Daily
+ Mail</i>&mdash;Is the East inherently intuitive, and the West
+ logical?&mdash;The difficulty of becoming mutually
+ acquainted&mdash;The secret of genuine acquaintance&mdash;Is
+ the East inherently meditative and the West
+ active?&mdash;Oriental unity and characteristics are social,
+ not inherent&mdash;Isolated evolution is divergent&mdash;Mutual
+ influence of the East and the West&mdash;Summary statement,
+ 422</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p><b><a href='#XXXVII'>XXXVII. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS</a></b></p>
+
+ <p>Review of our course of thought&mdash;Purpose of this
+ chapter&mdash;The problem studied in this
+ work&mdash;Interrelation of social and psychic
+ phenomena&mdash;Heredity defined and analyzed&mdash;Evolution
+ defined&mdash;Exact definition of our question, and our
+ reply&mdash;What would be an adequate disproof of our
+ position&mdash;Reasons for limiting the discussion to advanced
+ races&mdash;Divergent evolution dependent on
+ segregation&mdash;Distinction between racial and social
+ unity&mdash;Relation of the individual psychic character to the
+ social order&mdash;"Race soul" a convenient
+ fiction&mdash;Psychic function produces psychic
+ organism&mdash;Causes and nature of plasticity and fixity of
+ society&mdash;Relation of incarnate ideas to character and
+ destiny&mdash;Valuelessness of "floating" ideas&mdash;Progress
+ is at once communal and individual&mdash;Personality is its
+ cause, aim, and criterion&mdash;Progress in personality is
+ ethico-religious&mdash;Japanese social and psychic evolution
+ not exceptional, 438
+ <a name='Page_13'
+ id="Page_13"></a></p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+ <div>
+ <h2><a name='INTRODUCTION'
+ id="INTRODUCTION"></a>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The tragedy enacted in China during the closing year of the
+ nineteenth century marks an epoch in the history of China and
+ of the world. Two world-views, two types of civilization met in
+ deadly conflict, and the inherent weakness of isolated,
+ belated, superstitious and corrupt paganism was revealed.
+ Moreover, during this, China's crisis, Japan for the first time
+ stepped out upon the world's stage of political and military
+ activity. She was recognized as a civilized nation, worthy to
+ share with the great nations of the earth the responsibility of
+ ruling the lawless and backward races.</p>
+
+ <p>The correctness of any interpretation as to the significance
+ of this conflict between the opposing civilizations turns,
+ ultimately, on the question as to what is the real nature of
+ man and of society. If it be true, as maintained by Prof. Le
+ Bon and his school, that the mental and moral character of a
+ people is as fixed as its physiological characteristics, then
+ the conflict in China is at bottom a conflict of races, not of
+ civilizations.</p>
+
+ <p>The inadequacy of the physiological theory of national
+ character may be seen almost at a glance by a look at Japan.
+ Were an Oriental necessarily and unchangeably Oriental, it
+ would have been impossible for Japan to have come into such
+ close and sympathetic touch with the West.</p>
+
+ <p>The conflict of the East with the West, however, is not an
+ inherent and unending conflict, because it is not racial, but
+ civilizational. It is a conflict of world-views and systems of
+ thought and life. It is a conflict of heathen and Christian
+ civilizations. And the conflict will come to an end as soon as,
+ and in proportion as, China awakes from her blindness and
+ begins to build <a name='Page_14'
+ id="Page_14"></a>her national temple on the bedrock of
+ universal truth and righteousness. The conflict is
+ practically over in Japan because she has done this. In
+ loyally accepting science, popular education, and the rights
+ of every individual to equal protection by the government,
+ Japan has accepted the fundamental conceptions of
+ civilization held in the West, and has thus become an
+ integral part of Christendom, a fact of world-wide
+ significance. It proves that the most important differences
+ now separating the great races of men are civilizational,
+ not physiological. It also proves that European, American,
+ and Oriental peoples may be possessed by the same great
+ ideals of life and principles of action, enabling them to
+ co-operate as nations in great movements to their mutual
+ advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>While even we of the West may be long in learning the full
+ significance of what has been and still is taking place in
+ Japan and more conspicuously just now, because more tragically,
+ in China, one thing is clear: steam and electricity have
+ abolished forever the old isolation of the nations.</p>
+
+ <p>Separated branches of the human race that for thousands of
+ years have been undergoing divergent evolution, producing
+ radically different languages, customs, civilizations, systems
+ of thought and world-views, and have resulted even in marked
+ physiological and psychological differences, are now being
+ brought into close contact and inevitable conflict. But at
+ bottom it is a conflict of ideas, not of races. The age of
+ isolation and divergent evolution is passing away, and that of
+ international association and convergent social evolution has
+ begun. Those races and nations that refuse to recognize the new
+ social order, and oppose the cosmic process and its forces,
+ will surely be pushed to the wall and cease to exist as
+ independent nations, just as, in ancient times, the tribes that
+ refused to unite with neighboring tribes were finally
+ subjugated by those that did so unite.</p>
+
+ <p>Universal economic, political, intellectual, moral, and
+ religious intercourse is the characteristic of the new
+ &aelig;on on which we are entering. What are to be the
+ <a name='Page_15'
+ id="Page_15"></a>final consequences of this wide
+ intercourse? Can a people change its character? Can a nation
+ fully possessed by one type of civilization reject it, and
+ adopt one radically different? Do races have "souls" which
+ are fixed and incapable of radical transformations? What has
+ taken place in Japan, a profound, or only a superficial
+ change in psychical character? Are the destinies of the
+ Oriental races already unalterably determined?</p>
+
+ <p>The answers to these questions have already been suggested
+ in the preceding paragraphs, in regard to what has already
+ taken place in Japan. But we may add that that answer really
+ turns on our conception as to the nature of the characteristics
+ separating the East from the West. In proportion as national
+ character is reckoned to be biological, will it be considered
+ fixed and the national destiny predetermined. In proportion as
+ it is reckoned to be sociological, will it be considered
+ alterable and the national destiny subject to new social
+ forces. Now that the intercourse of widely different races has
+ begun on a scale never before witnessed, it is highly important
+ for us to know its probable consequences. For this we need to
+ gain a clear idea of the nature both of the individual man and
+ of society, of the relation of the social order to individual
+ and to race character, and of the law regulating and the forces
+ producing social evolution. Only thus can we forecast the
+ probable course and consequences of the free social intercourse
+ of widely divergent races.</p>
+
+ <p>It is the belief of the writer that few countries afford so
+ clear an illustration of the principles involved in social
+ evolution as Japan. Her development has been so rapid and so
+ recent that some principles have become manifest that otherwise
+ might easily have escaped notice. The importance of
+ understanding Japan, because of the light her recent
+ transformations throw on the subject of social evolution and of
+ national character and also because of the conspicuous
+ r&ocirc;le to which she is destined as the natural leader of
+ the Oriental races in their adoption of Occidental modes of
+ life and thought, justifies a careful study of Japanese
+ character. He who really <a name='Page_16'
+ id="Page_16"></a>understands Japan, has gained the magic key
+ for unlocking the social mysteries of China and the entire
+ East. But the Japanese people, with their institutions and
+ their various characteristics, merit careful study also for
+ their own sakes. For the Japanese constitute an exceedingly
+ interesting and even a unique branch of the human race.
+ Japan is neither a purgatory, as some would have it, nor a
+ paradise, as others maintain, but a land full of individuals
+ in an interesting stage of social evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>Current opinions concerning Japan, however, are as curious
+ as they are contradictory. Sir Edwin Arnold says that the
+ Japanese "Have the nature rather of birds or butterflies than
+ of ordinary human beings." Says Mr. A.M. Knapp: "Japan is the
+ one country in the world which does not disappoint ... It is
+ unquestionably the unique nation of the globe, the land of
+ dream and enchantment, the land which could hardly differ more
+ from our own, were it located in another planet, its people not
+ of this world." An "old resident," however, calls it "the land
+ of disappointments." Few phenomena are more curious than the
+ readiness with which a tourist or professional journalist,
+ after a few days or weeks of sight-seeing and interviewing,
+ makes up his mind in regard to the character of the people,
+ unless it be the way in which certain others, who have resided
+ in this land for a number of years, continue to live in their
+ own dreamland. These two classes of writers have been the chief
+ contributors of material for the omnivorous readers of the
+ West.</p>
+
+ <p>It appears to not a few who have lived many years in this
+ Far Eastern land, that the public has been fed with the dreams
+ of poets or the snap-judgments of tourists instead of with the
+ facts of actual experience. A recent editorial article in the
+ <i>Japan Mail</i>, than whose editor few men have had a wider
+ acquaintance with the Japanese people or language, contains the
+ following paragraph:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"In the case of such writers as Sir Edwin Arnold and Mr.
+ Lafcadio Hearn it is quite apparent that the logical
+ <a name='Page_17'
+ id="Page_17"></a>faculty is in abeyance. Imagination
+ reigns supreme. As poetic nights or outbursts, the works
+ of these authors on Japan are delightful reading. But no
+ one who has studied the Japanese in a deeper manner, by
+ more intimate daily intercourse with all classes of the
+ people than either of these writers pretends to have
+ had, can possibly regard a large part of their
+ description as anything more than pleasing fancy. Both
+ have given rein to the poetic fancy and thus have, from
+ a purely literary point of view, scored a success
+ granted to few.... But as exponents of Japanese life and
+ thought they are unreliable.... They have given form and
+ beauty to much that never existed except in vague
+ outline or in undeveloped germs in the Japanese mind. In
+ doing this they have unavoidably been guilty of
+ misrepresentation.... The Japanese nation of Arnold and
+ Hearn is not the nation we have known for a quarter of a
+ century, but a purely ideal one manufactured out of the
+ author's brains. It is high time that this was pointed
+ out. For while such works please a certain section of
+ the English public, they do a great deal of harm among a
+ section of the Japanese public, as could be easily shown
+ in detail, did space allow."&mdash;<i>Japan Mail, May 7,
+ 1898</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But even more harmful to the reading public of England and
+ America are the hastily formed yet, nevertheless, widely
+ published opinions of tourists and newspaper correspondents.
+ Could such writers realize the inevitable limitations under
+ which they see and try to generalize, the world would be spared
+ many crudities and exaggerations, not to say positive errors.
+ The impression so common to-day that Japan's recent
+ developments are anomalous, even contrary to the laws of
+ national growth, is chiefly due to the superficial writings of
+ hasty observers. Few of those who have dilated ecstatically on
+ her recent growth have understood either the history or the
+ genius of her people.</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"To mention but one among many examples," says Prof.
+ Chamberlain, "the ingenious Traveling Commissioner of the
+ <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>, Mr. Henry Norman,
+ <a name='Page_18'
+ id="Page_18"></a>in his lively letters on Japan
+ published nine or ten years ago, tells the story of
+ Japanese education under the fetching title of 'A Nation
+ at School'; but the impression left is that they have
+ been their own schoolmasters. In another letter on
+ 'Japan in Arms,' he discourses concerning 'The Japanese
+ Military Re-organizers,' 'The Yokosuka dockyard,' and
+ other matters, but omits to mention that the
+ reorganizers were Frenchmen, and that the Yokosuka
+ dockyard was also a French creation. Similarly, when
+ treating of the development of the Japanese newspaper,
+ he ignores the fact that it owed its origin to an
+ Englishman, which surely, to a man whose object was
+ reality, should have seemed an object worth recording.
+ These letters, so full and apparently so frank, really
+ so deceptive, are, as we have said, but one instance
+ among many of the way in which popular writers on Japan
+ travesty history by ignoring the part which foreigners
+ have played. The reasons for this are not far to seek. A
+ wonderful tale will please folks at a distance all the
+ better if made more wonderful still. Japanese progress,
+ traced to its causes and explained by references to the
+ means employed, is not nearly such fascinating reading
+ as when represented in the guise of a fairy creation,
+ sprung from nothing, like Aladdin's
+ palace."&mdash;"<i>Things Japanese," p. 116</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But inter-racial misunderstanding is not, after all, so very
+ strange. Few things are more difficult than to accommodate
+ one's self in speech, in methods of life, and even in thought,
+ to an alien people; so identifying one's deepest interest with
+ theirs as really to understand them. The minds of most men are
+ so possessed by notions acquired in childhood and youth as to
+ be unable to see even the plainest facts at variance with those
+ notions. He who comes to Japan possessed with the idea that it
+ is a dreamland and that its old social order was free from
+ defects, is blind to any important facts invalidating that
+ conception; while he who is persuaded that Japan, being
+ Oriental, is necessarily pagan at heart, however civilized in
+ form, cannot easily be persuaded that there is anything
+ praiseworthy in her old <a name='Page_19'
+ id="Page_19"></a>civilization, in her moral or religious
+ life, or in any of her customs.</p>
+
+ <p>If France fails in important respects to understand England;
+ and England, Germany; and Germany, its neighbors; if even
+ England and America can so misunderstand one another as to be
+ on the verge of war over the boundary dispute of an alien
+ country, what hope is there that the Occident shall understand
+ the Orient, or the Orient the Occident?</p>
+
+ <p>Though the difficulty seems insurmountable, I am persuaded
+ that the most fruitful cause of racial misunderstandings and of
+ defective descriptions both of the West by Orientals, and of
+ the East by Occidentals, is a well-nigh universal misconception
+ as to the nature of man, and of society, and consequently of
+ the laws determining their development. In the East this error
+ arises from and rests upon its polytheism, and the accompanying
+ theories of special national creation and peculiar national
+ sanctity. On these grounds alien races are pronounced
+ necessarily inferior. China's scorn for foreigners is due to
+ these ideas.</p>
+
+ <p>Although this pagan notion has been theoretically abandoned
+ in the West, it still dominates the thought not only of the
+ multitudes, but also of many who pride themselves on their high
+ education and liberal sentiments. They bring to the support of
+ their national or racial pride such modern sociological
+ theories as lend themselves to this view. Evolution and the
+ survival of the fittest, degeneration and the arrest of
+ development, are appealed to as justifying the arrogance and
+ domineering spirit of Western nations.</p>
+
+ <p>But the most subtle and scholarly doctrine appealed to in
+ support of national pride is the biological conception of
+ society. Popular writers assume that society is a biological
+ organism and that the laws of its evolution are therefore
+ biological. This assumption is not strange, for until recent
+ times the most advanced professional sociologists have been
+ dominated by the same misconception. Spencer, for example,
+ makes sociology a branch of biology. More recent sociological
+ writers, however, such as Professors Giddings and
+ <a name='Page_20'
+ id="Page_20"></a>Fairbanks, have taken special pains to
+ assert the essentially psychic character of society; they
+ reject the biological conception, as inadequate to express
+ the real nature of society. The biological conception, they
+ insist, is nothing more than a comparison, useful for
+ bringing out certain features of the social life and
+ structure, but harmful if understood as their full
+ statement. The laws of psychic activity and development
+ differ as widely from those of biologic activity and
+ development as these latter do from those that hold in the
+ chemical world. If the laws which regulate psychic
+ development and the progress of civilization were understood
+ by popular writers on Japan, and if the recent progress of
+ Japan had been stated in the terms of these laws, there
+ would not have been so much mystification in the West in
+ regard to this matter as there evidently has been. Japan
+ would not have appeared to have "jumped out of her skin," or
+ suddenly to have escaped from the heredity of her past
+ millenniums of development. This wide misunderstanding of
+ Japan, then, is not simply due to the fact that "Japanese
+ progress, traced to its causes and explained by reference to
+ the means employed, is not nearly such fascinating reading
+ as when represented in the guise of a fairy creation," but
+ it is also due to the still current popular view that the
+ social organism is biological, and subject therefore to the
+ laws of biological evolution. On this assumption, some hold
+ that the progress of Japan, however it may appear, is really
+ superficial, while others represent it as somehow having
+ evaded the laws regulating the development of other races. A
+ nation's character and characteristics are conceived to be
+ the product of brain-structure; these can change only as
+ brain structure changes. Brain is held to determine
+ civilization, rather than civilization brain. Hampered by
+ this defective view, popular writers inevitably describe
+ Japan to the West in terms that necessarily misrepresent
+ her, and that at the same time pander to Occidental pride
+ and prejudice.</p>
+
+ <p>But this misunderstanding of Japan reveals an equally
+ profound misunderstanding in regard to ourselves.
+ <a name='Page_21'
+ id="Page_21"></a>Occidental peoples are supposed to be what
+ they are in civilization and to have reached their high
+ attainments in theoretical and applied science, in
+ philosophy and in practical politics, because of their
+ unique brain-structures, brains secured through millenniums
+ of biological evolution. The following statement may seem to
+ be rank heresy to the average sociologist, but my studies
+ have led me to believe that the main differences between the
+ great races of mankind to-day are not due to biological, but
+ to social conditions; they are not physico-psychological
+ differences, but only socio-psychological differences. The
+ Anglo-Saxon is what he is because of his social heredity,
+ and the Chinaman is what he is because of his social
+ heredity. The profound difference between social and
+ physiological heredity and evolution is unappreciated except
+ by a few of the most recent sociological writers. The part
+ that association, social segregation, and social heredity
+ take in the maintenance, not only of once developed
+ languages and civilizations, but even in their genesis, has
+ been generally overlooked.</p>
+
+ <p>But a still more important factor in the determination of
+ social and psychic evolution, generally unrecognized by
+ sociologists, is the nature and function of personality.
+ Although in recent years it has been occasionally mentioned by
+ several eminent writers, personality as a principle has not
+ been made the core of any system of sociology. In my judgment,
+ however, this is the distinctive characteristic of human
+ evolution and of human association, and it should accordingly
+ be the fundamental principle of social science. Many writers on
+ the East have emphasized what they call its "impersonal"
+ characteristics. So important is this subject that I have
+ considered it at length in the body of this work.</p>
+
+ <p>Sociological phenomena cannot be fully expressed by any
+ combination of exclusively physical, biological, and psychic
+ terms, for the significant element of man and of society
+ consists of something more than these&mdash;namely,
+ personality. It is this that differentiates human from animal
+ evolution. The unit of human sociology <a name='Page_22'
+ id="Page_22"></a>is a self-conscious, self-determinative
+ being. The causative factor in the social evolution of man
+ is his personality. The goal of that evolution is developed
+ personality. Personality is thus at once the cause and the
+ end of social progress. The conditions which affect or
+ determine progress are those which affect or determine
+ personality.</p>
+
+ <p>The biological evolution of man from the animal has been, it
+ is true, frankly assumed in this work. No attempt is made to
+ justify this assumption. Let not the reader infer, however,
+ that the writer similarly assumes the adequacy of the so-called
+ naturalistic or evolutionary origin of ethics, of religion, or
+ even of social progress. It may be doubted whether Darwin,
+ Wallace, Le Conte, or any exponent of biological evolution has
+ yet given a complete statement of the factors of the
+ physiological evolution of man. It is certain, however, that
+ ethical, religious, and social writers who have striven to
+ account for the higher evolution of man, by appealing to
+ factors exclusively parallel to those which have produced the
+ physiological evolution of man, have conspicuously failed.
+ However much we may find to praise in the social
+ interpretations of such eminent writers as Comte, Spencer,
+ Ward, Fiske, Giddings, Kidd, Southerland, or even Drummond,
+ there still remains the necessity of a fuller consideration of
+ the moral and religious evolution of man. The higher evolution
+ of man cannot be adequately expressed or even understood in any
+ terms lower than those of personality.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h1><a name='Page_23'
+ id="Page_23"></a>EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE</h1>
+
+ <h2><a name='I'
+ id="I"></a>I</h2>
+
+ <h3>PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Said a well educated and widely read Englishman to the
+ writer while in Oxford, "Can you explain to me how it is that
+ the Japanese have succeeded in jumping out of their skins?" And
+ an equally thoughtful American, speaking about the recent
+ strides in civilization made by Japan, urged that this progress
+ could not be real and genuine. "How can such a mushroom-growth,
+ necessarily without deep roots in the past, be real and strong
+ and permanent? How can it escape being chiefly superficial?"
+ These two men are typical of much of the thought of the West in
+ regard to Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Seldom, perhaps never, has the civilized world so suddenly
+ and completely reversed an estimate of a nation as it has that
+ with reference to Japan. Before the recent war, to the majority
+ even of fairly educated men, Japan was little more than a name
+ for a few small islands somewhere near China, whose people were
+ peculiar and interesting. To-day there is probably not a man,
+ or woman, or child attending school in any part of the
+ civilized world, who does not know the main facts about the
+ recent war: how the small country and the men of small stature,
+ sarcastically described by their foes as "Wojen," pygmy,
+ attacked the army and navy of a country ten times their
+ size.</p>
+
+ <p>Such a universal change of opinion regarding a nation,
+ especially regarding one so remote from the centers of Western
+ civilization as Japan, could not have taken place in any
+ previous generation. The tele<a name='Page_24'
+ id="Page_24"></a>graph, the daily paper, the intelligent
+ reporters and writers of books and magazine articles, the
+ rapid steam travel and the many travelers&mdash;all these
+ have made possible this sudden acquisition of knowledge and
+ startling reversal of opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>There is reason, however, to think that much misapprehension
+ and real ignorance still exists about Japan and her leap into
+ power and world-wide prestige. Many seem to think that Japan
+ has entered on her new career through the abandonment of her
+ old civilization and the adoption of one from the
+ West&mdash;that the victories on sea and land, in Korea, at
+ Port Arthur, and a Wei-hai-wei, and more recently at Tientsin
+ and Pekin, were solely due to her Westernized navy and army.
+ Such persons freely admit that this process of Westernization
+ had been going on for many years more rapidly than the world at
+ large knew, and that consequently the reputation of Japan
+ before the war was not such as corresponded with her actual
+ attainments. But they assume that there was nothing of
+ importance in the old civilization; that it was little superior
+ to organized barbarism.</p>
+
+ <p>These people conceive of the change which has taken place in
+ Japan during the past thirty years as a revolution, not as an
+ evolution; as an abandonment of the old, and an adoption of the
+ new, civilization. They conceive the old tree of civilization
+ to have been cut down and cast into the fire, and a new tree to
+ have been imported from the West and planted in Japanese soil.
+ New Japan is, from this view-point, the new tree.</p>
+
+ <p>Not many months ago I heard of a wealthy family in Kyoto
+ which did not take kindly to the so-called improvements
+ imported from abroad, and which consequently persisted in using
+ the instruments of the older civilization. Even such a
+ convenience as the kerosene lamp, now universally adopted
+ throughout the land of the Rising Sun, this family refused to
+ admit into its home, preferring the old-style andon with its
+ vegetable oil, dim light, and flickering flame. Recently,
+ however, an electric-light company was organized in that city,
+ and this brilliant illuminant was introduced not only
+ <a name='Page_25'
+ id="Page_25"></a>into the streets and stores, but into many
+ private houses. Shortly after its introduction, the family
+ was converted to the superiority of the new method of
+ illumination, and passed at one leap from the old-style
+ lantern to the latest product of the nineteenth century.
+ This incident is considered typical of the transformations
+ characteristic of modern Japan. It is supposed that New
+ Japan is in no proper sense the legitimate product through
+ evolution of Old Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>In important ways, therefore, Japan seems to be
+ contradicting our theories of national growth. We have thought
+ that no "heathen" nation could possibly gain, much less wield,
+ unaided by Westerners, the forces of civilized Christendom. We
+ have likewise held that national growth is a slow process, a
+ gradual evolution, extending over scores and centuries of
+ years. In both respects our theories seem to be at fault. This
+ "little nation of little people," which we have been so ready
+ to condemn as "heathen" and "uncivilized," and thus to despise,
+ or to ignore, has in a single generation leaped into the
+ forefront of the world's attention.</p>
+
+ <p>Are our theories wrong? Is Japan an exception? Are our facts
+ correct? We instinctively feel that something is at fault. We
+ are not satisfied with the usual explanation of the recent
+ history of Japan. We are perhaps ready to concede that "the
+ rejection of the old and the adoption of Western civilization"
+ is the best statement whereby to account for the new power of
+ Japan and her new position among the nations, but when we stop
+ to think, we ask whether we have thus explained that for which
+ we are seeking an explanation? Do not the questions still
+ remain&mdash;Why did the Japanese so suddenly abandon Oriental
+ for Occidental civilization? And what mental and other traits
+ enabled a people who, according to the supposition, were far
+ from civilized, so suddenly to grasp and wield a civilization
+ quite alien in character and superior to their own; a
+ civilization ripened after millenniums of development of the
+ Aryan race? And how far, as a matter of fact, has this
+ assimilation gone? Not until these questions are really
+ answered has the explanation been found, So <a name='Page_26'
+ id="Page_26"></a>that, after all, the prime cause which we
+ must seek is not to be found in the external environment,
+ but rather in the internal endowment.</p>
+
+ <p>An effort to understand the ancient history of Japan
+ encounters the same problem as that raised by her modern
+ history. What mental characteristics led the Japanese a
+ thousand years ago so to absorb the Chinese civilization,
+ philosophy, and language that their own suffered a permanent
+ arrest? What religious traits led them so to take on a religion
+ from China and India that their own native religion never
+ passed beyond the most primitive development, either in
+ doctrine, in ethics, in ritual, or in organization? On the
+ other hand, what mental characteristics enabled them to
+ preserve their national independence and so to modify
+ everything brought from abroad, from the words of the new
+ language to the philosophy of the new religions, that Japanese
+ civilization, language, and religion are markedly distinct from
+ the Chinese? Why is it that, though the Japanese so fell under
+ the bondage of the Chinese language as permanently to enslave
+ and dwarf their own beautiful tongue, expressing the dominant
+ thought of every sentence with characters (ideographs) borrowed
+ from China, yet at the same time so transformed what they
+ borrowed that no Chinaman can read and understand a Japanese
+ book or newspaper?</p>
+
+ <p>The same questions recur at this new period of Japan's
+ national life. Why has she so easily turned from the customs of
+ centuries? What are the mental traits that have made her
+ respond so differently from her neighbor to the environment of
+ the nineteenth-century civilization of the West Why is it that
+ Japan has sent thousands of her students to these Western lands
+ to see and study and bring back all that is good in them, while
+ China has remained in stolid self-satisfaction, seeing nothing
+ good in the West and its ways? To affirm that the difference is
+ due to the environment alone is impossible, for the environment
+ seems to be essentially the same. This difference of attitude
+ and action must be traced, it would seem, to differences of
+ mental and temperamental characteristics. Those
+ <a name='Page_27'
+ id="Page_27"></a>who seek to understand the secret of
+ Japan's newly won power and reputation by looking simply at
+ her newly acquired forms of government, her reconstructed
+ national social structure, her recently constructed roads
+ and railroads, telegraphs, representative government, etc.,
+ and especially at her army and navy organized on European
+ models and armed with European weapons, are not unlike those
+ who would discover the secret of human life by the study of
+ anatomy.</p>
+
+ <p>This external view and this method of interpretation are,
+ therefore, fundamentally erroneous. Never, perhaps, has the
+ progress of a nation been so manifestly an evolution as
+ distinguished from a revolution. No foreign conquerors have
+ come in with their armies, crushing down the old and building
+ up a new civilization. No magician's wand has been waved over
+ the land to make the people forget the traditions of a thousand
+ years and fall in with those of the new r&eacute;gime. No rite
+ or incantation has been performed to charm the marvelous tree
+ of civilization and cause it to take root and grow to such
+ lofty proportions in an unprepared soil.</p>
+
+ <p>In contrast to the defective views outlined above, one need
+ not hesitate to believe that the actual process by which Old
+ Japan has been transformed into New Japan is perfectly natural
+ and necessary. It has been a continuous growth; it is not the
+ mere accumulation of external additions; it does not consist
+ alone of the acquisition of the machinery and the institutions
+ of the Occident. It is rather a development from within, based
+ upon already existing ideas and institutions. New Japan is the
+ consequence of her old endowment and her new environment. Her
+ evolution has been in progress and can be traced for at least a
+ millennium and a half, during which she has been preparing for
+ this latest step. All that was necessary for its accomplishment
+ was the new environment. The correctness of this view and the
+ reasons for it will appear as we proceed in our study of
+ Japanese characteristics. But we need to note at this point the
+ danger, into which many fall, of ascribing to Japan an
+ attainment of western civilization which the <a name='Page_28'
+ id="Page_28"></a>facts will not warrant. She has secured
+ much, but by no means all, that the West has to give.</p>
+
+ <p>We may suggest our line of thought by asking what is the
+ fundamental element of civilization? Does it consist in the
+ manifold appliances that render life luxurious; the railroad,
+ the telegraph, the post office, the manufactures, the infinite
+ variety of mechanical and other conveniences? Or is it not
+ rather the social and intellectual and ethical state of a
+ people? Manifestly the latter. The tools indeed of civilization
+ may be imported into a half-civilized, or barbarous country;
+ such importation, however, does not render the country
+ civilized, although it may assist greatly in the attainment of
+ that result. Civilization being mental, social, and ethical,
+ can arise only through the growth of the mind and character of
+ the vast multitudes of a nation. Now has Japan imported only
+ the tools of civilization? In other words, is her new
+ civilization only external, formal, nominal, unreal? That she
+ has imported much is true. Yet that her attainments and
+ progress rest on her social, intellectual, and ethical
+ development will become increasingly clear as we take up our
+ successive chapters. Under the new environment of the past
+ fifty years, this growth, particularly in intellectual, in
+ industrial, and in political lines, has been exceedingly rapid
+ as compared with the growths of other peoples.</p>
+
+ <p>This conception of the rise of New Japan will doubtless
+ approve itself to every educated man who will allow his thought
+ to rest upon the subject. For all human progress, all organic
+ evolution, proceeds by the progressive modification of the old
+ organs under new conditions. The modern locomotive did not
+ spring complete from the mind of James Watt; it is the result
+ of thousands of years of human experience and consequent
+ evolution, beginning first perhaps with a rolling log, becoming
+ a rude cart, and being gradually transformed by successive
+ inventions until it has become one of the marvels of the
+ nineteenth century. It is impossible for those who have
+ attained the view-point of modern science to conceive of
+ discontinuous progress; of continually rising types of being,
+ of thought, or of <a name='Page_29'
+ id="Page_29"></a>moral life, in which the higher does not
+ find its ground and root and thus an important part of its
+ explanation, in the lower. Such is the case not only with
+ reference: to biological evolution; it is especially true of
+ social evolution. He who would understand the Japan of
+ to-day cannot rest with the bare statement that her adoption
+ of the tools and materials of Western civilization has given
+ her her present power and place among the nations. The
+ student with historical insight knows that it is impossible
+ for one nation, off-hand, without preparation, to "adopt the
+ civilization" of another.</p>
+
+ <p>The study of the evolution of Japan is one of unusual
+ interest; first, because of the fact that Japan has experienced
+ such unique changes in her environment. Her history brings into
+ clear light some principles of evolution which the visual
+ development of a people does not make so clear.</p>
+
+ <p>In the second place, New Japan is in a state of rapid
+ growth. She is in a critical period, resembling a youth, just
+ coming to manhood, when all the powers of growth are most
+ vigorous. The latent qualities of body and mind and heart then
+ burst forth with peculiar force. In the course of four or five
+ short years the green boy develops into a refined and noble
+ man; the thoughtless girl ripens into the full maturity of
+ womanhood and of motherhood. These are the years of special
+ interest to those who would observe nature in her time of most
+ critical activity.</p>
+
+ <p>Not otherwise is it in the life of nations. There are times
+ when their growth is phenomenally rapid; when their latent
+ qualities are developed; when their growth can be watched with
+ special ease and delight, because so rapid. The Renaissance was
+ such a period in Europe. Modern art, science, and philosophy
+ took their start with the awakening of the mind of Europe at
+ that eventful and epochal period of her life. Such, I take it,
+ is the condition of Japan to-day. She is "being born again";
+ undergoing her "renaissance." Her intellect, hitherto largely
+ dormant, is but now awaking. Her ambition is equaled only by
+ her self-reliance. Her self-confidence and amazing expectations
+ have not yet been <a name='Page_30'
+ id="Page_30"></a>sobered by hard experience. Neither does
+ she, nor do her critics, know how much she can or cannot do.
+ She is in the first flush of her new-found powers; powers of
+ mind and spirit, as well as of physical force. Her dreams
+ are gorgeous with all the colors of the rainbow. Her efforts
+ are sure, to be noble in proportion as her ambitions are
+ high. The growth of the past half-century is only the
+ beginning of what we may expect to see.</p>
+
+ <p>Then again, this latest and greatest step in the evolution
+ of Japan has taken place at a time unparalleled for
+ opportunities of observation, under the incandescent light of
+ the nineteenth century, with its thousands of educated men to
+ observe and record the facts, many of whom are active agents in
+ the evolution in progress. Hundreds of papers and magazines,
+ native and European, read by tens of thousands of intelligent
+ men and women, have kept the world aware of the daily and
+ hourly events. Telegraphic dispatches and letters by the
+ million have passed between the far East and the West. It would
+ seem as if the modernizing of Japan had been providentially
+ delayed until the last half of the nineteenth century with its
+ steam and electricity, annihilators of space and time, in order
+ that her evolution might be studied with a minuteness
+ impossible in any previous age, or by any previous generation.
+ It is almost as if one were conducting an experiment in human
+ evolution in his own laboratory, imposing the conditions and
+ noting the results.</p>
+
+ <p>For still another reason is the evolution of New Japan of
+ special interest to all intelligent persons. To illustrate
+ great things by small, and human by physical, no one who has
+ visited Geneva has failed to see the beautiful mingling of the
+ Arve and the Rhone. The latter flowing from the calm Geneva
+ lake is of delicate blue, pure and limpid. The former, running
+ direct from the glaciers of Mont Blanc and the roaring bed of
+ Chamouni, bears along in its rushing waters powdered rocks and
+ loosened soil. These rivers, though joined in one bed, for
+ hundreds of rods are quite distinct; the one, turbid; the
+ other, clear as crystal; yet they press <a name='Page_31'
+ id="Page_31"></a>each against the other, now a little of the
+ Rhone's clear current forces its way into the Arve, soon to
+ be carried off, absorbed and discolored by the mass of muddy
+ water around it. Now a little of the turbid Arve forces its
+ way into the clear blue Rhone, to lose there its identity in
+ the surrounding waters. The interchange goes on, increasing
+ with the distance until, miles below, the two-rivers mingle
+ as one. No longer is it the Arve or the old Rhone, but the
+ new Rhone.</p>
+
+ <p>In Japan there is going on to-day a process unique in the
+ history of the human race. Two streams of civilization, that of
+ the far East and that of the far West, are beginning to flow in
+ a single channel. These streams are exceedingly diverse, in
+ social structure, in government, in moral ideals and standards,
+ in religion, in psychological and metaphysical conceptions. Can
+ they live together? Or is one going to drive out and annihilate
+ the other? If so, which will be victor? Or is there to be
+ modification of both? In other words, is there to be a new
+ civilization&mdash;a Japanese, an Occidento-Oriental
+ civilization?</p>
+
+ <p>The answer is plain to him who has eyes with which to see.
+ Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? No
+ more can Japan lose all trace of inherited customs of daily
+ life, of habits of thought and language, products of a thousand
+ years of training in Chinese literature, Buddhist doctrine, and
+ Confucian ethics. That "the boy is father to the man" is true
+ of a nation no less than of an individual. What a youth has
+ been at home in his habits of thought, in his purpose and
+ spirit and in their manifestation in action, will largely
+ determine his after-life. In like manner the mental and moral
+ history of Japan has so stamped certain characteristics on her
+ language, on her thought, and above all on her temperament and
+ character, that, however she may strive to Westernize herself,
+ it is impossible for her to obliterate her Oriental features.
+ She will inevitably and always remain Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>Japan has already produced an Occidento-Oriental
+ civilization. Time will serve progressively to Occidentalize
+ it. But there is no reason for thinking that it will
+ <a name='Page_32'
+ id="Page_32"></a>ever become wholly Occidentalized. A
+ Westerner visiting Japan will always be impressed with its
+ Oriental features, while an Asiatic will be impressed with
+ its Occidental features. This progressive Occidentalization
+ of Japan will take place according to the laws of social
+ evolution, of which we must speak somewhat more fully in a
+ later chapter.</p>
+
+ <p>An important question bearing on this problem is the precise
+ nature of the characteristics differentiating the Occident and
+ the Orient. What exactly do we mean when we say that the
+ Japanese are Oriental and will always bear the marks of the
+ Orient in their civilization, however much they may absorb from
+ the West? The importance and difficulty of this question have
+ led the writer to defer its consideration till toward the close
+ of this work.</p>
+
+ <p>If one would gain adequate conception of the process now
+ going on, the illustration already used of the mingling of two
+ rivers needs to be supplemented by another, corresponding to a
+ separate class of facts. Instead of the mingling of rivers, let
+ us watch the confluence of two glaciers. What pressures! What
+ grindings! What upheavals! What rendings! Such is the mingling
+ of two civilizations. It is not smooth and Noiseless, but
+ attended with pressure and pain. It is a collision in more ways
+ than one. The unfortunates on whom the pressures of both
+ currents are directed are often quite destroyed.</p>
+
+ <p>Comparison is often made between Japan and India. In both
+ countries enormous social changes are taking place; in both,
+ Eastern and Western civilizations are in contact and in
+ conflict. The differences, however, are even more striking than
+ the likenesses. Most conspicuous is the fact that whereas, in
+ India, the changes in civilization are due almost wholly to the
+ force and rule of the conquering race, in Japan these changes
+ are spontaneous, attributable entirely to the desire and
+ initiative of the native rulers. This difference is fundamental
+ and vital. The evolution of society in India is to a large
+ degree compulsory; in a true sense it is an artificial
+ evolution. In Japan, on the other hand, evolution is
+ <a name='Page_33'
+ id="Page_33"></a>natural. There has not been the slightest
+ physical compulsion laid on her from without. With two rare
+ exceptions, Japan has never heard the boom of foreign cannon
+ carrying destruction to her people. During these years of
+ change, there have been none but Japanese rulers, and such
+ has been the case throughout the entire period of Japanese
+ history. Their native rulers have introduced changes such as
+ foreign rulers would hardly have ventured upon. The adoption
+ of the Chinese language, literature, and religions from ten
+ to twelve centuries ago, was not occasioned by a military
+ occupancy of Japanese soil by invaders from China. It was
+ due absolutely to the free choice of their versatile people,
+ as free and voluntary as was the adoption by Rome of Greek
+ literature and standards of learning. The modern choice of
+ Western material civilization no doubt had elements of fear
+ as motive power. But impulsion through a knowledge of
+ conditions differs radically from compulsion exercised by a
+ foreign military occupancy. India illustrates the latter;
+ Japan, the former.</p>
+
+ <p>Japan and her people manifest amazing contrasts. Never, on
+ the one hand, has a nation been so free from foreign military
+ occupancy throughout a history covering more than fifteen
+ centuries, and at the same time, been so influenced by and even
+ subject to foreign psychical environment. What was the fact in
+ ancient times is the fact to-day. The dominance of China and
+ India has been largely displaced by that of Europe. Western
+ literature, language, and science, and even customs, are being
+ welcomed by Japan, and are working their inevitable effects.
+ But it is all perfectly natural, perfectly spontaneous. The
+ present choice by Japan of modern science and education and
+ methods and principles of government and nineteenth-century
+ literature and law,&mdash;in a word, of Occidental
+ civilization,&mdash;is not due to any artificial pressure or
+ military occupancy. But the choice and the consequent evolution
+ are wholly due to the free act of the people. In this, as in
+ several other respects, Japan reminds us of ancient Greece. Dr.
+ Menzies, in his "History of Religion," says: "Greece was not
+ conquered from the East, but stirred to new life
+ <a name='Page_34'
+ id="Page_34"></a>by the communication of new ideas." Free
+ choice has made Japan reject Chinese astronomy, surgery,
+ medicine, and jurisprudence. The early choice to admit
+ foreigners to Japan to trade may have been made entirely
+ through fear, but is now accepted and justified by reason
+ and choice.</p>
+
+ <p>The true explanation, therefore, of the recent and rapid
+ rise of Japan to power and reputation, is to be found, not in
+ the externals of her civilization, not in the pressure of
+ foreign governments, but rather in the inherited mental and
+ temperamental characteristics, reacting on the new and
+ stimulating environment, and working along the lines of true
+ evolution. Japan has not "jumped out of her skin," but a new
+ vitality has given that skin a new color.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='II'
+ id="II"></a><a name='Page_35'
+ id="Page_35"></a>II</h2>
+
+ <h3>HISTORICAL SKETCH</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>How many of the stories of the Kojiki (written in 712 A.D.)
+ and Nihongi (720 A.D.) are to be accepted is still a matter of
+ dispute among scholars. Certain it is, however, that Japanese
+ early history is veiled in a mythology which seems to center
+ about three prominent points: Kyushu, in the south; Yamato, in
+ the east central, and Izumo in the west central region. This
+ mythological history narrates the circumstances of the victory
+ of the southern descendants of the gods over the two central
+ regions. And it has been conjectured that these three centers
+ represent three waves of migration that brought the ancestors
+ of the present inhabitants of Japan to these shores. The
+ supposition is that they came quite independently and began
+ their conflicts only after long periods of residence and
+ multiplication.</p>
+
+ <p>Though this early record is largely mythological, tradition
+ shows us the progenitors of the modern Japanese people as
+ conquerors from the west and south who drove the aborigines
+ before them and gradually took possession of the entire land.
+ That these conquerors were not all of the same stock is proved
+ by the physical appearance of the Japanese to-day, and by their
+ language. Through these the student traces an early mixture of
+ races&mdash;the Malay, the Mongolian, and the Ural-Altaic.
+ Whether the early crossing of these races bears vital relation
+ to the plasticity of the Japanese is a question which tempts
+ the scholar.</p>
+
+ <p>Primitive, inter-tribal conflicts of which we have no
+ reliable records resulted in increasing intercourse. Victory
+ was followed by federation. And through the development of a
+ common language, of common customs and common ideas, the tribes
+ were unified socially <a name='Page_36'
+ id="Page_36"></a>and psychically. Consciousness of this
+ unity was emphasized by the age-long struggle against the
+ Ainu, who were not completely conquered until the eighteenth
+ century.</p>
+
+ <p>With the dawn of authentic history (500-600 A.D.) we find
+ amalgamation of the conquering tribes, with, however,
+ constantly recurring inter-clan and inter-family wars. Many of
+ these continued for scores and even hundreds of
+ years&mdash;proving that, in the modern sense, of the word, the
+ Japanese were not yet a nation, though, through inter-marriage,
+ through the adoption of important elements of civilization
+ brought from China and India via Korea, through the nominal
+ acceptance of the Emperor as the divinely appointed ruler of
+ the land, they were, in race and in civilization, a fairly
+ homogeneous people.</p>
+
+ <p>The national governmental system was materially affected by
+ the need, throughout many centuries, of systematic methods of
+ defense against the Ainu. The rise of the Shogunate dates back
+ to 883 A.D., when the chief of the forces opposing the Ainu was
+ appointed by the Emperor and bore the official title, "The
+ Barbarian-expelling Generalissimo." This office developed in
+ power until, some centuries later, it usurped in fact, if not
+ in name, all the imperial prerogatives.</p>
+
+ <p>It is probable that the Chinese written language,
+ literature, and ethical teachings of Confucius came to Japan
+ from Korea after the Christian era. The oldest known Japanese
+ writings (Japanese written with Chinese characters) date from
+ the eighth century. In this period also Buddhism first came to
+ Japan. For over a hundred years it made relatively little
+ progress. But when at last in the ninth and tenth centuries
+ native Japanese Buddhists popularized its doctrines and adopted
+ into its theogony the deities of the aboriginal religion, now
+ known as Shinto, Buddhism became the religion of the people,
+ and filled the land with its great temples, praying priests,
+ and gorgeous rituals.</p>
+
+ <p>Even in those early centuries the contact of Japan with her
+ Oriental neighbors revealed certain traits of her character
+ which have been conspicuous in recent times
+ &mdash;<a name='Page_37'
+ id="Page_37"></a>great capacity for acquisition, and
+ readiness to adopt freely from foreign nations. Her contact
+ with China, at that time so far in advance of herself in
+ every element of civilization, was in some respects
+ disastrous to her original growth. Instead of working out
+ the problems of thought and life for herself, she took what
+ China and Korea had to give. The result was an arrest in the
+ development of everything distinctively native. The native
+ religion was so absorbed by Buddhism that for a thousand
+ years it lost all self-consciousness. Indeed the modern
+ clear demarcation between the native and the imported
+ religions is a matter of only a few decades, due to the
+ researches of native scholars during the latter part of the
+ last and the early part of this century. Even now,
+ multitudes of the common people know no difference between
+ the various elements of the composite religion of which they
+ are the heirs.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, early contact with China and her enormous
+ literature checked the development of the native language and
+ the growth of the native literature. The language suffered
+ arrest because of the rapid introduction of Chinese terms for
+ all the growing needs of thought and civilization. Modern
+ Japanese is a compound of the original tongue and Japonicized
+ Chinese. Native speculative thought likewise found little
+ encouragement or stimulus to independent activity in the
+ presence of the elaborate and in many respects profound
+ philosophies brought from India and China.</p>
+
+ <p>From earliest times the government of Japan was essentially
+ feudal. Powerful families and clans disputed and fought for
+ leadership, and the political history of Japan revolves around
+ the varying fortunes of these families. While the Imperial line
+ is never lost to sight, it seldom rises to real power.</p>
+
+ <p>When, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Japan's
+ conquering arm reached across the waters, to ravage the coast
+ of China, to extend her influence as far south as Siam, and
+ even to invade Korea with a large army in 1592, it looked as if
+ she were well started on her career as a world-power. But that
+ was not yet to be. The hegemony of her clans passed into the
+ powerful and <a name='Page_38'
+ id="Page_38"></a>shrewd Tokugawa family, the policy of which
+ was peace and national self-sufficiency.</p>
+
+ <p>The representatives of the Occidental nations (chiefly of
+ Spain and Portugal) were banished. The Christian religion
+ (Roman Catholic), which for over fifty years had enjoyed free
+ access and had made great progress, was forbidden and stamped
+ out, not without much bloodshed. Foreign travel and commerce
+ were strictly interdicted. A particular school of Confucian
+ ethics was adopted and taught as the state religion. Feudalism
+ was systematically established and intentionally developed.
+ Each and every man had his assigned and recognized place in the
+ social fabric, and change was not easy. It is doubtful if any
+ European country has ever given feudalism so long and thorough
+ a trial. Never has feudalism attained so complete a development
+ as it did in Japan under the Tokugawa r&eacute;gime of over 250
+ years.</p>
+
+ <p>During this period no influences came from other lands to
+ disturb the natural development. With the exception of three
+ ships a year from Holland, an occasional stray ship from other
+ lands, and from fifteen to twenty Dutchmen isolated in a little
+ island in the harbor of Nagasaki, Japan had no communication
+ with foreign lands or alien peoples.</p>
+
+ <p>Of this period, extending to the middle of the present
+ century, the ordinary visitor and even the resident have but a
+ superficial knowledge. All the changes that have taken place in
+ Japan, since the coming of Perry in 1854, are attributed by the
+ easy-going tourist to the external pressure of foreign nations.
+ But such travelers know nothing of the internal preparations
+ that had been making for generations previous to the arrival of
+ Perry. The tourist is quite ignorant of the line of Japanese
+ scholars that had been undermining the authority of the
+ military rulers, "the Tokugawa," in favor of the Imperial line
+ which they had practically supplanted.</p>
+
+ <p>The casual student of Japan has been equally ignorant of the
+ real mental and moral caliber of the Japanese. Dressed in
+ clothing that appeared to us fantastic, and armed with
+ cumbersome armor and old-fashioned <a name='Page_39'
+ id="Page_39"></a>guns, it was easy to jump to the conclusion
+ that the people were essentially uncivilized. We did not
+ know the intellectual discipline demanded of one, whether
+ native or foreign, who would master the native language or
+ the native systems of thought. We forgot that we appeared as
+ grotesque and as barbarous to them as they to us, and that
+ mental ability and moral worth are qualities that do not
+ show on the surface of a nation's civilization. While they
+ thought us to be "unclean," "dogs," "red-haired devils," we
+ perhaps thought them to be clever savages, or at best
+ half-civilized heathen, without moral perceptions or
+ intellectual ability.</p>
+
+ <p>Of Old Japan little more needs to be said. Without external
+ commerce, there was little need for internal trade; ships were
+ small; roads were footpaths; education was limited to the
+ samurai, or military class, retainers of the daimyo, "feudal
+ lords"; inter-clan travel was limited and discouraged;
+ Confucian ethics was the moral standard. From the beginning of
+ the seventeenth century Christianity was forbidden by edict,
+ and was popularly known as the "evil way"; Japan was thought to
+ be especially sacred, and the coming of foreigners was supposed
+ to pollute the land and to be the cause of physical evils.
+ Education, as in China, was limited to the Chinese classics.
+ Mathematics, general history, and science, in the modern sense,
+ were of course wholly unknown. Guns and powder were brought
+ from the West in the sixteenth century by Spaniards and
+ Portuguese, but were never improved. Ship-building was the same
+ in the middle of the nineteenth century as in the middle of the
+ sixteenth, perhaps even less advanced. Architecture had
+ received its great impulse from the introduction of Buddhism in
+ the ninth and tenth centuries and had made no material
+ improvement thereafter.</p>
+
+ <p>But while there was little progress in the external and
+ mechanical elements of civilization, there was progress in
+ other respects. During the "great peace," first arose great
+ scholars. Culture became more general throughout the nation.
+ Education was esteemed. The corrupt lives of the priests were
+ condemned and an effort was made to reform life through the
+ revival of a <a name='Page_40'
+ id="Page_40"></a>certain school of Confucian teachers known
+ as "Shin-Gaku"&mdash;"Heart-Knowledge." Art also made
+ progress, both pictorial and manual. It would almost seem as
+ if modern artificers and painters had lost the skill of
+ their forefathers of one or two hundred years ago.</p>
+
+ <p>Many reasons explain the continuance of the old political
+ and social order: the lack of a foreign foe to compel
+ abandonment of the tribal organisation; the mountainous nature
+ of the country with its slow, primitive means of
+ intercommunication; the absence of all idea of a completely
+ centralized nation. Furthermore, the principle of complete
+ subordination to superiors and ancestors had become so strong
+ that individual innovations were practically impossible. Japan
+ thus lacked the indispensable key to further progress, the
+ principle of individualism. The final step in the development
+ of her nationality has been taken, therefore, only in our own
+ time.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Japan seemed absolutely committed to a thorough-going
+ antagonism to everything foreign. New Japan seems committed to
+ the opposite policy. What are the steps by which she has
+ effected this apparent national reversal of attitude?</p>
+
+ <p>We should first note that the absolutism of the Tokugawa
+ Shogunate served to arouse ever-growing opposition because of
+ its stern repression of individual opinion. It not only forbade
+ the Christian religion, but also all independent thought in
+ religious philosophy and in politics. The particular form of
+ Confucian moral philosophy which it held was forced on all
+ public teachers of Confucianism. Dissent was not only
+ heretical, but treasonable. Although, by its military
+ absolutism, the Tokugawa rule secured the great blessing of
+ peace, lasting over two hundred years, and although the curse
+ of Japan for well-nigh a thousand preceding years had been
+ fierce inter-tribal and inter-family wars and feuds, yet it
+ secured that peace at the expense of individual liberty of
+ thought and act. It thus gradually aroused against itself the
+ opposition of many able minds. The enforced peace rendered it
+ possible for these men to devote themselves to problems of
+ thought and of his<a name='Page_41'
+ id="Page_41"></a>tory. Indeed, they had no other outlet for
+ their energies. As they studied the history of the past and
+ compared their results with the facts of the present, it
+ gradually dawned on the minds of the scholars of the
+ eighteenth century, that the Tokugawa family were exercising
+ functions of government which had never been delegated to
+ them; and that the Emperor was a poverty-stricken puppet in
+ the hands of a family that had seized the military power and
+ had gradually absorbed all the active functions of
+ government, together with its revenues.</p>
+
+ <p>It is possible for us to see now that these early Japanese
+ scholars idealized their ancient history, and assigned to the
+ Emperor a place in ancient times which in all probability he
+ has seldom held. But, however that may be, they thought their
+ view correct, and held that the Emperor was being deprived of
+ his rightful rule by the Tokugawa family.</p>
+
+ <p>These ideas, first formulated in secret by scholars,
+ gradually filtered down, still in secrecy, and were accepted by
+ a large number of the samurai, the military literati of the
+ land. Their opposition to the actual rulers of the land,
+ aroused by the individual-crushing absolutism of the Tokugawa
+ rule, naturally allied itself to the religious sentiment of
+ loyalty to the Emperor. Few Westerners can appreciate the full
+ significance of this fact. Throughout the centuries loyalty to
+ the Emperor has been considered a cardinal virtue. With one
+ exception, according to the popular histories, no one ever
+ acknowledged himself opposed to the Emperor. Every rebellion
+ against the powers in actual possession made it the first aim
+ to gain possession of the Emperor, and proclaim itself as
+ fighting for him. When, therefore, the scholars announced that
+ the existing government was in reality a usurpation and that
+ the Emperor was robbed of his rightful powers, the latent
+ antagonism to the Tokugawa rule began to find both intellectual
+ and moral justification. It could and did appeal to the
+ religious patriotism of the people. It is perhaps not too much
+ to say that the overthrow of the Tokugawa family and the
+ restoration of the Imperial rule to the Imperial
+ <a name='Page_42'
+ id="Page_42"></a>family would have taken place even though
+ there had been no interference of foreign nations, no
+ extraneous influences. But equally certain is it that these
+ antagonisms to the ruling family were crystallized, and the
+ great internal changes hastened by the coming in of the
+ aggressive foreign nations. How this external influence
+ operated must and can be told in a few words.</p>
+
+ <p>When Admiral Perry negotiated his treaty with the Japanese,
+ he supposed he was dealing with responsible representatives of
+ the government. As was later learned, however, the Tokugawa
+ rulers had not secured the formal assent of the Emperor to the
+ treaty. The Tokugawa rulers and their counselors, quite as much
+ as the clan-rulers, wished to keep the foreigners out of the
+ country, but they realized their inability. The rulers of the
+ clans, however, felt that the Tokugawa rulers had betrayed the
+ land; they were, accordingly, in active opposition both to the
+ foreigners and to the national rulers. When the foreigners
+ requested the Japanese government, "the Tokugawa Shogunate," to
+ carry out the treaties, it was unable to comply with the
+ request because of the antagonism of the clan-rulers. When the
+ clan-rulers demanded that the government annul the treaties and
+ drive out the hated and much-feared foreigners, it found itself
+ utterly unable to do so, because of the formidable naval power
+ of the foreigners.</p>
+
+ <p>As a consequence of this state of affairs, a few serious
+ collisions took place between the foreigners and the
+ two-sworded samurai, retainers of the clan-rulers. The Tokugawa
+ rulers apparently did their best to protect the foreigners,
+ and, when there was no possible method of evasion, to execute
+ the treaties they had made. But they could not control the
+ clans already rebellious. A few murders of foreigners, followed
+ by severe reprisals, and two bombardments of native towns by
+ foreign gunboats, began to reveal to the military class at
+ large that no individual or local action against the foreigners
+ was at all to be thought of. The first step necessary was the
+ unification of the Empire under the Imperial rule. This,
+ however, could be done only by the overthrow of
+ <a name='Page_43'
+ id="Page_43"></a>the Tokugawa Shogunate; which was effected
+ in 1867-68 after a short struggle, marked by great
+ clemency.</p>
+
+ <p>We thus realize that the overthrow of the Shogunate as also
+ the final abolishment of feudalism with its clans, lords, and
+ hereditary rulers, and the establishment of those principles of
+ political and personal centralization which lie at the
+ foundation of real national unity, not only were hastened by,
+ but in a marked degree dependent on, the stimulus and
+ contribution of foreigners. They compelled a more complete
+ Japanese unity than had existed before, for they demanded
+ direct relations with the national head. And when treaty
+ negotiations revealed the lack of such a head, they undertook
+ to show its necessity by themselves punishing those local
+ rulers who did not recognize the Tokugawa headship.</p>
+
+ <p>With the establishment of the Emperor on the throne, began
+ the modern era in Japanese history, known in Japan as
+ "Meiji"&mdash;"Enlightened Rule."</p>
+
+ <p>But not even yet was the purpose of the nation attained,
+ namely, the expulsion of the polluters of the sacred soil of
+ Japan. As soon as the new government was established and had
+ turned its attention to foreign affairs, it found itself in as
+ great a dilemma as had its predecessors, the Tokugawa rulers.
+ For the foreign governments insisted that the treaties
+ negotiated with the old government should be accepted in full
+ by the new. It was soon as evident to the new rulers as it had
+ been to the old that direct and forcible resistance to the
+ foreigners was futile. Not by might were they to be overcome.
+ Westerners had, however, supplied the ideals whereby national,
+ political unity was to be secured. Mill's famous work on
+ "Representative Government" was early translated, and read by
+ all the thinking men of the day. These ideas were also keenly
+ studied in their actual workings in the West. The consequence
+ was that feudalism was utterly rejected and the new ideas, more
+ or less modified, were speedily adopted, even down to the
+ production of a constitution and the establishment of local
+ representative assemblies and a national diet. In other words,
+ the theories and practices of the West in regard to the
+ political or<a name='Page_44'
+ id="Page_44"></a>ganization of the state supplied Japan with
+ those new intellectual variations which were essential to
+ the higher development of her own national unity.</p>
+
+ <p>A further point of importance is the fact that at the very
+ time that the West applied this pressure and supplied Japan
+ with these political ideals she also put within her reach the
+ material instruments which would enable her to carry them into
+ practice. I refer to steam locomotion by land and sea, the
+ postal and telegraphic systems of communication, the steam
+ printing press, the system of popular education, and the modern
+ organization of the army and the navy. These instruments Japan
+ made haste to acquire. But for these, the rapid transformation
+ of Old Japan into New Japan would have been an exceedingly long
+ and difficult process. The adoption of these tools of
+ civilization by the central authority at once gave it an
+ immense superiority over any local force. For it could
+ communicate speedily with every part of the Empire, and enforce
+ its decisions with a celerity and a decisiveness before
+ unknown. It became once more the actual head of the nation.</p>
+
+ <p>We have thus reached the explanation of one of the most
+ astonishing changes in national attitude that history has to
+ record, and the new attitude seems such a contradiction of the
+ old as to be inexplicable, and almost incredible. But a better
+ knowledge of the facts and a deeper understanding of their
+ significance will serve to remove this first impression.</p>
+
+ <p>What, then, did the new government do? It simply said, "For
+ us to drive out these foreigners is impossible; but neither is
+ it desirable. We need to know the secrets of their power. We
+ must study their language, their science, their machinery,
+ their steamboats, their battle-ships. We must learn all their
+ secrets, and then we shall be able to turn them out without
+ difficulty. Let us therefore restrict them carefully to the
+ treaty ports, but let us make all the use of them we can."</p>
+
+ <p>This has virtually been the national policy of Japan ever
+ since. And this policy gained the acceptance of the people as a
+ whole with marvelous readiness, for a reason which few
+ foreigners can appreciate. Had this <a name='Page_45'
+ id="Page_45"></a>policy been formulated and urged by the
+ Tokugawa rulers, there is no probability that it would have
+ been accepted. But because it was, ostensibly at least, the
+ declared will of the Emperor, loyalty to him, which in Japan
+ is both religion and patriotism, led to a hearty and
+ complete acceptance which could hardly have been realized in
+ any other land. During the first year of his "enlightened"
+ rule (1868), the Emperor gave his sanction to an Edict, the
+ last two clauses of which read as follows:</p>
+
+ <p>"The old, uncivilized way shall be replaced by the eternal
+ principles of the universe.</p>
+
+ <p>"The best knowledge shall be sought throughout the world, so
+ as to promote the Imperial welfare."</p>
+
+ <p>It is the wide acceptance of this policy, which, however, is
+ in accord with the real genius of the people, that has
+ transformed Japan. It has sent hundreds of its young men to
+ foreign lands to learn and bring back to Japan the secrets of
+ Western power and wealth; it has established roads and
+ railways, postal and telegraphic facilities, a public
+ common-school system, colleges and a university in which
+ Western science, history, and languages have been taught by
+ foreign and foreign-trained instructors; daily, weekly, and
+ monthly papers and magazines; factories, docks, drydocks; local
+ and foreign commerce; representative government&mdash;in a
+ word, all the characteristic features of New Japan. The whole
+ of New Japan is only the practical carrying out of the policy
+ adopted at the beginning of the new era, when it was found
+ impossible to cast out the foreigners by force. Brute force
+ being found to be out of the question, resort was thus made to
+ intellectual force, and with real success.</p>
+
+ <p>The practice since then has not been so much to retain the
+ foreigner as to learn of him and then to eliminate him. Every
+ branch of learning and industry has proved this to be the
+ consistent Japanese policy. No foreigner may hope to obtain a
+ permanent position in Japanese employ, either in private firms
+ or in the government. A foreigner is useful not for what he can
+ do, but for what he can teach. When any Japanese can do
+ <a name='Page_46'
+ id="Page_46"></a>his work tolerably well, the foreigner is
+ sure to be dropped.</p>
+
+ <p>The purpose of this volume does not require of us a minute
+ statistical statement of the present attainments of New Japan.
+ Such information may be procured from Henry Norman's "Real
+ Japan," Ransome's "Japan in Transition," and Newton's "Japan:
+ Country, Court, and People." It is enough for us to realize
+ that Japan has wholly abandoned or profoundly modified all the
+ external features of her old, her distinctively Oriental
+ civilization and has replaced them by Occidental features. In
+ government, she is no longer arbitrary, autocratic, and
+ hereditary, but constitutional and representative. Town,
+ provincial, and national legislative assemblies are
+ established, and in fairly good working order, all over the
+ land. The old feudal customs have been replaced by well
+ codified laws, which are on the whole faithfully administered
+ according to Occidental methods. Examination by torture has
+ been abolished. The perfect Occidentalization of the army, and
+ the creation of an efficient navy, are facts fully demonstrated
+ to the world. The limited education of the few&mdash;- and in
+ exclusively Chinese classics&mdash;has given place to popular
+ education. Common schools number over 30,000, taught by about
+ 100,000 teachers (4278 being women), having over 4,500,000
+ pupils (over 1,500,000 being girls). The school accommodation
+ is insufficient; it is said that 30,000 additional teachers are
+ needed at once. Middle and high schools throughout the land are
+ rejecting nearly one-half of the student applicants for lack of
+ accommodation.</p>
+
+ <p>Feudal isolation, repression, and seclusion have given way
+ to free travel, free speech, and a free press. Newspapers,
+ magazines, and books pour forth from the universal printing
+ press in great profusion. Twenty dailies issue in the course of
+ a year over a million copies each, while two of them circulate
+ 24,000,000 and 21,000,000 copies, respectively.</p>
+
+ <p>Personal, political, and religious liberty has been
+ practically secure now for over two decades, guaranteed by the
+ constitution, and enforced by the courts.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_47'
+ id="Page_47"></a>Chinese medical practice has largely been
+ replaced by that from the West, although many of the
+ ignorant classes still prefer the old methods. The
+ government enforces Western hygienic principles in all
+ public matters, with the result that the national health has
+ improved and the population is growing at an alarming rate.
+ While in 1872 the people numbered 33,000,000, in 1898 they
+ numbered 45,000,000. The general scale of living for the
+ common people has also advanced conspicuously. Meat shops
+ are now common throughout the land&mdash;a thing unknown in
+ pre-Meiji times&mdash;and rice, which used to be the luxury
+ of the wealthy few, has become the staple necessity of the
+ many.</p>
+
+ <p>Postal and telegraph facilities are quite complete.
+ Macadamized roads and well-built railroads have replaced the
+ old footpaths, except in the most mountainous districts.
+ Factories of many kinds are appearing in every town and city.
+ Business corporations, banks, etc., which numbered only
+ thirty-four so late as 1864 are now numbered by the thousand,
+ and trade flourishes as in no previous period of Japanese
+ history. Instead of being a country of farmers and soldiers,
+ Japan is to-day a land of farmers and merchants. Wealth is
+ growing apace. International commerce, too, has sprung up and
+ expanded phenomenally. Japanese merchant steamers may now be
+ seen in every part of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>All these changes have taken place within about three
+ decades, and so radical have they been,&mdash;so productive of
+ new life in Japan,&mdash;that some have urged the re-writing of
+ Japanese history, making the first year of Meiji (1868) the
+ year one of Japan, instead of reckoning from the year in which
+ Jimmu Tenno is said to have ascended the throne, 2560 years ago
+ (B.C. 660).</p>
+
+ <p>The way in which Japanese regard the transformations
+ produced by the "restoration" of the present Emperor, upon the
+ overthrow of the "Bakufu," or "Curtain Government," may be
+ judged from the following graphic paragraph from <i>The Far
+ East</i>:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"The Restoration of Meiji was indeed the greatest of
+ revolutions that this island empire ever underwent.
+ <a name='Page_48'
+ id="Page_48"></a>Its magic wand left nothing untouched
+ and unchanged. It was the Restoration that overthrew the
+ Tokugawa Shogunate, which reigned supreme for over two
+ centuries and a half. It was the Restoration that
+ brought us face to face with the Occidentals. It was the
+ Restoration that pulled the demigods of the Feudal lords
+ down to the level of the commoners. It was the
+ Restoration that deprived the samurai of their fiefs and
+ reduced them to penury. It was the Restoration that
+ taught the people to build their houses of bricks and
+ stones and to construct ships and bridges of iron
+ instead of wood. It was the Restoration that informed us
+ that eclipses and comets are not to be feared, and that
+ earthquakes are not caused by a huge cat-fish in the
+ bottom of the earth. It was the Restoration that taught
+ the people to use the "drum-backing" thunder as their
+ messenger, and to make use of the railroad instead of
+ the palanquin. It was the Restoration that set the earth
+ in motion, and proved that there is no rabbit in the
+ moon. It was the Restoration that bestowed on Socrates
+ and Aristotle the chairs left vacant by Confucius and
+ Mencius. It was the Restoration that let Shakspere and
+ Goethe take the place of Bakin and Chikamatsu. It was
+ the Restoration that deprived the people of the swords
+ and topnots. In short, after the Restoration a great
+ change took place in administration, in art, in science,
+ in literature, in language spoken and written, in taste,
+ in custom, in the mode of living, nay in everything" (p.
+ 541).</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A natural outcome of the Restoration is the exuberant
+ patriotism that is so characteristic a feature of New Japan.
+ The very term "ai-koku-shin" is a new creation, almost as new
+ as the thing. This word is an incidental proof of the general
+ correctness of the contention of this chapter that true
+ nationality is a recent product in Japan. The term, literally
+ translated, is "love-country heart"; but the point for us to
+ notice particularly is the term for country, "koku"; this word
+ has never before meant the country as a whole, but only the
+ territory of a clan. If I wish to ask a Japanese
+ <a name='Page_49'
+ id="Page_49"></a>what part of Japan is his native home, I
+ must use this word. And if a Japanese wishes to ask me which
+ of the foreign lands I am a native of, he must use the same
+ word. The truth is that Old Japan did not have any common
+ word corresponding to the English term, "My country." In
+ ancient times, this could only mean, "My clan-territory."
+ But with the passing away of the clans the old word has
+ taken on a new significance. The new word, "ai-koku-shin,"
+ refers not to love of clan, but to love of the whole nation.
+ The conception of national unity has at last seized upon the
+ national mind and heart, and is giving the people an
+ enthusiasm for the nation, regardless of the parts, which
+ they never before knew. Japanese patriotism has only in this
+ generation come to self-consciousness. This leads it to many
+ a strange freak. It is vociferous and imperious, and often
+ very impractical and Chauvinistic. It frequently takes the
+ form of uncompromising disdain for the foreigner, and the
+ most absolute loyalty to the Emperor of Japan; it demands
+ the utmost respect of expression in regard to him and the
+ form of government he has graciously granted the nation. The
+ slightest hint or indirect suggestion of defect or
+ ignorance, or even of limitation, is most vehemently
+ resented.</p>
+
+ <p>A few illustrations of the above statements from recent
+ experience will not be out of place. In August, 1891, the
+ Minister of Education, Mr. Y. Osaki, criticising the tendency
+ in Japan to pay undue respect to moneyed men, said, in the
+ course of a long speech, "You Japanese worship money even more
+ reverently than the Americans do. If you had a republic as they
+ have, I believe you would nominate an Iwazaki or a Mitsui to be
+ president, whereas they don't think of nominating a Vanderbilt
+ or a Gould." It was not long before a storm was raging around
+ his head because of this reference to a republican form of
+ government as a possibility in Japan. The storm became so
+ fierce that he was finally compelled to resign his post and
+ retire, temporarily, from political life.</p>
+
+ <p>In October, 1898, the High Council of Education was required
+ to consider various questions regarding the <a name='Page_50'
+ id="Page_50"></a>conduct of the educational department after
+ the New Treaties should come into force. The most important
+ question was whether foreigners should be allowed to have a
+ part in the education of Japanese youth. The general
+ argument, and that which prevailed, was that this should not
+ be allowed lest the patriotism of the children be weakened.
+ So far as appears but one voice was raised for a more
+ liberal policy. Mr. Y. Kamada maintained that "patriotism in
+ Japan was the outcome of foreign intercourse. Patriotism,
+ that is to say, love of country&mdash;not merely of
+ fief&mdash;and readiness to sacrifice everything for its
+ sake, was a product of the Meiji era."</p>
+
+ <p>In 1891 a teacher in the Kumamoto Boys' School gave
+ expression to the thought in a public address that, as all
+ mankind are brothers, the school should stand for the principle
+ of universal brotherhood and universal good-will to men. This
+ expression of universalism was so obnoxious to the patriotic
+ spirit of so large a number of the people of Kumamoto Ken, or
+ Province, that the governor required the school to dismiss that
+ teacher. There is to-day a strong party in Japan which makes
+ "Japanism" their cry; they denounce all expressions of
+ universal good-will as proofs of deficiency of patriotism.
+ There are not wanting those who see through the shallowness of
+ such views and who vigorously oppose and condemn such narrow
+ patriotism. Yet the fact that it exists to-day with such force
+ must be noted and its natural explanation, too, must not be
+ forgotten. It is an indication of self-conscious
+ nationality.</p>
+
+ <p>That this love of country, even this conception of country,
+ is a modern thing will appear from two further facts. Until
+ modern times there was no such thing as a national flag. The
+ flaming Sun on a field of white came into existence as a
+ national flag only in 1859. The use of the Sun as the symbol
+ for the Emperor has been in vogue since 700 A.D., the custom
+ having been adopted from China. "When in 1859 a national flag
+ corresponding to those of Europe became necessary, the Sun
+ Banner naturally stepped into the vacant
+ place."<a name='FNanchor_A_1'
+ id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href='#Footnote_A_1'><sup>[A]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The second fact is the recent origin of the festival
+ <a name='Page_51'
+ id="Page_51"></a>known as "Kigensetsu." It occurs on
+ February 11 and celebrates the alleged accession of Jimmu
+ Tenno, the first Emperor of Japan, to the throne 2560 years
+ ago (660 B.C.). The festival itself, however, was instituted
+ by Imperial decree ten years ago (1890).</p>
+
+ <p>The transformation which has come over Japan in a single
+ generation requires interpretation. Is the change real or
+ superficial? Is the new social order "a borrowed trumpery
+ garment, which will soon be rent by violent revolutions,"
+ according to the eminent student of racial psychology,
+ Professor Le Bon, or is it of "a solid nature" according to the
+ firm belief of Mr. Stanford Ransome, one of the latest writers
+ on Japan?</p>
+
+ <p>This is the problem that will engage our attention more or
+ less directly throughout this work. We shall give our chief
+ thought to the nature and development of Japanese racial
+ characteristics, believing that this alone gives the light
+ needed for the solution of the problem.<a name='FNanchor_B_2'
+ id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href='#Footnote_B_2'><sup>[B]</sup></a></p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='III'
+ id="III"></a><a name='Page_52'
+ id="Page_52"></a>III</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>What constitutes progress? And what is the true criterion
+ for its measurement? In adopting Western methods of life and
+ thought, is Japan advancing or receding? The simplicity of the
+ life of the common people, their freedom from fashions that
+ fetter the Occidental, their independence of furniture in their
+ homes, their few wants and fewer necessities&mdash;these, when
+ contrasted with the endless needs and demands of an Occidental,
+ are accepted by some as evidences of a higher stage of
+ civilization than prevails in the West.</p>
+
+ <p>The hedonistic criterion of progress is the one most
+ commonly adopted in considering the question as to whether
+ Japan is the gainer or the loser by her rapid abandonment of
+ old ways and ideas and by her equally rapid adoption of Western
+ ones in their place. Yet this appeal to happiness seems to me a
+ misleading because vague, if not altogether false, standard of
+ progress. Those who use it insist that the people of Japan are
+ losing their former happiness under the stress of new
+ conditions. Now there can be no doubt that during the "Kyu-han
+ jidai," the times before the coming in of Western waves of
+ life, the farmers were a simple, unsophisticated people; living
+ from month to month with little thought or anxiety. They may be
+ said to have been happy. The samurai who lived wholly on the
+ bounty of the daimyo led of course a tranquil life, at least so
+ far as anxiety or toil for daily rice and fish was concerned.
+ As the fathers had lived and fought and died, so did the sons.
+ To a large extent the community had all things in common; for
+ although the lord lived in relative luxury, yet in such small
+ communities there never was the great difference between
+ classes that we find in <a name='Page_53'
+ id="Page_53"></a>modern Europe and America. As a rule the
+ people were fed, if there was food. The socialistic
+ principle was practically universal. Especially was emphasis
+ laid on kinship. As a result, save among the outcast
+ classes, the extremes of poverty did not exist.</p>
+
+ <p>Were we to rest our inquiries at this point, we might say
+ that in truth the Japanese had attained the summit of progress;
+ that nothing further could be asked. But pushing our way
+ further, we find that the peace and quiet of the ordinary
+ classes of society were accompanied by many undesirable
+ features.</p>
+
+ <p>Prominent among them was the domineering spirit of the
+ military class. They alone laid claim to personal rights, and
+ popular stories are full of the free and furious ways in which
+ they used their swords. The slightest offense by one of the
+ swordless men would be paid for by a summary act of the
+ two-sworded swashbucklers, while beggars and farmers were cut
+ down without compunction, sometimes simply to test a sword. In
+ describing those times one man said to me, "They used to cut
+ off the heads of the common people as farmers cut off the head
+ of the daikon" (a variety of giant radish). I have frequently
+ asked my Japanese friends and acquaintances, whether, in view
+ of the increasing difficulties of life under the new
+ conditions, the country would not like to return to ancient
+ times and customs. But none have been ready to give me an
+ affirmative reply. On detailed questioning I have always found
+ that the surly, domineering methods, the absolutism of the
+ rulers, and the defenselessness of the people against unjust
+ arbitrary superiors would not be submitted to by a people that
+ has once tasted the joy arising from individual rights and
+ freedom and the manhood that comes from just laws for all.</p>
+
+ <p>A striking feature of those Japanese who are unchanged by
+ foreign ways is their obsequious manner toward superiors and
+ officials. The lordly and oftentimes ruthless manner of the
+ rulers has naturally cowed the subject. Whenever the higher
+ nobility traveled, the common people were commanded to fall on
+ the ground in obeisance and homage. Failure to do so was
+ pun<a name='Page_54'
+ id="Page_54"></a>ishable with instant death at the hands of
+ the retainers who accompanied the lord. During my first stay
+ in Kumamoto I was surprised that farmers, coming in from the
+ country on horseback, meeting me as I walked, invariably got
+ down from their horses, unfastened the handkerchiefs from
+ their heads, and even took off their spectacles if there
+ were nothing else removable. These were signs of respect
+ given to all in authority. Where my real status began to be
+ generally known, these signs of politeness gave place to
+ rude staring. It is difficult for the foreigner to
+ appreciate the extremes of the high-handed and the
+ obsequious spirit which were developed by the ancient form
+ of government. Yet it is comparatively easy to distinguish
+ between the evidently genuine humility of the non-military
+ classes and the studied deference of the dominant
+ samurai.</p>
+
+ <p>Another feature of the old order of things was the emptiness
+ of the lives of the people. Education was rare. Limited to the
+ samurai, who composed but a fraction of the population, it was
+ by no means universal even among them. And such education as
+ they had was confined to the Chinese classics. Although there
+ were schools in connection with some of the temples, the people
+ as a whole did not learn to read or write. These were
+ accomplishments for the nobility and men of leisure. The
+ thoughts of the people were circumscribed by the narrow world
+ in which they lived, and this allowed but an occasional glimpse
+ of other clans through war or a chance traveler. For, in those
+ times, freedom of travel was not generally allowed. Each man,
+ as a rule, lived and labored and died where he was born. The
+ military classes had more freedom. But when we contrast the
+ breadth of thought and outlook enjoyed by the nation to-day,
+ through newspapers and magazines, with the outlook and
+ knowledge of even the most progressive and learned of those of
+ ancient times, how contracted do their lives appear!</p>
+
+ <p>A third feature of former times is the condition of women
+ during those ages. Eulogizers of Old Japan not only seem to
+ forget that working classes existed then, but also that women,
+ constituting half the popula<a name='Page_55'
+ id="Page_55"></a>tion, were essential to the existence of
+ the nation. Though allowing more freedom than was given to
+ women in other Oriental nations, Japan did not grant such
+ liberty as is essential to the full development of her
+ powers. "Woman is a man's plaything" expresses a view still
+ held in Japan. "Woman's sole duty is the bearing and rearing
+ of children for her husband" is the dominant idea that has
+ determined her place in the family and in the state for
+ hundreds of years. That she has any independent interest or
+ value as a human being has not entered into national
+ conception. "The way in which they are treated by the men
+ has hitherto been such as might cause a pang to any generous
+ European heart.... A woman's lot is summed up in what is
+ termed 'the three obediences,' obedience, while yet
+ unmarried, to a father; obedience, when married, to a
+ husband; obedience, when widowed, to a son. At the present
+ moment the greatest duchess or marchioness in the land is
+ still her husband's drudge. She fetches and carries for him,
+ bows down humbly in the hall when my lord sallies forth on
+ his good pleasure."<a name='FNanchor_C_3'
+ id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href='#Footnote_C_3'><sup>[C]</sup></a>
+ "The Greater Learning for Women," by Ekken Kaibara
+ (1630-1714), an eminent Japanese moralist, is the name of a
+ treatise on woman's duties which sums up the ideas common in
+ Japan upon this subject. For two hundred years or more it
+ has been used as a text-book in the training of girls. It
+ enjoins such abject submission of the wife to her husband,
+ to her parents-in-law, and to her other kindred by marriage,
+ as no self-respecting woman of Western lands could for a
+ moment endure. Let me prove this through a few
+ quotations.</p>
+
+ <p>"A woman should look on her husband as if he were Heaven
+ itself and never weary of thinking how she may yield to her
+ husband, and thus escape celestial castigation." "Woman must
+ form no friendships and no intimacy, except when ordered to do
+ so by her parents or by the middleman. Even at the peril of her
+ life, must she harden her heart like a rock or metal, and
+ observe the rules of propriety." "A woman has no particular
+ lord. She must look to her husband as her lord and
+ <a name='Page_56'
+ id="Page_56"></a>must serve him with all reverence and
+ worship, not despising or thinking lightly of him. The great
+ life-long duty of a woman is obedience.... When the husband
+ issues his instructions, the wife must never disobey
+ them.... Should her husband be roused to anger at any time,
+ she must obey him, with fear and trembling." Not one word in
+ all these many and specific instructions hints at love and
+ affection. That which to Western ears is the sweetest word
+ in the English language, the foundation of happiness in the
+ home, the only true bond between husband and wife, parents
+ and children&mdash;LOVE&mdash;does not once appear in this
+ the ideal instruction for Japanese women.</p>
+
+ <p>Even to this day divorce is the common occurrence in Japan.
+ According to Confucius there are seven grounds of divorce:
+ disobedience, barrenness, lewd conduct, jealousy, leprosy or
+ any other foul or incurable disease, too much talking, and
+ thievishness. "In plain English, a man may send away his wife
+ whenever he gets tired of her."</p>
+
+ <p>Were the man's duties to the wife and to her parents as
+ minutely described and insisted on as are those of the wife to
+ the husband and to his parents, this "Greater Learning for
+ Women" would not seem so deficient; but such is not the case.
+ The woman's rights are few, yet she bears her lot with
+ marvelous patience. Indeed, she has acquired a most attractive
+ and patient and modest behavior despite, or is it because of,
+ centuries of well-nigh tyrannical treatment from the male sex.
+ In some important respects the women of Japan are not to be
+ excelled by those of any other land. But that this lot has been
+ a happy one I cannot conceive it possible for a European, who
+ knows the meaning of love or home, to contend. The single item
+ of one divorce for every three marriages tells a tale of sorrow
+ and heartache that is sad to contemplate. Nor does this include
+ those separations where tentative marriage takes place with a
+ view to learning whether the parties can endure living
+ together. I have known several such cases. Neither does this
+ take account of the great number of concubines that may be
+ found in the homes of the higher <a name='Page_57'
+ id="Page_57"></a>classes. A concubine often makes formal
+ divorce quite superfluous.</p>
+
+ <p>I by no means contend that the women of Old Japan were all
+ and always miserable. There was doubtless much happiness and
+ even family joy; affection between husband and wife could
+ assuredly have been found in numberless cases. But the hardness
+ of life as a whole, the low position held by woman in her
+ relations to man, her lack of legal
+ rights,<a name='FNanchor_D_4'
+ id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href='#Footnote_D_4'><sup>[D]</sup></a>
+ and her menial position, justify the assertion that there
+ was much room for improvement.</p>
+
+ <p>These three conspicuous features of the older life in Japan
+ help us to reach a clear conception as to what constitutes
+ progress. We may say that true progress consists in that
+ continuous, though slow, transformation of the structure of
+ society which, while securing its more thorough organization,
+ brings to each individual the opportunity of a larger, richer,
+ and fuller life, a life which increasingly calls forth his
+ latent powers and capacities. In other words, progress is a
+ growing organization of society, accompanied by a growing
+ liberty of the individual resulting in richness and fullness of
+ life. It is not primarily a question of unreflecting happiness,
+ but a question of the wide development of manhood and
+ womanhood. Both men and women have as yet unmeasured latent
+ capacities, which demand a certain liberty, accompanied by
+ responsibilities and cares, in order for their development.
+ Intellectual education and a wide horizon are likewise
+ essential to the production of such manhood and womanhood. In
+ the long run this is seen to bring a deeper and a more lasting
+ happiness than was possible to the undeveloped man or
+ woman.</p>
+
+ <p>The question of progress is confused and put on a wrong
+ footing when the consciousness of happiness or unhappiness, is
+ made the primary test. The happiness of the child is quite
+ apart from that of the adult. Regardless of distressing
+ circumstances, the child is able to laugh and play, and this
+ because he is a child; a child <a name='Page_58'
+ id="Page_58"></a>in his ignorance of actual life, and in his
+ inability to perceive the true conditions in which he lives.
+ Not otherwise, I take it, was the happiness of the vast
+ majority in Old Japan. Theirs was the happiness of ignorance
+ and simple, undeveloped lives. Accustomed to tyranny, they
+ did not think of rebellion against it. Familiar with
+ brutality and suffering, they felt nothing of its shame and
+ inhumanity. The sight of decapitated bodies, the torture of
+ criminals, the despotism of husbands, the cringing obedience
+ of the ruled, the haughtiness of the rulers, the life of
+ hard toil and narrow outlook, were all so usual that no
+ thought of escape from such an order of society ever
+ suggested itself to those who endured it.</p>
+
+ <p>From time to time wise and just rulers did indeed strive to
+ introduce principles of righteousness into their methods of
+ government; but these men formed the exception, not the rule.
+ They were individuals and not the system under which the people
+ lived. It was always a matter of chance whether or not such men
+ were at the head of affairs, for the people did not dream of
+ the possibility of having any voice in their selection. The
+ structure of society was and always had been absolute
+ militarism. Even under the most benevolent rulers the use of
+ cruel torture, not only on convicted criminals, but on all
+ suspected of crime, was customary. Those in authority might
+ personally set a good example, but they did not modify the
+ system. They owned not only the soil but practically the
+ laborers also, for these could not leave their homes in search
+ of others that were better. They were serfs, if not slaves, and
+ the system did not tend to raise the standard of life or
+ education, of manhood or womanhood among the people. The
+ happiness of the people in such times was due in part to their
+ essential inhumanity of heart and lack of sympathy with
+ suffering and sorrow. Each individual bore his own sorrow and
+ pain alone. The community, as such, did not distress itself
+ over individuals who suffered. Sympathy, in its full meaning,
+ was unknown in Old Japan. The barbarous custom of casting out
+ the leper from the home, to wander a lonely exile, living on
+ the charity of <a name='Page_59'
+ id="Page_59"></a>strangers, is not unknown even to this day.
+ We are told that in past times the "people were governed by
+ such strong aversion to the sight of sickness that travelers
+ were often left to die by the roadside from thirst, hunger,
+ or disease; and householders even went the length of
+ thrusting out of doors and abandoning to utter destitution
+ servants who suffered from chronic maladies." So universal
+ was this heartlessness that the government at one time
+ issued proclamations against the practices it allowed.
+ "Whenever an epidemic occurred the number of deaths was
+ enormous." Seven men of the outcast, "the Eta," class were
+ authoritatively declared equal in value to one common man.
+ Beggars were technically called "hi-nin," "not men."</p>
+
+ <p>Those who descant on the happiness of Old Japan commit the
+ great error of overlooking all these sad features of life, and
+ of fixing their attention exclusively on the one feature of the
+ childlike, not to say childish, lightness of heart of the
+ common people. Such writers are thus led to pronounce the past
+ better than the present time. They also overlook the profound
+ happiness and widespread prosperity of the present era. Trade,
+ commerce, manufactures, travel, the freest of
+ intercommunication, newspapers, and international relations,
+ have brought into life a richness and a fullness that were then
+ unknown. But in addition, the people now enjoy a security of
+ personal interests, a possession of personal rights and
+ property, and a personal liberty, that make life far more
+ worthy and profoundly enjoyable, even while they bring
+ responsibilities and duties and not a few anxieties. This
+ explains the fact that no Japanese has expressed to me the
+ slightest desire to abandon the present and return to the life
+ and conditions of Old Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Let me repeat, therefore, with all possible emphasis, that
+ the problem of progress is not primarily one of increasing
+ light-heartedness, pure and simple, nor yet a problem of racial
+ unification or of political centralization; it is rather a
+ problem of so developing the structure of society that the
+ individual may have the fullest opportunity for
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_60'
+ id="Page_60"></a>The measure of progress is not the degree
+ of racial unification, of political centralization, or of
+ unreflective happiness, but rather the degree and the extent
+ of individual personality. Racial unification, political
+ centralization, and increasing happiness are in the
+ attainment of progress, but they are not to be viewed as
+ sufficient ends. Personality, can alone be that end. The
+ wide development of personality, therefore, is at once the
+ goal and the criterion of progress.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='IV'
+ id="IV"></a><a name='Page_61'
+ id="Page_61"></a>IV</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE METHOD OF PROGRESS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Progress as an ideal is quite modern in its origin. For
+ although the ancients were progressing, they did it
+ unconsciously, blindly, stumbling on it by chance, forced to
+ it, as we have seen, by the struggle for existence. True of the
+ ancient civilizations of Europe and Western Asia and Africa,
+ this is emphatically true of the Orient. Here, so far from
+ seeking to progress, the avowed aim has been not to progress;
+ the set purpose has been to do as the fathers did; to follow
+ their example even in customs and rites whose meaning has been
+ lost in the obscurity of the past. This blind adherence was the
+ boast of those who called themselves religious. They strove to
+ fulfill their duties to their ancestors.</p>
+
+ <p>Under such conditions how was progress possible? And how has
+ it come to pass that, ruled by this ideal until less than fifty
+ years ago, Japan is now facing quite the other way? The passion
+ of the nation to-day is to make the greatest possible progress
+ in every direction. Here is an anomaly, a paradox; progress
+ made in spite of its rejection; and, recently, a total
+ volte-face. How shall we explain this paradox?</p>
+
+ <p>In our chapter on the Principles of National
+ Evolution,<a name='FNanchor_E_5'
+ id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href='#Footnote_E_5'><sup>[E]</sup></a>
+ we see that the first step in progress was made through the
+ development of enlarging communities by means of extending
+ boundaries and hardening customs. We see that, on reaching
+ this stage, the great problem was so to break the "cake of
+ custom" as to give liberty to individuals whereby to secure
+ the needful variations. We do not consider how this was to
+ be accomplished. We merely show that, if further progress
+ was to be <a name='Page_62'
+ id="Page_62"></a>made, it could only be through the
+ development of the individualistic principle to which we
+ give the more exact name communo-individualism. This problem
+ as to how the "cake of custom" is successfully broken must
+ now engage our attention.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Bagehot contends that this process consisted, as a
+ matter of history, in the establishment of government by
+ discussion. Matters of principle came to be talked over; the
+ desirability of this or that measure was submitted to the
+ people for their approval or disapproval. This method served to
+ stimulate definite and practical thought on a wide scale; it
+ substituted the thinking of the many for the thinking of the
+ few; it stimulated independent thinking and consequently
+ independent action. This is, however, but another way of saying
+ that it stimulated variation. A government whose action was
+ determined after wide discussion would be peculiarly fitted to
+ take advantage of all useful variations of ideas and practice.
+ Experience shows, he continues, that the difficulty of
+ developing a "cake of custom" is far more easily surmounted
+ than that of developing government by discussion; <i>i.e.</i>,
+ that it is far less difficult to develop communalism than
+ communo-individualism. The family of arrested civilizations, of
+ which China and India and Japan, until recent times, are
+ examples, were caught in the net of what had once been the
+ source of their progress. The tyranny of their laws and customs
+ was such that all individual variations were nipped in the bud.
+ They failed to progress because they failed to develop
+ variations. And they failed in this because they did not have
+ government by discussion.</p>
+
+ <p>No one will dispute the importance of Mr. Bagehot's,
+ contribution to this subject. But it may be doubted whether he
+ has pointed out the full reason for the difficulty of breaking
+ the "cake of custom" or manifested the real root of progress.
+ To attain progress in the full sense, not merely of an
+ oligarchy or a caste, but of the whole people, there must not
+ only be government by discussion, but the responsibilities of
+ the government must be snared more or less fully by all the
+ governed.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_63'
+ id="Page_63"></a>History, however, shows that this cannot
+ take place until a conception of intrinsic manhood and
+ womanhood has arisen, a conception which emphasizes their
+ infinite and inherent worth. This conception is not produced
+ by government by discussion, while government by discussion
+ is the necessary consequence of the wide acceptance of this
+ conception. It is therefore the real root of progress.</p>
+
+ <p>As I look over the history of the Orient, I find no tendency
+ to discover the inherent worth of man or to introduce the
+ principle of government by discussion. Left to themselves, I
+ see no probability that any of these nations would ever have
+ been able to break the thrall of their customs, and to reach
+ that stage of development in which common individuals could be
+ trusted with a large measure of individual liberty. Though I
+ can conceive that Japan might have secured a thorough-going
+ political centralization under the old <i>r&eacute;gime</i>, I
+ cannot see that that centralization would have been accompanied
+ by growing liberty for the individual or by such constitutional
+ rights for the common man as he enjoys to-day. Whatever
+ progress she might have made in the direction of nationality it
+ would still have been a despotism. The common man would have
+ remained a helpless and hopeless slave. Art might have
+ prospered; the people might have remained simple-minded and
+ relatively contented. But they could not have attained that
+ freedom and richness of life, that personality, which we saw in
+ our last chapter to be the criterion and goal of true
+ progress.</p>
+
+ <p>If the reader judges the above contention correct and agrees
+ with the writer that the conception of the inherent value of a
+ human being could not arise spontaneously in Japan, he will
+ conclude that the progress of Japan depended on securing this
+ important conception from without. Exactly this has taken
+ place. By her thorough-going abandonment of the feudal social
+ order and adoption of the constitutional and representative
+ government of Christendom, whether she recognizes it or not,
+ she has accepted the principles of the inherent worth of
+ manhood and womanhood, as well as <a name='Page_64'
+ id="Page_64"></a>government by discussion. Japan has thus,
+ by imitation rather than by origination, entered on the path
+ of endless progress.</p>
+
+ <p>So important, however, is the step recently taken that
+ further analysis of this method of progress is desirable for
+ its full comprehension. We have already noted quite
+ briefly<a name='FNanchor_F_6'
+ id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href='#Footnote_F_6'><sup>[F]</sup></a>
+ how Japan was supplied by the West with the ideal of
+ national unity and the material instruments essential to its
+ attainment. In connection with the high development of the
+ nation as a whole, these two elements of progress, the ideal
+ and the material, need further consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>We note in the first place that both begin with imitation,
+ but if progress is to be real and lasting, both must grow to
+ independence.</p>
+
+ <p>The first and by far the most important is the psychical,
+ the introduction of new ideas. So long as the old, familiar
+ ideas hold sway over the mind of a nation, there is little or
+ no stimulus to comparison and discussion. Stagnation is
+ well-nigh complete. But let new ideas be so introduced as to
+ compel attention and comprehension, and the mind spontaneously
+ awakes to wonderful activity. The old stagnation is no longer
+ possible. Discussion is started; and in the end something must
+ take place, even if the new ideas are not accepted wholly or
+ even in part. But they will not gain attention if presented
+ simply in the abstract, unconnected with real life. They must
+ bring evidence that, if accepted and lived, they will be of
+ practical use, that they will give added power to the
+ nation.</p>
+
+ <p>Exactly this took place in 1854 when Admiral Perry demanded
+ entrance to Japan. The people suddenly awoke from their sleep
+ of two and a half centuries to find that new nations had arisen
+ since they closed their eyes, nations among which new sets of
+ ideas had been at work, giving them a power wholly unknown to
+ the Orient and even mysterious to it. Those ideas were
+ concerned, not alone with the making of guns, the building of
+ ships, the invention of machinery, the taming and using of the
+ forces of nature, but also with methods <a name='Page_65'
+ id="Page_65"></a>of government and law, with strange
+ notions, too, about religion and duty, about the family and
+ the individual, which the foreigners said were of
+ inestimable value and importance. It needed but a few years
+ of intercourse with Western peoples to convince the most
+ conservative that unless the Japanese themselves could gain
+ the secret of their power, either by adopting their weapons
+ or their civilization, they themselves must fade away before
+ the stronger nations. The need of self-preservation was the
+ first great stimulus that drove new thoughts into unwilling
+ brains.</p>
+
+ <p>There can be no doubt that the Japanese were right in this
+ analysis of the situation. Had they insisted on maintaining
+ their old methods of national life and social order and ancient
+ customs, there can be no doubt as to the result. Africa and
+ India in recent decades and China and Korea in the most recent
+ years tell the story all too clearly. Those who know the course
+ of treaty conferences and armed collisions, as at Shimonoseki
+ and Kagoshima between Japan and the foreign nations, have no
+ doubt that Japan, divided into clans and persisting in her love
+ of feudalism, would long since have become the territory of
+ some European Power. She was saved by the possession of a
+ remarkable combination of national characteristics,&mdash;the
+ powers of observation, of appreciation, and of imitation. In a
+ word, her sensitiveness to her environment and her readiness to
+ respond to it proved to be her salvation.</p>
+
+ <p>But the point on which I wish to lay special emphasis is
+ that the prime element of the form in which the deliverance
+ came was through the acquisition of numerous new ideas. These
+ were presented by persons who thoroughly believed in them and
+ who admittedly had a power not possessed by the Japanese
+ themselves. Though unable to originate these ideas, the
+ Japanese yet proved themselves capable of understanding and
+ appreciating them&mdash;in a measure at least. They were at
+ first attracted to that which related chiefly to the externals
+ of civilization, to that which would contribute immediately to
+ the complete political centralization of the nation. With great
+ rapidity they adopted Western <a name='Page_66'
+ id="Page_66"></a>ideas about warfare and weapons. They sent
+ their young men abroad to study the civilization of the
+ foreign nations. At great expense they also employed many
+ foreigners to teach them in their own land the things they
+ wished to learn. Thus have the Japanese mastered so rapidly
+ the details of those ideas which, less than fifty years ago,
+ were not only strange but odious to them.</p>
+
+ <p>Under their influence, the conditions which history shows to
+ be the most conducive to the continuous growth of civilization
+ have been definitely accepted and adopted by the people,
+ namely, popular rights, the liberty of individuals to differ
+ from the past so far as this does not interfere with national
+ unity, and the direct responsibility and relation of each
+ individual to the nation without any mediating group. These
+ rights and liberties are secured to the individual by a
+ constitution and by laws enacted by representative
+ legislatures. Government by discussion has been fairly
+ inaugurated.</p>
+
+ <p>During these years of change the effort has been to leave
+ the old social order as undisturbed as possible. For example,
+ it was hoped that the reorganization of the military and naval
+ forces of the Empire would be sufficient without disturbing the
+ feudal order and without abolishing the feudal states. But this
+ was soon found ineffectual. For a time it was likewise thought
+ that the adoption of Western methods of government might be
+ made without disturbing the old religious ideas and without
+ removing the edicts against Christianity. But experience soon
+ showed that the old civilization was a unit. No part could be
+ vitally modified without affecting the whole structure. Having
+ knocked over one block in the long row that made up their
+ feudal social order, it was found that each successive block
+ was touched and fell, until nothing was left standing as
+ before. It was found also that the old ideas of education, of
+ travel, of jurisprudence, of torture and punishment, of social
+ ranks, of the relation of the individual to the state, of the
+ state to the family, and of religion to the family, were more
+ or less defective and unsuited to the new civilization. Before
+ this new movement all obstructive <a name='Page_67'
+ id="Page_67"></a>ideas, however, sanctioned by antiquity,
+ have had to give way. The Japanese of to-day look, as it
+ were, upon a new earth and a new heaven. Those of forty
+ years ago would be amazed, not only at the enormous changes
+ in the externals, life and government, but also at the
+ transformation which has overtaken every element of the
+ older civilization. Putting it rather strongly, it is now
+ not the son who obeys the father, but the father the son.
+ The rulers no longer command the people, but the people
+ command the rulers. The people do not now toil to support
+ the state; but the state toils to protect the people.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether the incoming of these new ideas and practices be
+ thought to constitute progress or not will depend on one's view
+ of the aim of life. If this be as maintained in the previous
+ chapter, then surely the transformation of Japan must be
+ counted progress. That, however, to which I call attention is
+ the fact that the essential requisite of progress is the
+ attainment of new ideas, whatever be their source. Japan has
+ not only taken up a great host of these, but in doing so she
+ has adopted a social structure to stimulate the continuous
+ production of new ideas, through the development of
+ individuality. She is thus in the true line of continuously
+ progressive evolution. Imitating the stronger nations, she has
+ introduced into her system the life-giving blood of free
+ discussion, popular education, and universal individual rights
+ and liberty. In a word, she has begun to be an individualistic
+ nation. She has introduced a social order fitted to a wide
+ development of personality.</p>
+
+ <p>The importance of the second line of progress, the physical,
+ would seem to be too obvious to call for any detailed
+ consideration. But so much has been said by both graceful and
+ able writers on Japan as to the advantages she enjoys from her
+ simple non-mechanical civilization, and the mistake she is
+ making in adopting the mechanical civilization of the West,
+ that it may not be amiss to dwell for a few moments upon it. I
+ wish to show that the second element of progress consists in
+ the <i>increasing use of mechanisms</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_68'
+ id="Page_68"></a>The enthusiastic admirer of Japan hardly
+ finds words wherewith sufficiently to praise the simplicity
+ of her pre-Meiji civilization. No furniture brings confusion
+ to the room; no machinery distresses the ear with its
+ groanings or the eye with its unsightliness. No factories
+ blacken the sky with smoke. No trains screeching through the
+ towns and cities disturb sleepers and frighten babies. The
+ simple bed on the floor, the straw sandal on the foot,
+ wooden chopsticks in place of knives and forks, the small
+ variety of foods and of cooking utensils, the simple,
+ homespun cotton clothing, the fascinating homes, so small
+ and neat and clean&mdash;in truth all that pertains to Old
+ Japan finds favor in the eyes of the enthusiastic admirer
+ from the Occident. One such writer, in an elaborate paper
+ intended to set forth the superiority of the original
+ Japanese to the Occidental civilization, uses the following
+ language: "Ability to live without furniture, without
+ impedimenta, with the least possible amount of neat
+ clothing, shows more than the advantage held by the Japanese
+ race in the struggle of life; it shows also the real
+ character of some of the weaknesses in our own civilization.
+ It forces reflection upon the useless multiplicity of our
+ daily wants. We must have meat and bread and butter; glass
+ windows and fire; hats, white shirts, and woolen underwear;
+ boots and shoes; trunks, bags, and boxes; bedsteads,
+ mattresses, sheets, and blankets; all of which a Japanese
+ can do without, and is really better off
+ without."<a name='FNanchor_G_7'
+ id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href='#Footnote_G_7'><sup>[G]</sup></a>
+ Surely one finds much of truth in this, and there is no
+ denying the charm of the simpler civilization, but the
+ closing phrase of the quotation is the assumption without
+ discussion of the disputed point. Are the Japanese really
+ better off without these implements of Western civilization?
+ Evidently they themselves do not think so. For, in glancing
+ through the list as given by the writer quoted, one realizes
+ the extent of Japanese adoption of these Western devices.
+ Hardly an article but is used in Japan, and certainly with
+ the supposition of the purchaser that it adds either to his
+ health or his comfort. In witness are the hundreds of
+ <a name='Page_69'
+ id="Page_69"></a>thousands of straw hats, the glass windows
+ everywhere, and the meat-shops in each town and city of the
+ Empire. The charm of a foreign fashion is not sufficient
+ explanation for the rapidly spreading use of foreign
+ inventions.</p>
+
+ <p>That there are no useless or even evil features in our
+ Western civilization is not for a moment contended. The stiff
+ starched shirt may certainly be asked to give an account of
+ itself and justify its continued existence, if it can. But I
+ think the proposition is capable of defense that the vast
+ majority of the implements of our Occidental civilization have
+ their definite place and value, either in contributing directly
+ to the comfort and happiness of their possessor, or in
+ increasing his health and strength and general mental and
+ physical power. What is it that makes the Occidental
+ longer-lived than the Japanese? Why is he healthier? Why is he
+ more intelligent? Why is he a more developed personality? Why
+ are his children more energetic? Or, reversing the questions,
+ why has the population of Japan been increasing with leaps and
+ bounds since the introduction of Western civilization and
+ medical science? Why is the rising generation so free from
+ pockmarks? Why is the number of the blind steadily diminishing?
+ Why are mechanisms multiplying so rapidly&mdash;the jinrikisha,
+ the railroads, the roads, the waterworks and sewers, the
+ chairs, the tables, the hats and umbrellas, lamps, clocks,
+ glass windows and shoes? A hundred similar questions might be
+ asked, to which no definite answers are needful.</p>
+
+ <p>Further discussion of details seems unnecessary. Yet the
+ full significance of this point can hardly be appreciated
+ without a perception of the great principle that underlies it.
+ The only way in which man has become and continues to be
+ increasingly superior to animals is in his use of mechanisms.
+ The animal does by brute force what man accomplishes by various
+ devices. The inventiveness of different races differs vastly.
+ But everywhere, the most advanced are the most powerful. Take
+ the individual man of the more developed race and separate him
+ from his tools and machines, and it <a name='Page_70'
+ id="Page_70"></a>is doubtless true that he cannot in some
+ selected points compete with an individual of a less
+ developed race. But let ten thousand men of the higher
+ development compete with ten thousand of the lower, each
+ using the mechanisms under his control, and can there be any
+ doubt as to which is the superior?</p>
+
+ <p>In other words, the method of human progress consists, in no
+ small degree, in the progressive mastery of nature, first
+ through understanding her and then through the use of her
+ immense forces by means of suitable mechanisms. All the
+ machines and furniture, and tools and clothing, and houses and
+ canned foods, and shoes and boots, and railroads and telegraph
+ lines, and typewriters and watches, and the ten thousand other
+ so-called "impedimenta" of the Occidental civilization are but
+ devices whereby Western man has sought to increase his health,
+ his wealth, his knowledge, his comfort, his independence, his
+ capacity of travel&mdash;in a word, his well-being. Through
+ these mechanisms he masters nature. He extracts a rich living
+ from nature; he annihilates time and space; he defies the
+ storms; he tunnels the mountains; he extracts precious ores and
+ metals from the rock-ribbed hills; with a magic touch he
+ loosens the grip of the elements and makes them surrender their
+ gold, their silver, and, more precious still, their iron; with
+ these he builds his spacious cities and parks, his railroads
+ and ocean steamers; he travels the whole world around, fearing
+ neither beast nor alien man; all are subject to his command and
+ will. He investigates and knows the constitution of stellar
+ worlds no less than that of the world in which he lives. By his
+ instruments he explores the infinite depths of heaven and the
+ no less infinite depths of the microscopic world. All these
+ reviled "impedimenta" thus bring to the race that has them a
+ wealth of life both physical and psychical, practical and
+ ideal, that is otherwise unattainable. By them he gains and
+ gives external expression to the reality of his inner nature,
+ his freedom, his personality. True, instead of bringing health
+ and long life, knowledge and deep enjoyment, they may become
+ the means of bitterest curses. But the lesson to learn from
+ this fact <a name='Page_71'
+ id="Page_71"></a>is how to use these powers aright, not how
+ to forbid their use altogether. They are not to be branded
+ as hindrances to progress.</p>
+
+ <p>The defect of Occidental civilization to-day is hot its
+ multiplicity of machinery, but the defective view that still
+ blinds the eyes of the multitude as to the true nature and the
+ legitimate goal of progress. Individual, selfish happiness is
+ still the ideal of too many men and women to permit of the
+ ideal which carries the Golden Rule into the markets and
+ factories, into the politics of parties and nations, which is
+ essential to the attainment of the highest progress. But no one
+ who casts his eyes over the centuries of struggle and effort
+ through which man has been slowly working his way upward from
+ the rank of a beast to that of a man, can doubt that progress
+ has been made. The worth of character has been increasingly
+ seen and its possession desired. The true end of effort and
+ development was never more clear than it is at the close of the
+ nineteenth century. Never before were the conditions of
+ progress so bright, not only for the favored few in one or two
+ lands, but for the multitudes the world over. Isolation and
+ separation have passed from this world forever. Free social
+ intercourse between the nations permits wide dissemination of
+ ideas and their application to practical life in the form of
+ social organization and mechanical invention. This makes it
+ possible for nations more or less backward in social and
+ civilizational development to gain in a relatively short time
+ the advantages won by advanced nations through ages of toil and
+ under favoring circumstances. Nation thus stimulates nation,
+ each furnishing the other with important variations in ideas,
+ customs, institutions, and mechanisms resulting from
+ long-continued divergent evolution. The advantages slowly
+ gained by advanced peoples speedily accrues through social
+ heredity to any backward race really desiring to enter the
+ social heritage.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus does the paradox of Japan's recent progress become
+ thoroughly intelligible.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='V'
+ id="V"></a><a name='Page_72'
+ id="Page_72"></a>V</h2>
+
+ <h3>JAPANESE SENSITIVENESS TO ENVIRONMENT</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>With this chapter we begin a more detailed study of Japanese
+ social and psychic evolution. We shall take up the various
+ characteristics of the race and seek to account for them,
+ showing their origin in the peculiar nature of the social order
+ which so long prevailed in Japan. This is a study of Japanese
+ psychogenesis. The question to which we shall continually
+ return is whether or not the characteristic under consideration
+ is inherent and congenital and therefore inevitable. Not only
+ our interpretation of Japanese evolution, past, present, and
+ future, but also our understanding of the essential nature of
+ social evolution in general, depends upon the answer to this
+ question.</p>
+
+ <p>We naturally begin with that characteristic of Japanese
+ nature which would seem to be more truly congenital than any
+ other to be mentioned later. I refer to their sensitiveness to
+ environment. More quickly than most races do the Japanese seem
+ to perceive and adapt themselves to changed conditions.</p>
+
+ <p>The history of the past thirty years is a prolonged
+ illustration of this characteristic. The desire to imitate
+ foreign nations was not a real reason for the overthrow of
+ feudalism, but there was, rather, a more or less conscious
+ feeling, rapidly pervading the whole people, that the feudal
+ system would be unable to maintain the national integrity. As
+ intimated, the matter was not so much reasoned out as felt. But
+ such a vast illustration is more difficult to appreciate than
+ some individual instances, of which I have noted several.</p>
+
+ <p>During a conversation with Drs. Forsythe and Dale,
+ <a name='Page_73'
+ id="Page_73"></a>of Cambridge, England, I asked particularly
+ as to their experience with the Japanese students who had
+ been there to study. They both remarked on the fact that all
+ Japanese students were easily influenced by those with whom
+ they customarily associated; so much so that, within a short
+ time, they acquired not only the cut of coats and trousers,
+ but also the manner and accent, of those with whom they
+ lived. It was amusing, they said, to see what
+ transformations were wrought in those who went to the
+ Continent for their long vacations. From France they
+ returned with marked French manners and tones and clothes,
+ while from Germany they brought the distinctive marks of
+ German stiffness in manner and general bearing. It was noted
+ as still more curious that the same student would illustrate
+ both variations, provided he spent one summer in Germany and
+ another in France.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese sensitiveness is manifested in many unexpected
+ ways. An observant missionary lady once remarked that she had
+ often wondered how such unruly, self-willed children as grow up
+ under Japanese training, or its lack, finally become such
+ respectable members of society. She concluded that instead of
+ being punished out of their misbehaviors they were laughed out
+ of them. The children are constantly told that if they do so
+ and so they will be laughed at&mdash;a terrible thing.</p>
+
+ <p>The fear of ridicule has thus an important sociological
+ function in maintaining ethical standards. Its power may be
+ judged by the fact that in ancient times when a samurai gave
+ his note to return a borrowed sum, the only guarantee affixed
+ was the permission to be laughed at in public in case of
+ failure. The Japanese young man who is making a typewritten
+ copy of these pages for me says that, when still young, he
+ heard an address to children which he still remembers. The
+ speaker asked what the most fearful thing in the world was.
+ Many replies were given by the children&mdash;"snakes," "wild
+ beasts," "fathers," "gods," "ghosts," "demons," "Satan,"
+ "hell," etc. These were admitted to be fearful, but the speaker
+ told the children that one other thing was to be more feared
+ than all else, namely, "<a name='Page_74'
+ id="Page_74"></a>to be laughed at." This speech, with its
+ vivid illustrations, made a lasting impression on the mind
+ of the boy, and on reading what I had written he realized
+ how powerful a motive fear of ridicule had been in his own
+ life; also how large a part it plays in the moral education
+ of the young in Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Naturally enough this fear of being laughed at leads to
+ careful and minute observation of the clothing, manners, and
+ speech of one's associates, and prompt conformity to them,
+ through imitation. The sensitiveness of Japanese students to
+ each new environment is thus easily understood. And this
+ sensitiveness to environment has its advantages as well as its
+ disadvantages. I have already referred to the help it gives to
+ the establishment of individual conformity to ethical
+ standards. The phenomenal success of many reforms in Japan may
+ easily be traced to the national sensitiveness to foreign
+ criticism. Many instances of this will be given in the course
+ of this work, but two may well be mentioned at this point.
+ According to the older customs there was great, if not perfect,
+ freedom as to the use of clothing by the people. The apparent
+ indifference shown by them in the matter of nudity led
+ foreigners to call the nation uncivilized. This criticism has
+ always been a galling one, and not without reason. In many
+ respects their civilization has been fully the equal of that of
+ any other nation; yet in this respect it is true that they
+ resembled and still do resemble semi-civilized peoples. In
+ response to this foreign criticism, however, a law was passed,
+ early in the Meiji era, prohibiting nudity in cities. The
+ requirement that public bathing houses be divided into two
+ separate compartments, one for men and one for women, was
+ likewise due to foreign opinion. That this is the case may be
+ fairly inferred from the fact that the enforcement of these
+ laws has largely taken places where foreigners abound, whereas,
+ in the interior towns and villages they receive much less
+ attention. It must be acknowledged, however, that now at last,
+ twenty-five years after their passage, they are almost
+ everywhere beginning to be enforced by the authorities.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_75'
+ id="Page_75"></a>My other illustration of sensitiveness to
+ foreign opinion is the present state of Japanese thought
+ about the management of Formosa. The government has been
+ severely criticised by many leading papers for its blunders
+ there. But the curious feature is the constant reference to
+ the contempt into which such mismanagement will bring Japan
+ in the sight of the world&mdash;as if the opinion of other
+ nations were the most important issue involved, and not the
+ righteousness and probity of the government itself. It is
+ interesting to notice how frequently the opinion of other
+ nations with regard to Japan is a leading thought in the
+ mind of the people.</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection the following extract finds its natural
+ place:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>In a very large number of schools throughout the country
+ special instructions have been given to the pupils as to
+ their behavior towards foreigners. From various sources we
+ have culled the following orders bearing on special points,
+ which we state as briefly as possible.</p>
+
+ <p>(1) Never call after foreigners passing along the
+ streets or roads.</p>
+
+ <p>(2) When foreigners make inquiries, answer them
+ politely. If unable to make them understand, inform the
+ police of the fact.</p>
+
+ <p>(3) Never accept a present from a foreigner when there
+ is no reason for his giving it, and never charge him
+ anything above what is proper.</p>
+
+ <p>(4) Do not crowd around a shop when a foreigner is
+ making purchases, thereby causing him much annoyance. The
+ continuance of this practice disgraces us as a nation.</p>
+
+ <p>(5) Since all human beings are brothers and sisters,
+ there is no reason for fearing foreigners. Treat them as
+ equals and act uprightly in all your dealings with them. Be
+ neither servile nor arrogant.</p>
+
+ <p>(6) Beware of combining against the foreigner and
+ disliking him because he is a foreigner; men are to be
+ judged by their conduct and not by their nationality.</p>
+
+ <p>(7) As intercourse with foreigners becomes closer
+ <a name='Page_76'
+ id="Page_76"></a>and extends over a series of years,
+ there is danger that many Japanese may become enamored
+ of their ways and customs and forsake the good old
+ customs of their forefathers. Against this danger you
+ must be on your guard.</p>
+
+ <p>(8) Taking off your hat is the proper way to salute a
+ foreigner. The bending of the body low is not be
+ commended.</p>
+
+ <p>(9) When you see a foreigner be sure and cover up naked
+ parts of the body.</p>
+
+ <p>(10) Hold in high regard the worship of ancestors and
+ treat your relations with warm cordiality, but do not
+ regard a person as your enemy because he or she is a
+ Christian.</p>
+
+ <p>(11) In going through the world you will often find a
+ knowledge of a foreign tongue absolutely essential.</p>
+
+ <p>(12) Beware of selling your souls to foreigners and
+ becoming their slaves. Sell them no houses or lands.</p>
+
+ <p>(13) Aim at not being beaten in your competition with
+ foreigners. Remember that loyalty and filial piety are our
+ most precious national treasures and do nothing to violate
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>Many of the above rules are excellent in tone. Number 7,
+ however, which hails from Osaka, is somewhat narrow and
+ prejudiced. The injunction not to sell houses to foreigners
+ is, as the <i>Jiji Shimpo</i> points out, absurd and
+ mischievous.<a name='FNanchor_H_8'
+ id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href='#Footnote_H_8'><sup>[H]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The sensitiveness of the people also works to the advantage
+ of the nation in the social unity which it helps to secure.
+ Indeed I cannot escape the conviction that the striking unity
+ of the Japanese is largely due to this characteristic. It tends
+ to make their mental and emotional activities synchronous. It
+ retards reform for a season, to be sure, but later it
+ accelerates it. It makes it difficult for individuals to break
+ away from their surroundings and start out on new lines. It
+ leads to a general progress while it tends to hinder individual
+ progress. It tends to draw back into the general current of
+ national life those individuals who, under exceptional
+ conditions, may have succeeded in breaking away from
+ <a name='Page_77'
+ id="Page_77"></a>it for a season. This, I think, is one of
+ the factors of no little power at work among the Christian
+ churches in Japan. It is one, too, that the Japanese
+ themselves little perceive; so far as I have observed,
+ foreigners likewise fail to realize its force.</p>
+
+ <p>Closely connected with this sensitiveness to environment are
+ other qualities which make it effective. They are: great
+ flexibility, adjustability, agility (both mental and physical),
+ and the powers of keen attention to details and of exact
+ imitation.</p>
+
+ <p>As opposed to all this is the Chinese lack of flexibility.
+ Contrast a Chinaman and a Japanese after each has been in
+ America a year. The one to all appearances is an American; his
+ hat, his clothing, his manner, seem so like those of an
+ American that were it not for his small size, Mongolian type of
+ face, and defective English, he could easily be mistaken for
+ one. How different is it with the Chinaman! He retains his
+ curious cue with a tenacity that is as intense as it is
+ characteristic. His hat is the conventional one adopted by all
+ Chinese immigrants. His clothing likewise, though far from
+ Chinese, is nevertheless entirely un-American. He makes no
+ effort to conform to his surroundings. He seems to glory in his
+ separateness.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese desire to conform to the customs and
+ appearances of those about him is due to what I have called
+ sensitiveness; his success is due to the flexibility of his
+ mental constitution.</p>
+
+ <p>But this characteristic is seen in multitudes of little
+ ways. The new fashion of wearing the hair according to the
+ Western styles; of wearing Western hats, and Western clothing,
+ now universal in the army, among policemen, and common among
+ officials and educated men; the use of chairs and tables,
+ lamps, windows, and other Western things is due in no small
+ measure to that flexibility of mind which readily adopts new
+ ideas and new ways; is ready to try new things and new words,
+ and after trial, if it finds them convenient or useful or even
+ amusing, to retain them permanently, and this flexibility is,
+ in part, the reason why the Japanese are accounted a fickle
+ people. They accept new ways <a name='Page_78'
+ id="Page_78"></a>so easily that those who do not have this
+ faculty have no explanation for it but that of fickleness. A
+ frequent surprise to a missionary in Japan is that of
+ meeting a fine-looking, accomplished gentleman whom he knew
+ a few years before as a crude, ungainly youth. I am
+ convinced that it is the possession of this set of
+ characteristics that has enabled Japan so quickly to
+ assimilate many elements of an alien civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet this flexibility of mind and sensitiveness to changed
+ conditions find some apparently striking exceptions. Notable
+ among these are the many customs and appliances of foreign
+ nations which, though adopted by the people, have not been
+ completely modified to suit their own needs. In illustration is
+ the Chinese ideograph, for the learning of which even in the
+ modern common-school reader, there is no arrangement of the
+ characters in the order of their complexity. The possibility of
+ simplifying the colossal task of memorizing these uncorrelated
+ ideographs does not seem to have occurred to the Japanese;
+ though it is now being attempted by the foreigner. Perhaps a
+ partial explanation of this apparent exception to the usual
+ flexibility of the people in meeting conditions may be found in
+ their relative lack of originality. Still I am inclined to
+ refer it to a greater sensitiveness of the Japanese to the
+ personal and human, than to the impersonal and physical
+ environment.</p>
+
+ <p>The customary explanation of the group of characteristics
+ considered in this chapter is that they are innate, due to
+ brain and nerve structure, and acquired by each generation
+ through biological heredity. If closely examined, however, this
+ is seen to be no explanation at all. Accepting the
+ characteristics as empirical inexplicable facts, the real
+ problem is evaded, pushed into prehistoric times, that
+ convenient dumping ground of biological, anthropological, and
+ sociological difficulties.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese flexibility, imitativeness, and sensitiveness to
+ environment are to be accounted for by a careful consideration
+ of the national environment and social order. Modern psychology
+ has called at<a name='Page_79'
+ id="Page_79"></a>tention to the astonishing part played by
+ imitation, conscious and unconscious, in the evolution of
+ the human race, and in the unification of the social group.
+ Prof. Le Tarde goes so far as to make this the fundamental
+ principle of human evolution. He has shown that it is ever
+ at work in the life of every human being, modifying all his
+ thoughts, acts, and feelings. In the evolution of
+ civilization the rare man thinks, the millions imitate.</p>
+
+ <p>A slight consideration of the way in which Occidental lands
+ have developed their civilization will convince anyone that
+ imitation has taken the leading part. Japan, therefore, is not
+ unique in this respect. Her periods of wholesale imitation have
+ indeed called special notice to the trait. But the rapidity of
+ the movement has been due to the peculiarities of her
+ environment. For long periods she has been in complete
+ isolation, and when brought into contact with foreign nations,
+ she has found them so far in advance of herself in many
+ important respects that rapid imitation was the only course
+ left her by the inexorable laws of nature. Had she not imitated
+ China in ancient times and the Occident in modern times, her
+ independence, if not her existence, could hardly have been
+ maintained.</p>
+
+ <p>Imitation of admittedly superior civilizations has therefore
+ been an integral, conscious element of Japan's social order,
+ and to a degree perhaps not equaled by the social order of any
+ other race.</p>
+
+ <p>The difference between Japanese imitation and that of other
+ nations lies in the fact that whereas the latter, as a rule,
+ despise foreign races, and do not admit the superiority of
+ alien civilizations as a whole, imitating only a detail here
+ and there, often without acknowledgment and sometimes even
+ without knowledge, the Japanese, on the other hand, have
+ repeatedly been placed in such circumstances as to see the
+ superiority of foreign civilizations as a whole, and to desire
+ their general adoption. This has produced a spirit of imitation
+ among all the individuals of the race. It has become a part of
+ their social inheritance. This explanation largely accounts for
+ the striking difference between <a name='Page_80'
+ id="Page_80"></a>Japanese and Chinese in the Occident. The
+ Japanese go to the West in order to acquire all the West can
+ give. The Chinaman goes steeled against its influences. The
+ spirit of the Japanese renders him quickly susceptible to
+ every change in his surroundings. He is ever noting details
+ and adapting himself to his circumstances. The spirit of the
+ Chinaman, on the contrary, renders him quite oblivious to
+ his environment. His mind is closed. Under special
+ circumstances, when a Chinaman has been liberated from the
+ prepossession of his social inheritance, he has shown
+ himself as capable of Occidentalization in clothing, speech,
+ manner, and thought as a Japanese. Such cases, however, are
+ rare.</p>
+
+ <p>But a still more effective factor in the development of the
+ characteristics under consideration is the nature of Japanese
+ feudalism. Its emphasis on the complete subordination of the
+ inferior to the superior was one of its conspicuous features.
+ This was a factor always and everywhere at work in Japan. No
+ individual was beyond its potent influence. Attention to
+ details, absolute obedience, constant, conscious imitation,
+ secretiveness, suspiciousness, were all highly developed by
+ this social system. Each of these traits is a special form of
+ sensitiveness to environment. From the most ancient times the
+ initiative of superiors was essential to the wide adoption by
+ the people of any new idea or custom. Christianity found ready
+ acceptance in the sixteenth century and Buddhism in the eighth,
+ because they had been espoused by exalted persons. The
+ superiority of the civilization of China in early times, and of
+ the West in modern times, was first acknowledged and adopted by
+ a few nobles and the Emperor. Having gained this prestige they
+ promptly became acceptable to the rank and file of people who
+ vied with each other in their adoption. A peculiarity of the
+ Japanese is the readiness with which the ideas and aims of the
+ rulers are accepted by the people. This is due to the nature of
+ Japanese feudalism. It has made the body of the nation
+ conspicuously subject to the ruling brain and has conferred on
+ Japan her unique sensitiveness to environment.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_81'
+ id="Page_81"></a>Susceptibility to slight changes in the
+ feelings of lords and masters and corresponding flexibility
+ were important social traits, necessary products of the old
+ social order. Those deficient in these regards would
+ inevitably lose in the struggle for social precedence, if
+ not in the actual struggle for existence. These
+ characteristics would, accordingly, be highly developed.</p>
+
+ <p>Bearing in mind, therefore, the character of the factors
+ that have ever been acting on the Japanese psychic nature, we
+ see clearly that the characteristics under consideration are
+ not to be attributed to her inherent race nature, but may be
+ sufficiently accounted for by reference to the social order and
+ social environment.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='VI'
+ id="VI"></a><a name='Page_82'
+ id="Page_82"></a>VI</h2>
+
+ <h3>WAVES OF FEELING&mdash;ABDICATION</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It has long been recognized that the Japanese are emotional,
+ but the full significance of this element of their nature is
+ far from realized. It underlies their entire life; it
+ determines the mental activities in a way and to a degree that
+ Occidentals can hardly appreciate. Waves of feeling have swept
+ through the country, carrying everything before them in a
+ manner that has oftentimes amazed us of foreign lands. An
+ illustration from the recent political life of the nation comes
+ to mind in this connection. For months previous to the outbreak
+ of the recent war with China, there had been a prolonged
+ struggle between the Cabinet and the political parties who were
+ united in their opposition to the government, though in little
+ else. The parties insisted that the Cabinet should be
+ responsible to the party in power in the Lower House, as is the
+ case in England, that thus they might stand and fall together.
+ The Cabinet, on the other hand, contended that, according to
+ the constitution, it was responsible to the Emperor alone, and
+ that consequently there was no need of a change in the Cabinet
+ with every change of party leadership. The nation waxed hot
+ over the discussion. Successive Diets were dissolved and new
+ Diets elected, in none of which, however, could the supporters
+ of the Cabinet secure a majority; the Cabinet was, therefore,
+ incapable of carrying out any of its distinctive measures.
+ Several times the opposition went so far as to decline to pass
+ the budget proposed by the Cabinet, unless so reduced as to
+ cripple the government, the reason constantly urged being that
+ the Cabinet was not competent to administer the expenditure of
+ such large sums of money. There were no direct charges of
+ fraud, but <a name='Page_83'
+ id="Page_83"></a>simply of incompetence. More than once the
+ Cabinet was compelled to carry on the government during the
+ year under the budget of the previous year, as provided by
+ the constitution. So intense was the feeling that the
+ capital was full of "soshi,"&mdash;political
+ ruffians,&mdash;and fear was entertained as to the personal
+ safety of the members of the Cabinet. The whole country was
+ intensely excited over the matter. The newspapers were not
+ loath to charge the government with extravagance, and a
+ great explosion seemed inevitable, when, suddenly, a breeze
+ from a new quarter arose and absolutely changed the face of
+ the nation.</p>
+
+ <p>War with China was whispered, and then noised around. Events
+ moved rapidly. One or two successful encounters with the
+ Chinese stirred the warlike passion that lurked in every
+ breast. At once the feud with the Cabinet was forgotten. When,
+ on short notice, an extra session of the Diet was called to
+ vote funds for a war, not a word was breathed about lack of
+ confidence in the Cabinet or its incompetence to manage the
+ ordinary expenditures of the government; on the contrary,
+ within five minutes from the introduction of the government
+ bill asking a war appropriation of 150,000,000 yen, the bill
+ was unanimously passed.</p>
+
+ <p>Such an absolute change could hardly have taken place in
+ England or America, or any land less subject to waves of
+ emotion. So far as I could learn, the nation was a unit in
+ regard to the war. There was not the slightest sign of a "peace
+ party." Of all the Japanese with whom I talked only one ever
+ expressed the slightest opposition to the war, and he on
+ religious grounds, being a Quaker.</p>
+
+ <p>The strength of the emotional element tends to make the
+ Japanese extremists. If liberals, they are extremely liberal;
+ if conservative, they are extremely conservative. The craze for
+ foreign goods and customs which prevailed for several years in
+ the early eighties was replaced by an almost equally strong
+ aversion to anything foreign.</p>
+
+ <p>This tendency to swing to extremes has cropped out not
+ infrequently in the theological thinking of Japanese
+ <a name='Page_84'
+ id="Page_84"></a>Christians. Men who for years had done
+ effective work in upbuilding the Church, men who had lifted
+ hundreds of their fellow-countrymen out of moral and
+ religious darkness into light and life, have suddenly, as it
+ has appeared, lost all appreciation of the truths they had
+ been teaching and have swung off to the limits of a radical
+ rationalism, losing with their evangelical faith their power
+ of helping their fellow-men, and in some few cases, going
+ over into lives of open sin. The intellectual reasons given
+ by them to account for their changes have seemed
+ insufficient; it will be found that the real explanation of
+ these changes is to be sought not in their intellectual, but
+ in their emotional natures.</p>
+
+ <p>Care must be taken, however, not to over-emphasize this
+ extremist tendency. In some respects, I am convinced that it is
+ more apparent than real. The appearance is due to the silent
+ passivity even of those who are really opposed to the new
+ departure. It is natural that the advocates of some new policy
+ should be enthusiastic and noisy. To give the impression to an
+ outsider that the new enthusiasm is universal, those who do not
+ share it have simply to keep quiet. This takes place to some
+ degree in every land, but particularly so in Japan. The silence
+ of their dissent is one of the striking characteristics of the
+ Japanese. It seems to be connected with an abdication of
+ personal responsibility. How often in the experience of the
+ missionary it has happened that his first knowledge of friction
+ in a church, wholly independent and self-supporting and having
+ its own native pastor, is the silent withdrawal of certain
+ members from their customary places of worship. On inquiry it
+ is learned that certain things are being done or said which do
+ not suit them and, instead of seeking to have these matters
+ righted, they simply wash their hands of the whole affair by
+ silent withdrawal.</p>
+
+ <p>The Kumi-ai church, in Kumamoto, from being large and
+ prosperous, fell to an actual active membership of less than a
+ dozen, solely because, as each member became dissatisfied with
+ the high-handed and radical pas<a name='Page_85'
+ id="Page_85"></a>tor, he simply withdrew. Had each one stood
+ by the church, realizing that he had a responsibility toward
+ it which duty forbade him to shirk, the conservative and
+ substantial members of the church would soon have been
+ united in their opposition to the radical pastor and, being
+ in the majority, could have set matters right. In the case
+ of perversion of trust funds by the trustees of the Kumamoto
+ School, many Japanese felt that injustice was being done to
+ the American Board and a stain was being inflicted on
+ Japan's fair name, but they did nothing either to express
+ their opinions or to modify the results. So silent were they
+ that we were tempted to think them either ignorant of what
+ was taking place, or else indifferent to it. We now know,
+ however, that many felt deeply on the matter, but were
+ simply silent according to the Japanese custom.</p>
+
+ <p>But silent dissent does not necessarily last indefinitely,
+ though it may continue for years. As soon as some check has
+ been put upon the rising tide of feeling, and a reaction is
+ evident, those who before had been silent begin to voice their
+ reactionary feeling, while those who shortly before had been in
+ the ascendant begin to take their turn of silent dissent. Thus
+ the waves are accentuated, both in their rise and in their
+ relapse, by the abdicating proclivity of the people.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet, in spite of the tendency of the nation to be swept from
+ one extreme to another by alternate waves of feeling, there are
+ many well-balanced men who are not carried with the tide. The
+ steady progress made by the nation during the past generation,
+ in spite of emotional actions and reactions, must be largely
+ attributed to the presence in its midst of these more stable
+ natures. These are the men who have borne the responsibilities
+ of government. So far as we are able to see, they have not been
+ led by their feelings, but rather by their judgments. When the
+ nation was wild with indignation over Europe's interference
+ with the treaty which brought the China-Japanese war to a
+ close, the men at the helm saw too clearly the futility of an
+ attempt to fight Russia to allow themselves to be carried away
+ by sentimental notions of patriotism. Theirs <a name='Page_86'
+ id="Page_86"></a>was a deeper and truer patriotism than that
+ of the great mass of the nation, who, flushed with recent
+ victories by land and by sea, were eager to give Russia the
+ thrashing which they felt quite able to administer.</p>
+
+ <p>Abdication is such an important element in Japanese life,
+ serving to throw responsibility on the young, and thus helping
+ to emphasize the emotional characteristics of the people, that
+ we may well give it further attention at this point. In
+ describing it, I can do no better than quote from J.H. Gubbins'
+ valuable introduction to his translation of the New Civil Code
+ of Japan.<a name='FNanchor_I_9'
+ id="FNanchor_I_9"></a><a href='#Footnote_I_9'><sup>[I]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"Japanese scholars who have investigated the subject
+ agree in tracing the origin of the present custom to the
+ abdication of Japanese sovereigns, instances of which occur
+ at an early period of Japanese history. These earlier
+ abdications were independent of religious influences, but
+ with the advent of Buddhism abdication entered upon a new
+ phase. In imitation, it would seem, of the retirement for
+ the purpose of religious contemplation of the Head Priests
+ of Buddhist monasteries, abdicating sovereigns shaved their
+ heads and entered the priesthood, and when subsequently the
+ custom came to be employed for political purposes, the
+ cloak of religion was retained. From the throne the custom
+ spread to Regents and high officers of state, and so
+ universal had its observance amongst officials of the high
+ ranks become in the twelfth century that, as Professor
+ Shigeno states, it was almost the rule for such persons to
+ retire from the world at the age of forty or fifty, and
+ nominally enter the priesthood, both the act and the person
+ performing it being termed 'niu do.' In the course of time,
+ the custom of abdication ceased to be confined to
+ officials, and extended to feudal nobility and the military
+ class generally, whence it spread through the nation, and
+ at this stage of its transition its connection with the
+ phase it finally assumed becomes clear. But with its
+ extension beyond the circle of official dignitaries, and
+ its consequent severance from tradition and religious
+ associations, whether<a name='Page_87'
+ id="Page_87"></a> real or nominal abdication changed its
+ name. It was no longer termed 'niu do,' but 'in kio,'
+ the old word being retained only in its strict religious
+ meaning, and 'inkyo' is the term in use to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>"In spite of the religious origin of abdication, its
+ connection with religion has long since vanished, and it
+ may be said without fear of contradiction that the Japanese
+ of to-day, when he or she abdicates, is in no way actuated
+ by the feeling which impelled European monarchs in past
+ times to end their days in the seclusion of the cloister,
+ and which finds expression to-day in the Irish phrase, 'To
+ make one's soul.' Apart from the influence of traditional
+ convention, which counts for something and also explains
+ the great hold on the nation which the custom has acquired,
+ the motive seems to be somewhat akin to that which leads
+ people in some Western countries to retire from active life
+ at an age when bodily infirmity cannot be adduced as the
+ reason. But with this great difference, that in the one
+ case, that of Western countries, it is the business or
+ profession, the active work of life, which is relinquished,
+ the position of the individual vis-&agrave;-vis the family
+ being unaffected; in the other case, it is the position of
+ head of the family which is relinquished, with the result
+ of the complete effacement of the individual so far as the
+ family is concerned. Moreover, although abdication usually
+ implies the abandonment of the business, or profession, of
+ the person who abdicates, this does not necessarily follow,
+ abdication being in no way incompatible with the
+ continuation of the active pursuits in which the person-in
+ question is engaged. And if an excuse be needed in either
+ case, there would seem to be more for the Japanese head of
+ family, who, in addition to the duties and responsibilities
+ incumbent upon his position, has to bear the brunt of the
+ tedious ceremonies and observances which characterize
+ family life in Japan, and are a severe tax upon time and
+ energies, while at the same time he is fettered by the
+ restrictions upon individual freedom of action imposed by
+ the family system. That in many cases the reason for
+ abdication lies in the wish to escape from the
+ tyrannical<a name='Page_88'
+ id="Page_88"></a> calls of family life, rather than in
+ mere desire for idleness and ease, is shown by the fact
+ that just as in past times the abdication of an Emperor,
+ a Regent, or a state dignitary, was often the signal for
+ renewed activity on his part, so in modern Japanese life
+ the period of a person's greatest activity not
+ infrequently dates from the time of his withdrawal from
+ the headship of his family."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The abdicating proclivities of the nation in pre-Meiji times
+ are well shown by the official list of daimyos published by the
+ Shogunate in 1862. To a list of 268 ruling daimyos is added a
+ list of 104 "inkyo."</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to what we may call political and family
+ abdication, described above, is personal abdication, referred
+ to on a previous page.</p>
+
+ <p>Are the traits of Japanese character considered in this
+ chapter inherent and necessary? Already our description has
+ conclusively shown them to be due to the nature of the social
+ order. This was manifestly the case in regard to political and
+ family abdication. The like origin of personal abdication is
+ manifest to him who learns how little there was in the ancient
+ training tending to give each man a "feeling of independent
+ responsibility to his own conscience in the sight of Heaven."
+ He was taught devotion to a person rather than to a principle.
+ The duty of a retainer was not to think and decide, but to do.
+ He might in silence disapprove and as far as possible he should
+ then keep out of his lord's way; should he venture to think and
+ to act contrary to his lord's commands, he must expect and plan
+ to commit "harakiri" in the near future. Personal abdication
+ and silent disapproval, therefore, were direct results of the
+ social order.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='VII'
+ id="VII"></a><a name='Page_89'
+ id="Page_89"></a>VII</h2>
+
+ <h3>HEROES AND HERO-WORSHIP</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>If a clew to the character of a nation is gained by a study
+ of the nature of the gods it worships, no less valuable an
+ insight is gained by a study of its heroes. Such a study
+ confirms the impression that the emotional life is fundamental
+ in the Japanese temperament. Japan is a nation of
+ hero-worshipers. This is no exaggeration. Not only is the
+ primitive religion, Shintoism, systematic hero-worship, but
+ every hero known to history is deified, and has a shrine or
+ temple. These heroes, too, are all men of conspicuous valor or
+ strength, famed for mighty deeds of daring. They are men of
+ passion. The most popular story in Japanese literature is that
+ of "The Forty-seven Ronin," who avenged the death of their
+ liege-lord after years of waiting and plotting. This revenge
+ administered, they committed harakiri in accordance with the
+ etiquette of the ethical code of feudal Japan. Their tombs are
+ to this day among the most frequented shrines in the capital of
+ the land, and one of the most popular dramas presented in the
+ theaters is based on this same heroic tragedy.</p>
+
+ <p>The prominence of the emotional element may be seen in the
+ popular description of national heroes. The picture of an ideal
+ Japanese hero is to our eyes a caricature. His face is
+ distorted by a fierce frenzy of passion, his eyeballs glaring,
+ his hair flying, and his hands hold with a mighty grip the
+ two-handed sword wherewith he is hewing to pieces an enemy. I
+ am often amazed at the difference between the pictures of
+ Japanese heroes and the living Japanese I see. This difference
+ is manifestly due to the idealizing process; for they
+ <a name='Page_90'
+ id="Page_90"></a>love to see their heroes in their
+ passionate moods and tenses.</p>
+
+ <p>The craving for heroes, even on the part of those who are
+ familiar with Western thought and customs, is a feature of
+ great interest. Well do I remember the enthusiasm with which
+ educated, Christian young men awaited the coming to Japan of an
+ eminent American scholar, from whose lectures impossible things
+ were expected. So long as he was in America and only his books
+ were known, he was a hero. But when he appeared in person,
+ carrying himself like any courteous gentleman, he lost his
+ exalted position.</p>
+
+ <p>Townsend Harris showed his insight into Oriental thought
+ never more clearly than by maintaining his dignity according to
+ Japanese standards and methods. On his first entry into Tokyo
+ he states, in his journal, that although he would have
+ preferred to ride on horseback, in order that he might see the
+ city and the people, yet as the highest dignitaries never did
+ so, but always rode in entirely closed "norimono" (a species of
+ sedan chair carried by twenty or thirty bearers), he too would
+ do the same; to have ridden into the limits of the city on
+ horseback would have been construed by the Japanese as an
+ admission that he held a far lower official rank than that of a
+ plenipotentiary of a great nation.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not difficult to understand how these ideals of heroes
+ arose. They are the same in every land where militarism, and
+ especially feudalism, is the foundation on which the social
+ order rests.</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the difficulties met by foreign missionaries in
+ trying to do their work arise from the fact that they are not
+ easily regarded as heroes by their followers. The people are
+ accustomed to commit their guidance to officials or to teachers
+ or advisers whom they can regard as heroes. Since missionaries
+ are not officials and do not have the manners of heroes, it is
+ not to be expected that the Japanese will accept their
+ leadership.</p>
+
+ <p>A few foreigners have, however, become heroes in Japanese
+ eyes. President Clark and Rev. S.R. Brown had great influence
+ on groups of young men in the early years of Meiji, while
+ giving them secular edu<a name='Page_91'
+ id="Page_91"></a>cation combined with Christian instruction.
+ The conditions, however, were then extraordinarily
+ exceptional, and it is a noticeable fact that neither man
+ remained long in Japan at that time. Another foreigner who
+ was exalted to the skies by a devoted band of students was a
+ man well suited to be a hero&mdash;for he had the samurai
+ spirit to the full. Indeed, in absolute fearlessness and
+ assumption of superiority, he out-samuraied the samurai. He
+ was a man of impressive and imperious personality. Yet it is
+ a significant fact that when he was brought back to Japan by
+ his former pupils, after an absence of about eighteen years,
+ during which they had continued to extol his merits and
+ revere his memory, it was not long before they discovered
+ that he was not the man their imagination had created. Not
+ many months were needed to remove him from his pedestal. It
+ would hardly be a fair statement of the whole case to leave
+ the matter here. So far as I know, President Clark and Rev.
+ S.R. Brown have always retained their hold on the
+ imagination of the Japanese. The foreigner who of all others
+ has perhaps done the most for Japan, and whose services have
+ been most heartily acknowledged by the nation and
+ government, was Dr. Guido F. Verbeck, who began his
+ missionary work in 1859; he was the teacher of large numbers
+ of the young men who became leaders in the transformation of
+ Japan; he alone of foreigners was made a citizen and was
+ given a free and general pass for travel; and his funeral in
+ 1898 was attended by the nobility of the land, and the
+ Emperor himself made a contribution toward the expenses. Dr.
+ Verbeck is destined to be one of Japan's few foreign
+ heroes.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the signs of Japanese craving for heroes may be
+ mentioned the constant experience of missionaries when search
+ is being made for a man to fill a particular place. The
+ descriptions of the kind of man desired are such that no one
+ can expect to meet him. The Christian boys' school in Kumamoto,
+ and the church with it, went for a whole year without principal
+ and pastor because they could not secure a man of national
+ reputation. They wanted a hero-principal, who would cut a
+ <a name='Page_92'
+ id="Page_92"></a>great figure in local politics and also be
+ a hero-leader for the Christian work in the whole island of
+ Kyushu, causing the school to shine not only in Kumamoto,
+ but to send forth its light and its fame throughout the
+ Empire and even to foreign lands. The unpretentious,
+ unprepossessing-looking man who was chosen temporarily,
+ though endowed with common sense and rather unusual ability
+ to harmonize the various elements in the school, was not
+ deemed satisfactory. He was too much like Socrates. At last
+ they found a man after their own heart. He had traveled and
+ studied long abroad; was a dashing, brilliant fellow; would
+ surely make things hum; so at least said those who
+ recommended him (and he did). But he was still a poor
+ student in Scotland; his passage money must be raised by the
+ school if he was to be secured. And raised it was. Four
+ hundred and seventy-five dollars those one hundred and fifty
+ poor boys and girls, who lived on two dollars a month,
+ scantily clothed and insufficiently warmed, secured from
+ their parents and sent across the seas to bring back him who
+ was to be their hero-principal and pastor. The rest of the
+ story I need not tell in detail, but I may whisper that he
+ was more of a slashing hero than they planned for; in three
+ months the boys' school was split in twain and in less than
+ three years both fragments of the school had not only lost
+ all their Christian character, but were dead and gone
+ forever. And the grounds on which the buildings stood were
+ turned into mulberry fields.</p>
+
+ <p>Talking not long since to a native friend, concerning the
+ hero-worshiping tendency of the Japanese, I had my attention
+ called to the fact that, while what has been said above is
+ substantially correct as concerns a large proportion of the
+ people, especially the young men, there is nevertheless a class
+ whose ideal heroes are not military, but moral. Their power
+ arises not through self-assertion, but rather through humility;
+ their influence is due entirely to learning coupled with
+ insight into the great moral issues of life. Such has been the
+ character of not a few of the "moral" teachers. I have recently
+ read a Japanese novel based upon the life of one such
+ <a name='Page_93'
+ id="Page_93"></a>hero. Omi Seijin, or the "Sage of Omi," is
+ a name well known among the people of Japan; and his fame
+ rests rather on his character than on his learning. If
+ tradition is correct, his influence on the people of his
+ region was powerful enough to transform the character of the
+ place, producing a paradise on earth whence lust and crime
+ were banished. Whatever the actual facts of his life may
+ have been, this is certainly the representation of his
+ character now held up for honor and imitation. There are
+ also indications that the ideal military hero is not, for
+ all the people, the self-assertive type that I have
+ described above, though this is doubtless the prevalent one.
+ Not long since I heard the following couplet as to the
+ nature of a true hero:</p>
+
+ <p class="poetry"><span style='margin-left: 6em;'>"Makoto no
+ Ei-yu;</span><br />
+ Sono yo, aizen to shite shumpu no gotoshi;<br />
+ Sono shin, kizen to shite kinseki no gotoshi.<br />
+ <br />
+ <span style='margin-left: 6em;'>"The true Hero;</span><br />
+ In appearance, charming like the spring breeze.<br />
+ In heart, firm as a rock."<br /></p>
+
+ <p>Another phrase that I have run across relating to the ideal
+ man is, "I atte takakarazu," which means in plain English,
+ "having authority, but not puffed up." In the presence of these
+ facts, it will not do to think that the ideal hero of all the
+ Japanese is, or even in olden times was, only a military hero
+ full of swagger and bluster; in a military age such would, of
+ necessity, be a popular ideal; but just in proportion as men
+ rose to higher forms of learning, and character, so would their
+ ideals be raised.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not to be lightly assumed that the spirit of
+ hero-worship is wholly an evil or a necessarily harmful thing.
+ It has its advantages and rewards as well as its dangers and
+ evils. The existence of hero-worship in any land reveals a
+ nature in the people that is capable of heroic actions. Men
+ appreciate and admire that which in a measure at least they
+ are, and more that which they aspire to become. The recent war
+ revealed how the capacity for heroism of a warlike nature lies
+ latent in every Japanese breast and not in the descendants of
+ the <a name='Page_94'
+ id="Page_94"></a>old military class alone. But it is more
+ encouraging to note that popular appreciation of moral
+ heroes is growing.</p>
+
+ <p>Education and religion are bringing forth modern moral
+ heroes. The late Dr. Neesima, the founder of the Doshisha, is a
+ hero to many even outside the Church. Mr. Ishii, the father of
+ Orphan Asylums in Japan, promises to be another. A people that
+ can rear and admire men of this character has in it the
+ material of a truly great nation.</p>
+
+ <p>The hero-worshiping characteristic of the Japanese depends
+ on two other traits of their nature. The first is the reality
+ of strong personalities among them capable of becoming heroes;
+ the second is the possession of a strong idealizing tendency.
+ Prof. G.T. Ladd has called them a "sentimental" people, in the
+ sense that they are powerfully moved by sentiment. This is a
+ conspicuous trait of their character appearing in numberless
+ ways in their daily life. The passion for group-photographs is
+ largely due to this. Sentimentalism, in the sense given it by
+ Prof. Ladd, is the emotional aspect of idealism.</p>
+
+ <p>The new order of society is reacting on the older ideal of a
+ hero and is materially modifying it. The old-fashioned samurai,
+ girded with two swords, ready to kill a personal foe at sight,
+ is now only the ideal of romance. In actual life he would soon
+ find himself deprived of his liberty and under the condemnation
+ not only of the law, but also of public opinion. The new ideal
+ with which I have come into most frequent contact is far
+ different. Many, possibly the majority, of the young men and
+ boys with whom I have talked as to their aim in life, have said
+ that they desired to secure first of all a thorough education,
+ in order that finally they might become great "statesmen" and
+ might guide the nation into paths of prosperity and
+ international power. The modern hero is one who gratifies the
+ patriotic passion by bringing some marked success to the
+ nation. He must be a gentleman, educated in science, in
+ history, and in foreign languages; but above all, he must be
+ versed in political economy and law. This new ideal of a
+ national hero <a name='Page_95'
+ id="Page_95"></a>has been brought in by the order of
+ society, and in proportion as this order continues, and
+ emphasis continues to be laid on mental and moral power,
+ rather than on rank or official position, on the intrinsic
+ rather than on the accidental, will the old ideal fade away
+ and the new ideal take its place. Among an idealizing and
+ emotional people, such as the Japanese, various ideals will
+ naturally find extreme expression. As society grows complex
+ also and its various elements become increasingly
+ differentiated, so will the ideals pass through the same
+ transformations. A study of ideals, therefore, serves
+ several ends; it reveals the present character of those
+ whose ideals they are; it shows the degree of development of
+ the social organism in which they live; it makes known,
+ likewise, the degree of the differentiation that has taken
+ place between the various elements of the nation.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='VIII'
+ id="VIII"></a><a name='Page_96'
+ id="Page_96"></a>VIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>LOVE FOR CHILDREN</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>An aspect of Japanese life widely remarked and praised by
+ foreign writers is the love for children. Children's holidays,
+ as the third day of the third moon and the fifth day of the
+ fifth moon, are general celebrations for boys and girls
+ respectively, and are observed with much gayety all over the
+ land. At these times the universal aim is to please the
+ children; the girls have dolls and the exhibition of ancestral
+ dolls; while the boys have toy paraphernalia of all the ancient
+ and modern forms of warfare, and enormous wind-inflated paper
+ fish, symbols of prosperity and success, fly from tall bamboos
+ in the front yard. Contrary to the prevailing opinion among
+ foreigners, these festivals have nothing whatever to do with
+ birthday celebrations. In addition to special festivals, the
+ children figure conspicuously in all holidays and
+ merry-makings. To the famous flower-festival celebrations,
+ families go in groups and make an all-day picnic of the joyous
+ occasion.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese fondness for children is seen not only at
+ festival times. Parents seem always ready to provide their
+ children with toys. As a consequence toy stores flourish. There
+ is hardly a street without its store.</p>
+
+ <p>A still further reason for the impression that the Japanese
+ are especially fond of their children is the slight amount of
+ punishment and reprimand which they administer. The children
+ seem to have nearly everything their own way. Playing on the
+ streets, they are always in evidence and are given the right of
+ way.</p>
+
+ <p>That Japanese show much affection for their children is
+ clear. The question of importance, however, is whether they
+ have it in a marked degree, more, for in<a name='Page_97'
+ id="Page_97"></a>stance, than Americans? And if so, is this
+ due to their nature, or may it be attributed to their family
+ life as molded by the social order? It is my impression
+ that, on the whole, the Japanese do not show more affection
+ for their children than Occidentals, although they may at
+ first sight appear to do so. Among the laboring classes of
+ the %est, the father, as a rule, is away from home all
+ through the hours of the day, working in shop or factory. He
+ seldom sees his children except upon the Sabbath. Of course,
+ the father has then very little to do with their care or
+ education, and little opportunity for the manifestation of
+ affection. In Japan, however, the industrial organization of
+ society is still such that the father is at home a large
+ part of the time. The factories are few as yet; the store is
+ usually not separate from the home, but a part of it, the
+ front room of the house. Family life is, therefore, much
+ less broken in upon by the industrial necessities of
+ civilization, and there are accordingly more opportunities
+ for the manifestation of the father's affection for the
+ children. Furthermore, the laboring-people in Japan live
+ much on the street, and it is a common thing to see the
+ father caring for children. While I have seldom seen a
+ father with an infant tied to his back, I have frequently
+ seen them with their infant sons tucked into their bosoms,
+ an interesting sight. This custom gives a vivid impression
+ of parental affection. But, comparing the middle classes of
+ Japan and the West, it is safe to say that, as a whole, the
+ Western father has more to do by far in the care and
+ education of the children than the Japanese father, and that
+ there is no less of fondling and playing with children. If
+ we may judge the degree of affection by the signs of its
+ demonstrations, we must pronounce the Occidental, with his
+ habits of kissing and embracing, as far and away more
+ affectionate than his Oriental cousin. While the Occidental
+ may not make so much of an occasion of the advent of a son
+ as does the Oriental, he continues to remember the birthdays
+ of all his children with joy and celebrations, as the
+ Oriental does not. Although the Japanese invariably say,
+ when asked about it, that they celebrate their children's
+ birth<a name='Page_98'
+ id="Page_98"></a>days, the uniform experience of the
+ foreigner is that birthday celebrations play a very
+ insignificant part in the joys and the social life of the
+ home.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not difficult to understand why, apart from the
+ question of affection, the Japanese should manifest special joy
+ on the advent of sons, and particularly of a first son. The
+ Oriental system of ancestral worship, with the consequent need,
+ both religious and political, of maintaining the family line,
+ is quite enough to account for all the congratulatory
+ ceremonies customary on the birth of sons. The fact that
+ special joy is felt and manifested on the birth of sons, and
+ less on the birth of daughters, clearly shows that the dominant
+ conceptions of the social order have an important place in
+ determining even so fundamental a trait as affection for
+ offspring.</p>
+
+ <p>Affection for children is, however, not limited to the day
+ of their birth or the period of their infancy. In judging of
+ the relative possession by different races of affection for
+ children, we must ask how the children are treated during all
+ their succeeding years. It must be confessed that the advantage
+ is then entirely on the side of the Occidental. Not only does
+ this appear in the demonstrations of affection which are
+ continued throughout childhood, often even throughout life, but
+ more especially in the active parental solicitude for the
+ children's welfare, striving to fit them for life's duties and
+ watching carefully over their mental and moral education. In
+ these respects the average Occidental is far in advance of the
+ average Oriental.</p>
+
+ <p>I have been told that, since the coming in of the new
+ civilization and the rise of the new ideas about woman,
+ marriage, and home, there is clearly observable to the Japanese
+ themselves a change in the way in which children are being
+ treated. But, even still, the elder son takes the more
+ prominent place in the affection of the family, and sons
+ precede daughters.</p>
+
+ <p>A fair statement of the case, therefore, is somewhat as
+ follows: The lower and laboring classes of Japan seem to have
+ more visible affection for their children than the same classes
+ in the Occident. Among the mid<a name='Page_99'
+ id="Page_99"></a>dle and upper classes, however, the balance
+ is in favor of the West. In the East, while, without doubt,
+ there always has been and is now a pure and natural
+ affection, it is also true that this natural affection has
+ been more mixed with utilitarian considerations than in the
+ West. Christian Japanese, however, differ little from
+ Christian Americans in this respect. The differences between
+ the East and the West are largely due to the differing
+ industrial and family conditions induced by the social
+ order.</p>
+
+ <p>The correctness of this general statement will perhaps be
+ better appreciated if we consider in detail some of the facts
+ of Japanese family life. Let us notice first the very loose
+ ties, as they seem to us, holding the Japanese family together.
+ It is one of the constant wonders to us Westerners how families
+ can break up into fragments, as they constantly do. One third
+ of the marriages end in divorce; and in case of divorce, the
+ children all stay with the father's family. It would seem as if
+ the love of the mother for her children could not be very
+ strong where divorce under such a condition is so common. Or,
+ perhaps, it would be truer to say that divorce would be far
+ more frequent than it is but for the mother's love for her
+ children. For I am assured that many a mother endures most
+ distressing conditions rather than leave her children.
+ Furthermore, the way in which parents allow their children to
+ leave the home and then fail to write or communicate with them,
+ for months or even years at a time, is incomprehensible if the
+ parental love were really strong. And still further, the way in
+ which concubines are brought into the home, causing confusion
+ and discord, is a very striking evidence of the lack of a deep
+ love on the part of the father for the mother of his children
+ and even for his own legitimate children. One would expect a
+ father who really loved his children to desire and plan for
+ their legitimacy; but the children by his concubines are not
+ "ipso facto" recognized as legal. One more evidence in this
+ direction is the frequency of adoption and of separation.
+ Adoption in Japan is largely, though by no means exclusively,
+ the adoption of an adult; the cases where <a name='Page_100'
+ id="Page_100"></a>a child is adopted by a childless couple
+ from love of children are rare, as compared with similar
+ cases in the United States, so far, at least, as my
+ observation goes. I recently heard of a conversation on
+ personal financial matters between a number of Christian
+ evangelists. After mutual comparisons they agreed that one
+ of their number was more fortunate than the rest in that he
+ did not have to support his mother. On inquiring into the
+ matter, the missionary learned that this evangelist, on
+ becoming a Buddhist priest many years before, had secured
+ from the government, according to the laws of the land,
+ exemption from this duty. When he became a Christian it did
+ not seem to occur to him that it was his duty and his
+ privilege to support his indigent mother. I may add that
+ this idea has since occurred to him and he is acting upon
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>Infanticide throws a rather lurid light on Japanese
+ affection. First, in regard to the facts: Mr. Ishii's attention
+ was called to the need of an orphan asylum by hearing how a
+ child, both of whose parents had died of cholera, was on the
+ point of being buried alive with its dead mother by heartless
+ neighbors when it was rescued by a fisherman. Certain parts of
+ Japan have been notorious from of old for this practice. In
+ Tosa the evil was so rampant that a society for its prevention
+ has been in existence for many years. It helps support children
+ of poor parents who might be tempted to dispose of them
+ criminally. In that province from January to March, 1898, I was
+ told that "only" four cases of conviction for this crime were
+ reported. The registered annual birth rate of certain villages
+ has increased from 40-50 to 75-80, and this without any
+ immigration from outside. The reason assigned is the diminution
+ of infanticide.</p>
+
+ <p>In speaking of infanticide in Japan, let us not forget that
+ every race and nation has been guilty of the same crime, and
+ has continued to be guilty of it until delivered by
+ Christianity.</p>
+
+ <p>Widespread infanticide proves a wide lack of natural
+ affection. Poverty is, of course, the common plea. Yet
+ infanticide has been practiced not so much by the desperately
+ poor as by small land-holders. The amount <a name='Page_101'
+ id="Page_101"></a>of farming land possessed by each family
+ was strictly limited and could feed only a given number of
+ mouths. Should the family exceed that number, all would be
+ involved in poverty, for the members beyond that limit did
+ not have the liberty to travel in search of new occupation.
+ Infanticide, therefore, bore direct relation to the rigid
+ economic nature of the old social order.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever, therefore, be the point of view from which we
+ study the question of Japanese affection for children, we see
+ that it was intimately connected with the nature of the social
+ order. Whether we judge such affection or its lack to be a
+ characteristic trait of Japanese nature, we must still maintain
+ that it is not an inherent trait of the race nature, but only a
+ characteristic depending for its greater or less development on
+ the nature of the social order.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='IX'
+ id="IX"></a><a name='Page_102'
+ id="Page_102"></a>IX</h2>
+
+ <h3>MARITAL LOVE</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>If the Japanese are a conspicuously emotional race, as is
+ commonly believed, we should naturally expect this
+ characteristic to manifest itself in a marked degree in the
+ relation of the sexes. Curiously enough, however, such does not
+ seem to be the case. So slight a place does the emotion of
+ sexual love have in Japanese family life that some have gone to
+ the extreme of denying it altogether. In his brilliant but
+ fallacious volume, entitled "The Soul of the Far East," Mr.
+ Percival Lowell states that the Japanese do not "fall in love."
+ The correctness of this statement we shall consider in
+ connection with the argument for Japanese impersonality. That
+ "falling in love" is not a recognized part of the family
+ system, and that marriage is arranged regardless not only of
+ love, but even of mutual acquaintance, are indisputable
+ facts.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us confine our attention here to Japanese post-marital
+ emotional characteristics. Do Japanese husbands love their
+ wives and wives their husbands? We have already seen that in
+ the text-book for Japanese women, the "Onna Daigaku," not one
+ word is said about love. It may be stated at once that love
+ between husband and wife is almost as conspicuously lacking in
+ practice as in precept. In no regard, perhaps, is the contrast
+ between the East and the West more striking than the respective
+ ideas concerning woman and marriage. The one counts woman the
+ equal, if not the superior of man; the other looks down upon
+ her as man's inferior in every respect; the one considers
+ profound love as the only true condition of marriage; the other
+ thinks of love as essentially impure, beneath the dignity of a
+ true man, and not to be taken into consideration
+ <a name='Page_103'
+ id="Page_103"></a>when marriage is contemplated; in the one,
+ the two persons most interested have most to say in the
+ matter; in the other, they have the least to say; in the
+ one, a long and intimate previous acquaintance is deemed
+ important; in the other, the need for such an acquaintance
+ does not receive a second thought; in the one, the wife at
+ once takes her place as the queen of the home; in the other,
+ she enters as the domestic for her husband and his parents;
+ in the one, the children are hers as well as his; in the
+ other, they are his rather than hers, and remain with him in
+ case of divorce; in the one, divorce is rare and condemned;
+ in the other, it is common in the extreme; in the one, it is
+ as often the woman as the man who seeks the divorce; in the
+ other, until most recent times, it is the man alone who
+ divorces the wife; in the one, the reasons for divorce are
+ grave; in the other, they are often trivial; in the one, the
+ wife is the "helpmate"; in the other, she is the man's
+ "plaything"; or, at most, the means for continuing the
+ family lineage; in the one, the man is the "husband"; in the
+ other, he is the "danna san" or "teishu" (the lord or
+ master); in the ideal home of the one, the wife is the
+ object of the husband's constant affection and solicitous
+ care; in the ideal home of the other, she ever waits upon
+ her lord, serves his food for him, and faithfully sits up
+ for him at night, however late his return may be; in the
+ one, the wife is justified in resenting any unfaithfulness
+ or immorality on the part of her husband; in the other, she
+ is commanded to accept with patience whatever he may do,
+ however many concubines he may have in his home or
+ elsewhere; and however immoral he may be, she must not be
+ jealous. The following characterization of the women of
+ Japan is presumably by one who would do them no injustice,
+ having himself married a Japanese wife (the editor of the
+ <i>Japan Mail</i>).</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"The woman of Japan is a charming personage in many
+ ways&mdash;gracious, refined, womanly before everything,
+ sweet-tempered, unselfish, virtuous, a splendid mother, and
+ an ideal wife from the point of view of the master. But she
+ is virtually excluded from the whole <a name='Page_104'
+ id="Page_104"></a>intellectual life of the nation.
+ Politics, art, literature, science, are closed books to
+ her. She cannot think logically about any of these
+ subjects, express herself clearly with reference to
+ them, or take an intellectual part in conversations
+ relating to them. She is, in fact, totally disqualified
+ to be her husband's intellectual companion, and the
+ inevitable result is that he despises
+ her."<a name='FNanchor_J_10'
+ id="FNanchor_J_10"></a><a href='#Footnote_J_10'><sup>[J]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In face of all these facts, it is evident that the emotional
+ element of character which plays so large a part in the
+ relation of the sexes in the West has little, if any,
+ counterpart in the Far East. Where the emotional element does
+ come in, it is under social condemnation. There are doubtless
+ many happy marriages in Japan, if the wife is faithful in her
+ place and fills it well; and if the master is honorable
+ according to the accepted standards, steady in his business,
+ not given to wine or women. But even then the affection must be
+ different from that which prevails in the West. No Japanese
+ wife ever dreams of receiving the loving care from her husband
+ which is freely accorded her Western sister by her
+ husband.<a name='FNanchor_K_11'
+ id="FNanchor_K_11"></a><a href='#Footnote_K_11'><sup>[K]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>I wish, however, to add at once that this is a topic about
+ which it is dangerous to dogmatize, for the customs of Japan
+ demand that all expressions of affection between husband and
+ wife shall be sedulously concealed from the outer world. I can
+ easily believe that there is no little true affection existing
+ between husband and wife. A Japanese friend with whom I have
+ talked on this subject expresses his belief that the statement
+ made above, to the effect that no Japanese wife dreams of
+ receiving the loving care which is expected by her
+ West<a name='Page_105'
+ id="Page_105"></a>ern sister, is doubtless true of Old
+ Japan, but that there has been a great change in this
+ respect in recent decades; and especially among the
+ Christian community. That Christians excel the others with
+ whom I have come in contact, has been evident to me. But
+ that even they are still very different from Occidentals in
+ this respect, is also clear. Whatever be the affection
+ lavished on the wife in the privacy of the home, she does
+ not receive in public the constant evidence of special
+ regard and high esteem which the Western wife expects as her
+ right.</p>
+
+ <p>How much affection can be expressed by low formal bows? The
+ fact is that Japanese civilization has striven to crush out all
+ signs of emotion; this stoicism is exemplified to a large
+ degree even in the home, and under circumstances when we should
+ think it impossible. Kissing was an unknown art in Japan, and
+ it is still unknown, except by name, to the great majority of
+ the people. Even mothers seldom kiss their infant children, and
+ when they do, it is only while the children are very young.</p>
+
+ <p>The question, however, which particularly interests us, is
+ as to the explanation for these facts. Is the lack of
+ demonstrative affection between husband and wife due to the
+ inherent nature of the Japanese, or is it not due rather to the
+ prevailing social order? If a Japanese goes to America or.
+ England, for a few years, does he maintain his cold attitude
+ toward all women, and never show the slightest tendency to fall
+ in love, or exhibit demonstrative affection? These questions
+ almost answer themselves, and with them the main question for
+ whose solution we are seeking.</p>
+
+ <p>A few concrete instances may help to illustrate the
+ generalization that these are not fixed because racial
+ characteristics, but variable ones dependent on the social
+ order. Many years ago when the late Dr. Neesima, the founder,
+ with Dr. Davis, of the Doshisha, was on the point of departure
+ for the United States on account of his health, he made an
+ address to the students. In the course of his remarks he stated
+ that there were three principal considerations that made him
+ regret the necessity for his departure at that time; the first
+ was <a name='Page_106'
+ id="Page_106"></a>that the Doshisha was in a most critical
+ position; it was but starting on its larger work, and he
+ felt that all its friends should be on hand to help on the
+ great undertaking. The second was that he was compelled to
+ leave his aged parents, whom he might not find living on his
+ return to Japan. The third was his sorrow at leaving his
+ beloved wife. This public reference to his wife, and
+ especially to his love for her, was so extraordinary that it
+ created no little comment, not to say scandal; especially
+ obnoxious was it to many, because he mentioned her after
+ having mentioned his parents. In the reports of this speech
+ given by his friends to the public press no reference was
+ made to this expression of love for his wife. And a few
+ months after his death, when Dr. Davis prepared a short
+ biography of Dr. Neesima, he was severely criticised by some
+ of the Japanese for reproducing the speech as Dr. Neesima
+ gave it.</p>
+
+ <p>Shortly after my first arrival in Japan, I was walking home
+ from church one day with an English-speaking Japanese, who had
+ had a good deal to do with foreigners. Suddenly, without any
+ introduction, he remarked that he did not comprehend how the
+ men of the West could endure such tyranny as was exercised over
+ them by their wives. I, of course, asked what he meant. He then
+ said that he had seen me buttoning my wife's shoes. I should
+ explain that on calling on the Japanese, in their homes, it is
+ necessary that we leave our shoes at the door, as the Japanese
+ invariably do; this is, of course, awkward for foreigners who
+ wear shoes; especially so is the necessity of putting them on
+ again. The difficulty is materially increased by the invariably
+ high step at the front door. It is hard enough for a man to
+ kneel down on the step and reach for his shoes and then put
+ them on; much more so is it for a woman. And after the shoes
+ are on, there is no suitable place on which to rest the foot
+ for buttoning and tying. I used, therefore, very gladly to help
+ my wife with hers. Yet, so contrary to Japanese precedent was
+ this act of mine that this well-educated gentleman and
+ Christian, who had had much intercourse with foreigners, could
+ not see in it anything except the imperious command of the wife
+ <a name='Page_107'
+ id="Page_107"></a>and the slavish obedience of the husband.
+ His conception of the relation between the Occidental
+ husband and wife is best described as tyranny on the part of
+ the wife.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the early shocks I received on this general subject
+ was due to the discovery that whenever my wife took my arm as
+ we walked the street to and from church, or elsewhere, the
+ people looked at us in surprised displeasure. Such public
+ manifestation of intimacy was to be expected from libertines
+ alone, and from these only when they were more or less under
+ the influence of drink. Whenever a Japanese man walks out with
+ his wife, which, by the way, is seldom, he invariably steps on
+ ahead, leaving her to follow, carrying the parcels, if there
+ are any. A child, especially a son, may walk at his side, but
+ not his wife.</p>
+
+ <p>Let me give a few more illustrations to show how the present
+ family life of the Japanese checks the full and free
+ development of the affections. In one of our out-stations I but
+ recently found a young woman in a distressing condition. Her
+ parents had no sons, and consequently, according to the custom
+ of the land, they had adopted a son, who became the husband of
+ their eldest daughter; the man proved a rascal, and the family
+ was glad when he decided that he did not care to be their son
+ any longer. Shortly after his departure a child was born to the
+ daughter; but, according to the law, she had no husband, and
+ consequently the child must either be registered as
+ illegitimate, or be fraudulently registered as the child of the
+ mother's father. There is much fraudulent registration, the
+ children of concubines are not recognized as legitimate; yet it
+ is common to register such children as those of the regular
+ wife, especially if she has few or none of her own.</p>
+
+ <p>An evangelist who worked long in Kyushu was always in great
+ financial trouble because of the fact that he had to support
+ two mothers, besides giving aid to his father, who had married
+ a third wife. The first was his own mother, who had been
+ divorced, but, as she had no home, the son took her to his.
+ When the father <a name='Page_108'
+ id="Page_108"></a>divorced his second wife, the son was
+ induced to take care of her also. Another evangelist, with
+ whom I had much to do, was the adopted son of a scheming old
+ man; it seems that in the earlier part of the present era
+ the eldest son of a family was exempt from military draft.
+ It often happened, therefore, that families who had no sons
+ could obtain large sums of money from those who had younger
+ sons whom they wished to have adopted for the purpose of
+ escaping the draft. This evangelist, while still a boy, was
+ adopted into such a family, and a certain sum was fixed upon
+ to be paid at some time in the future. But the adopted son
+ proved so pleasing to the adopting father that he did not
+ ask for the money; by some piece of legerdemain, however, he
+ succeeded in adopting a second son, who paid him the desired
+ money. After some years the first adopted son became a
+ Christian, and then an evangelist, both steps being taken
+ against the wishes of the adopting father. The father
+ finally said that he would forego all relations to the son,
+ and give him back his original name, provided the son would
+ pay the original sum that had been agreed on, plus the
+ interest, which altogether would, at that time, amount to
+ several hundred yen. This was, of course, impossible. The
+ negotiations dragged on for three or four years. Meanwhile,
+ the young man fell in love with a young girl, whom he
+ finally married; as he was still the son of his adopting
+ father, he could not have his wife registered as his wife,
+ for the old man had another girl in view for him and would
+ not consent to this arrangement. And so the matter dragged
+ for several months more. Unless the matter could be
+ arranged, any children born to them must be registered as
+ illegitimate. At this point I was consulted and, for the
+ first time, learned the details of the case. Further
+ consultations resulted in an agreement as to the sum to be
+ paid; the adopted son was released, and re-registered under
+ his newly acquired name and for the first time his marriage
+ became legal. The confusion and suffering brought into the
+ family by this practice of adoption and of separation are
+ almost endless.</p>
+
+ <p>The number of cases in which beautiful and
+ accom<a name='Page_109'
+ id="Page_109"></a>plished young women have been divorced by
+ brutal and licentious husbands is appalling. I know several
+ such. What wonder that Christians and others are constantly
+ laying emphasis, in public lectures and sermons and private
+ talks, on the crying need of reform in marriage and in the
+ home?</p>
+
+ <p>Throughout the land the newspapers are discussing the pros
+ and cons of monogamy and polygamy. In January of 1898 the
+ <i>Jiji Shimpo</i>, one of the leading daily papers of Tokyo,
+ had a series of articles on the subject from the pen of one of
+ the most illustrious educators of New Japan, Mr. Fukuzawa. His
+ school, the "Keio Gijiku," has educated more thousands of young
+ men than any other, notwithstanding the fact that it is a
+ private institution. Though not a Christian himself, nor making
+ any professions of advocating Christianity, yet Mr. Fukuzawa
+ has come out strongly in favor of monogamy. His description of
+ the existing social and family life is striking, not to say
+ sickening. If I mistake not, it is he who tells of a certain
+ noble lady who shed tears at the news of the promotion of her
+ husband in official rank; and when questioned on the matter she
+ confessed that, with added salary, he would add to the number
+ of his concubines and to the frequency of his intercourse with
+ famous dancing and singing girls.</p>
+
+ <p>The distressing state of family life may also be gathered
+ from the large numbers of public and secret prostitutes that
+ are to be found in all the large cities, and the singing girls
+ of nearly every town. According to popular opinion, their
+ number is rapidly increasing. Though this general subject
+ trenches on morality rather than on the topic immediately
+ before us, yet it throws a lurid light on this question also.
+ It lets us see, perhaps, more clearly than we could in any
+ other way, how deficient is the average home life of the
+ people. A professing Christian, a man of wide experience and
+ social standing, not long since seriously argued at a meeting
+ of a Young Men's Christian Association that dancing and singing
+ girls are a necessary part of Japanese civilization to-day. He
+ argued that they supply the men with that female element in
+ social life which the ordi<a name='Page_110'
+ id="Page_110"></a>nary woman cannot provide; were the
+ average wives and daughters sufficiently accomplished to
+ share in the social life of the men as they are in the West,
+ dancing and singing girls, being needless, would soon cease
+ to be.</p>
+
+ <p>One further question in this connection merits our
+ attention. How are we to account for an order of society that
+ allows so little scope for the natural affections of the heart,
+ unless by saying that that order is the true expression of
+ their nature? Must we not say that the element of affection in
+ the present social order is deficient because the Japanese
+ themselves are naturally deficient? The question seems more
+ difficult than it really is.</p>
+
+ <p>In the first place, the affectionate relation existing
+ between husbands and wives and between parents and children, in
+ Western lands, is a product of relatively recent times. In his
+ exhaustive work on "The History of Human Marriage," Westermarck
+ makes this very plain. Wherever the woman is counted a slave,
+ is bought and sold, is considered as merely a means of bearing
+ children to the family, or in any essential way is looked down
+ upon, there high forms of affection are by the nature of the
+ case impossible, though some affection doubtless exists; it
+ necessarily attains only a rudimentary development. Now it is
+ conspicuous that the conception of the nature and purpose of
+ woman, as held in the Orient, has always been debasing to her.
+ Though individual women might rise above their assigned
+ position the whole social order, as established by the leaders
+ of thought, was against her. The statement that there was a
+ primitive condition of society in Japan in which the
+ affectionate relations between husband and wife now known in
+ the West prevailed, is, I think, a mistake.</p>
+
+ <p>We must remember, in the second place, what careful students
+ of human evolution have pointed out, that those tribes and
+ races in which the family was most completely consolidated,
+ that is to say, those in which the power of the father was
+ absolute, were the ones to gain the victory over their
+ competitors. The reason for this is too obvious to require even
+ a statement. Every <a name='Page_111'
+ id="Page_111"></a>conquering race has accordingly developed
+ the "patria potestas" to a greater or less degree. Now one
+ general peculiarity of the Orient is that that stage of
+ development has remained to this day; it has not experienced
+ those modifications and restrictions which have arisen in
+ the West. The national government dealt with families and
+ clans, not with individuals, as the final social unit. In
+ the West, however, the individual has become the civil unit;
+ the "patria potestas" has thus been all but lost. This,
+ added to religious and ethical considerations, has given
+ women and children an ever higher place both in society and
+ in the home. Had this loss of authority by the father been
+ accompanied with a weakening of the nation, it would have
+ been an injury; but, in the West, his authority has been
+ transferred to the nation. These considerations serve to
+ render more intelligible and convincing the main proposition
+ of these chapters, that the distinctive emotional
+ characteristics of the Japanese are not inherent; they are
+ the results of the social and industrial order; as this
+ order changes, they too will surely change. The entire
+ civilization of a land takes its leading, if not its
+ dominant, color from the estimate set by the people as a
+ whole on the value of human life. The relatively late
+ development of the tender affections, even in the West, is
+ due doubtless to the extreme slowness with which the idea of
+ the inherent value of a human being, as such, has taken
+ root, even though it was clearly taught by Christ. But the
+ leaven of His teaching has been at work for these hundreds
+ of years, and now at last we are beginning to see its real
+ meaning and its vital relation to the entire progress of
+ man. It may be questioned whether Christ gave any more
+ important impetus to the development of civilization than by
+ His teaching in regard to the inestimable worth of man,
+ grounding it, as He did, on man's divine sonship. Those
+ nations which insist on valuing human life only by the
+ utilitarian standard, and which consequently keep woman in a
+ degraded place, insisting on concubinage and all that it
+ implies, are sure to wane before those nations which loyally
+ adopt and practice the higher ideals of human worth. The
+ weakness <a name='Page_112'
+ id="Page_112"></a>of heathen lands arises in no slight
+ degree from their cheap estimate of human life.</p>
+
+ <p>In Japan, until the Meiji era, human life was cheap. For
+ criminals of the military classes, suicide was the honorable
+ method of leaving this world; the lower orders of society
+ suffered loss of life at the hands of the military class
+ without redress. The whole nation accepted the low standards of
+ human value; woman was valued chiefly, if not entirely, on a
+ utilitarian basis, that, namely, of bearing children, doing
+ house and farm work, and giving men pleasure. So far as I know,
+ not among all the teachings of Confucius or Buddha was the
+ supreme value of human life, as such, once suggested, much less
+ any adequate conception of the worth and nature of woman. The
+ entire social order was constructed without these two important
+ truths.</p>
+
+ <p>By a great effort, however, Japan has introduced a new
+ social order, with unprecedented rapidity. By one revolution it
+ has established a set of laws in which the equality of all men
+ before the law is recognized at least; for the first time in
+ Oriental history, woman is given the right to seek divorce. The
+ experiment is now being made on a great scale as to whether the
+ new social order adopted by the rulers can induce those ideas
+ among the people at large which will insure its performance.
+ Can the mere legal enactments which embody the principles of
+ human equality and the value of human life, regardless of sex,
+ beget those fundamental conceptions on which alone a steady and
+ lasting government can rest? Can Japan really step into the
+ circle of Western nations, without abandoning her pagan
+ religions and pushing onward into Christian monotheism with all
+ its corollaries as to the relations and mutual duties of man?
+ All earnest men are crying out for a strengthening of the moral
+ life of the nation through the reform of the family and are
+ proclaiming the necessity of monogamy; but, aside from the
+ Christians, none appear to see how this is to be done. Even Mr.
+ Fukuzawa says that the first step in the reform of the family
+ and the establishment of monogamy is to develop public
+ sentiment against prostitution and plural or <a name='Page_113'
+ id="Page_113"></a>illegal marriage; and the way to do this
+ is first to make evil practices secret. This, he says, is
+ more important than to give women a higher education. He
+ does not see that Christianity with its conceptions of
+ immediate responsibility of the individual to God, the
+ loving Heavenly Father, and of the infinite value of each
+ human soul, thus doing away with the utilitarian scale for
+ measuring both men and women, together with its conceptions
+ of the relations of the sexes and of man to man, can alone
+ supply that foundation for all the elements of the new
+ social order, intellectual and emotional, which will make it
+ workable and permanent, and of which monogamy is but one
+ element.<a name='FNanchor_L_12'
+ id="FNanchor_L_12"></a><a href='#Footnote_L_12'><sup>[L]</sup></a>
+ He does not see that <a name='Page_114'
+ id="Page_114"></a>representative government and popular
+ rights cannot stand for any length of time on any other
+ foundation.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='X'
+ id="X"></a><a name='Page_115'
+ id="Page_115"></a>X</h2>
+
+ <h3>
+ CHEERFULNESS&mdash;INDUSTRY&mdash;TRUTHFULNESS&mdash;SUSPICIOUSNESS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Many writers have dwelt with delight on the cheerful
+ disposition that seems so common in Japan. Lightness of heart,
+ freedom from all anxiety for the future, living chiefly in the
+ present, these and kindred features are pictured in glowing
+ terms. And, on the whole, these pictures are true to life. The
+ many flower festivals are made occasions for family picnics
+ when all care seems thrown to the wind. There is a simplicity
+ and a freshness and a freedom from worry that is delightful to
+ see. But it is also remarked that a change in this regard is
+ beginning to be observed. The coming in of Western machinery,
+ methods of government, of trade and of education, is
+ introducing customs and cares, ambitions and activities, that
+ militate against the older ways. Doubtless, this too is true.
+ If so, it but serves to establish the general proposition of
+ these pages that the more outstanding national characteristics
+ are largely the result of special social conditions, rather
+ than of inherent national character.</p>
+
+ <p>The cheerful disposition, so often seen and admired by the
+ Westerner, is the cheerfulness of children. In many respects
+ the Japanese are relatively undeveloped. This is due to the
+ nature of their social order during the past. The government
+ has been largely paternal in form and fully so in theory.
+ Little has been left to individual initiative or
+ responsibility. Wherever such a system has been dominant and
+ the perfectly accepted order, the inevitable result is just
+ such a state of simple, childish cheerfulness as we find in
+ Japan. It constitutes that golden age sung by the poets of
+ every land. But being the cheerfulness of children, the
+ happiness of im<a name='Page_116'
+ id="Page_116"></a>maturity, it is bound to change with
+ growth, to be lost with coming maturity.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet the Japanese are by no means given up to a cheerful view
+ of life. Many an individual is morose and dejected in the
+ extreme. This disposition is ever stimulated by the religious
+ teachings of Buddhism. Its great message has been the
+ evanescent character of the present life. Life is not worth
+ living, it urges; though life may have some pleasures, the
+ total result is disappointment and sorrow. Buddhism has found a
+ warm welcome in the hearts of many Japanese. For more than a
+ thousand years it has been exercising a potent influence on
+ their thoughts and lives. Yet how is this consistent with the
+ cheerful disposition which seems so characteristic of Japan?
+ The answer is not far to seek. Pessimism is by its very nature
+ separative, isolating, silent. Those oppressed by it do not
+ enter into public joys. They hide themselves in monasteries, or
+ in the home. The result is that by its very nature the actual
+ pessimism of Japan is not a conspicuous feature of national
+ character. The judgment that all Japanese are cheerful rests on
+ shallow grounds. Because, forsooth, millions on holidays bear
+ that appearance, and because on ordinary occasions the average
+ man and woman seem cheerful and happy, the conclusion is
+ reached that all are so. No effort is made to learn of those
+ whose lives are spent in sadness and isolation. I am convinced
+ that the Japan of old, for all its apparent cheer, had likewise
+ its side of deep tragedy. Conditions of life that struck down
+ countless individuals, and mental conditions which made
+ Buddhism so popular, both point to this conclusion.</p>
+
+ <p>Again I wish to call attention to the fact that the
+ prominence of children and young people is in part the cause of
+ the appearance of general happiness. The Japanese live on the
+ street as no Western people do. The stores and workshops are
+ the homes; when these are open, the homes are open. When the
+ children go out of the house to play they use the streets, for
+ they seldom have yards. Here they gather in great numbers and
+ play most enthusiastically, utterly regardless of the
+ <a name='Page_117'
+ id="Page_117"></a>passers-by, for these latter are all on
+ foot or in jinrikishas, and, consequently, never cause the
+ children any alarm.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese give the double impression of being industrious
+ and diligent on the one hand, and, on the other, of being lazy
+ and utterly indifferent to the lapse of time. The long hours
+ during which they keep at work is a constant wonder to the
+ Occidental. I have often been amazed in Fukuoka to find stores
+ and workshops open, apparently in operation, after ten and
+ sometimes even until eleven o'clock at night, while blacksmiths
+ and carpenters and wheelwrights would be working away as if it
+ were morning. Many of the factories recently started keep very
+ long hours. Indeed most of the cotton mills run day and night,
+ having two sets of workers, who shift their times of labor
+ every week. Those who work during the night hours one week take
+ the day hours the following week. In at least one such factory,
+ with which I am acquainted, the fifteen hundred girls who work
+ from six o'clock Saturday evening until six o'clock Sunday
+ morning, are then supposed to have twenty-four hours of rest
+ before they begin their day's work Monday morning; but, as a
+ matter of fact, they must spend three or four and sometimes
+ five hours on Sunday morning cleaning up the factory.</p>
+
+ <p>In a small silk-weaving factory that I know the customary
+ hours for work were from five in the morning until nine at
+ night, seven days in the week. The wife, however, of the owner
+ became a Christian. Through her intervention time for rest was
+ secured on Sunday long enough for a Bible class, which the
+ evangelist of the place was invited to teach. After several
+ months of instruction a number of the hands became Christian,
+ and all were sufficiently interested to ask that the whole of
+ the Sabbath be granted to them for rest; but in order that the
+ master might not lose thereby, they agreed to begin work at
+ four each morning and to work on until ten at night. With such
+ hours one would have expected them to fall at once into their
+ beds when the work of the day was over. But for many months, at
+ ten o'clock in the evening, my wife and I heard them singing a
+ hymn <a name='Page_118'
+ id="Page_118"></a>or two in their family worship before
+ retiring for the night.</p>
+
+ <p>In certain weaving factories I have been told that the girls
+ are required to work sixteen hours a day; and that on Sundays
+ they are allowed to have some rest, being then required to work
+ but ten hours! The diligence of mail deliverers, who always run
+ when on duty, the hours of consecutive running frequently
+ performed by jin-irikisha men (several have told me that they
+ have made over sixty miles in a single day), the long hours of
+ persistent study by students in the higher schools, and many
+ kindred facts, certainly indicate a surprising capacity for
+ work.</p>
+
+ <p>But there are equally striking illustrations of an opposite
+ nature. The farmers and mechanics and carpenters, among regular
+ laborers, and the entire life of the common people in their
+ homes, give an impression of indifference to the flight of
+ time, if not of absolute laziness. The workers seem ready to
+ sit down for a smoke and a chat at any hour of the day. In the
+ home and in ordinary social life, the loss of time seems to be
+ a matter of no consequence whatever. Polite palaver takes
+ unstinted hours, and the sauntering of the people through the
+ street emphasizes the impression that no business calls oppress
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>In my opinion these characteristics, also, are due to the
+ conditions of society, past and present, rather than to the
+ inherent nature of the people. The old civilization was
+ easy-going; it had no clocks; it hardly knew the time of day;
+ it never hastened. The hour was estimated and was twice as long
+ as the modern hour. The structure of society demanded the
+ constant observance of the forms of etiquette; this, with its
+ numberless genuflections and strikings of the head on the
+ floor, always demanded time. Furthermore, the very character of
+ the footgear compelled and still compels a shuffling, ambling
+ gait when walking the streets. The clog is a well-named
+ hindrance to civilization in the waste of time it compels. The
+ slow-going, time-ignoring characteristics of New Japan are
+ social inheritances from feudal times, characteristics which
+ are still hampering its de<a name='Page_119'
+ id="Page_119"></a>velopment. The industrious spirit that is
+ to be found in so many quarters to-day is largely the gift
+ of the new civilization. Shoes are taking the place of
+ clogs. The army and all the police, on ordinary duty, wear
+ shoes. Even the industry of the students is largely due to
+ the new conditions of student life. The way in which the
+ Japanese are working to-day, and the feverish haste that
+ some of them evince in their work, shows that they are as
+ capable as Occidentals of acquiring the rush of
+ civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>The home life of the people gives an impression of
+ listlessness that is in marked contrast to that of the West.
+ This is partly due to the fact that the house work is
+ relatively light, there being no furniture to speak of, the
+ rooms small, and the cooking arrangements quite simple.
+ Housewives go about their work with restful deliberation, which
+ is trying, however, to one in haste. It is the experience of
+ the housekeepers from the West that one Japanese domestic is
+ able to accomplish from a third to a half of what is done by a
+ girl in America. This is not wholly due to slowness of
+ movement, however, but also to smallness of stature and
+ corresponding lack of strength. On the other hand, the long
+ hours of work required of women in the majority of Japanese
+ homes is something appalling. The wife is expected to be up
+ before the husband, to prepare his meals, and to wait patiently
+ till his return at night, however late that may be. In all
+ except the higher ranks of society she takes entire care of the
+ children, except for the help which her older children may give
+ her. During much of the time she goes about her work with an
+ infant tied to her back. Though she does not work hard at any
+ one time (and is it to be wondered at?) yet she works long.
+ Especially hard is the life of the waiting girls in the hotels.
+ I have learned that, as a rule, they are required to be up
+ before daylight and to remain on duty until after midnight. In
+ some hotels they are allowed but four or five hours out of the
+ twenty-four. The result is, they are often overcome and fall
+ asleep while at service. Sitting on the floor and waiting to
+ serve the rice, with nothing to distract their thoughts or hold
+ <a name='Page_120'
+ id="Page_120"></a>their attention, they easily lose
+ themselves for a few moments.</p>
+
+ <p>Two other strongly contrasted traits are found in the
+ Japanese character, absolute confidence and trustfulness on the
+ one hand, and suspicion on the other. It is the universal
+ testimony that the former characteristic is rapidly passing
+ away; in the cities it is well-nigh gone. But in the country
+ places it is still common. The idea of making a bargain when
+ two persons entered upon some particular piece of work, the one
+ as employer, the other as employed, was entirely repugnant to
+ the older generation, since it was assumed that their relations
+ as inferior and superior should determine their financial
+ relations; the superior would do what was right, and the
+ inferior should accept what the superior might give without a
+ question or a murmur. Among the samurai, where the arrangement
+ is between equals, bargaining or making fixed and fast terms
+ which will hold to the end, and which may be carried to the
+ courts in case of differences, was a thing practically unknown
+ in the older civilization. Everything of a business nature was
+ left to honor, and was carried on in mutual confidence.</p>
+
+ <p>A few illustrations of this spirit of confidence from my own
+ experience may not be without interest. On first coming to
+ Japan, I found it usual for a Japanese who wished to take a
+ jinrikisha to call the runner and take the ride without making
+ any bargain, giving him at the end what seemed right. And the
+ men generally accepted the payment without question. I have
+ found that recently, unless there is some definite
+ understanding arrived at before the ride, there is apt to be
+ some disagreement, the runner presuming on the hold he has, by
+ virtue of work done, to get more than is customary. This is
+ especially true in case the rider is a foreigner. Another set
+ of examples in which astonishing simplicity and confidence were
+ manifested was in the employment of evangelists. I have known
+ several instances in which a full correspondence with an
+ evangelist with regard to his employment was carried on, and
+ the settlement finally concluded, and the man set to work
+ without a <a name='Page_121'
+ id="Page_121"></a>word said about money matters. It need
+ hardly be said that no foreigner took part in that
+ correspondence.</p>
+
+ <p>The simple, childlike trustfulness of the country people is
+ seen in multiplied ways; yet on the whole I cannot escape the
+ conviction that it is a trustfulness which is shown toward each
+ other as equals. Certain farmers whom I have employed to care
+ for a cow and to cultivate the garden, while showing a trustful
+ disposition towards me, have not had the same feelings toward
+ their fellows apparently.</p>
+
+ <p>This confidence and trustfulness were the product of a
+ civilization resting on communalistic feudalism; the people
+ were kept as children in dependence on their feudal lord; they
+ had to accept what he said and did; they were accustomed to
+ that order of things from the beginning and had no other
+ thought; on the whole too, without doubt, they received regular
+ and kindly treatment. Furthermore, there was no redress for the
+ peasant in case of harshness; it was always the wise policy,
+ therefore, for him to accept whatever was given without even
+ the appearance of dissatisfaction. This spirit was connected
+ with the dominance of the military class. Simple trustfulness
+ was, therefore, chiefly that of the non-military classes. The
+ trustfulness of the samurai sprang from their distinctive
+ training. As already mentioned, when drawing up a bond in
+ feudal times, in place of any tangible security, the document
+ would read, "If I fail to do so and so, you may laugh at me in
+ public."</p>
+
+ <p>Since the overthrow of communal feudalism and the
+ establishment of an individualistic social order, necessitating
+ personal ownership of property, and the universal use of money,
+ trustful confidence is rapidly passing away. Everything is
+ being more and more accurately reduced to a money basis. The
+ old samurai scorn for money seems to be wholly gone, an
+ astonishing transformation of character. Since the
+ disestablishment of the samurai class many of them have gone
+ into business. Not a few have made tremendous failures for lack
+ of business instinct, being easily fleeced by more
+ <a name='Page_122'
+ id="Page_122"></a>cunning and less honorable fellows who
+ have played the "confidence" game most successfully; others
+ have made equally great successes because of their superior
+ mental ability and education. The government of Japan is
+ to-day chiefly in the hands of the descendants of the
+ samurai class. They have their fixed salaries and everything
+ is done on a financial basis, payment being made for work
+ only. The lazy and the incapable are being pushed to the
+ wall. Many of the poorest and most pitiable people of the
+ land to-day are the proud sons of the former aristocracy,
+ who glory in the history of their ancestors, but are not
+ able or willing to change their old habits of thought and
+ manner of life.</p>
+
+ <p>The American Board has had a very curious, not to say
+ disastrous, experience with the spirit of trustful confidence
+ that was the prevailing business characteristic of the older
+ civilization. According to the treaties which Japan had made
+ with foreign nations, no foreigner was allowed to buy land
+ outside the treaty ports. As, however, mission work was freely
+ allowed by the government and welcomed by many of the people in
+ all parts of the land, and as it became desirable to have
+ continuous missionary work in several of the interior towns, it
+ seemed wise to locate missionaries in those places and to
+ provide suitable houses for them. In order to do this, land was
+ bought and the needed houses erected, and the title was
+ necessarily held in the names of apparently trustworthy native
+ Christians. The government was, of course, fully aware of what
+ was being done and offered no objection. It was well understood
+ that the property was not for the private ownership of the
+ individual missionary, but was to be held by the Christians for
+ the use of the mission to which the missionary belonged. For
+ many years no questions were raised and all moved along
+ smoothly. The arrangement between the missionaries and the
+ Christian or Christians in whose names the property might be
+ held was entirely verbal, no document being of any legal value,
+ to say nothing of the fact that in those early days the mention
+ of documentary relationships would have greatly hurt the tender
+ feelings of honor which were so prominent a part of
+ <a name='Page_123'
+ id="Page_123"></a>samurai character. The financial relations
+ were purely those of honor and trust.</p>
+
+ <p>Under this general method, large sums of money were expended
+ by the American Board for homes for its missionaries in various
+ parts of Japan, and especially in Kyoto. Here was the Doshisha,
+ which grew from a small English school and Evangelists'
+ training class to a prosperous university with fine buildings.
+ Tens of thousands of dollars were put into this institution,
+ besides the funds needful for the land and the houses for nine
+ foreign families. An endowment was also raised, partly in
+ Japan, but chiefly in America. In a single bequest, Mr. Harris
+ of New London gave over one hundred thousand dollars for a
+ School of Science. It has been estimated that, altogether, the
+ American Board and its constituency have put into the Doshisha,
+ including the salaries of the missionary teachers, toward a
+ million dollars.</p>
+
+ <p>In the early nineties the political skies were suddenly
+ darkened. The question of treaty revision loomed up black in
+ the heavens. The politicians of the land clamored for the
+ absolute refusal of all right of property ownership by
+ foreigners. In their political furore they soon began to attack
+ the Japanese Christians who were holding the property used by
+ the various missions. They accused them of being traitors to
+ the country. A proposed law was drafted and presented in the
+ National Diet, confiscating all such property. The Japanese
+ holders naturally became nervous and desirous of severing the
+ relationships with the foreigners as soon as possible. In the
+ case of corporate ownership the trustees began to make
+ assumptions of absolute ownership, regardless of the moral
+ claims of the donors of the funds. In the earlier days of the
+ trouble frequent conferences on the question were held by the
+ missionaries of the American Board with the leading Christians
+ of the Empire, and their constant statement was, "Do not worry;
+ trust us; we are samurai and will do nothing that is not
+ perfectly honorable." So often were these sentiments
+ reiterated, and yet so steadily did the whole management of the
+ Doshisha move further and further away <a name='Page_124'
+ id="Page_124"></a>from the honorable course, that finally
+ the "financial honor of the samurai" came to have an odor
+ far from pleasant. A deputation of four gentlemen, as
+ representatives of the American Board, came from America
+ especially to confer with the trustees as to the Christian
+ principles of the institution, and the moral claims of the
+ Board, but wholly in vain. The administration of the
+ Doshisha became so distinctly non-Christian, to use no
+ stronger term, that the mission felt it impossible to
+ co-operate longer with the Doshisha trustees; the missionary
+ members of the faculty accordingly resigned. In order to
+ secure exemption from the draft for its students the
+ trustees of the Doshisha abrogated certain clauses of the
+ constitution relating to the Christian character of the
+ institution, in spite of the fact that these clauses
+ belonged to the "unchangeable" part of the constitution
+ which the trustees, on taking office, had individually sworn
+ to maintain. Again the Board sent out a man, now a lawyer
+ vested with full power to press matters to a final issue.
+ After months of negotiations with the trustees in regard to
+ the restoration of the substance of the abrogated clauses,
+ without result, he was on the point of carrying the case
+ into the courts, when the trustees decided to resign in a
+ body. A new board of trustees has been formed, who bid fair
+ to carry on the institution in accord with the wishes of its
+ founders and benefactors, as expressed in the original
+ constitution. At one stage of the proceedings the trustees
+ voted magnanimously, as they appeared to think, to allow the
+ missionaries of the Board to live for fifteen years, rent
+ free, in the foreign houses connected with the Doshisha;
+ this, because of the many favors it had received from the
+ Board! By this vote they maintained that they had more than
+ fulfilled every requirement of honor. That they were
+ consciously betraying the trust that had been reposed in
+ them is not for a moment to be supposed.</p>
+
+ <p>It would not be fair not to add that this experience in
+ Kyoto does not exemplify the universal Japanese character.
+ There are many Japanese who deeply deplore and condemn the
+ whole proceeding. Some of the <a name='Page_125'
+ id="Page_125"></a>Doshisha alumni have exerted themselves
+ strenuously to have righteousness done.</p>
+
+ <p>Passing now from the character of trustful confidence, we
+ take up its opposite, suspiciousness. The development of this
+ quality is a natural result of a military feudalism such as
+ ruled Japan for hundreds of years. Intrigue was in constant use
+ when actual war was not being waged. In an age when conflicts
+ were always hand to hand, and the man who could best deceive
+ his enemy as to his next blow was the one to carry off his
+ head, the development of suspicion, strategy, and deceit was
+ inevitable. The most suspicious men, other things being equal,
+ would be the victors; they, with their families, would survive
+ and thus determine the nature of the social order. The more
+ than two hundred and fifty clans and "kuni," "clan territory,"
+ into which the land was divided, kept up perpetual training in
+ the arts of intrigue and subtlety which are inevitably
+ accompanied by suspicion.</p>
+
+ <p>Modern manifestations of this characteristic are frequent.
+ Not a cabinet is formed, but the question of its make-up is
+ discussed from the clannish standpoint. Even though it is now
+ thirty years since the centralizing policy was entered upon and
+ clan distinctions were effectually broken down, yet clan
+ suspicion and jealousy is not dead.</p>
+
+ <p>The foreigner is impressed by the constant need of care in
+ conversation, lest he be thought to mean something more or
+ other than he says. When we have occasion to criticise anything
+ in the Japanese, we have found by experience that much more is
+ inferred than is said. Shortly after my arrival in Japan I was
+ advised by one who had been in the land many years to be
+ careful in correcting a domestic or any other person sustaining
+ any relation to myself, to say not more than one-tenth of what
+ I meant, for the other nine-tenths would be inferred. Direct
+ and perfectly frank criticism and suggestion, such as prevail
+ among Anglo-Americans at least, seem to be rare among the
+ Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>In closing, it is in order to note once again that the
+ emotional characteristics considered in this chapter,
+ al<a name='Page_126'
+ id="Page_126"></a>though customarily thought to be
+ deep-seated traits of race nature, are, nevertheless, shown
+ to be dependent on the character of the social order. Change
+ the order, and in due season corresponding changes occur in
+ the national character, a fact which would be impossible
+ were that character inherent and essential, passed on from
+ generation to generation by the single fact of biological
+ heredity.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XI'
+ id="XI"></a><a name='Page_127'
+ id="Page_127"></a>XI</h2>
+
+ <h3>JEALOUSY&mdash;REVENGE&mdash;HUMANE FEELINGS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>According to the teachings of Confucius, jealousy is one of
+ the seven just grounds on which a woman may be divorced. In the
+ "Greater Learning for Women,"<a name='FNanchor_M_13'
+ id="FNanchor_M_13"></a><a href='#Footnote_M_13'><sup>[M]</sup></a>
+ occur the following words: "Let her never even dream of
+ jealousy. If her husband be dissolute, she must expostulate
+ with him, but never either render her countenance frightful
+ or her accents repulsive, which can only result in
+ completely alienating her husband from her, and making her
+ intolerable in his eyes." "The five worst maladies that
+ afflict the female mind are indocility, discontent, slander,
+ jealousy, and silliness. Without any doubt, these five
+ maladies infest seven or eight out of every ten women, and
+ it is from these that arises the inferiority of women to men
+ ... Neither when she blames and accuses and curses innocent
+ persons, nor when in her jealousy of others she thinks to
+ set herself up alone, does she see that she is her own
+ enemy, estranging others and incurring their hatred."</p>
+
+ <p>The humiliating conditions to which women have been
+ subjected in the past and present social order, and to which
+ full reference has been made in previous chapters, give
+ sufficient explanation of the jealousy which is recognized as a
+ marked, and, as might appear, inevitable characteristic of
+ Japanese women. Especially does this seem inevitable when it is
+ remembered how slight is their hold on their husbands, on whose
+ faithfulness their happiness so largely depends. Only as this
+ order changes and the wife secures a more certain place in the
+ home, free from the competition of concubines and harlots and
+ dancing girls, can we expect the characteristic to
+ dis<a name='Page_128'
+ id="Page_128"></a>appear. That it will do so under such
+ conditions, there is no reason to question. Already there
+ are evidences that in homes where the husband and the wife
+ are both earnest Christians, and where each is confident of
+ the loyalty of the other, jealousy is as rare as it is in
+ Christian lands.</p>
+
+ <p>But is jealousy a characteristic limited to women? or is it
+ not also a characteristic of men? I am assured from many
+ quarters that men also suffer from it. The jealousy of a woman
+ is aroused by the fear that some other woman may supplant her
+ in the eyes of her husband; that of a man by the fear that some
+ man may supplant him in rank or influence. Marital jealousy of
+ men seems to be rare. Yet I heard not long since of a man who
+ was so afraid lest some man might steal his wife's affections
+ that he could not attend to his business, and finally, after
+ three months of married wretchedness, he divorced her. A year
+ later he married her again, but the old trouble reappeared, and
+ so he divorced her a second time. If marital jealousy is less
+ common among men than among women, the explanation is at hand
+ in the lax moral standard for man. The feudal order of society,
+ furthermore, was exactly the soil in which to develop masculine
+ jealousy. In such a society ambition and jealousy go hand in
+ hand. Wherever a man's rise in popularity and influence depends
+ on the overthrow of someone already in possession, jealousy is
+ natural. Connected with the spirit of jealousy is that of
+ revenge. Had we known Japan only during her feudal days, we
+ should have pronounced the Japanese exceedingly revengeful.
+ Revenge was not only the custom, it was also the law of the
+ land and the teaching of moralists. One of the proverbs handed
+ down from the hoary past is: "Kumpu no ada to tomo ni ten we
+ itadakazu." "With the enemy of country, or father, one cannot
+ live under the same heaven." The tales of heroic Japan abound
+ in stories of revenge. Once when Confucius was asked about the
+ doctrine of Lao-Tse that one should return good for evil, he
+ replied, "With what then should one reward good? The true
+ doctrine is to return good for good, and evil with justice."
+ This saying <a name='Page_129'
+ id="Page_129"></a>of Confucius has nullified for twenty-four
+ hundred years that pearl of truth enunciated by Lao-Tse, and
+ has caused it to remain an undiscovered diamond amid the
+ rubbish of Taoism. By this judgment Confucius sanctified the
+ rough methods of justice adopted in a primitive order of
+ society. His dictum peculiarly harmonized with the
+ militarism of Japan. Being, then, a recognized duty for many
+ hundred years, it would be strange indeed were not
+ revengefulness to appear among the modern traits of the
+ Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>But the whole order of society has been transformed. Revenge
+ is now under the ban of the state, which has made itself
+ responsible for the infliction of corporal punishment on
+ individual transgressors. As a result conspicuous
+ manifestations of the revengeful spirit have disappeared, and,
+ may we not rightly say, even the spirit itself? The new order
+ of society leaves no room for its ordinary activity; it
+ furnishes legal methods of redress. The rapid change in regard
+ to this characteristic gives reason for thinking that if the
+ industrial and social order could be suitably adjusted, and the
+ conditions of individual thought and life regulated, this, and
+ many other evil traits of human character, might become
+ radically changed in a short time. Intelligent Christian
+ Socialism is based on this theory and seems to have no little
+ support for its position.</p>
+
+ <p>Are Japanese cruel or humane? The general impression of the
+ casual tourist doubtless is that they are humane. They are kind
+ to children on the streets, to a marked degree; the jinrikisha
+ runners turn out not only for men, women, and children, but
+ even for dogs. The patience, too, of the ordinary Japanese
+ under trying circumstances is marked; they show amazing
+ tolerance for one another's failings and defects, and their
+ mutual helpfulness in seasons of distress is often striking. To
+ one traveling through New Japan there is usually little that
+ will strike the eye as cruel.</p>
+
+ <p>But the longer one lives in the country, the more is he
+ impressed with certain aspects of life which seem to evince an
+ essentially unsympathetic and inhumane disposition. I well
+ remember the shock I received when <a name='Page_130'
+ id="Page_130"></a>I discovered, not far from my home in
+ Kumamoto, an insane man kept in a cage. He was given only a
+ slight amount of clothing, even though heavy frost fell each
+ night. Food was given him once or twice a day. He was
+ treated like a wild animal, not even being provided with
+ bedding. This is not an exceptional instance, as might,
+ perhaps, at first be supposed. The editor of the <i>Japan
+ Mail</i>, who has lived in Japan many years, and knows the
+ people well, says: "Every foreigner traveling or residing in
+ Japan must have been shocked from time to time by the method
+ of treating lunatics. Only a few months ago an imbecile
+ might have been seen at Hakone confined in what was
+ virtually a cage, where, from year's end to year's end, he
+ received neither medical assistance nor loving tendance, but
+ was simply fed like a wild beast in a menagerie. We have
+ witnessed many such sights with horror and pity. Yet humane
+ Japanese do not seem to think of establishing asylums where
+ these unhappy sufferers can find refuge. There is only one
+ lunatic asylum in Tokyo. It is controlled by the
+ municipality, its accommodation is limited, and its terms
+ place it beyond the reach of the poor." And the amazing part
+ is that such sights do not seem to arouse the sentiment of
+ pity in the Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>The treatment accorded to lepers is another significant
+ indication of the lack of sympathetic and humane sentiments
+ among the people at large. For ages they have been turned from
+ home and house and compelled to wander outcasts, living in the
+ outskirt of the villages in rude booths of their own
+ construction, and dependent on their daily begging, until a
+ wretched death gives them relief from a more wretched life. So
+ far as I have been able to learn, the opening of hospitals for
+ lepers did not take place until begun by Christians in recent
+ times. This casting out of leper kindred was not done by the
+ poor alone, but by the wealthy also, although I do hot affirm
+ or suppose that the practice was universal. I am personally
+ acquainted with the management of the Christian Leper Hospital
+ in Kumamoto, and the sad accounts I have heard of the way in
+ which lepers are treated by their kindred would seem
+ incredible, were <a name='Page_131'
+ id="Page_131"></a>they not supported by the character of my
+ informants, and by many other facts of a kindred nature.</p>
+
+ <p>A history of Japan was prepared by Japanese scholars under
+ appointment from the government and sent to the Columbian
+ Exposition in 1893; it makes the following statement, already
+ referred to on a previous page: "Despite the issue of several
+ proclamations ... people were governed by such strong aversion
+ to the sight of sickness that travelers were often left to die
+ by the roadside from thirst, hunger, or disease, and
+ householders even went to the length of thrusting out of doors
+ and abandoning to utter destitution servants who suffered from
+ chronic maladies.... Whenever an epidemic occurred, the number
+ of deaths that resulted was enormous."<a name='FNanchor_N_14'
+ id="FNanchor_N_14"></a><a href='#Footnote_N_14'><sup>[N]</sup></a>
+ This was the condition of things after Buddhism, with its
+ civilizing and humanizing influences, had been at work in
+ the land for about four hundred years, and Old Japan was at
+ the height of her glory, whether considered from the
+ standpoint of her government, her literature, her religious
+ development, or her art.</p>
+
+ <p>Of a period some two hundred years earlier, it is stated
+ that, by the assistance of the Sovereign, Buddhism established
+ a charity hospital in Nara, "where the poor received medical
+ treatment and drugs gratis, and an asylum was founded for the
+ support of the destitute. Measures were also taken to rescue
+ foundlings, and, in general, to relieve poverty and distress"
+ (p. 92). The good beginning made at that time does not seem to
+ have been followed up. As nearly as I can make out, relying on
+ the investigations of Rev. J.H. Pettee and Mr. Ishii, there are
+ to-day in Japan fifty orphan asylums, of which eleven are of
+ non-Christian, and thirty-nine of Christian origin, support,
+ and control. Of the non-Christian, five are in Osaka, two in
+ Tokyo, four in Kyoto, and one each in Nagoya, Kumamoto, and
+ Matsuye. Presumably the majority of these are in the hands of
+ Buddhists. Of the Christian asylums twenty are Roman Catholic
+ and nineteen are Protestant. It is a noteworthy fact that in
+ this form of philanthropy and <a name='Page_132'
+ id="Page_132"></a>religious activity, as in so many others,
+ Christians are the pioneers and Buddhists are the imitators.
+ In a land where Buddhism has been so effective as to modify
+ the diet of the nation, leading them in obedience to the
+ doctrines of Buddha, as has been stated, to give up eating
+ animal food, it is exceedingly strange that the people
+ apparently have no regard for the pain of living animals.
+ Says the editor of the <i>Mail</i> in the article already
+ quoted: "They will not interfere to save a horse from the
+ brutality of its driver, and they will sit calmly in a
+ jinrikisha while its drawer, with throbbing heart and
+ straining muscles, toils up a steep hill." How often have I
+ seen this sight! How the rider can endure it, I cannot
+ understand, except it be that revolt at cruelty and sympathy
+ with suffering do not stir within his heart. Of course,
+ heartless individuals are not rare in the West also. I am
+ speaking here, however, not of single individuals, but of
+ general characteristics.</p>
+
+ <p>But a still more conspicuous evidence of Japanese deficiency
+ of sympathy is the use, until recently, of public torture. It
+ was the theory of Japanese jurisprudence that no man should be
+ punished, even though proved guilty by sufficient evidence,
+ until he himself confessed his guilt; consequently, on the
+ flimsiest evidence, and even on bare suspicion, he was tortured
+ until the desired confession was extracted. The cruelty of the
+ methods employed, we of the nineteenth century cannot
+ appreciate. Some foreigner tells how the sight of torture which
+ he witnessed caused him to weep, while the Japanese spectators
+ stood by unmoved. The methods of execution were also refined
+ devices of torture. Townsend Harris says that crucifixion was
+ performed as follows: "The criminal is tied to a cross with his
+ arms and legs stretched apart as wide as possible; then a spear
+ is thrust through the body, entering just under the bottom of
+ the shoulder blade on the left side, and coming out on the
+ right side, just by the armpit. Another is then thrust through
+ in a similar manner from the right to the left side. The
+ executioner endeavors to avoid the heart in this operation. The
+ spears are thrust through in this manner until the criminal
+ ex<a name='Page_133'
+ id="Page_133"></a>pires, but his sufferings are prolonged as
+ much as possible. Shinano told me that a few years ago a
+ very strong man lived until the eleventh spear had been
+ thrust through him."</p>
+
+ <p>From these considerations, which might be supported by a
+ multitude of illustrations, we conclude that in the past there
+ has certainly been a great amount of cruelty exhibited in
+ Japan, and that even to this day there is in this country far
+ less sympathy for suffering, whether animal or human, than is
+ felt in the West.</p>
+
+ <p>But we must not be too quick to jump to the conclusion that
+ in this regard we have discovered an essential characteristic
+ of the Japanese nature. With reference to the reported savagery
+ displayed by Japanese troops at Port Arthur, it has been said
+ and repeated that you have only to scratch the Japanese skin to
+ find the Tartar, as if the recent development of human feelings
+ were superficial, and his real character were exhibited in his
+ most cruel moments. To get a true view of the case let us look
+ for a few moments at some other parts of the world, and ask
+ ourselves a few questions.</p>
+
+ <p>How long is it since the Inquisition was enforced in Europe?
+ Who can read of the tortures there inflicted without shuddering
+ with horror? It is not necessary to go back to the times of the
+ Romans with their amphitheaters and gladiators, and with their
+ throwing of Christians to wild animals, or to Nero using
+ Christians as torches in his garden. How long is it since
+ witches were burned, not only in Europe by the thousand, but in
+ enlightened and Christian New England? although it is true that
+ the numbers there burned were relatively few and the reign of
+ terror brief. How long is it since slaves were feeling the lash
+ throughout the Southern States of our "land of freedom"? How
+ long is it since fiendish mobs have burned or lynched the
+ objects of their rage? How long is it since societies for
+ preventing cruelty to animals and to children were established
+ in England and America? Is it not a suggestive fact that it was
+ needful to establish them and that it is still needful to
+ maintain them? The fact is that the highly developed humane
+ sense which is now felt so strongly by <a name='Page_134'
+ id="Page_134"></a>the great majority of people in the West
+ is a late development, and is not yet universal. It is not
+ for us to boast, or even to feel superior to the Japanese,
+ whose opportunities for developing this sentiment have been
+ limited.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, in regard to Japan, we must not overlook
+ certain facts which show that Japan has made gradual progress
+ in the development of the humane feelings and in the legal
+ suppression of cruelty. The Nihon Shoki records that, on the
+ death of Yamato Hiko no Mikoto, his immediate retainers were
+ buried alive in a standing position around the grave,
+ presumably with the heads alone projecting above the surface of
+ the ground. The Emperor Suijin Tenno, on hearing the continuous
+ wailing day after day of the slowly dying retainers, was
+ touched with pity and said that it was a dreadful custom to
+ bury with the master those who had been most faithful to him
+ when alive. And he added that an evil custom, even though
+ ancient, should not be followed, and ordered it to be
+ abandoned. A later record informs us that from this time arose
+ the custom of burying images in the place of servants.
+ According to the ordinary Japanese chronology, this took place
+ in the year corresponding to 1 B.C. The laws of Ieyasu (1610
+ A.D.) likewise condemn this custom as unreasonable, together
+ with the custom in accordance with which the retainers
+ committed suicide upon the master's death. These same laws also
+ refer to the proverb on revenge, given in the third paragraph
+ of this chapter, and add that whoever undertakes thus to avenge
+ himself or his father or mother or lord or elder brother must
+ first give notice to the proper office of the fact and of the
+ time within which he will carry out his intention; without such
+ a notice, the avenger will be considered a common murderer.
+ This provision was clearly a limitation of the law of revenge.
+ These laws of Ieyasu also describe the old methods of punishing
+ criminals, and then add: "Criminals are to be punished by
+ branding, or beating, or tying up, and, in capital cases, by
+ spearing or decapitation; but the old punishments of tearing to
+ pieces and boiling <a name='Page_135'
+ id="Page_135"></a>to death are not to be used." Torture was
+ finally legally abolished in Japan only as late as 1877.</p>
+
+ <p>It has already become quite clear that the prevalence of
+ cruelty or of humanity depends largely upon the social order
+ that prevails. It is not at all strange that cruelty, or, at
+ least, lack of sympathy for suffering in man or beast, should
+ be characteristic of an order based on constant hand-to-hand
+ conflict. Still more may we expect to find a great indifference
+ to human suffering wherever the value of man as man is
+ slighted. Not until the idea of the brotherhood of man has
+ taken full possession of one's heart and thought does true
+ sympathy spring up; then, for the first time, comes the power
+ of putting one's self in a brother's place. The apparently
+ cruel customs of primitive times, in their treatment of the
+ sick, and particularly of those suffering from contagious
+ diseases, is the natural, not to say necessary, result of
+ superstitious ignorance. Furthermore, it was often the only
+ ready means to prevent the spread of contagious or epidemic
+ diseases.</p>
+
+ <p>In the treatment of the sick, the first prerequisite for the
+ development of tenderness is the introduction of correct ideas
+ as to the nature of disease and its proper treatment. As soon
+ as this has been effectually done, a great proportion of the
+ apparent indifference to human suffering passes away. The
+ cruelty which is to-day so universal in Africa needs but a
+ changed social and industrial order to disappear. The needed
+ change has come to Japan. Physicians trained in modern methods
+ of medical practice are found all over the land. In 1894 there
+ were 597 hospitals, 42,551 physicians, 33,921 nurses and
+ midwives, 2869 pharmacists, and 16,106 druggists, besides
+ excellent schools of pharmacy and
+ medicine.<a name='FNanchor_O_15'
+ id="FNanchor_O_15"></a><a href='#Footnote_O_15'><sup>[O]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>It is safe to say that nearly all forms of active cruelty
+ have disappeared from Japan; some amount of active sympathy has
+ been developed, though, as compared to that of other civilized
+ lands, it is still small. But there can be no doubt that the
+ rapid change which has come <a name='Page_136'
+ id="Page_136"></a>over the people during the past thirty
+ years is not a change in essential innate character, but
+ only in the social order. As soon as the idea takes root
+ that every man has a mission of mercy, and that the more
+ cruel are not at liberty to vent their barbarous feelings on
+ helpless creatures, whether man or beast, a strong uprising
+ of humane activity will take place which will demand the
+ formation of societies for the prevention of cruelty and for
+ carrying active relief to the distressed and wretched.
+ Lepers will no longer need to eke out a precarious living by
+ exhibiting their revolting misery in public; lunatics will
+ no longer be kept in filthy cages and left with insufficient
+ care or clothing. The stream of philanthropy will rise high,
+ to be at once a blessing and a glory to a race that already
+ has shown itself in many ways capable of the highest ideals
+ of the West.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XII'
+ id="XII"></a><a name='Page_137'
+ id="Page_137"></a>XII</h2>
+
+ <h3>AMBITION&mdash;CONCEIT</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Ambition is a conspicuous characteristic of New Japan. I
+ have already spoken of the common desire of her young men to
+ become statesmen. The stories of Neesima and other young
+ Japanese who, in spite of opposition and without money, worked
+ their way to eminence and usefulness, have fired the
+ imagination of thousands of youths. They think that all they
+ need is to get to America, when their difficulties will be at
+ an end. They fancy that they have but to look around to find
+ some man who will support them while they study.</p>
+
+ <p>Not only individuals, but the people as a whole, have great
+ ambitions. Three hundred years ago the Taiko, Hideyoshi, the
+ Napoleon of Japan, and the virtual ruler of the Empire,
+ planned, after subjugating Korea, to conquer China and make
+ himself the Emperor of the East. He thought he could accomplish
+ this in two years. During the recent war, it was the desire of
+ many to march on to Pekin. Frequent expression was given to the
+ idea that it is the duty of Japan to rouse China from her long
+ sleep, as America roused Japan in 1854. It is frequently
+ argued, in editorial articles and public speeches, that the
+ Japanese are peculiarly fitted to lead China along the path of
+ progress, not only indirectly by example, as they have been
+ doing, but directly by teaching, as foreigners have led Japan.
+ "The Mission of Japan to the Orient" is a frequent theme of
+ public discourse. But national ambitions do not rest here. It
+ is not seldom asserted that in Japan a mingling of the
+ Occidental and Oriental civilizations is taking place under
+ such favorable conditions that, for the first time in history,
+ the better elements of both are being selected;
+ <a name='Page_138'
+ id="Page_138"></a>and that before long the world will sit to
+ learn at her feet. The lofty ambition of a group of radical
+ Christians is to discover or create a new religion which
+ shall unite the best features of Oriental and Occidental
+ religious thought and experience. The religion of the future
+ will be, not Christianity, nor Buddhism, but something
+ better than either, more consistent, more profound, more
+ universal; and this religion, first developed in Japan, will
+ spread to other lands and become the final religion of the
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>A single curious illustration of the high-flying thoughts of
+ the people may well find mention here. When the Kumamoto Boys'
+ School divided over the arbitrary, tyrannical methods of their
+ newly secured, brilliant principal, already referred to in a
+ previous chapter, the majority of the trustees withdrew and at
+ once established a new school for boys. For some time they
+ struggled for a name which should set forth the principles for
+ which the school stood, and finally they fixed on that of "To-A
+ Gakko." Translated into unpretentious English, this means
+ "Eastern Asia School"; the idea was that the school stood for
+ no narrow methods of education, and that its influence was to
+ extend beyond the confines of Japan. This interpretation is not
+ an inference, but was publicly stated oil various occasions.
+ The school began with twenty-five boys, if my memory is
+ correct, and never reached as many as fifty. In less than three
+ years it died an untimely death through lack of patronage.</p>
+
+ <p>The young men of the island of Kyushu, especially of
+ Kumamoto and Kagoshima provinces, are noted for their ambitious
+ projects. The once famous "Kumamoto Band" consisted entirely of
+ Kyushu boys. Under the masterful influence of Captain Jaynes
+ those high-spirited sons of samurai, who had come to learn
+ foreign languages and science, in a school founded to combat
+ Christianity and to upbuild Buddhism, became impressed with the
+ immense superiority of foreign lands, which superiority they
+ were led to attribute to Christianity. They accordingly
+ espoused the Christian cause with great ardor, and, in their
+ compact with one another, <a name='Page_139'
+ id="Page_139"></a>agreed to work for the reform of Japan. I
+ have listened to many addresses by the Kumamoto schoolboys,
+ and I have been uniformly impressed with the political and
+ national tendencies of their thought.</p>
+
+ <p>Accompanying ambition is a group of less admirable
+ qualities, such as self-sufficiency and self-conceit. They are
+ seldom manifested with that coarseness which in the West we
+ associate with them, for the Japanese is usually too polished
+ to be offensively obtrusive. He seldom indulges in bluster or
+ direct assertion, but is contented rather with the silent
+ assumption of superiority.</p>
+
+ <p>I heard recently of a slight, though capital, illustration
+ of my point. Two foreign gentlemen were walking through the
+ town of Tadotsu some years since and observed a sign in English
+ which read "Stemboots." Wondering what the sign could mean they
+ inquired the business of the place, and learning that it was a
+ steamboat office, they gave the clerk the reason for their
+ inquiry, and at his request made the necessary correction. A
+ few days later, however, on their return, they noticed that the
+ sign had been re-corrected to "Stem-boats," an assumption of
+ superior knowledge on the part of some tyro in English. The
+ multitude of signboards in astonishing English, in places
+ frequented by English-speaking people, is one of the amusing
+ features of Japan. It would seem as if the shopkeepers would at
+ least take the pains to have the signs correctly worded and
+ spelled, by asking the help of some foreigner or competent
+ Japanese. Yet they assume that they know all that is
+ needful.</p>
+
+ <p>Indications of perfect self-confidence crop out in
+ multitudes of ways far too numerous to mention. The aspiring
+ ambition spoken of in the immediately preceding pages is one
+ indication of this characteristic. Another is the readiness of
+ fledglings to undertake responsibilities far beyond them. Young
+ men having a smattering of English, yet wholly unable to
+ converse, set up as teachers. Youths in school not infrequently
+ undertake to instruct their teachers as to what courses of
+ study and what treatment they should receive. Still more
+ conspicuous is the cool assumption of superiority
+ <a name='Page_140'
+ id="Page_140"></a>evinced by so many Japanese in discussing
+ intellectual and philosophical problems. The manner assumed
+ is that of one who is complete master of the subject. The
+ silent contempt often poured on foreigners who attempt to
+ discuss these problems is at once amusing and illustrative
+ of the characteristic of which I am
+ speaking.<a name='FNanchor_P_16'
+ id="FNanchor_P_16"></a><a href='#Footnote_P_16'><sup>[P]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>We turn next to inquire for the explanation of these
+ characteristics. Are they inherent traits of the race? Or are
+ they the product of the times? Doubtless the latter is the true
+ explanation. It will be found that those individuals in whom
+ these characteristics appear are descendants of the samurai. A
+ small class of men freed from heavy physical toil, given to
+ literature and culture, ever depending on the assumption of
+ superiority for the maintenance of their place in society and
+ defending their assumption by the sword&mdash;such a class, in
+ such a social order, would develop the characteristics in
+ question to a high degree. Should we expect an immediate change
+ of character when the social order has been suddenly
+ changed?</p>
+
+ <p>In marked contrast to the lofty assumptions of superiority
+ which characterized the samurai of Old Japan, was the equally
+ marked assumption of inferiority which characterized the rest
+ of the people, or nineteen-twentieths of the nation. I have
+ already sufficiently dwelt on this aspect of national
+ character. I here recur to it merely to enforce the truth that
+ self-arrogation and self-abnegation, haughtiness and humility,
+ proud, high-handed, magisterial manners, and cringing,
+ obsequious obedience, are all elements of character that depend
+ on the nature of the social order. They are passed on from
+ generation to generation more by social than by biological
+ heredity. Both of these sets of contrasted characteristics are
+ induced by a full-fledged feudal system, and must remain for a
+ time as a social inheritance after that system has been
+ overthrown, particularly if its overthrow is sudden. In
+ proportion as the principles of personal rights and individual
+ worth on the basis of <a name='Page_141'
+ id="Page_141"></a>manhood become realized by the people and
+ incorporated into the government and customs of the land,
+ will abnegating obsequiousness, as well as haughty
+ lordliness, be replaced by a straightforward manliness, in
+ which men of whatever grade of society will frankly face
+ each other, eye to eye.</p>
+
+ <p>But what shall we say in regard to the assumption made by
+ young Japan in its attitude to foreigners? Are the assumptions
+ wholly groundless? Is the self-confidence unjustified? Far from
+ it. When we study later the intellectual elements of Japanese
+ character, we shall see some reasons for their feeling of
+ self-reliance. The progress which the nation has made in many
+ lines within thirty years shows that it has certain kinds of
+ power and, consequently, some ground for self-reliance.
+ Furthermore, self-reliance, if fairly supported by ability and
+ zeal, is essential in the attainment of any end whatever. Faint
+ heart never won fair lady. Confidence in self is one form of
+ faith. No less of peoples than individuals is it true, that
+ without faith in themselves they cannot attain their goal. The
+ impression of undue self-confidence made by the Japanese may be
+ owing partly to their shortness of stature. It is a new
+ experience for the West to see a race of little people with
+ large brains and large plans. Especially does it seem strange
+ and conceited for a people whose own civilization is so belated
+ to assume a r&ocirc;le of such importance in the affairs of the
+ world. Yet we must learn to dissociate physical size from
+ mental or spiritual capacity. The future alone will disclose
+ what Japanese self-reliance and energy can produce.</p>
+
+ <p>The present prominence of this characteristic in Japan is
+ still further to be accounted for by her actual recent history.
+ The overthrow of the Shogunate was primarily the work of young
+ men; the introduction of almost all the sweeping reforms which
+ have transformed Japan has been the work of young men who,
+ though but partly equipped for their work, approached it with
+ energy and perfect confidence, not knowing enough perhaps to
+ realize the difficulties they were undertaking. They had to set
+ aside the customs of centuries; to do <a name='Page_142'
+ id="Page_142"></a>this required startling assumptions of
+ superiority to their ancestors and their immediate parents.
+ The young men undertook to dispute and doubt everything that
+ stood in the way of national re-organization. In what nation
+ has there ever been such a setting aside of parental
+ teaching and ancestral authority? These heroic measures
+ secured results in which the nation glories. Is it strange,
+ then, that the same spirit should show itself in every
+ branch of life, even in the attitude of the people to the
+ Westerners who have brought them the new ways and ideas?</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese, however, is not the only conceited nation.
+ Indeed, it would be near the truth to say that there is no
+ people without this quality. Certainly the American and
+ English, French and German nations cannot presume to criticise
+ others. The reason why we think Japan unique in this respect is
+ that in the case of these Western nations we know more of the
+ grounds for national self-satisfaction than in the case of
+ Japan. Yet Western lands are, in many respects, truly
+ provincial to this very day, in spite of their advantages and
+ progress; the difficulty with most of them is that they do not
+ perceive it. The lack of culture that prevails among our
+ working classes is in some respects great. The narrow horizon
+ still bounding the vision of the average American or Briton is
+ very conspicuous to one who has had opportunities to live and
+ travel in many lands. Each country, and even each section of a
+ country, is much inclined to think that it has more nearly
+ reached perfection than any other.</p>
+
+ <p>This phase of national and local feeling is interesting,
+ especially after one has lived in Japan a number of years and
+ has had opportunities to mingle freely with her people. For
+ they, although self-reliant and self-conceited, are at the same
+ time surprisingly ready to acknowledge that they are far behind
+ the times. Their open-mindedness is truly amazing. In
+ describing the methods of land tenure, of house-building, of
+ farming, of local government, of education, of moral
+ instruction, of family life, indeed, of almost anything in the
+ West that has some advantageous feature, the remark will be
+ <a name='Page_143'
+ id="Page_143"></a>dropped incidentally that these facts show
+ how uncivilized Japan still is. In their own public
+ addresses, if any custom is attacked, the severest
+ indictment that can be brought against it is that it is
+ uncivilized. In spite, therefore, of her self-conceit, Japan
+ is in a fairer way of making progress than many a Western
+ nation, because she is also so conscious of defects. A large
+ section of the nation has a passion for progress. It wishes
+ to learn of the good that foreign lands have attained, and
+ to apply the knowledge in such wise as shall fit most
+ advantageously into the national life. Although Japan is
+ conceited, her conceit is not without reason, nor is it to
+ be attributed to her inherent race nature. It is manifestly
+ due to her history and social order past and present.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XIII'
+ id="XIII"></a><a name='Page_144'
+ id="Page_144"></a>XIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>PATRIOTISM&mdash;APOTHEOSIS&mdash;COURAGE</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>No word is so dear to the patriotic Japanese as the one that
+ leaps to his lips when his country is assailed or maligned,
+ "Yamato-Damashii." In prosaic English this means "Japan Soul."
+ But the native word has a flavor and a host of associations
+ that render it the most pleasing his tongue can utter. "Yamato"
+ is the classic name for that part of Japan where the divinely
+ honored Emperor, Jimmu Tenno, the founder of the dynasty and
+ the Empire, first established his court and throne. "Damashii"
+ refers to the soul, and especially to the noble qualities of
+ the soul, which, in Japan of yore, were synonymous with
+ bravery, the characteristic of the samurai. If, therefore, you
+ wish to stir in the native breast the deepest feelings of
+ patriotism and courage, you need but to call upon his
+ "Yamato-Damashii."</p>
+
+ <p>There has been a revival in the use of this word during the
+ last decade. The old Japan-Spirit has been appealed to, and the
+ watchword of the anti-foreign reaction has been "Japan for the
+ Japanese." Among English-speaking and English-reading Japanese
+ there has been a tendency to give this term a meaning deeper
+ and broader than the historic usage, or even than the current
+ usage, will bear. One Japanese writer, for instance, defines
+ the term as meaning, "a spirit of loyalty to country,
+ conscience, and ideal." An American writer comes more nearly to
+ the current usage in the definition of it as "the aggressive
+ and invincible spirit of Japan." That there is such a spirit no
+ one can doubt who has the slightest acquaintance with her past
+ or present history.</p>
+
+ <p>Concerning the recent rise of patriotism I have spoken
+ elsewhere, perhaps at sufficient length. Nor is it
+ need<a name='Page_145'
+ id="Page_145"></a>ful to present extensive evidence for the
+ statement that the Japanese have this feeling of patriotism
+ in a marked degree. One or two rather interesting items may,
+ however, find their place here.</p>
+
+ <p>The recent war with China was the occasion of focusing
+ patriotism and fanning it into flame. Almost every town street,
+ and house, throughout the Empire, was brilliantly decked with
+ lanterns and flags, not on a single occasion only, but
+ continuously. Each reported victory, however small, sent a
+ thrill of delight throughout the nation. Month after month this
+ was kept up. In traveling through the land one would not have
+ fancied that war was in progress, but rather, that a
+ long-continued festival was being observed.</p>
+
+ <p>An incident connected with sending troops to Korea made a
+ deep impression on the nation. The Okayama Orphan Asylum under
+ the efficient management of its founder, Mr. Ishii, had
+ organized the older boys into a band, securing for them various
+ kinds of musical instruments. These they learned to use with
+ much success. When the troops were on the point of leaving, Mr.
+ Ishii went with his band to the port of Hiroshima, erected a
+ booth, prepared places for heating water, and as often as the
+ regiments passed by, his little orphans sallied forth with
+ their teapots of hot tea for the refreshment of the soldiers.
+ Each regiment was also properly saluted, and if opportunity
+ offered, the little fellows played the national anthem,
+ "Kimi-ga yo," which has been thus translated: "May Our Gracious
+ Sovereign reign a thousand years, reign till the little stone
+ grow into a mighty rock, thick velveted with ancient moss." And
+ finally the orphans would raise their shrill voices with the
+ rhythmical national shout, "Tei-koku Ban-zai, Tei-koku
+ Ban-zai"; "Imperial-land, a myriad years, Imperial-land, a
+ myriad years." This thoughtful farewell was maintained for the
+ four or five days during which the troops were embarking for
+ the seat of war, well knowing that some would never return, and
+ that their children would be left fatherless even as were these
+ who saluted them. So deep was the impression made upon the
+ soldiers that many of them wept and many a bronzed face
+ <a name='Page_146'
+ id="Page_146"></a>bowed in loving recognition of the
+ patriotism of these Christian boys. It is said that the
+ commander-in-chief of the forces himself gave the little
+ fellows the highest military salute in returning theirs.</p>
+
+ <p>Throughout the history of Japan, the aim of every rebellious
+ clan or general was first to get possession of the Emperor.
+ Having done this, the possession of the Imperial authority was
+ unquestioned. Whoever was opposed to the Emperor was
+ technically called "Cho-teki," the enemy of the throne, a crime
+ as heinous as treason in the West. The existence of this
+ sentiment throughout the Empire is an interesting fact. For, at
+ the very same time, there was the most intense loyalty to the
+ local lord or "daimyo." This is a fine instance of a certain
+ characteristic of the Japanese of which I must speak more fully
+ in another connection, but which, for convenience, I term
+ "nominality." It accepts and, apparently at least, is satisfied
+ with a nominal state of affairs, which may be quite different
+ from the real. The theoretical aspect of a question is accepted
+ without reference to the actual facts. The real power may be in
+ the hands of the general or of the daimyo, but if authority
+ nominally proceeds from the throne, the theoretical demands are
+ satisfied. The Japanese themselves describe this state as
+ "yumei-mujitsu." In a sense, throughout the centuries there has
+ been a genuine loyalty to the throne, but it has been of the
+ "yumei-mujitsu" type, apparently satisfied with the name only.
+ In recent times, however, there has been growing
+ dissatisfaction with this state of affairs. Some decades before
+ Admiral Perry appeared there were patriots secretly working
+ against the Tokugawa Shogunate. Called in Japanese "Kinnoka,"
+ they may be properly termed in English "Imperialists." Their
+ aim was to overthrow the Shogunate and restore full and direct
+ authority to the Emperor. Not a few lost their lives because of
+ their views, but these are now honored by the nation as
+ patriots.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a tendency among scholars to-day to magnify the
+ patriotism and loyalty of preceding ages, also to emphasize the
+ dignity and Imperial authority of the Emperor. The patriotic
+ spirit is now so strong that <a name='Page_147'
+ id="Page_147"></a>it blinds their eyes to many of the
+ salient facts of their history. Their patriotism is more
+ truly a passion than an idea. It is an emotion rather than a
+ conception. It demands certain methods of treatment for
+ their ancient history that Western scholarship cannot
+ accept. It forbids any really critical research into the
+ history of the past, since it might cast doubt on the divine
+ descent of the Imperial line. It sums itself up in
+ passionate admiration, not to say adoration, of the Emperor.
+ In him all virtues and wisdom abound. No fault or lack in
+ character can be attributed to him. I question if any rulers
+ have ever been more truly apotheosized by any nation than
+ the Emperors of Japan. The essence of patriotism to-day is
+ devotion to the person of the Emperor. It seems impossible
+ for the people to distinguish between the country and its
+ ruler. He is the fountain of authority. Lower ranks gain
+ their right and their power from him alone. Power belongs to
+ the people only because, and in proportion as, he has
+ conferred it upon them. Even the Constitution has its
+ authority only because he has so determined. Should he at
+ any time see fit to change or withdraw it, it is exceedingly
+ doubtful whether one word of criticism or complaint would be
+ publicly uttered, and as for forcible opposition, of such a
+ thing no one would dream.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese patriotism has had some unique and interesting
+ features. In some marked respects it is different from that of
+ lands in which democratic thought has held sway. For 1500
+ years, under the military social order, loyalty has consisted
+ of personal attachment to the lord. It has ever striven to
+ idealize that lord. The "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic has
+ helped much in this idealizing process, by bridging the chasm
+ between the prosaic fact and the ideal. Now that the old form
+ of feudalism has been abruptly abolished, with its local lords
+ and loyalty, the old sentiment of loyalty naturally fixes
+ itself on the Emperor. Patriotism has perhaps gained intensity
+ in proportion as it has become focalized. The Emperor is
+ reported to be a man of commanding ability and good sense. It
+ is at least true that he has shown wisdom in selecting his
+ councilors. There <a name='Page_148'
+ id="Page_148"></a>is general agreement that he is not a mere
+ puppet in the hands of his advisers, but that he exercises a
+ real and direct influence on the government of the day.
+ During the late war with China it was currently reported
+ that from early morning until late at night, week after week
+ and month after month, he worked upon the various matters of
+ business that demanded his attention. No important move or
+ decision was made without his careful consideration and
+ final approval. These and other noble qualities of the
+ present Emperor have, without doubt, done much toward
+ transferring the loyalty of the people from the local daimyo
+ to the national throne.</p>
+
+ <p>An event in the political world has recently occurred which
+ illustrates pointedly the statements just made in regard to the
+ enthusiastic loyalty of the people toward the Emperor. In spite
+ of the fact that the national finances are in a distressing
+ state of confusion, and notwithstanding the struggle which has
+ been going on between successive cabinets and political
+ parties, the former insisting on, and the latter refusing, any
+ increase in the land tax, no sooner was it suggested by a small
+ political party, to make a thank-offering to the Emperor of
+ 20,000,000 yen out of the final payment of the war indemnity
+ lately received, than the proposal was taken up with zeal by
+ both of the great and utterly hostile political parties, and
+ immediately by both houses of the Diet. The two reasons
+ assigned were, "First, that the victory over China would never
+ have been won, nor the indemnity obtained, had not the Emperor
+ been the victorious, sagacious Sovereign that he is, and that,
+ therefore, it is only right that a portion of the indemnity
+ should be offered to him; secondly, that His Majesty is in need
+ of money, the allowance granted by the state for the
+ maintenance of the Imperial Household being insufficient, in
+ view of the greatly enhanced prices of commodities and the
+ large donations constantly made by His Majesty for charitable
+ purposes."<a name='FNanchor_Q_17'
+ id="FNanchor_Q_17"></a><a href='#Footnote_Q_17'><sup>[Q]</sup></a>
+ This act of the Diet appeals to the sentiment of the people
+ as the prosaic, business-like method of the Occident would
+ not do. The <a name='Page_149'
+ id="Page_149"></a>significance of the appropriation made by
+ the Diet will be better realized if it is borne in mind that
+ the post-bellum programme for naval and military expansion
+ which was adopted in view of the large indemnity (being, by
+ the way, 50,000,000 yen), already calls for an expenditure
+ in excess of the indemnity. Either the grand programme must
+ be reduced, or new funds be raised, yet the leading
+ political parties have been absolutely opposed to any
+ substantial increase of the land tax, which seems to be the
+ only available source of increase even to meet the current
+ expenses of the government, to say nothing of the
+ post-bellum programme. So has a burst of sentiment buried
+ all prudential considerations. This is a species of loyalty
+ that Westerners find hard to appreciate. To them it would
+ seem that the first manifestation of loyalty would be to
+ provide the Emperor's Cabinet and executive officers with
+ the necessary funds for current expenses; that the second
+ would be to give the Emperor an allowance sufficient to meet
+ his actual needs, and the third,&mdash;if the funds held
+ out,&mdash;to make him a magnificent gift. This sentimental
+ method of loyalty to the Emperor, however, is matched by
+ many details of common life. A sentimental parting gift or
+ speech will often be counted as more friendly than
+ thoroughly business-like relations. The prosaic Occidental
+ discounts all sentiment that has not first satisfied the
+ demands of business and justice. Such a standard, however,
+ seems to be repugnant to the average Japanese mind.</p>
+
+ <p>The theory that all authority resides in the Emperor is also
+ enforced by recent history. For the constitution was not wrung
+ from an unwilling ruler by an ambitious people, but was
+ conferred by the Emperor of his own free will, under the advice
+ of his enlightened and progressive councilors.</p>
+
+ <p>As an illustration of some of the preceding statements let
+ me quote from a recent article by Mr. Yamaguchi, Professor of
+ History in the Peeresses' School and Lecturer in the Imperial
+ Military College. After speaking of the abolition of feudalism
+ and the establishment of a constitutional monarchy, he goes on
+ to say: "But we must not suppose that the sovereign power of
+ the state <a name='Page_150'
+ id="Page_150"></a>has been transferred to the Imperial Diet.
+ On the contrary, it is still in the hands of the Emperor as
+ before.... The functions of the government are retained in
+ the Emperor's own hands, who merely delegates them to the
+ Diet, the Government (Cabinet), and the Judiciary, to
+ exercise the same in his name. The present form of
+ government is the result of the history of a country which
+ has enjoyed an existence of many centuries. Each country has
+ its own peculiar characteristics which differentiate it from
+ others. Japan, too, has her history, different from that of
+ other countries. Therefore we ought not to draw comparisons
+ between Japan and other countries, as if the same principles
+ applied to all indiscriminately. The Empire of Japan has a
+ history of 3000 [!] years, which fact distinctly marks out
+ our nationality as unique. The monarch, in the eyes of the
+ people, is not merely on a par with an aristocratic
+ oligarchy which rules over the inferior masses, or a few
+ nobles who equally divide the sovereignty among themselves.
+ According to our ideas, the monarch reigns over and governs
+ the country in his own right, and not by virtue of rights
+ conferred by the constitution.... Our Emperor possesses real
+ sovereignty and also exercises it. He is quite different
+ from other rulers who possess but a partial sovereignty....
+ He has inherited the rights of sovereignty from his
+ ancestors. Thus it is quite legitimate to think that the
+ rights of sovereignty exist in the Emperor himself.... The
+ Empire of Japan shall be reigned over and governed by a line
+ of Emperors unbroken for ages eternal. (Constitution, Art.
+ LXXIII.) ... The sovereign power of the state cannot be
+ dissociated from the Imperial Throne. It lasts forever,
+ along with the Imperial line of succession, unbroken for
+ ages eternal. If the Imperial house cease to exist, the
+ Empire falls."</p>
+
+ <p>In a land where adopted sons are practically equivalent to
+ lineal descendants (another instance of the "yumei-mujitsu"
+ type of thought), and where marriage is essentially polygamous,
+ and where the "yumei-mujitsu" spirit has allowed the
+ sovereignty to be usurped in fact, though it may not be in
+ name, it is not <a name='Page_151'
+ id="Page_151"></a>at all wonderful that the nation can boast
+ of a longer line of Emperors than any other land. But when
+ monogamy becomes the rule in Japan, as it doubtless will
+ some day, and if lineal descent should be considered
+ essential to inheritance, as in the Occident, it is not at
+ all likely that the Imperial line will maintain itself
+ unbroken from father to son indefinitely. Although the
+ present Emperor has at least five concubines besides his
+ wife, the Empress, and has had, prior to 1896, no less than
+ thirteen children by them, only two of these are still
+ living, both of them the offspring of his concubines; one of
+ these is a son born in 1879, proclaimed the heir in 1887,
+ elected Crown Prince in 1889, and married in 1900; he is
+ said to be in delicate health; the second child is a
+ daughter born in 1890. Since 1896 several children have been
+ born to the Emperor and two or three have died, so that at
+ present writing there are but four living children. These
+ are all offspring of concubines.<a name='FNanchor_R_18'
+ id="FNanchor_R_18"></a><a href='#Footnote_R_18'><sup>[R]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In speaking, however, of the Japanese apotheosis of their
+ Emperor, we must not forget how the "divine right of kings" has
+ been a popular doctrine, even in enlightened England, until the
+ eighteenth century, and is not wholly unknown in other lands at
+ the present day. Only in recent times has the real source of
+ sovereignty been discovered by historical and political
+ students. That the Japanese are not able to pass at one leap
+ from <a name='Page_152'
+ id="Page_152"></a>the old to the new conception in regard to
+ this fundamental element of national authority is not at all
+ strange. Past history, together with that which is recent,
+ furnishes a satisfactory explanation for the peculiar nature
+ of Japanese patriotism. This is clearly due to the nature of
+ the social order.</p>
+
+ <p>A further fact in this connection is that, in a very real
+ sense, the existence of Japan as a unified nation has depended
+ on apotheosis. It is the method that all ancient nations have
+ adopted at one stage of their social development for expressing
+ their sense of national unity and the authority of national
+ law. In that stage of social development when the common
+ individual counts for nothing, the only possible conception of
+ the authority of law is that it proceeds from a superior
+ being&mdash;the highest ruler. And in order to secure the full
+ advantage of authority, the supreme ruler must be raised to the
+ highest possible pinnacle, must be apotheosized. That national
+ laws should be the product of the unvalued units which compose
+ the nation was unthinkable in an age when the worth of the
+ individual was utterly unrecognized. The apotheosis of the
+ Emperor was neither an unintelligible nor an unreasonable
+ practice. But now that an individualistic, democratic
+ organization of society has been introduced resting on a
+ principle diametrically opposed to that of apotheosis, a
+ struggle of most profound importance has been inaugurated. Does
+ moral or even national authority really reside in the Emperor?
+ The school-teachers are finding great difficulty in teaching
+ morality as based exclusively on the Imperial Edict. The
+ politicians of Japan are not content with leaving all political
+ and state authority to the Emperor. Not long ago (June, 1898),
+ for the first time in Japan, a Cabinet acknowledging
+ responsibility to a political party took the place of one
+ acknowledging responsibility only, to the Emperor. For this end
+ the politicians have been working since the first meeting of
+ the national Diet. Which principle is to succeed, apotheosis
+ and absolute Imperial sovereignty, or individualism with
+ democratic sovereignty? The two cannot permanently live
+ together. The struggle is sure to <a name='Page_153'
+ id="Page_153"></a>be intense, for the question of authority,
+ both political and moral, is inevitably involved.</p>
+
+ <p>The parallel between Japanese and Roman apotheosis is
+ interesting. I can present it no better than by quoting from
+ that valuable contribution to social and moral problems, "The
+ Genesis of the Social Conscience," by Prof. H.S. Nash: "Yet
+ Rome with all her greatness could not outgrow the tribal
+ principle.... We find something that reveals a fundamental
+ fault in the whole system. It is the apotheosis of the
+ Emperors. The process of apotheosis was something far deeper
+ than servility in the subject conspiring with vanity in the
+ ruler. It was a necessity of the state. There was no means of
+ insuring the existence of the state except religion. In the
+ worship of the C&aelig;sars the Empire reverenced its own law.
+ There was no other way in which pagan Rome could guarantee the
+ gains she had made for civilization. Yet the very thing that
+ was necessary to her was in logic her undoing.... The worship
+ of the Emperor undid the definition of equality the logic of
+ the Empire demanded. Again apotheosis violated the divine unity
+ of humanity upon which alone the Empire could securely
+ build."<a name='FNanchor_S_19'
+ id="FNanchor_S_19"></a><a href='#Footnote_S_19'><sup>[S]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>That the final issue of Japan's experience will be like that
+ of Rome I do not believe. For her environment is totally
+ different. But the same struggle of the two conflicting
+ principles is already on. Few, even among the educated classes,
+ realize its nature or profundity. The thinkers who adhere to
+ the principle of apotheosis do so admittedly because they see
+ no other way in which to secure authority for law, whether
+ political or moral. Here we see the importance of those
+ conceptions of God, of law, of man, which Christianity alone
+ can give.</p>
+
+ <p>From patriotism we naturally pass to the consideration of
+ courage. Nothing was more prized and praised in Old Japan. In
+ those days it was the deliberate effort of parents and
+ educators to develop courage in children. Many were their
+ devices for training the young in bravery. Not content with
+ mere precept, they were sent alone on dark stormy nights to
+ cemeteries, to houses rep<a name='Page_154'
+ id="Page_154"></a>uted to be haunted, to dangerous mountain
+ peaks, and to execution grounds. Many deeds were required of
+ the young whose sole aim was the development of courage and
+ daring. The worst name you could give to a samurai was
+ "koshinuke" (coward). Many a feud leading to a fatal end has
+ resulted from the mere use of this most hated of all
+ opprobrious epithets. The history of Japan is full of heroic
+ deeds. I well remember a conversation with a son of the old
+ samurai type, who told me, with the blood tingling in his
+ veins, of bloody deeds of old and the courage they demanded.
+ He remarked incidentally that, until one had slain his first
+ foe, he was ever inclined to tremble. But once the deed had
+ been done, and his sword had tasted the life blood of a man,
+ fear was no more. He also told me how for the sake of
+ becoming inured to ghastly sights under nerve-testing
+ circumstances, the sons of samurai were sent at night to the
+ execution grounds, there, by faint moonlight to see, stuck
+ on poles, the heads of men who had been recently
+ beheaded.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese emotion of courage is in some respects
+ peculiar. At least it appears to differ from that of the
+ Anglo-Saxon. A Japanese seems to lose all self-control when the
+ supreme moment comes; he throws himself into the fray with a
+ frenzied passion and a fearless madness allied to insanity.
+ Such is the impression I have gathered from the descriptions I
+ have heard and the pictures I have seen. Even the pictures of
+ the late war with China give evidence of this.</p>
+
+ <p>But their courage is not limited to fearlessness in the face
+ of death; it extends to complete indifference to pain. The
+ honorable method by which a samurai who had transgressed some
+ law or failed in some point of etiquette, might leave this
+ world is well known to all, the "seppuku," the elegant name for
+ the vulgar term "hara-kiri" or "belly-cutting." To one who is
+ sensitive to tales of blood, unexpurgated Japanese history must
+ be a dreadful thing. The vastness of the multitudes who died by
+ their own hands would be incredible, were there not ample
+ evidence of the most convincing nature. It may be said with
+ truth that suicide became <a name='Page_155'
+ id="Page_155"></a>apotheosized, a condition that I suppose
+ cannot be said to have prevailed in any other land.</p>
+
+ <p>In thus describing the Japanese sentiment in regard to
+ "seppuku," there is, however, some danger of misrepresenting
+ it. "Seppuku" itself was not honored, for in the vast majority
+ of cases those who performed it were guilty of some crime or
+ breach of etiquette. And not infrequently those who were
+ condemned to commit "seppuku" were deficient in physical
+ courage; in such cases, some friend took hold of the victim's
+ hand and forced him to cut himself. Such cowards were always
+ despised. To be condemned to commit "seppuku" was a disgrace,
+ but it was much less of a disgrace than to be beheaded as a
+ common man, for it permitted the samurai to show of what stuff
+ he was made. It should be stated further that in the case of
+ "seppuku," as soon as the act of cutting the abdomen had been
+ completed, always by a single rapid stroke, someone from behind
+ would, with a single blow, behead the victim. The physical
+ agony of "seppuku" was, therefore, very brief, lasting but a
+ few seconds.</p>
+
+ <p>I can do no better than quote in this connection a paragraph
+ from the "Religions of Japan" by W.E. Griffis:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"From the prehistoric days when the custom of 'Junshi,'
+ or dying with the master, required the interment of living
+ retainers with their dead lord, down through all the ages
+ to the Revolution of 1868, when at Sendai and Aidzu scores
+ of men and boys opened their bowels, and mothers slew their
+ infant sons and cut their own throats, there has been
+ flowing a river of suicides' blood having its springs in
+ devotion of retainers to masters, and of soldiers to a lost
+ cause.... Not only a thousand, but thousands of thousands
+ of soldiers hated their parents, wife, child, friend, in
+ order to be disciples to the supreme loyalty. They sealed
+ their creed by emptying their own veins.... The common
+ Japanese novels read like records of slaughter-houses. No
+ Molech or Shivas won more victims to his shrine than has
+ this idea of Japanese loyalty, which is so beautiful in
+ theory but so hideous in practice ... Could the statistics
+ <a name='Page_156'
+ id="Page_156"></a>of the suicides during this long
+ period be collected, their publication would excite in
+ Christendom the utmost
+ incredulity."<a name='FNanchor_T_20'
+ id="FNanchor_T_20"></a><a href='#Footnote_T_20'><sup>[T]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I well remember the pride, which almost amounted to glee,
+ with which a young blood gave me the account of a mere boy,
+ perhaps ten or twelve years old, who cut his bowels in such a
+ way that the deed was not quite complete, and then tying his
+ "obi" or girdle over it, walked into the presence of his
+ mother, explained the circumstances which made it a point of
+ honor that he should commit "seppuku," and forthwith untied his
+ "obi" and died in her presence.</p>
+
+ <p>These are the ideals of courage and loyalty that have been
+ held up before Japanese youth for centuries. Little comment is
+ needful. From the evolutionary standpoint, it is relatively
+ easy to understand the rise of these ideas and practices. It is
+ clear that they depend entirely on the social order. With the
+ coming in of the Western social order, feudal lords and local
+ loyalty and the carrying of swords were abolished. Are the
+ Japanese any less courageous now than they were thirty years
+ ago? The social order has changed and the ways of showing
+ courage have likewise changed. That is all that need be
+ said.</p>
+
+ <p>Are we to say that the Japanese are more courageous than
+ other peoples? Although no other people have manifested such
+ phenomena as the Japanese in regard to suicide for loyalty, yet
+ any true appreciation of Western peoples will at once dispel
+ the idea that they lack courage. Manifestations of courage
+ differ according to the nature of the social order, but no
+ nation could long maintain itself, to say nothing of coming
+ into existence, without a high degree of this endowment.</p>
+
+ <p>But Japanese courage is not entirely of the physical order,
+ although that is the form in which it has chiefly shown itself
+ thus far. The courage of having and holding one's own
+ convictions is known in Japan as elsewhere. There has been a
+ long line of martyrs. During the decades after the introduction
+ of Buddhism, there <a name='Page_157'
+ id="Page_157"></a>was such opposition that it required much
+ courage for converts to hold to their beliefs. So, too, at
+ the time of the rise of the new Buddhist sects, there was
+ considerable persecution, especially with the rise of the
+ Nichiren Shu. And when the testing time of Christianity
+ came, under the edict of the Tokugawas by which it was
+ suppressed, tens of thousands were found who preferred death
+ to the surrender of their faith. In recent times, too, much
+ courage has been shown by the native Christians.</p>
+
+ <p>As an illustration is the following: When an eminent
+ American teacher of Japanese youth returned to Japan after a
+ long absence, his former pupils gathered around him with warm
+ admiration. They had in the interval of his absence become
+ leaders among the trustees and faculty of the most prosperous
+ Christian college in Japan. He was accordingly invited to
+ deliver a course of lectures in the Chapel. It was generally
+ known that he was no longer the earnest Christian that he had
+ once been, when, as teacher in an interior town, he had
+ inspired a band of young men who became Christians under his
+ teaching and a power for good throughout the land. But no one
+ was prepared to hear such extreme denunciations of Christianity
+ and Christian missions and missionaries as constituted the
+ substance of his lectures. At first the matter was passed over
+ in silence. But, by the end of the second lecture, the
+ missionaries entered a protest, urging that the Christian
+ Chapel should not again be used for such lectures. The faculty,
+ however, were not ready to criticise their beloved teacher. The
+ third lecture proved as abusive as the others; the speaker
+ seemed to have no sense of propriety. A glimpse of his thought,
+ and method of expression may be gained from a single sentence:
+ "I have been commissioned, gentlemen, by Jesus Christ, to tell
+ you that there is no such thing as a soul or a future life."
+ Although the missionary members of the faculty urged it, the
+ Japanese members, most of whom were his former pupils, were
+ unwilling to take any steps whatever to prevent the
+ continuation of the blasphemous lectures. The students of the
+ institution <a name='Page_158'
+ id="Page_158"></a>accordingly held a mass-meeting, in which
+ the matter was discussed, and it was decided to inform the
+ speaker that the students did not care to hear any more such
+ lectures. The question then arose as to who would deliver
+ the resolution. There was general hesitancy, and anyone who
+ has seen or known the lecturer, and has heard him speak, can
+ easily understand this feeling; for he is a large man with a
+ most impressive and imperious manner. The young man,
+ however, who had perhaps been most active in agitating the
+ matter, and who had presented the resolution to the meeting,
+ volunteered to go. He is slight and rather small, even for a
+ Japanese. Going to the home of the lecturer, he delivered
+ calmly the resolution of the students. To the demand as to
+ who had drawn up and presented the resolution to the
+ meeting, the reply was: "I, sir." That ended the
+ conversation, but not the matter. From that day the idolized
+ teacher was gradually lowered from his pedestal. But the
+ moral courage of the young man who could say in his enraged
+ presence, "I, sir," has not been forgotten. Neither has that
+ of the young man who had acted as interpreter for the first
+ lecture; not only did he decline to act in that capacity any
+ longer, but, taking the first public opportunity, at the
+ chapel service the following day, which proved to be Sunday,
+ he went to the platform and asked forgiveness of God and of
+ men that he had uttered such language as he had been
+ compelled to use in his translating. Here, too, was moral
+ courage of no mean order.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XIV'
+ id="XIV"></a><a name='Page_159'
+ id="Page_159"></a>XIV</h2>
+
+ <h3>FICKLENESS&mdash;STOLIDITY&mdash;STOICISM</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A frequent criticism of the Japanese is that they are
+ fickle; that they run from one fad to another, from one idea to
+ another, quickly tiring of each in turn. They are said to lack
+ persistence in their amusements no less than in the most
+ serious matters of life.</p>
+
+ <p>None will deny the element of truth in this charge. In fact,
+ the Japanese themselves recognize that of late their progress
+ has been by "waves," and not a few lament it. A careful study
+ of school attendance will show that it has been subject to
+ alternate waves of popularity and disfavor. Private schools
+ glorying in their hundreds of pupils have in a short time lost
+ all but a few score. In 1873 there was a passion for rabbits,
+ certain varieties of which were then for the first time
+ introduced into Japan. For a few months these brought fabulous
+ prices, and became a subject of the wildest speculation. In
+ 1874-75 cock-fighting was all the rage. Foreign waltzing and
+ gigantic funerals were the fashion one year, while wrestling
+ was the fad at another time, even the then prime minister,
+ Count Kuroda, taking the lead. But the point of our special
+ interest is as to whether fickleness is an essential element of
+ Japanese character, and so dominant that wherever the people
+ may be and whatever their surroundings, they will always be
+ fickle; or whether this trait is due to the conditions of their
+ recent history. Let us see.</p>
+
+ <p>Prof. Basil H. Chamberlain says, "Japan stood still so long
+ that she has to move quickly and often now to make up for lost
+ time." This states the case pretty well. Had we known Japan
+ only through her Tokugawa period, the idea of fickleness would
+ not have occurred to us; on the contrary, the dominant
+ impression would <a name='Page_160'
+ id="Page_160"></a>have been that of the permanence and
+ fixity of her life and customs. This quality or appearance
+ of fickleness is, then, a modern trait, due to the
+ extraordinary circumstances in which Japan finds herself.
+ The occurrence of wave after wave of fresh fashions and fads
+ is neither strange nor indicative of an essentially fickle
+ disposition. Glancing below the surface for a moment, we
+ shall see that there is an earnestness of purpose which is
+ the reverse of fickle.</p>
+
+ <p>What nation, for example, ever voluntarily set itself to
+ learn the ways and thoughts and languages of foreign nations as
+ persistently as Japan? That there has been fluctuation of
+ intensity is not so surprising as that, through a period of
+ thirty years, she has kept steadily at it. Tens of thousands of
+ her young men are now, able to read the English language with
+ some facility; thousands are also able to read German and
+ French. Foreign languages are compulsory in all the advanced
+ schools. A regulation going into force in September, 1900,
+ requires the study of two foreign languages. This has been done
+ at a cost of many hundred thousands of dollars. There has been
+ a fairly permanent desire and effort to learn all that the West
+ has to teach. The element of fickleness is to be found chiefly
+ in connection with the methods rather than in connection with
+ the ends to be secured. From the moment when Japan discovered
+ that the West had sources of power unknown to herself, and
+ indispensable if she expected to hold her own with the nations
+ of the world, the aim and end of all her efforts has been to
+ master the secrets of that power. She has seen that education
+ is one important means. That she should stumble in the adoption
+ of educational methods is not strange. The necessary experience
+ is being secured. But for a lesson of this sort, more than one
+ generation of experience is required of a nation. For some time
+ to come Japan is sure to give signs of unsteadiness, of lack of
+ perfect balance.</p>
+
+ <p>A pitiful sight in Japan is that of boys not more than five
+ or six years of age pushing or pulling with all their might at
+ heavily loaded hand-carts drawn by their parents. Yet this is
+ typical of one aspect of Japanese <a name='Page_161'
+ id="Page_161"></a>civilization. The work is largely done by
+ young people under thirty, and vast multitudes of the
+ workers are under twenty years of age. This is true not only
+ of menial labor, but also in regard to labor involving more
+ or less responsibility. In the post offices, for instance,
+ the great majority of the clerks are mere boys. In the
+ stores one rarely sees a man past middle age conducting the
+ business or acting as clerk. Why are the young so prominent?
+ Partly because of the custom of "abdication." As "family
+ abdication" is frequent, it has a perceptible effect on the
+ general character of the nation, and accounts in part for
+ rash business ventures and other signs of impetuosity and
+ unbalanced judgment. Furthermore, under the new
+ civilization, the older men have become unfitted to do the
+ required work. The younger and more flexible members of the
+ rising generation can quickly adjust themselves to the new
+ conditions, as in the schools, where the older men, who had
+ received only the regular training in Chinese classics, were
+ utterly incompetent as teachers of science. Naturally,
+ therefore, except for instruction in these classics, the
+ common-school teachers, during the earlier decades, were
+ almost wholly young boys. The extreme youthfulness of
+ school-teachers has constantly surprised me. In the various
+ branches of government this same phenomenon is equally
+ common. Young men have been pushed forward into positions
+ with a rapidity and in numbers unknown in the West, and
+ perhaps unknown in any previous age in Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>The rise and decline of the Christian Church in Japan has
+ been instanced as a sign of the fickleness of the people. It is
+ a mistaken instance, for there are many other causes quite
+ sufficient to account for the phenomenon in question. Let me
+ illustrate by the experience of an elderly Christian. He had
+ been brought to Christ through the teachings of a young man of
+ great brilliancy, whose zeal was not tempered with full
+ knowledge&mdash;which, however, was not strange, in view of his
+ limited opportunities for learning. His instruction was
+ therefore narrow, not to say bigoted. Still the elderly
+ gentleman found the teachings of the young man sufficiently
+ <a name='Page_162'
+ id="Page_162"></a>strong and clear thoroughly to upset all
+ his old ideas of religion, his polytheism, his belief in
+ charms, his worship of ancestors, and all kindred ideas. He
+ accepted the New Testament in simple unquestioning faith.
+ But, after six or eight years, the young instructor began to
+ lose his own primitive and simple faith. He at once
+ proceeded to attack that which before he had been defending
+ and expounding. Soon his whole theological position was
+ changed. Higher criticism and religious philosophy were now
+ the center of his preaching and writing. The result was that
+ this old gentleman was again in danger of being upset in his
+ religious thinking. He felt that his new faith had been
+ received in bulk, so to speak, and if a part of it were
+ false, as his young teacher now asserted, how could he know
+ that any of it was true? Yet his heart's experience told him
+ that he had secured something in this faith that was real;
+ he was loath to lose it; consequently, for some years now,
+ he has systematically stayed away from church services, and
+ refrained from reading magazines in which these new and
+ destructive views have been discussed; he has preferred to
+ read the Bible quietly at home, and to have direct communion
+ with God, even though, in many matters of Biblical or
+ theoretical science, he might hold his mistaken opinions. A
+ surface view of this man's conduct might lead one to think
+ of him as fickle; but a deeper consideration will lead to
+ the opposite conclusion.</p>
+
+ <p>The fluctuating condition of the Christian churches is not
+ cause for astonishment, nor is it to be wholly, if at all,
+ attributed to the fickleness of the national character, but
+ rather, in a large degree, to the peculiar conditions of
+ Japanese life. The early Christians had much to learn. They
+ knew, experimentally, but little of Christian truth. The whole
+ course of Christian thought, the historical development of
+ theology, with the various heresies, the recent discussions
+ resting on the so-called "higher criticism" of the Bible,
+ together with the still more recent investigations into the
+ history and philosophy of religion in general, were of course
+ wholly unknown to them. This was inevitable, and they were
+ blameless. All could not be learned at once.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_163'
+ id="Page_163"></a>Nor is there any blame attached to the
+ missionaries. It was as impossible for them to impart to
+ young and inexperienced Christians a full knowledge of these
+ matters as it was for the latter to receive such
+ information. The primary interest of the missionaries was in
+ the practical and everyday duties of the Christian life, in
+ the great problem of getting men and women to put away the
+ superstitions and narrowness and sins springing from
+ polytheism or practical atheism, and getting them started in
+ ways of godliness. The training schools for evangelists were
+ designed to raise up practical workers rather than
+ speculative theologians. Missionaries considered it their
+ duty (and they were beyond question right) to teach religion
+ rather than the science and philosophy of religion. When,
+ therefore, the evangelists discovered that they had not been
+ taught these advanced branches of knowledge, it is not
+ strange that some should rush after them, and, in their zeal
+ for that which they supposed to be important, hasten to
+ criticise their former teachers. As a result, they
+ undermined both their own faith and that of many who had
+ become Christians through their teaching.</p>
+
+ <p>The dullness of the church life, so conspicuous at present
+ in many of the churches, is only partly due to the fact that
+ the Christians are tired of the services. It is true that these
+ services no longer afford them that mental and spiritual
+ stimulus which they found at the first, and that, lacking this,
+ they find little inducement to attend. But this is only a
+ partial explanation. Looking over the experience of the past
+ twenty-five years, we now see that the intense zeal of the
+ first few years was a natural result of a certain narrowness of
+ view. It is an interesting fact that, during one of the early
+ revivals in the Doshisha, the young men were so intense and
+ excited that the missionaries were compelled to restrain them.
+ These young Christians felt and said that the missionaries were
+ not filled with the Holy Spirit; they accordingly considered it
+ their duty to exhort their foreign leaders, even to chide them
+ for their lack of faith. The extraordinary expectations
+ entertained by the young Japanese workers of those days and
+ shared by the mis<a name='Page_164'
+ id="Page_164"></a>sionaries, that Japan was to become a
+ Christian nation before the end of the century, was due in
+ large measure to an ignorance alike of Christianity, of
+ human nature, and of heathenism, but, under the peculiar
+ conditions of life, this was well-nigh inevitable. And that
+ great and sudden changes in feeling and thought have come
+ over the infant churches, in consequence of the rapid
+ acquisition of new light and new experience, is equally
+ inevitable. These changes are not primarily attributable to
+ fickleness of nature, but to the extraordinary additions to
+ their knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>There is good reason to think, however, that the period of
+ these rapid fluctuations is passing away. All the various fads,
+ fancies, and follies, together with the sciences, philosophies,
+ ologies, and isms of the Western world, have already come to
+ Japan, and are fairly well known. No essentially new and sudden
+ experiences lie before the people.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, the young men are year by year growing older.
+ Experience and age together are giving a soberness and a
+ steadiness otherwise unattainable. In the schools, in the
+ government, in politics, and in the judiciary, and in the
+ churches, men of years and of training in the new order are
+ becoming relatively numerous, and erelong they will be in the
+ majority. We may expect to see Japan gradually settling down to
+ a steadiness and a regularity that have been lacking during the
+ past few decades. The newcomer to Japan is much impressed with
+ the expressionless character of so many Japanese faces. They
+ appear like the images of Buddha, who is supposed to be so
+ absorbed in profound meditation that the events of the passing
+ world make no impression upon him. I have sometimes heard the
+ expression "putty face" used to describe the appearance of the
+ common Japanese face. This immobility of the Oriental is more
+ conspicuous to a newcomer than to one who has seen much of the
+ people and who has learned its significance. But though the
+ "putty" effect wears off, there remains an impression of
+ stoicism that never fades away. These two features, stolidity
+ and stoicism, are so closely allied in appearance that they are
+ easily mistaken, yet they are <a name='Page_165'
+ id="Page_165"></a>really distinct. The one arises from
+ stupidity, from dullness of mind. The other is the product
+ of elaborate education and patient drill. Yet it is often
+ difficult to determine where the one ends and the other
+ begins.</p>
+
+ <p>The stolidity of stupidity is, of course, commonest among
+ the peasant class. For centuries they have been in closest
+ contact with the soil; nothing has served to awaken their
+ intellectual faculties. Reading and writing have remained to
+ them profound mysteries. Their lives have been narrow in the
+ extreme. But the Japanese peasant is not peculiar in this
+ respect. Similar conditions in other lands produce similar
+ results, as in France, according to Millet's famous painting,
+ "The Man with the Hoe."</p>
+
+ <p>It is an interesting fact, however, that this stolidity of
+ stupidity can be easily removed. I have often heard comments on
+ the marked change in the facial expression of those adults who
+ learn to read the Bible. Their minds are awakened; a new light
+ is seen in their eyes as new ideas are started in their
+ minds.</p>
+
+ <p>The impression of stolidity made on the foreigner is, due
+ less, however, to stupidity than to a stoical education. For
+ centuries the people have been taught to repress all expression
+ of their emotions. It has been required of the inferior to
+ listen quietly to his superior and to obey implicitly. The
+ relations of superior and inferior have been drilled into the
+ people for ages. The code of a military camp has been taught
+ and enforced in all the homes. Talking in the presence of a
+ superior, or laughter, or curious questions, or expressions of
+ surprise, anything revealing the slightest emotion on the part
+ of the inferior was considered a discourtesy.</p>
+
+ <p>Education in these matters was not confined to oral
+ instruction; infringements were punished with great rigor.
+ Whenever a daimyo traveled to Yedo, the capital, he was treated
+ almost as a god by the people. They were required to fall on
+ their knees and bow their faces to the ground, and the death
+ penalty was freely awarded to those who failed to make such
+ expressions of respect.</p>
+
+ <p>One source, then, of the systematic repression of emotional
+ expression is the character of the feudal order of
+ <a name='Page_166'
+ id="Page_166"></a>society that so long prevailed. The
+ warrior who had best control of his facial expression, who
+ could least expose to his foe or even to his ordinary
+ friends the real state of his feelings, other things being
+ equal, would come off the victor. In further explanation of
+ this repression is the religion of Buddha. For 1200 years it
+ has helped to mold the middle and the lower classes of the
+ people. According to its doctrine, desire is the great evil;
+ from it all other evils spring. For this reason, the aim of
+ the religious life is to suppress all desire, and the most
+ natural way to accomplish this is to suppress the
+ manifestation of desire; to maintain passive features under
+ all circumstances. The images of Buddha and of Buddhist
+ saints are utterly devoid of expression. They indicate as
+ nearly as possible the attainment of their desire, namely,
+ freedom from all desire. This is the ambition of every
+ earnest Buddhist. Being the ideal and the actual effort of
+ life, it does affect the faces of the people. Lack of
+ expression, however, does not prove absence of desire.</p>
+
+ <p>Every foreigner has had amusing proof of this. A common
+ experience is the passing of a group of Japanese who,
+ apparently, give no heed to the stranger. Neither by the turn
+ of the head nor by the movement of a single facial muscle do
+ they betray any curiosity, yet their eyes take in each detail,
+ and involuntarily follow the receding form of the traveler. In
+ the interior, where foreigners are still objects of curiosity,
+ young men have often run up from behind, gone to a distance
+ ahead of me, then turned abruptly, as though remembering
+ something, and walked slowly back again, giving me, apparently,
+ not the slightest attention. The motive was the desire to get a
+ better look at the foreigner. They hoped to conceal it by a
+ ruse, for there must be no manifestation of curiosity.</p>
+
+ <p>Phenomena which a foreigner may attribute to a lack of
+ emotion of, at least, to its repression, may be due to some
+ very different cause. Few things, for instance, are more
+ astonishing to the Occidental than the silence on the part of
+ the multitude when the Emperor, whom they all admire and love,
+ appears on the street. Under <a name='Page_167'
+ id="Page_167"></a>circumstances which would call forth the
+ most enthusiastic cheers from Western crowds, a Japanese
+ crowd will maintain absolute silence. Is this from lack of
+ emotion? By no means. Reverence dominates every breast. They
+ would no more think of making noisy demonstrations of joy in
+ the presence of the Emperor than a congregation of devout
+ Christians would think of doing the same during a religious
+ service. This idea of reverence for superiors has pervaded
+ the social order &mdash;the intensity of the reverence
+ varying with the rank of the superior. But a change has
+ already begun. Silence is no longer enforced; no profound
+ bowings to the ground are now demanded before the nobility;
+ on at least one occasion during the recent China-Japan war
+ the enthusiasm of the populace found audible expression when
+ the Emperor made a public appearance. Even the stoical
+ appearance of the people is passing away under the influence
+ of the new order of society, with its new, dominant ideas.
+ Education is bringing the nation into a large and throbbing
+ life. Naturalness is taking the place of forced repression.
+ A sense of the essential equality of man is springing up,
+ especially among the young men, and is helping to create a
+ new atmosphere in this land, where, for centuries, one chief
+ effort has been to repress all natural expression of
+ emotion.</p>
+
+ <p>While touring in Kyushu several years ago, I had an
+ experience which showed me that the stolidity, or vivacity, of
+ a people is largely dependent on the prevailing social order
+ rather than on inherent nature. Those who have much to do with
+ the Japanese have noted the extreme quiet and reserve of the
+ women. It is a trait that has been lauded by both native and
+ foreign writers. Because of this characteristic it is difficult
+ for a stranger, to carry on conversation with them. They
+ usually reply in monosyllables and in low tones. The very
+ expression of their faces indicates a reticence, a calm
+ stolidity, and a lack of response to the stimulus of social
+ intercourse that is striking and oppressive to an Occidental. I
+ have always found it a matter of no little difficulty to become
+ acquainted with the women, and especially with the young women,
+ in the church with which I have been con<a name='Page_168'
+ id="Page_168"></a>nected. With the older women this
+ reticence is not so marked. Now for my story:</p>
+
+ <p>One day I called on a family, expecting to meet the mother,
+ with whom I was well acquainted. She proved to be out; but a
+ daughter of whom I had not before heard was at home, and I
+ began to talk with her. Contrary to all my previous experience,
+ this young girl of less than twenty years looked me straight in
+ the face with perfect composure, replied to my questions with
+ clear voice and complete sentences, and asked questions in her
+ turn without the slightest embarrassment. I was amazed. Here
+ was a Japanese girl acting and talking with the freedom of an
+ American. How was this to be explained? Difficult though it
+ appeared, the problem was easily solved. The young lady had
+ been in America, having spent several years in Radcliffe
+ College. There it was that her Japanese demureness was dropped
+ and the American frankness and vivacity of manner acquired. It
+ was a matter simply of the prevailing social customs, and not
+ of her inherent nature as a Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>And this conclusion is enforced by the further fact that
+ there is a marked increase in vivacity in those who become
+ Christian. The repressive social restraints of the old social
+ order are somewhat removed. A freedom is allowed to individuals
+ of the Christian community, in social life, in conversation
+ between men and women, in the holding of private opinions,
+ which the non-Christian order of society did not permit.
+ Sociability between the sexes was not allowed. The new freedom
+ naturally results in greater vivacity and a far freer play of
+ facial expression than the older order could produce. The
+ vivacity and sociability of the geisha (dancing and singing
+ girls), whose business it is to have social relations with the
+ men, freely conversing with them, still further substantiates
+ the view that the stolid, irrepressive features of the usual
+ Japanese woman are social, not essential, characteristics. The
+ very same girls exhibit alternately stolidity and vivacity
+ according as they are acting as geisha or as respectable
+ members of society.</p>
+
+ <p>This completes our direct study of the various elements
+ characterizing the emotional nature of the
+ Japa<a name='Page_169'
+ id="Page_169"></a>nese. It is universally admitted that the
+ people are conspicuously emotional. We have shown, however,
+ that their feelings are subject to certain remarkable
+ suppressions.</p>
+
+ <p>It remains to be asked why the Japanese are more emotional
+ than other races? One reason doubtless is that the social
+ conditions were such as to stimulate their emotional rather
+ than their intellectual powers. The military system upon which
+ the social structure rested kept the nation in its mental
+ infancy. Twenty-eight millions of farmers and a million and a
+ half of soldiers was the proportion during the middle of the
+ nineteenth century. Education was limited to the soldiers. But
+ although they cultivated their minds somewhat, their very
+ occupation as soldiers required them to obey rather than to
+ think; their hand-to-hand conflicts served mightily to
+ stimulate the emotions. The entire feudal order likewise was
+ calculated to have the same effect. The intellectual life being
+ low, its inhibitions were correspondingly weak. When, in the
+ future, the entire population shall have become fairly
+ educated, and taught to think independently; and when
+ government by the people shall have become much more universal,
+ throwing responsibility on the people as never before, and
+ stimulating discussion of the general principles of life, of
+ government, and of law, then must the emotional features of the
+ nation become less conspicuous.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a question of relative development. As children run to
+ extremes of thought and action on the slightest occasion,
+ simply because their intellects have not come into full
+ activity, weeping at one moment and laughing at the next, so it
+ is with national life. Where the general intellectual
+ development of a people is retarded, the emotional
+ manifestations are of necessity correspondingly
+ conspicuous.</p>
+
+ <p>Even so fundamental a racial trait, then, as the emotional,
+ is seen to be profoundly influenced by the prevailing social
+ order. The emotional characteristics which distinguish the
+ Japanese from other races are due, in the last analysis, to the
+ nature of their social order rather than to their inherent
+ nature or brain structure.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XV'
+ id="XV"></a><a name='Page_170'
+ id="Page_170"></a>XV</h2>
+
+ <h3>&AElig;STHETIC CHARACTERISTICS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In certain directions, the Japanese reveal a development of
+ &aelig;sthetic taste which no other nation has reached. The
+ general appreciation of landscape-views well illustrates this
+ point. The home and garden of the average workman are far
+ superior artistically to those of the same class in the West.
+ There is hardly a home without at least a diminutive garden
+ laid out in artistic style with miniature lake and hills and
+ winding walks. And this garden exists solely for the delight of
+ the eye.</p>
+
+ <p>The general taste displayed in many little ways is a
+ constant delight to the Western "barbarian" when he first comes
+ to Japan. Nor does this delight vanish with time and
+ familiarity, though it is tempered by a later perception of
+ certain other features. Indeed, the more one knows of the
+ details of their artistic taste, the more does he appreciate
+ it. The "toko-no-ma," for example, is a variety of alcove
+ usually occupying half of one side of a room. It indicates the
+ place of honor, and guests are always urged to sit in front of
+ it. The floor of the "toko-no-ma" is raised four or five inches
+ above the level of the room and should never be stepped upon.
+ In this "toko-no-ma" is usually placed some work of art, or a
+ vase with flowers, and on the wall is hung a picture or a few
+ Chinese characters, written by some famous calligraphist, which
+ are changed with the seasons. The woodwork and the coloring of
+ this part of the room is of the choicest. The "toko-no-ma" of
+ the main room of the house is always restful to the eye; this
+ "honorable spot" is found in at least one room in every house;
+ and if the owner has moderate means, there are two or three
+ such rooms. Only the homes of the poorest of the poor are
+ without this ornament.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_171'
+ id="Page_171"></a>The Japanese show a refined taste in the
+ coloring and decoration of rooms; natural woods, painted and
+ polished, are common; every post and board standing erect
+ must stand in the position in which it grew. A Japanese
+ knows at once whether a board or post is upside down, though
+ it would often puzzle a Westerner to decide the matter. The
+ natural wood ceilings and the soft yellows and blues of the
+ walls are all that the best trained Occidental eye could
+ ask. Dainty decorations called the "ramma," over the neat
+ "fusuma," consist of delicate shapes and quaint designs cut
+ in thin boards, and serve at once as picture and ventilator.
+ The drawings, too, on the "fusuma" (solid thick paper
+ sliding doors separating adjacent rooms or shutting off the
+ closet) are simple and neat, as is all Japanese pictorial
+ art.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese love for flowers reveals a high &aelig;sthetic
+ development. Not only are there various flower festivals at
+ which times the people flock to suburban gardens and parks, but
+ sprays, budding branches, and even large boughs are invariably
+ arranged in the homes and public halls. Every church has an
+ immense vase for the purpose. The proper arrangement of flowers
+ and of flowering sprays and boughs is a highly developed art.
+ It is often one of the required studies in girls' schools. I
+ have known two or three men who made their entire living by
+ teaching this art. Miniature flowering trees are reared with
+ consummate skill. An acquaintance of mine glories in 230
+ varieties of the plum tree, all in pots, some of them between
+ two and three hundred years old. Shinto and Buddhist temples
+ also reveal artistic qualities most pleasing to the eye.</p>
+
+ <p>But the main point of our interest lies in the explanation
+ of this characteristic. Is the &aelig;sthetic sense more highly
+ developed in Japan than in the West? Is it more general? Is it
+ a matter of inherent nature, or of civilization?</p>
+
+ <p>In trying to meet these problems, I note, first of all, that
+ the development of the Japanese &aelig;sthetic taste is
+ one-sided; though advanced in certain respects it is belated in
+ others. In illustration is the sense of smell. It will not do
+ to say that "the Japanese have no use for the
+ <a name='Page_172'
+ id="Page_172"></a>nose," and that the love of sweet smells
+ is unknown. Sir Rutherford Alcock's off-quoted sentence that
+ "in one of the most beautiful and fertile countries in the
+ whole world the flowers have no scent, the birds no song,
+ and the fruit and vegetables no flavor," is quite
+ misleading, for it has only enough truth to make it the more
+ deceptive. It is true that the cherry blossom has little or
+ no odor, and that its beauty lies in its exquisite coloring
+ and abounding luxuriance, but most of the native flowers are
+ praised and prized by the Japanese for their odors, as well
+ as for their colors, as the plum, the chrysanthemum, the
+ lotus, and the rose. The fragrance of flowers is a frequent
+ theme in Japanese poetry. Japanese ladies, like those of
+ every land, are fond of delicate scents. Cologne and kindred
+ wares find wide sale in Japan, and I am told that expensive
+ musk is not infrequently packed away with the clothing of
+ the wealthy.</p>
+
+ <p>But in contrast to this appreciation is a remarkable
+ indifference to certain foul odors. It is amazing what horrid
+ smells the cultivated Japanese will endure in his home. What we
+ conceal in the rear and out of the way, he very commonly places
+ in the front yard; though this is, of course, more true of the
+ country than of large towns or cities. It would seem as if a
+ high &aelig;sthetic development should long ago have banished
+ such sights and smells. As a matter of fact, however, the
+ &aelig;sthetics of the subject does not seem to have entered
+ the national mind, any more than have the hygienics of the same
+ subject.</p>
+
+ <p>In explanation of these facts, may it not be that the
+ Japanese method of agriculture has been a potent hindrance to
+ the &aelig;sthetic development of the sense of smell? In
+ primitive times, when wealth was small, the only easy method
+ which the people had of preserving the fertilizing properties
+ of that which is removed from our cities by the sewer-system
+ was such as we still find in use in Japan to-day. Perhaps the
+ necessities of the case have toughened the mental, if not the
+ physical, sense of the people. Perhaps the un&aelig;sthetic
+ character of the sights and smells has been submerged in the
+ great value of fertilizing materials. Then, too, with the
+ Occidental, <a name='Page_173'
+ id="Page_173"></a>the thought is common that such odors are
+ indications of seriously unhealthful conditions. We are
+ accordingly offended not simply by the odor itself, but also
+ by the associations of sickness and death which it suggests.
+ Not so the unsophisticated Oriental. Such a correlation of
+ ideas is only now arising in Japan, and changes are
+ beginning to be made, as a consequence.</p>
+
+ <p>I cannot leave this point without drawing attention to the
+ fact that the development of the sense of smell in these
+ directions is relatively recent, even in the West. Of all the
+ non-European nations and races, I have no doubt Japan is most
+ free from horrid smells and putrid odors. And in view of our
+ own recent emancipation it is not for us to marvel that others
+ have made little progress. Rather is it marvelous that we
+ should so easily forget the hole from which we have been so
+ recently digged.</p>
+
+ <p>In turning to study certain features of Japanese pictorial
+ art, we notice that a leading characteristic is that of
+ simplicity. The greatest results are secured with the fewest
+ possible strokes. This general feature is in part due to the
+ character of the instrument used, the "fude," "brush." This
+ same brush answers for writing. It admits of strong, bold
+ outlines; and a large brush allows the exhibition of no slight
+ degree of skill. As a result, "writing" is a fine art in Japan.
+ Hardly a family that makes any pretense at culture but owns one
+ or more framed specimens of writing. In Japan these rank as
+ pictures do or mottoes in the West, and are prized not merely
+ for the sentiment expressed, but also for the skill displayed
+ in the use of the brush. Skillful writers become famous, often
+ receiving large sums for small "pictures" which consist of but
+ two or three Chinese characters.</p>
+
+ <p>No doubt the higher development of appreciation for natural
+ scenery among the people in general is largely due to the
+ character of the scenery itself. Steep hills and narrow valleys
+ adjoin nearly every city in the land. Seas, bays, lakes, and
+ rivers are numerous; reflected mountain scenes are common; the
+ colors are varied and marked. Flowering trees of striking
+ beauty are abun<a name='Page_174'
+ id="Page_174"></a>dant. Any people living under these
+ physical conditions, and sufficiently advanced in
+ civilization to have leisure and culture, can hardly fail to
+ be impressed with such wealth of beauty in the scenery
+ itself.</p>
+
+ <p>In the artistic reproduction of this scenery, however,
+ Japanese artists are generally supposed to be inferior to those
+ of the West.</p>
+
+ <p>As often remarked, Japanese art has directed its chief
+ endeavor to animals and to nature, thus failing to give to man
+ his share of attention. This curious one-sidedness shows itself
+ particularly in painting and in sculpture. In the former, when
+ human beings are the subject, the aim has apparently been to
+ extol certain characteristics; in warriors, the military or
+ heroic spirit; in wise men, their wisdom; in monks and priests,
+ their mastery over the passions and complete attainment of
+ peace; in a god, the moral character which he is supposed to
+ represent. Art has consequently been directed to bringing into
+ prominence certain ideal features which must be
+ over-accentuated in order to secure recognition; caricatures,
+ rather than lifelike forms, are the frequent results. The
+ images of multitudes of gods are frightful to behold; the aim
+ being to show the character of the emotion of the god in the
+ presence of evil. These idols are easily misunderstood, for we
+ argue that the more frightful he is, the more vicious must be
+ the god in his real character; not so the Oriental. To him the
+ more frightful the image, the more noble the character. Really
+ evil gods, such as demons, are always represented, I think, as
+ deformed creatures, partly human and partly beast. It is to be
+ remembered, in this connection, that idols are an imported
+ feature of Japanese religion; Shinto to this day has no "graven
+ image." All idols are Buddhistic. Moreover, they are but copies
+ of the hideous idols of India; the Japanese artistic genius has
+ added nothing to their grotesque appearance. But the point of
+ interest for us is that the &aelig;sthetic taste which can
+ revel in flowers and natural scenery has never delivered
+ Japanese art from truly un&aelig;sthetic representations of
+ human beings and of gods.</p>
+
+ <p>Standing recently before a toy store and looking at
+ <a name='Page_175'
+ id="Page_175"></a>the numberless dolls offered for sale, I
+ was impressed afresh with the lack of taste displayed, both
+ in coloring and in form; their conventionality was
+ exceedingly tiresome; their one attractive feature was their
+ absurdity. But the moment I turned away from the imitations
+ of human beings to look at the imitations of nature, the
+ whole impression was changed. I was pleased with the
+ artistic taste displayed in the perfectly imitated,
+ delicately colored flowers. They were beautiful indeed.</p>
+
+ <p>Why has Japanese art made so little of man as man? Is it due
+ to the "impersonality" of the Orient, as urged by some? This
+ suggests, but does not give, the correct interpretation of the
+ phenomenon in question. The reason lies in the nature of the
+ ruling ideas of Oriental civilization. Man, as man, has not
+ been honored or highly esteemed. As a warrior he has been
+ honored; consequently, when pictured or sculptured as a
+ warrior, he has worn his armor; his face, if visible, is not
+ the natural face of a man, but rather that of a passionate
+ victor, slaying his foe or planning for the same. And so with
+ the priests and the teachers, the emperors and the generals;
+ all have been depicted, not for what they are in themselves,
+ but for the rank which they have attained; they are accordingly
+ represented with their accouterments and robes and the
+ characteristic attitudes of their rank. The effort to preserve
+ their actual appearance is relatively rare. Manhood and
+ womanhood, apart from social rank, have hardly been recognized,
+ much less extolled by art. This feature, then, corresponds to
+ the nature of the Japanese social order. The art of a land
+ necessarily reveals the ruling ideals of its civilization. As
+ Japan failed to discover the inherent nature and value of
+ manhood and womanhood, estimating them only on a utilitarian
+ basis, so has her art reflected this failure.</p>
+
+ <p>Apparently it has never attempted to depict the nude human
+ form. This is partly explained, perhaps, by the fact that the
+ development of a perfect physical form through exercise and
+ training has not been a part of Oriental thought. Labor of
+ every sort has been regarded as degrading. Training for
+ military skill and prowess has indeed been common among the
+ military <a name='Page_176'
+ id="Page_176"></a>classes; but the skill and strength
+ themselves have been the objects of thought, rather than the
+ beauty of the muscular development which they produce. When
+ we recall the prominent place which the games of Greece took
+ in her civilization previous to her development of art, and
+ the stress then laid on perfect bodily form, we shall better
+ understand why there should be such difference in the
+ development of the art of these two lands. I have never seen
+ a Japanese man or youth bare his arm to show with pride the
+ development of his biceps; and so far as I have observed,
+ the pride which students in the United States feel over
+ well-developed calves has no counterpart in
+ Japan&mdash;this, despite the fact that the average Japanese
+ has calves which would turn the American youth green with
+ envy.</p>
+
+ <p>From the absence of the nude in Japanese art it has been
+ urged that Japan herself is far more morally pure than the
+ West. Did the moral life of the people correspond to their art
+ in this respect, the argument would have force. Unfortunately,
+ such does not seem to be the case. It is further suggested as a
+ reason that the bodily form of Oriental peoples is essentially
+ un&aelig;sthetic; that the men are either too fat or too lean,
+ and the women too plump when in the bloom of youth and too
+ wrinkled and flabby when the first bloom is over. The absurdity
+ of this suggestion raises a smile, and a query as to the
+ experience which its author must have had. For any person who
+ has lived in Japan must have seen individuals of both sexes,
+ whom the most fastidious painter or sculptor would rejoice to
+ secure as models.</p>
+
+ <p>It might be thought that a truly artistic people, who are
+ also somewhat immoral, would have developed much skill in the
+ portrayal of the nude female form. But such an attempt does not
+ seem to have been made until recent times, and in imitation of
+ Western art. At least such attempts have not been recognized as
+ art nor have they been preserved as such. I have never seen
+ either statue or picture of a nude Japanese woman. Even the
+ pictures of famous prostitutes are always faultlessly attired.
+ The number and size of the conventional hairpins, and the gaudy
+ coloring of the clothing, alone <a name='Page_177'
+ id="Page_177"></a>indicate the immoral character of the
+ woman represented.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not to be inferred, however, that immoral pictures
+ have been unknown in Japan, for the reverse is true. Until
+ forcibly suppressed by the government under the incentive of
+ Western criticism, there was perfect freedom to produce and
+ sell licentious and lascivious pictures. The older foreign
+ residents in Japan testify to the frequency with which immoral
+ scenes were depicted and exposed for sale. Here I merely say
+ that these were not considered works of art; they were
+ reproduced not in the interests of the &aelig;sthetic sense,
+ but wholly to stimulate the taste for immoral things.</p>
+
+ <p>The absence of the nude from Japanese art is due to the same
+ causes that led to the relative absence of all distinctively
+ human nature from art. Manhood and womanhood, as such, were not
+ the themes they strove to depict.</p>
+
+ <p>A curious feature of the artistic taste of the people is the
+ marked fondness for caricature. It revels in absurd
+ accentuations of special features. Children with protruding
+ foreheads; enormously fat little men; grotesque dwarf figures
+ in laughable positions; these are a few common examples. Nearly
+ all of the small drawings and sculpturings of human figures are
+ intentionally grotesque. But the Japanese love of the grotesque
+ is not confined to its manifestation in art. It also reveals
+ itself in other surprising ways. It is difficult to realize
+ that a people who revel in the beauties of nature can also
+ delight in deformed nature; yet such is the case. Stunted and
+ dwarfed trees, trees whose branches have been distorted into
+ shapes and proportions that nature would scorn&mdash;these are
+ sights that the Japanese seem to enjoy, as well as "natural"
+ nature. Throughout the land, in the gardens of the middle and
+ higher classes, may be found specimens of dwarfed and stunted
+ trees which have required decades to raise. The branches, too,
+ of most garden shrubs and trees are trimmed in fantastic
+ shapes. What is the charm in these distortions? First, perhaps,
+ the universal human interest in anything requiring skill. Think
+ of the patience and per<a name='Page_178'
+ id="Page_178"></a>sistence and experimentation necessary to
+ rear a dwarf pear tree twelve or fifteen inches high,
+ growing its full number of years and bearing full-size fruit
+ in its season! And second is the no less universal human
+ interest in the strange and abnormal. All primitive people
+ have this interest. It shows itself in their religions.
+ Abnormal stones are often objects of religious devotion.
+ Although I cannot affirm that such objects are worshiped in
+ Japan to-day, yet I can say that they are frequently set up
+ in temple grounds and dedicated with suitable inscriptions.
+ Where nature can be made to produce the abnormal, there the
+ interest is still greater. It is a living miracle. Witness
+ the cocks of Tosa, distinguished by their two or three tail
+ feathers reaching the extraordinary length of ten or even
+ fifteen feet, the product of ages of special breeding.</p>
+
+ <p>According to the ordinary use of the term, &aelig;sthetics
+ has to do with art alone. Yet it also has intimate relations
+ with both speech and conduct. Poetry depends for its very
+ existence on &aelig;sthetic considerations. Although little
+ conscious regard is paid to &aelig;sthetic claims in ordinary
+ conversation, yet people of culture do, as a matter of fact,
+ pay it much unconscious attention. In conduct too,
+ &aelig;sthetic ideas are often more dominant than we suppose.
+ The objection of the cultured to the ways of the boorish rests
+ on &aelig;sthetic grounds. This is true in every land. In the
+ matter of conduct it is sometimes hard to draw the line between
+ &aelig;sthetics and ethics, for they shade imperceptibly into
+ one another; so much so that they are seen to be complementary
+ rather than contradictory. Though it is doubtless true that
+ conduct &aelig;sthetically defective may not be defective
+ ethically, still is it not quite as true that conduct bad from
+ the ethical is bad also from the &aelig;sthetical
+ standpoint?</p>
+
+ <p>In no land have &aelig;sthetic considerations had more force
+ in molding both speech and conduct than in Japan. Not a
+ sentence is uttered by a Japanese but has the characteristic
+ marks of &aelig;stheticism woven into its very structure. By
+ means of "honorifics" it is seldom necessary for a speaker to
+ be so pointedly vulgar as even to mention self. There are few
+ points in the language so <a name='Page_179'
+ id="Page_179"></a>difficult for a foreigner to master,
+ whether in speaking himself, or in listening to others, as
+ the use of these honorific words. The most delicate shades
+ of courtesy and discourtesy may be expressed by them. Some
+ writers have attributed the relative absence of the personal
+ pronouns from the language to the dominating force of
+ impersonal pantheism. I am unable to take this view for
+ reasons stated in the later chapters on personality.</p>
+
+ <p>Though the honorific characteristics of the language seem to
+ indicate a high degree of &aelig;sthetic development, a certain
+ lack of delicacy in referring to subjects that are ruled out of
+ conversation by cultivated people in the West make the contrary
+ impression upon the uninitiated. Such language in Japan cannot
+ be counted impure, for no such idea accompanies the words. They
+ must be described simply as &aelig;sthetically defective. Far
+ be it from me to imply that there is no impure conversation in
+ Japan. I only say that the particular usages to which I refer
+ are not necessarily a proof of moral tendency. A realistic
+ baldness prevails that makes no effort to conceal even that
+ which is in its nature unpleasant and un&aelig;sthetic. A spade
+ is called a spade without the slightest hesitation. Of course
+ specific illustrations of such a point as this are out of
+ place. &AElig;sthetic considerations forbid.</p>
+
+ <p>And how explain these un&aelig;sthetic phenomena? By the
+ fact that Japan has long remained in a state of primitive
+ development. Speech is but the verbal expression of life. Every
+ primitive society is characterized by a bald literalism
+ shocking to the &aelig;sthetic sense of societies which
+ represent a higher stage of culture. In Japan, until recently,
+ little effort has been made to keep out of sight objects and
+ acts which we of the West have considered disagreeable and
+ repulsive. Language alters more slowly than acts. Laws are
+ making changes in the latter, and they in time will take effect
+ in the former. But many decades will doubtless pass before the
+ cultivated classes of Japan will reach, in this respect, the
+ standard of the corresponding classes of the West.</p>
+
+ <p>As for the &aelig;sthetics of conduct in Japan, enough is
+ in<a name='Page_180'
+ id="Page_180"></a>dicated by what has been said already
+ concerning the &aelig;sthetics of speech. Speech and conduct
+ are but diverse expressions of the same inner life. Japanese
+ etiquette has been fashioned on the feudalistic theory of
+ society, with its numberless gradations of inferior and
+ superior. Assertive individualism, while allowed a certain
+ range among the samurai, always had its well-marked limits.
+ The mass of the people were compelled to walk a narrow line
+ of respectful obedience and deference both in form and
+ speech. The constant aim of the inferior was to please the
+ superior. That individuals of an inferior rank had any
+ inherent rights, as opposed to those of a superior rank,
+ seldom occurred to them. Furthermore, this whole feudal
+ system, with its characteristic etiquette of conduct and
+ speech, was authoritatively taught by moralists and
+ religious leaders, and devoutly believed by the noblest of
+ the land. Ethical considerations, therefore, combined
+ powerfully with those that were social and &aelig;sthetic to
+ produce "the most polite race on the face of the globe."
+ Recent developments of rudeness and discourtesy among
+ themselves and toward foreigners have emphasized my general
+ contention that these characteristics are not due to
+ inherent race nature, but rather to the social order.</p>
+
+ <p>How are we to account for the wide &aelig;sthetic
+ development of all classes of the Japanese? As already
+ suggested, the beautiful scenery explains much. But I pass at
+ once to the significant fact that although the classes of
+ Japanese society were widely differentiated in social rank, yet
+ they lived in close proximity to each other. There was no
+ spatial gulf of separation preventing the lower from knowing
+ fully and freely the thoughts, ideals, and customs of the upper
+ classes. The transmission of culture was thus an easy matter,
+ in spite of social gradations.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, the character of the building materials, and the
+ methods of construction used by the more prosperous among the
+ people, were easily imitated in kind, if not in costliness, by
+ the less prosperous. Take, for example, the structure of the
+ room; it is always of certain fixed proportions, that the
+ uniform mats may be easily <a name='Page_181'
+ id="Page_181"></a>fitted to it. The mats themselves are
+ always made of a straw "toko," "bed," and an "omote,"
+ "surface," of woven straw; they vary greatly in value, but,
+ of whatever grade, may always be kept neat and fresh at
+ comparatively small cost. The walls of the average houses
+ are made of mud wattles. The outer layers of plaster consist
+ of selected earth and tinted lime. Whether put up at large
+ or small expense, these walls may be neat and attractive.
+ So, too, with other parts of the house.</p>
+
+ <p>The utter lack of independent thinking throughout the middle
+ and lower classes, and the constant desire of the inferior to
+ imitate the superior, have also helped to make the culture of
+ the classes the possession of the masses. This subserviency and
+ spirit of imitation has been further stimulated by the enforced
+ courtesy and deference and obedience of the common people.</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection it should be noted, however, that the
+ universality of culture in Japan is more apparent than real.
+ The appearance is due in part to the lack of furniture in the
+ homes. Without chairs or tables, bedsteads or washstands, and
+ the multitude of other things invariably found in the home of
+ the Occidental, it is easy for the Japanese housewife to keep
+ her home in perfect order. No special culture is needful for
+ this.</p>
+
+ <p>How it came about that the Japanese people adopted their own
+ method of sitting on the feet, I cannot say; neither have I
+ heard any plausible explanation of the practice. Yet this habit
+ has relieved them of all necessity for heavy furniture. Given
+ the custom of sitting on the feet, and a large part of the
+ furniture of the house will be useless. Already is the
+ introduction of furniture after Western patterns producing
+ changes in the homes of the people; and it will be interesting
+ to see whether the &aelig;sthetic sense of the Japanese will be
+ able to assimilate and harmonize with itself these useful, but
+ bulky and un&aelig;sthetic, elements of Occidental
+ civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>That no part of the fine taste of the Japanese is due to the
+ general civilization, rather than to the individual possession
+ of the &aelig;sthetic faculty, may be inferred
+ <a name='Page_182'
+ id="Page_182"></a>from many little signs. In spite of the
+ fact that, following the long-established social fashions,
+ the women usually display good taste in the choice of colors
+ for their clothing, it sometimes happens that they also
+ manifest not the slightest sense of the harmony of colors.
+ Daughters of wealthy families will array themselves in
+ brilliant discordant hues, yet apparently without causing
+ the wearers or their friends the slightest &aelig;sthetic
+ discomfort. Little children are arrayed in clothing that
+ would doubtless put Joseph's coat of many colors quite out
+ of countenance. Combinations and brilliancy that to the
+ Western eye of culture seem crude and gaudy, typical of
+ barbaric splendor, are in constant use, and are apparently
+ thought to be fine. The Japanese display both taste and its
+ lack in the choice of colors for clothing; this
+ contradiction is the more striking in view of the taste
+ manifest in the decorations of the homes of all classes of
+ the people. Few sights are more ludicrously un&aelig;sthetic
+ than the red, yellow, and blue worsted crocheted caps and
+ shawls for infants, which shock all our ideas of
+ &aelig;sthetic harmony.</p>
+
+ <p>In connection with Western ways or articles of clothing, the
+ native &aelig;sthetic faculty often seems to take its flight.
+ In a foreign house many a Japanese seems to lose his sense of
+ fitness. I have had schoolboys, and even gentlemen, enter my
+ home with hobnailed muddied boots, without wiping their feet on
+ the conspicuous door mat, which is the more remarkable since,
+ in their own homes, they invariably take off their shoes on
+ entering. I have frequently noticed that in railway cars the
+ first comers monopolize the seats, and the later ones receive
+ not the slightest notice, being often compelled to stand for an
+ hour at a time, although, with a little moving, there would be
+ abundant room for all. I have noticed this so often that I
+ cannot think it an exceptional occurrence. I do not believe it
+ to be intentional rudeness, but to be due simply to a lack of
+ real heart politeness. Yet a true and deep &aelig;sthetic
+ development, so far at least as relates to conduct, to say
+ nothing of the spirit of altruism, would not permit such
+ indifference to another's discomfort.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_183'
+ id="Page_183"></a>My explanation for this, and for all
+ similar defects in etiquette, is somewhat as follows.
+ Etiquette is popularly conceived as consisting of rules of
+ conduct, rather than as the outward expression of the state
+ of the heart. From time immemorial rules for the ordinary
+ affairs of life have been formulated by superiors and have
+ been taught the people. In all usual and conventional
+ relations, therefore, the average farmer and peasant know
+ how to express perfect courtesy. But in certain situations,
+ as in foreign houses and the railroad car, where there are
+ no precedents to follow, or rules to obey, all evidence of
+ politeness takes its flight. The old rules do not fit the
+ new conditions. Not being grounded on the inner principles
+ of etiquette, the people are not able to formulate new rules
+ for new conditions. To the Westerner, on the other hand,
+ these seem to follow from the simplest principles of common
+ sense and kindliness. The general collapse of etiquette in
+ Japan, which native writers note and deplore, is due,
+ therefore, not only to the withdrawal of feudal pressure,
+ but also to introduction of strange circumstances for which
+ the people have no rules, and to the fact that the people
+ have not been taught those underlying principles of high
+ courtesy which are applicable on all occasions.</p>
+
+ <p>An impression seems to have gained currency in the United
+ States that the un&aelig;sthetic features seen in Japan to-day
+ are due to the debasing influences of Western art and
+ Occidental intercourse. There can be no doubt that a certain
+ type of tourist, ignorant of Japanese art, by greedily buying
+ strange, gaudy things at high prices, has stimulated a morbid
+ production of truly un&aelig;sthetic pseudo-Japanese art. But
+ this accounts for only a small part of the grossly inartistic
+ features of Japan. The instances given of hideous worsted bibs
+ for babes and collars for dogs, combining in the closest
+ proximity the most uncomplementary and mutually repellent
+ colors, has nothing whatever to do with foreign art or foreign
+ intercourse. What foreigner ever decorated a little lapdog with
+ a red-green-yellow-blue-and purple crocheted collar, four or
+ five inches wide?</p>
+
+ <p>Westerners have been charmed with the exquisite
+ col<a name='Page_184'
+ id="Page_184"></a>ored photographs produced in Japan. It is
+ strange, yet true, that the same artistic hand that produces
+ these beautiful effects will also, by a slight change of
+ tints, produce the most unnatural and spectral views. Yet
+ the strangest thing is, not that he produces them, but that
+ he does not seem conscious of the defect, for he will put
+ them on sale in his own shop or send them to purchasers in
+ America, without the slightest apparent hesitation. The
+ constant care of the purchaser in selection and his
+ insistence on having only truly artistic work are what keep
+ the Japanese artist up to the standard.</p>
+
+ <p>If other evidence is needed of &aelig;sthetic defect in the
+ still unoccidentalized Japanese taste let the doubter go to any
+ popular second-grade Shinto shrine or Buddhist temple. Here
+ un&aelig;sthetic objects and sights abound. Hideous idols,
+ painted and unpainted, big and little, often decorated with
+ soiled bibs; decaying to-rii; ruined sub-shrines; conglomerate
+ piles of cast-off paraphernalia, consisting of broken idols,
+ old lanterns, stones, etc., filthy towels at the holy-water
+ basins, piously offered to the gods and piously used by
+ hundreds of dusty pilgrims; equally filthy bell-ropes hung in
+ front of the main shrines, pulled by ten thousand hands to call
+ the attention of the deity; travel-stained hands, each of which
+ has left its mark on the once beautiful enormous tasselated
+ cord; ex-voto tufts of human hair; scores of pictures, where
+ the few may be counted works of art while the rest are hideous
+ beyond belief; frightful faces of tengu, with their long noses
+ and menacing teeth, decorated with scores of spit-balls or even
+ with mud-balls; these are some of the more conspicuous
+ un&aelig;sthetic features of multitudes of popular shrines and
+ temples. And none of these can be attributed to the debasing
+ influence of Western art. And these inartistic features will be
+ found accompanying scrupulous neatness in well-swept walks, new
+ sub-shrines, floral decorations, and much that pleases the
+ eye&mdash;a strange compound of the beautiful and the ugly.
+ Truly the &aelig;sthetic development of the Japanese is
+ curiously one-sided.</p>
+
+ <p>A survey of Japanese musical history leads to the conclusion
+ that while the people are fairly developed in
+ cer<a name='Page_185'
+ id="Page_185"></a>tain aspects of the &aelig;sthetics of
+ music, such as rhythm, they are certainly undeveloped in
+ other directions&mdash;in melody, for example, and in
+ harmony. Their instrumental music is primitive and meager.
+ They have no system of musical notation. The love of music,
+ such as it is, is well-nigh universal. Their solo-vocal
+ music, a semi-chanting in minors, has impressive elements;
+ but these are due to the passionate outbursts and plaintive
+ wails, rather than to the musically &aelig;sthetic character
+ of the melodies. The universal twanging samisen, a species
+ of guitar, accompanied by the shrill, hard voices of the
+ geisha (singing girls), marks at once the universality of
+ the love of music and the undeveloped quality of the musical
+ taste, both vocal and instrumental. But in comparing the
+ musical development of Japan with that of the West, we must
+ not forget how recent is that of the former.</p>
+
+ <p>The conditions which have served to develop musical taste in
+ the West have but recently come to Japan. Sufficient time has
+ not yet elapsed for the nation to make much visible progress in
+ the lines of Occidental music. But it has already done
+ something. The popularity of brass bands, the wide introduction
+ of organs, their manufacture in this land, their use in all
+ public schools, the exclusive use of Occidental music in
+ Christian churches, the ability of trained individuals in
+ foreign vocal and instrumental music&mdash;all these facts go
+ to show that in time we may expect great musical evolution in
+ Japan. Those who doubt this on the ground of inherent race
+ nature may be reminded of the evolution which has taken place
+ among the Hawaiians during the past two generations. From being
+ a race manifesting marked deficiency in music they have
+ developed astonishing musical taste and ability. During a
+ recent visit to these islands after an absence of twenty-seven
+ years, I attended a Sunday-school exhibition, which was largely
+ a musical contest; the voices were sweet and rich; and the
+ difficulty of the part songs, easily carried through by
+ children and adults, revealed a musical sense that surpasses
+ any ordinary Sunday school of the United States or England with
+ which I am acquainted.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_186'
+ id="Page_186"></a>The development of Japanese literature
+ likewise conspicuously reflects the ruling ideas of the
+ social order, and reveals the dependence of literary taste
+ on the order. As in other aspects in Japanese &aelig;sthetic
+ development, so in this do we see marked lack of balance.
+ "It is wonderful what felicity of phrase, melody of
+ versification, and true sentiment can be compressed within
+ the narrow limits (of the Tanka). In their way nothing can
+ be more perfect than some of these little
+ poems."<a name='FNanchor_U_21'
+ id="FNanchor_U_21"></a><a href='#Footnote_U_21'><sup>[U]</sup></a>
+ The deficiencies of Japanese poetry have been remarked by
+ the foreigners most competent to judge. The following
+ general characterization from the volume just quoted merits
+ attention.</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"Narrow in its scope and resources, it is chiefly
+ remarkable for its limitations&mdash;for what it has not,
+ rather than what it has. In the first place there are no
+ long poems. There is nothing which even remotely resembles
+ an epic&mdash;no Iliad or Divina Commedia&mdash;not even a
+ Nibelungen Lied or Chevy Chase. Indeed, narrative poems of
+ any kind are short and very few, the only ones which I have
+ met with being two or three ballads of a sentimental cast.
+ Didactic, philosophical, political, and satirical poems are
+ also conspicuously absent. The Japanese muse does not
+ meddle with such subjects, and it is doubtful whether, if
+ it did, the native Pegasus possesses sufficient staying
+ power for them to be dealt with adequately. For dramatic
+ poetry we have to wait until the fourteenth century. Even
+ then there are no complete dramatic poems, but only dramas
+ containing a certain poetical element.</p>
+
+ <p>"Japanese poetry is, in short, confined to lyrics, and
+ what, for want of a better word, may be called epigrams. It
+ is primarily an expression of emotion. We have amatory
+ verse poems of longing for home and absent dear ones,
+ praise of love and wine, elegies on the dead, laments over
+ the uncertainty of life. A chief place is given to the
+ seasons, the sound of purling streams, the snow of Mount
+ Fuji, waves breaking on the beach, seaweed drifting to the
+ shore, the song of birds, the hum of in<a name='Page_187'
+ id="Page_187"></a>sects, even the croaking of frogs, the
+ leaping of trout in a mountain stream, the young shoots
+ of fern in spring, the belling of deer in autumn, the
+ red tints of the maple, the moon, flowers, rain, wind,
+ mist; these are among the favorite subjects which the
+ Japanese poets delight to dwell upon. If we add some
+ courtly and patriotic effusions, a vast number of
+ conceits more or less pretty, and a very few poems of a
+ religious cast, the enumeration is tolerably complete.
+ But, as Mr. Chamberlain has observed, there are curious
+ omissions. War songs&mdash;strange to say&mdash;are
+ almost wholly absent. Fighting and bloodshed are
+ apparently not considered fit themes for
+ poetry."<a name='FNanchor_V_22'
+ id="FNanchor_V_22"></a><a href='#Footnote_V_22'><sup>[V]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The drama and the novel have both achieved considerable
+ development, yet judged from Occidental standards, they are
+ comparatively weak and insipid. They, of course, conspicuously
+ reflect the characteristics of the social order to which they
+ belong. Critics call repeated attention to the lack of
+ sublimity in Japanese literature, and ascribe it to their
+ inherent race nature. While the lack of sublimity in Japanese
+ scenery may in fact account for the characteristic in question,
+ still a more conclusive explanation would seem to be that in
+ the older social order man, as such, was not known. The hidden
+ glories of the soul, its temptations and struggles, its defects
+ and victories, could not be the themes of a literature arising
+ in a completely communal social order, even though it possessed
+ individualism of the Buddhistic type.<a name='FNanchor_W_23'
+ id="FNanchor_W_23"></a><a href='#Footnote_W_23'><sup>[W]</sup></a>
+ These are the themes that give Western
+ literature&mdash;poetic, dramatic, and narrative&mdash;its
+ opportunity for sustained power and sublimity. They portray
+ the inner life of the spirit.</p>
+
+ <p>The poverty of poetic form is another point of Western
+ criticism. Mr. Aston has shown how this poverty is directly due
+ to the phonetic characteristics of the language. Diversities of
+ both rhyme and rhythm are practically excluded from Japanese
+ poetry by the nature of the language. And this in turn has led
+ to the "preference of the national genius for short poems." But
+ language is manifestly the combined product of
+ <a name='Page_188'
+ id="Page_188"></a>linguistic heredity and the social order,
+ and can in no sense be ascribed to inherent race nature.
+ Thus directly are social heredity and social order
+ determinative of the literary characteristics and
+ &aelig;sthetic tastes of a nation.</p>
+
+ <p>Even more manifestly may Japanese architectural development
+ be traced to the social heredity derived from China and India.
+ The needs of the developing internal civilization have
+ determined its external manifestation. So far as Japanese
+ differs from Chinese architecture, it may be attributed to
+ Japan's isolation, to the different demands of her social
+ order, to the difference of accessible building materials, and
+ to the different social heredity handed down from prehistoric
+ times. That the distinguishing characteristics of Japanese
+ architecture are due to the inherent race nature cannot for a
+ moment be admitted.</p>
+
+ <p>We conclude that the Japanese are not possessed of a unique
+ and inherent &aelig;sthetic taste. In some respects they are as
+ certainly ahead of the Occidental as they are behind him in
+ other respects. But this, too, is a matter of social
+ development and social heredity, rather than of inherent race
+ character, of brain structure. If &aelig;sthetic nature were a
+ matter of inherited brain structure, it would be impossible to
+ account for rapid fluctuations in &aelig;sthetic judgment, for
+ the great inequality of &aelig;sthetic development in the
+ different departments of life, or for the ease of acquiring the
+ &aelig;sthetic development of alien
+ races.<a name='FNanchor_X_24'
+ id="FNanchor_X_24"></a><a href='#Footnote_X_24'><sup>[X]</sup></a></p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XVI'
+ id="XVI"></a>XVI.<a name='Page_189'
+ id="Page_189"></a></h2>
+
+ <h3>MEMORY&mdash;IMITATION</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The differences which separate the Oriental from the
+ Occidental mind are infinitesimal as compared with the
+ likenesses which unite them. This is a fact that needs to be
+ emphasized, for many writers on Japan seem to ignore it. They
+ marvel at the differences. The real marvel is that the
+ differences are so few and so superficial. The Japanese are a
+ race whose ancestors were separated from their early home
+ nearly three thousand years ago; during this period they have
+ been absolutely prevented from intermarriage with the parent
+ stock. Furthermore, that original stock was not the
+ Indo-European race. And no one has ventured to suggest how long
+ before the migration of the ancestors of the Japanese to Japan
+ their ancestors parted from those who finally became the
+ progenitors of modern Occidental peoples. For thousands of
+ years, certainly, the Japanese and Anglo-Saxon races have had
+ no ancestry in common. Yet so similar is the entire structure
+ and working of their minds that the psychological textbooks of
+ the Anglo-Saxon are adopted and perfectly understood by
+ competent psychological students among the Japanese. I once
+ asked a professor of psychology in the Matsuyama Normal School
+ if he had no difficulty in teaching his classes the
+ psychological system of Anglo-Saxon thinkers, if there were not
+ peculiarities of the Anglo-Saxon mind which a Japanese could
+ not understand, and if there were not psychological phenomena
+ of the Japanese mind which were ignored in Anglo-Saxon
+ psychological text-books. The very questions surprised him; to
+ each he gave a negative reply. The mental differences that
+ characterize races so dissimilar as the Japanese and the
+ Anglo-Saxon, I venture <a name='Page_190'
+ id="Page_190"></a>to repeat, are insignificant as compared
+ with their resemblances.</p>
+
+ <p>Our discussions shall have reference, not to those general
+ psychological characteristics which all races have in common,
+ but only to those which may seem to stamp the Japanese people
+ as peculiar. We wish to understand the distinguishing features
+ of the Japanese mind. We wish to know whether they are due to
+ brain structure, to inherent race nature, or whether they are
+ simply the result of education, of social heredity. This is our
+ ever-recurring question.</p>
+
+ <p>First, in regard to Japanese brain development. Travelers
+ have often been impressed with the unusual size of the Japanese
+ head. It has sometimes been thought, however, that the size is
+ more apparent than real, and the appearance has been attributed
+ to the relatively short limbs of the people and to the unusual
+ proportion of round heads which one sees everywhere. It may
+ also be due to the shape of the head. But, after all has been
+ said, it remains true that the Japanese head, as related to his
+ body, is unexpectedly large.</p>
+
+ <p>Prof. Marsh of Yale University is reported to have said
+ that, on the basis of brain size, the Japanese is the race best
+ fitted to survive in the struggle for existence, or at least in
+ the struggle for pre-eminence.</p>
+
+ <p>Statements have been widely circulated to the effect that
+ not only relatively to the body, but even absolutely, the
+ Japanese possess larger brains than the European, but
+ craniological statistics do not verify the assertion. The
+ matter has been somewhat discussed in Japanese magazines of
+ late, to which, through the assistance of a Japanese friend, I
+ am indebted for the following figures. They are given in
+ Japanese measurements, but are, on this account, however, none
+ the less satisfactory for comparative purposes.</p>
+
+ <p>According to Dr. Davis, the average European male brain
+ weighs 36,498 momme, and the Australian, 22,413, while the
+ Japanese, according to Dr. Taguchi weighs 36,205. Taking the
+ extremes, the largest English male brain weighs 38,100 momme
+ and the smallest 35,377, whereas the corresponding figures for
+ Japan are 43,919 <a name='Page_191'
+ id="Page_191"></a>and 30,304, respectively, showing an
+ astonishing range between extremes. According to Dr. E.
+ Baelz of the Imperial University of Tokyo, the lower classes
+ of Japan have a larger skull circumference than either the
+ middle or upper classes (1.8414, 1.7905, and 1.8051 feet,
+ respectively), and the Ainu (1.8579) exceed the Japanese.
+ From these facts it might almost appear that brain size and
+ civilizational development are in inverse ratio. Were the
+ Japanese brain larger, then, than that of the European, it
+ might plausibly be argued that they are therefore inferior
+ in brain power. This would be in accord with certain of De
+ Quatrefages's investigations. He has shown that negroes born
+ in America have smaller brains, but are intellectually
+ superior to their African brothers. "With them, therefore,
+ intelligence increases, while the cranial capacity
+ diminishes."<a name='FNanchor_Y_25'
+ id="FNanchor_Y_25"></a><a href='#Footnote_Y_25'><sup>[Y]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Those who trace racial and civilizational nature to brain
+ development cannot gain much consolation from a comparative
+ statistical study of race brains. De Quatrefages's conclusion
+ is repeatedly forced home: "We must confess that there can be
+ no real relation between the dimension of the cranial capacity
+ and social development."<a name='FNanchor_Z_26'
+ id="FNanchor_Z_26"></a><a href='#Footnote_Z_26'><sup>[Z]</sup></a>
+ "The development of the intellectual faculties of man is, to
+ a great extent, independent of the capacity of the cranium
+ and the volume of the brain."<a name='FNanchor_AA_27'
+ id="FNanchor_AA_27"></a><a href='#Footnote_AA_27'><sup>[AA]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>We may conclude at once, then, that Japanese intellectual
+ peculiarities are in no way due to the size of their brains,
+ but depend rather on their social evolution. Yet it will not be
+ amiss to study in detail the various mental peculiarities of
+ the race, real and supposed, and to note their relation to the
+ social order.</p>
+
+ <p>In becoming acquainted with the Japanese and Chinese
+ peoples, an Occidental is much impressed with their powers of
+ memory, and this especially in connection with the written
+ language, the far-famed "Chinese Character," or ideograph. My
+ Chinese dictionary contains over 50,000 different characters.
+ The task of <a name='Page_192'
+ id="Page_192"></a>learning them is appalling. How the
+ Japanese or Chinese do it is to us a constant wonder. We
+ assume at once their possession of astonishing memories. We
+ argue that, for hundreds of years, each generation has been
+ developing powers of memory through efforts to conquer this
+ cumbersome contrivance for writing, and that, as a
+ consequence for the nations using this system, there is now
+ prodigious ability to remember.</p>
+
+ <p>It is my impression, however, that we greatly overrate these
+ powers. In the first place, few Japanese claim any acquaintance
+ with the entire 50,000 characters; only the educated make any
+ pretense of knowing more than a few hundred, and a vast
+ majority even of learned men do not know more than 10,000
+ characters. Some Japanese newspapers have undertaken to limit
+ themselves in the use of the ideograph. It is said that between
+ four and five thousand characters suffice for all the ordinary
+ purposes of communication. These are, without doubt, fairly
+ well known to the educated classes. But for the masses, there
+ is need that the pronunciation be placed beside each printed
+ character, before it can be read. Furthermore, we must remember
+ that a Japanese youth gives the best years of his life to the
+ bare memorizing of these symbols.<a name='FNanchor_AB_28'
+ id="FNanchor_AB_28"></a><a href='#Footnote_AB_28'><sup>[AB]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Were European or American youth to devote to the
+ <a name='Page_193'
+ id="Page_193"></a>study of Chinese the same number of hours
+ each day for the same number of years, I doubt if there
+ would be any conspicuous difference in the results. We
+ should not forget also that some Occidentals manifest
+ astonishing facility in memorizing Chinese characters.</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection is the important fact that the social
+ order serves to sift out individuals of marked mnemonic powers
+ and bring them into prominence, while those who are relatively
+ deficient are relegated to the background. The educated class
+ is necessarily composed of those who have good powers of
+ memory. All others fail and are rejected. We see and admire
+ those who succeed; of those who fail we know nothing and we
+ even forget that there are such.</p>
+
+ <p>In response to my questions Japanese friends have uniformly
+ assured me that they are not accustomed to think of the
+ Japanese as possessed of better memories than the people of the
+ West. They appear surprised that the question should be raised,
+ and are specially surprised at our high estimate of Japanese
+ ability in this direction.</p>
+
+ <p>If, however, we inquire about their powers of memory in
+ connection with daily duties and the ordinary acquisition of
+ knowledge and its retention, my own experience of twelve years,
+ chiefly with the middle and lower classes of society, has left
+ the impression that, while some learn easily and remember well,
+ a large number are exceedingly slow. On the whole, I am
+ inclined to believe that, although the Japanese may be said to
+ have good memories, yet it can hardly be maintained that they
+ conspicuously exceed Occidentals in this respect.</p>
+
+ <p>In comparing the Occidental with the Oriental, it is to be
+ remembered that there is not among Occidental nations that
+ attention to bare memorizing which is so conspicuous among the
+ less civilized nations. The astonishing feats performed by the
+ transmitters of ancient poems and religious teachings seem to
+ us incredible. Professor Max M&uuml;ller says that the
+ voluminous Vedas have been handed down for centuries,
+ unchanged, simply from mouth to mouth by the priesthood. Every
+ progressive race, until it has attained a high
+ develop<a name='Page_194'
+ id="Page_194"></a>ment of the art of writing, has manifested
+ similar power of memory. Such power is not, however,
+ inherent; that is to say, it is not due to the innate
+ peculiarity of brain structure, but rather to the nature of
+ the social order which demands such expenditure of time and
+ strength for the maintenance of its own higher life. Through
+ the art of writing Occidental peoples have found a cheaper
+ way of retaining their history and of preserving the
+ products of their poets and religious teachers. Even for the
+ transactions of daily life we have resorted to the constant
+ use of pen and notebook and typewriter, by these devices
+ saving time and strength for other things. As a result, our
+ memories are developed in directions different from those of
+ semi-civilized or primitive man. The differences of memory
+ characterizing different races, then, are for the most part
+ due to differences in the social order and to the nature of
+ the civilization, rather than to the intrinsic and inherited
+ structure of the brain itself.</p>
+
+ <p>Since memory is the foundation of all mental operations, we
+ have given to it the first place in the present discussion. And
+ that the Japanese have a fair degree of memory argues well for
+ the prospect of high attainment in other directions. With this
+ in mind, we naturally ask whether they show any unusual
+ proficiency or deficiency in the acquisition of foreign
+ languages? In view of her protracted separation from the
+ languages of other peoples, should we not expect marked
+ deficiency in this respect? On the contrary, however, we find
+ that tens of thousands of Japanese students have acquired a
+ fairly good reading knowledge of English, French, and German.
+ Those few who have had good and sufficient teaching, or who
+ have been abroad and lived in Occidental lands, have in
+ addition secured ready conversational use of the various
+ languages. Indeed, some have contended that since the Japanese
+ learn foreign languages more easily than foreigners learn
+ Japanese, they have greater linguistic powers than the
+ foreigner. It should be borne in mind, however, that in such a
+ comparison, not only are the time required and the proficiency;
+ attained to be considered, but also the inherent
+ diffi<a name='Page_195'
+ id="Page_195"></a>culty of the language studied and the
+ linguistic helps provided the student.</p>
+
+ <p>I have come gradually to the conclusion that the Japanese
+ are neither particularly gifted nor particularly deficient in
+ powers of language acquisition. They rank with Occidental
+ peoples in this respect.</p>
+
+ <p>To my mind language affords one of the best possible proofs
+ of the general contention of this volume that the
+ characteristics which distinguish the races are social rather
+ than biological. The reason why the languages of the different
+ races differ is not because the brain-types of the races are
+ different, but only because of the isolated social evolution
+ which the races have experienced. Had it been possible for
+ Japan to maintain throughout the ages perfect and continuous
+ social intercourse with the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon race,
+ while still maintaining biological isolation, <i>i.e.</i>,
+ perfect freedom from intermarriage, there is no reason to think
+ that two distinct languages so different as English and
+ Japanese would have arisen. The fact that Japanese children can
+ accurately acquire English, and that English or American
+ children can accurately acquire Japanese, proves conclusively
+ that diversities of language do not rest on brain differences
+ and brain heredity, but exclusively on social differences and
+ social heredity.</p>
+
+ <p>If this is true, then the argument can easily be extended to
+ all the features that differentiate the civilizations of
+ different races; for the language of any race is, in a sense,
+ the epitome of the civilization of that race. All its ideas,
+ customs, theologies, philosophies, sciences, mythologies; all
+ its characteristic thoughts, conceptions, ideals; all its
+ distinguishing social features, are represented in its
+ language. Indeed, they enter into it as determining factors,
+ and by means of it are transmitted from age to age. This
+ argument is capable of much extension and illustration.</p>
+
+ <p>The charge that the Japanese are a nation of imitators has
+ been repeated so often as to become trite, and the words are
+ usually spoken with disdain. Yet, if the truth were fully told,
+ it would be found that, from many points of view, this quality
+ gives reason rather for congratu<a name='Page_196'
+ id="Page_196"></a>lation. Surely that nation which can best
+ discriminate and imitate has advantage over nations that are
+ so fixed in their self-sufficiency as to be able neither to
+ see that which is advantageous nor to imitate it. In
+ referring to the imitative powers of the Japanese, then, I
+ do not speak in terms of reproach, but rather in those of
+ commendation. "Monkeyism" is not the sort of imitation that
+ has transformed primitive Japan into the Japan of the early
+ or later feudal ages, nor into the Japan of the twentieth
+ century. Bare imitation, without thought, has been
+ relatively slight in Japan. If it has been known at times,
+ those times have been of short duration.</p>
+
+ <p>In his introduction to "The Classic Poetry of the Japanese"
+ Professor Chamberlain has so stated the case for the imitative
+ quality of the people that I quote the following:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"The current impression that the Japanese are a nation
+ of imitators is in the main correct. As they copy us
+ to-day, so did they copy the Chinese and Koreans a
+ millennium and a half ago. Religion, philosophy, laws,
+ administration, written characters, all arts but the very
+ simplest, all science, or at least what then went by that
+ name, everything was imported from the neighboring
+ continent; so much so that of all that we are accustomed to
+ term 'Old Japan' scarce one trait in a hundred is really
+ and properly Japanese. Not only are their silk and lacquer
+ not theirs by right of invention, nor their painting
+ (albeit so often praised by European critics for its
+ originality), nor their porcelain, nor their music, but
+ even the larger part of their language consists of
+ mispronounced Chinese; and from the Chinese they have drawn
+ new names for already existing places, and new titles for
+ their ancient Gods."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>While the above cannot be disputed in its direct statements,
+ yet I can but feel that it makes, on the whole, a false
+ impression. Were these same tests applied to any European
+ people, what would be the result? Of what European nation may
+ it be said that its art, or <a name='Page_197'
+ id="Page_197"></a>method of writing, or architecture, or
+ science, or language even, is "its own by right of
+ invention"? And when we stop to examine the details of the
+ ancient Japanese civilization which is supposed to have been
+ so, slavishly copied from China and India, we shall find
+ that, though the beginnings were indeed imitated, there were
+ also later developments of purely Japanese creation. In some
+ instances the changes were vital.</p>
+
+ <p>In examining the practical arts, while we acknowledge that
+ the beginnings of nearly all came from Korea or China, we must
+ also acknowledge that in many important respects. Japan has
+ developed along her own lines. The art of sword-making, for
+ instance, was undoubtedly imported; but who does not know of
+ the superior quality and beauty of Japanese swords, the
+ Damascus blades of the East? So distinct is this Japanese
+ production that it cannot be mistaken for that of any other
+ nation. It has received the impress of the Japanese social
+ order. Its very shape is due to the habit of carrying the
+ sheath in the "obi" or belt.</p>
+
+ <p>If we study the home of the laborer, or the instruments in
+ common use, we shall find proof that much more than imitation
+ has been involved.</p>
+
+ <p>Were the Japanese mere imitators, how could we explain their
+ architecture, so different from that of China and Korea? How
+ explain the multiplied original ways in which bamboo and straw
+ are used?</p>
+
+ <p>For a still closer view of the matter, let us consider the
+ imported ethical and religious codes of the country. In China
+ the emphasis of Confucianism is laid on the duty of filial
+ piety. In Japan the primary emphasis is on loyalty. This single
+ change transformed the entire system and made the so-called
+ Confucianism of Japan distinct from that of China. In Buddhism,
+ imported from India, we find greater changes than Occidental
+ nations have imposed on their religion imported from Palestine.
+ Indeed, so distinct has Japanese Buddhism become that it is
+ sometimes difficult to trace its connections in China and
+ India. And the Buddhistic sects that have sprung up in Japan
+ are more radically diverse and antagonistic to each other and
+ to primitive Buddhism than the de<a name='Page_198'
+ id="Page_198"></a>nominations of Christianity are to each
+ other and to primitive Christianity.</p>
+
+ <p>In illustration is the most popular of all the Buddhist
+ sects to-day, Shinshu. This has sometimes been called by
+ foreigners "Reformed" Buddhism; and so similar are many of its
+ doctrines to those of Christianity that some have supposed them
+ to have been derived from it, but without the slightest
+ evidence. All its main doctrines and practices were clearly
+ formulated by its founder, Shinrah, six hundred years ago. The
+ regular doctrines of Buddhism that salvation comes only through
+ self-effort and self-victory are rejected, and salvation
+ through the merits of another is taught. "Ta-riki," "another's
+ power," not "Ji-riki," "self-power," is with them the orthodox
+ doctrine. Priests may marry and eat meat, practices utterly
+ abhorrent to the older and more primitive Buddhism. The sacred
+ books are printed in the vernacular, in marked contrast to the
+ customs of the other sects. Women, too, are given a very
+ different place in the social and religious scale and are
+ allowed hopes of attaining salvation that are denied by all the
+ older sects. "Penance, fasting, prescribed diet, pilgrimages,
+ isolation from society, whether as hermits or in the cloister,
+ and generally amulets and charms, are all tabooed by this sect.
+ Monasteries imposing life vows are unknown within its pale.
+ Family life takes the place of monkish seclusion. Devout
+ prayer, purity, earnestness of life, and trust in Buddha
+ himself as the only worker of perfect righteousness, are
+ insisted on. Morality is taught as more important than
+ orthodoxy."<a name='FNanchor_AC_29'
+ id="FNanchor_AC_29"></a><a href='#Footnote_AC_29'><sup>[AC]</sup></a>
+ It is amazing how far the Shin sect has broken away from
+ regular Buddhistic doctrine and practice. Who can say that
+ no originality was required to develop such a system, so
+ opposed at vital points to the prevalent Buddhism of the
+ day?</p>
+
+ <p>Another sect of purely Japanese origin deserving notice is
+ the "Hokke" or "Nicheren." Its founder, known by the name of
+ Nichiren, was a man of extraordinary independence and religious
+ fervor. Wholly by his original questions and doubts as to the
+ prevailing doc<a name='Page_199'
+ id="Page_199"></a>trines and customs of the then dominant
+ sects, he was led to make independent examination into the
+ history and meaning of Buddhistic literature and to arrive
+ at conclusions quite different from those of his
+ contemporaries. Of the truth and importance of his views he
+ was so persuaded that he braved not only fierce
+ denunciations, but prolonged opposition and persecution. He
+ was rejected and cast out by his own people and sect; he was
+ twice banished by the ruling military powers. But he
+ persevered to the end, finally winning thousands of converts
+ to his views. The virulence of the attacks made upon him was
+ due to the virulence with which he attacked what seemed to
+ him the errors and corruption of the prevailing sects.
+ Surely his was no case of servile imitation. His early
+ followers had also to endure opposition and severe
+ persecution.</p>
+
+ <p>Glancing at the philosophical ideas brought from China, we
+ find here too a suggestion of the same tendency toward
+ originality. It is true that Dr. Geo. Wm. Knox, in his valuable
+ monograph on "A Japanese Philosopher," makes the statement
+ that, "In acceptance and rejection alike no native originality
+ emerges, nothing beyond a vigorous power of adoption and
+ assimilation. No improvements of the new philosophy were even
+ attempted. Wherein it was defective and indistinct, defective
+ and indistinct it remained. The system was not thought out to
+ its end and independently adopted. Polemics, ontology, ethics,
+ theology, marvels, heroes&mdash;all were enthusiastically
+ adopted on faith. It is to be added that the new system was
+ superior to the old, and so much of discrimination was
+ shown."<a name='FNanchor_AD_30'
+ id="FNanchor_AD_30"></a><a href='#Footnote_AD_30'><sup>[AD]</sup></a>
+ And somewhat earlier he likewise asserts that "There is not
+ an original and valuable commentary by a Japanese writer.
+ They have been content to brood over the imported works and
+ to accept unquestioningly politics, ethics, and
+ metaphysics." After some examination of these native
+ philosophers, I feel that, although not without some truth,
+ these assertions cannot be strictly maintained. It is
+ doubtless true that no powerful thinker and writer has
+ appeared in Japan that may be compared to the two great
+ philoso<a name='Page_200'
+ id="Page_200"></a>phers of China, Shushi and Oyomei. The
+ works and the system of the former dominated Japan, for the
+ simple reason that governmental authority forbade the public
+ teaching or advocacy of the other. Nevertheless, not a few
+ Japanese thinkers rejected the teachings and philosophy of
+ Shushi, regardless of consequences. Notable among those
+ rejecters was Kaibara Yekken, whose book "The Great Doubt"
+ was not published until after his death. In it he rejects in
+ emphatic terms the philosophical and metaphysical ideas of
+ Shushi. An article<a name='FNanchor_AE_31'
+ id="FNanchor_AE_31"></a><a href='#Footnote_AE_31'><sup>[AE]</sup></a>
+ by Dr. Tetsujiro Inouye, Professor of Philosophy in the
+ Imperial University in Tokyo, on the "Development of
+ Philosophical Ideas in Japan," concludes with these
+ words:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"From this short sketch the reader can clearly see that
+ philosophical considerations began in our country with the
+ study of Shushi and Oyomei. But many of our thinkers did
+ not long remain faithful to that tradition; they soon
+ formed for themselves new conceptions of life and of the
+ world, which, as a rule, are not only more practical, but
+ also more advanced than those of the Chinese."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>An important reason for our Western thought, that the
+ Japanese have had no independence in philosophy, is our
+ ignorance of the larger part of Japanese and Chinese
+ literature. Oriental speculation was moving in a direction so
+ diverse from that of the West that we are impressed more with
+ the general similarity that prevails throughout it than with
+ the evidences of individual differences. Greater knowledge
+ would reveal these differences. In our generalized knowledge,
+ we see the uniformity so strongly that we fail to discover the
+ originality.</p>
+
+ <p>As a traveler from the West, on reaching some Eastern land,
+ finds it difficult at first to distinguish between the faces of
+ different individuals, his mind being focused on the likeness
+ pervading them all, so the Occidental student of Oriental
+ thought is impressed with the remarkable similarity that
+ pervades the entire Oriental civili<a name='Page_201'
+ id="Page_201"></a>zation, modes of thought, and philosophy,
+ finding it difficult to discover the differences which
+ distinguish the various Oriental races. In like manner, a
+ beginner in the study of Japanese philosophy hardly gives
+ the Japanese credit for the modifications of Chinese
+ philosophy which they have originated.</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection it is well to remember that, more than
+ any Westerner can realize, the Japanese people have been
+ dependent on governmental initiative from time immemorial. They
+ have never had any thought but that of implicit obedience, and
+ this characteristic of the social order has produced its
+ necessary consequences in the present characteristics of the
+ people. Individual initiative and independence have been
+ frowned upon, if not always forcibly repressed, and thus the
+ habit of imitation has been stimulated. The people have been
+ deliberately trained to imitation by their social system. The
+ foreigner is amazed at the sudden transformations that have
+ swept the nation. When the early contact with China opened the
+ eyes of the ruling classes to the fact that China had a system
+ of government that was in many respects better than their own,
+ it was an easy thing to adopt it and make it the basis for
+ their own government. This constituted the epoch-making period
+ in Japanese history known as the Taikwa Reform. It occurred in
+ the seventh century, and consisted of a centralizing policy;
+ under which, probably for the first time in Japanese history,
+ the country was really unified. Critics ascribe it to an
+ imitation of the Chinese system. Imitation it doubtless was;
+ but its significant feature was its imposition by the few
+ rulers on the people; hence its wide prevalence and general
+ acceptance.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly, in our own times, the Occidentalized order now
+ dominant in Japan was adopted, not by the people, but by the
+ rulers, and imposed by them on the people; these had no idea of
+ resisting the new order, but accepted it loyally as the
+ decision of their Emperor, and this spirit of unquestioning
+ obedience to the powers that be is, I am persuaded, one of the
+ causes of the prevalent opinion respecting Japanese
+ imitativeness as well as of the fact itself.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_202'
+ id="Page_202"></a>The reputation for imitativeness, together
+ with the quality itself, is due in no small degree,
+ therefore, to the long-continued dominance of the feudal
+ order of society. In a land where the dependence of the
+ inferior on the superior is absolute, the wife on the
+ husband, the children on the parents, the followers on their
+ lord, the will of the superior being ever supreme,
+ individual initiative must be rare, and the quality of
+ imitation must be powerfully stimulated.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XVII'
+ id="XVII"></a><a name='Page_203'
+ id="Page_203"></a>XVII</h2>
+
+ <h3>ORIGINALITY&mdash;INVENTIVENESS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Originality is the obverse side of imitation. In combating
+ the notion that Japan is a nation of unreflective imitators, I
+ have given numerous examples of originality. Further extensive
+ illustration of this characteristic is, accordingly,
+ unnecessary. One other may be cited, however.</p>
+
+ <p>The excellence of Japanese art is admitted by all. Japanese
+ temples and palaces are adorned with mural paintings and pieces
+ of sculpture that command the admiration of Occidental experts.
+ The only question is as to their authors. Are these, properly
+ speaking, Japanese works of art&mdash;or Korean or Chinese?
+ That Japan received her artistic stimulus, and much of her
+ artistic ideas and technique, from China is beyond dispute. But
+ did she develop nothing new and independent? This is a question
+ of fact. Japanese art, though Oriental, has a distinctive
+ quality. A magnificent work entitled "Solicited Relics of
+ Japanese Art" is issuing from the press, in which there is a
+ large number of chromo-xylographic and collotype reproductions
+ of the best specimens of ancient Japanese art. Reviewing this
+ work, the <i>Japan Mail</i> remarks:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"But why should the only great sculptors that China or
+ Korea ever produced have come to Japan and bequeathed to
+ this country the unique results of their genius? That is
+ the question we have to answer before we accept the
+ doctrine that the noblest masterpieces of ancient Japan
+ were from foreign lands. When anything comparable is found
+ in China or Korea, there will be less difficulty in
+ applying this doctrine of over-sea-influence to the genius
+ that enriched the temples of antique
+ Japan."<a name='FNanchor_AF_32'
+ id="FNanchor_AF_32"></a><a href='#Footnote_AF_32'><sup>[AF]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_204'
+ id="Page_204"></a>Under the early influence of Buddhism
+ (900-1200 A.D.) Japan fairly bloomed. Those were the days of
+ her glory in architecture, literature, and art. But a blight
+ fell upon her from which she is only now recovering. The
+ causes of this blight will receive attention in a subsequent
+ chapter. Let us note here only one aspect of it, namely,
+ official repression of originality.</p>
+
+ <p>Townsend Harris, in his journal, remarks on the way in which
+ the Japanese government has interfered with the originality of
+ the people. "The genius of their government seems to forbid any
+ exercise of ingenuity in producing articles for the
+ gratification of wealth and luxury. Sumptuary laws rigidly
+ enforce the forms, colors, material, and time of changing the
+ dress of all. As to luxury of furniture, the thing is unknown
+ in Japan.... It would be an endless task to attempt to put down
+ all the acts of a Japanese that are regulated by
+ authority."</p>
+
+ <p>The Tokugawa rule forbade the building of large ships; so
+ that, by the middle of the nineteenth century, the art of
+ ship-building was far behind what it had been two centuries
+ earlier. Government authority exterminated Christianity in the
+ early part of the seventeenth century and freedom of religious
+ belief was forbidden. The same power that put the ban on
+ Christianity forbade the spread of certain condemned systems of
+ Confucianism. Even in the study of Chinese literature and
+ philosophy, therefore, such originality as the classic models
+ stimulated was discouraged by the all-powerful Tokugawa
+ government. The avowed aim and end of the ruling powers of
+ Japan was to keep the nation in its <i>status quo</i>.
+ Originality was heresy and treason; progress was impiety. The
+ teaching of Confucius likewise lent its support to this policy.
+ To do exactly as the fathers did is to honor them; to do, or
+ even to think, otherwise is to dishonor them. There have not
+ been wanting men of originality and independence in both China
+ and Japan; but they were not great enough to break over, or
+ break down, the incrusted system in which they lived&mdash;the
+ system of blind devotion to the past. This system, that
+ deliberately opposed all inven<a name='Page_205'
+ id="Page_205"></a>tion and originality, has been the great
+ incubus to national progress, in that it has rejected and
+ repressed every tendency to variation. What results might
+ not the country have secured, had Christianity been allowed
+ to do its work in stimulating individual development and in
+ creating the sense of personal responsibility towards God
+ and man!</p>
+
+ <p>A curious anomaly still remains in Japan on the subject of
+ liberty in study and belief. Though perfect liberty is the
+ rule, one topic is even yet under official embargo. No one may
+ express public dissent from the authorized version of primitive
+ Japanese history. A few years ago a professor in the Imperial
+ University made an attempt to interpret ancient Japanese myths.
+ His constructions were supposed to threaten the divine descent
+ of the Imperial line, and he was summarily dismissed.</p>
+
+ <p>Dr. E. Inouye, Professor of Buddhist Philosophy in the
+ Imperial University, addressing a Teachers' Association of
+ Sendai, delivered a conservative, indirectly anti-foreign
+ speech. He insisted, as reported by a local English
+ correspondent, that the Japanese people "were descended from
+ the gods. In all other countries the sovereign or Emperor was
+ derived from the people, but here the people had the honor of
+ being derived from the Emperor. Other countries had filial
+ piety and loyalty, but no such filial piety and loyalty as
+ exist in Japan. The moral attainments of the people were
+ altogether unique. He informed his audience that though they
+ might adopt foreign ways of doing things, their minds needed no
+ renovating; they were good enough as they
+ were."<a name='FNanchor_AG_33'
+ id="FNanchor_AG_33"></a><a href='#Footnote_AG_33'><sup>[AG]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>As a result of this position, scholarship and credulity are
+ curiously combined in modern historical production. Implicit
+ confidence seems to be placed in the myths of the primitive
+ era. Tales of the gods are cited as historical events whose
+ date, even, can be fixed with some degree of accuracy. Although
+ writing was unknown in Japan until early in the Christian era,
+ the chronology of the previous six or eight hundred years is
+ accepted on <a name='Page_206'
+ id="Page_206"></a>the authority of a single statement in the
+ Kojiki, written 712 years A.D. This statement was reproduced
+ from the memory of a single man, who remembered miraculously
+ the contents of a book written shortly before, but
+ accidentally destroyed by fire. In the authoritative history
+ of Japan, prepared and translated into English at the
+ command of the government for the Columbian Exposition, we
+ find such statements as these:</p>
+
+ <p>"From the time that Amaterasu-Omikami made Ninigi-no-mikoto
+ to descend from the heavens and subject to his administrative
+ sway Okini-nushi-no-mikoto and other offspring of the deities
+ in the land, descendants of the divine beings have sat upon the
+ throne, generation after generation in
+ succession."<a name='FNanchor_AH_34'
+ id="FNanchor_AH_34"></a><a href='#Footnote_AH_34'><sup>[AH]</sup></a>
+ "Descended in a direct line from the heavenly deities, the
+ Emperor has stood unshaken in his high place through all
+ generations, his prestige and dignity immutable from time
+ immemorial and independent of all the vicissitudes of the
+ world about him."<a name='FNanchor_AI_35'
+ id="FNanchor_AI_35"></a><a href='#Footnote_AI_35'><sup>[AI]</sup></a>
+ "Never has there been found a single subject of the realm
+ who sought to impair the Imperial
+ prestige."<a name='FNanchor_AJ_36'
+ id="FNanchor_AJ_36"></a><a href='#Footnote_AJ_36'><sup>[AJ]</sup></a>
+ It is true that in a single passage the traditions of the
+ "age of the Deities" are described as "strange and
+ incredible legends," but it is added that, however singular
+ they are, in order to understand the history of the Empire's
+ beginnings, they must be studied. Then follows, without a
+ word of criticism or dissent, the account of the doings of
+ the heavenly deities, in creating Japan and its people, as
+ well as the myriads of gods. There is no break between the
+ age of the gods and the history of men. The first inventions
+ and discoveries, such as those of fire, of mining, and of
+ weaving are ascribed to Amate rasu-Omikami (the Sun
+ Goddess). According to these traditions and the modern
+ histories built upon them, the Japanese race came into
+ existence wholly independently of all other races of men.
+ Such is the authoritative teaching in the schools
+ to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>Occidental scholars do not accept these statements or dates.
+ That the Japanese will evince historical and critical ability
+ in the study of their own early history, as <a name='Page_207'
+ id="Page_207"></a>soon as the social order will allow it,
+ can hardly be doubted. Those few who even now entertain
+ advanced ideas do not dare to avow them. And this fact
+ throws an interesting light on the way in which the social
+ order, or a despotic government, may thwart for a time the
+ natural course of development. The present apparent
+ credulity of Japanese historical scholarship is due neither
+ to race character nor to superstitions lodged in the
+ inherited race brain, but simply to the social system,
+ which, as yet, demands the inviolability of the Imperial
+ line.</p>
+
+ <p>Now that the Japanese have been so largely relieved from the
+ incubus of the older social order, the question rises whether
+ they are showing powers of originality. The answer is not
+ doubtful, for they have already made several important
+ discoveries and inventions. The Murata rifle, with which the
+ army is equipped, is the invention of a Japanese. In 1897
+ Colonel Arisaka invented several improvements in this same
+ rifle, increasing the velocity and accuracy, and lessening the
+ weight. Still more recently he has invented a rapid-fire
+ field-piece to superintend whose manufacture he has been sent
+ to Europe. Mr. Shimose has invented a smokeless powder, which
+ the government is manufacturing for its own use. Not
+ infrequently there appear in the papers notices of new
+ inventions. I have recently noted the invention of important
+ improvements in the hand loom universally used in Japan, also a
+ "smoke-consumer" which not only abolishes the smoke, but
+ reduces the amount of coal used and consequently the expense.
+ These are but a few of the ever-increasing number of Japanese
+ inventions.</p>
+
+ <p>In the, field of original scientific research is the famous
+ bacteriologist, Dr. Kitazato. Less widely known perhaps, but
+ none the less truly original explorers in the field of science,
+ are Messrs. Hirase and Ikeno, whose discoveries of
+ spermatozoids in Ginko and Cycas have no little value for
+ botanists, especially in the development of the theory of
+ certain forms of fertilization. These instances show that the
+ faculty of original thought is not entirely lacking among the
+ Japanese. Under favorable conditions, such as now prevail,
+ there is good reason for <a name='Page_208'
+ id="Page_208"></a>holding that the Japanese will take their
+ place among the peoples of the world, not only as skillful
+ imitators and adapters, but also as original contributors to
+ the progress of civilization and of science.</p>
+
+ <p>Originality may be shown in imitation as well as in
+ production, and this type of originality the Japanese have
+ displayed in a marked way. They have copied the institutions of
+ no single country. It might even be difficult to say which
+ Western land has had the greatest influence in molding the new
+ social order of Japan. In view of the fact that it is the
+ English language which has been most in favor during the past
+ thirty years, it might be assumed that England and America are
+ the favored models. But no such hasty conclusion can be drawn.
+ The Japanese have certainly taken ideas and teachers from many
+ different sources; and they have changed them frequently, but
+ not thoughtlessly. A writer in <i>The Far East</i> brings this
+ points out clearly:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"While Japan remained secluded from other countries, she
+ had no necessity for and scarcely any war vessels, but
+ after the country was opened to the free intercourse of
+ foreign powers&mdash;immediately she felt the urgent
+ necessity of naval defense and employed a Dutch officer to
+ construct her navy. In 1871 the Japanese government
+ employed a number of English officers, and almost wholly
+ reconstructed her navy according to the English system. But
+ in the matter of naval education our rulers found the
+ English system altogether unsatisfactory, and adopted the
+ American system for the model of our naval academy. So, in
+ discipline, our naval officers found the German principle
+ much superior to the English, and adopted that in point of
+ discipline. Thus the Japanese navy is not wholly after the
+ English system, or the American, or the French, or the
+ German system. But it has been so constructed as to include
+ the best portions of all the different systems. In the case
+ of the army, we had a system of our own before we began to
+ utilize gunpowder and foreign methods of discipline.
+ Shortly before the present era we reorganized our army by
+ adopting the Dutch system, then the English,
+ <a name='Page_209'
+ id="Page_209"></a>then the French, and after the
+ Franco-Prussian war, made an improvement by adopting the
+ German system. But on every occasion of reorganization
+ we retained the most advantageous parts of the old
+ systems and harmonized them with the new one. The result
+ has been the creation of an entirely new system,
+ different from any of those models we have adopted. So
+ in the case of our civil code, we consulted most
+ carefully the laws of many civilized nations, and
+ gathered the cream of all the different codes before we
+ formulated our own suited to the customs of our people.
+ In the revision of our monetary system, our government
+ appointed a number of prominent economists to
+ investigate the characteristics of foreign systems, as
+ to their merits and faults, and also the different
+ circumstances under which various systems present their
+ strength and weakness. The investigation lasted more
+ than two years, which finally culminated in our adoption
+ of the gold in the place of the old silver
+ standard."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This quotation gives an idea of the selective method that
+ has been followed. There has been no slavish or unconscious
+ imitation. On the contrary, there has been a constant conscious
+ effort to follow the best model that the civilized world
+ afforded. Of course, it may be doubted whether in fact they
+ have always chosen the best; but that is a different matter.
+ The Japanese think they have; and what foreigner can say that,
+ under the circumstances and in view of the conditions of the
+ people, they have not? One point is clear, that on the whole
+ the nation has made great progress in recent decades, and that
+ the conduct of the government cannot fail to command the
+ admiration of every impartial student of Oriental lands. This
+ is far from saying that all is perfection. Even the Japanese
+ make no such claim. Nor is this equivalent to an assertion of
+ Japan's equality with the leading lands of the West, although
+ many Japanese are ready to assert this. But I merely say that
+ the leaders of New Japan have revealed a high order of
+ judicious originality in their imitation of foreign
+ nations.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XVIII'
+ id="XVIII"></a><a name='Page_210'
+ id="Page_210"></a>XVIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>INDIRECTNESS&mdash;"NOMINALITY"</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The Japanese have two words in frequent use which aptly
+ describe certain striking aspects of their civilization. They
+ are "tomawashi ni," "yumei-mujitsu," the first translated
+ literally signifying "roundabout" or "indirect," the second
+ meaning "having the name, but not the reality." Both these
+ aspects of Japanese character are forced on the attention of
+ any who live long in Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Some years ago I had a cow that I wished to sell. Being an
+ American, my natural impulse was to ask a dairyman directly if
+ he did not wish to buy; but that would not be the most Japanese
+ method. I accordingly resorted to the help of a "go-between."
+ This individual, who has a regular name in Japanese,
+ "nakadachi," is indispensable for many purposes. When land was
+ being bought for missionary residences in Kumamoto, there were
+ at times three or even four agents acting between the purchaser
+ and the seller and each received his "orei," "honorable
+ politeness," or, in plain English, commission. In the purchase
+ of two or three acres of land, dealings were carried on with
+ some fifteen or more separate landowners. Three different
+ go-betweens dealt directly with the purchaser, and each of
+ these had his go-between, and in some cases these latter had
+ theirs, before the landowner was reached. A domestic desiring
+ to leave my employ conferred with a go-between, who conferred
+ with his go-between, who conferred with me! In every important
+ consultation a go-between seems essential in Japan. That
+ vexatious delays and misunderstandings are frequent may be
+ assumed.</p>
+
+ <p>The system, however, has its advantages. In case of
+ disagreeable matters the go-between can say the
+ dis<a name='Page_211'
+ id="Page_211"></a>agreeable things in the third person,
+ reducing the unpleasant utterances to a minimum.</p>
+
+ <p>I recall the case of two evangelists in the employ of the
+ Kumamoto station. Each secured the other to act as go-between
+ in presenting his own difficulties to me. To an American the
+ natural course would have been for each man to state his own
+ grievances and desires, and secure an immediate settlement.</p>
+
+ <p>The characteristic of "roundaboutness" is not, however,
+ confined to Japanese methods of action, but also characterizes
+ their methods of speech. In later chapters on the alleged
+ Japanese impersonality we shall consider the remarkable
+ deficiency of personal pronouns in the language, and the wide
+ use of "honorifics." This substitution of the personal pronouns
+ by honorifics makes possible an indefiniteness of speech that
+ is exceedingly difficult for an Anglo-Saxon to appreciate.
+ Fancy the amount of implication in the statement, "Ikenai
+ koto-we shimashita" which, strictly translated, means "Can't go
+ thing have done." Who has done? you? or he? or I? This can only
+ be inferred, for it is not stated. If a speaker wishes to make
+ his personal allusion blind, he can always do so with the
+ greatest ease and without the slightest degree of grammatical
+ incorrectness. "Caught cold," "better ask," "honorably sorry,"
+ "feel hungry," and all the common sentences of daily life are
+ entirely free from that personal definiteness which an
+ Occidental language necessitates. We shall see later that the
+ absence of the personal element from the wording of the
+ sentence does not imply, or prove, its absence from the thought
+ of either the speaker or hearer. The Japanese language abounds
+ in roundabout methods of expression. This is specially true in
+ phrases of courtesy. Instead of saying, "I am glad to see you,"
+ the Japanese say, "Well, honorably have come"; instead of, "I
+ am sorry to have troubled you," they say, "Honorable hindrance
+ have done"; instead of "Thank you," the correct expression is,
+ "It is difficult."</p>
+
+ <p>In a conversation once with a leading educator, I was
+ maintaining that a wide study of English was not needful for
+ the Japanese youth; that the majority of the boys
+ <a name='Page_212'
+ id="Page_212"></a>would never learn enough English to make
+ it of practical use to them in after-life, and that it would
+ be wiser for them to spend the same amount of time on more
+ immediately practical subjects. The reply was that the boys
+ needed to have the drill in English in order to gain clear
+ methods of thought: that the sharp distinctness of the
+ English sentence, with its personal pronouns and tense and
+ number, affords a mental drill which the Japanese can get in
+ no other way; and that even if the boys should never make
+ the slightest after-use of English in reading or
+ conversation, the advantage gained was well worth the time
+ expended. I have since noticed that those men who have spent
+ some time in the study of a foreign language speak very much
+ more clearly in Japanese than those who have not had this
+ training. In the former case, the enunciation is apt to be
+ more distinct, and the sentences rounded into more definite
+ periods. The conversation of the average Japanese tends to
+ ramble on in a never-ending sentence. But a marked change
+ has come over vast numbers of the people during the last
+ three decades. The roundaboutness of to-day is as nothing to
+ that which existed under the old order of society. For the
+ new order rests on radically different ideas; directness of
+ speech and not its opposite is being cultivated, and in
+ absolute contrast to the methods of the feudal era,
+ directness of governmental procedure is well-nigh universal
+ to-day. In trade, too, there has come a straightforwardness
+ that is promising, though not yet triumphant. It is safe to
+ assume that in all respectable stores the normal price is
+ charged; for the custom of fixed prices has been widely
+ adopted. If individuals are known to have the "beating down"
+ habit, special prices are added for their sakes.</p>
+
+ <p>A personal experience illustrates the point. My wife and I
+ had priced several lamps, had made note of the most
+ satisfactory, and had gone home without buying. The next day a
+ domestic was sent to secure the one which pleased us best. He
+ was charged more than we had been, and in surprise mentioned
+ the sum which we had authorized him to pay. The shopkeeper
+ explained by saying that he always told us the true price in
+ the <a name='Page_213'
+ id="Page_213"></a>beginning, because we never tried to beat
+ him down. In truth, modern industrial conditions have pretty
+ well banished the old-time custom of haggling. A premium is
+ set on straightforwardness in business unknown to the old
+ social order.</p>
+
+ <p>Roundaboutness is, however, closely connected with
+ "yumei-mujitsu," the other characteristic mentioned at the
+ beginning of this chapter. This, for the sake of simplicity, I
+ venture to call "nominality." Japanese history is a prolonged
+ illustration of this characteristic. For over a thousand years
+ "yumei-mujitsu" has been a leading feature in governmental
+ life. Although the Emperor has ostensibly been seated on the
+ throne, clothed with absolute power, still he has often reigned
+ only in name.<a name='FNanchor_AK_37'
+ id="FNanchor_AK_37"></a><a href='#Footnote_AK_37'><sup>[AK]</sup></a>
+ Even so early as 130 A.D., the two families of Oomi and
+ Omuraji began to exercise despotic authority in the central
+ government, and the feudal system, as thus early
+ established, continued with but few breaks to the middle of
+ the present century. There were also the great families
+ which could alone furnish wives to the Imperial line. These
+ early took possession of the person of the Emperor, and the
+ fathers of the wives often exercised Imperial power. The
+ country was frequently and long disturbed by intense civil
+ wars between these rival families. In turn the Fujiwaras,
+ the Minamotos, and the Tairas held the leading place in the
+ control of the Emperor; they determined the succession and
+ secured frequent abdication in favor of their infant sons,
+ but within these families, in turn, there appeared the
+ influence of the "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic. Lesser men,
+ the retainers of these families, manipulated the family
+ leaders, who were often merely figureheads of the contending
+ families and clans. Emperors were made and unmade at the
+ will of these men behind the scenes, most of whom are quite
+ unknown to fame. The creation of infant Emperors, allowed to
+ bear the Imperial name in their infancy and youth, but
+ compelled to abdicate on reaching manhood, was a common
+ device <a name='Page_214'
+ id="Page_214"></a>for maintaining nominal Imperialism with
+ actual impotence.</p>
+
+ <p>When military clans began to monopolize Imperial power, the
+ people distinctly recognized the nature of their methods and
+ gave it the name of "Bakufu" or "curtain government," a
+ roundabout expression for military government. There has been a
+ succession of these "curtain governments," the last and most
+ successful being that of the Tokugawa, whose fall in 1867-68
+ brought the entire system to an end and placed the true Emperor
+ on the throne.</p>
+
+ <p>But this "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic of Japanese life has
+ been by no means limited to the national government. Every
+ daimyate was more or less blighted by it; the daimyo, or "Great
+ Name," was in too many cases but a puppet in the hands of his
+ "kerai," or family retainers. These men, who were entirely out
+ of sight, were, in very many cases, the real holders of the
+ power which was supposed to be exercised by the daimyo. The
+ lord was often a "great name" and nothing more. That this state
+ of affairs was always attended with evil results is by no means
+ the contention of these pages. Not infrequently the people were
+ saved by it from the incompetence and ignorance and selfishness
+ of hereditary rulers. Indeed, this system of "yumei-mujitsu"
+ government was one of the devices whereby the inherent evils of
+ hereditary rulers were more or less obviated. It may be
+ questioned, however, whether the device did not in the long run
+ cost more than it gained. Did it not serve to maintain, if not
+ actually to produce, a system of dissimulation and deception
+ which could but injure the national character? It certainly
+ could not stimulate the straightforward frankness and outspoken
+ directness and honesty so essential to the well-being of the
+ human race.</p>
+
+ <p>Although "yumei-mujitsu" government is now practically
+ extinct in Japan, yet in the social structure it still
+ survives.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese family is a maze of "nominality." Full-grown
+ young men and women are adopted as sons and daughters, in order
+ to maintain the family line and name.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_215'
+ id="Page_215"></a>A son is not a legal son unless he is so
+ registered, while an illegitimate child is recognized as a
+ true son if so registered. A man may be the legal son of his
+ grandmother, or of his sister, if so registered. Although a
+ family may have no children, it does not die out unless
+ there has been a failure to adopt a son or daughter, and an
+ extinct family may be revived by the legal appointment of
+ someone to take the family name and worship at the family
+ shrine. The family pedigree, therefore, does not describe
+ the actual ancestry, but only the nominal, the fictitious.
+ There is no deception in this. It is a well-recognized
+ custom of Old Japan. Its origin, moreover, is not difficult
+ to explain. Nor is this kind of family peculiar to Japan. It
+ is none the less a capital illustration of the
+ "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic permeating the feudal
+ civilization, and still exerting a powerful influence. Even
+ Christians are not free from "nominalism," as we have
+ frequently found in our missionary work.</p>
+
+ <p>A case in mind is of an evangelist employed by our mission
+ station. He was to receive a definite proportion of his salary
+ from the church for which he worked and the rest from the
+ station. On inquiry I learned that he was receiving only that
+ provided by the station, and on questioning him further he said
+ that probably the sum promised by the church was being kept as
+ his monthly contribution to the expenses of the church!
+ Instances of this kind are not infrequent. While in Kyushu I
+ more than once discovered that a body of Christians, whose
+ evangelists we were helping to support proportionately, were
+ actually raising not a cent of their proportion. On inquiry, I
+ would be told that the evangelists themselves contributed out
+ of their salary the sums needed, and that, therefore, the
+ Christians did not need to raise it.</p>
+
+ <p>The mission, at one time, adopted the plan of throwing upon
+ the local churches the responsibility of deciding as to the
+ fitness of young men for mission aid in securing a theological
+ education. It was agreed by representatives of the churches and
+ the mission that each candidate should secure the approval of
+ the deacons of <a name='Page_216'
+ id="Page_216"></a>the church of which he was a member, and
+ that the church should pay a certain proportion of the
+ candidate's school expenses. It was thought that by this
+ method the leading Christians of the young man's
+ acquaintance would become his sponsors, and that they would
+ be unwilling to take this responsibility except for men in
+ whom they had personal confidence, and for whom they would
+ be willing to make personal contributions. In course of time
+ the mission discovered that the plan was not working as
+ expected. The young men could secure the approval of the
+ deacons of their church without any difficulty; and as for
+ the financial aid from the church, that could be very easily
+ arranged for by the student's making a monthly contribution
+ to the church of the sum which the church should contribute
+ toward his expenses. Although this method seems to the
+ average Occidental decidedly deceptive, it seemed to the
+ Japanese perfectly proper. The arrangement, it is needless
+ to state, was not long continued. I am persuaded that the
+ correct explanation of these cases is "yumei-mujitsu."</p>
+
+ <p>Not long since express trains were put on between Kobe and
+ Tokyo. One morning at Osaka I planned to take the early express
+ to Kyoto, distant about thirty miles. These are the second and
+ third cities of Japan, and the travel between them is heavy. On
+ applying for a ticket I was refused and told there was no train
+ for Kyoto. But as multitudes were buying tickets, and going out
+ upon the platform, I asked an official what the trouble was,
+ and received the explanation that for this express train no
+ tickets could be sold for less than forty miles; but if I would
+ buy a ticket for the next station beyond Kyoto, it would be all
+ right; I could get off at Kyoto. I was assured that I would be
+ allowed to land and leave the station at Kyoto. This I did
+ then, and have repeatedly done since. The same absurd rule is
+ applied, I am told, between Yokohama and Tokyo.</p>
+
+ <p>But our interest in these illustrations is the light they
+ shed on Japanese character. They indicate the intellectual
+ angle from which the people have looked out on life. What is
+ the origin of the characteristic? Is it due to deep-lying race
+ nature, to the quality of the race <a name='Page_217'
+ id="Page_217"></a>brain? Even more clearly than in the case
+ of "roundaboutness," it seems to me that "nominality" is due
+ to the nature of the old social order. Feudalism has always
+ exhibited more or less of these same features. To
+ Anglo-Saxons, reared in a land blessed by direct government
+ of the people, by the people, and for the people, such
+ methods were not only needless but obnoxious. Nominal
+ responsibility without real power has been seen to breed
+ numberless evils. We have learned to hate all nominalism,
+ all fiction in government, in business and, above all, in
+ personal character. But this is due to the Anglo-Saxon
+ social order, the product in large measure of centuries of
+ Christian instruction.</p>
+
+ <p>Through contact with Westerners and the ideas they stand
+ for, directness and reality are being assimilated and developed
+ by the Japanese. This would be impossible were the
+ characteristic in question due to inherent race nature
+ necessarily bequeathed from generation to generation by
+ intrinsic heredity.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XIX'
+ id="XIX"></a><a name='Page_218'
+ id="Page_218"></a>XIX</h2>
+
+ <h3>INTELLECTUALITY</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Some writers hold that the Japanese are inherently deficient
+ in the higher mental faculties. They consider mediocre
+ mentality to be an inborn characteristic of Japan and assert
+ that it lies at the root of the civilizational differences
+ distinguishing the East from the West. The puerility of
+ Oriental science in all its departments, the prevalence of
+ superstition even among the cultivated, the lack of historical
+ insight and interpretation of history are adduced as conclusive
+ evidences of this view.</p>
+
+ <p>Foreign teachers in Japanese employ have told me that
+ Japanese students, as compared with those of the West, manifest
+ deficient powers of analysis and of generalization. Some even
+ assert that the Japanese have no generalizing ability whatever,
+ their progress in civilization being entirely due to their
+ remarkable power of clever imitation. Mr. W.G. Aston, in
+ ascribing the characteristic features of Japanese literature to
+ the fundamental nature of the race, says they are "hardly
+ capable of high intellectual
+ achievement."<a name='FNanchor_AL_38'
+ id="FNanchor_AL_38"></a><a href='#Footnote_AL_38'><sup>[AL]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>While we may admit that the Japanese do not seem to have at
+ present the same power of scientific generalization as
+ Occidentals, we naturally ask ourselves whether the difference
+ is due to natal deficiency, or whether it may not be due to
+ difference in early training. We must not forget that the youth
+ who come under the observation of foreign teachers in Japanese
+ schools are already products of the Japanese system of
+ education, home and school, and necessarily are as defective as
+ it is.</p>
+
+ <p>In a previous chapter a few instances of recent invention
+ and important scientific discovery were given.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_219'
+ id="Page_219"></a>These could not have been made without
+ genuine powers of analysis and generalization. We need not
+ linger to elaborate this point.</p>
+
+ <p>Another set of facts throwing light on our problem is the
+ success of so many Japanese students, at home and in foreign
+ lands, in mastering modern thought. Great numbers have come
+ back from Europe and America with diplomas and titles; not a
+ few have taken high rank in their classes. The Japanese student
+ abroad is usually a hard worker, like his brother at home. I
+ doubt if any students in the new or the old world study more
+ hours in a year than do these of Japan. It has often amazed me
+ to learn how much they are required to do. This is one fair
+ sign of intellectuality. The ease too with which young Japan,
+ educated in Occidental schools and introduced to Occidental
+ systems of thought, acquires abstruse speculations, searching
+ analyses, and generalized abstractions proves conclusively
+ Japanese possession of the higher mental faculties, in spite of
+ the long survival in their civilization of primitive puerility
+ and superstitions and the lack of science, properly so
+ called.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese youths, furthermore, have a fluency in public
+ speech decidedly above anything I have met with in the United
+ States. Young men of eighteen or twenty years of age deliver
+ long discourses on religion or history or politics, with an
+ apparent ease that their uncouth appearance would not lead one
+ to expect. In the little school of less than 150 boys in
+ Kumamoto there were more individuals who could talk
+ intelligibly and forcefully on important themes of national
+ policy, the relation of religion and politics, the relation of
+ Japan to the Occident and the Orient, than could be found in
+ either of the two colleges in the United States with which I
+ was connected. I do not say that they could bring forth
+ original ideas on these topics. But they could at least
+ remember what they had heard and read and could reproduce the
+ ideas with amazing fluency.</p>
+
+ <p>A recent public meeting in Tokyo in which Christian students
+ of the University spoke to fellow-students on the great
+ problems of religion, revealed a power of no mean order in
+ handling the peculiar difficulties encoun<a name='Page_220'
+ id="Page_220"></a>tered by educated young men. A competent
+ listener, recently graduated from an American university and
+ widely acquainted with American students, declared that
+ those Japanese speakers revealed greater powers of mind and
+ speech than would be found under similar circumstances in
+ the United States.</p>
+
+ <p>The fluency with which timid girls pray in public has often
+ surprised me. Once started, they never seem to hesitate for
+ ideas or words. The same girls would hardly be able to utter an
+ intelligible sentence in reply to questions put to them by the
+ pastor or the missionary, so faint would be their voices and so
+ hesitating their manner.</p>
+
+ <p>The question as to whether the Japanese have powers of
+ generalization receives some light from a study of the language
+ of the people. An examination of primitive Japanese proves that
+ the race, prior to receiving even the slightest influence from
+ China, had developed highly generalized terms. It is worth
+ while to call attention here to a simple fact which most
+ writers seem to ignore, namely, that all language denotes and
+ indeed rests on generalization. Consider the word "uma,"
+ "horse"; this is a name for a whole class of objects, and is
+ therefore the product of a mind that can generalize and express
+ its generalization in a concept which no act of the imagination
+ can picture; the imagination can represent only individuals;
+ the mind that has concepts of classes of things, as, for
+ instance, of horses, houses, men, women, trees, has already a
+ genuine power of generalization. Let me also call attention to
+ such words as "wake," "reason"; "mono," "thing"; "koto,"
+ "fact"; "aru," "is"; "oro," "lives"; "aru koto," "is fact," or
+ "existence"; "ugoku koto," "movement"; "omoi," "thought"; this
+ list might be indefinitely extended. Let the reader consider
+ whether these words are not highly generalized; yet these are
+ all pure Japanese words, and reveal the development of the
+ Japanese mind before it was in the least influenced by Chinese
+ thought. Evidently it will not do to assert the entire lack of
+ the power of generalization to the Japanese mind.</p>
+
+ <p>Still further evidence proving Japanese possession of
+ <a name='Page_221'
+ id="Page_221"></a>the higher mental faculties may be found
+ in the wide prevalence and use of the most highly
+ generalized philosophical terms. Consider for instance, "Ri"
+ and "Ki," "In" and "Yo." No complete translation can be
+ found for them in English; "Ri" and "Ki" may be best
+ translated as the rational and the formative principles in
+ the universe, while "In" and "Yo" signify the active and the
+ passive, the male and the female, the light and the
+ darkness; in a word, the poles of a positive and negative.
+ It is true that these terms are of Chinese origin as well as
+ the thoughts themselves, but they are to-day in universal
+ use in Japan. Similar abstract terms of Buddhistic origin
+ are the possession of the common people.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course the possession of these Chinese terms is not
+ offered as evidence of independent generalizing ability. But
+ wide use proves conclusively the possession of the higher
+ mental faculties, for, without such faculties, the above terms
+ would be incomprehensible to the people and would find no place
+ in common speech. We must be careful not to give too much
+ weight to the foreign origin of these terms. Chinese is to
+ Japanese what Latin and Greek are to modern European languages.
+ The fact that a term is of Chinese origin proves nothing as to
+ the nature of the modern Japanese mind. The developing Japanese
+ civilization demanded new terms for her new instruments and
+ increasing concepts. These for over fifteen centuries have been
+ borrowed from, or constructed out of, Chinese in the same way
+ that all our modern scientific terms are constructed out of
+ Latin and Greek. It is doubtful if any of the Chinese terms,
+ even those borrowed bodily, have in Japan the same significance
+ as in China. If this is true, then the originating feature of
+ Japanese power of generalization becomes manifest.</p>
+
+ <p>Indeed from this standpoint, the fact that the Japanese have
+ made such extensive use of the Chinese language shows the
+ degree to which the Japanese mind has outgrown its primitive
+ development, demanding new terms for the expression of its
+ expanding life. But mental growth implies energy of
+ acquisition. The adoption of Chinese terms is not a passive but
+ an active process.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_222'
+ id="Page_222"></a>Acquisition of generalized terms can only
+ take place with the development of a generalizing mind.
+ Foreign terms may help, but they do not cause that
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p>In a study of the question whether or not the Japanese
+ possess independent powers of analysis and generalization, we
+ must ever remember the unique character of the social
+ environment to which they have been subjected. Always more or
+ less of an isolated nation, they have been twice or thrice
+ suddenly confronted with a civilization much superior to that
+ which they in their isolation had developed. Under such
+ circumstances, adoption and modification of ideas and language
+ as well as of methods and machinery were the most rational and
+ natural courses.</p>
+
+ <p>The explanation usually given for the puerilities of
+ Oriental science, history, and religion has been short and
+ simple, namely, the inherent nature of the Oriental races, as
+ if this were the final fact, needing and admitting no further
+ explanation. That the Orient has not developed history or
+ science is doubtless true, but the correct explanation of this
+ fact is, in my opinion, that the educational method of the
+ entire Orient has rested on mechanical memorization; during the
+ formative period of the mind the exclusive effort of education
+ has been to develop a memory which acts by arbitrary or
+ fanciful connections and relations. A Japanese boy of Old
+ Japan, for instance, began his education at from seven to eight
+ years of age and spent three or four years in memorizing the
+ thousands of Chinese hieroglyphic characters contained in the
+ Shisho and Gokyo, nine of the Chinese classics. This completed,
+ his teacher would begin to explain to him the meaning of the
+ characters and sentences. The entire educational effort was to
+ develop the powers of observing and memorizing accidental,
+ superficial, or even purely artificial relations. This double
+ faculty of observing trifling and irrelevant details, and of
+ remembering them, became phenomenally and abnormally
+ developed.</p>
+
+ <p>Recent works on the psychology of education, however, have
+ made plain how an excessive development of a child's lower
+ mental faculties may arrest its later <a name='Page_223'
+ id="Page_223"></a>growth in all the higher departments of
+ its intellectual nature; the development of a mechanical
+ memory is well known as a serious obstacle to the higher
+ activities of reason. Now Japanese education for centuries,
+ like Chinese, has developed such memory. It trained the
+ lower and ignored the higher. Much of the Japanese education
+ of to-day, although it includes mathematics, science, and
+ history, is based on the mechanical memory method. The
+ Orient is thus a mammoth illustration of the effects of
+ over-development of the mechanical memory, and the
+ consequent arrest of the development of the remaining powers
+ of the mind.</p>
+
+ <p>Encumbered by this educational ideal and system, how could
+ the ancient Chinese and Japanese men of education make a
+ critical study of history, or develop any science worthy of the
+ name? The childish physics and astronomy, the brutal
+ therapeutics and the magical and superstitious religions of the
+ Orient, are a necessary consequence of its educational system,
+ not of its inherent lack of the higher mental powers.</p>
+
+ <p>If Japanese children brought up from infancy in American
+ homes, and sent to American schools from kindergarten days
+ onward, should still manifest marked deficiencies in powers of
+ analysis and generalization, as compared with American
+ children, we should then be compelled to conclude that this
+ difference is due to diverse natal psychic endowment.
+ Generalizations as to the inherent intellectual deficiencies of
+ the Oriental are based on observations of individuals already
+ developed in the Oriental civilization, whose psychic defects
+ they accordingly necessarily inherit through the laws of social
+ heredity. Such observations have no relevancy to our main
+ problem. We freely admit that Oriental civilization manifests
+ striking deficiencies of development of the higher mental
+ faculties, although it is not nearly so great as many assert;
+ but we contend that these deficiencies are due to something
+ else than the inherent psychic nature of the Oriental
+ individual. Innumerable causes have combined to produce the
+ Oriental social order and to determine its slow development.
+ These cannot be stated in a sentence, nor in a paragraph.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_224'
+ id="Page_224"></a>In the final analysis, however, the causes
+ which produce the characteristic features of Japanese social
+ order are the real sources of the differentiating
+ intellectual traits now characterizing the Japanese.
+ Introduce a new social heredity,&mdash;a new system of
+ education,&mdash;one which relegates a mechanical memory to
+ the background,&mdash;one which exalts powers of rational
+ observation of the profound causal relations of the
+ phenomena of nature, and which sets a premium on such
+ observation, analysis, and generalization, and the results
+ will show the inherent psychic nature of the Oriental to be
+ not different from that of the Occidental.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XX'
+ id="XX"></a><a name='Page_225'
+ id="Page_225"></a>XX</h2>
+
+ <h3>PHILOSOPHICAL ABILITY</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We are now prepared to consider whether or not the Japanese
+ have philosophical ability. The average educated Japanese
+ believe such to be the case. The rapidity and ease with which
+ the upper classes have abandoned their superstitious faiths is
+ commonly attributed by themselves to the philosophical nature
+ of their minds. Similarly the rapid spread of so-called
+ rationalism and Unitarian thought and Higher Criticism among
+ once earnest Christians, during the past decade, they
+ themselves ascribe to their interest in philosophical
+ questions, and to their ability in handling philosophical
+ problems.</p>
+
+ <p>Foreigners, on the other hand, usually deny them the
+ possession of philosophical ability.</p>
+
+ <p>Dr. Peery, in his volume entitled "The Gist of Japan," says:
+ "By nature, I think, they are more inclined to be practical
+ than speculative. Abstract theological ideas have little charm
+ for them. There is a large element in Japan that simulates a
+ taste for philosophical study. Philosophy and metaphysics are
+ regarded by them as the profoundest of all branches of
+ learning, and in order to be thought learned they profess great
+ interest in these studies. Not only are the highly metaphysical
+ philosophies of the East studied, but the various systems of
+ the West are looked into likewise. Many of the people are
+ capable of appreciating these philosophies, too; but they do it
+ for a purpose." Other writers make the same general charge of
+ philosophical incompetence. One or two quotations from Dr.
+ Knox's writings were given on this subject, under the head of
+ Imitation.<a name='FNanchor_AM_39'
+ id="FNanchor_AM_39"></a><a href='#Footnote_AM_39'><sup>[AM]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>What, then, are the facts? Do the Japanese excel in
+ <a name='Page_226'
+ id="Page_226"></a>philosophy, or are they conspicuously
+ deficient? In either case, is the characteristic due to
+ essential race nature or to some other cause?</p>
+
+ <p>We must first distinguish between interest in philosophical
+ problems and ability in constructing original philosophical
+ systems. In this distinction is to be found the reconciliation
+ of many conflicting views. Many who argue for Japanese
+ philosophical ability are impressed with the interest they show
+ in metaphysical problems, while those who deny them this
+ ability are impressed with the dependence of Japanese on
+ Chinese philosophy.</p>
+
+ <p>The discussions of the previous chapter as to the nature of
+ Japanese education and its tendency to develop the lower at the
+ expense of the higher mental faculties, have prepared us not to
+ expect any particularly brilliant history of Japanese
+ philosophy. Such is indeed the case. Primitive Japanese
+ cosmology does not differ in any important respect from the
+ primitive cosmology of other races. The number of those in Old
+ Japan who took a living interest in distinctly metaphysical
+ problems is indisputably small. While we admit them to have
+ manifested some independence and even originality, as Professor
+ Inouye urges,<a name='FNanchor_AN_40'
+ id="FNanchor_AN_40"></a><a href='#Footnote_AN_40'><sup>[AN]</sup></a>
+ yet it can hardly be maintained that they struck out any
+ conspicuously original philosophical systems. There is no
+ distinctively Japanese philosophy.</p>
+
+ <p>These facts, however, should not blind us to the distinction
+ between latent ability in philosophical thought and the
+ manifestation of that ability. The old social order, with its
+ defective education, its habit of servile intellectual
+ dependence on ancestors, and its social and legal condemnation
+ of independent originality, particularly in the realm of
+ thought, was a mighty incubus on speculative philosophy.
+ Furthermore, crude science and distorted history could not
+ provide the requisite material from which to construct a
+ philosophical interpretation of the universe that would appeal
+ to the modern Occidental.</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In spite, however, of social and educational hindrances,
+ <a name='Page_227'
+ id="Page_227"></a>the Japanese have given ample evidence of
+ interest in metaphysical problems and of more or less
+ ability in their solution. Religious constructions of the
+ future life, conceptions as to the relations of gods and men
+ and the universe, are in fact results of the metaphysical
+ operations of the mind. Primitive Japan was not without
+ these. As she developed in civilization and came in contact
+ with Chinese and Hindu metaphysical thought, she acquired
+ their characteristic systems. Buddhist first, and later
+ Confucian, metaphysics dominated the thought of her educated
+ men. In view of the highly metaphysical character of
+ Buddhist doctrines and the interest they have produced at
+ least among the better trained priests, the assertion that
+ the Japanese have no ability in metaphysics cannot be
+ maintained.</p>
+
+ <p>At one period in the history of Buddhism in Japan, prolonged
+ public discussions were all the fashion. Priests traveled from
+ temple to temple to engage in public debate. The ablest debater
+ was the abbot, and he had to be ready to face any opponent who
+ might appear. If a stranger won, the abbot yielded his place
+ and his living to the victor. Many an interesting story is told
+ of those times, and of the crowds that would gather to hear the
+ debates. But our point is that this incident in the national
+ life shows the appreciation of the people for philosophical
+ questions. And although that particular fashion has long since
+ passed away, the national interest in discussions and arguments
+ still exists. No monks of the West ever enjoyed hair-splitting
+ arguments more than do many of the Japanese. They are as adept
+ at mental refinements and logical juggling as any people of the
+ West, though possibly the Hindus excel them.</p>
+
+ <p>If it be said that Confucianism was not only
+ non-metaphysical, but uniquely practical, and for this reason
+ found wide acceptance in Japan, the reply must be first that,
+ professing to be non-metaphysical, it nevertheless had a real
+ metaphysical system of thought in the background to which it
+ ever appealed for authority, a system, be it noted, more in
+ accord with modern science and philosophy than Buddhist
+ metaphysics; and secondly, although Confucianism became the
+ bulwark of the state <a name='Page_228'
+ id="Page_228"></a>and the accepted faith of the samurai, it
+ was limited to them. The vast majority of the nation clung
+ to their primitive Buddhistic cosmology. That Confucianism
+ rested on a clearly implied and more or less clearly
+ expressed metaphysical foundation may be seen in the
+ quotations from the writings of Muro Kyuso which are given
+ in chapter xxiv. We should note that the revolt of the
+ educated classes of Japan from Buddhism three hundred years
+ ago, and their general adoption of Confucian doctrine, was
+ partly in the interests of religion and partly in the
+ interests of metaphysics. In both respects the progressive
+ part of the nation had become dissatisfied with Buddhism.
+ The revolt proves not lack of religious or metaphysical
+ interest and insight, but rather the reverse.</p>
+
+ <p>Not a little of the teaching of Shushi (1130-1200 A.D.) and
+ of Oyomei (1472-1528 A.D.), Chinese philosophical expounders of
+ Confucianism, is metaphysical. The doctrine of the former was
+ widely studied and was the orthodox doctrine in Japan for more
+ than two centuries, all other doctrine and philosophy being
+ forbidden by the state. It is true that the central interest in
+ this philosophical instruction was the ethical. It was felt
+ that the entire ethical system rested on the acceptance of a
+ particular metaphysical system. But so far from detracting from
+ our argument this statement rather adds. For in what land has
+ not the prime interest in metaphysics been ethical? A study of
+ the history of philosophy shows clearly that philosophy and
+ metaphysics arose out of religious and ethical problems, and
+ have ever maintained their hold on thinking men, because of
+ their mutually vital relations. In Japan it has not been
+ otherwise. If anyone doubts this he should read the Japanese
+ philosophers&mdash;in the original, if possible; if not, then
+ in such translations and extracts as Dr. Knox has given us in
+ his "A Japanese Philosopher," and Mr. Aston in his "Japanese
+ Literature." The ethical interest is primary, and the
+ metaphysical interest is secondary,<a name='FNanchor_AO_41'
+ id="FNanchor_AO_41"></a><a href='#Footnote_AO_41'><sup>[AO]</sup></a>
+ to be sure, but not to be denied.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_229'
+ id="Page_229"></a>Occidental philosophy has found many
+ earnest and capable Japanese students. The Imperial
+ University has a strong corps of philosophical instructors.
+ Occidental metaphysical thought, both materialistic and
+ idealistic, has found many congenial minds. Indeed, it is
+ not rash to say that in the thought of New Japan the
+ distinguishing Oriental metaphysical conceptions of the
+ universe have been entirely displaced by those of the West.
+ Christians, in particular, have entirely abandoned the old
+ polytheistic, pantheistic, and fatalistic metaphysics and
+ have adopted thoroughgoing monotheism.</p>
+
+ <p>Ability to understand and sufficient interest to study
+ through philosophical and metaphysical systems of foreign lands
+ indicate a mental development of no slight order, whatever may
+ be the ability, or lack of it, in making original contributions
+ to the subject. That educated Japanese have shown real ability
+ in the former sense can hardly be doubted by those who have
+ read the writings of such men as Goro Takahashi, ex-president
+ Hiroyuki Kato, Prof. Yujiro Motora, Prof. Rikizo Nakashima, or
+ Dr. Tetsujiro Inouye. The philosophical brightness of many of
+ Japan's foreign as well as home-trained scholars argues well
+ for the philosophical ability of the nation.</p>
+
+ <p>A recent conversation with a young Japanese gives point to
+ what has just been said. The young man suddenly appeared at my
+ study door, and, with unusually brief salutations, said that he
+ wished me to talk to him about religion. In answer to questions
+ he explained that he had been one of my pupils ten years ago in
+ the Kumamoto Boys' School; that he had been baptized as a
+ Christian at that time, but had become cold and filled with
+ doubts; that he had been studying ever since, having at one
+ time given considerable attention to the Zen sect of Buddhism;
+ but that he had found no satisfaction there. He accordingly
+ wished to study Christianity more carefully. For three hours we
+ talked, he asking questions about the Christian conception of
+ God, of the universe, of man, of sin, of evolution, of Christ,
+ of salvation, of the object of life, of God's purpose in
+ <a name='Page_230'
+ id="Page_230"></a>creation, of the origin and nature of the
+ Bible. Toward the latter part of our conversation, referring
+ to one idea expressed, he said, "That is about what Hegel
+ held, is it not?" As he spoke he opened his knapsack, which
+ I then saw to be full of books, and drew out an English
+ translation of Hegel's "Philosophy of History"; he had
+ evidently read it carefully, making his notes in Japanese on
+ the margin. I asked him if he had read it through. "Yes," he
+ replied, "three times." He also incidentally informed me
+ that he had thought of entering our mission theological
+ training class during the previous winter, but that he was
+ then in the midst of the study of the philosophy of Kant,
+ and had accordingly decided to defer entering until the
+ autumn. How thoroughly he had mastered these, the most
+ profound and abstruse metaphysicians that the West can
+ boast, I cannot state. But this at least is clear; his
+ interest in them was real and lasting. And in his
+ conversation he showed keen appreciation of philosophical
+ problems. It is to be noted also that he was a self-taught
+ philosopher&mdash;for he had attended no school since he
+ studied elementary English, ten years before, while a lad of
+ less than twenty.</p>
+
+ <p>As a sample of the kind of men I not infrequently meet, let
+ me cite the case of a young business man who once called on me
+ in the hotel at Imabari, popularly called "the little
+ philosopher." He wished to talk about the problem of the future
+ life and to ask my personal belief in the matter. He said that
+ he believed in God and in Jesus as His unique son and revealer,
+ but that he found great difficulty in believing in the
+ continued life of the soul after death. His difficulty arose
+ from the problems of the nature of future thinking; shall we
+ continue to think in terms of sense perception, such as time,
+ space, form, color, pleasure, and pain? If not, how can we
+ think at all? And can we then remember our present life? If we
+ do, then the future life will not be essentially different from
+ this, <i>i.e.</i>, we must still have physical senses, and
+ continue to live in an essentially physical world. Here was a
+ set of objections to the <a name='Page_231'
+ id="Page_231"></a>doctrine of the future life that I have
+ never heard as much as mentioned by any Occidental youth.
+ Though without doubt not original with him, yet he must have
+ had in some degree both philosophical ability and interest
+ in order to appreciate their force and to seek their
+ solution.</p>
+
+ <p>In conversation not long since with a Buddhist priest of the
+ Tendai sect, after responding to his request for a criticism of
+ Buddhism, I asked him for a similarly frank criticism of
+ Christianity. To my surprise, he said that while Christianity
+ was far ahead of Buddhism in its practical parts and in its
+ power to mold character, it was deficient in philosophical
+ insight and interest. This led to a prolonged conversation on
+ Buddhistic philosophy, in which he explained the doctrines of
+ the "Ku-ge-chu," and the "Usa and Musa." Without attempting to
+ explain them here, I may say that the first is amazingly like
+ Hegel's "absolute nothing," with its thesis, antithesis, and
+ synthesis, and the second a psychological distinction between
+ volitional and spontaneous emotions.</p>
+
+ <p>In discussing Japanese philosophical ability, a point often
+ forgotten is the rarity of philosophical ability or even
+ interest in the West. But a small proportion of college
+ students have the slightest interest in philosophical or
+ metaphysical problems. The majority do not understand what the
+ distinctive metaphysical problems are. In my experience it is
+ easier to enter into a conversation with an educated man in
+ Japan on a philosophical question than with an American. If
+ interest in philosophical and metaphysical questions in the
+ West is rare, original ability in their investigation is still
+ rarer.</p>
+
+ <p>We conclude, then, that in regard to philosophical ability
+ the Japanese have no marked racial characteristic
+ differentiating them from other races. Although they have not
+ developed a distinctive national philosophy, this is not due to
+ inherent philosophical incompetence. Nor, on the other hand, is
+ the relatively wide interest now manifest in philosophical
+ problems <a name='Page_232'
+ id="Page_232"></a>attributable to the inherent philosophical
+ ability of the race. So far as Japan is either behind or in
+ advance of other races, in this respect, it is due to her
+ social order and social inheritance, and particularly to the
+ nature, methods, and aims of the educational system, but not
+ to her intrinsic psychic inheritance.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXI'
+ id="XXI"></a><a name='Page_233'
+ id="Page_233"></a>XXI</h2>
+
+ <h3>IMAGINATION</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In no respect, perhaps, have the Japanese been more
+ sweepingly criticised by foreigners than in regard to their
+ powers of imagination and idealism. Unqualified generalizations
+ not only assert the entire lack of these powers, but they
+ consider this lack to be the distinguishing inherent mental
+ characteristic of the race. The Japanese are called "prosaic,"
+ "matter-of-fact," "practical," "unimaginative."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Walter Dening, describing Japanese mental
+ characteristics, says:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"Neither their past history nor their prevailing tastes
+ show any tendency to idealism. They are lovers of the
+ practical and the real; neither the fancies of Goethe nor
+ the reveries of Hegel are to their liking. Our poetry and
+ our philosophy and the mind that appreciates them are alike
+ the results of a network of subtle influences to which the
+ Japanese are comparative strangers. It is maintained by
+ some, and we think justly, that the lack of idealism in the
+ Japanese mind renders the life of even the most cultivated
+ a mechanical, humdrum affair when compared with that of
+ Westerners. The Japanese cannot understand why our
+ controversialists should wax so fervent over psychological,
+ ethical, religious, and philosophical questions, failing to
+ perceive that this fervency is the result of the intense
+ interest taken in such subjects. The charms that the
+ cultured Western mind finds in the world of fancy and
+ romance, in questions themselves, irrespective of their
+ practical bearings, is for the most part unintelligible to
+ the Japanese."<a name='FNanchor_AP_42'
+ id="FNanchor_AP_42"></a><a href='#Footnote_AP_42'><sup>[AP]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_234'
+ id="Page_234"></a>Mr. Percival Lowell expends an entire
+ chapter in his "Soul of the Far East," in showing how
+ important imagination is as a factor in art, religion,
+ science, and civilization generally, and how strikingly
+ deficient Japanese are in this faculty. "The Far Orientals,"
+ he argues, "ought to be a particularly unimaginative set of
+ people. Such is precisely what they are. Their lack of
+ imagination is a well-recognized
+ fact."<a name='FNanchor_AQ_43'
+ id="FNanchor_AQ_43"></a><a href='#Footnote_AQ_43'><sup>[AQ]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Aston, characterizing Japanese literature, says:</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"A feature which strikingly distinguishes the Japanese
+ poetic muse from that of Western nations is a certain lack
+ of imaginative power. The Japanese are slow to endow
+ inanimate objects with life. Shelley's 'Cloud,' for
+ example, contains enough matter of this kind for many
+ volumes of Japanese verse. Such lines as:</p>
+
+ <p class="poetry">'From my wings are shaken<br />
+ The dews that waken<br />
+ The sweet buds every one,<br />
+ When rocked to rest<br />
+ On their mother's breast<br />
+ As she dances about the sun,'</p>
+
+ <p>would appear to them ridiculously overcharged with
+ metaphor, if not absolutely
+ unintelligible."<a name='FNanchor_AR_44'
+ id="FNanchor_AR_44"></a><a href='#Footnote_AR_44'><sup>[AR]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, some writers have called attention to the
+ contrary element of Japanese mental nature. Prof. Ladd, for
+ instance, maintains that the characteristic mental trait of the
+ Japanese is their sentimentality. He has shown how their lives
+ are permeated with and regulated by sentiment. Ancestral
+ worship, patriotism, Imperial apotheosis, friendship, are
+ fashioned by idealizing sentiment. In our chapters on the
+ emotional elements of Japanese character we have considered how
+ widespread and powerful these ideals and sentiments have been
+ and still are.</p>
+
+ <p>Writers who compare the Chinese with the Japanese remark the
+ practical business nature of the former and the impractical,
+ visionary nature of the latter.</p>
+
+ <p>For a proper estimate of our problem we should
+ <a name='Page_235'
+ id="Page_235"></a>clearly distinguish between the various
+ forms of imagination. It reveals itself not merely in art
+ and literature, in fantastic conception, in personification
+ and metaphor, but in every important department of human
+ life. It is the tap-root of progress, as Mr. Lowell well
+ points out. It pictures an ideal life in advance of the
+ actual, which ideal becomes the object of effort. The forms
+ of imagination may, therefore, be classified according to
+ the sphere of life in which it appears. In addition to the
+ poetic fancy and the idealism of art and literature
+ generally, we must distinguish the work of imagination in
+ the &aelig;sthetic, in the moral, in the religious, in the
+ scientific, and in the political life. The manifestation of
+ the imaginative faculty in art and in literature is only one
+ part of the &aelig;sthetic imagination.</p>
+
+ <p>In studying Japanese &aelig;sthetic characteristics, we
+ noted how unbalanced was the development of their
+ &aelig;sthetic sense. This proposition of unbalanced
+ development applies with equal force to the imaginative faculty
+ as a whole. Conspicuously lacking in certain directions, it is
+ as conspicuously prominent in others. Rules of etiquette are
+ the products of the &aelig;sthetic imagination, and in what
+ land has etiquette been more developed than in feudal Japan?
+ Japanese imagination has been particularly active in the
+ political world. The passionate loyalty of retainers to their
+ lord, of samurai to their daimyo, of all to their "kuni," or
+ clan, in ancient times, and now, of the people to their
+ Emperor, are the results of a vivid political idealizing
+ imagination. Imperial apotheosis is a combination of the
+ political and religious imagination. And in what land has the
+ apotheosizing imagination been more active than in Japan?
+ Ambition and self-conceit are likewise dependent on an active
+ imaginative faculty.</p>
+
+ <p>There can be no doubt the writers quoted above have drawn
+ attention to some salient features of Japanese art. In the
+ literature of the past, the people have not manifested that
+ high literary imagination that we discover in the best
+ literature of many other nations.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_236'
+ id="Page_236"></a>This fact, however, will not justify the
+ sweeping generalizations based upon it. Judging from the
+ pre-Elizabethan literature, who would have expected the
+ brilliancy of the Elizabethan period? Similarly in regard to
+ the Victorian period of English literature. Because the
+ Japanese have failed in the past to produce literature equal
+ to the best of Western lands, we are not justified in
+ asserting that she never will and that she is inherently
+ deficient in literary imagination. In regard to certain
+ forms of light fancy, all admit that Japanese poems are
+ unsurpassed by those of other lands. Japanese amative poetry
+ is noted for its delicate fancies and plays on words
+ exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, of translation, or
+ even of expression, to one unacquainted with the
+ language.</p>
+
+ <p>The deficiencies of Japanese literature, therefore, are not
+ such as to warrant the conclusion that they both mark and make
+ a fundamental difference in the race mind. For such differences
+ as exist are capable of a sociological explanation.</p>
+
+ <p>The prosaic matter-of-factness of the Japanese mind has been
+ so widely emphasized that we need not dwell upon it here. There
+ is, however, serious danger of over-emphasis, a danger into
+ which all writers fall who make it the ground for sweeping
+ condemnatory criticism.</p>
+
+ <p>They are right in ascribing to the average Japanese a large
+ amount of unimaginative matter-of-factness, but they are
+ equally wrong in unqualified dogmatic generalizations. They
+ base their inductions on insufficient facts, a habit to which
+ foreigners are peculiarly liable, through ignorance of the
+ language and also of the inner thoughts and life of the
+ people.</p>
+
+ <p>The prosaic nature of the Japanese has not impressed me so
+ much as the visionary tendency of the people, and their
+ idealism. The Japanese themselves count this idealism a
+ national characteristic. They say that they are theorizers, and
+ numberless experiences confirm this view.</p>
+
+ <p>They project great undertakings; they scheme; they discuss
+ contingencies; they make enormous plans; all with an air of
+ seriousness and yet with a nonchalance which shows a
+ semi-conscious sense of the unreality of <a name='Page_237'
+ id="Page_237"></a>their proposals. In regard to Korea and
+ China and Formosa, they have hatched political and business
+ schemes innumerable. The kaleidoscopic character of Japanese
+ politics is in part due to the rapid succession of visionary
+ schemes. One idea reigns for a season, only to be displaced
+ by another, causing constant readjustment of political
+ parties. Frequent attacks on government foreign policy
+ depend for their force on lordly ideas as to the part Japan
+ should play in international relations. Writing about the
+ recent discussions in the public press over the question of
+ introducing foreign capital into Japan, one contributor to
+ the <i>Far East</i> remarks that "It has been treated more
+ from a theoretical than from a practical standpoint.... This
+ seems to me to arise from a peculiar trait of Japanese mind
+ which is prone to dwell solely on the theoretical side until
+ the march of events compels a sudden leap toward the
+ practical." This visionary faculty of the Japanese is
+ especially conspicuous in the daily press. Editorials on
+ foreign affairs and on the relations of Japan to the world
+ are full of it.</p>
+
+ <p>I venture to jot down a few illustrations of impractical
+ idealism out of my personal knowledge. An evangelist in the
+ employ of the Kumamoto station exemplified this visionary trait
+ in a marked degree. Nervous in the extreme, he was constantly
+ having new ideas. For some reason his attention was turned to
+ the subject of opium and the evils China was suffering from the
+ drug, forced on her by England. Forthwith he came to me for
+ books on the subject; he wished to become fully informed, and
+ then he proposed to go to China and preach on the subject. For
+ a few weeks he was full of his enterprise. It seemed to him
+ that if he were only allowed the opportunity he could convince
+ the Chinese of their error, and the English of their crime. One
+ of his plans was to go to England and expostulate with them on
+ their un-Christian dealings with China. A few weeks later his
+ attention was turned to the wrongs inflicted on the poor on
+ account of their ignorance about law and their inability to get
+ legal assistance. This idea held him longer than the
+ previous.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_238'
+ id="Page_238"></a>He desired to study law and become a
+ public pleader in order to defend the poor against unjust
+ men of wealth. In his theological ideas he was likewise
+ extreme and changeable; swinging from positive and most
+ emphatic belief to extreme doubt, and later back again. In
+ his periods of triumphant faith it seemed to him that he
+ could teach the world; and his expositions of truth were
+ extremely interesting. He proposed to formulate a new
+ theology that would dissolve forever the difficulties of the
+ old theology. In his doubts, too, he was no less interesting
+ and assertive. His hold on practical matters was exceedingly
+ slender. His salary, though considerably larger than that of
+ most of the evangelists, was never sufficient. He would
+ spend lavishly at the beginning of the month so long as he
+ had the money, and then would pinch himself or else fall
+ into debt.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, the head of the Kumamoto Boys' School
+ during the period of its fierce struggles and final collapse,
+ whom I have already referred to as the
+ Hero-Principal,<a name='FNanchor_AS_45'
+ id="FNanchor_AS_45"></a><a href='#Footnote_AS_45'><sup>[AS]</sup></a>
+ is another example of this impractical high-strung
+ visionariness. No sooner had he reached Kumamoto, than there
+ opened before our enchanted eyes the vision of this little
+ insignificant school blooming out into a great university.
+ True, there had been some of this bombast before his
+ arrival; but it took on new and gorgeous form under his
+ master hand. The airs that he put on, displaying his
+ (fraudulent) Ph.D., and talking about his schemes, are
+ simply amusing to contemplate from this distance. His
+ studies in the philosophy of religion had so clarified his
+ mind that he was going to reform both Christianity and
+ Buddhism. His sermons of florid eloquence and vociferous
+ power, never less than an hour in length, were as marked in
+ ambitious thoughts as in pulpit mannerisms. He threw a spell
+ over all who came in contact with him. He overawed them by
+ his vehemence and tremendous earnestness and insistence on
+ perfect obedience to his masterful will. In one of his
+ climactic sermons, after charging missionaries with teaching
+ dangerous errors, he said <a name='Page_239'
+ id="Page_239"></a>that while some were urging that the need
+ of the times was to "his back to Luther," and others were
+ saying, that we must "his back to Christ" (these English
+ words being brought into his Japanese sermon), they were
+ both wrong; we must "hie back to God"; and he prophesied a
+ reformation in religion, beginning there in Kumamoto, in
+ that school, which would be far and away more important in
+ the history of the world than was the Lutheran
+ Reformation.</p>
+
+ <p>The recent history of Christianity in Japan supplies many
+ striking instances of visionary plans and visionary
+ enthusiasts. The confident expectation entertained during the
+ eighties of Christianizing the nation before the close of the
+ century was such a vision. Another, arising a few years later,
+ was the importance of returning all foreign missionaries to
+ their native lands and of intrusting the entire evangelistic
+ work to native Christians, and committing to them the
+ administration of the immense sums thus set free. For it was
+ assumed by these brilliant Utopians that the amount of money
+ expended in supporting missionaries would be available for
+ aggressive work should the missionaries be withdrawn, and that
+ the Christians in foreign lands would continue to pour in their
+ contributions for the evangelization of Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Still another instance of utopian idealism is the vision
+ that Japan will give birth to that perfect religion, meeting
+ the demands of both heart and head, for which the world waits.
+ In January, 1900, Prof. T. Inouye, of the Imperial University,
+ after showing quite at length, and to his own satisfaction, the
+ inadequacy of all existing religions to meet the ethical and
+ religious situation in Japan, maintained this ambitious
+ view.</p>
+
+ <p>Some Japanese Christians are declaring the need of
+ Japonicized Christianity. "Did not the Greeks transform
+ Christianity before they accepted it? And did not the Romans,
+ and finally the Germans, do the same? Before Japan will or can
+ accept the religion of Christ, it must be Japonicized." So they
+ argue; "and who so fit to do it as we?" lies in the background
+ of their thought.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_240'
+ id="Page_240"></a>Many a Christian pastor and evangelist,
+ although not sharing the ambition of Prof. Inouye,
+ nevertheless glows with the confident expectation that
+ Japonicized Christianity will be its most perfect type. "No
+ one need wonder if Japan should be destined to present to
+ the world the best type of Christianity that has yet
+ appeared in history," writes an exponent of this view, at
+ one time a Christian pastor. In this connection the reader
+ may recall what was said in chapter xiv. on Japanese
+ Ambition and Conceit, qualities depending on the power of
+ seeing visions. We note, in passing, the optimistic spirit
+ of New Japan. This is in part due, no doubt, to ignorance of
+ the problems that lie athwart their future progress, but it
+ is also due to the vivid imaginative faculty which pictures
+ for them the glories of the coming decades when they shall
+ lead not only the Orient, but also the Occident, in every
+ line of civilization, material and spiritual, moral and
+ religious. A dull, unimaginative, prosaic nature cannot be
+ exuberantly optimistic. It is evident that writers who
+ proclaim the unimaginative matter-of-factness of the
+ Japanese as universal and absolute, have failed to see a
+ large side of Japanese inner life.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Percival Lowell states that the root of all the
+ peculiarities of Oriental peoples is their marked lack of
+ imagination. This is the faculty that "may in a certain sense
+ be said to be the creator of the world." The lack of this
+ faculty, according to Mr. Lowell, is the root of the Japanese
+ lack of originality and invention; it gives the whole Oriental
+ civilization its characteristic features. He cites a few words
+ to prove the essentially prosaic character of the Japanese
+ mind, such as "up-down" for "pass" (which word, by the way, is
+ his own invention, and reveals his ignorance of the language),
+ "the being (so) is difficult," in place of "thank you." "A lack
+ of any fanciful ideas," he says, "is one of the most salient
+ traits of all Far Eastern peoples, if indeed a sad dearth can
+ properly be called salient. Indirectly, their want of
+ imagination betrays itself in their everyday sayings and
+ doings, and more directly in every branch of thought." I note,
+ in passing, that Mr. Lowell <a name='Page_241'
+ id="Page_241"></a>does not distinguish between fancy and
+ imagination. Though allied faculties, they are distinct. Mr.
+ Lowell's extreme estimate of the prosaic nature of the
+ Japanese mind I cannot share. Many letters received from
+ Japanese friends refute this view by their fanciful
+ expressions. The Japanese language, too, has many fanciful
+ terms. Why "pass" is any more imaginative than "up-down," to
+ accept Mr. Lowell's etymology, or "the being (so) is
+ difficult" than "thank you," I do not see. To me the reverse
+ proposition would seem the truer. And are not
+ "breaking-horns" for "on purpose," and "breaking-bones" for
+ "with great difficulty," distinctly imaginative terms, more
+ imaginative than the English? In the place of our English
+ term "sun," the Japanese have several alternative terms in
+ common use, such as "<i>hi</i>," "day," "<i>Nichirin</i>,"
+ "day-ball," "<i>Ten-to Sama</i>," "the god of heaven's
+ light;" and for "moon," it has "<i>tsuki</i>," "month,"
+ "<i>getsu-rin</i>," "month ball." The names given to her
+ men-of-war also indicate a fanciful nature. The torpedo
+ destroyers are named "Dragon-fly," "Full Moon," "The Moon in
+ the Cloud," "Seabeach," "Dawn of Day," "Clustering Clouds,"
+ "Break of Day," "Ripples," "Evening Mist," "Dragon's Lamp,"
+ "Falcon," "Magpie," "White-naped Crane," and "White Hawk."
+ Surely, it cannot be maintained that the Japanese are
+ utterly lacking in fancy.</p>
+
+ <p>Distinguishing between fancy as "the power of forming
+ pleasing, graceful, whimsical, or odd mental images, or of
+ combining them with little regard to rational processes of
+ construction," and imagination, in its more philosophical use,
+ as "the act of constructive intellect in grouping the materials
+ of knowledge or thought into new, original, and rational
+ systems," we assert without fear of successful contradiction,
+ that the Japanese race is not without either of these important
+ mental faculties.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to the preceding illustrations of visionary and
+ fanciful traits, let the reader reflect on the significance of
+ the comic and of caricature in art. Japanese <i>Netsuke</i>
+ (tiny carvings of exquisite skill representing comical men,
+ women, and children) are famous the <a name='Page_242'
+ id="Page_242"></a>world over. Surely, the fancy is the most
+ conspicuous mental characteristic revealed in this branch of
+ Japanese art. In Japanese poetry "a vast number of conceits,
+ more or less pretty," are to be found, likewise manifesting
+ the fancy of both the authors who wrote and the people who
+ were pleased with and preserved their
+ writings.<a name='FNanchor_AT_46'
+ id="FNanchor_AT_46"></a><a href='#Footnote_AT_46'><sup>[AT]</sup></a>
+ The so-called "impersonal habit of the Japanese mind," with
+ a corresponding "lack of personification of abstract
+ qualities," doubtless prevents Japanese literature from
+ rising to the poetic heights attained by Western nations.
+ But this lack does not prove the Japanese mind incapable of
+ such flights. As describing the actual characteristics of
+ the literature of the past the assertion of "a lack of
+ imaginative power" is doubtless fairly correct. But the
+ inherent nature of the Japanese mind cannot be inferred from
+ the deficiencies of its past literature, without first
+ examining the relation between its characteristic features
+ and the nature of the social order and the social
+ inheritance.</p>
+
+ <p>Are the Japanese conspicuously deficient in imagination, in
+ the sense of the definition given above? The constructive
+ imagination is the creator of civilization. Not only art and
+ literature, but, as already noted, science, philosophy,
+ politics, and even the practical arts and prosaic farming are
+ impossible without it. It is the tap-root of invention, of
+ discovery, of originality.</p>
+
+ <p>It is needless to repeat what has been said in previous
+ chapters<a name='FNanchor_AU_47'
+ id="FNanchor_AU_47"></a><a href='#Footnote_AU_47'><sup>[AU]</sup></a>
+ on Japanese imitation, invention, discovery, and
+ originality. Yet, in consideration of the facts there given,
+ are we justified in counting the Japanese so conspicuously
+ deficient in constructive, imagination as to warrant the
+ assertion that such a lack is the fundamental characteristic
+ of the race psychic nature?</p>
+
+ <p>As an extreme case, look for a moment at their
+ imitativeness. Although imitation is considered a proof of
+ deficient originality, and thus of imagination, yet reflection
+ shows that this depends on the nature of the imitation.
+ Japanese imitation has not been, except <a name='Page_243'
+ id="Page_243"></a>possibly for short periods, of that
+ slavish nature which excludes the work of the imagination.
+ Indeed, the impulse to imitation rests on the imagination.
+ But for this faculty picturing the state of bliss or power
+ secured in consequence of adopting this or that feature of
+ an alien civilization, the desire to imitate could not
+ arise. In view, moreover, of the selective nature of
+ Japanese imitation, we are further warranted in ascribing to
+ the people no insignificant development of the
+ imagination.</p>
+
+ <p>In illustration, consider Japan's educational system.
+ Established no doubt on Occidental models, it is nevertheless a
+ distinctly Japanese institution. Its buildings are as
+ characteristically Japonicized Occidental school buildings as
+ are its methods of instruction. Japanese railroads and
+ steamers, likewise constructed in Japan, are similarly
+ Japonicized&mdash;adapted to the needs and conditions of the
+ people. To our eyes this of course signifies no improvement,
+ but assuredly, without such modification, our Western railroads
+ and steamers would be white elephants on their hands, expensive
+ and difficult of operation.</p>
+
+ <p>What now is the sociological interpretation of the foregoing
+ facts? How are the fanciful, visionary, and idealistic
+ characteristics, on the one hand, and, on the other, the
+ prosaic, matter-of-fact, and relatively unimaginative
+ characteristics, related to the social order?</p>
+
+ <p>It is not difficult to account for the presence of
+ accentuated visionariness in Japan. Indeed, this quality is
+ conspicuous among the descendants of the military and literary
+ classes; and this fact furnishes us the clew. "From time
+ immemorial," to use a phrase common on the lips of Japanese
+ historians, up to the present era, the samurai as a class were
+ quite separated from the practical world; they were comfortably
+ supported by their liege lords; entirely relieved from the
+ necessity of toiling for their daily bread, they busied
+ themselves not only with war and physical training, but with
+ literary accomplishments, that required no less strenuous
+ mental exertions.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, in a class thus freed from daily toil,
+ <a name='Page_244'
+ id="Page_244"></a>there was sure to arise a refined system
+ of etiquette and of rank distinctions. Even a few centuries
+ of life would, under such conditions, develop highly nervous
+ individuals in large numbers, hypersensitive in many
+ directions. These men, by the very development of their
+ nervous constitutions, would become the social if not the
+ practical leaders of their class; high-spirited, and with
+ domineering ideas and scheming ambitions, they would set the
+ fashion to all their less nervously developed fellows. Freed
+ from the exacting conditions of a practical life, they would
+ inevitably fly off on tangents more or less impractical,
+ visionary.</p>
+
+ <p>If, therefore, this trait is more marked in Japanese
+ character than in that of many other nations, it may be easily
+ traced to the social order that has ruled this land "from time
+ immemorial." More than any other of her mental characteristics,
+ impractical visionariness may be traced to the development of
+ the nervous organization at the expense of the muscular. This
+ characteristic accordingly may be said to be more inherently a
+ race characteristic than many others that have been mentioned.
+ Yet we should remember that the samurai constitute but a small
+ proportion of the people. According to recent statistics (1895)
+ the entire class to-day numbers but 2,050,000, while the common
+ people number over 40,000,000. It is, furthermore, to be
+ remembered that not all the descendants of the samurai are thus
+ nervously organized. Large numbers have a splendid physical
+ endowment, with no trace of abnormal nervous development. While
+ the old feudal order, with its constant carrying of swords, and
+ the giving of honor to the most impetuous, naturally tended to
+ push the most high-strung individuals into the forefront and to
+ set them up as models for the imitation of the young, the
+ social order now regnant in Japan faces in the other direction.
+ Such visionary men are increasingly relegated to the rear.
+ Their approach to insanity is recognized and condemned. Even
+ this trait of character, therefore, which seems to be rooted in
+ brain and nerve structure is, nevertheless, more subject to the
+ prevailing social order than would at first seem possible.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_245'
+ id="Page_245"></a>Its rise we have seen was due to that
+ order, and the setting aside of these characteristics as
+ ideals at least, and thus the bringing into prominence of
+ more normal and healthy ideals, is due to the coming in of a
+ new order.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese prosaic matter-of-factness may similarly be shown
+ to have intimate relations to the nature of the social order.
+ Oppressive military feudalism, keeping the vast majority of the
+ people in practical bondage, physical, intellectual, and
+ spiritual, would necessarily render their lives and thoughts
+ narrow in range and spiritless in nature. Such a system crushes
+ out hope. From sunrise to sunset, "<i>nembyaku nenju</i>," "for
+ a hundred years and through all the year," the humdrum duties
+ of daily life were the only psychic stimuli of the absolutely
+ uneducated masses. Without ambition, without self-respect,
+ without education or any stimulus for the higher mental life,
+ what possible manifestation of the higher powers of the mind
+ could be expected? Should some "sport" appear by chance, it
+ could not long escape the sword of domineering samurai. Even
+ though originally possessing some degree of imagination,
+ cringing fear of military masters, with the continuous
+ elimination by ruthless slaughter of the more idealizing, less
+ submissive, and more self-assertive individuals of the
+ non-military classes, would finally produce a dull, imitative,
+ unimaginative, and matter-of-fact class such as we find in the
+ hereditary laboring and merchant classes.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, Japanese civilization, like that of the entire
+ Orient, with its highly communalized social order, is an
+ expression of passive submission to superior authority.
+ Although an incomplete characterization, there is still much
+ truth in saying that the Orient is an expression of Fate, the
+ Occident of Freedom. We have seen that a better contrasted
+ characterization is found in the terms communal and individual.
+ The Orient has known nothing of individualism. It has not
+ valued the individual nor sought his elevation and freedom. In
+ every way, on the contrary, it has repressed and opposed him.
+ The high development of the individual culminating in powerful
+ personality has been an exceptional <a name='Page_246'
+ id="Page_246"></a>occurrence, due to special circumstances.
+ A communal social order, often repressing and invariably
+ failing to evoke the higher human faculties, must express
+ its real nature in the language, literature, and customs of
+ the people. Thus in our chapter on the &AElig;sthetic
+ Characteristics of the Japanese<a name='FNanchor_AV_48'
+ id="FNanchor_AV_48"></a><a href='#Footnote_AV_48'><sup>[AV]</sup></a>
+ we saw how the higher forms of literature were dependent on
+ the development of manhood and on a realization of his
+ nature. A communal social order despising, or at least
+ ignoring the individual, cannot produce the highest forms of
+ literature or art, because it does not possess the highest
+ forms of psychic development. Take from Western life all
+ that rests on or springs from the principles of individual
+ worth, freedom, and immortality, and how much of value or
+ sublimity will remain? The absence from Japanese literature
+ and language of the higher forms of fancy, metaphor, and
+ personification on the one hand, and, on the other, the
+ presence of widespread prosaic matter-of-factness, are thus
+ intimately related to the communal nature of Japan's long
+ dominant social order.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly, in regard to the constructive imagination, whose
+ conspicuous lack in Japan is universally asserted by foreign
+ critics, we reply first that the assertion is an exaggeration,
+ and secondly, that so far as it is fact, it is intimately
+ related to the social order. In our discussions concerning
+ Japanese Intellectuality and Philosophical
+ Ability,<a name='FNanchor_AW_49'
+ id="FNanchor_AW_49"></a><a href='#Footnote_AW_49'><sup>[AW]</sup></a>
+ we saw how intimate a relation exists between the social
+ order, particularly as expressed in its educational system,
+ and the development of the higher mental faculties. Now a
+ moment's reflection will show how the constructive
+ imagination, belonging as it does to the higher faculties,
+ was suppressed by the system of mechanical and superficial
+ education required by the social order. Religion
+ apotheosized ancestral knowledge and customs, thus
+ effectively condemning all conscious use of this faculty. So
+ far as it was used, it was under the guise of reviving old
+ knowledge or of expounding it more completely.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_247'
+ id="Page_247"></a>This, however, has been the experience of
+ every race in certain stages of its development. Such
+ periods have been conspicuously deficient in powerful
+ literature, progressive science, penetrating philosophy, or
+ developing political life. When a nation has once entered
+ such a social order it becomes stagnant, its further
+ development is arrested. The activity of the higher
+ faculties of the mind are in abeyance, but not destroyed. It
+ needs the electric shock of contact and conflict with
+ foreign races to startle the race out of its fatal repose
+ and start it on new lines of progress by demanding, on pain
+ of death, or at least of racial subordination, the
+ introduction of new elements into its social order by a
+ renewed exercise of the constructive imagination. For
+ without such action of the constructive imagination a
+ radical and voluntary modification of the dominant social
+ order is impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Japan experienced this electric shock and New Japan is
+ the result. She is thus a living witness to the inaccuracy of
+ those sweeping generalizations as to her inherent deficiency of
+ constructive imagination.</p>
+
+ <p>It is by no means our contention that Japanese imagination
+ is now as widely and profoundly exercised as that of the
+ leading Western nations. We merely contend that the exercise of
+ this mental faculty is intimately related to the nature of the
+ whole social order; that under certain circumstances this
+ important faculty may be so suppressed as to give the
+ impression to superficial observers of entire absence, and that
+ with a new environment necessitating a new social order, this
+ faculty may again be brought into activity.</p>
+
+ <p>The inevitable conclusion of the above line of thought is
+ that the activity and the manifestation of the higher faculties
+ is so intimately related to the nature of the social order as
+ to prevent our attributing any particular mental
+ characteristics to a race as its inherent and unchangeable
+ nature. The psychic characteristics of a race at any given time
+ are the product of the inherited social order. To transform
+ those characteristics changes in the social order, introduced
+ either from without, or through individuals within the race,
+ are alone <a name='Page_248'
+ id="Page_248"></a>needful. This completes our specific study
+ of the intellectual characteristics of the Japanese. It may
+ seem, as it undoubtedly is, quite fragmentary. But we have
+ purposely omitted all reference to those characteristics
+ which the Japanese admittedly have in common with other
+ races. We have attempted the consideration of only the more
+ outstanding characteristics by which they seem to be
+ differentiated from other races. We have attempted to show
+ that in so far as they are different, the difference is due
+ not to inherent psychic nature transmitted by organic
+ heredity, but to the nature of the social order, transmitted
+ by social heredity.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXII'
+ id="XXII"></a><a name='Page_249'
+ id="Page_249"></a>XXII</h2>
+
+ <h3>MORAL IDEALS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Even a slight study of Japanese history suffices to show
+ that the faculty of moral discrimination was highly developed
+ in certain directions. In what land have the ideal and practice
+ of loyalty been higher? The heroes most lauded by the Japanese
+ to-day are those who have proved their loyalty by the sacrifice
+ of their lives. When Masashige Kusunoki waged a hopeless war on
+ behalf of one branch of the then divided dynasty, and finally
+ preferred to die by his own hand rather than endure the sight
+ of a victorious rebel, he is considered to have exhibited the
+ highest possible evidence of devoted loyalty. One often hears
+ his name in the sermons of Christian preachers as a model
+ worthy of all honor. The patriots of the period immediately
+ preceding the Meiji era, known as the "Kinnoka," some of whom
+ lost their lives because of their devotion to the cause of
+ their then impotent Emperor, are accorded the highest honor the
+ nation can give.</p>
+
+ <p>The teachings of the Japanese concerning the relations that
+ should exist between parents, and children, and, in multitudes
+ of instances, their actual conduct also, can hardly be
+ excelled. We can assert that they have a keen moral faculty,
+ however further study may compel us to pronounce its
+ development and manifestations to be unbalanced.</p>
+
+ <p>Better, however, than generalizations as to the ethical
+ ideals of Japan, past and present, are actual quotations from
+ her moral teachers. The following passages are taken from "A
+ Japanese Philosopher," by Dr. Geo. W. Knox, the larger part of
+ the volume consisting of a translation of one of the works of
+ Muro Kyuso&mdash;who lived from 1658 to 1734. It was during his
+ life that <a name='Page_250'
+ id="Page_250"></a>the famous forty-seven ronin performed
+ their exploit, and Kyu-so gave them the name by which they
+ are still remembered, Gi-shi, the "Righteous Samurai." The
+ purpose of the work is the defense of the Confucian faith
+ and practice, as interpreted by Tei-shu, the philosopher of
+ China whom Japan delighted to honor. It discusses among
+ other things the fundamental principles of ethics, politics,
+ and religion. Dr. Knox has done all earnest Western students
+ of Japanese ethical and religious ideas an inestimable
+ service in the production of this work in English.</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"The 'Way' of Heaven and Earth is the 'Way' of Gyo and
+ Shun [semi-mythical rulers of ancient China idealized by
+ Confucius]; the 'Way' of Gyo and Shun is the 'Way' of
+ Confucius and Mencius, and the 'Way' of Confucius and
+ Mencius is the 'Way' of Tei-Shu. Forsaking Tei-Shu, we
+ cannot find Confucius and Mencius; forsaking Confucius and
+ Mencius, we cannot find Gyo and Shun; and forsaking Gyo and
+ Shun, we cannot find the 'Way' of Heaven and Earth. Do not
+ trust implicitly an aged scholar; but this I know, and
+ therefore I speak. If I say that which is false, may I be
+ instantly punished by Heaven and
+ Earth."<a name='FNanchor_AX_50'
+ id="FNanchor_AX_50"></a><a href='#Footnote_AX_50'><sup>[AX]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Recently I was astounded at the words of a philosopher:
+ 'The "Way" comes not from Heaven,' he said, 'it was
+ invented by the sages. Nor is it in accord with nature; it
+ is a mere matter of &aelig;sthetics and ornament. Of the
+ five relations, only the conjugal is natural, while
+ loyalty, filial obedience, and the rest were invented by
+ the sages, and have been maintained by their authority ever
+ since.' Surely, among all heresies from ancient days until
+ now, none has been so monstrous as
+ this."<a name='FNanchor_AY_51'
+ id="FNanchor_AY_51"></a><a href='#Footnote_AY_51'><sup>[AY]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Kujuro, a lad of fifteen years, quarreled with a
+ neighbor's son over a game of <i>go</i>, lost his
+ self-control, and before he could be seized, drew his sword
+ and cut the boy down. While the wounded boy was under the
+ surgeon's care, Kujuro was in custody, but he showed no
+ fear, and his words and acts were calm beyond his
+ <a name='Page_251'
+ id="Page_251"></a>years. After some days the boy died,
+ and Kujuro was condemned to hara-kiri. The officers in
+ charge gave him a farewell feast the night before he
+ died. He calmly wrote to his mother, took ceremonious
+ farewell of his keeper and all in the house, and then
+ said to the guests: 'I regret to leave you all, and
+ should like to stay and talk till daybreak; but I must
+ not be sleepy when I commit hara-kiri to-morrow, so I'll
+ go to bed at once. Do you stay at your ease and drink
+ the wine.' So he went to his room and fell asleep, all
+ being filled with admiration as they heard him snore. On
+ the morrow he rose early, bathed and dressed himself
+ with care, made all his preparations with perfect
+ calmness, and then, quiet and composed, killed himself.
+ No old, trained, self-possessed samurai could have
+ excelled him. No one who saw it could speak of it for
+ years without tears.... I have told you this that Kujuro
+ may be remembered. It would be shameful were it to be
+ forgotten that so young a boy performed such a
+ deed."<a name='FNanchor_AZ_52'
+ id="FNanchor_AZ_52"></a><a href='#Footnote_AZ_52'><sup>[AZ]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"We are not to cease obeying for the sake of study, nor
+ must we establish the laws before we begin to obey. In
+ obedience we are to establish its Tightness and
+ wrongness."<a name='FNanchor_BA_53'
+ id="FNanchor_BA_53"></a><a href='#Footnote_BA_53'><sup>[BA]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"We learn loyalty and obedience as we are loyal and
+ obedient. To-day I know yesterday's short-comings, and
+ to-morrow I shall know to-day's.... In our occupations we
+ learn whether conduct conforms to right and so advance in
+ the truth by practice."<a name='FNanchor_BB_54'
+ id="FNanchor_BB_54"></a><a href='#Footnote_BB_54'><sup>[BB]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Besides a few works on history, like the Sankyo Ega
+ Monogatari, which record facts, there are no books worth
+ reading in our literature. For the most part they are sweet
+ stories of the Buddhas, of which one soon wearies. But the
+ evil is traditional, long-continued, and beyond remedy. And
+ other books are full of lust, not even to be mentioned,
+ like the Genji Monogatari, which should never be shown to a
+ woman or a young man. Such books lead to vice. Our nobles
+ call the Genji Monogatari a national treasure, why, I do
+ not know, unless it is that they are intoxicated with its
+ style. That is <a name='Page_252'
+ id="Page_252"></a>like plucking the spring blossom
+ unmindful of the autumn's fruit. The book is full of
+ adulteries from beginning to end. Seeing the right,
+ ourselves should become good, seeing the wrong, we
+ should reprove ourselves. The Genji Monogatari,
+ Chokonka, and Seishoki are of a class, vile, mean,
+ comparable to the books of the sages as charcoal to ice,
+ as the stench of decay to the perfume of
+ flowers."<a name='FNanchor_BC_55'
+ id="FNanchor_BC_55"></a><a href='#Footnote_BC_55'><sup>[BC]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"To the samurai, first of all is righteousness; next
+ life, then silver and gold. These last are of value, but
+ some put them in the place of righteousness. But to the
+ samurai even life is as dirt compared to righteousness.
+ Until the middle part of the middle ages customs were
+ comparatively pure, though not really righteous. Corruption
+ has come only during this period of government by the
+ samurai. A maid servant in China was made ill with
+ astonishment when she saw her mistress, soroban (abacus) in
+ hand, arguing prices and values. So was it once with the
+ samurai. They knew nothing of trade, were economical and
+ content."<a name='FNanchor_BD_56'
+ id="FNanchor_BD_56"></a><a href='#Footnote_BD_56'><sup>[BD]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Even in the days of my youth, young folks never
+ mentioned the price of anything; and their faces reddened
+ if the talk was of women. Their joy was in talk of battles
+ and plans for war. And they studied how parents and lords
+ should be obeyed, and the duty of samurai. But nowadays the
+ young men talk of loss and gain, of dancing girls and
+ harlots and gross pleasures. It is a complete change from
+ fifty or sixty years ago.... Said Aochi to his son: 'There
+ is such a thing as trade. See that you know nothing of it.
+ In trade the profit should always go to the other side....
+ To be proud of buying high-priced articles cheap is the
+ good fortune of merchants, but should be unknown to
+ samurai. Let it not be even so much as mentioned....
+ Samurai must have a care of their words, and are not to
+ speak of avarice, cowardice, or
+ lust.'"<a name='FNanchor_BE_57'
+ id="FNanchor_BE_57"></a><a href='#Footnote_BE_57'><sup>[BE]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A point of considerable interest to the student of Japanese
+ ethical ideals is the fact that the laws of Old Japan combined
+ legal and moral maxims. Loyalty and <a name='Page_253'
+ id="Page_253"></a>morality were conceived as inseparable.
+ Ieyasu (abdicated in 1605, and died in 1616), the founder of
+ the Tokugawa Shogunate, left a body of laws to his
+ successors as his last will, in accordance with which they
+ should rule the land. These laws were not made public, but
+ were kept strictly for the guidance of the rulers. They are
+ known as the Testament or "Honorable Will" of Ieyasu, and
+ consist of one hundred rules. It will serve our purpose here
+ to quote some of those that refer to the moral ideal.</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"No one is to act simply for the gratification of his
+ own desires, but he is to strive to do what may be opposed
+ to his desires, <i>i.e</i>., to exercise self-control, in
+ order that everyone may be ready for whatever he may be
+ called upon by his superiors to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"The aged, whether widowers or widows, and orphans, and
+ persons without relations, every one should assist with
+ kindness and liberality; for justice to these four is the
+ root of good government."</p>
+
+ <p>"Respect the gods [or God], keep the heart pure, and be
+ diligent in business during the whole life."</p>
+
+ <p>"When I was young I determined to fight and punish all
+ my own and my ancestors' enemies, and I did punish them;
+ but afterwards, by deep consideration, I found that the way
+ of heaven was to help the people, and not to punish them.
+ Let my successors follow out this policy, or they are not
+ of my line. In this lies the strength of the nation."</p>
+
+ <p>"To insure the Empire peace, the foundation must be laid
+ in the ways of holiness and religion, and if men think they
+ can be educated, and will not remember this, it is as if a
+ man were to go to a forest to catch fish, or thought he
+ could draw water out of fire. They must follow the ways of
+ holiness."</p>
+
+ <p>"Japan is the country of the gods [or
+ God&mdash;'Shinkoku']. Therefore, we have among us
+ Confucianism, Buddhism, and Shintoism, and other sects. If
+ we leave our gods [or God] it is like refusing the wages of
+ our master and taking them from another."</p>
+
+ <p>"In regard to dancing women, prostitutes, brothels,
+ <a name='Page_254'
+ id="Page_254"></a>night work, and all other improper
+ employments, all these are like caterpillars or locusts
+ in the country. Good men and writers in all times have
+ written against them."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is said that the Mikado, looking down on his people,
+ loves them as a mother does her children. The same may be
+ said of me and my government. This benevolence of mind is
+ called Jin. This Jin may be said to consist of five parts;
+ these are humanity, integrity, courtesy, wisdom, and truth.
+ My mode of government is according to the way of heaven.
+ This I have done to show that I am impartial, and am not
+ assisting my own relatives and friends
+ only."<a name='FNanchor_BF_58'
+ id="FNanchor_BF_58"></a><a href='#Footnote_BF_58'><sup>[BF]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>These quotations are perhaps sufficient, though one more
+ from a recent writer has a peculiar interest of its own, from
+ the fact that the purpose of the book from which the quotation
+ is taken was the destruction of the tendencies toward approval
+ of Western thought. It was published in 1857. The writer, Junzo
+ Ohashi, felt himself to be a witness for truth and
+ righteousness, and, in the spirit of the doctrine he professed,
+ sealed his faith with a martyr's suffering and death, dying (in
+ August, 1868) from the effect of repeated examination by
+ torture for a supposed crime, innocence of which he maintained
+ to the end. It is interesting to note that two of his
+ granddaughters, "with the physics and astronomy of the West,
+ have accepted its religion."</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"The West knows not the 'Ri'<a name='FNanchor_BG_59'
+ id="FNanchor_BG_59"></a><a href='#Footnote_BG_59'><sup>[BG]</sup></a>
+ of the virtues of the heart which are in all men
+ unchangeably the same. Nor does it know that the body is
+ the organ of the virtues, however careful its analysis
+ of the body may be. The adherents of the Western
+ Philosophy indeed study carefully the outward
+ appearances, but they have no right to steal the honored
+ name of natural philosophy. As when 'Ki' is destroyed,
+ 'Ri' too disappears, so, with their analysis of 'Ki,'
+ they destroy 'Ri,' and thus this learning brings
+ benevolence and <a name='Page_255'
+ id="Page_255"></a>righteousness and loyalty and truth to
+ naught. Among the Westerners who from of old have
+ studied details minutely, I have not heard of one who
+ was zealous for the Great Way, for benevolence,
+ righteousness, loyalty, and truth, and who opposed the
+ absurdities of the Lord of Heaven
+ [God].'<a name='FNanchor_BH_60'
+ id="FNanchor_BH_60"></a><a href='#Footnote_BH_60'><sup>[BH]</sup></a>
+ 'Let then the child make its parent, Heaven; the
+ retainer, his lord; the wife, her husband; and let each
+ give up life for righteousness. Thus will each serve
+ Heaven. But if we exalt Heaven above parent or lord, we
+ shall come to think that we can serve it though they be
+ disobeyed, and like wolf or tiger shall rejoice to kill
+ them. To such fearful end does the Western learning
+ lead."<a name='FNanchor_BI_61'
+ id="FNanchor_BI_61"></a><a href='#Footnote_BI_61'><sup>[BI]</sup></a></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The foregoing quotations reveal the exalted nature of the
+ ideals held by at least some of the leaders of ethical thought
+ in Japan. Taken as a whole, the moral ideals characterizing the
+ Japanese during their entire historical period have been
+ conspicuously communal. The feudal structure of society has
+ determined the peculiar character of the moral ideal. Loyalty
+ took first rank in the moral scale; the subordination of the
+ inferior to the superior has come next, including unquestioning
+ obedience of children to parents, and of wife to husband. The
+ virtues of a military people have been praised and often
+ gloriously exemplified. The possession of these various ideals
+ and their attainment in such high degree have given the nation
+ its cohesiveness. They make the people a unit. The feudal
+ training under local daimyos was fitting the people for the
+ larger life among the nations of the world on which they are
+ now entering. Especially is their sense of loyalty, as
+ exhibited toward the Emperor, serving them well in this period
+ of transition from Oriental to Occidental social ideals.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us now examine some defective moral standards and
+ observe their origin in the social order. Take, for instance,
+ the ideal of truthfulness. Every Occidental remarks on the
+ untruthfulness of the Japanese. Lies are told without the
+ slightest apparent compunction; <a name='Page_256'
+ id="Page_256"></a>and when confronted with the charge of
+ lying, the culprit often seems to feel little sense of
+ guilt. This trait of character was noted repeatedly by the
+ early negotiators with Japan. Townsend Harris and Sir
+ Rutherford Alcock made frequent mention of it. When we
+ inquire as to the moral ideal and actual instruction
+ concerning truthfulness, we are amazed to find how
+ inadequate it was. The inadequacy of the teaching, however,
+ was not the primal cause of the characteristic. There is a
+ far deeper explanation, yet very simple, namely, the nature
+ of the social order. The old social order was feudal, and
+ not industrial or commercial. History shows that industrial
+ and commercial nations develop the virtue of truthfulness
+ far in advance of military nations. For these virtues are
+ essential to them; without them they could not long continue
+ to prosper.</p>
+
+ <p>So in regard to all the aspects of business morality, it
+ must be admitted that, from the Occidental standpoint, Old
+ Japan was very deficient. But it must also be stated that new
+ ideals are rapidly forming. Buying and selling with a view to
+ making profit, though not unknown in Old Japan, was carried on
+ by a despised section of the community. Compared with the
+ present, the commercial community of feudal times was mean and
+ small. Let us note somewhat in detail the attitude of the
+ samurai toward the trader in olden times, and the ideals they
+ reveal.</p>
+
+ <p>The pursuit of business was considered necessarily
+ degrading, for he who handled money was supposed to be
+ covetous. The taking of profit was thought to be ignoble, if
+ not deceitful. They who condescended to such an occupation were
+ accordingly despised and condemned to the lowest place in the
+ social scale. These ideas doubtless helped to make business
+ degrading; traders were doubtless sordid and covetous and
+ deceitful. In the presence of the samurai they were required to
+ take the most abject postures. In addressing him, they must
+ never stand, but must touch the ground with their foreheads;
+ while talking with him they must remain with their hands on the
+ ground. Even the <a name='Page_257'
+ id="Page_257"></a>children of samurai always assumed the
+ lordly attitude toward tradesmen. The sons of tradesmen
+ might not venture into a quarrel with the sons of samurai,
+ for the armed children of the samurai were at liberty to cut
+ down and kill the children of the despicable merchant,
+ should they insult or even oppose them.</p>
+
+ <p>All this, however, has passed away. Commerce is now honored;
+ trade and manufacture are recognized not only as laudable, but
+ as the only hope of Japan for the future. The new social order
+ is industrial and commercial. The entire body of the former
+ samurai, now no longer maintaining their distinctive name, are
+ engaged in some form of business. Japan is to-day a nation of
+ traders and farmers. Accompanying the changes in the social
+ order, new standards as to honesty and business integrity are
+ being formulated and enforced.<a name='FNanchor_BJ_62'
+ id="FNanchor_BJ_62"></a><a href='#Footnote_BJ_62'><sup>[BJ]</sup></a></p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXIII'
+ id="XXIII"></a><a name='Page_258'
+ id="Page_258"></a>XXIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>MORAL IDEALS</h3>
+
+ <p>(<i>Continued</i>)</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>An Occidental is invariably filled with astonishment on
+ learning that a human being, as such, had no value in Old
+ Japan. The explanation lies chiefly in the fact that the social
+ order did not rest on the inherent worth of the individual. As
+ in all primitive lands and times, the individual was as nothing
+ compared to the family and the tribe. As time went on, this
+ principle took the form of the supreme worth of the higher
+ classes in society. Hence arose the liberty allowed the samurai
+ of cutting down, in cold blood, a beggar, a merchant, or a
+ farmer on the slightest provocation, or simply for the purpose
+ of testing his sword.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese social and religious philosophy had not yet
+ discovered that the individual is of infinite worth in himself,
+ apart from all considerations of his rank in society. As we
+ have seen, the absence of this idea from Japanese civilization
+ resulted in various momentous consequences, of which the
+ frequency of murder and suicide is but one.</p>
+
+ <p>Another, and this constitutes one of the most striking
+ differences between the moral ideals of the East and the West,
+ is the low estimate put upon the inherent nature and value of
+ woman, by which was determined her social position and the
+ moral relations of the sexes. Japan seems to have suffered
+ somewhat in this respect from her acceptance of Hindu
+ philosophy. For there seems to be considerable unanimity among
+ historians that in primitive times in Japan there prevailed a
+ much larger liberty, and consequently a much higher regard, for
+ <a name='Page_259'
+ id="Page_259"></a>woman than in later ages after Buddhism
+ became powerful. With regard, however, to that earlier
+ period of over a thousand years ago, it is of little use to
+ speculate. I cannot escape the feeling, however, that the
+ condition of woman then has been unconsciously idealized, in
+ order to make a better showing in comparison with the
+ customs of Western lands. Be that as it may, the notions and
+ ideals presented by Buddhism in regard to woman are clear,
+ and clearly degrading. She is the source of temptation and
+ sin; she is essentially inferior to man in every respect.
+ Before she may hope to enter Nirvana she must be born again
+ as man. How widely these extreme views of woman have found
+ acceptance in Japan, I am not in a position to state. It is
+ my impression, however, that they never received as full
+ acceptance here as in India. Nevertheless, as has already
+ been shown,<a name='FNanchor_BK_63'
+ id="FNanchor_BK_63"></a><a href='#Footnote_BK_63'><sup>[BK]</sup></a>
+ the ideals of what a woman should do and be make it clear
+ that her social position for centuries has been relatively
+ low; as wife she is a domestic rather than a helpmeet. The
+ "three obediences," to parents, to husband, to son, set
+ forth the ideal, although, without doubt, the strict
+ application of the third, obedience to one's son after he
+ becomes the head of the household, is relatively rare.</p>
+
+ <p>What especially strikes the notice of the Occidental is the
+ slight amount of social intercourse that prevails to-day
+ between men and women. Whenever women enter into the social
+ pleasures of men, they do so as professional singers and
+ dancers, they being mere girls and unmarried young women; this
+ social intercourse is all but invariably accompanied with
+ wine-drinking, even if it does not proceed to further
+ licentiousness. The statement that woman is man's plaything has
+ been often heard in Japan. Confucian no less than Buddhistic
+ ethics must bear the responsibility for putting and keeping
+ woman on so low a level. Concubinage, possibly introduced from
+ China, was certainly sanctioned by the Chinese classics.</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The Lei-ki allows an Emperor to have in addition to the
+ Empress three consorts, nine maids of high rank,
+ <a name='Page_260'
+ id="Page_260"></a>and twenty-seven maids of lower rank, all
+ of whom rank as wives, and, beside these, eighty-one other
+ females called concubines. Concubinage and polygamy, being
+ thus sanctioned by the classics, became an established
+ custom in Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>The explanation for this ideal and practice is not far to
+ seek. It rests in the communal character of the social order.
+ The family was the social unit of Japan. No individual member
+ was of worth except the legal head and representative, the
+ father. A striking proof of the correctness of this explanation
+ is the fact that even the son is obeyed by the father in case
+ he has become "in kio,"<a name='FNanchor_BL_64'
+ id="FNanchor_BL_64"></a><a href='#Footnote_BL_64'><sup>[BL]</sup></a>
+ that is, has abdicated; the son then becomes the
+ authoritative head. The ideals regarding woman then were not
+ unique; they were part of the social order, and were
+ determined by the principle of "communalism" unregulated by
+ the principle of "individualism." Ideals respecting man and
+ woman were equally affected. So long as man is not valued as
+ a human being, but solely according to his accidental
+ position in society, woman must be regarded in the same way.
+ She is valued first as a begetter of offspring, second as a
+ domestic. And when such conceptions prevail as to her nature
+ and function in society, defective ideals as to morality in
+ the narrower sense of this term, leading to and justifying
+ concubinage, easy divorce, and general loose morality are
+ necessary consequences.</p>
+
+ <p>But this moral or immoral ideal is by no means peculiar to
+ Japan. The peculiarity of Japan and the entire Orient is that
+ the social order that fostered it lasted so long, before forces
+ arose to modify it. But, as will be shown
+ later,<a name='FNanchor_BM_65'
+ id="FNanchor_BM_65"></a><a href='#Footnote_BM_65'><sup>[BM]</sup></a>
+ the great problem of human evolution, after securing the
+ advantages of "communalism," and the solidification of the
+ nation, is that of introducing the principle of
+ individualism into the social order. In the Orient the
+ principle of communalism gained such headway as effectually
+ to prevent the introduction of this new principle. There is,
+ in my opinion, no probability that Japan, while maintaining
+ her isolation, would ever have succeeded in making any
+ radical change in her <a name='Page_261'
+ id="Page_261"></a>social order; her communalism was too
+ absolute. She needed the introduction of a new stimulus from
+ without. It was providential that this stimulus came from
+ the Anglo-Saxon race, with its pronounced principle of
+ "individualism" wrought out so completely in social order,
+ in literature, and in government. Had Russia or Turkey been
+ the leading influences in starting Japan on her new career,
+ it is more than doubtful whether she would have secured the
+ principles needful for her healthful moral development.</p>
+
+ <p>Justice to the actual ideals and life of Old Japan forbids
+ me to leave, without further remark, what was said above
+ regarding the ideals of morality in the narrower significance
+ of this word. Injunctions that women should be absolutely
+ chaste were frequent and stringent. Nothing more could be asked
+ in the line of explicit teaching on this theme. And,
+ furthermore, I am persuaded, after considerable inquiry, that
+ in Old Japan in the interior towns and villages, away from the
+ center of luxury and out of the beaten courses of travel, there
+ was purity of moral life that has hardly been excelled
+ anywhere. I have repeatedly been assured that if a youth of
+ either sex were known to have transgressed the law of chastity,
+ he or she would at once be ostracised; and that such
+ transgressions were, consequently, exceedingly rare. It is
+ certainly a fact that in the vast majority of the interior
+ towns there have never, until recent times, been licensed
+ houses of prostitution. Of late there has been a marked
+ increase of dancing and singing girls, of whom it is commonly
+ said that they are but "secret prostitutes." These may to-day
+ be found in almost every town and village, wherever indeed
+ there is a hotel. Public as well as secret prostitution has
+ enormously increased during the last thirty or forty
+ years.<a name='FNanchor_BN_66'
+ id="FNanchor_BN_66"></a><a href='#Footnote_BN_66'><sup>[BN]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_262'
+ id="Page_262"></a>Thanks to Mr. Murphy's consecrated energy,
+ the appalling legalized and hopeless slavery under which
+ these two classes of girls exist is at last coming to light.
+ He has shown, by several test cases, that although the
+ national laws are good to look at they are powerless because
+ set aside by local police regulations over which the courts
+ are powerless! In September, 1900, however, in large part
+ due no doubt to the facts made public by him, and backed up
+ by the public press, and such leaders of Japan's progressive
+ elements as Shimada Sabur, the police regulations were
+ modified, and with amazing results. Whereas, previous to
+ that date, the average monthly suicides throughout the land
+ among the public prostitutes were between forty and fifty,
+ during the two months of September and October there were
+ none! In that same period, out of about five thousand
+ prostitutes in the city of Tokyo, 492 had fled from their
+ brothels and declared their intentions of abandoning the
+ "shameful business," as the Japanese laws call it, and in
+ consequence a prominent brothel had been compelled to stop
+ the business! We are only in the first flush of this new
+ reform as these lines are written, so cannot tell what end
+ the whole movement will reach. But the conscience of the
+ nation is beginning to waken on this matter and we are
+ confident it will never tolerate the old slavery of the
+ past, enforced as it was by local laws, local courts, so
+ that girls were always kept in debt, and when
+ <a name='Page_263'
+ id="Page_263"></a>they fled were seized and forced back to
+ the brothels in order to pay their debts!</p>
+
+ <p>But in contrast to the undoubted ideal of Old Japan in
+ regard to the chastity of women, must be set the equally
+ undoubted fact that the sages have very little to say on the
+ subject of chastity for men. Indeed there is no word in the
+ Japanese language corresponding to our term "chastity" which
+ may be applied equally to men and women. In his volume entitled
+ "Kokoro," Mr. Hearn charges the missionaries with the assertion
+ that there is no word for chastity in Japanese. "This," he
+ says, "is true in the same sense only that we might say that
+ there is no word for chastity in the English language, because
+ such words as honor, virtue, purity, chastity have been adopted
+ into English from other languages."<a name='FNanchor_BO_67'
+ id="FNanchor_BO_67"></a><a href='#Footnote_BO_67'><sup>[BO]</sup></a>
+ I doubt if any missionary has made such a statement. His
+ further assertion, that "the word most commonly used applies
+ to both sexes," would have more force, if Mr. Hearn had
+ stated what the word is. His English definition of the term
+ has not enabled me to find the Japanese equivalent, although
+ I have discussed this question with several Japanese. It is
+ their uniform confession that the Japanese language is
+ defective in its terminology on this topic, the word with
+ which one may exhort a woman to be chaste being inapplicable
+ to a man. The assertion of the missionaries has nothing
+ whatever to do with the question as to whether the terms
+ used are pure Japanese or imported Chino-Japanese; nor has
+ it any reference to the fact that the actual language is
+ deficient in abstract terms. It is simply that the term
+ applicable to a woman is not applicable to a man. And this
+ in turn proves sharp contrasts between the ideals regarding
+ the moral duties of men and of women.</p>
+
+ <p>An interesting point in the Japanese moral ideal is the fact
+ that the principle of filial obedience was carried to such
+ extremes that even prostitution of virtue at the command of the
+ parents, or for the support of the parents, was not only
+ permitted but, under special conditions, was highly praised.
+ Modern prostitution is rendered possible chiefly through the
+ action of this per<a name='Page_264'
+ id="Page_264"></a>verted principle. Although the sale of
+ daughters for immoral purposes is theoretically illegal,
+ yet, in fact, it is of frequent occurrence.</p>
+
+ <p>Although concubinage was not directly taught by Confucius,
+ yet it was never forbidden by him, and the leaders and rulers
+ of the land have lent the custom the authority and
+ justification of their example. As we have already seen, the
+ now ruling Emperor has several concubines, and all of his
+ children are the offspring of these concubines. In Old Japan,
+ therefore, there were two separate ideals of morality for the
+ two sexes.</p>
+
+ <p>The question may be raised how a social order which required
+ such fidelity on the part of the woman could permit such
+ looseness on the part of the man, whether married or not. How
+ could the same social order produce two moral ideals? The
+ answer is to be found in several facts. First, there is the
+ inherent desire of each husband to be the sole possessor of his
+ wife's affections. As the stronger of the two, he would bring
+ destruction on an unfaithful wife and also on any who dared
+ invade his home. Although the woman doubtless has the same
+ desire to be the sole possessor of her husband's affection, she
+ has not the same power, either to injure a rival or to punish
+ her faithless husband. Furthermore, licentiousness in women has
+ a much more visibly disastrous effect on her procreative
+ functions than equal licentiousness in man. This, too, would
+ serve to beget and maintain different ethical standards for the
+ two sexes. Finally, and perhaps no less effective than the two
+ preceding, is the fact that the general social consciousness
+ held different conceptions in regard to the social positions of
+ man and woman. The one was the owner of the family, the lord
+ and master; to him belonged the freedom to do as he chose. The
+ other was a variety of property, not free in any sense to
+ please herself, but to do only as her lord and master
+ required.</p>
+
+ <p>An illustration of the first reason given above came to my
+ knowledge not long since. Rev. John T. Gulick saw in Kanagawa,
+ in 1862, a man going through the streets carrying the bloody
+ heads of a man and a woman which he declared to be those of his
+ wife and her seducer, <a name='Page_265'
+ id="Page_265"></a>whom he had caught and killed in the act
+ of adultery. This act of the husband's was in perfect accord
+ with the practices and ideals of the time, and not seldom
+ figures in the romances of Old Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>The new Civil Code adopted in 1898 furnishes an
+ authoritative statement of many of the moral ideals of New
+ Japan. For the following summary I am indebted to the <i>Japan
+ Mail</i>.<a name='FNanchor_BP_68'
+ id="FNanchor_BP_68"></a><a href='#Footnote_BP_68'><sup>[BP]</sup></a>
+ In regard to marriage it is noteworthy that the "prohibited
+ degrees of relationship are the same as those in
+ England"&mdash;including the deceased wife's sister. "The
+ minimum age for legal marriage is seventeen in the case of a
+ man and fifteen in the case of a woman, and marriage takes
+ effect on notification to the registrar, being thus a purely
+ civil contract. As to divorce, it is provided that the
+ husband and wife may effect it by mutual consent, and its
+ legal recognition takes the form of an entry by the
+ registrar, no reference being necessary to the judicial
+ authorities. Where mutual consent is not obtained, however,
+ an action for divorce must be brought, and here it appears
+ that the rights of the woman do not receive the same
+ recognition as those of the man. Thus, although adultery
+ committed by the wife constitutes a valid ground of divorce,
+ we do not find that adultery on the husband's part furnishes
+ a plea to the wife. Ill-treatment or gross insult, such as
+ renders living together impracticable, or desertion,
+ constitutes a reason for divorce from the wife's point of
+ view." The English reviewer here adds that "since no
+ treatment can be worse nor any insult grosser than open
+ inconstancy on the part of a husband, it is conceivable that
+ a judge might consider that such conduct renders living
+ together impracticable. But in the presence of an explicit
+ provision with regard to the wife's adultery and in the
+ absence of any such provision with regard to the husband's,
+ we doubt whether any court of law would exercise discretion
+ in favor of the woman." The gross "insult of inconstancy" on
+ the part of the husband is a plea that has never yet been
+ recognized by Japanese society. The reviewer goes on to say:
+ "One cannot <a name='Page_266'
+ id="Page_266"></a>help wishing that the peculiar code of
+ morality observed by husbands in this country had received
+ some condemnation at the hands of the framers of the new
+ Code. It is further laid down that a 'person who is
+ judicially divorced or punished because of adultery cannot
+ contract a marriage with the other party to the adultery.'
+ If that extended to the husband it would be an excellent
+ provision, well calculated to correct one of the worst
+ social abuses of this country. Unfortunately, as we have
+ seen, it applies apparently to the case of the wife only."
+ The provision for divorce by "mutual consent" is striking
+ and ominous. It makes divorce a matter of entirely private
+ arrangement, unless one of the parties objects. In a land
+ where women are so docile, is it likely that the wife would
+ refuse to consent to divorce when her lord and master
+ requests or commands her to leave his home? "There are not
+ many women in Japan who could refuse to become a party to
+ the 'mutual consent' arrangement if they were convinced that
+ they had lost their husband's affection and that he could
+ not live comfortably with them." It would appear that
+ nothing whatever is said by the Code with reference to
+ concubinage, either allowing or forbidding it. Presumably a
+ man may have but one legitimate wife, and children by
+ concubines must be registered as illegitimate. Nothing,
+ however, on this point seems to be stated, although
+ provision is made for the public acknowledgment of
+ illegitimate children. "Thus, a father can acknowledge a
+ natural child, making what is called a 'shoshi,' and if,
+ subsequent to acknowledgment, the father and mother marry,
+ the 'shoshi,' acquires the status of a legitimate child,
+ such status reckoning back, apparently to the time of
+ birth." Evidently, this provision rests on the implication
+ that the mother is an unmarried woman&mdash;presumably a
+ concubine.</p>
+
+ <p>Recent statistics throw a rather lurid light on these
+ provisions of the Code. The Imperial Cabinet for some years
+ past has published in French and Japanese a
+ r&eacute;sum&eacute; of national statistics. Those bearing on
+ marriage and divorce, in the volume published in 1897, may well
+ be given at this point.</p><a name='Page_267'
+ id="Page_267"></a>
+
+ <table summary="statistics" width="80%">
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>MARRIAGES</td>
+ <td>DIVORCES</td>
+ <td>LEGITIMATE<br />BIRTHS</td>
+ <td>ILLEGITIMATE</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1890</td>
+ <td>325,141</td>
+ <td>109,088</td>
+ <td>1,079,121</td>
+ <td>66,253</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1891</td>
+ <td>325,651</td>
+ <td>112,411</td>
+ <td>1,033,653</td>
+ <td>64,122</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1892</td>
+ <td>349,489</td>
+ <td>133,498</td>
+ <td>1,134,665</td>
+ <td>72,369</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1893</td>
+ <td>358,398</td>
+ <td>116,775</td>
+ <td>1,105,119</td>
+ <td>73,677</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1894</td>
+ <td>361,319</td>
+ <td>114,436</td>
+ <td>1,132,897</td>
+ <td>76,407</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1895</td>
+ <td>365,633</td>
+ <td>110,838</td>
+ <td>1,166,254</td>
+ <td>80,168</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>1897</td>
+ <td>395,207</td>
+ <td>124,075</td>
+ <td>1,335,125</td>
+ <td>89,996<a name='FNanchor_BQ_69'
+ id="FNanchor_BQ_69"></a><a href='#Footnote_BQ_69'><sup>[BQ]</sup></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <br />
+ <p>These authoritative statistics show how divorce is a regular
+ part of the Japanese family system, one out of three marriages
+ proving abortive.</p>
+
+ <p>Morally Japan's weak spot is the relation of the sexes, both
+ before and after marriage. Strict monogamy, with the equality
+ of duties of husband and wife, is the remedy for the
+ disease.</p>
+
+ <p>This slight sketch of the provision of the new Code as it
+ bears on the purity of the home, and on the development of
+ noble manhood and womanhood, shows that the Code is very
+ defective. It practically recognizes and legalizes the present
+ corrupt practices of society, and makes no effort to establish
+ higher ideals. Whether anything more should be expected of a
+ Code drawn up under the present circumstances is, of course, an
+ open question. But the Code reveals the astonishingly low
+ condition of the moral standards for the home, one of the vital
+ weaknesses of New Japan. The defectiveness of the new Code in
+ regard to the matters just considered must be argued, however,
+ not from the failure to embody Occidental moral standards, but
+ rather from the failure to recognize the actual nature of the
+ social order of New Japan. While the Code recognizes the
+ principle of individualism and individual rights and worth in
+ all other matters, in regard to the home, the most important
+ social unit in the body politic, the Code legalizes and
+ perpetuates the old pre-Meiji standards. Individualism in the
+ general social order demands its consistent recognition in
+ every part.</p>
+
+ <p>We cannot conclude our discussion of Japanese ideas as to
+ woman, and the consequent results to morality,
+ <a name='Page_268'
+ id="Page_268"></a>without referring to the great changes
+ which are to-day taking place. Although the new Civil Code
+ has not done all that we could ask, we would not ignore what
+ it has secured. Says Prof. Gubbins in the excellent
+ introduction to his translation of the Codes:</p>
+
+ <p>"In no respect has modern progress in Japan made greater
+ strides than in the improvement of the position of woman.
+ Though she still labors under certain disabilities, a woman can
+ now become a head of a family, and exercise authority as such;
+ she can inherit and own property and manage it herself; she can
+ exercise parental authority; if single, or a widow, she can
+ adopt; she is one of the parties to adoption effected by her
+ husband, and her consent, in addition to that of her husband,
+ is necessary to the adoption of her child by another person;
+ she can act as guardian, or curator, and she has a voice in
+ family councils." In all these points the Code marks a great
+ advance, and reveals by contrast the legally helpless condition
+ of woman prior to 1898. But in certain respects practice is
+ preceding theory. We would call special attention to the
+ exalted position and honor publicly accorded to the Empress. On
+ more than one historic occasion she has appeared at the
+ Emperor's side, a thing unknown in Old Japan. The Imperial
+ Silver Wedding (1892) was a great event, unprecedented in the
+ annals of the Orient. Commemorative postage stamps were struck
+ off which were first used on the auspicious day.</p>
+
+ <p>The wedding of the Prince Imperial (in May, 1900) was also
+ an event of unique importance in Japanese social and moral
+ history. Never before, in the 2600 years claimed by her
+ historians, has an heir to the throne been honored by a public
+ wedding. The ceremony was prepared <i>de novo</i> for the
+ occasion and the pledges were mutual. In the reception that
+ followed, the Imperial bride stood beside her Imperial husband.
+ On this occasion, too, commemorative postage stamps were issued
+ and first used on the auspicious day; the entire land was
+ brilliantly decorated with flags and lanterns. Countless
+ congratulatory meetings were held throughout the country and
+ thousands of gifts, letters, and telegraphic <a name='Page_269'
+ id="Page_269"></a>messages expressed the joy and good will
+ of the people.</p>
+
+ <p>But the chief significance of these events is the new and
+ exalted position accorded to woman and to marriage by the
+ highest personages of the land. It is said by some that the
+ ruling Emperor will be the last to have concubines. However
+ that may be, woman has already attained a rank and marriage an
+ honor unknown in any former age in Japan, and still quite
+ unknown in any Oriental land save Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>A serious study of Japanese morality should not fail to
+ notice the respective parts taken by Buddhism and Confucianism.
+ The contrast is so marked. While Confucianism devoted its
+ energies to the inculcation of proper conduct, to morality as
+ contrasted to religion, Buddhism devoted its energies to the
+ development of a cultus, paying little attention to morality. A
+ recent Japanese critic of Buddhism remarks that "though
+ Buddhism has a name in the world for the excellence of its
+ ethical system, yet there exists no treatise in Japanese which
+ sets forth the distinctive features of Buddhist ethics."
+ Buddhist literature is chiefly occupied with mythology,
+ metaphysics, and eschatology, ethical precepts being interwoven
+ incidentally. The critic just quoted states that the pressing
+ need of the times is that Buddhist ethics should be
+ disentangled from Buddhist mythology. The great moralists of
+ Japan have been Confucianists. Distinctively Japanese morality
+ has derived its impulse from Confucian classics. A new spirit,
+ however, is abroad among the Buddhist priesthood. Their
+ preaching is increasingly ethical. The common people are saying
+ that the sermons heard in certain temples are identical with
+ those of Christians. How widely this imitation of Christian
+ preaching has spread I cannot say; but that Christianity has in
+ any degree been imitated is significant, both ethically and
+ sociologically.</p>
+
+ <p>Buddhism is not alone, however, in imitating Christianity. A
+ few years ago Dr. D.C. Greene attended the preaching services
+ of a modern Shinto sect, the "Ten-Ri-Kyo," the
+ Heaven-Reason-Teaching, and was surprised <a name='Page_270'
+ id="Page_270"></a>to hear almost literal quotations from the
+ "Sermon on the Mount"; the source of the sentiment and
+ doctrine was not stated and very likely was not known to the
+ speaker. Dr. Greene, who has given this sect considerable
+ study, is satisfied that the insistence of its teachers on
+ moral conduct is general and genuine. When I visited their
+ headquarters, not far from Nara, in 1895, and inquired of
+ one of the priests as to the chief points of importance in
+ their teaching, I was told that the necessity of leading an
+ honorable and correct life was most emphasized. There are
+ reasons for thinking that the Kurozumi sect of Shintoism,
+ with its emphasis on morality, is considerably indebted to
+ Christianity both for its origin and its doctrine.</p>
+
+ <p>It is evident that Christianity is having an influence in
+ Japan, far beyond the ranks of its professed believers. It is
+ proving a stimulus to the older faiths, stirring them up to an
+ earnestness in moral teaching that they never knew in the olden
+ times. It is interesting to note that this widespread emphasis
+ on ethical truth comes at a time when morality is suffering a
+ wide collapse.</p>
+
+ <p>An important point for the sociological student of Japanese
+ moral ideals is the fact that her moralists have directed their
+ attention chiefly to the conduct of the rulers. The ideal of
+ conduct as stated by them is for a samurai. If any action is
+ praised, it is said that it becomes a samurai; if condemned, it
+ is on the ground that it is not becoming to a samurai. Anything
+ wrong or vulgar is said to be what you might expect of the
+ common man. All the terms of the higher morality, such as
+ righteousness, duty, benevolence, are expounded from the
+ standpoint of a samurai, that is, from the standpoint of
+ loyalty. The forty-seven ronin were pronounced "righteous
+ samurai" because they avenged the death of their lord, even
+ though in doing so they committed deeds that, by themselves,
+ would have been condemned. Japanese history and literature
+ proclaim the same ideal. They are exclusively concerned with
+ the deeds of the higher class, the court and the samurai. The
+ actual condition of the common people in ancient times is a
+ matter not easily determined. The morality of the
+ com<a name='Page_271'
+ id="Page_271"></a>mon people was more a matter of
+ unreasoning custom than of theory and instruction. But these
+ facts are susceptible of interpretation if we remember that
+ the interest of the historian and the moralist was not in
+ humanity, as such, but in the external features of the
+ social order. Their gaze was on the favored few, on the
+ nobility, the court, and the samurai.</p>
+
+ <p>In closing our discussion of Japanese moral ideals it may
+ not be amiss to append the Imperial Edict concerning the moral
+ education of the youth of Japan, issued by the Emperor November
+ 31, 1890. This is supposed to be the distilled essence of
+ Shinto and Confucian teaching. It is to-day the only
+ authoritative teaching on morality given in the public schools.
+ It is read with more reverence than is accorded to the Bible in
+ England or America. It is considered both holy and
+ inspired.</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="ctr">IMPERIAL EDICT ON MORAL EDUCATION</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"We consider that the Founder of Our Empire and the
+ ancestors of Our Imperial House placed the foundation of
+ the country on a grand and permanent basis, and established
+ their authority on the principles of profound humanity and
+ benevolence.</p>
+
+ <p>"That Our subjects have throughout ages deserved well of
+ the state by their loyalty and piety, and by their
+ harmonious co-operation, is in accordance with the
+ essential character of Our nation; and on these very same
+ principles Our education has been founded.</p>
+
+ <p>"You, Our subjects, be therefore filial to your parents;
+ be affectionate to your brothers; be harmonious as husbands
+ and wives; and be faithful to your friends; conduct
+ yourselves with propriety and carefulness; extend
+ generosity and benevolence toward your neighbors; attend to
+ your studies and follow your pursuits; cultivate your
+ intellects and elevate your morals; advance public benefits
+ and promote social interests; be always found in the good
+ observance of the laws and constitution of the land;
+ display your personal courage and public spirit for the
+ sake of the country whenever required; and thus support the
+ Imperial prerog<a name='Page_272'
+ id="Page_272"></a>ative, which is coexistent with the
+ Heavens and the Earth.</p>
+
+ <p>"Such conduct on your part will not only strengthen the
+ character of Our good and loyal subjects, but conduce also
+ to the maintenance of the fame of your worthy
+ forefathers.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is the instruction bequeathed by Our ancestors and
+ to be followed by Our subjects; for it is the truth which
+ has guided and guides them in their own affairs and their
+ dealings toward aliens.</p>
+
+ <p>"We hope, therefore, that We and Our subjects will
+ regard these sacred precepts with one and the same heart in
+ order to attain the same ends."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXIV'
+ id="XXIV"></a><a name='Page_273'
+ id="Page_273"></a>XXIV</h2>
+
+ <h3>MORAL PRACTICE</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>One noticeable characteristic of the Japanese is the
+ publicity of the life of the individual. He seems to feel no
+ need for privacy. Houses are so constructed that privacy is
+ practically impossible. The slight paper shoji and fusuma
+ between the small rooms serve only partially to shut out
+ peering eyes; they afford no protection from listening ears.
+ Moreover, these homes of the middle and lower classes open upon
+ public streets, and a passer-by may see much of what is done
+ within. Even the desire for privacy seems lacking. The
+ publicity of the private (?) baths and sanitary conveniences
+ which the Occidental puts entirely out of sight has already
+ been noted.</p>
+
+ <p>I once passed through a village and was not a little amazed
+ to see two or three bathtubs on the public road, each occupied
+ by one or more persons; nor were the occupants children alone,
+ but men and women also. Calling at the home of a gentleman in
+ Kyushu with whom I had some business, and gaining no notice at
+ the front entrance, I went around to the side of the house only
+ to discover the lady of the place taking her bath with her
+ children, in a tub quite out of doors, while a manservant
+ chopped wood but a few paces distant.</p>
+
+ <p>The natural indifference of the Japanese to the exposure of
+ the unclothed body is an interesting fact. In the West such
+ indifference is rightly considered immodest. In Japan, however,
+ immodesty consists entirely in the intention of the heart and
+ does not arise from the accident of the moment or the need of
+ the occasion. With a fellow missionary, I went some years since
+ to some famous hot springs at the foot of Mount
+ <a name='Page_274'
+ id="Page_274"></a>Ase, the smoking crater of Kyushu. The
+ spot itself is most charming, situated in the center of an
+ old crater, said to be the largest in the world. Wearied
+ with a long walk, we were glad to find that one of the
+ public bath tubs or tanks, some fifteen by thirty feet in
+ size, in a bath house separate from other houses, was quite
+ unoccupied; and on inquiry we were told that bathers were
+ few at that hour of the day, so that we might go in without
+ fear of disturbance. It seems that in such places the tiers
+ of boxes for the clothing on either side of the door, are
+ reserved for men and women respectively. Ignorant of this
+ custom, we deposited our clothing in the boxes on the left
+ hand, and as quickly as we could accommodate ourselves to
+ the heat of the water, we got into the great tank. We were
+ scarcely in, when a company of six or eight men and women
+ entered the bath house; they at once perceived our blunder,
+ but without the slightest hesitation, the women as well as
+ the men went over to the men's side and proceeded to undress
+ and get into the tank with us, betraying no consciousness
+ that aught was amiss. So far as I could see there was not
+ the slightest self-consciousness in the entire proceeding.
+ In the tank, too, though it is customary for women to occupy
+ the left side, on this occasion they mingled freely with the
+ men. I suppose it is impossible in England or America to
+ conceive of such a state of unconsciousness. Yet it seems to
+ be universal in Japan. It is doubtless explained by the
+ custom, practiced from infancy, not only of public bathing,
+ but also of living together so unreservedly. The heat of the
+ summer and the nature of Japanese clothing, so easily thrown
+ off, has accustomed them to the greater or less exposure of
+ the person. All these customs have prevented the development
+ of a sense of modesty corresponding to that which has
+ developed in the West. Whether this familiarity of the sexes
+ is conducive to purity of life or not, is a totally
+ different question, on which I do not here enter.</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection I can do no better than quote from a
+ popular, and in many respects deservedly popular, writer on
+ Japan. Says Mr. Hearn, "There is little <a name='Page_275'
+ id="Page_275"></a>privacy of any sort in Japan. Among the
+ people, indeed, what we term privacy in the Occident does
+ not exist. There are only walls of paper dividing the lives
+ of men; there are only sliding screens instead of doors;
+ there are neither locks nor bolts to be used by day; and
+ whenever the weather permits, the fronts and perhaps even
+ the sides of the houses are literally removed, and its
+ interior widely opened to the air, the light, and the public
+ gaze. Within a hotel or even a common dwelling house, nobody
+ knocks before entering your room; there is nothing to knock
+ at except a shoji or a fusuma, which cannot be knocked at
+ without being broken. And in this world of paper walls and
+ sunshine, nobody is afraid or ashamed of fellow-man or
+ fellow-woman. Whatever is done is done after a fashion in
+ public. Your personal habits, your idiosyncrasies (if you
+ have any), your foibles, your likes and dislikes, your loves
+ and your hates must be known to everybody. Neither vices nor
+ virtues can be hidden; there is absolutely nowhere to hide
+ them.... There has never been, for the common millions at
+ least, even the idea of living unobserved." The Japanese
+ language has no term for "privacy," nor is it easy to convey
+ the idea to one who does not know the English word. They
+ lack the term and the clear idea because they lack the
+ practice.</p>
+
+ <p>These facts prove conclusively that the Japanese individual
+ is still a gregarious being, and this fact throws light on the
+ moral life of the people. It follows of necessity that the
+ individual will conform somewhat more closely to the moral
+ standards of the community, than a man living in a strong
+ segregarious community.</p>
+
+ <p>The converse of this principle is that in a community whose
+ individuals are largely segregarious, enjoying privacy, and
+ thus liberty of action, variations from the moral standards
+ will be frequent and positive transgressions not uncommon. In
+ the one case, where "communalism" reigns, moral action is, so
+ to speak, automatic; it requires no particular assertion of the
+ individual will to do right; conformity to the standard is
+ <a name='Page_276'
+ id="Page_276"></a>spontaneous. In the latter case, however,
+ where "individualism" is the leading characteristic of the
+ community, the acceptance of the moral standards usually
+ requires a definite act of the individual will.</p>
+
+ <p>The history of Japan is a capital illustration of this
+ principle. The recent increase of immorality and crime is
+ universally admitted. The usual explanation is that in olden
+ times every slight offense was punished with death; the
+ criminal class was thus continuously exterminated. Nowadays a
+ robber can ply his trade continuously, though interrupted by
+ frequent intervals of imprisonment. In former times, once
+ caught, he never could steal again, except in the land of the
+ shades. While this explanation has some force, it does not
+ cover the ground. A better explanation for the modern increase
+ of lawlessness is the change in the social order itself. The
+ new order gives each man wider liberty of individual action. He
+ is free to choose his trade and his home. Formerly these were
+ determined for him by the accident of his birth. His freedom is
+ greater and so, too, are his temptations.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, the standards of conduct themselves have been
+ changing. Certain acts which would have brought praise and
+ honor if committed fifty years ago, such, for instance, as
+ "kataki uchi," revenge, would to-day soon land one behind
+ prison doors. In a word, "individualism" is beginning to work
+ powerfully on conduct; it has not yet gained the ascendancy
+ attained in the West; it is nevertheless abroad in the land.
+ The young are especially influenced by it. Taking advantage of
+ the liberty it grants, many forms of immorality seem to be on
+ the increase. So far as I can gather by inquiry, there has been
+ a great collapse not only in honesty, but also in the matter of
+ sexual morality. It will hardly do to say dogmatically that the
+ national standards of morality have been lowered, but it is
+ beyond question that the power of the community to enforce
+ those standards has suddenly come to naught by reason of the
+ changing social order. Western thought and practice as to the
+ structure of society and the freedom of the individual have
+ been <a name='Page_277'
+ id="Page_277"></a>emphasized; Spencer and Mill and Huxley
+ have been widely read by the educated
+ classes.<a name='FNanchor_BR_70'
+ id="FNanchor_BR_70"></a><a href='#Footnote_BR_70'><sup>[BR]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, freedom and ease of travel, and liberty to
+ change one's residence at will, and thus the ability to escape
+ unpleasant restraints, have not a little to do with this
+ collapse in morality. Tens of thousands of students in the
+ higher schools are away from their homes and are entirely
+ without the steadying support that home gives. Then, too, there
+ is a wealth among the common people that was, never known in
+ earlier times. Formerly the possession of means was limited to
+ a relatively small number of families. To-day we see general
+ prosperity, and a consequent tendency to luxury that was
+ unknown in any former period.</p>
+
+ <p>To be specific, let us note that in feudal times there were
+ some 270 daimyo living in the utmost luxury. About 1,500,000
+ samurai were dependent on them as retainers, while 30,000,000
+ people supported these sons of luxury. In 1863 the farmers of
+ Japan raised 30,000,000 koku of rice, and paid 22,000,000 of it
+ to the government as taxes. Taxed at the same rate to-day the
+ farmers would have to pay 280,000,000 yen, whereas the actual
+ payment made by them is only 38,000,000 yen. "The farmer's
+ manner of life has radically changed. He is now prosperous and
+ comfortable, wearing silk where formerly he could scarcely
+ afford cotton, and eating rice almost daily, whereas formerly
+ he scarcely knew its taste."<a name='FNanchor_BS_71'
+ id="FNanchor_BS_71"></a><a href='#Footnote_BS_71'><sup>[BS]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>It is stated by the <i>Japan Mail</i> that whereas but "one
+ person out of ten was able thirty years ago to afford rice, the
+ nine being content to live from year's end to year's end on
+ barley alone or barley mixed with a modicum of rice, six
+ persons to-day out of ten count it a hardship if they cannot
+ sit down to a square meal of rice daily.... Rice is no longer a
+ luxury to the mass of the people, but has become a
+ necessity."</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_278'
+ id="Page_278"></a>Financially, then, the farming and middle
+ classes are incomparably better off to-day than in olden
+ times. The amount of ready money which a man can earn has
+ not a little to do with his morality. If his uprightness
+ depends entirely or chiefly on his lack of opportunity to do
+ wrong, he will be a moral man so long as he is desperately
+ poor or under strict control. But give him the chance to
+ earn ready cash, together with the freedom to live where he
+ chooses, and to spend his income as he pleases, and he is
+ sure to develop various forms of immorality.</p>
+
+ <p>I have made a large number of inquiries in regard to the
+ increase or decrease of concubinage during the present era.
+ Statistics on this subject are not to be had, for concubines
+ are not registered as such nor yet as wives. If a concubine
+ lives in the home of the man, she is registered as a domestic,
+ and her children should be registered as hers, although I am
+ told that they are very often illegally registered as his. If
+ she lives in her own home, the concubine still retains the name
+ and registry of her own parents. The government takes no notice
+ of concubinage, and publishes no statistics in regard to it.
+ The children of concubines who live with their own parents are,
+ I am told, usually registered as the children of the mother's
+ father; otherwise they are registered as illegitimate;
+ statistics, therefore, furnish no clew as to the increase or
+ decrease or amount of concubinage and illegitimacy, most
+ important questions in Japanese sociology. But my informants
+ are unanimous in the assertion that there has been a marked
+ increase of concubinage during recent years. The simple and
+ uniform explanation given is that multitudes of merchants and
+ officials, and even of farmers, can afford to maintain them
+ to-day who formerly were unable to do so. The older ideals on
+ this subject were such as to allow of concubinage to the extent
+ of one's financial ability.</p>
+
+ <p>During the year 1898 the newspapers and leading writers of
+ Japan carried on a vigorous discussion concerning concubinage.
+ The <i>Yorozu Choho</i> published an inventory of 493 men
+ maintaining separate establish<a name='Page_279'
+ id="Page_279"></a>ments for their concubines, giving not
+ only the names and the business of the men, but also the
+ character of the women chosen to be concubines. Of these 493
+ men, 9 are ministers of state and ex-ministers; 15 are peers
+ or members of House of Peers; 7 are barristers; 3 are
+ learned doctors; the rest are nearly all business men. The
+ women were, previous to concubinage, Dancing girls, 183;
+ Servants, 69; Prostitutes, 17; "Ordinary young girls," 91;
+ Adopted daughters, 15; Widows, 7; Performers, 7;
+ Miscellaneous, 104. In this discussion it has been generally
+ admitted that concubinage has increased in modern times, and
+ the cause attributed is "general looseness of morals." Some
+ of the leading writers maintain that the concubinage of
+ former times was largely confined to those who took
+ concubines to insure the maintenance of the family line; and
+ also that the taking of dancing girls was unknown in olden
+ times.</p>
+
+ <p>It is interesting to note in this connection that some of
+ those who defend the practice of concubinage appeal to the
+ example of the Old Testament, saying that what was good enough
+ for the race that gave to Christians the greater part of their
+ Bible is good enough for the Japanese. Another point in the
+ discussion interesting to the Occidental is the repeated
+ assertion that there is no real difference between the East and
+ the West in point of practice; the only difference is that
+ whereas in the East all is open and above board, in the West
+ extra-marital relations are condemned by popular opinion, and
+ are therefore concealed.<a name='FNanchor_BT_72'
+ id="FNanchor_BT_72"></a><a href='#Footnote_BT_72'><sup>[BT]</sup></a>
+ A few writers publicly defend concubinage; most, however,
+ condemn it vigorously, even though making no profession of
+ Christian faith. Of the latter class is Mr. Fukuzawa, one of
+ Japan's leaders of public opinion. In his most trenchant
+ attack, he asserts that if Japan is to progress in
+ civilization she must abandon her system of concubinage.
+ That new standards in regard to marital relations are
+ arising in Japan is clear; but they have as yet little
+ force; there is no consensus of opinion to
+ <a name='Page_280'
+ id="Page_280"></a>give them force. He who transgresses them
+ is still recognized as in good standing in the
+ community.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly, with respect to business honesty, it is the
+ opinion of all with whom I have conversed on the subject that
+ there has been a great decline in the honesty of the common
+ people. In feudal days thefts and petty dishonesty were
+ practically unknown. To-day these are exceedingly common.
+ Foreign merchants complain that it is impossible to trust
+ Japanese to carry out verbal or written promises, when the
+ conditions of the market change to their disadvantage. It is
+ accordingly charged that the Japanese have no sense of honor in
+ business matters.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Kokumin Shinbun</i> (People's News) has recently
+ discussed the question of Japanese commercial morality, with
+ the following results: It says, first, that goods delivered are
+ not up to sample; secondly, that engagements as to time are not
+ kept; thirdly, that business men have no adequate appreciation
+ of the permanent interests of business; fourthly, that they are
+ without ability to work in common; and fifthly, that they do
+ not get to know either their customers or
+ themselves.<a name='FNanchor_BU_73'
+ id="FNanchor_BU_73"></a><a href='#Footnote_BU_73'><sup>[BU]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"The Japanese consul at Tientsin recently reported to the
+ Government that the Chinese have begun to regard Japanese
+ manufactures with serious distrust. Merchandise received from
+ Japan, they allege, does not correspond with samples, and
+ packing is, in almost all cases, miserably unsubstantial. The
+ consul expresses the deepest regret that Japanese merchants are
+ disposed to break their faith without regard to
+ honor."<a name='FNanchor_BV_74'
+ id="FNanchor_BV_74"></a><a href='#Footnote_BV_74'><sup>[BV]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In this connection it may not be amiss to revert to
+ illustrations that have come within my own experience. I have
+ already cited instances of the apparent duplicity to which
+ deacons and candidates for the ministry stoop. I do not believe
+ that either the deacons or the candidates had the slightest
+ thought that they were doing anything dishonorable. Nor do I
+ for a moment suppose that the President and the Trustees of the
+ Doshisha at all realized the gravity of the moral aspect
+ <a name='Page_281'
+ id="Page_281"></a>of the course they took in diverting the
+ Doshisha from its original purposes. They seemed to think
+ that money, once given to the Doshisha, might be used
+ without regard to the wishes of the donors. I cannot help
+ wondering how much of their thought on this subject is due
+ to the custom prevalent in Japan ever since the
+ establishment of Buddhist temples and monasteries, of
+ considering property once given as irrevocable, so that the
+ individuals who gave it or their heirs, have no further
+ interest or right in the property. Large donations in Japan
+ have, from time immemorial, been given thus absolutely; the
+ giver assumed that the receiver would use it aright;
+ specific directions were not added as to the purposes of the
+ gift. American benefactors of the Doshisha have given under
+ the standards prevailing in the West. The receivers in Japan
+ have accepted these gifts under the standards prevailing in
+ the East. Is not this in part the cause of the friction that
+ has arisen in recent years over the administration of funds
+ and lands and houses held by Japanese for mission
+ purposes?</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection, however, I should not fail to refer to
+ the fact that the Christians of the Kumiai
+ churches,<a name='FNanchor_BW_75'
+ id="FNanchor_BW_75"></a><a href='#Footnote_BW_75'><sup>[BW]</sup></a>
+ in their annual meeting (1898), took strong grounds as to
+ the mismanagement of the Doshisha by the trustees. The
+ action of the latter in repealing the clause of the
+ constitution which declared the six articles of the
+ constitution forever unchangeable, and then of striking out
+ the word "Christian" in regard to the nature of the moral
+ education to be given in all departments of the institution,
+ was characterized as "fu-ho," that is to say, unlawful,
+ unrighteous, or immoral. Resolutions were also passed
+ demanding that the trustees should either restore the
+ expunged words or else resign and give place to men who
+ would restore them and carry out the will of the donors.
+ This act on the part of a large majority of the delegates of
+ the churches shows that a standard of business morality is
+ arising in Japan that promises well for the future.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_282'
+ id="Page_282"></a>Before leaving this question, it is
+ important for us to consider how widely in lands which have
+ long been both Christian and commercial, the standards of
+ truthfulness and business morality are transgressed. I for
+ one do not feel disposed to condemn Japanese failure very
+ severely, when I think of the failure in Western lands.
+ Then, again, when we stop to think of it, is it not a pretty
+ fine line that we draw between legitimate and illegitimate
+ profits? What a relative distinction this is! Even the
+ Westerner finds difficulty in discovering and observing it,
+ especially so when the man with whom he is dealing happens
+ to be ignorant of the real value of the goods in question.
+ Let us not be too severe, then, in condemning the Japanese,
+ even though we must judge them to be deficient in ideals and
+ conduct. The explanation for the present state of Japan in
+ regard to business morality is neither far to seek nor hard
+ to find. It has nothing whatever to do with brain structure
+ or inherent race character, but is wholly a matter of
+ changing social order. Feudal communalism has given way to
+ individualistic commercialism. The results are inevitable.
+ Japan has suddenly entered upon that social order where the
+ individuals of the nation are thrown upon their own choice
+ for character and life as they have been at no previous
+ time. Old men, as well as young, are thrown off their feet
+ by the new temptations into which they fall.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the strongest arguments in my mind for the necessity
+ of a rapid introduction into Japan of the Gospel of Christ, is
+ to be built on this fact. An individualistic social order
+ demands an individualizing religion. So far as I know, the
+ older religions, with the lofty moral teachings which one may
+ freely admit them to have, make no determined or even distinct
+ effort to secure the activity of the individual will in the
+ adoption of moral ideals. The place both of "conversion" and of
+ the public avowal of one's "faith" in the establishment of
+ individual character, and the peculiar fitness of a religion
+ having such characteristics to a social order in which
+ "individualism" is the dominant principle, have not yet been
+ widely recognized by writers <a name='Page_283'
+ id="Page_283"></a>on sociology. These practices of the
+ Protestant churches are, nevertheless, of inestimable value
+ in the upbuilding both of the individual and of society. And
+ Japan needs these elements at the earliest possible date in
+ order to supplement the new order of society which is being
+ established. Without them it is a question whether in the
+ long run this new order may not prove a step downward rather
+ than upward.</p>
+
+ <p>This completes our detailed study of Japanese moral
+ characteristics as revealed alike in their ideals and their
+ practices. Let us now seek for some general statement of the
+ facts and conclusions thus far reached. It has become clear
+ that Japanese moralists have placed the emphasis of their
+ ethical thinking on loyalty; subordinated to this has been
+ filial piety. These two principles have been the pivotal points
+ of Japanese ethics. All other virtues flowed out of them, and
+ were intimately dependent upon them. These virtues are
+ especially fitted to upbuild and to maintain the feudal order
+ of society. They are essentially communal virtues. The first
+ group, depending on and growing out of loyalty, was concerned
+ with the maintenance of the larger communal unity, formerly the
+ tribe, and now the nation. The virtues connected with the
+ second principle&mdash;filial piety&mdash;were concerned with
+ the maintenance of the smaller unit of society&mdash;- the
+ family. Righteousness and duty, of which much was made by
+ Japanese moralists, consisted in the observance of these two
+ ideals.</p>
+
+ <p>The morality of individualism was largely wanting. From this
+ lack sprang the main defects of the moral ideal and of the
+ actual practice. The chief sins of Old Japan&mdash;and, as a
+ matter of fact, of all the heathen world, as graphically
+ depicted by Mr. Dennis in his great work on "Christian Missions
+ and Social Progress"&mdash;were sins of omission and commission
+ against the individual. The rights of inferiors practically
+ received no consideration at the hands of the moralists. In the
+ Japanese conception of righteousness and duty, the rights and
+ value of the individual, as such, whatever his social standing
+ or sex, were not included.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_284'
+ id="Page_284"></a>One class of defects in the Japanese moral
+ ideal arose out of the feudal order itself, namely, its
+ scorn of trade. Trade had no vital relation to the communal
+ unity; hence it found and developed no moral sanctions for
+ its guidance. The West conceives of business deceit as
+ concerned not only with the integrity of the community, but
+ also with the rights of the individual. The moral ideals and
+ sanctions for business honesty are therefore doubly strong
+ with us. The old order of Japan was in no way dependent for
+ its integrity on business honor and honesty, and, as we have
+ seen, individuals, as such, were not thought to have
+ inherent rights. Under such conditions, it is difficult to
+ conceive how universal moral ideals and sanctions for
+ business relations could be developed and maintained.</p>
+
+ <p>One further point demands attention. We naturally ask what
+ the grounds were on which the ethical ideals were commonly
+ supposed to have authority. So far as my knowledge goes, this
+ question received almost no consideration by the ordinary
+ person, and but little from the moralist. Old Japan was not
+ accustomed to ask "Why?" It accepted everything on the
+ authority of the teacher, as children do, and as all primitive
+ peoples do. There was little or no thought as to the source of
+ the moral ideals or as to the nature or the function of the
+ social sanctions. If, as in a few instances, the questions were
+ raised as to their authority, the reply ordinarily would be
+ that they had derived their teachings from ancient times. And,
+ if the matter were pressed, it would be argued that the most
+ ancient times were nearer the beginning of men, and, therefore,
+ nearer to Heaven, which decreed that all the duties and customs
+ of men; in the final resort, therefore, authority would be
+ attributed to Heaven. But such a questioner was rare. Moral law
+ was unhesitatingly accepted on the authority of the teacher,
+ and no uncomfortable questions were asked. It is easy to see
+ that both of the pivotal moral ideals, <i>i.e.</i>, loyalty and
+ filial piety, would support this unquestioning habit of mind,
+ for to ask questions as to authority is the beginning both of
+ disloyalty to the master and of irreverence to the parents and
+ ancestors.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_285'
+ id="Page_285"></a>The whole social order, being one of
+ authority, unquestioned and absolute, moral standards were
+ accepted on the ipse dixit of great teachers.</p>
+
+ <p>In closing, we revert to our ever-recurring question: Are
+ the moral characteristics wherein the Japanese differ from
+ other races inherent and necessary, as are their physiological
+ characteristics, or are they incidental and transient, liable
+ to transformation? Light has been thrown on this problem by
+ every illustration adduced. We have seen in detail that every
+ characteristically Japanese moral trait is due to the nature of
+ her past social order, and is changing With that order. Racial
+ moral traits, therefore, are not due to inherent nature, to
+ essential character, to brain structure, nor are they
+ transmitted from father to son by the mere fact of physical
+ generation. On the contrary, the distinguishing ethical
+ characteristics of races, as seen in their ethical ideals and
+ their moral conduct, are determined by the dominant social
+ order, and vary with it. Ethical characteristics are
+ transmitted by association, transmission is therefore not
+ limited to the relation of parents and children. The bearing of
+ this fact on the problem of the moral transformation of races
+ could be easily shown.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXV'
+ id="XXV"></a><a name='Page_286'
+ id="Page_286"></a>XXV</h2>
+
+ <h3>ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Said Prof. Pfleiderer to the writer in the winter of 1897:
+ "I am sorry to know that the Japanese are deficient in
+ religious nature." In an elaborate article entitled, "Wanted, a
+ Religion," a missionary describes the three so-called religions
+ of Japan, Buddhism, Confucianism, and Shintoism, and shows to
+ his satisfaction that none of these has the essential
+ characteristics of religion.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Percival Lowell has said that "Sense may not be vital to
+ religion, but incense is."<a name='FNanchor_BX_76'
+ id="FNanchor_BX_76"></a><a href='#Footnote_BX_76'><sup>[BX]</sup></a>
+ In my judgment, this is the essence of nonsense, and is
+ fitted to incense a man's sense.</p>
+
+ <p>The impression that the Japanese people are not religious is
+ due to various facts. The first is that for about three hundred
+ years the intelligence of the nation has been dominated by
+ Confucian thought, which rejects active belief in supra-human
+ beings. When asked by his pupils as to the gods, Confucius is
+ reported to have said that men should respect them, but should
+ have nothing to do with them. The tendency of Confucian ethics,
+ accordingly, is to leave the gods severely alone, although
+ their existence is not absolutely denied. When Confucianism
+ became popular in Japan, the educated part of the nation broke
+ away from Buddhism, which, for nearly a thousand years, had
+ been universally dominant. To them Buddhism seemed
+ superstitious in the extreme. It was not uncommon for them to
+ criticise it severely. Muro Kyu-so,<a name='FNanchor_BY_77'
+ id="FNanchor_BY_77"></a><a href='#Footnote_BY_77'><sup>[BY]</sup></a>
+ speaking of the immorality that was so common in the native
+ literature, says: "Long has Buddhism made Japan to think of
+ nothing as important except the worship of Buddha.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_287'
+ id="Page_287"></a>So it is that evil customs prevail, and
+ there is no one who does not find pleasure in lust.... Take
+ out the lust and Buddhism from that book, and the scenery
+ and emotions are well described.... Had he learned in the
+ 'Way' of the sages, he had not fallen into
+ Buddhism."<a name='FNanchor_BZ_78'
+ id="FNanchor_BZ_78"></a><a href='#Footnote_BZ_78'><sup>[BZ]</sup></a>
+ The tendency of all persons trained in Confucian classics
+ was toward thoroughgoing skepticism as to divine beings and
+ their relation to this world. For this reason, beyond doubt,
+ has Western agnosticism found so easy an entrance into
+ Japan. This ready acceptance of Western agnosticism is a
+ second fact that has tended to give the West the impression
+ referred to above. Complete indifference to religion is
+ characteristic of the educated classes of to-day. Japanese
+ and foreigners, Christians and non-Christians, alike, unite
+ in this opinion. The impression usually conveyed by this
+ statement, however, is that agnosticism is a new thing in
+ Japan. In point of fact, the old agnosticism is merely
+ re-enforced by the support it receives from the agnosticism
+ of the West.</p>
+
+ <p>The Occidental impression of Japanese irreligious race
+ nature is further strengthened by the frequent assertion of it
+ by writers, some of whom at least are neither partial nor
+ ignorant. Prof. Basil H. Chamberlain, for instance, repeatedly
+ makes the assertion or necessitates the inference. Speaking of
+ pilgrimages, he remarks that the Japanese "take their religion
+ lightly." Discussing the general question of religion, he
+ speaks of the Japanese as "essentially undevotional," but he
+ guards against the inference that they are therefore specially
+ immoral. Yet, in the same paragraph, he adds, "Though they pray
+ little and make light of supernatural dogma, the religion of
+ the family binds them down in truly social bonds." Percival
+ Lowell also, as we have seen, makes light of Japanese
+ religion.</p>
+
+ <p>This conclusion of foreigner observers is rendered the more
+ convincing to the average reader when he learns that such an
+ influential man as Mr. Fukuzawa declares that "religion is like
+ tea," it serves a social end, and nothing more; and that Mr.
+ Hiroyuki Kato, until re<a name='Page_288'
+ id="Page_288"></a>cently president of the Imperial
+ University, and later Minister of Education, states that
+ "Religion depends on fear." Marquis Ito, Japan's most
+ illustrious statesman, is reported to have said: "I regard
+ religion itself as quite unnecessary for a nation's life;
+ science is far above superstition, and what is
+ religion&mdash;Buddhism or Christianity&mdash;but
+ superstition, and therefore a possible source of weakness to
+ a nation? I do not regret the tendency to free thought and
+ atheism, which is almost universal in Japan, because I do
+ not regard it as a source of danger to the
+ community."<a name='FNanchor_CA_79'
+ id="FNanchor_CA_79"></a><a href='#Footnote_CA_79'><sup>[CA]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>If leaders of national thought have such conceptions as to
+ the nature and origin of religion, is it strange that the rank
+ and file of educated people should have little regard for it,
+ or that foreigners generally should believe the Japanese race
+ to be essentially non-religious?</p>
+
+ <p>But before we accept this conclusion, various considerations
+ demand our notice. Although the conception of religion held by
+ the eminent Japanese gentlemen just quoted is not accepted by
+ the writer as correct, yet, even on their own definitions, a
+ study of Japanese superstitions and religious ceremonies would
+ easily prove the people as a whole to be exceedingly religious.
+ Never had a nation so many gods. It has been indeed "the
+ country of the gods." Their temples and shrines have been
+ innumerable. Priests have abounded and worshipers swarmed. For
+ worship, however indiscriminate and thoughtless, is evidence of
+ religious nature.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, utterances like those quoted above in
+ <a name='Page_289'
+ id="Page_289"></a>regard to the nature and function of
+ religion, are frequently on the lips of Westerners also,
+ multitudes of whom have exceedingly shallow conceptions of
+ the real nature of religion or the part it plays in the
+ development of society and of the individual. But we do not
+ pronounce the West irreligious because of such utterances.
+ We must not judge the religious many by the irreligious
+ few.</p>
+
+ <p>Again, are they competent judges who say the Japanese are
+ non-religious? Can a man who scorns religion himself, who at
+ least reveals no appreciation of its real nature by his own
+ heart experience, judge fairly of the religious nature of the
+ people? Still further, the religious phenomena of a people may
+ change from age to age. In asking, then, whether a people is
+ religious by nature, we must study its entire religious
+ history, and not merely a single period of it. The life of
+ modern Japan has been rudely shocked by the sudden accession of
+ much new intellectual light. The contents of religion depends
+ on the intellect; sudden and widespread accession of knowledge
+ always discredits the older forms of religious expression. An
+ undeveloped religion, still bound up with polytheistic
+ symbolism, with its charms and mementoes, inevitably suffers
+ severely at the hands of exact modern science. For the educated
+ minority, especially, the inevitable reaction is to complete
+ skepticism, to apparent irreligion. For the time being,
+ religion itself may appear to have been discredited. In an
+ advancing age, prophets of religious dissolution are abundant.
+ Such prophecies, with reference to Christianity, have been
+ frequent, and are not unheard even now. Particular beliefs and
+ practices of religion have indeed changed and passed away, even
+ in Christianity. But the essentially religious nature of man
+ has re-asserted itself in every case, and the outward
+ expressions of that nature have thereby only become freer from
+ elements of error and superstition. Exactly this is taking
+ place in Japan to-day. The apparent irreligion of to-day is the
+ groundwork of the purer religion of to-morrow.</p>
+
+ <p>If the Japanese are emotional and sentimental, we
+ <a name='Page_290'
+ id="Page_290"></a>should expect them to be, perhaps more
+ than most peoples, religious. This expectation is not
+ disappointed by a study of their history. However imperfect
+ as a religion we must pronounce original Shinto to have
+ been, consisting of little more than a cultus and a
+ theogony, yet even with this alone the Japanese should be
+ pronounced a religious people. The universality of the
+ respect and adoration, not to say love, bestowed throughout
+ the ages of history on the "Kami" (the multitudinous Gods of
+ Shintoism), is a standing witness to the depth of the
+ religious feeling in the Japanese heart. True, it is
+ associated with the sentiments of love of ancestors and
+ country, with filial piety and loyalty; but these, so far
+ from lowering the religion, make it more truly
+ religious?</p>
+
+ <p>Unending lines of pilgrims, visiting noted Shinto temples
+ and climbing sacred mountain peaks, arrest the attention of
+ every thoughtful student of Japan. These pilgrims are numbered
+ by the hundreds of thousands every year. The visitors to the
+ great shrine at Kizuki of Izumo number about 250,000 annually.
+ "The more prosperous the season, the larger the number of
+ pilgrims. It rarely falls below two hundred thousand." In his
+ "Occult Japan," Mr. Lowell has given us an interesting account
+ of the "pilgrim clubs," The largest known to him numbered about
+ twelve thousand men, but he thinks they average from one
+ hundred to about five hundred persons each. The number of
+ yearly visitors to the Shinto shrines at Ise is estimated at
+ half a million, and ten thousand pilgrims climb Mt. Fuji every
+ summer. The number of pilgrims to Kompira, in Shikoku, is
+ incredibly large; according to the count taken during the first
+ half of 1898, the first ever taken, the average for six months
+ was 2500 each day; at this rate the number for the year is
+ nearly 900,000. The highest for a single day was over 12,000.
+ These figures were given me by the chief official of this
+ district. The highest mountain in Shikoku, Ishidzuchi San, some
+ six thousand feet in height, is said to be ascended by ten
+ thousand pilgrims each summer. These pilgrims eat little or
+ nothing at hotels, depending rather on what <a name='Page_291'
+ id="Page_291"></a>they carry until they return from their
+ arduous three days' climb; nor do they take any prolonged
+ rest until they are on the homeward way. The reason for this
+ is that the climb is supposed to be a test of the heart; if
+ the pilgrim fail to reach the summit, the inference is that
+ he is at fault, and that the god does not favor him. They
+ who offer their prayers from the summit are supposed to be
+ assured of having them answered.</p>
+
+ <p>But beside these greater pilgranages to mountain summits and
+ national shrines, innumerable lesser ones are made. Each
+ district has a more or less extended circuit of its own. In
+ Shikoku there is a round known as the "Hachi-Ju-hakka sho
+ mairi," or "The Pilgrimage to the 88 Places," supposed to be
+ the round once made by Kobo Daishi (A.D. 774-834), the founder
+ of the Shinton sect of Buddhism. The number of pilgrims who
+ make this round is exceedingly large, since it is a favorite
+ circuit for the people not only of Shikoku, but also of central
+ and western Japan. Many of the pilgrims wear on the back, just
+ below the neck, a pair of curious miniature "waraji" or straw
+ sandals, because Kobo Daishi carried a real pair along with him
+ on his journey. I never go to Ishite Temple (just out of
+ Matsuyama), one of the eighty-eight places of the circuit,
+ without seeing some of these pilgrims. But this must suffice.
+ The pilgrim habit of the Japanese is a strong proof of
+ widespread religious enthusiasm, and throws much light on the
+ religious nature of the people. There seems to be reason for
+ thinking that the custom existed in Japan even before the
+ introduction of Buddhism. If this is correct, it bears powerful
+ testimony to the inherently religious nature of the Japanese
+ race.</p>
+
+ <p>The charge has been made that these pilgrimages are mere
+ pleasure excursions. Mr. Lowell says, facetiously, that "They
+ are peripatetic picnic parties, faintly flavored with piety;
+ just a sufficient suspicion of it to render them acceptable to
+ the easy-going gods." Beneath this light alliterative style,
+ which delights the literary reader, do we find the truth? To me
+ it seems like a slur on the pilgrims, evidently due to Mr.
+ Lowell's <a name='Page_292'
+ id="Page_292"></a>idea that a genuine religious feeling must
+ be gloomy and solemn. Joy may seem to him incompatible with
+ heartfelt religion and aspiration. That these pilgrims lack
+ the religious aspiration characteristic of highly developed
+ Christians of the West, is, of course, true; but that they
+ have a certain type of religious aspiration is equally
+ indisputable. They have definite and strong ideas as to the
+ advantage of prayer at the various shrines; they confidently
+ believe that their welfare, both in this world and the next,
+ will be vitally affected by such pilgrimages and such a
+ faithful worship. It is customary for pilgrims, who make
+ extended journeys, to carry what may be called a passbook,
+ in which seals are placed by the officials of each shrine.
+ This is evidence to friends and to the pilgrim himself, in
+ after years, of the reality of his long and tedious
+ pilgrimage. Beggars before these shrines are apt to display
+ these passbooks as an evidence of their worthiness and need.
+ For many a pilgrim supports himself, during his pilgrimage,
+ entirely by begging.</p>
+
+ <p>Pilgrims also buy from each shrine of note some charm, "o
+ mamori," "honorable preserver," and "o fuda," "honorable
+ ticket," which to them are exceedingly precious. There is
+ hardly a house in Japan but has some, often many, of these
+ charms, either nailed on the front door or placed on the
+ god-shelf. I have seen a score nailed one above another. In
+ some cases the year-names are still legible, and show
+ considerable age. The sale of charms is a source of no little
+ revenue to the temples, in some cases amounting to thousands of
+ yen annually. We may smile at the ignorance and superstition
+ which these facts reveal, but, as I already remarked, these are
+ external features, the material expression or clothing, so to
+ speak, of the inner life. Their particular form is due to
+ deficient intellectual development. I do not defend them; I
+ merely maintain that their existence shows conclusively the
+ possession by the people at large of a real religious emotion
+ and purpose. If so, they, are not to be sneered at, although
+ the mood of the average pilgrim may be cheerful, and the
+ ordinary pilgrimage may have the aspect of a
+ "per<a name='Page_293'
+ id="Page_293"></a>ipatetic picnic, faintly flavored with
+ piety." The outside observer, such as the foreigner of
+ necessity is, is quick to detect the picnic quality, but he
+ cannot so easily discern the religious significance or the
+ inner thoughts and emotions of the pilgrims. The former is
+ discernible at a glance, without knowledge of the Japanese
+ language or sympathy with the religious heart; the latter
+ can be discovered only by him who intimately understands the
+ people, their language and their religion.</p>
+
+ <p>If religion were necessarily gloomy, festivals and
+ merry-making would be valid proof of Japanese religious
+ deficiency. But such is not the case. Primitive religions, like
+ primitive people, are artless and simple in religious joy as in
+ all the aspects of their life. Developed races increasingly
+ discover the seriousness of living, and become correspondingly
+ reflective, if not positively gloomy. Religion shares this
+ transformation. But those religions in which salvation is a
+ prominent idea, and whose nature is such as to satisfy at once
+ the head and the heart, restore joyousness as a necessary
+ consequence. While certain aspects of Christianity certainly
+ have a gloomy look,&mdash;which its critics are much disposed
+ to exaggerate, and then to condemn,&mdash;yet Christianity at
+ heart is a religion of profound joy, and this feature shows
+ itself in such universal festivals as Christmas and Easter.
+ Even though the Japanese popular religious life showed itself
+ exclusively in festivals and on occasions of joy, therefore,
+ that would not prove them to be inherently lacking in religious
+ nature.</p>
+
+ <p>But there is another set of phenomena, even more impressive
+ to the candid and sympathetic student. It is the presence in
+ every home of the "Butsu-dan," or Buddha shelf, and the
+ "Kami-dana," or God shelf. The former is Buddhist, and the
+ latter Shinto. Exclusive Shintoists, who are rare, have the
+ latter alone. Where both are found, the "I-hai," ancestral
+ memorial tablets, are placed on the "Butsu-dan"; otherwise they
+ are placed on the "Kami-dana." The Kami-dana are always quite
+ simple, as are all Shinto charms and utensils. The Butsu-dan
+ are usually elaborate and <a name='Page_294'
+ id="Page_294"></a>beautiful, and sometimes large and costly.
+ The universality of these tokens of family religion, and the
+ constant and loving care bestowed upon them, are striking
+ testimony to the universality of the religion in Japan. The
+ pathos of life is often revealed by the faithful devotion of
+ the mother to these silent representatives of divine beings
+ and departed ancestors or children. I have no hesitation in
+ saying that, so far as external appearances go, the average
+ home in Japan is far more religious than the average home in
+ enlightened England or America, especially when compared
+ with such as have no family worship. There may be a genuine
+ religious life in these Western homes, but it does not
+ appear to the casual visitor. Yet no casual visitor can
+ enter a Japanese home, without seeing at once the evidences
+ of some sort, at least, of religious life.</p>
+
+ <p>It is impossible for me to believe, as many assert, that all
+ is mere custom and hollow form, without any kernel of meaning
+ or sincerity. Customs may outlast beliefs for a time, and this
+ is particularly the case with religious customs; for the form
+ is so often taken to involve the very essence of the reality.
+ But customs which have lost all significance, and all belief,
+ inevitably dwindle and fade away, even if not suddenly
+ rejected; they remain them; they leave their trace indeed, but
+ so faintly that only the student of primitive customs can
+ detect them and recognize their original nature and purpose.
+ The Butsu-dan and Kami-dana do not belong to this order of
+ beliefs. The average home of Japan would feel itself desecrated
+ were these to be forcibly removed. The piety of the home
+ centers, in large measure, about these expressions of the
+ religious heart. Their practical universality is a significant
+ witness to the possession by the people at large of a religious
+ nature.</p>
+
+ <p>If it is fair to argue that the Christian religion has a
+ vital hold on the Western peoples because of the cathedrals and
+ churches to be found throughout the length and breadth of
+ Christendom, a similar argument applies to Japan and the hold
+ of the religions of this land upon <a name='Page_295'
+ id="Page_295"></a>its people. For over a thousand years the
+ external manifestations of religion in architecture have
+ been elaborate. Temples of enormous size, comparing not
+ unfavorably with the cathedrals of Europe as regards the
+ cost of erection, are to be found in all parts of the land.
+ Immense temple bells of bronze, colossal statues of Buddha,
+ and lesser ones of saints and worthies innumerable, bear
+ witness to the lavish use of wealth in the expression of
+ religious devotion. It is sometimes said that Buddhism is
+ moribund in Japan. It is seriously asserted that its temples
+ are falling into decay. This is no more true of the temples
+ of Buddhism in Japan, than of the cathedrals Of Christendom.
+ Local causes greatly affect the prosperity of the various
+ temples. Some are falling into decay, but others are being
+ repaired, and new ones are being built. No one can have
+ visited any shrine of note without observing the large
+ number of signboards along either side of the main approach,
+ on which are written the sums contributed for the building
+ or repairing of the temple. These gifts are often
+ munificent, single gifts sometimes reaching the sum of a
+ thousand yen; I have noticed a few exceeding this amount.
+ The total number of these temples and shrines throughout the
+ country is amazing. According to government statistics, in
+ 1894 the Buddhist temples numbered 71,831; and the Shinto
+ temples and shrines which have received official
+ registration reached the vast number of 190,803. The largest
+ temple in Japan, costing several million dollars, the
+ Nishihongwanji in Kyoto, has been built during the past
+ decade. Considering the general poverty of the nation, the
+ proportion of gifts made for the erection and maintenance of
+ these temples and shrines is a striking testimony to the
+ reality of some sort of religious zeal. That it rests
+ entirely on form and meaningless rites, is incredible.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXVI'
+ id="XXVI"></a><a name='Page_296'
+ id="Page_296"></a>XXVI</h2>
+
+ <h3>SOME RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Without doubt, many traits are attributed to the Japanese by
+ the casual observer or captious critic, through lack of ability
+ to read between the lines. We have already seen how the stoical
+ element of Japanese character serves to conceal from the
+ sociologist the emotional nature of the people. If a Japanese
+ conceals his ordinary emotions, much more does he refrain from
+ public exhibition of his deeper religious aspirations. Although
+ he may feel profoundly, his face and manner seldom reveal it.
+ When torn with grief over the loss of a parent or son, he will
+ tell you of his loss with smiles, if not with actual laughter.
+ "The Japanese smile" has betrayed the solemn foreigner into
+ many an error of individual and racial character
+ interpretation. Particularly frequent have been such errors in
+ matters of religion.</p>
+
+ <p>Although the light and joyous, "smiling" aspect of Japanese
+ religious life is prominent, the careful observer will come
+ incidentally and unexpectedly on many signs of an opposite
+ nature, if he mingle intimately with the people. Japan has its
+ sorrows and its tragedies, no less than other lands. These have
+ their part in determining religious phenomena.</p>
+
+ <p>The student who takes his stand at a popular shrine and
+ watches the worshipers come and go will be rewarded by the
+ growing conviction that, although many are manifestly
+ ceremonialists, others are clearly subjects of profound
+ feeling. See that mother leading her toddling child to the
+ image of Binzuru, the god of healing, and teaching it to rub
+ the eyes and face of the god and then its own eyes and face.
+ See that pilgrim before a <a name='Page_297'
+ id="Page_297"></a>bare shrine repeating in rapt devotion the
+ prayer he has known from his childhood, and in virtue of
+ which he has already received numberless blessings. Behold
+ that leper pleading with merciful Kwannon of the thousand
+ hands to heal his disease. Hear that pitiful wail of a score
+ of fox-possessed victims for deliverance from their
+ oppressor. Watch that tearful maiden performing the hundred
+ circuits of the temple while she prays for a specific
+ blessing for herself or some loved one. Observe that
+ merchant solemnly worshiping the god of the sea, with
+ offering of rice and wine. Count those hundreds of votive
+ pictures, thanksgiving remembrances of the sick who have
+ been healed, in answer, as they firmly believe, to their
+ prayers to the god of this particular shrine. These are not
+ imaginary cases. The writer has seen these and scores more
+ like them. Here is a serious side to Japanese religious life
+ easily overlooked by a casual or unsympathetic observer.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to these simpler religious phenomena, we find in
+ Japan, as in other lands, the practice of ecstatic union with
+ the deity. In Shinto it is called "Kami-oroshi," the bringing
+ down of the gods. It is doubtless some form of hypnotic trance,
+ yet the popular interpretation of the phenomenon is that of
+ divine possession.</p>
+
+ <p>Among Buddhists, the practice of ecstasy takes a different
+ form. The aim is to attain absolute vacuity of mind and thus
+ complete union with the Absolute. When attained, the soul
+ becomes conscious of blissful superiority to all the concerns
+ of this mundane life, a foretaste of the Nirvana awaiting those
+ who shall attain to Buddhahood. The actual attainment of this
+ experience is practically limited to the priesthood, who alone
+ have the time and freedom from the cares of the world needful
+ for its practice. For it is induced only by long and profound
+ "meditation." Especially is this experience the desire of the
+ Zen sect, which makes it a leading aim, taking its name "zen"
+ (to sit) from this practice. To sit in religious abstraction is
+ the height of religious bliss.</p>
+
+ <p>The practical business man of the West may perhaps find some
+ difficulty in seeing anything particularly re<a name='Page_298'
+ id="Page_298"></a>ligious in ecstasy or mental vacuity. But
+ if I mistake not, this religious phenomenon of the Orient
+ does not differ in essence from the mystical religious
+ experience so common in the middle and subsequent ages in
+ Europe, and represented to-day by mystical Christians.
+ Indeed, some of the finest religious souls of Western lands
+ have been mystics. Mystic Christianity finds ready
+ acceptance with certain of the Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>The critical reader may perhaps admit, in view of the facts
+ thus far presented, that the ignorant millions have some degree
+ of religious feeling and yet, in view of the apparently
+ irreligious life of the educated, he may still feel that the
+ religious nature of the race is essentially shallow. He may
+ feel that as soon as a Japanese is lifted out of the
+ superstitious beliefs of the past, he is freed from all
+ religious ideas and aspirations. I admit at once that there
+ seems to be some ground for such an assertion. Yet as I study
+ the character of the samurai of the Tokugawa period, who alone
+ may be called the irreligious of the olden times, I see good
+ reasons for holding that, though rejecting Buddhism, they were
+ religious at heart. They developed little or no religious
+ ceremonial to replace that of Buddhism, yet there were
+ indications that the religious life still remained.
+ Intellectual and moral growth rendered it impossible for
+ earnest and honest men to accept the old religious expressions.
+ They revolted from religious forms, rather than from religion,
+ and the revolt resulted not in deeper superstitions and a
+ poorer life, but in a life richer in thought and noble
+ endeavor. Muro Kyu-so, the "Japanese Philosopher" to whom we
+ have referred more than once, rejected Buddhism, as we have
+ already seen. The high quality of his moral teachings we have
+ also noticed. Yet he had no idea that he was "religious." Those
+ who reject Buddhism often use the term "Shukyo-kusai,"
+ "stinking religion." For them religion is synonymous with
+ corrupt and superstitious Buddhism. To have told Muro that he
+ was religious would doubtless have offended him, but a few
+ quotations should satisfy anyone that at heart he was religious
+ in the best sense of the term.</p>
+
+ <p>"<a name='Page_299'
+ id="Page_299"></a>Consider all of you. Whence is fortune?
+ From Heaven. Even the world says, Fortune is in Heaven. So
+ then there is no resource save prayer to Heaven. Let us then
+ ask: what does Heaven hate, and what does Heaven love? It
+ loves benevolence and hates malevolence. It loves truth and
+ hates untruth.... That which in Heaven begets all things, in
+ man is called love. So doubt not that Heaven loves
+ benevolence and hates its opposite. So too is it with truth.
+ For countless ages sun and moon and stars constantly revolve
+ and we make calendars without mistake. Nothing is more
+ certain. It is the very truth of the universe.... I have
+ noticed prayers for good luck, brought year by year from
+ famous temples and hills, decorating the entrances to the
+ homes of famous samurai. But none the less they have been
+ killed or punished, or their line has been destroyed and
+ house extinguished. Or at least to many, shame and disgrace
+ have come. They have not learned fortune, but foolishly
+ depend on prayers and charms. Confucius said: 'When punished
+ by Heaven there is no place for prayer.' Women of course
+ follow the temples and trust in charms, but not so should
+ men. Alas! Now all are astray, those who should be teachers,
+ the samurai and those higher still" (pp. 63-5). "Sin is the
+ source of pain and righteousness of happiness. This is the
+ settled law. The teaching of the sages and the conduct of
+ superior men is determined by principles and the result is
+ left to Heaven. Still, we do not obey in the hope of
+ happiness, nor do we forbear to sin from fear. Not with this
+ meaning did Confucius and Mencius teach that happiness is in
+ virtue and pain in sin. But the 'way' is the law of man. It
+ is said, 'The way of Heaven blesses virtue and curses sin.'
+ That is intended for the ignorant multitude. Yet it is not
+ like the Buddhist 'hoben' (pious device), for it is the
+ determined truth" (p. 66). "Heaven is forever and is not to
+ be understood at once, like the promises of men.
+ Shortsighted men consider its ways and decide that there is
+ no reward for virtue or vice. So they doubt when the good
+ are virtuous and fear not when the wicked sin. They do not
+ know that there is no victory against Heaven
+ <a name='Page_300'
+ id="Page_300"></a>when it decrees" (p. 67). "Reason comes
+ from Heaven, and is in men.... The philosopher knows the
+ truth as the drinker knows the taste of <i>sak&eacute;</i>
+ and the abstainer the taste of sweets. How shall he forget
+ it? How shall he fall into error? Lying down, getting up,
+ moving, resting, all is well. In peace, in trouble, in
+ death, in joy, in sorrow, all is well. Never for a moment
+ will he leave this 'way.' This is to know it in ourselves"
+ (p. 71).</p>
+
+ <p>One day, five or six students remained after the lecture to
+ ask Kyu-so about his view as to the gods, stating their own
+ dissatisfaction with the fantastic interpretations given to the
+ term "Shinto" by the native scholars. Making some quotations
+ from the Chinese classics, he went on to say for himself:</p>
+
+ <p>"I cannot accept that which is popularly called Shinto.... I
+ do not profess to understand the profound reason of the
+ deities, but in outline this is my idea: The Doctrine of the
+ Mean speaks of the 'virtue of the Gods' and Shu-shi explains
+ this word 'virtue' to mean the 'heart and its revelation.' Its
+ meaning is thus stated in the Saden: 'God is pure intelligence
+ and justice.' Now all know that God is just, but do not know
+ that he is intelligent. But there is no such intelligence
+ elsewhere as God's. Man hears by the ear and where the ear is
+ not he hears not ...; man sees with his eyes, and where they
+ are not he sees not ...; with his heart man thinks and the
+ swiftest thought takes time. But God uses neither ear nor eye,
+ nor does he pass over in thought. Directly he feels, and
+ directly does he respond.... Is not this the divinity of Heaven
+ and Earth? So the Doctrine of the Mean says: 'Looked for it
+ cannot be seen, listened to it cannot be heard. It enters into
+ all things. There is nothing without it.' ... 'Everywhere,
+ everywhere, on the right and on the left.' This is the
+ revealing of God, the truth not to be concealed. Think not that
+ God is distant, but seek him in the heart, for the heart is the
+ House of God. Where there is no obstacle of lust, there is
+ communion of one spirit with the God of Heaven and Earth....
+ And now <a name='Page_301'
+ id="Page_301"></a>for the application. Examine yourselves,
+ make the truth of the heart the foundation, increase in
+ learning and at last you will attain. Then will you know the
+ truth of what I speak" (pp. 50-52).</p>
+
+ <p>In the above passage Dr. Knox has translated the term
+ "Shin," the Chinese ideograph for the Japanese word "Kami," by
+ the English singular, God. This lends to the passage a fullness
+ of monotheistic expression which the original hardly, if at
+ all, justifies. The originals are indefinite as to number and
+ might with equal truth be translated "gods," as Dr. Knox
+ suggests himself in a footnote.</p>
+
+ <p>These and similar passages are of great interest to the
+ student of Japanese religious development. They should be made
+ much of by Christian preachers and missionaries. Such writers
+ and thinkers as Muro evidently was might not improperly be
+ called the pre-Christian Christians of Japan. They prepared the
+ way for the coming of more light on these subjects. Japanese
+ Christian apologists should collect such utterances from her
+ wise men of old, and by them lead the nation to an appreciation
+ of the truths which they suggest and for which they so fitly
+ prepare the way. Scattered as they now are, and seldom read by
+ the people, they lie as precious gems imbedded in the hills, or
+ as seed safely stored. They can bear no harvest till they are
+ sown in the soil and allowed to spring up and grow.</p>
+
+ <p>The more I have pondered the implications of these and
+ similar passages, the more clear has it become that their
+ authors were essentially religious men. Their revolt from
+ "religion" did not spring from an irreligious motive, but from
+ a deeper religious insight than was prevalent among Buddhist
+ believers. The irrational and often immoral nature of many of
+ the current religious expressions and ceremonials and beliefs
+ became obnoxious to the thinking classes, and were accordingly
+ rejected. The essence of religion, however, was not rejected.
+ They tore off the accumulated husks of externalism, but kept
+ intact the real kernel of religion.</p>
+
+ <p>The case for the religious nature of modern, educated Japan
+ is not so simple. Irreligious it certainly appears.
+ <a name='Page_302'
+ id="Page_302"></a>Yet it, too, is not so irreligious as
+ perhaps the Occidental thinks. Though immoral, a Japanese
+ may still be a filial son and a loyal subject,
+ characteristics which have religious value in Japan, Old and
+ New. It would not be difficult to prove that many a modern
+ Japanese writer who proclaims his rejection of
+ religion&mdash;calling all religion but superstition and
+ ceremony&mdash;is nevertheless a religious man at heart. The
+ religions he knows are too superstitious and senseless to
+ satisfy the demands of his intellectually developed
+ religious nature. He does not recognize that his rejection
+ of what he calls "religion" is a real manifestation of his
+ religious nature rather than the reverse.</p>
+
+ <p>The widespread irreligious phenomena of New Japan are,
+ therefore, not difficult of explanation, when viewed in the
+ light of two thousand years of Japanese religious history. They
+ cannot be attributed to a deficient racial endowment of
+ religious nature. They are a part of nineteenth-century life by
+ no means limited to Japan. If the Anglo-Saxon race is not to be
+ pronounced inherently irreligious, despite the fact that
+ irreligious phenomena and individuals are in constant evidence
+ the world over, neither can New Japan be pronounced irreligious
+ for the same reason. The irreligion now so rampant is a recent
+ phenomenon in Japan. It may not immediately pass away, but it
+ must eventually. Religion freed from superstition and
+ ceremonialism, resting in reality, identifying moral and
+ scientific with religious truth, is already finding hearty
+ support from many of Japan's educated men. If appeal is made
+ under the right conditions, the Japanese manifest no lack of a
+ genuine religious nature. That they seem to be deficient in the
+ sense of reverence is held by some to be proof presumptive of a
+ deficient religious nature. A few illustrations will make clear
+ what the critic means and will guide us to an interpretation of
+ the phenomena. Occidentals are accustomed to consider a
+ religious service as a time of solemn quiet, for we feel
+ ourselves in a special sense in the presence of God; His
+ majesty and glory are realities to the believing worshiper. But
+ much occurs during a Christian service in Japanese
+ <a name='Page_303'
+ id="Page_303"></a>churches which would seem to indicate a
+ lack of this feeling. It is by no means uncommon for little
+ children to run about without restraint during the service,
+ for mothers to nurse their infants, and for adults to
+ converse with each other in an undertone, though not so low
+ but that the sound of the conversation may be heard by all.
+ I know a deacon occupying a front mat in church who spends a
+ large part of service time during the first two sabbaths of
+ each month in making out the receipts of the monthly
+ contributions and distributing them among the members. His
+ apparent supposition is that he disturbs no one (and it is
+ amazing how undisturbed the rest of the congregation is),
+ but also that he is in no way interfering with the solemnity
+ or value of the service. The freedom, too, with which
+ individuals come and go during the service is in marked
+ contrast to our custom. From our standpoint, there is lack
+ of reverence.</p>
+
+ <p>I recently attended a young men's meeting at which the
+ places for each were assigned by written quotations, from the
+ Bible, one-half of which was given to the individual and the
+ other half placed at the seat. One quotation so used was the
+ text, "The birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man hath
+ not where to lay his head." It would hardly seem as if earnest
+ Christians could have made such use of this text. Some months
+ ago at a social gathering held in connection with the annual
+ meeting of the churches of Shikoku, one of the comic
+ performances consisted in the effort on the part of three old
+ men to sing through to the end without a break-down the song
+ which to us is so sacred, "Rock of Ages, cleft for me." Only
+ one man succeeded, the others going through a course of quavers
+ and breaks which was exceedingly laughable, but absolutely
+ irreverent. The lack of reverence which has sometimes
+ characterized the social side of the Christmas services in
+ Japan has been the source of frequent regret to the
+ missionaries. In a social gathering of earnest young Christians
+ recently, a game demanding forfeits was played; these consisted
+ of the recitation of familiar texts from the Bible. There
+ certainly seems to be a lack of the sense of the fitness of
+ things.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_304'
+ id="Page_304"></a>But the question is, are these practices
+ due to an inherent deficiency of reverence, arising from the
+ character of the Japanese nature, or are they due rather to
+ the religious history of the past and the conditions of the
+ present? That the latter seems to me the correct view I need
+ hardly state. The fact that the Japanese are an emotional
+ people renders it probable, a priori, that under suitable
+ conditions they would be especially subject to the emotion
+ of reverence. And when we look at their history, and observe
+ the actual reverence paid by the multitudes to the rulers,
+ and by the superstitious worshipers to the "Kami" and
+ "Hotoke," it becomes evident that the apparent irreverence
+ in the Christian churches must be due to peculiar
+ conditions. Reverence is a subtle feeling; it depends on the
+ nature of the ideas that possess the mind and heart. From
+ the very nature of the case, Japanese Christians cannot have
+ the same set of associations clustering around the church,
+ the service, the Bible, or any of the Christian
+ institutions, as the Occidental who has been reared from
+ childhood among them, and who has derived his spiritual
+ nourishment from them. All the wealth of nineteen centuries
+ of experience has tended to give our services and our
+ churches special religious value in our eyes. The average
+ Christian in Japan and in any heathen land cannot have this
+ fringe of ideas and subtle feelings so essential to a
+ profound feeling of reverence. But as the significance of
+ the Christian conception of God, endowed with glory and
+ honor, majesty and might, is increasingly realized, and as
+ it is found that the spirit of reverence is one that needs
+ cultivation in worship, and especially as it is found that
+ the spirit of reverence is important to high spiritual life
+ and vitalizing spiritual power, more and more will that
+ spirit be manifested by Japanese Christians. But its
+ possession or its lack is due not to the inherent character
+ of the people, but rather to the character of the ideas
+ which possess them. In taking now a brief glance at the
+ nature and history of the three religions of Japan it seems
+ desirable to quote freely from the writings of recognized
+ authorities on the subject.</p><a name='Page_305'
+ id="Page_305"></a>/#
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"<i>Shinto</i>, which means literally 'the way of the
+ Gods,' is the name given to the mythology and vague
+ ancestor-and nature-worship which preceded the introduction
+ of Buddhism into Japan&mdash;Shinto, so often spoken of as
+ a religion, is hardly entitled to that name. It has no set
+ of dogmas, no sacred book, no moral code. The absence of a
+ moral code is accounted for in the writings of modern
+ native commentators by the innate perfection of Japanese
+ humanity, which obviates the necessity for such outward
+ props.... It is necessary, however, to distinguish three
+ periods in the existence of Shinto. During the first of
+ these&mdash;roughly speaking, down to A.D. 550&mdash;the
+ Japanese had no notion of religion as a separate
+ institution. To pay homage to the gods, that is, to the
+ departed ancestors of the Imperial family, and to the names
+ of other great men, was a usage springing from the same
+ soil as that which produced passive obedience to, and
+ worship of, the living Mikado. Besides this, there were
+ prayers to the wind-gods, to the god of fire, to the god of
+ pestilence, to the goddess of food, and to deities
+ presiding over the sauce-pan, the caldron, the gate, and
+ the kitchen. There were also purifications for
+ wrongdoing.... But there was not even a shadowy idea of any
+ code of morals, or any systematization of the simple
+ notions of the people concerning things unseen. There was
+ neither heaven nor hell&mdash;only a kind of neutral-tinted
+ Hades. Some of the gods were good and some were bad; nor
+ was the line between men and gods at all clearly
+ drawn."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The second period of Shinto began with the introduction of
+ Buddhism into Japan, in which period Shinto became absorbed
+ into Buddhism through the doctrine that the Shinto deities were
+ ancient incarnations of Buddhas. In this period Shinto retained
+ no distinctive feature. "Only at court and at a few great
+ shrines, such as those of Ise and Idzumo, was a knowledge of
+ Shinto in its native simplicity kept up; and it is doubtful
+ whether changes did not creep in with the lapse of ages. Most
+ Shinto temples throughout the country were served by Buddhist
+ priests, who introduced the architectural
+ orna<a name='Page_306'
+ id="Page_306"></a>ments and the ceremonial of their own
+ religion. Thus was formed the Ryobu Shinto&mdash;a mixed
+ religion founded on a compromise between the old creed and
+ the new, and hence the tolerant ideas on theological
+ subjects of most of the middle-lower classes, who worship
+ indifferently at the shrines of either faith."</p>
+
+ <p>The third period began about 1700. It was introduced by the
+ scholarly study of history. "Soon the movement became religious
+ and political&mdash;above all, patriotic.... The Shogunate was
+ frowned on, because it had supplanted the autocracy of the
+ heaven-descended Mikados. Buddhism and Confucianism were
+ sneered at because of their foreign origin. The great scholars
+ Mabuchi (1697-1769), Motoori (1730-1801), and Hirata
+ (1776-1843) devoted themselves to a religious
+ propaganda&mdash;if that can be called a religion which sets
+ out from the principle that the only two things needful are to
+ follow one's natural impulses and to obey the Mikado. This
+ order triumphed for a moment in the revolution of 1868." It
+ became for a few months the state religion, but soon lost its
+ status.<a name='FNanchor_CB_80'
+ id="FNanchor_CB_80"></a><a href='#Footnote_CB_80'><sup>[CB]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p><i>Buddhism</i> came to Japan from Korea <i>via</i> China in
+ 552 A.D. It was already a thousand years old and had, before it
+ reached Japan, broken up into numerous sects and subsects
+ differing widely from each other and from the original teaching
+ of Sakya Muni. After two centuries of propagandism it conquered
+ the land and absorbed the religious life of the people, though
+ Shinto was never entirely suppressed. "All education was for
+ centuries in Buddhist hands; Buddhism introduced art, and
+ medicine, molded the folklore of the country, created its
+ dramatic poetry, deeply influenced politics and every sphere of
+ social and intellectual activity. In a word, Buddhism was the
+ teacher under whose instruction the Japanese nation grew up. As
+ a nation they are now grossly forgetful of this fact. Ask an
+ educated Japanese a question about Buddhism, and ten to one he
+ will smile in your face. A hundred to one that he knows nothing
+ about the subject and glories in his nescience." "The
+ complicated metaphysics of Buddhism have awakened no interest
+ in the Japanese nation. Another fact, curious but true, is that
+ these people have never been at the trouble to translate
+ <a name='Page_307'
+ id="Page_307"></a>the Buddhist canon into their own
+ language. The priests use a Chinese version, and the laity
+ no version at all, though ... they would seem to have been
+ given to searching the Scriptures a few hundred years ago.
+ The Buddhist religion was disestablished and disendowed
+ during the years 1871-74, a step taken in consequence of the
+ temporary ascendency of Shinto." Although Confucianism took
+ a strong hold on the people in the early part of the
+ seventeenth century, yet its influence was limited to the
+ educated and ruling classes. The vast multitude still
+ remained Shinto-Buddhists.</p>
+
+ <p>As for doctrine, philosophic Buddhism with its dogmas of
+ salvation through intellectual enlightenment, by means of
+ self-perfecting, with its goal of absorption into Nirvana, has
+ doubtless been the belief and aim of the few. But such Buddhism
+ was too deep for the multitudes. "By the aid of hoben, or pious
+ devices, the priesthood has played into the hands of popular
+ superstition. Here, as elsewhere, there have been evolved
+ charms, amulets, pilgrimages, and gorgeous temple services, in
+ which the people worship not only the Buddha, who was himself
+ an agnostic, but his disciple, and even such abstractions as
+ Amida, which are mistaken for actual divine
+ personages."<a name='FNanchor_CC_81'
+ id="FNanchor_CC_81"></a><a href='#Footnote_CC_81'><sup>[CC]</sup></a>
+ The deities of Shinto have been more or less confused with
+ those of popular Buddhism; in some cases, inextricably
+ so.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Confucianism</i>, as known in Japan, was the elaborated
+ doctrine of Confucius. "He confined himself to practical
+ details of morals and government, and took submission to
+ parents and political rulers as the corner stone of his system.
+ The result is a set of moral truths&mdash;some would say
+ truisms&mdash;of a very narrow scope, and of dry ceremonial
+ observances, political rather than personal." "Originally
+ introduced into Japan early in the Christian era, along with
+ other products of Chinese civilization, the Confucian
+ philosophy lay dormant during the middle ages, the period of
+ the supremacy of Buddhism. It awoke with a start in the early
+ part of the seventeenth century when Iccasu, the great warrior,
+ ruler, and patron of learning, caused the Confucian classics to
+ be printed in <a name='Page_308'
+ id="Page_308"></a>Japan for the first time. During the two
+ hundred and fifty years that followed, the intellect of the
+ country was molded by Confucian ideas. Confucius himself
+ had, it is true, labored for the establishment of a
+ centralized monarchy. But his main doctrine of unquestioning
+ submission to rulers and parents fitted in perfectly with
+ the feudal ideas of Old Japan; and the conviction of the
+ paramount importance of such subordination lingers on, an
+ element of stability, in spite of the recent social
+ cataclysm which has involved Japanese Confucianism, properly
+ so-called, in the ruin of all other Japanese
+ institutions."<a name='FNanchor_CD_82'
+ id="FNanchor_CD_82"></a><a href='#Footnote_CD_82'><sup>[CD]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p><i>Christianity</i> was first brought to Japan by Francis
+ Xavier, who landed in Kagoshima in 1549. His zeal knew no
+ bounds and his results were amazing. "The converts were drawn
+ from all classes alike. Noblemen, Buddhist priests, men of
+ learning, embraced the faith with the same alacrity as did the
+ poor and ignorant.... One hundred and thirty-eight European
+ missionaries" were then on the field. "Until the breaking out
+ of the persecution of 1596 the work of evangelization proceeded
+ apace. The converts numbered ten thousand yearly, though all
+ were fully aware of the risk to which they exposed themselves
+ by embracing the Catholic faith." "At the beginning of the
+ seventeenth century, the Japanese Christians numbered about one
+ million, the fruit of half a century of apostolic labor
+ accomplished in the midst of comparative peace. Another
+ half-century of persecution was about to ruin this flourishing
+ church, to cut off its pastors, more than two hundred of whom
+ suffered martyrdom, and to leave its laity without the offices
+ of religion.... The edicts ordering these measures remained in
+ force for over two centuries." Tens of thousands of Christians
+ preferred death to perjury. It was supposed that Christianity
+ was entirely exterminated by the fearful and prolonged
+ persecutions. Yet in the vicinity of Nagasaki over four
+ thousand Christians were discovered in 1867, who were again
+ subject to persecution until the pressure of foreign lands
+ secured religious toleration in Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>Protestant Christianity came to Japan with the
+ begin<a name='Page_309'
+ id="Page_309"></a>ning of the new era, and has been preached
+ with much zeal and moderate success. For a time it seemed
+ destined to sweep the land even more astonishingly than did
+ Romanism in the sixteenth century. But in 1888 an
+ anti-foreign reaction began in every department of Japanese
+ life and thought which has put a decided check on the
+ progress of Christian missions.</p>
+
+ <p>This must suffice for our historical review of the religious
+ life of the Japanese. Were we to forget Japan's long and
+ repeated isolations, and also to ignore fluctuations of belief
+ and of other religious phenomena in other lands, we might say,
+ as many do, that the Japanese have inherently shallow and
+ changeable religious convictions. But remembering these facts,
+ and recalling the persecutions of Buddhists by each other, of
+ Christianity by the state, and knowing to-day many earnest,
+ self-sacrificing and persistent Christians, I am convinced that
+ such a judgment is mistaken. There are other and sufficient
+ reasons to account for this appearance of changeableness in
+ religion.</p>
+
+ <p>I close this chapter with a single observation on the
+ religious history just outlined. Bearing in mind the great
+ changes that have come over Japanese religious thinking and
+ forms of religion I ask if religious phenomena are the
+ expressions of the race nature, as some maintain, and if this
+ nature is inherent and unchangeable, how are such profound
+ changes to be accounted for? If the religious character of the
+ Japanese people is inherent, how is it conceivable that they
+ should so easily adopt foreign religions, even to the exclusion
+ of their own native religion, as did those who became Buddhist
+ or Confucian or Christian? I conclude from these facts, and
+ they are paralleled in the history of many other peoples, that
+ even religious characteristics are not dependent on biological,
+ but are wholly dependent on social evolution. It seems to me
+ capable of the clearest proof that the religious phenomena of
+ any age are dependent on the general development of the
+ intellect, on the ruling ideas, and on the entire conditions of
+ the civilization of the age rather than on brain structure or
+ essential race nature.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXVII'
+ id="XXVII"></a><a name='Page_310'
+ id="Page_310"></a>XXVII</h2>
+
+ <h3>SOME RELIGIOUS CONCEPTIONS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The conceptions of the common people in regard to deity are
+ chaotic. They believe in local spirits who are to be worshiped;
+ some of these are of human origin, and some antedate all human
+ life. The gods of the Shinto pantheon are "yaoyorodzu" in
+ number, eight thousand myriads; yet in their "norito," or
+ prayer rituals, reference is made not only to the "yaoyorodzu"
+ who live in the air, but also to the "yaoyorodzu" who live on
+ earth, and even to the "yaoyorodzu" who live beneath the earth.
+ If we add these together there must be at least twenty-four
+ thousand myriads of gods. These of course include sun, moon,
+ stars, and all the forces of nature, as well as the spirits of
+ men. Popular Buddhism accepts the gods of Shinto and brings in
+ many more, worshiping not only the Buddha and his immediate
+ "rakan," disciples, five hundred in number, but numberless
+ abstractions of ideal qualities, such as the varieties of
+ Kwannon (Avelokitesvara, gods and goddesses of mercy), Amida
+ (Amitabha, the ideal of boundless light), Jizo (Kshitigarbha,
+ the helper of those in trouble, lost children, and pregnant
+ women), Emma O (Yama-raja, ruler of Buddhist hells), Fudo
+ (Achala, the "immovable," "unchangeable"), and many others.
+ Popular Buddhism also worships every man dead or living who has
+ become a "hotoke," that is, has attained Buddhahood and has
+ entered Nirvana. The gods of Japan are innumerable in theory
+ and multitudinous in practice. Not only are there gods of
+ goodness but also gods of lust and of evil, to whom robbers and
+ harlots may pray for success and blessing.</p>
+
+ <p>In the Japanese pantheon there is no supreme god, such, for
+ instance, as the Roman Jupiter, or the Greek Chronos, nor is
+ there a thoroughgoing divine hierarchy.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_311'
+ id="Page_311"></a>According to the common view (although
+ there is no definite thought about it), the idea seems to be
+ that the universe with its laws and nature were already
+ existent before the gods appeared on the scene; they created
+ specific places, such as Japan, out of already existing
+ material. Neither in Shinto nor in popular Buddhism is the
+ conception formed of a primal fount of all being with its
+ nature and laws. In this respect Japanese thought is like
+ all primitive religious thought. There is no word in the
+ Japanese language corresponding to the English term "God."
+ The nearest approach to it are the Confucian terms "Jo-tei,"
+ "Supreme Emperor," "Ten," "Heaven," and "Ten-tei," "Heavenly
+ Emperor"; but all of these terms are Chinese, they are
+ therefore of late appearance in Japan, and represent rather
+ conceptions of educated and Confucian classes than the ideas
+ of the masses. These terms approach closely to the idea of
+ monotheism; but though the doctrine may be discovered lying
+ implicit in these words and ideas it was never developed.
+ Whether "Heaven" was to be conceived as a person, or merely
+ as fate, was not clearly thought out; some expressions point
+ in one direction while others point in the other.</p>
+
+ <p>I may here call attention to a significant fact in the
+ history of recent Christian work in Japan. Although the
+ serious-minded Japanese is first attracted to Christianity by
+ the character of its ethical thought&mdash;so much resembling,
+ also so much surpassing that of Confucius, it is none the less
+ true that monotheism is another powerful source of attraction.
+ I have been repeatedly told by Christians that the first
+ religious satisfaction they ever experienced was upon their
+ discovery of monotheism. How it affected Dr. Neesima, readers
+ of his life cannot have overlooked. He is a type of multitudes.
+ In the earlier days of Christian work many felt that they had
+ become Christians upon rejection of polytheism and acceptance
+ of monotheism. And in truth they were so far forth Christian,
+ although they knew little of Christ, and felt little need of
+ His help as a personal Saviour. The weakness of the Church in
+ recent years is due in part, I doubt not, to the acceptance
+ into its membership of num<a name='Page_312'
+ id="Page_312"></a>bers who were, properly speaking,
+ monotheistic, but not in the complete sense of the term
+ Christian. Their discovery later that more was needed than
+ the intellectual acceptance of monotheism ere they could be
+ considered, or even be, truly "Christian," has led many such
+ "believers" to abandon their relations with the Church.
+ This, while on many accounts to be regretted, was
+ nevertheless inevitable. The bare acceptance of the
+ monotheistic idea does not secure that transformation of
+ heart and produce that warmth of living faith which are
+ essential elements in the altruistic life demanded of the
+ Christian.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor is it difficult to understand why monotheism has proved
+ such an attraction to the Japanese when we consider that
+ through it they first recognized a unity in the universe and
+ even in their own lives. Nature, and human nature took on an
+ intelligibility which they never had had under the older
+ philosophy. History likewise was seen to have a meaning and an
+ order, to say nothing of a purpose, which the non-Christian
+ faiths did not themselves see and could not give to their
+ devotees. Furthermore the monotheistic idea furnished a
+ satisfactory background and explanation for the exact sciences.
+ If there is but one God, who is the fount and cause of all
+ being, it is easy to see why the truths of science should be
+ universal and absolute, rather than local and diverse, as they
+ would be were they subject to the jurisdiction of various local
+ deities. The universality of nature's laws was inconceivable
+ under polytheism. Monotheism thus found a ready access to many
+ minds. Polytheism pure and simple is the belief of no educated
+ Japanese to-day. He is a monist of some kind or other.
+ Philosophic Buddhism always was monistic, but not monotheistic.
+ Thinking Confucianists were also monistic. But neither
+ philosophic Buddhism nor Confucianism emphasized their monistic
+ elements; they did not realize the importance to popular
+ thought of monistic conceptions. But possessing these ideas,
+ and being now in contact with aggressive Christian monotheism,
+ they are beginning to emphasize this truth.</p>
+
+ <p>As Japan has had no adequate conception of God, her
+ <a name='Page_313'
+ id="Page_313"></a>conception of man has been of necessity
+ defective. Indeed, the cause of her inadequate conception of
+ God is due in large measure to her inadequate conception of
+ man, which we have seen to be a necessary consequence of the
+ primitive communal order. Since, however, we have already
+ given considerable attention to Japan's inadequate
+ conception of man, we need do no more than refer to it in
+ this connection.</p>
+
+ <p>Corresponding to her imperfect doctrines of God and of man
+ is her doctrine of sin. That the Japanese sense of sin is
+ slight is a fact generally admitted. This is the universal
+ experience of the missionary. Many Japanese with whom I have
+ conversed seem to have no consciousness of it whatever. Indeed,
+ it is a difficult matter to speak of to the Japanese, not only
+ because of the etiquette involved, but for the deeper reason of
+ the deficiency of the language. There exists no term in
+ Japanese which corresponds to the Christian word "sin." To tell
+ a man he is a sinner without stopping to explain what one means
+ would be an insult, for he is not conscious of having broken
+ any of the laws of the land. Yet too much stress must not be
+ laid on this argument from the language, for the Buddhistic
+ vocabulary furnishes a number of terms which refer to the crime
+ of transgressing not the laws of the land, but those of
+ Buddha.</p>
+
+ <p>In Shinto, sin is little, if anything, more than physical
+ impurity. Although Buddhism brought a higher conception of
+ religion for the initiated few, it gave no help to the ignorant
+ multitudes, rather it riveted their superstitions upon them. It
+ spoke of law indeed, and lust and sin; and of dreadful
+ punishments for sin; but when it explained sin it made its
+ nature too shallow, being merely the result of mental
+ confusion; salvation, then, became simply intellectual
+ enlightenment; it also made the consequences of sin too remote
+ and the escape from them too easy. The doctrine of "Don,"
+ suddenness of salvation, the many external and entirely formal
+ rites, short pilgrimages to famous shrines, the visiting of
+ some neighboring temple having miniature models of all the
+ other efficacious shrines throughout the land, the wearing of
+ charms, the buying of "o fuda," and even the single
+ <a name='Page_314'
+ id="Page_314"></a>utterance of certain magic prayers, were
+ taught to be quite enough for the salvation of the common
+ man from the worst of sins. Where release is so easily
+ obtained, the estimate of the heinousness of sin is
+ correspondingly slight. How different was the consciousness
+ of sin and the conception of its nature developed by the
+ Jewish worship with its system of sin offerings! Life for
+ life. Whatever we may think of the efficacy of offering an
+ animal as an expiation for sin, it certainly contributed far
+ more toward deepening the sense of sin than the rites in
+ common practice among the Buddhists. So far as I know, human
+ or animal sacrifice has never been known in Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>In response to the not unlikely criticism that sacrifice is
+ the result of profound sense of sin and not its cause, I reply
+ that it is both. The profound sense is the experience of the
+ few at the beginning; the practice educates the multitudes and
+ begets that feeling in the nation.</p>
+
+ <p>Ceremonial purification is an old rite in Japan. In this
+ connection we naturally think of the "Chozu-bachi" which may be
+ found before every Shinto shrine, containing the "holy water"
+ with which to rinse the mouth and wash the hands. Pilgrims and
+ worshipers invariably make use of this water, wiping their
+ hands on the towels provided for the purpose by the faithful.
+ To our eyes, few customs in Japan are more conducive to the
+ spread of impurity and infectious disease than this rite of
+ ceremonial purification. No better means could be devised for
+ the wide dissemination of the skin diseases which are so
+ common. The reformed religion of New Japan&mdash;whether
+ Buddhist, Shinto, or Christian&mdash;could do few better
+ services for the people at large than by entering on a crusade
+ against this religious rite. It could and should preach the
+ doctrine that sin and defilement of the hearts are not removed
+ by such an easy method as the rite implies and the masses
+ believe. If retained as a symbol, the purification rite should
+ at least be reformed as a practice.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether the use of purificatory water is to be traced to the
+ sense of moral or spiritual sin is doubtful to my mind; in view
+ of the general nature of primitive Shinto. The
+ <a name='Page_315'
+ id="Page_315"></a>interpretation given the system by W.E.
+ Griffis, in his volume on the "Religions of Japan," is
+ suggestive, but in view of all the facts does not seem
+ conclusive. "One of the most remarkable features of Shinto"
+ he writes, "was the emphasis laid on cleanliness. Pollution
+ was calamity, defilement was sin, and physical purity at
+ least was holiness. Everything that could in any way soil
+ the body or clothing was looked upon with abhorrence and
+ detestation."<a name='FNanchor_CE_83'
+ id="FNanchor_CE_83"></a><a href='#Footnote_CE_83'><sup>[CE]</sup></a>
+ The number of specifications given in this connection is
+ worthy of careful perusal. But it is a strange nemesis of
+ history that the sense of physical pollution should develop
+ a religious rite fitted to become the very means for the
+ dissemination of physical pollution and disease.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese personal cleanliness is often connected in the
+ descriptions of foreigners with ceremonial purification, but
+ the facts are much exaggerated. In contrast to nearly if not
+ quite all non-Christian peoples, the Japanese are certainly
+ astonishingly cleanly in their habits. But it is wholly
+ unnecessary to exaggerate the facts. The "tatami," or
+ straw-mats, an inch or more in thickness, give to the room an
+ appearance of cleanliness which usually belies the truth. The
+ multitudes of fleas that infest the normal Japanese home are
+ convincing proof of the real state of the "tatami." There are
+ those who declare that a Japanese crowd has the least offensive
+ odor of any people in the world. One writer goes so far as to
+ state that not only is there no unpleasant odor whatever, but
+ that there is even a pleasant intimation of lavender about
+ their exhalations. This exactly contradicts my experience. Not
+ to mention the offensive oil with which all women anoint their
+ hair to give it luster and stiffness, the Japanese habit of
+ wearing heavy cotton wadded clothing, with little or no
+ underwear, produces the inevitable result in the atmosphere of
+ any closed room. In cold weather I always find it necessary to
+ throw open all the doors and windows of my study or parlor,
+ after Bible classes of students or even after the visits of
+ cultured and well-to-do guests. That the Japanese bathe so
+ frequently is certainly an interesting <a name='Page_316'
+ id="Page_316"></a>fact and a valuable feature of their
+ civilization; it indicates no little degree of cleanliness;
+ but for that, their clothing would become even more
+ disagreeable than it is, and the evil effect upon themselves
+ of wearing soiled garments would be much greater. In point
+ of fact, their frequent baths do not wholly remove the need
+ of change in clothing. To a Japanese the size of the weekly
+ wash of a foreigner seems extravagant.</p>
+
+ <p>As to the frequent bathing, its cleanliness is exaggerated
+ by Western thought, for instead of supplying fresh water for
+ each person, the Japanese public baths consist usually of a
+ large tank used by multitudes in common. Clean water is allowed
+ for the face, but the main tank is supplied with clean hot
+ water only once each day. In Kumamoto, schoolgirls living with
+ us invariably asked permission to go to the bath early in the
+ day that they might have the first use of the water. They said
+ that by night it was so foul they could not bear to use it.
+ Each hotel has its own private bath for guests; this is usually
+ heated in the afternoon, and the guests take their baths from
+ four o'clock on until midnight, the waiting girls of the hotel
+ using it last. My only experience with public baths has been
+ mentioned already. At first glance the conditions were
+ reassuring, for a large stream of hot water was running in
+ constantly, and the water in the tank itself was quite
+ transparent. But on entering I was surprised, not to say
+ horrified, to see floating along the margin of the tank and on
+ the bottom of it suggestive proofs of previous bathers. On
+ inquiry I learned that the tank was never washed out, nor the
+ water entirely discharged at a single time; the natural
+ overflow along the edge of the tank being considered
+ sufficient. In the interest of accuracy it is desirable to add
+ that New Japan is making progress in the matter of public
+ baths. In some of the larger cities, I am told, provision is
+ sometimes made for entirely fresh water for each bather in
+ separate bathrooms.</p>
+
+ <p>In view of these facts&mdash;as unpleasant to mention as
+ they are essential to a faithful description of the habits of
+ the people&mdash;it is clear that the "horror of physical
+ impurity" has not been, and is not now, so great as some
+ <a name='Page_317'
+ id="Page_317"></a>would have us believe. Whatever may have
+ been the condition in ancient times, it would be difficult
+ to believe that the rite of ceremonial purification could
+ arise out of the present practices and habits of thought.
+ One may venture the inquiry whether the custom of using the
+ "purificatory water" may not have been introduced from
+ abroad.</p>
+
+ <p>But whatever be the present thought of the people, on the
+ general subject of sin, it may be shown to be due to the
+ prevailing system of ideas, moral and religious, rather than to
+ the inherent racial character. In an interesting article by Mr.
+ G. Takahashi on the "Past, Present, and Future of Christianity
+ in Japan" I find the statement that the preaching of the monks
+ who came to Japan in the sixteenth century was of such a nature
+ as to produce a very deep consciousness of sin among the
+ converts. "The Christians or martyrs repeatedly cried out 'we
+ miserable sinners,' 'Christ died for us,' etc., as their
+ letters abundantly prove. It was because of this that their
+ consciences were aroused by the burning words of Christ, and
+ kept awake by means of contrition and confession." Among modern
+ Christians the sense of sin is much more clear and pronounced
+ than among the unconverted. Individual instances of extreme
+ consciousness of sin are not unknown, especially under the
+ earlier Protestant preaching. If the Christians of the last
+ decade have less sense of sin, it is due to the changed
+ character of recent preaching, in consequence of the changed
+ conception of Christianity widely accepted in Protestant lands.
+ Who will undertake to say that Christians in New England of the
+ nineteenth century have the same oppressive sense of sin that
+ was customary in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth
+ centuries? The sense of sin is due more to the character of the
+ dominant religious ideas of the age than to brain structure or
+ to race nature. I cannot agree with Mr. Takahashi that "To be
+ religious one needs a Semitic tinge of mind." It is not a
+ question of mind, of race nature, but of dominant ideas.</p>
+
+ <p>In this connection I may refer to an incident that came
+ under my notice some years ago. A young man applied
+ <a name='Page_318'
+ id="Page_318"></a>for membership in the Kumamoto Church, who
+ at one time had been a student in one of my Bible classes. I
+ had not known that he had received any special help from his
+ study with me, until I heard his statement as to how he had
+ discovered his need of a Saviour, and had found that need
+ satisfied in Christ. In his statement before the examining
+ committee of the church, he said that when he first read the
+ thirteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians, he was so impressed
+ with its beauty as a poem that he wrote it out entire on one
+ of the fusuma (light paper doors) of his room, and each
+ morning, as he arose, he read it. This practice continued
+ several weeks. Then, as we continued our study of the Bible,
+ we took up the third chapter of John, and when he came to
+ the sixteenth verse, he was so impressed with its statement
+ that he wrote that beside the poem from Corinthians, and
+ read them together. Gradually this daily reading, together
+ with the occasional sermons and other Christian addresses
+ which he heard at the Boys' School, led him to desire to
+ secure for himself the love described by Paul, and to know
+ more vitally the love of God described by John. It occurred
+ to him, that, to secure these ends, he should pray. Upon
+ doing so he said that, for the first time in his life, his
+ unworthiness and his really sinful nature overwhelmed him.
+ This was, of course, but the beginning of his Christian
+ life. He began then to search the Scriptures in earnest, and
+ with increasing delight. It was not long before he wished to
+ make public confession of his faith, and thus identify
+ himself with the Christian community. This brief account of
+ the way in which this young man was brought to Christ
+ illustrates a good many points, but that for which I have
+ cited it is the testimony it bears to the fact that under
+ similar circumstances the human heart undergoes very much
+ the same religious experience, whatever be the race or
+ nationality of the individual.</p>
+
+ <p>In regard to the future life, Shinto has little specific
+ doctrine. It certainly implies the continued existence of the
+ soul after death, as its ancestral worship shows, but its
+ conception as to the future state is left vague in the extreme.
+ Confucius purposely declined to teach anything on this point,
+ and, in part, for this reason, it has been <a name='Page_319'
+ id="Page_319"></a>maintained that Confucianism cannot
+ properly be called a religion. Buddhism brought to Japan an
+ elaborate system of eschatological ideas, and so far as the
+ common people of Japan have any conception of the future
+ life, it may be attributed to Buddhistic teachings. Into
+ their nature I need not inquire at any length. According to
+ popular Buddhism, the future world, or more properly
+ speaking, worlds (for there are ten of them, into any one of
+ which a soul may be born either immediately or in the course
+ of its future transmigrations), does not differ in any vital
+ way from the present world. It is a world of material
+ blessings or woes; the successive stages or worlds are
+ graded one above the other in fantastic ways. Salvation
+ consists in passing to higher grades of life, the final or
+ perfect stage being paradise, which, once attained, can
+ never be lost. Transmigration is universal, the period of
+ life in each world being determined by the merits and
+ demerits of the individual soul.</p>
+
+ <p>Here we must consider two widely used terms "ingwa" and
+ "mei." The first of these is Buddhistic and the other
+ Confucianistic; though differing much in origin and meaning,
+ yet in the end they amount to much the same thing. "Ingwa" is
+ the law of cause and effect. According to the Buddhistic
+ teaching, however, the "in," or cause, is in one world, while
+ the "gwa," or effect, is in the other. The suffering, for
+ instance, or any misfortune that overtakes one in this present
+ life, is the "gwa" or effect of what was done in the previous,
+ and is thus inevitable. The individual is working off in this
+ life the "gwa" of his last life, and he is also working up the
+ "in" of the next He is thus in a kind of vise. His present is
+ absolutely determined for him by his past, and in turn is
+ irrevocably fixing his future. Such is the Buddhistic "wheel of
+ the law." The common explanation of misfortune, sickness, or
+ disease, or any calamity, is that it is the result of "ingwa,"
+ and that there is, therefore, no help for it. The paralyzing
+ nature of this conception on the development of character, or
+ on activity of any kind, is apparent not only theoretically but
+ actually. As an escape from the inexorable fatality of this
+ scheme of thought, the Buddhist faith of the common people has
+ <a name='Page_320'
+ id="Page_320"></a>resorted to magic. Magic prayers,
+ consisting of a few mystic syllables of whose meaning the
+ worshiper may be quite ignorant, are the means for
+ overcoming the inexorableness of "ingwa," both for this life
+ and the next. "Namu Amida Butsu," "Namu Myo Ho Ren Ge Kyo,"
+ "Namu Hen Jo Kongo," are the most common of such magic
+ formul&aelig;. These prayers are heard on the lips of tens
+ of thousands of pious pilgrims, not only at the temples, but
+ as they pass along the highways. It is believed that each
+ repetition secures its reward. Popular Buddhism's appeal to
+ magic was not only winked at by philosophical Buddhism, but
+ it was encouraged. Magic was justified by religious
+ philosophy, and many a "hoben," "pious device," for saving
+ the ignorant was invented by the priesthood. It will be
+ apparent that while Buddhism has in certain respects a
+ vigorous system of punishment for sin, yet its method of
+ relief is such that the common people can gain only the most
+ shallow and superficial views of salvation. Buddhism has not
+ served to deepen the sense of responsibility, nor helped to
+ build up character. That the more serious-minded thinkers of
+ the nation have, as a rule, rejected Buddhism is not
+ strange.</p>
+
+ <p>One point of great interest for us is the fact that this
+ eschatological and soteriological system was imported, and is
+ not the spontaneous product of Japan. The wide range of
+ national religious characteristics thus clearly traceable to
+ Buddhistic influence shows beyond doubt how large a part of a
+ nation's character is due to the system of thought that for one
+ reason or another prevails, rather than to the essential race
+ character.</p>
+
+ <p>The other term mentioned above, "mei," literally means
+ "command" or "decree"; but while the English terms definitely
+ imply a real being who decides, decrees, and commands, the term
+ "mei" is indeterminate on this point. It is frequently joined
+ to the word "Ten," or Heaven; "Ten-mei," Heaven's decree,
+ seeming to imply a personality in the background of the
+ thought. Yet, as I have already pointed out, it is only
+ implied; in actual usage it means the fate decreed by Heaven;
+ that is, fated fate, or absolute fate. The Chinese and the
+ Japa<a name='Page_321'
+ id="Page_321"></a>nese alike failed to inquire minutely as
+ to the implication of the deepest conceptions of their
+ philosophy. But "mei" is commonly used entirely unconnected
+ with "Ten," and in this case its best translation into
+ English is probably "fate." In this sense it is often used.
+ Unlike Buddhism, however, Confucianism provided no way of
+ escape from "mei" except moral conduct. One of its important
+ points of superiority was its freedom from appeal to magic
+ in any form, and its reliance on sincerity of heart and
+ correctness of conduct.</p>
+
+ <p>Few foreigners have failed to comment on the universal use
+ by the Japanese of the phrase "Shikataga nai," "it can't be
+ helped." The ready resignation to "fate," as they deem it, even
+ in little things about the home and in the daily life, is
+ astonishing to Occidentals. Where we hold ourselves and each
+ other to sharp personal responsibility, the sense of subjection
+ to fate often leads them to condone mistakes with the phrase
+ "Shikataga nai."</p>
+
+ <p>But this characteristic is not peculiar to Japan. China and
+ India are likewise marked by it. During the famines in India,
+ it was frequently remarked how the Hindus would settle down to
+ starve in their huts in submission to fate, where Westerners
+ would have been doing something by force, fighting even the
+ decrees of heaven, if needful. But it is important to note that
+ this characteristic in Japan is undergoing rapid change. The
+ spirit of absolute submission, so characteristic of the common
+ people of Old Japan, is passing away and self-assertion is
+ taking its place. Education and developing intelligence are
+ driving out the fear of fate. Had our estimate of the Japanese
+ race character been based wholly on the history of Old Japan,
+ it might have been easy to conclude that the spirit of
+ submission to rulers and to fate was a national characteristic
+ due to racial nature; but every added year of New Japan shows
+ how erroneous that view would have been. Thus we see again that
+ the characteristics of Japan, Old and New, are not due to race
+ nature, but to the prevailing civilization in the broadest
+ sense of the term. The religious characteristics of a people
+ depend primarily on the dominant religious ideas, not on the
+ inherent religious nature.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXVIII'
+ id="XXVIII"></a><a name='Page_322'
+ id="Page_322"></a>XXVIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>SOME RELIGIOUS PRACTICES</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Among the truly religious sentiments of the Japanese are
+ those of loyalty and filial piety. Having already given them
+ considerable attention, we need not delay long upon them here.
+ The point to be emphasized is that these two principles are
+ exalted into powerful religious sentiments, which have
+ permeated and dominated the entire life of the nation. Not only
+ were they at the root of courage, of fidelity, of obedience,
+ and of all the special virtues of Old Japan, but they were also
+ at the root of the larger part of her religion. These emotions,
+ sentiments, and beliefs have built 190,000 Shinto shrines.
+ Loyalty to the daimyo was the vital part of the religion of the
+ past, as loyalty to the Emperor is the vital part of the
+ popular religion of to-day. Next to loyalty came filial piety;
+ it not only built the cemeteries, but also maintained
+ god-shelves and family ancestral worship throughout the
+ centuries. One of the first questions which many an inquirer
+ about Christianity has put to me is as to the way we treat our
+ parents living and dead, and the tombs and memories of our
+ ancestors. These two religious sentiments of loyalty and filial
+ piety were essential elements of primitive Shinto. The imported
+ religions, particularly Confucianism and Christianity, served
+ to strengthen them. In view of the indubitable religious nature
+ of these two sentiments it is difficult to see how anyone can
+ deny the name of religion to the religions that inculcate them,
+ Shinto and Confucianism. It shows how defective is the current
+ conception of the real nature of religion.</p>
+
+ <p>Despite the reality of these religious, sentiments, however,
+ many things are done in Japan quite opposed to
+ <a name='Page_323'
+ id="Page_323"></a>them. Of course this is so. These
+ violations spring from irreligion, and irreligion is found
+ in every land. Furthermore, many things done in the name of
+ loyalty and piety seem to us Westerners exceedingly
+ whimsical and illogical. Deeds which to us seem disloyal and
+ unfilial receive no rebuke. Filial piety often seems to us
+ more active toward the dead than toward the living.</p>
+
+ <p>Closely connected with loyalty and filial piety, and in part
+ their expression, is one further religious sentiment, namely,
+ gratitude. In his chapter in "Kokoro" "About Ancestor-Worship,"
+ Mr. Hearn makes some pertinent remarks as to the nature of
+ Shinto. "Foremost among the moral sentiments of Shinto is that
+ of loving gratitude to the past." This he attributes to the
+ fact that "To Japanese thought the dead are not less real than
+ the living. They take part in the daily life of the people,
+ sharing the humblest sorrows and the humblest joys ... and they
+ are universally thought of as finding pleasure in the offerings
+ made to them or the honors conferred upon them." There is much
+ truth in these statements, though I by no means share the
+ opinion that in connection with the Japanese belief in the dead
+ there "have been evolved moral sentiments wholly unknown to
+ Western civilization," or that their "loving gratitude to the
+ past" is "a sentiment having no real correspondence in our own
+ emotional life." Mr. Hearn may be presumed to be speaking for
+ himself in these matters; but he certainly does not correctly
+ represent the thought or the feelings of the circle of life
+ known to me. The feeling of gratitude of Western peoples is as
+ real and as strong as that of the Japanese, though it does not
+ find expression in the worship of the dead. That the Japanese
+ are profuse in their expressions of gratitude to the past and
+ to the powers that be is beyond dispute. It crops out in
+ sermons and public speeches, as well as in the numberless
+ temples to national heroes.</p>
+
+ <p>But it is a matter of surprise to note how often there is
+ apparent ingratitude toward living benefactors. Some years ago
+ I heard a conversation between some young men who had enjoyed
+ special opportunities of travel and of study abroad by the
+ liberality of American gentlemen.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_324'
+ id="Page_324"></a>It appeared that the young men considered
+ that instead of receiving any special favors, they were
+ conferring them on their benefactors by allowing the latter
+ to help such brilliant youth as they, whose subsequent
+ careers in Japan would preserve to posterity the names of
+ their benefactors. I have had some experience in the line of
+ giving assistance to aspiring students, in certain cases
+ helping them for years; a few have given evidence of real
+ gratitude; but a large proportion have seemed singularly
+ deficient in this grace. It is my impression that relatively
+ few of the scores of students who have received a large
+ proportion of their expenses from the mission, while
+ pursuing their studies, have felt that they were thereby
+ under any special debt of gratitude. An experience that a
+ missionary had with a class to which he had been teaching
+ the Bible in English for about a year is illustrative. At
+ the close of the school year they invited him to a dinner
+ where they made some very pleasant speeches, and bade each
+ other farewell for the summer. The teacher was much
+ gratified with the result of the year's work, feeling
+ naturally that these boys were his firm friends. But the
+ following September when he returned, not only did the class
+ not care to resume their studies with him, but they appeared
+ to desire to have nothing whatever to do with him. On the
+ street many of them would not even recognize him. Other
+ similar cases come to mind, and it should be remembered that
+ missionaries give such instruction freely and always at the
+ request of the recipient. In the case cited the teacher came
+ to the conclusion that the elaborate dinner and fine
+ farewell speeches were considered by the young men as a full
+ discharge of all debts of gratitude and a full compensation
+ for services. This, however, is to be said: the city itself
+ was at that time the seat of a determined antagonism to
+ Christianity and, of course, to the Christian missionary;
+ and this fact may in part, but not wholly, account for the
+ appearance of ingratitude.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese pride themselves on their gratitude. It is,
+ however, limited in its scope. It is vigorous toward the dead
+ and toward the Emperor, but as a grace of daily life it is not
+ conspicuous.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_325'
+ id="Page_325"></a>Few achievements of the Japanese have been
+ more remarkable than the suppression of certain religious
+ phenomena. Any complete statement of the religious
+ characteristics of the Japanese fifty years ago would have
+ included most revolting and immoral practices under the
+ guise of religion. Until suppressed by the government in the
+ early years of Meiji there were in many parts of Japan
+ phallic shrines of considerable popularity, at which, on
+ festivals at least, sexual immorality seemed to be an
+ essential part of the worship. At Uji, not far from Kyoto,
+ the capital of the Empire, for a thousand years and more,
+ and the center of Buddhism, there was a shrine of great
+ repute and popularity. Thither resorted the multitudes for
+ bacchanalian purposes. Under the auspices of the Goddess
+ Hashihime and the God Sumiyoshi, free rein was given to
+ lust. Since the beginning of the new r&eacute;gime such
+ revels have been forbidden and apparently stopped; the
+ phallic symbols themselves are no longer visible, although
+ it is asserted by the keeper of the shrine that they are
+ still there, concealed in the boxes on the pedestals
+ formerly occupied by the symbols. When I visited the place
+ some years since with a fellow missionary we were told that
+ multitudes still come there to pray to the deities; those
+ seeking divorce pray to the female deity, while those
+ seeking a favorable marriage pray to the male deity; on
+ asking as to the proportion of the worshipers, we were told
+ that there are about ten of the former to one of the latter,
+ a significant indication of the unhappiness of many a home.
+ Prof. Edmund Buckley has made a special study of the subject
+ of phallic worship in Japan; in his thesis on the topic he
+ gives a list of thirteen places where these symbols of
+ phallic worship might be seen a few years since. It is
+ significant that at Uji, not a stone's throw from the
+ phallic shrine, is a temple to the God Agata, whose special
+ function is the cure of venereal diseases.</p>
+
+ <p>But though phallic worship and its accompanying immorality
+ have been extirpated, immorality in connection with religion is
+ still rampant in certain quarters. Not far from the great
+ temples at Ise, the center of Shintoism and the goal for half a
+ million pilgrims yearly, are large <a name='Page_326'
+ id="Page_326"></a>and prosperous brothels patronized by and
+ existing for the sake of the pilgrims. A still more popular
+ resort for pilgrims is that at Kompira, whither, as we have
+ seen, some 900,000 come each year; here the best hotels, and
+ presumably the others also, are provided with prostitutes
+ who also serve as waiting girls; on the arrival of a guest
+ he is customarily asked whether or not the use of a
+ prostitute shall be included in his hotel bill. It seems
+ strange, indeed, that the government should take such pains
+ to suppress phallicism, and allow such immorality to go on
+ under the eaves of the greatest national shrines; for these
+ shrines are not private affairs; the government takes
+ possession of the gifts, and pays the regular salaries of
+ the attending priests. It would appear from its success in
+ the extermination of distinctly phallic worship that the
+ government could put a stop to all public prostitution in
+ connection with religion if it cared to do so.</p>
+
+ <p>One point of interest in connection with the above facts is
+ that the old religions, however much of force, beauty, and
+ truth we may concede to them, have never made warfare against
+ these obscene forms of worship, nor against the notorious
+ immorality of their devotees. Whatever may be said of the
+ profound philosophy of life involved in phallic worship, for
+ many hundreds of years it has been a source of outrageous
+ immorality. Nevertheless, there has never been any continued
+ and effective effort on the part of the higher types of
+ religion to exterminate the lower. But Japan is not peculiar in
+ this respect. India is even now amazingly immoral in certain
+ forms of her worship.</p>
+
+ <p>Another point of interest in this connection is that the
+ change of the nation in its attitude to this form of religion
+ was due largely, probably wholly, to contact with the nations
+ of the West. The uprooting of phallic worship was due, not to a
+ moral reformation, but to a political ambition. It was carried
+ out, not in deference to public opinion, but wholly by
+ government command, though without doubt the nobler opinion of
+ the land approved of the government action. But even this
+ nobler public sentiment was aroused by the Occidental stimulus.
+ The success of the effort must be attributed not a little to
+ the <a name='Page_327'
+ id="Page_327"></a>age-long national custom of submitting
+ absolutely to governmental initiative and command.</p>
+
+ <p>Another point of interest is that, in consequence of
+ official pressure, the religious character of a large number of
+ the people seems to have undergone a radical change. The
+ ordinary traveler in Japan would not suspect that phallicism
+ had ever been a prominent feature of Japanese religious life.
+ Only an inquisitive seeker can now find the slightest evidences
+ of this once popular cult. Here we have an apparent change in
+ the character of a people sudden and complete, induced almost
+ wholly by external causes. It shows that the previous
+ characteristic was not so deeply rooted in the physical or
+ spiritual nature of the race as many would have us believe. Can
+ we escape the conclusion that national characteristics are due
+ much more to the circle of dominant ideas and actual practices,
+ than to the inherent race nature?</p>
+
+ <p>The way in which phallicism has been suppressed during the
+ present era raises the general question of religious liberty in
+ Japan. In this respect, no less than in many others, a change
+ has taken place so great as to amount to a revolution. During
+ two hundred and fifty years Christianity was strictly forbidden
+ on pain of extreme penalties. In 1872 the edict against
+ Christianity was removed, free preaching was allowed, and for a
+ time it seemed as if the whole nation would become Christian in
+ a few decades; even non-Christians urged that Christianity be
+ made the state religion. What an amazing volte-face! Religious
+ liberty is now guaranteed by the constitution promulgated in
+ 1888. There are those who assert that until Christianity
+ invaded Japan, religious freedom was perfect; persecutions were
+ unknown. This is a mistake. When Buddhism came to Japan,
+ admission was first sought from the authorities, and for a time
+ was refused. When various sects arose, persecutions were
+ severe. We have seen how belief in Christianity was forbidden
+ under pain of death for more than two hundred and fifty years.
+ Under this edict, many thousand Japanese Christians and over
+ two hundred European missionaries were put to death. Yet, on
+ the whole, it may be said that Old Japan enjoyed no little
+ religious <a name='Page_328'
+ id="Page_328"></a>freedom. Indeed, the same man might
+ worship freely at all the shrines and temples in the land.
+ To this day multitudes have never asked themselves whether
+ they are Shinto or Buddhist or Confucianist. The reason for
+ this religious eclecticism was the fractional character of
+ the old religions; they supplemented each other. There was
+ no collision between them in doctrine or in morals. The
+ religious freedom was, therefore, not one of principle but
+ of indifference. As Rome was tolerant of all religions which
+ made no exclusive claims, but fiercely persecuted
+ Christianity, so Japan was tolerant of the two religions
+ that found their way into her territory because they made no
+ claims of exclusiveness. But a religion that demanded the
+ giving up of rivals was feared and forbidden.</p>
+
+ <p>New Japan, however, following Anglo-Saxon example, has
+ definitely adopted religious freedom as a principle. First
+ tacitly allowed after the abolition of the edict against
+ Christianity in 1872, it was later publicly guaranteed by the
+ constitution promulgated in 1888. Since that date there has
+ been perfect religious liberty for the individual.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet this statement must be carefully guarded. If we may
+ judge from some recent decrees of the Educational Department,
+ it would appear that a large and powerful section of the nation
+ is still ignorant of the real nature and significance of
+ "religious liberty." Under the plea of maintaining secular
+ education, the Educational Department has forbidden informal
+ and private Christian teaching, even in private schools. An
+ adequate statement of the present struggle for complete
+ religious liberty would occupy many pages. We note but one
+ important point.</p>
+
+ <p>In the very act of forbidding religious instruction in all
+ schools the Educational Department is virtually establishing a
+ brand-new religion for Japan, a religion based on the Imperial
+ Educational Edict.<a name='FNanchor_CF_84'
+ id="FNanchor_CF_84"></a><a href='#Footnote_CF_84'><sup>[CF]</sup></a>
+ The essentially religious nature of the attitude taken by
+ the government toward this Edict has become increasingly
+ clear in late years. In the summer of 1898 one who has had
+ special opportunities of information told me that Mr.
+ Kinoshita, a high official in the Educational Department,
+ suggested <a name='Page_329'
+ id="Page_329"></a>the ceremonial worship of the Emperor's
+ picture and edict by all the schools, for the reason that he
+ saw the need of cultivating the religious spirit of
+ reverence together with the need for having religious
+ sanctions for the moral law. He felt convinced that a
+ national school system without any such sanctions would be
+ helpless in teaching morality to the pupils. His suggestion
+ was adopted by the Educational Department and has been
+ enforced.</p>
+
+ <p>In this attitude toward the religious character of entirely
+ private schools, the government is materially abridging the
+ religious liberty of the people. It is abridging their liberty
+ of carrying belief into action in one important respect, that,
+ namely, of giving a Christian education. It virtually insists
+ on the acceptance of that form of religion which apotheosizes
+ the Emperor, and finds the sanctions for morality in his edict;
+ it excludes from the schools every other form of religion. It
+ should, of course, be said that this attitude is maintained not
+ only toward Christian schools, but theoretically also toward
+ all religious schools. It, however, operates more severely on
+ Christian schools than upon others, because Christians are the
+ only ones who establish high-grade schools for secular
+ education under religious influences.</p>
+
+ <p>It is evident, therefore, that in the matter of religious
+ liberty the present attitude of the government is paradoxical,
+ granting in one breath, what, in an important respect, it
+ denies in the next. But throughout all these changes and by
+ means of them we see more and more clearly that even religious
+ tolerance is a matter of the prevailing social ideas and of the
+ dominant social order, rather than of inherent race character.
+ By a single transformation of the social order, Japan passed
+ from a state of perfect religious intolerance to one just the
+ reverse, so far as individual belief was concerned.</p>
+
+ <p>Taking a comprehensive review of our study thus far, we see
+ that the forms of Japanese religious life have been determined
+ by the history, rather than by any inherent racial character of
+ the people. Although they had a religion prior to the coming of
+ any external influence, <a name='Page_330'
+ id="Page_330"></a>yet they have proved ready disciples of
+ the religions of other lands. The religion of India, its
+ esoteric, and especially its exoteric forms, has found wide
+ acceptance and long-continued popularity. The higher life of
+ the nation readily took on in later times the religious
+ characteristics of the Chinese, predominantly ethical, it is
+ true, and only slightly religious as to forms of worship.
+ When Roman Catholic Christianity came to Japan in the
+ sixteenth century, it, too, found ready acceptance. It is
+ true that it presented a view of the nature of religion not
+ very different from that held by Buddhism in many respects,
+ yet in others there was a marked divergence, as for
+ instance, in the doctrine of God, of individual sin, and of
+ the nature and method of salvation. The Japanese have thus
+ shown themselves ready assimilators of all these diverse
+ systems of religious expression. Just at present a new
+ presentation of Christianity is being made to the Japanese;
+ some are urging upon them the acceptance of the Roman
+ Catholic form of it; others are urging the Greek; and still
+ others are presenting the Protestant point of view. Each of
+ these groups of missionaries seems to be reaping good
+ harvests. Speaking from my own experience, I may say, that
+ many of the Japanese show as great an appreciation of the
+ essence of the religious life, and find the ideas and
+ ideals, doctrines and ceremonies, of Christianity as fitted
+ to their heart's deepest needs, as do any in the most
+ enlightened parts of Christendom. It is true that the
+ Christian system is so opposed to the Buddhistic and Shinto,
+ and in some respects to the Confucian, that it is an
+ exceedingly difficult matter at the beginning to give the
+ Buddhist or Shintoist any idea of what Christianity is. Yet
+ the difficulty arises not from the structure of the brain,
+ nor from the inherent race character, but solely from the
+ diversity of hitherto prevailing systems of thought. When
+ once the passage from the one system of thought to the other
+ has been effected, and the significance of the Christian
+ system and life has been appreciated,&mdash;in other words,
+ when the Japanese Buddhist or Shintoist or Confucianist has
+ become a Christian,&mdash;he is as truly a Christian and as
+ faithful as is the Englishman or American.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_331'
+ id="Page_331"></a>Of course I do not mean to say that he
+ looks at every doctrine and at every ceremony in exactly the
+ same way as an Englishman or American. But I do say that the
+ different point of view is due to the differing social and
+ religious history of the past and the differing surroundings
+ of the present, rather than to inherent racial character or
+ brain structure. The Japanese are human beings before they
+ are Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>For these reasons have I absolute confidence in the final
+ acceptance of Christianity by the Japanese. There is no race
+ characteristic in true Christianity that bars the way.
+ Furthermore, the very growth of the Japanese in recent years,
+ intellectually and in the reorganization of the social order,
+ points to their final acceptance of Christianity and renders it
+ necessary. The old religious forms are not satisfying the
+ religious needs of to-day. And if history proves anything, it
+ proves that only the religion of Jesus can do this permanently.
+ Religion is a matter of humanity, not of nationality. It is for
+ this reason that the world over, religions, though of so many
+ forms, are still so much alike. And it is because the religion
+ of Jesus is pre-eminently the religion of humanity and has not
+ a trace of exclusive nationality about it, that it is the true
+ religion, and is fitted to satisfy the deepest religious wants
+ of the most highly developed as well as the least developed man
+ of any and every race and nation. In proportion as man
+ develops, he grows out of his narrow surroundings, both
+ physical and mental and even moral; he enters a larger and
+ larger world. The religious expressions of his nature in the
+ local provincial and even national stages of his life cannot
+ satisfy his larger potential life. Only the religion of
+ humanity can do this. And this is the religion of Jesus. The
+ white light of religion, no less than that of scientific truth,
+ has no local or national coloring. Perfect truth is universal,
+ eternal, unchangeable. Occidental or Oriental colorations are
+ in reality defects, discolorations.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXIX'
+ id="XXIX"></a><a name='Page_332'
+ id="Page_332"></a>XXIX</h2>
+
+ <h3>SOME PRINCIPLES OF NATIONAL EVOLUTION</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And now, having studied somewhat in detail various
+ distinctive Japanese characteristics, it is important that we
+ gain an insight into the general principles which govern the
+ development of unified, national life. These principles render
+ Japanese history luminous.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us first fix our attention on the fact that every step
+ in the progress of mankind has been from smaller to larger
+ communities. In other words, human progress has been through
+ the increasing extension of the communal principle. The
+ primitive segregative man, if there ever really was such a
+ being, hardly deserves to be called man. Social qualities he
+ had very slight, if at all; his altruistic actions and emotions
+ were of the lowest and feeblest type. His life was so
+ self-centered&mdash;we may not call it selfish, for he was not
+ conscious of his self-centeredness&mdash;that he was quite
+ sufficient to himself except for short periods of time. It was
+ a matter of relative indifference to him whether his kinsmen
+ survived or perished. His life was in only the slightest degree
+ involved in theirs. The first step of progress for him depended
+ on the development of some form of communal life. The primary
+ problem of the social evolution of man was that of taking the
+ wild, self-centered, self-sufficient man, and of teaching him
+ to move in line with his fellow-men. And this problem
+ confronted not only mankind at the beginning, but it has also
+ been the great problem of each successive stage. After the
+ individual has been taught to live with, to work with and for,
+ and to love, his immediate kinsmen (in other words to merge his
+ individual interests in those of the family, and to count the
+ family interests of more importance than his own), the next
+ step was to induce the family to look beyond <a name='Page_333'
+ id="Page_333"></a>its little world and be willing to work
+ with and for neighboring families. When, after ages of
+ conflict, this step was in a measure secured and the
+ family-tribe was fairly formed, this group in turn must be
+ taught to take into its view a still larger group, the
+ tribal nation. Throughout the ages the constant problem has
+ been the development of larger and larger communal groups.
+ This general process has been very aptly called by Mr.
+ Bagehot the taming process. The selfward thoughts and
+ ambitions of the individual man have been thus far driven
+ more and more into the background of fact, if not of
+ consciousness. The individual has been brought into vital
+ and organic relations with ever-increasing multitudes of his
+ fellow-men. It is, therefore, pre-eminently a process of
+ social or associational development. It not only develops
+ social relations in an ever-increasing scale, but also
+ social qualities and ideals and desires.</p>
+
+ <p>Now this taming, this socializing process, has been
+ successful because it has had back of it, always enforcing it,
+ the law of the survival of the strongest. What countless
+ millions of men must have perished in the first step! They
+ consisted of the less fit; of those who would not, or did not,
+ learn soon enough the secret of existence through permanent
+ family union. And what countless millions of families must have
+ perished because they did not discover the way, or were too
+ independent, to unite with kindred families in order to fight a
+ common foe or develop a common food supply. And still later,
+ what countless tribes must have perished before the secret of
+ tribal federation was widely accepted! In each case the problem
+ has been to secure the subordination of the interests of the
+ smaller and local community to those of the larger community.
+ Death to self and life to the larger interest was often the
+ condition of existence at all. How slow men always have been
+ and still are to learn this great lesson of history!</p>
+
+ <p>The method whereby this taming process has been carried on
+ has been through the formation of increasingly comprehensive
+ and rigid customs and ideas. Through the development and
+ continued existence of a common language, series of common
+ customs, and sets of common <a name='Page_334'
+ id="Page_334"></a>ideas, unity was secured for the
+ community; these, indeed, are the means whereby a group is
+ transformed into a community. As the smaller community gave
+ way to the larger, so the local languages, customs, and
+ ideas had to break up and become so far modified as to form
+ a new bond of unity. Until this unity was secured the new
+ community was necessarily weak; the group easily broke up
+ into its old constituent elements. We here gain a glimpse
+ into one reason why the development of large composite
+ communities, uniting and for the most part doing away with
+ smaller ones, was so difficult and slow.</p>
+
+ <p>The process of absorption of smaller groups and their
+ unification into larger ones, when carried out completely in
+ any land, tends to arrest all further growth, not simply
+ because there is no further room for expansion by the
+ absorption of other divergent tribes, but also because the
+ "cake of custom" is apt to become so hard, the uniformity
+ enforced on all the individuals is liable to become so binding,
+ that fruitful variation from within is effectually cut off. The
+ evolution of relatively isolated or segregated groups
+ necessarily produces variety; and the process whereby these
+ divergent types of life and thought and organization are
+ gradually brought together into one large community provides
+ wide elements of variation, in the selection and general
+ adoption of which the evolution of the whole community may be
+ secured. But let the divergent elements of the lesser groups
+ once be entirely absorbed by the composite community and let
+ the "cake of custom" become so rigid that every individual who
+ varies from it is branded as a heretic and a traitor, and the
+ progressive evolution of that community must cease.</p>
+
+ <p>The great problem, therefore, which then confronts man and
+ seems to threaten all further progress is, how to break the
+ bondage of custom so as to secure local or individual
+ variations. This can be done only through some form of
+ individualism. The individual must be free to think and act as
+ experience or fancy may suggest, without fear of being branded
+ as a traitor, or at least he must have the courage to do so in
+ spite of such fears. And to produce an effect on the community
+ he must also be more or less protected in his idiosyncrasies by
+ popular toleration.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_335'
+ id="Page_335"></a>He must be allowed to live and work out
+ his theories, proving whether they are valuable or not. But
+ since individualism is just what all previous communal
+ development has been most assiduous in crushing out, how is
+ the rise of individualism possible, or even desirable? If
+ the first and continued development of man depended on the
+ attainment and the maintenance of the communal principle, we
+ may be sure that his further progress will not consist in
+ the reversal of that principle. If, therfore, individualism
+ must be developed, it must manifestly be of a variety which
+ does not conflict with or abrogate communalism. Only as the
+ individualistic includes the communal principle will it be a
+ source of strength; otherwise it can only be a source of
+ weakness to the community. But is not this an impossible
+ condition to satisfy? Certainly, before the event, it would
+ seem to be so. The rarity with which this step in human
+ evolution has been taken would seem to show that it is far
+ more difficult to accomplish than any of the previous steps.
+ To give it a name we may call it communo-individualism. What
+ this variety of individualism is, how this forward step was
+ first actually taken, and how it is maintained and extended
+ to-day, we shall consider in a later chapter. In the present
+ place its importance for us is twofold. First we must
+ realize the logical difficulty of the step&mdash;its
+ apparently self-contradictory nature. And secondly we need
+ to see that fully developed and continuously progressive
+ national life is impossible without it. The development of a
+ nation under the communal principle may advance far, even to
+ the attainment of a relatively high grade of civilization.
+ But the fully centralized and completely self-conscious
+ nation cannot come into existence except on the basis of
+ this last step of communo-individualism. The growth of
+ nationalism proper, and the high development of civilization
+ through the rise of the sciences and the arts based upon
+ individualism, all await the dawn of the era of which
+ communo-individualism is the leading, though at first
+ unrecognized, characteristic.</p>
+
+ <p>This individualistic development of the communal principle
+ is its intensive development; it is the focalizing and
+ centralizing of the consciousness of the national unity in
+ <a name='Page_336'
+ id="Page_336"></a>each individual member. The extensive
+ process of communal enlargement must ever be accompanied by
+ the intensive establishment in the individual of the
+ communal ideal, the objective by the subjective, the
+ physical by the psychical, if the accidental association for
+ individual profit is to develop into the permanent
+ association for the national as well as the individual life.
+ The intensive or subjective development of the communal
+ principle does, as a matter of fact, take place in all
+ growing communities, but it is largely unconscious. Not
+ until the final stages of national development does it
+ become a self-conscious process, deserving the distinctive
+ name I have given it here,
+ communo-individualism.<a name='FNanchor_CG_85'
+ id="FNanchor_CG_85"></a><a href='#Footnote_CG_85'><sup>[CG]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The point just made is, however, only one aspect of a more
+ general fact, too, of cardinal importance for the sociologist
+ and the student of human evolution. It is that, throughout the
+ entire period of the expansion of the community, there has been
+ an equally profound, although wholly unconscious, development
+ of the individual. This fact seems to have largely escaped the
+ notice of all but the most recent thinkers and writers on the
+ general topic of human and social evolution. The fact and the
+ importance of the communal life have been so manifest that, in
+ important senses, the individual has been almost, if not
+ <a name='Page_337'
+ id="Page_337"></a>wholly, dropped out of sight. The
+ individual has been conceived to have been from the very
+ beginning of social evolution fully endowed with mind,
+ ideas, and brains, and to be perfectly regardless of all
+ other human beings. The development of the community has
+ accordingly been conceived to be a progressive taming and
+ subduing of this wild, self-centered, primitive man; a
+ process of eliminating his individualistic instincts. So far
+ as the individual is concerned, it has been conceived to be
+ chiefly a negative process; a process of destroying his
+ individual desires and plans and passions. Man's natural
+ state has been supposed to be that of absolute selfishness.
+ Only the hard necessity of natural law succeeded in forcing
+ him to curb his natural selfish desires and to unite with
+ his fellows. Only on these terms could he maintain even an
+ existence. Those who have not accepted these terms have been
+ exterminated. Communal life in all its forms, from the
+ family upward to the most unified and developed nation, is
+ thus conceived as a continued limiting of the
+ individual&mdash;a necessity, indeed, to his existence, but
+ none the less a limitation.</p>
+
+ <p>I am unable to take this view, which at best is a one-sided
+ statement. It appears to me capable of demonstration, that
+ communal and individual development proceed pari passu; that
+ every gain in the communal life is a gain to the individual and
+ vice versa. They are complementary, not contradictory
+ processes. Neither can exist, in any proper sense, apart from
+ the other; and the degree of the development of the one is a
+ sure index of the degree of the development of the other. So
+ important is this matter that we must pause to give it further
+ consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>Consider, first, man in his earliest stage of development. A
+ relatively segregarious animal; with a few ideas about the nuts
+ and fruits and roots on which he lives; with a little knowledge
+ as to where to find them; the subject of constant fear lest a
+ stronger man may suddenly appear to seize and carry off his
+ wife and food; possessing possibly a few articulate sounds
+ answering to words; such probably was primitive man. He must
+ have been little removed from the ape. His "self," his mind,
+ was so small and so empty of content that we could hardly
+ recog<a name='Page_338'
+ id="Page_338"></a>nize him as a man, should we stumble on
+ him in the forest.</p>
+
+ <p>Look next upon him after he has become a family-man. Living
+ in the group, his life enlarges; his existence broadens; his
+ ideas multiply; his vocabulary increases with his ideas and
+ experiences; he begins to share the life and thinking and
+ interests and joys and sorrows of others; their ideas and
+ experiences become his, to his enormous advantage. What he now
+ is throws into the shade of night what he used to be. So far
+ from being the loser by his acceptance of even this limited
+ communal life, he is a gainer in every way. He begins to know
+ what love is, and hate; what joy is, and sorrow; what kindness
+ is, and cruelty; what altruism is, and selfishness. Thus, not
+ only in ideas and language, in industry and property, but also
+ in emotions, in character, in morality, in religion, in the
+ knowledge of self, and even in opportunity for selfishness, he
+ is the gainer. In just the degree that communal life is
+ developed is the life of the individuals that compose it
+ extended both subjectively and objectively. Human psychogenesis
+ takes place in the communal stage of his life. Human
+ association is its chief external cause.</p>
+
+ <p>It matters not at what successive stage of man's developing
+ life we may choose to look at him, the depth and height and
+ breadth, in a word, the fullness and vigor and character of the
+ inner and private life of the individual, will depend directly
+ on the nature and development of the communal life. As the
+ community expands, taking in new families or tribes or nations,
+ reaching out to new regions, learning new industries,
+ developing new ideas of man, of nature, of the gods, of duty,
+ inventing new industries, discovering new truths, and
+ developing a new language, all these fresh acquirements of the
+ community become the possession of its individual members. In
+ the growing complexity of society the individual unit, it is
+ true, is increasingly lost among the millions of his
+ fellow-units, yet all these successive steps serve to render
+ his life the larger and richer. His horizon is no longer the
+ little family group in which he was born; he now looks out over
+ large and populous regions and feels the thrill of his growing
+ life as he realizes the unity and community of
+ <a name='Page_339'
+ id="Page_339"></a>his life and interests with those of his
+ fellow-countrymen. His language is increasingly enriched; it
+ serves to shape all his thinking and thus even the structure
+ of his mind. His knowledge reaches far beyond his own
+ experience; it includes not only that of the few persons
+ whom he knows directly, but also that of unnumbered
+ millions, remote in time and space. He increasingly
+ discovers, though he never has analyzed, and is perhaps
+ wholly unable to analyze, the discovery that he is not a
+ thing among things; his life has a universal aspect. He
+ lives more and more the universal life, subjecting the
+ demands of the once domineering present to decisions of a
+ cool judgment that looks back into the past and carefully
+ weighs the interests of the future, temporal and eternal.
+ Every advance made by the community is thus stored up to the
+ credit of its individual members. So far, then, from the
+ development of the communal principle consisting of and
+ coming about through a limitation of the individual, it is
+ exactly the reverse. Only as the individual develops are
+ communal unity and progress possible. And on the other hand,
+ only where the communal principle has reached its highest
+ development, both extensively and intensively, do we find
+ the most highly developed personality. The one is a
+ necessary condition of the other. The deepest, blackest
+ selfishness, even, can only come into existence where the
+ communal principle has reached its highest development.</p>
+
+ <p>The preceding statement, however, is not equivalent to
+ saying that when communalism and individualism arose in human
+ consciousness they were both accepted as equally important. The
+ reverse seems always to have been the case. As soon as the two
+ principles are distinguished in thought, the communal is at
+ once ranked as the higher, and the individual principle is
+ scorned if not actually rejected. And the reason for this is
+ manifest. From earliest times the constant foe which the
+ community has had to fight and exterminate has been the wanton,
+ selfish individual. Individualism of this type was the
+ spontaneous contrast to the communal life, and was ever
+ manifesting itself. No age or race has been without it, nor
+ ignorant of it. As soon as the two principles became
+ <a name='Page_340'
+ id="Page_340"></a>clearly contrasted in thought, therefore,
+ because of his actual experience, man could conceive of
+ individualism only as the antithesis to communalism; it was
+ felt that the two were mutually destructive. It inevitably
+ followed that communalism as a principle was accepted and
+ individualism condemned. In their minds not only social
+ order, but existence itself, was at stake. And they were
+ right. Egoistic individualism is necessarily atomistic. No
+ society can long maintain its life as a unified and peaceful
+ society, when such a principle has been widely accepted by
+ its members. The social ills of this and of every age
+ largely arise from the presence of this type of men, who
+ hold this principle of life.</p>
+
+ <p>If, therefore, after a fair degree of national unity has
+ been attained, the higher stages of national evolution depend
+ on the higher development of individualism, and if the only
+ kind of individualism of which men can conceive is the
+ egoistic, it becomes evident that further progress must cease.
+ Stagnation, or degeneration, must follow. This is what has
+ happened to nearly all the great nations and races of the
+ world. They progressed well up to a certain point. Then they
+ halted or fell back. The only possible condition under which a
+ new lease of progressive life could be secured by them was a
+ new variety of individualism, which would unite the opposite
+ and apparently contradictory poles of communalism and egoism,
+ namely, communo-individualism. Inconceivable though it be to
+ those men and nations who have not experienced this type of
+ life, it is nevertheless a fact, and a mighty factor in human
+ and in national evolution. In its light we are able to see that
+ the communal life itself has not reached its fullest
+ development until the individualistic principle has been not
+ only recognized in thought, but exalted, both in theory and in
+ fact, to its true and coordinate position beside the communal
+ principle. Only then does the nation become fully and
+ completely organized. Only then does the national organism
+ contain within itself the means for an endless, because a
+ self-sustained, life.</p>
+
+ <p>It is important to guard against a misunderstanding of the
+ principles just enunciated which may easily arise. In
+ <a name='Page_341'
+ id="Page_341"></a>saying that the development of the
+ individual has proceeded pari passu with that of the
+ community, that every gain by the community has contributed
+ directly to the development of the individual, I do not say
+ that the communal profits are at once distributed among all
+ the members of the group, or that the distribution is at all
+ equal. Indeed, such is far from the case. Some few
+ individuals seem to appropriate a large and unfair
+ proportion of the communal bank account. So far as a people
+ live a simple and relatively undifferentiated life, all
+ sharing in much the same kind of pursuits, and enjoying much
+ the same grade of life,&mdash;such as prevailed in a large
+ measure in the earlier times, and decreasingly as society
+ has become industrial,&mdash;and so far also as the new
+ acquirements of thought are transformed into practical life
+ and common language, all the members of the community share
+ these acquirements in fairly equal measure. So far, however,
+ as the communal profits consist of more or less abstract
+ ideas, embodied in religious and philosophic thought, and
+ stored away in books and literature accessible only to
+ scholars, they are distributed very unequally. The more
+ highly developed and consequently differentiated the
+ society, the more difficult does distribution become. The
+ very structure of the highly differentiated communal
+ organism forbids the equal distribution of these goods. The
+ literary and ruling minority have exclusive access to the
+ treasures. The industrial majority are more and more rigidly
+ excluded from them. Thus, although it is strictly true that
+ every advance in the communal principle accrues to the
+ benefit of the individual, it is not true that such advance
+ necessarily accrues to the benefit of every individual, or
+ equally to all individuals. In its lowest stages, developing
+ communalism lifts all its individual members to about the
+ same level of mental and moral acquirement. In its middle
+ stages it develops all individuals to a certain degree, and
+ certain individuals to a high degree. In its highest stages
+ it develops among all its members a uniformly high grade of
+ personal worth and acquirement.</p>
+
+ <p>Now the great problem on whose solution depends the
+ possibility of continued communal evolution is, from this
+ <a name='Page_342'
+ id="Page_342"></a>view-point, the problem of distributing
+ the gains of the community to all its members more and more
+ equally. It is the problem of giving to each human unit all
+ the best and truest thought and character, all the highest
+ and noblest ideals and motives, which the most advanced
+ individuals have secured. If we stop to inquire minutely and
+ analytically just what is the nature of the greatest
+ attainments made by the community, we discover that it is
+ not the possession of wealth in land or gold, it is not the
+ accident of social rank, it is not any incident of temporal
+ happiness or physical ease of life. It consists, on the
+ contrary, in the discovery of the real nature of man. He is
+ no mere animal, living in the realm of things and pleasures,
+ limited by the now and the here. He is a person, a rational
+ being. His thoughts and desires can only be expressed in
+ terms of infinity. Nothing short of the infinite can satisfy
+ either his reason or his heart Though living in nature and
+ dependent on it, he is above it, and may and should
+ understand it and rule it. His thoughts embrace all time and
+ all being. In a very real sense he lives an infinite and
+ eternal life, even here in this passing world.</p>
+
+ <p>The discovery of this set of facts, slowly emerging into
+ consciousness, is the culmination of all past history, and the
+ beginning of all man's higher life. It is the turning point in
+ the history of the human race. Every onward step in man's
+ preceding life, whereby he has united to form higher and higher
+ groups, has been leading onward and upward to the development
+ of strong personality, to the development of individuals
+ competent to make this great discovery. But this is not
+ enough.</p>
+
+ <p>The next step is to discover the fact, <i>and to believe
+ it</i>, that this infinite life is the potential possession of
+ every member of the community; that the bank account which the
+ community has been storing up for ages is for the use not only
+ of a favored few, but also of the masses. That since every man
+ is a man, he has an infinite and an eternal life and value,
+ which no accident of birth, or poverty, can annul. Each man
+ needs to discover himself. The great problem, then, which
+ confronts progressive communal evolution is to take this
+ enlarged definition <a name='Page_343'
+ id="Page_343"></a>of the individual and scatter it broadcast
+ over the land, persuading all men to accept and believe it
+ both for themselves and for others. This definition must be
+ carried in full confidence to the lowest, meanest, most
+ ignorant man that lives in the community, and by its help
+ this down-most man must be shown his birthright, and in the
+ light of it he must be raised to actual manhood. He must
+ "come to himself"; only so can he qualify for his
+ heritage.</p>
+
+ <p>After a nation, therefore, has secured a large degree of
+ unity, of the confederated tribal type, the step which must be
+ taken, before it can proceed to more complete nationalization
+ even, is, first, the discovery of personality as the real and
+ essential characteristic of men, and secondly the discovery
+ that high-grade personality may and can and must be developed
+ in all the members of the community. In proportion as the
+ members of the community become conscious persons, fully
+ self-conscious and self-regulating, fully imbued with the idea
+ and the spirit of true personality, of communo-individualism,
+ in that proportion will the community be unified and
+ centralized, as well as capable of the most complex and
+ differentiated internal structure. The strength of such a
+ nation will be indefinitely greater than that of any other less
+ personalized and so less communalized nation.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXX'
+ id="XXX"></a><a name='Page_344'
+ id="Page_344"></a>XXX</h2>
+
+ <h3>ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Few phases of the Japanese character have proved so
+ fascinating to the philosophical writer on Japan as that of the
+ personality of this Far Eastern people. From the writings of
+ Sir Rutherford Alcock, the first resident English minister in
+ Japan, down to the last publication that has come under my eye,
+ all have something to say on this topic. One writer, Mr.
+ Percival Lowell, has devoted an entire volume to it under the
+ title of "The Soul of the Far East," in which he endeavors to
+ establish the position that the entire civilization of the
+ Orient, in its institutions, such as the family and the state,
+ in the structure of its language, in its conceptions of nature,
+ in its art, in its religion, and finally in its inherent mental
+ nature, is essentially <i>impersonal</i>. One of the prominent
+ and long resident missionaries in Japan once delivered a course
+ of lectures on the influence of pantheism in the Orient, in
+ which he contended, among other things, that the lack of
+ personal pronouns and other phenomena of Japanese life and
+ religion are due to the presence and power in this land of
+ pantheistic philosophy preventing the development of
+ personality.</p>
+
+ <p>The more I have examined these writings and their
+ fundamental assumptions, the more manifest have ambiguities and
+ contradictions in the use of terms become. I have become also
+ increasingly impressed with the failure of advocates of
+ Japanese "impersonality" to appreciate the real nature of the
+ phenomena they seek to explain. They have not comprehended the
+ nature or the course of social evolution, nor have they
+ discovered the mutual relation existing between the social
+ order and personality. The arguments advanced for the
+ "impersonal" view are more or less plausible, and this method
+ <a name='Page_345'
+ id="Page_345"></a>of interpreting the Orient appeals for
+ authority to respectable philosophical writers. No less a
+ philosopher than Hegel is committed to this interpretation.
+ The importance of this subject, not only for a correct
+ understanding of Japan, but also of the relation existing
+ between individual, social, and religious evolution,
+ requires us to give it careful attention. We shall make our
+ way most easily into this difficult discussion by
+ considering some prevalent misconceptions and defective
+ arguments. I may here express my indebtedness to the author
+ of "The Soul of the Far East" for the stimulus received from
+ his brilliant volume, differ though I do from his main
+ thesis. We begin this study with a few quotations from Mr.
+ Lowell's now classic work.</p>
+
+ <p>"Capability to evolve anything is not one of the marked
+ characteristics of the Far East. Indeed, the tendency to
+ spontaneous variation, Nature's mode of making experiments,
+ would seem there to have been an enterprising faculty that was
+ early exhausted. Sleepy, no doubt, from having got up betimes
+ with the dawn, these inhabitants of the land of the morning
+ began to look upon their day as already far spent before they
+ had reached its noon. They grew old young, and have remained
+ much the same age ever since. What they were centuries ago,
+ that at bottom they are to-day. Take away the European
+ influences of the past twenty years, and each man might almost
+ be his own great-grandfather. In race character, he is yet
+ essentially the same. The traits that distinguished these
+ peoples in the past have been gradually extinguishing them ever
+ since. Of these traits, stagnating influences upon their
+ career, perhaps the most important is the great quality of
+ "impersonality."<a name='FNanchor_CGA_86'
+ id="FNanchor_CGA_86"></a><a href='#Footnote_CGA_86'><sup>[CGa]</sup></a>
+ "The peoples inhabiting it [the northern hemisphere] grow
+ steadily more personal as we go West. So unmistakable is
+ this gradation that we are almost tempted to ascribe it to
+ cosmical rather than to human causes.... The sense of self
+ grows more intense as we follow the wake of the setting sun,
+ and fades steadily as we advance into the dawn. America,
+ Europe, the Levant, India, Japan, <a name='Page_346'
+ id="Page_346"></a>each is less personal than the one before.
+ We stand at the nearer end of the scale, the Far Orientals
+ at the other. If with us the 'I' seems to be the very
+ essence of the soul, then the soul of the Far East may be
+ said to be 'Impersonality.'"<a name='FNanchor_CH_87'
+ id="FNanchor_CH_87"></a><a href='#Footnote_CH_87'><sup>[CH]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Following the argument through the volume we see that
+ individual physical force and aggressiveness, deficiency of
+ politeness, and selfishness are, according to this line of
+ thought, essential elements of personality. The opposite set of
+ qualities constitutes the essence of impersonality. "The
+ average Far Oriental, indeed, talks as much to no purpose as
+ his Western cousin, only in his chit-chat politeness takes the
+ place of personalities. With him, self is suppressed, and an
+ ever-present regard for others is substituted in its stead. A
+ lack of personality is, as we have seen, the occasion of this
+ courtesy; it is also its cause.... Considered a priori, the
+ connection between the two is not far to seek. Impersonality,
+ by lessening the interest in one's self, induces one to take an
+ interest in others. Introspection tends to make a man a
+ solitary animal, the absence of it a social one. The more
+ impersonal the people, the more will the community supplant the
+ individual in the popular estimation.... Then, as the social
+ desires develop, politeness, being the means of their
+ enjoyment, develops also."<a name='FNanchor_CI_88'
+ id="FNanchor_CI_88"></a><a href='#Footnote_CI_88'><sup>[CI]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Let us take a look at some definitions:</p>
+
+ <p>"Individuality, personality, and the sense of self, are only
+ three aspects of the same thing. They are so many various views
+ of the soul, according as we regard it from an intrinsic, an
+ altruistic, or an egoistic standpoint.... By individuality we
+ mean that bundle of ideas, thoughts, and day-dreams which
+ constitute our separate identity, and by virtue of which we
+ feel each one of us at home within himself.... Consciousness is
+ the necessary attribute of mental action. Not only is it the
+ sole way we have of knowing mind; without it there would be no
+ mind to know. Not to be conscious of one's self is, mentally
+ <a name='Page_347'
+ id="Page_347"></a>speaking, not to be. This complex entity,
+ this little cosmos of a world, the 'I,' has for its very law
+ of existence, self-consciousness, while personality is the
+ effect it produces upon the consciousness of
+ others."<a name='FNanchor_CJ_89'
+ id="FNanchor_CJ_89"></a><a href='#Footnote_CJ_89'><sup>[CJ]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The more we study the above definitions, the more baffling
+ they become. Try as I may, I have not been able to fit them,
+ not only to the facts of my own experience, which may not be
+ strange, but I cannot reconcile them even to each other. There
+ seem to me inherent ambiguities and self-contradictions lurking
+ beneath their scientific splendor. Individuality is stated to
+ be "that bundle of ideas, thoughts, and day-dreams which
+ constitute our separate identity." This seems plain and
+ straightforward, but is it really so? Consciousness is stated
+ to be not only "the necessary attribute of mental action" (to
+ which exception might be taken on the ground of abundant proof
+ of unconscious mental action), but it is also considered to be
+ the very cause of mind itself. Not only by consciousness do we
+ know mind, but the consciousness itself constitutes the mind;
+ "without it there would be no mind to know." "Not to be
+ conscious of one's self is not to be." Do we then cease to be,
+ when we sleep? or when absorbed in thought or action? And do we
+ become new-created when we awake? What is the bond of
+ connection that binds into one the successive consciousnesses
+ of the successive days? Does not that "bundle of ideas" become
+ broken into as many wholly independent fragments as there are
+ intervals between our sleepings? Or rather is not each fragment
+ a whole in itself, and is not the idea of self-continuity from
+ day to day and from week to week a self-delusion? How can it be
+ otherwise if consciousness constitutes existence? For after the
+ consciousness has ceased and "the bundle of ideas," which
+ constitutes the individuality of that day, has therefore gone
+ absolutely out of existence, it is impossible that the old
+ bundle shall be resurrected by a new consciousness. Only a new
+ bundle can be the product of a new consciousness. Evidently
+ there is trouble somewhere. But let us pass on.</p>
+
+ <p>"<a name='Page_348'
+ id="Page_348"></a>The 'I' has for its very law of existence
+ self-consciousness." Is not "self-consciousness" here
+ identified with "consciousness" in the preceding sentence?
+ The very existence of the mind, the "I," is ascribed to each
+ in turn. Is there, then, no difference between consciousness
+ and self-consciousness? Finally, personality is stated to be
+ "the effect it [the "I"] produces on the self-consciousness
+ of others." I confess I gain no clear idea from this
+ statement. But whatever else it may mean, this is clear,
+ that personality is not a quality or characteristic of the
+ "I," but only some effect which the "I" produces on the
+ consciousness of another. Is it a quality, then, of the
+ other person? And does impersonality mean the lack of such
+ an effect? But does not this introduce us to new confusion?
+ When a human being is wholly absorbed in an altruistic act,
+ for instance, wholly forgetful of self, he is, according to
+ a preceding paragraph, quite impersonal; yet, according to
+ the definition before us, he cannot be impersonal, for he is
+ producing most lively effects on the consciousness of the
+ poor human being he is befriending; in his altruistic deed
+ he is strongly personal, yet not he, for personality does
+ not belong to the person acting, but somehow to the person
+ affected. How strange that the personality of a person is
+ not his own characteristic but another's!</p>
+
+ <p>But still more confusing is the definition when we recall
+ that if the benevolent man is wholly unconscious of self, and
+ is thinking only of the one whom he is helping, then he himself
+ is no longer existing. But in that case how can he help the
+ poor man or even continue to think of him? Perfect altruism is
+ self-annihilation! Knowledge of itself by the mind is that
+ which constitutes it! But enough. It has become clear that
+ these terms have not been used consistently, nor are the
+ definitions such as to command the assent of any careful
+ psychologist or philosopher. What the writer means to say is, I
+ judge, that the measure of a man's personality is the amount of
+ impression he makes on his fellows. For the whole drift of his
+ argument is that both the physical and mental aggressiveness of
+ the Occidental is far greater than that of the Oriental; this
+ characteristic, he asserts, is due to <a name='Page_349'
+ id="Page_349"></a>the deficient development of personality
+ in the Orient, and this deficient development he calls
+ "impersonality." If those writers who describe the Orient as
+ "impersonal" fail in their definition of the term
+ "personal," their failure to define "impersonal" is even
+ more striking. They use the term as if it were so well known
+ as to need no definition; yet their usage ascribes to it
+ contrary conceptions. As a rule they conceive of
+ "impersonality" as a deficiency of development; yet, when
+ they attempt to describe its nature, they speak of it as
+ self-suppression. A clear statement of this latter point may
+ be found in a passage already quoted: "Politeness takes the
+ place of personalities. With him [the Oriental], self is
+ suppressed, and an ever-present regard for others is
+ substituted." "Impersonality, by lessening the interest in
+ one's self, induces one to take interest in others." In this
+ statement it will be noted the "<i>self is suppressed</i>."
+ Does "impersonality" then follow personality, as a matter of
+ historical development? It would so appear from this and
+ kindred passages. But if this is true, then Japan is
+ <i>more</i> instead of less developed than the Occident. Yet
+ this is exactly the reverse of that for which this school of
+ thought contends.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us now examine some concrete illustrations adduced by
+ those who advocate Japanese impersonality. They may be arranged
+ in two classes: those that are due wholly to invention, and
+ those that are doubtless facts, but that may be better
+ accounted for by some other theory than that of
+ "impersonality."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Lowell makes amusing material out of the two children's
+ festivals, known by the Japanese as "Sekku," occurring on March
+ 3 and June 5 (old calendar). Because the first of these is
+ exclusively for the girls and the second is exclusively for the
+ boys, Mr. Lowell concludes that they are general birthdays, in
+ spite of the fact which he seems to know that the ages are not
+ reckoned from these days. He calls them "the great impersonal
+ birthdays"; for, according to his supposition, all the girls
+ celebrate their birthdays on the third day of the third moon
+ and all the boys celebrate theirs on the fifth day of the fifth
+ moon, regardless of the actual days on which they may have been
+ born. With regard to this under<a name='Page_350'
+ id="Page_350"></a>standing of the significance of the
+ festival, I have asked a large number of Japanese, not one
+ of whom had ever heard of such an idea. Each one has
+ insisted that individual birthdays are celebrated regardless
+ of these general festivals; the ages of children are never
+ computed from these festivals; they have nothing whatever to
+ do with the ages of the children.<a name='FNanchor_CK_90'
+ id="FNanchor_CK_90"></a><a href='#Footnote_CK_90'><sup>[CK]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The report of the discussions of the Japanese Society of
+ Comparative Religion contains quite a minute statement of all
+ the facts known as to these festivals, much too long in this
+ connection, but among them there is not the slightest reference
+ to the birthday feature attributed to them by Mr.
+ Lowell.<a name='FNanchor_CL_91'
+ id="FNanchor_CL_91"></a><a href='#Footnote_CL_91'><sup>[CL]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Lowell likewise invents another fact in support of his
+ theory by his interpretation of the Japanese method of
+ computing ages. Speaking of the advent of an infant into the
+ home he says, that "from the moment he makes his appearance he
+ is spoken of as a year old, and this same age he continues to
+ be considered in most simple cases of calculation, till the
+ beginning of the next calendar year. When that epoch of general
+ rejoicing arrives, he is credited with another year himself. So
+ is everybody else. New Year's day is a common birthday for the
+ community, a sort of impersonal anniversary for his whole
+ world." Now this is a very entertaining conceit, but it will
+ hardly pass muster as a serious argument with one who has any
+ real understanding of Japanese ideas on the subject. The simple
+ fact is that the Japanese does not ordinarily tell you how old
+ the child is, but only in how many year periods he has lived.
+ Though born December 31, on January 1 he has undoubtedly lived
+ in two different year periods. This method of counting,
+ however, is not confined to the counting of ages, but it
+ characterizes all their counting. If you ask a man how many
+ days before a certain festival near at hand he will say ten
+ where we would say but nine. In other words, in counting
+ periods the Japanese count all, including both the first and
+ the last, whereas we omit the first. This as a custom is an
+ interesting psychological problem, but it has
+ <a name='Page_351'
+ id="Page_351"></a>not the remotest connection with
+ "personality" or "impersonality." Furthermore, the Japanese
+ have another method of signifying the age of a child which
+ corresponds exactly to ours. You have but to ask what is the
+ "full" age of a child to receive a statement which satisfies
+ our ideas of the problem. The idea of calling New Year's day
+ a great "impersonal" birthday because forsooth all the
+ members of the community and the nation then enter on a new
+ year period, and of using that as an argument for the
+ "impersonality" of the whole race, is as interesting as it
+ is inconclusive.</p>
+
+ <p>Much is made of the fact that Japanese art has paid its
+ chief attention to nature and to animals, and but little to
+ man. This proves, it is argued, that the Japanese artist and
+ people are "impersonal"&mdash;that they are not self-conscious,
+ for their gaze is directed outward, toward "impersonal" nature;
+ had they been an aggressive personal people, a people conscious
+ of self, their art would have depicted man. The cogency of this
+ logic seems questionable to me. Art is necessarily objective,
+ whether it depicts nature or man; the gaze is always and
+ necessarily outward, even when it is depicting the human form.
+ In our consideration of the &aelig;sthetic elements of Japanese
+ character<a name='FNanchor_CM_92'
+ id="FNanchor_CM_92"></a><a href='#Footnote_CM_92'><sup>[CM]</sup></a>
+ we gave reasons for the Japanese love of natural beauty and
+ for their relatively slight attention to the human form. If
+ the reasons there given were correct, the fact that Japanese
+ art is concerned chiefly with nature has nothing whatever to
+ do with the "impersonality" of the people. If
+ "impersonality" is essentially altruistic, if it consists of
+ self-suppression and interest in others, then it is
+ difficult to see how art that depicts the form even of human
+ beings can escape the charge of being "impersonal" except
+ when the artist is depicting himself. If, again, supreme
+ interest in objective "impersonal" nature proves the lack of
+ "personality," should we not argue that the West is
+ supremely "impersonal" because of its extraordinary interest
+ in nature and in the natural and physical sciences? Are
+ naturalists and scientists "impersonal," and are
+ philosophers and psychologists "personal" in nature? If it
+ be argued that art <a name='Page_352'
+ id="Page_352"></a>which depicts the human emotions is
+ properly speaking subjective, and therefore a proof of
+ developed personality, will it be maintained that Japan is
+ devoid of such art? How about the pictures and the statues
+ of warriors? How about the passionate features of the Ni-o,
+ the placid faces of the Buddhas and other religious imagery?
+ Are there not here the most powerful representations
+ possible of human emotions, both active and passive? But
+ even so, is not the gaze of the artist still <i>outward</i>
+ on others, <i>i.e.</i>, is he not altruistic; and,
+ therefore, "impersonal," according to this method of thought
+ and use of terms? Are European artists who revel in
+ landscape and animal scenes deficient in "personal"
+ development, and are those who devote their lives to
+ painting nude women particularly developed in "personality"?
+ Truly, a defective terminology and a distorted conception of
+ what "personality" is, land one in most contradictory
+ positions.</p>
+
+ <p>Those who urge the "impersonality" of the Orient make much
+ of the Japanese idea of the "family," with the attendant
+ customs. The fact that marriage is arranged for by the parents,
+ and that the two individuals most concerned have practically no
+ voice in the matter, proves conclusively, they argue, that the
+ latter have little "personality." Here again all turns on the
+ definition of this important word. If by "personality" is meant
+ consciousness of one's self as an independent individual, then
+ I do not see what relation the two subjects have. If, however,
+ it means the willingness of the subjects of marriage to forego
+ their own desires and choices; because indeed they do not have
+ any of their own, then the facts will not bear out the
+ argument. These writers skillfully choose certain facts out of
+ the family customs whereby to illustrate and enforce this
+ theory, but they entirely omit others having a significant
+ bearing upon it. Take, for instance, the fact that one-third of
+ the marriages end in divorce. What does this show? It shows
+ that one-third of the individuals in each marriage are so
+ dissatisfied with the arrangements made by the parents that
+ they reject them and assert their own choice and decision.
+ According to the argument for "impersonality" in marriage,
+ these recalcitrant, <a name='Page_353'
+ id="Page_353"></a>unsubmissive individuals have a great
+ amount of "personality," that is, consciousness of self; and
+ this consciousness of self produces a great effect on the
+ other party to the marriage; and the effect on the other
+ party (in the vast majority of the cases women), that is to
+ say, the effect of the divorce on the consciousness of the
+ women, constitutes the personality of the men! The marriage
+ customs cited, therefore, do not prove the point, for no
+ account is taken of the multitudinous cases in which one
+ party or the other utterly refuses to carry out the
+ arrangements of the parents. Many a girl declines from the
+ beginning the proposals of the parents. These cases are by
+ no means few. Only a few days before writing the present
+ lines a waiting girl in a hotel requested me to find her a
+ place of service in some foreign family. On inquiry she told
+ me how her parents wished her to marry into a certain
+ family; but that she could not endure the thought and had
+ run away from home. One of the facts which strike a
+ missionary, as he becomes acquainted with the people, is the
+ frequency of the cases of running away from home. Girls run
+ away, probably not as frequently as boys, yet very often.
+ Are we to believe that these are individuals who have an
+ excessive amount of "personality"? If so, then the
+ development of "personality" in Japan is far more than the
+ advocates of its "impersonality" recognize or would allow us
+ to believe. Mr. Lowell devotes three pages to a beautiful
+ and truthful description of the experience known in the West
+ as "falling in love." Turning his attention to the Orient,
+ because of the fact that marriages are arranged for by the
+ families concerned, he argues that: "No such blissful
+ infatuation falls to the lot of the Far Oriental. He never
+ is the dupe of his own desire, the willing victim of his
+ self-delusion. He is never tempted to reveal himself, and by
+ thus revealing, realize.... For she is not his love; she is
+ only his wife; and what is left of a romance when the
+ romance is left out?" Although there is an element of truth
+ in this, yet it is useless as a support for the theory of
+ Japanese "impersonality." For it is not a fact that the
+ Japanese do not fall in love; it is a well-known experience
+ to them. It is inconceivable how any<a name='Page_354'
+ id="Page_354"></a>one at all acquainted with either Japanese
+ life or literature could make such an assertion. The
+ passionate love of a man and a woman for each other, so
+ strong that in multitudes of cases the two prefer a common
+ death to a life apart, is a not uncommon event in Japan.
+ Frequently we read in the daily papers of a case of mutual
+ suicide for love. This is sufficiently common to have
+ received a specific name "joshi."<a name='FNanchor_CN_93'
+ id="FNanchor_CN_93"></a><a href='#Footnote_CN_93'><sup>[CN]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>So far as the argument for "impersonality" is concerned this
+ illustration from the asserted lack of love is useless, for it
+ is one of those manufactured for the occasion by imaginative
+ and resourceful advocates of "impersonality."</p>
+
+ <p>But I do not mean to say that "falling in love" plays the
+ same important part in the life and development of the youth in
+ Japan that it does in the West. It is usually utterly ignored,
+ so far as parental planning for marriage is concerned. Love is
+ not recognized as a proper basis for the contraction of
+ marriage, and is accordingly frowned upon. It is deemed a sign
+ of mental and moral weakness for a man to fall in love. Under
+ these conditions it is not at all strange that "falling in
+ love" is not so common an experience as in the West.
+ Furthermore, this profound experience is not utilized as it is
+ in the West as a refining and elevating influence in the life
+ of a young man or woman. In a land where "falling in love" is
+ regarded as an immoral thing, a breaking out of uncontrollable
+ animal passion, it is not strange that it should not be
+ glorified by moralists or sanctified by religion. There are few
+ experiences in the West so ennobling as the love that a young
+ man and a young woman bear to each other during the days of
+ their engagement and lasting onward throughout the years of
+ their lengthening married life. The West has found the secret
+ of making use of this period in the lives of the young to
+ elevate and purify them of which the East knows little.</p>
+
+ <p>But there are still other and sadder consequences
+ fol<a name='Page_355'
+ id="Page_355"></a>lowing from the attitude of the Japanese
+ to the question of "falling in love." It can hardly be
+ doubted that the vast number of divorces is due to the
+ defective method of betrothal, a method which disregards the
+ free choice of the parties most concerned. The system of
+ divorce is, we may say, the device of society for remedying
+ the inherent defects of the betrothal system. It treats both
+ the man and the woman as though they were not persons but
+ unfeeling machines. Personality, for a while submissive,
+ soon asserts its liberty, in case the married parties prove
+ uncongenial, and demands the right of divorce. Divorce is
+ thus the device of thwarted personality. But in addition to
+ this evil, there is that of concubinage or virtual polygamy,
+ which is often the result of "falling in love." And then,
+ there is the resort of hopelessly thwarted personality known
+ in the West as well as in the East, murder and suicide, and
+ oftentimes even double suicide, referred to above. The
+ marriage customs of the Orient are such that hopeless love,
+ though mutual, is far more frequent than in the West, and
+ the death of lovers in each other's arms, after having
+ together taken the fatal draught, is not rare. The number of
+ suicides due to hopeless love in 1894 was 407, and the
+ number of murders for the same cause was 94. Here is a total
+ of over five hundred deaths in a single year, very largely
+ due to the defective marriage system. Do not these phenomena
+ refute assertions to the effect that the Japanese are so
+ impersonal as not to know what it is to "fall in love"? If
+ the question of the personality of the Japanese is to be
+ settled by the phenomena of family life and the strength of
+ the sexual emotion, would we not have to pronounce them
+ possessed of strongly developed personality?</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXI'
+ id="XXXI"></a><a name='Page_356'
+ id="Page_356"></a>XXXI</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE JAPANESE NOT IMPERSONAL</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We must now face the far more difficult task of presenting a
+ positive statement in regard to the problem of personality in
+ the Orient. We need to discover just what is or should be meant
+ by the terms "personality" and "impersonality." We must also
+ analyze this Oriental civilization and discover its elementary
+ factors, in order that we may see what it is that has given the
+ impression to so many students that the Orient is "impersonal."
+ In doing this, although our aim is constructive, we shall
+ attain our end with greater ease if we rise to positive results
+ through further criticism of defective views. We naturally
+ begin with definitions.</p>
+
+ <p>"Individuality" is defined by the Standard Dictionary as
+ "the state or quality of being individual; separate or distinct
+ existence." "Individual" is defined as "Anything that cannot be
+ divided or separated into parts without losing identity.... A
+ single person, animal, or thing." "Personality" is defined as
+ "That which constitutes a person; conscious, separate existence
+ as an intelligent and voluntary being." "Person" is defined as
+ "Any being having life, intelligence, will, and separate
+ individual existence." On these various definitions the
+ following observations seem pertinent.</p>
+
+ <p>"Individuality" has reference only to the distinctions
+ existing between different objects, persons, or things. The
+ term draws attention to the fact of distinctness and difference
+ and not to the qualities which make the difference, and least
+ of all to the consciousness of identity by virtue of which "we
+ feel each one of us at home within himself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Personality" properly has reference only to that which
+ constitutes a person. As contrasted with an animal
+ <a name='Page_357'
+ id="Page_357"></a>a person has not only life, but also a
+ highly developed and self-conscious intelligence, feeling,
+ and will; these involve moral relations toward other persons
+ and religious relations toward God.</p>
+
+ <p>Consciousness is not attendant on every act of the person,
+ much less is self-consciousness, although both are always
+ potential and more or less implicit. A person is often so
+ absorbed in thought or act as to be wholly unconscious of his
+ thinking or acting; the consciousness is, so to speak,
+ submerged for the time being. Self-consciousness implies
+ considerable progress in reflection on one's own states of
+ mind, and in the attainment of the consciousness of one's own
+ individuality. It is the result of introspection.
+ Self-consciousness, however, does not constitute one's
+ identity; it merely recognizes it.</p>
+
+ <p>The foundation for a correct conception of the term
+ "personality" rests on the conception of the term "soul" or
+ "spirit." In my judgment, each human being is to be conceived
+ as being a separate "soul," endowed by its very nature with
+ definite capacities or qualities or attributes which we
+ describe as mental, emotional, and volitional, having powers of
+ consciousness more or less developed according to the social
+ evolution of the race, the age of the individual, his
+ individual environment, and depending also on the amount of
+ education he may have received. The possession of a soul
+ endowed with these qualities constitutes a person; their
+ possession in marked measure constitutes developed personality,
+ and in defective measure, undeveloped personality.</p>
+
+ <p>The unique character of a "person" is that he combines
+ perfect separateness with the possibility and more or less of
+ the actuality of perfect universality. A "person" is in a true
+ sense a universal, an infinite being. He is thus through the
+ constitution of his psychic nature a thinking, feeling, and
+ willing being. Through his intellect and in proportion to his
+ knowledge he becomes united with the whole objective universe;
+ through his feelings he may become united in sympathy and love
+ with all sentient creation, and even with God himself, the
+ center and source of all being; through his active will he is
+ increasingly creator of his environment. Man is thus in a true
+ sense cre<a name='Page_358'
+ id="Page_358"></a>ating the conditions which make him to be
+ what he is. Thus in no figurative sense, but literally and
+ actually, man is in the process of creating himself. He is
+ realizing the latent and hitherto unsuspected potentialities
+ of his nature. He is creating a world in which to express
+ himself; and this he does by expressing himself. In
+ proportion as man advances, making explicit what is implicit
+ in his inner nature, is he said to grow in personality. A
+ man thus both possesses personality and grows in
+ personality. He could not grow in it did he not already
+ actually possess it. In such growth both elements of his
+ being, the individual and the universal, develop
+ simultaneously. A person of inferior personal development is
+ at once less individual and less universal. This is a
+ matter, however, not of endowment but of development. We
+ thus distinguish between the original personal endowment,
+ which we may call intrinsic or inherent personality, and the
+ various forms in which this personality has manifested and
+ expressed itself, which we may call extrinsic or acquired
+ personality. Inherent personality is that which
+ differentiates man from animal. It constitutes the original
+ involution which explains and even necessitates man's entire
+ evolution. There may be, nay, must be, varying degrees of
+ expression of the inherent personality, just as there may be
+ and must be varying degrees of consciousness of personality.
+ These depend on the degree of evolution attained by the race
+ and by the individuals of the race.</p>
+
+ <p>It is no part of our plan to justify this conception of the
+ nature of personality, or to defend these brief summary
+ statements as to its inherent nature. It is enough if we have
+ gained a clear idea of this conception on which the present
+ chapter, and indeed this entire work, rests. In discussing the
+ question as to personality in the Orient, it is important for
+ us ever to bear in mind the distinctions between the inherent
+ endowment that constitutes personal beings, the explicit and
+ external expression of that endowment, and the possession of
+ the consciousness of that endowment. For these are three things
+ quite distinct, though intimately related.</p>
+
+ <p>The term "impersonality" demands special attention,
+ <a name='Page_359'
+ id="Page_359"></a>being the most misused and abused term of
+ all. The first and natural signification of the word is the
+ mere negation of personality; as a stone, for instance, is
+ strictly "impersonal." This is the meaning given by the
+ dictionaries. But in this sense, of course, it is
+ inapplicable to human beings. What, then, is the meaning
+ when applied to them? When Mr. Lowell says, "If with us [of
+ the West] the 'I' seems to be of the very essence of the
+ soul, then the soul of the Far East may be said to be
+ 'impersonal,'" what does he mean? He certainly does not mean
+ that the Chinese and Japanese and Hindus have no emotional
+ or volitional characteristics, that they are strictly
+ "impersonal"; nor does he mean that the Oriental has less
+ development of powers of thinking, willing, feeling, or of
+ introspective meditation. The whole argument shows that he
+ means that <i>their sense of the individuality or
+ separateness of the Ego is so slight that it is practically
+ ignored; and this not by their civilization alone, but by
+ each individual himself</i>. The supreme consciousness of
+ the individual is not of himself, but of his family or race;
+ or if he is an intensely religious man, his consciousness is
+ concerned with his essential identity with the Absolute and
+ Ultimate Being, rather than with his own separate self. In
+ other words, the term "impersonal" is made to do duty for
+ the non-existent negative of "individual." "Impersonal" is
+ thus equivalent to "universal" and personal to "individual."
+ To change the phraseology, the term "impersonal" is used to
+ signify a state of mind in which the separateness or
+ individuality of the individual ego is not fully recognized
+ or appreciated even by the individual himself. The prominent
+ element of the individual's consciousness is the unity or
+ the universalism, rather than the multiplicity or
+ individualism.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Lowell in effect says this in his closing chapter
+ entitled "Imagination." His thesis seems to be that the
+ universal mind, of which, each individual receives a fragment,
+ becomes increasingly differentiated as the race mind evolves.
+ In proportion as the evolution has progressed does the
+ individual realize his individuality&mdash;his separateness;
+ this individualization, this differentiation of the individual
+ mind is, in his view, the measure as well as the
+ <a name='Page_360'
+ id="Page_360"></a>cause of the higher civilization. The lack
+ of such individualization he calls "impersonality"; in such
+ a mind the dominant thought is not of the separateness
+ between, but of the unity that binds together, himself and
+ the universal mind.</p>
+
+ <p>If the above is a correct statement of the conception of
+ those who emphasize the "impersonality" of the Orient, then
+ there are two things concerning it which may be said at once.
+ First, the idea is a perfectly clear and intelligible one, the
+ proposition is definite and tangible. But why do they not so
+ express it? The terms "personality" and "individuality" are
+ used synonymously; while "impersonal" is considered the
+ equivalent of the negative of individual, un-individual&mdash;a
+ word which has not yet been and probably never will be used.
+ But the negation of individual is universal; "impersonal,"
+ therefore, according to the usage of these writers, becomes
+ equivalent to universal.</p>
+
+ <p>But, secondly, even after the use of terms has become thus
+ understood, and we are no longer confused over the words,
+ having arrived at the idea they are intended to convey, the
+ idea itself is fundamentally erroneous. I freely admit that
+ there is an interesting truth of which these writers have got a
+ glimpse and to which they are striving to give expression, but
+ apparently they have not understood the real nature of this
+ truth and consequently they are fundamentally wrong in calling
+ the Far East "impersonal," even in their sense of the word.
+ They are furthermore in error, in ascribing this "impersonal"
+ characteristic of the Japanese to their inherent race nature,
+ If they are right, the problem is fundamentally one of
+ biological evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>In contrast to this view, it is here contended, first, that
+ the feature they are describing is not such as they describe
+ it; second, that it is not properly called "impersonality";
+ third, that it is not a matter of inherent race nature, of
+ brain structure, or of mind differentiation, but wholly a
+ matter of social evolution; and, fourth, that if there is such
+ a trait as they describe, it is not due to a deficiently
+ developed but on the contrary to a superlatively developed
+ personality, which might better be called
+ super-person<a name='Page_361'
+ id="Page_361"></a>ality. To state the position here
+ advocated in a nutshell, it is maintained that the asserted
+ "impersonality" of the Japanese is the result of the
+ communalistic nature of the social order which has prevailed
+ down to the most recent times; it has put its stamp on every
+ feature of the national and individual life, not omitting
+ the language, the philosophy, the religion, or even the
+ inmost thoughts of the people. This dominance of the
+ communalistic type of social order has doubtless had an
+ effect on the physical and psychic, including the brain,
+ development of the people. These physical and psychical
+ developments, however, are not the cause, but the product,
+ of the social order. They are, furthermore, of no
+ superlative import, since they offer no insuperable obstacle
+ to the introduction of a social order radically different
+ from that of past millenniums.</p>
+
+ <p>Before proceeding to elaborate and illustrate this general
+ position, it seems desirable to introduce two further
+ definitions.</p>
+
+ <p>Communalism and individualism are the two terms used
+ throughout this work to describe two contrasted types of social
+ order.</p>
+
+ <p>By communalism I mean that order of society, whether family,
+ tribal, or national, in which the idea and the importance of
+ the community are more or less clearly recognized, and in which
+ this idea has become the constructive principle of the social
+ order, and where at the same time the individual is practically
+ ignored and crushed.</p>
+
+ <p>By individualism I mean that later order of society in which
+ the worth of the individual has been recognized and emphasized,
+ to the extent of radically modifying the communalism, securing
+ a liberty for individual act and thought and initiative, of
+ which the old order had no conception, and which it would have
+ considered both dangerous and immoral. Individualism is not
+ that atomic social order in which the idea of the communal
+ unity has been rejected, and each separate human being regarded
+ as the only unit. Such a society could hardly be called an
+ order, even by courtesy. Individualism is that developed stage
+ of communalism, wherein the advantages of close communal unity
+ have been retained, and wherein, at <a name='Page_362'
+ id="Page_362"></a>the same time, the idea and practice of
+ the worth of the individual and the importance of giving him
+ liberty of thought and action have been added. Great changes
+ in the internal structure, of society follow, but the
+ communial unity or idea is neither lost nor injured. In
+ taking up our various illustrations regarding personality in
+ Japan, three points demand our attention; what are the
+ facts? are they due to, and do they prove, the asserted
+ "impersonality" of the people? and are the facts
+ sufficiently accounted for by the communal theory of the
+ Japanese social order?</p>
+
+ <p>Let us begin, then, with the illustration of which advocates
+ of "impersonality" make so much, Japanese politeness. As to the
+ reality of the fact, it is hardly necessary that I present
+ extended proof. Japanese politeness is proverbial. It is
+ carried into the minutest acts of daily life; the holding of
+ the hands, the method of entering a room, the sucking in of the
+ breath on specific occasions, the arrangement of the hair, the
+ relative places of honor in a sitting-room, the method of
+ handing guests refreshments, the exchange of friendly
+ gifts&mdash;every detail of social life is rigidly dominated by
+ etiquette. Not only acts, but the language of personal address
+ as well, is governed by ideas of politeness which have
+ fundamentally affected the structure of the language, by
+ preventing the development of personal pronouns.</p>
+
+ <p>Now what is the cause of this characteristic of the
+ Japanese? It is commonly attributed by writers of the
+ impersonal school to the "impersonality" of the Oriental mind.
+ "Impersonality" is not only the occasion, it is the cause of
+ the politeness of the Japanese people. "Self is suppressed, and
+ an ever-present regard for others is substituted in its stead."
+ "Impersonality, by lessening the interest in one's self,
+ induces one to take interest in
+ others."<a name='FNanchor_CO_94'
+ id="FNanchor_CO_94"></a><a href='#Footnote_CO_94'><sup>[CO]</sup></a>
+ Politeness is, in these passages, attributed to the
+ impersonal nature of the Japanese mind. The following
+ quotations show that this characteristic is conceived of as
+ inherent in race and mind structure, not in the social
+ order, as is here maintained. "The nation grew up to man's
+ estate, keeping the mind of its child-h<a name='Page_363'
+ id="Page_363"></a>ood."<a name='FNanchor_CP_95'
+ id="FNanchor_CP_95"></a><a href='#Footnote_CP_95'><sup>[CP]</sup></a>
+ "In race characteristics, he is yet essentially the same....
+ Of these traits ... perhaps the most important is the great
+ quality of impersonality."<a name='FNanchor_CQ_96'
+ id="FNanchor_CQ_96"></a><a href='#Footnote_CQ_96'><sup>[CQ]</sup></a>
+ "The peoples inhabiting it [the earth's temperate zone] grow
+ steadily more personal as we go West. So unmistakable is
+ this gradation that one is almost tempted to ascribe it to
+ cosmical rather than human causes.... The essence of the
+ soul of the Far East may be said to be
+ impersonality."<a name='FNanchor_CR_97'
+ id="FNanchor_CR_97"></a><a href='#Footnote_CR_97'><sup>[CR]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In his chapter on "Imagination," Mr. Lowell seeks to explain
+ the cause of the "impersonality" of the Orient. He attributes
+ it to their marked lack of the faculty of
+ "imagination"&mdash;the faculty of forming new and original
+ ideas. Lacking this faculty, there has been relatively little
+ stimulus to growth, and hence no possibility of differentiation
+ and thus of individualization.</p>
+
+ <p>If politeness were due to the "impersonal" nature of the
+ race mind, it would be impossible to account for the rise and
+ decline of Japanese etiquette, for it should have existed from
+ the beginning, and continued through all time, nor could we
+ account for the gross impoliteness that is often met with in
+ recent years. The Japanese themselves deplore the changes that
+ have taken place. They testify that the older forms of
+ politeness were an integral element of the feudal system and
+ were too often a thin veneer of manner by no means expressive
+ of heart interest. None can be so absolutely rude as they who
+ are masters of the forms of politeness, but have not the kindly
+ heart. The theory of "impersonality" does not satisfactorily
+ account for the old-time politeness of Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>The explanation here offered for the development and decline
+ of politeness is that they are due to the nature of the social
+ order. Thoroughgoing feudalism long maintained, with its social
+ ranks and free use of the sword, of necessity develops minute
+ unwritten rules of etiquette; without the universal observance
+ of these customs, life would be unbearable and precarious, and
+ society itself would be impossible. Minute etiquette is the
+ lubricant of a feudal social order. The rise and fall of
+ Japan's phenomenal system of feudal etiquette is synchronous
+ with <a name='Page_364'
+ id="Page_364"></a>that of her feudal system, to which it is
+ due rather than to the asserted "impersonality" of the race
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <p>The impersonal theory is amazingly blind to adverse
+ phenomena. Such a one is the marked sensitiveness of the middle
+ and upper classes to the least slight or insult. The gradations
+ of social rank are scrupulously observed, not only on formal
+ occasions, but also in the homes at informal and social
+ gatherings. Failure to show the proper attention, or the use of
+ language having an insufficient number of honorific particles
+ and forms, would be instantly interpreted as a personal slight,
+ if not an insult.<a name='FNanchor_CS_98'
+ id="FNanchor_CS_98"></a><a href='#Footnote_CS_98'><sup>[CS]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Now if profuse courtesy is a proof of "impersonality," as
+ its advocates argue, what does morbid sensitiveness prove but
+ highly developed personality? But then arises the difficulty of
+ understanding how the same individuals can be both profusely
+ polite and morbidly sensitive at one and the same time? Instead
+ of inferring "impersonality" from the fact of politeness, from
+ the two facts of sensitiveness and politeness we may more
+ logically infer a considerable degree of personality. Yet I
+ would not lay much stress on this argument, for oftentimes (or
+ is it always true?) the weaker and more insignificant the
+ person, the greater the sensitiveness. Extreme sensitiveness is
+ as natural and necessary a product of a highly developed
+ feudalism as is politeness, and neither is particularly due to
+ the high or the low development of personality.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly with respect to the question of altruism, which is
+ practically identified with politeness by expounders of
+ Oriental "impersonality." They make this <a name='Page_365'
+ id="Page_365"></a>term (altruism) the virtual equivalent of
+ "impersonality"&mdash;interest in others rather than in
+ self, an interest due, according to their view, to a lack of
+ differentiation of the individual minds; the individuals,
+ though separate, still retain the universalism of the
+ original mind-stuff. This use of the term altruism makes it
+ a very different thing from the quality or characteristic
+ which in the West is described by this term.</p>
+
+ <p>But granting that this word is used with a legitimate
+ meaning, we ask, is altruism in this sense an inherent quality
+ of the Japanese race? Let the reader glance back to our
+ discussion of the possession by the Japanese of sympathy, and
+ the humane feelings.<a name='FNanchor_CT_99'
+ id="FNanchor_CT_99"></a><a href='#Footnote_CT_99'><sup>[CT]</sup></a>
+ We saw there marked proofs of their lack. The cruelty of the
+ old social order was such as we can hardly realize. Altruism
+ that expresses itself only in polite forms, and does not
+ strive to alleviate the suffering of fellow-men, can have
+ very little of that sense, which this theory requires. So
+ much as to the fact. Then as to the theory. If this alleged
+ altruism were inherent in the mental structure, it ought to
+ be a universal characteristic of the Japanese; it should be
+ all-pervasive and permanent. It should show itself toward
+ the foreigner as well as toward the native. But such is far
+ from the case. Few foreigners have received a hearty welcome
+ from the people at large. They are suspected and hated; as
+ little room as possible is made for them. The less of their
+ presence and advice, the better. So far as there is any
+ interest in them, it is on the ground of utility, and not of
+ inherent good will because of a feeling of aboriginal unity.
+ Of course there are many exceptions to these statements,
+ especially among the Christians. But such is the attitude of
+ the people as a whole, especially of the middle and upper
+ classes toward the foreigners.</p>
+
+ <p>If we turn our attention to the opposite phase of Japanese
+ character, namely their selfishness, their self-assertiveness,
+ and their aggressiveness, whether as a nation or as
+ individuals, and consider at the same time the recent rise of
+ this spirit, we are again impressed both with the narrow range
+ of facts to which the advocates of "imper<a name='Page_366'
+ id="Page_366"></a>sonality" call our attention, and also
+ with the utter insufficiency of their theory to account for
+ the facts they overlook. According to the theory of altruism
+ and "impersonality," these are characteristics of
+ undeveloped races and individuals, while the reverse
+ characteristics, those of selfishness and
+ self-assertiveness, are the products of a later and higher
+ development, marks of strong personality. But neither
+ selfishness nor individual aggressiveness is a necessary
+ element of developed "personality." If it were, children who
+ have never been trained by cultivated mothers, but have been
+ allowed to have their own way regardless of the rights or
+ desires of others, are more highly developed in
+ "personality" than the adult who has, through a long life of
+ self-discipline and religious devotion, become regardless of
+ his selfish interests and solicitous only for the welfare of
+ others. If the high development of altruism is equivalent to
+ the development of "impersonality," then those in the West
+ who are renowned for humanity and benevolence are
+ "impersonal," while robbers and murderers and all who are
+ regardless of the welfare of others are possessed of the
+ most highly developed "personality." And it also follows
+ that highly developed altruistic benefactors of mankind are
+ such, after all, because they are
+ <i>undeveloped</i>,&mdash;their minds are relatively
+ undifferentiated,&mdash;hence their fellow-feeling and
+ kindly acts. There is a story of some learned wit who met a
+ half-drunken boor; the latter plunged ahead, remarking, "I
+ never get out of the way of a fool"; to which the quick
+ reply came, "I always do." According to this argument based
+ on self-assertive aggressiveness, the boor was the man
+ possessed of a strong personality, while the gentleman was
+ relatively "impersonal." If pure selfishness and
+ aggressiveness are the measure of personality, then are not
+ many of the carnivorous animals endowed with a very high
+ degree of "personality"?</p>
+
+ <p>The truth is, a comprehensive and at the same time correct
+ contrast between the East and the West cannot be stated in
+ terms of personality and impersonality. They fail not only to
+ take in all the facts, but they fail to explain even the facts
+ they take in. Such a contrast of the East and the West can be
+ stated only in the terms of com<a name='Page_367'
+ id="Page_367"></a>munalism and individualism. As we have
+ already seen,<a name='FNanchor_CU_100'
+ id="FNanchor_CU_100"></a><a href='#Footnote_CU_100'><sup>[CU]</sup></a>
+ every nation has to pass through the communal stage, in
+ order to become a nation at all. The families and tribes of
+ which it is composed need to become consolidated in order to
+ survive in the struggle for existence with surrounding
+ families, tribes, and nations. In this stage the individual
+ is of necessity sunk out of sight in the demands of the
+ community. This secures indeed a species of altruism, but of
+ a relatively low order. It is communal altruism which nature
+ compels on pain of extermination. This, however, is very
+ different from the altruism of a high religious experience
+ and conscious ethical devotion. This latter is volitional,
+ the product of character. This altruism can arise chiefly in
+ a social order where individualism to a large extent has
+ gained sway. It is this variety of altruism that
+ characterizes the West, so far as the West is altruistic.
+ But on the other hand, in a social order in which
+ individualism has full swing, the extreme of egoistic
+ selfishness can also find opportunity for development. It is
+ accordingly in the West that extreme selfishness, the most
+ odious of sins, is seen at its best, or rather its
+ worst.</p>
+
+ <p>So again we see that selfish aggressiveness and an exalted
+ consciousness of one's individuality or separateness are not
+ necessary marks of developed personality, nor their opposite
+ the marks of undeveloped personality&mdash;so-called
+ "impersonality." On the contrary, the reverse statement would
+ probably come nearer the truth. He who is intensely conscious
+ of the great unities of nature and of human nature, of the
+ oneness that unites individuals to the nation and to the race,
+ and who lives a corresponding life of goodness and kindness, is
+ by far the more developed personality. But the manifestations
+ of personality will vary much with the nature of the social
+ order. This may change with astonishing rapidity. Such a change
+ has come over the social order of the Japanese nation during
+ the past thirty years, radically modifying its so-called
+ impersonal features. Their primitive docility, their
+ politeness, their marriage customs, their universal adoption of
+ Chinese thoughts, language, and <a name='Page_368'
+ id="Page_368"></a>literature, and now, in recent times,
+ their rejection of the Chinese philosophy and science, their
+ assertiveness in Korea and China and their aggressive
+ attitude toward the whole world&mdash;all these
+ multitudinous changes and complete reversals of ideals and
+ customs, point to the fact that the former characteristics
+ of their civilization were not "impersonal," but communal,
+ and that they rested on social development rather than on
+ inherent nature or on deficient mental differentiation.</p>
+
+ <p>A common illustration of Japanese "impersonality," depending
+ for its force wholly on invention, is the deficiency of the
+ Japanese language in personal pronouns and its surplus of
+ honorifics. At first thought this argument strikes one as very
+ strong, as absolutely invincible indeed. Surely, if there is a
+ real lack of personal pronouns, is not that proof positive that
+ the people using the language, nay, the authors of the
+ language, must of necessity be deficient in the sense of
+ personality? And if the verbs in large numbers are impersonal,
+ does not that clinch the matter? But further consideration of
+ the argument and its illustrations gradually shows its
+ weakness. At present I must confess that the argument seems to
+ me utterly fallacious, and for the sufficient reason that the
+ personal element is introduced, if not always explicitly yet at
+ least implicitly, in almost every sentence uttered. The method
+ of its expression, it is true, is quite different from that
+ adopted by Western languages, but it is none the less there. It
+ is usually accomplished by means of the titles, "honorific"
+ particles, and honorific verbs and nouns. "Honorable shoes"
+ can't by any stretch of the imagination mean shoes that belong
+ to me; every Japanese would at once think "your shoes"; his
+ attention is not distracted by the term "honorable" as is that
+ of the foreigner; the honor is largely overlooked by the native
+ in the personal element implied. The greater the familiarity
+ with the language the more clear it becomes that the
+ impressions of "impersonality" are due to the ignorance of the
+ foreigner rather than to the real "impersonal" character of the
+ Japanese thought or mind. In the Japanese methods of linguistic
+ expression, politeness and personality are indeed, inextricably
+ interwoven; but they are not at all con<a name='Page_369'
+ id="Page_369"></a>fused. The distinctions of person and the
+ consciousness of self in the Japanese <i>thought</i> are as
+ clear and distinct as they are in the English thought. In
+ the Japanese <i>sentence</i>, however, the politeness and
+ the personality cannot be clearly separated. On that
+ account, however, there is no more reason for denying one
+ element than the other.</p>
+
+ <p>So far from the deficiency of personal pronouns being a
+ proof of Japanese "impersonality," <i>i.e.</i>, of lack of
+ consciousness of self, this very deficiency may, with even more
+ plausibility, be used to establish the opposite view. Child
+ psychology has established the fact that an early phenomenon of
+ child mental development is the emphasis laid on "meum" and
+ "tuum," mine and yours. The child is a thoroughgoing
+ individualist in feelings, conceptions, and language. The first
+ personal pronoun is ever on his lips and in his thought. Only
+ as culture arises and he is trained to see how disagreeable in
+ others is excessive emphasis on the first person, does he learn
+ to moderate his own excessive egoistic tendency. Is it not a
+ fact that the studied evasion of first personal pronouns by
+ cultured people in the West is due to their developed
+ consciousness of self? Is it possible for one who has no
+ consciousness of self to conceive as impolite the excessive use
+ of egoistic forms of speech? From this point of view we might
+ argue that, because of the deficiency of her personal pronouns,
+ the Japanese nation has advanced far beyond any other nation in
+ the process of self-consciousness. But this too would be an
+ error. Nevertheless, so far from saying that the lack of
+ personal pronouns is a proof of the "impersonality" of the
+ Japanese, I think we may fairly use it as a disproof of the
+ proposition.</p>
+
+ <p>The argument for the inherent impersonality of the Japanese
+ mind because of the relative lack of personal pronouns is still
+ further undermined by the discovery, not only of many
+ substitutes, but also of several words bearing the strong
+ impress of the conception of self. There are said to be three
+ hundred words which may be used as personal
+ pronouns&mdash;"Boku," "servant," is a common term for "I," and
+ "kimi," "Lord," for "you"; these words are freely used by the
+ student class. Officials often use "Konata," "here," and
+ "Anata," "there," for the <a name='Page_370'
+ id="Page_370"></a>first and second persons. "Omaye,"
+ "honorably in front," is used both condescendingly and
+ honorifically; "you whom I condescend to allow in my
+ presence," and "you who confer on me the honor of entering
+ your presence." The derivation of the most common word for
+ I, "Watakushi," is unknown, but, in addition to its
+ pronominal use, it has the meaning of "private." It has
+ become a true personal pronoun and is freely used by all
+ classes.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to the three hundred words which may be used as
+ personal pronouns the Japanese language possesses an indefinite
+ number of ways for delicately suggesting the personal element
+ without its express utterance. This is done either by subtle
+ praise, which can then only refer to the person addressed or by
+ more or less bald self-depreciation, which can then only refer
+ to the first person. "Go kanai," "honorable within the house,"
+ can only mean, according to Japanese etiquette, "your wife," or
+ "your family," while "gu-sai," "foolish wife," can only mean
+ "my wife." "Gufu," "foolish father," "tonji," "swinish child,"
+ and numberless other depreciatory terms such as "somatsu na
+ mono," "coarse thing," and "tsumaranu mono," "worthless thing,"
+ according to the genius of the language can only refer to the
+ first person, while all appreciative and polite terms can only
+ refer to the person addressed. The terms, "foolish," "swinish,"
+ etc., have lost their literal sense and mean now no more than
+ "my," while the polite forms mean "yours." To translate these
+ terms, "my foolish wife," "my swinish son," is incorrect,
+ because it twice translates the same word. In such cases the
+ Japanese <i>thought</i> is best expressed by using the
+ possessive pronoun and omitting the derogative adjective
+ altogether. Japanese indirect methods for the expression of the
+ personal relation are thus numberless and subtile. May it not
+ be plausibly argued since the European has only a few blunt
+ pronouns wherewith to state this idea while the Japanese has
+ both numberless pronouns and many other delicate ways of
+ conveying the same idea, that the latter is far in advance of
+ the European in the development of personality? I do not use
+ this argument, but as an argument it seems to me
+ <a name='Page_371'
+ id="Page_371"></a>much more plausible than that which infers
+ from the paucity of true pronouns the absence, or at least
+ the deficiency, of personality.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, Japanese possesses several words for self.
+ "Onore," "one's self," and "Ware," "I or myself," are pure
+ Japanese, while "Ji" (the Chinese pronunciation for "onore"),
+ "ga," "self," and "shi" (the Chinese pronunciation of
+ "watakushi," meaning private) are Sinico-Japanese words, that
+ is, Chinese derived words. These Sinico-Japanese terms are in
+ universal use in compound words, and are as truly Japanese as
+ many Latin, Greek and Norman-derived words are real English.
+ "Ji-bun," "one's self"; "jiman," "self-satisfaction"; "ji-fu,"
+ "self-assertion"; "jinin," "self-responsibility"; "ji-bo
+ ji-ki," "self-destruction, self-abandonment"; "ji-go ji-toku,"
+ "self-act, self-reward"&mdash;always in a bad sense; "ga-yoku,"
+ "selfish desire"; "ga-shin," "selfish heart"; "ga we oru,"
+ "self-mastery"; "muga," "unselfish"; "shi-shin shi-yoku,"
+ "private or self-heart, private or self-desire," that is,
+ selfishness"; "shi-ai shi-shin," "private-or self-love,
+ private-or-self heart," <i>i.e.</i>, selfishness&mdash;these
+ and countless other compound words involving the conception of
+ self, can hardly be explained by the "impersonal," "altruistic"
+ theory of Japanese race mind and language. In truth, if this
+ theory is unable to explain the facts it recognizes, much less
+ can it account for those it ignores.</p>
+
+ <p>To interpret correctly the phenomena we are considering, we
+ must ask ourselves how personal pronouns have arisen in other
+ languages. Did the primitive Occidental man produce them
+ outright from the moment that he discovered himself? Far from
+ it. There are abundant reasons for believing that every
+ personal pronoun is a degenerate or, if you prefer, a developed
+ noun. Pronouns are among the latest products of language, and,
+ in the sphere of language, are akin to algebraic symbols in the
+ sphere of mathematics or to a machine in the sphere of labor. A
+ pronoun, whether personal, demonstrative, or relative, is a
+ wonderful linguistic invention, enabling the speaker to carry
+ on long trains of unbroken thought. Its invention was no more
+ connected with the sense of self, than was the invention of any
+ labor-saving device. The <a name='Page_372'
+ id="Page_372"></a>Japanese language is even more defective
+ for lack of relative pronouns than it is for lack of
+ personal pronouns. Shall we argue from this that the
+ Japanese people have no sense of relation? Of course
+ personal pronouns could not arise without or before the
+ sense of self, but the problem is whether the sense of self
+ could arise without or exist before that particular
+ linguistic device, the personal pronoun? On this problem the
+ Japanese language and civilization throw conclusive
+ light.</p>
+
+ <p>The fact is that the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon and
+ Japanese peoples parted company so long ago that in the course
+ of their respective linguistic evolutions, not only have all
+ common terms been completely eliminated, but even common
+ methods of expression. The so-called Indo-European races hit
+ upon one method of sentence structure, a method in which
+ pronouns took an important part and the personal pronoun was
+ needed to express the personal element, while the Japanese hit
+ upon another method which required little use of pronouns and
+ which was able to express the personal element wholly without
+ the personal pronoun. The sentence structure of the two
+ languages is thus radically different.</p>
+
+ <p>Now the long prevalent feudal social order has left its
+ stamp on the Japanese language no less than on every other
+ feature of Japanese civilization. Many of the quasi personal
+ pronouns are manifestly of feudal parentage. Under the new
+ civilization and in contact with foreign peoples who can hardly
+ utter a sentence without a personal pronoun, the majority of
+ the old quasi personal pronouns are dropping out of use, while
+ those in continued use are fast rising to the position of
+ full-fledged personal pronouns. This, however, is not due to
+ the development of self-consciousness on the part of the
+ people, but only to the development of the language in the
+ direction of complete and concise expression of thought. It
+ would be rash to say that the feudal social order accounts for
+ the lack of pronouns, personal or others, from the Japanese
+ language, but it is safe to maintain that the feudal order,
+ with its many gradations of social rank, minute etiquette, and
+ refined and highly developed personal sensitiveness would adopt
+ and foster an impersonal <a name='Page_373'
+ id="Page_373"></a>and honorific method of personal allusion.
+ Even though we may not be able to explain the rise of the
+ non-pronominal method of sentence structure, it is enough if
+ we see that this is a problem in the evolution of language,
+ and that Japanese pronominal deficiency is not to be
+ attributed to lack of consciousness of self, much less to
+ the inherent "impersonality" of the Japanese mind.</p>
+
+ <p>An interesting fact ignored by advocates of the "impersonal"
+ theory is the Japanese inability of conceiving nationality
+ apart from personality. Not only is the Emperor conceived as
+ the living symbol of Japanese nationality, but he is its
+ embodiment and substance. The Japanese race is popularly
+ represented to be the offspring of the royal house. Sovereignty
+ resides completely and absolutely in him. Authority to-day is
+ acknowledged only in those who have it from him. Popular rights
+ are granted the people by him, and exist because of his will
+ alone. A single act of his could in theory abrogate the
+ constitution promulgated in 1889 and all the popular rights
+ enjoyed to-day by the nation. The Emperor of Japan could
+ appropriate, without in the least shocking the most patriotic
+ Japanese, the long-famous saying of Louis XIV., "L'&eacute;tat,
+ c'est moi." Mr. H. Kato, ex-president of the Imperial
+ University, in a recent work entitled the "Evolution of
+ Morality and Law" says this in just so many words: "Patriotism
+ in this country means loyalty to the throne. To the Japanese,
+ the Emperor and the country are the same. The Emperor of Japan,
+ without the slightest exaggeration, can say, 'L'&eacute;tat,
+ c'est moi.' The Japanese believe that all their happiness is
+ bound up with the Imperial line and have no respect for any
+ system of morality or law that fails to take cognizance of this
+ fact."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Yamaguchi, professor of history in the Peeresses' School
+ and lecturer in the Imperial Military College, thus writes in
+ the <i>Far East</i>: "The sovereign power of the State cannot
+ be dissociated from the Imperial Throne. It lasts forever along
+ with the Imperial line of succession, unbroken for ages
+ eternal. If the Imperial House cease to exist, the Empire
+ falls." "According to our ideas the monarch reigns over and
+ governs the country in his own <a name='Page_374'
+ id="Page_374"></a>right.... Our Emperor possesses real
+ sovereignty and also exercises it. He is quite different
+ from other rulers, who possess but a partial sovereignty."
+ This is to-day the universally accepted belief in Japan. It
+ shows clearly that national unity and sovereignty are not
+ conceived in Japan apart from personality.</p>
+
+ <p>One more point demands our attention before bringing this
+ chapter to a close. If "impersonality" were an inherent
+ characteristic of Japanese race nature, would it be possible
+ for strong personalities to arise?</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Lowell has described in telling way a very common
+ experience. "About certain people," he says, "there exists a
+ subtle something which leaves its impress indelibly upon the
+ consciousness of all who come in contact with them. This
+ something is a power, but a power of so indefinable a
+ description that we beg definition by calling it simply the
+ personality of the man.... On the other hand, there are people
+ who have no effect upon us whatever. They come and they go with
+ a like indifference.... And we say that the difference is due
+ to the personality or the want of personality of the
+ man."<a name='FNanchor_CV_101'
+ id="FNanchor_CV_101"></a><a href='#Footnote_CV_101'><sup>[CV]</sup></a>
+ The first thing to which I would call attention is the fact
+ that "personality" is here used in its true sense. It has no
+ exclusive reference to consciousness of self, nor does it
+ signify the effect of self-consciousness on the
+ consciousness of another. It here has reference to those
+ inherent qualities of thinking and feeling and willing which
+ we have seen to be the essence of personality. These
+ qualities, possessed in a marked way or degree, make strong
+ personalities. Their relative lack constitutes weak
+ personality. Bare consciousness of self is a minor evidence
+ of personality and may be developed to a morbid degree in a
+ person who has a weak personality.</p>
+
+ <p>In the second place this distinction between weak and strong
+ personalities is as true of the Japanese as of the Occidental.
+ There have been many commanding persons in Japanese history;
+ they have been the heroes of the land. There are such to-day.
+ The most commanding personality of recent times was, I suppose,
+ Takamori Saigo, whose very name is an inspiration to tens of
+ thousands of <a name='Page_375'
+ id="Page_375"></a>the choicest youth of the nation. Joseph
+ Neesima was such a personality. The transparency of his
+ purpose, the simplicity of his personal aim, his unflinching
+ courage, fixedness of belief, lofty plans, and far-reaching
+ ambitions for his people, impressed all who came into
+ contact with him. No one mingles much with the Japanese,
+ freely speaking with them in their own language, but
+ perceives here and there men of "strong personality" in the
+ sense of the above-quoted passage. Now it seems to me that
+ if "impersonality" in the corresponding sense were a race
+ characteristic, due to the nature of their psychic being,
+ then the occurrence of so many commanding personalities in
+ Japan would be inexplicable. Heroes and widespread
+ hero-worship<a name='FNanchor_CW_102'
+ id="FNanchor_CW_102"></a><a href='#Footnote_CW_102'><sup>[CW]</sup></a>
+ could hardly arise were there no commanding personalities.
+ The feudal order lent itself without doubt to the
+ development of such a spirit. But the feudal order could
+ hardly have arisen or even maintained itself for centuries
+ without commanding personalities, much less could it have
+ created them. The whole feudal order was built on an exalted
+ oligarchy. It was an order which emphasized persons, not
+ principles; the law of the land was not the will of the
+ multitudes, but of a few select persons. While, therefore,
+ it is beyond dispute that the old social order was communal
+ in type, and so did not give freedom to the individual, nor
+ tend to develop strong personality among the masses, it is
+ also true that it did develop men of commanding personality
+ among the rulers. Those who from youth were in the
+ hereditary line of rule, sons of Shoguns, daimyos, and
+ samurai, were forced by the very communalism of the social
+ order to an exceptional personal development. They shot far
+ ahead of the common man. Feudalism is favorable to the
+ development of personality in the favored few, while it
+ represses that of the masses. Individualism, on the
+ contrary, giving liberty of thought and act, with all that
+ these imply, is favorable to the development of the
+ personality of all.</p>
+
+ <p>In view of the discussions of this chapter, is it not
+ evident that advocates of the "impersonal" theory of Japanese
+ mind and civilization not only ignore many im<a name='Page_376'
+ id="Page_376"></a>portant elements of the civilization they
+ attempt to interpret, but also base their interpretation on
+ a mistaken conception of personality? We may not, however,
+ leave the discussion at this point, for important
+ considerations still demand our attention if we would probe
+ this problem of personality to its core.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXII'
+ id="XXXII"></a><a name='Page_377'
+ id="Page_377"></a>XXXII</h2>
+
+ <h3>IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Advocates of Japanese "impersonality" call attention to the
+ phenomena of self-suppression in religion. It seems strange,
+ however, that they who present this argument fail to see how
+ "self-suppression" undermines their main contention. If
+ "self-suppression" be actually attained, it can only be by a
+ people advanced so far as to have passed through and beyond the
+ "personal" stage of existence. "Self-suppression" cannot be a
+ characteristic of a primitive people, a people that has not yet
+ reached the stage of consciousness of self. If the alleged
+ "impersonality" of the Orient is that of a primitive people
+ that has not yet reached the stage of self-consciousness, then
+ it cannot have the characteristic of "self-suppression." If, on
+ the other hand, it is the "impersonality" of
+ "self-suppression," then it is radically different from that of
+ a primitive people. Advocates of "impersonality" present both
+ conceptions, quite unconscious apparently that they are
+ mutually exclusive. If either conception is true, the other is
+ false.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, if self-suppression is a marked characteristic
+ of Japanese politeness and altruism (as it undoubtedly is when
+ these qualities are real expressions of the heart and of the
+ general character), it is a still more characteristic feature
+ of the higher religious life of the people, which certainly
+ does not tend to "impersonality." The ascription of esoteric
+ Buddhism to the common people by advocates of the "impersonal"
+ theory is quite a mistake, and the argument for the
+ "impersonality" of the race on this ground is without
+ foundation, for the masses of the people are grossly
+ polytheistic, wholly unable to understand Buddhistic
+ metaphysics, or to conceive of the nebulous, impersonal
+ Absolute of Buddhism. Now if con<a name='Page_378'
+ id="Page_378"></a>sciousness of the unity of nature, and
+ especially of the unity of the individual soul with the
+ Absolute, were a characteristic of undeveloped, that is, of
+ undifferentiated mind, then all primitive peoples should
+ display it in a superlative degree. It should show itself in
+ every phase of their life. The more primitive the people,
+ the more divine their life&mdash;because the less
+ differentiated from the original divine mind! Such are the
+ requirements of this theory. But what are the facts? The
+ primitive undeveloped mind is relatively unconscious of
+ self; it is wholly objective; it is childlike; it does not
+ even know that there is self to suppress. Primitive religion
+ is purely objective. Implicit, in primitive religion without
+ doubt, is the fact of a unity between God and man, but the
+ primitive man has not discovered this implication of his
+ religious thinking. This is the state of mind of a large
+ majority of Japanese.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet this is by no means true of all. No nation, with such a
+ continuous history as Japan has had, would fail to develop a
+ class capable of considerable introspection. In Japan
+ introspection received early and powerful impetus from the
+ religion of Buddha. It came with a philosophy of life based on
+ prolonged and profound introspection. It commanded each man who
+ would know more than the symbols, who desired, like Buddha, to
+ attain the great enlightenment and thus become a Tathagata, a
+ Blessed one, a Buddha, an Enlightened one, to know and conquer
+ himself. The emphasis laid by thoughtful Buddhism on the need
+ of self-knowledge, in order to self-suppression, is well
+ recognized by all careful students. Advocates of Oriental
+ "impersonality" are not one whit behind others in recognizing
+ it. In this connection we can hardly do better than quote a few
+ of Mr. Lowell's happy descriptions of the teaching of
+ philosophic Buddhism.</p>
+
+ <p>"This life, it says, is but a chain of sorrows.... These
+ desires that urge us on are really causes of all our woe. We
+ think they are ourselves. We are mistaken. They are all
+ illusion.... This personality, this sense of self, is a cruel
+ deception.... Realize once the true soul behind it, devoid of
+ attributes ... an invisible part of the great
+ <a name='Page_379'
+ id="Page_379"></a>impersonal soul of nature, then ... will
+ you have found happiness in the blissful quiescence of
+ Nirvana" [p. 186]. "In desire alone lies all the ill. Quench
+ the desire, and the deeds [sins of the flesh] will die of
+ inanition. Get rid, then, said Buddha, of these passions,
+ these strivings, for the sake of self. As a man becomes
+ conscious that he himself is something distinct from his
+ body, so if he reflect and ponder, he will come to see that
+ in like manner, his appetites, ambitions, hopes, are really
+ extrinsic to the spirit proper.... Behind desire, behind
+ even the will, lies the soul, the same for all men, one with
+ the soul of the universe. When he has once realized this
+ eternal truth, the man has entered Nirvana.... It [Nirvana]
+ is simply the recognition of the eternal oneness of the two
+ [the individual and the universal soul]" [p. 189].</p>
+
+ <p>Accepting this description of philosophic Buddhism as fairly
+ accurate, it is plain that the attainment of this consciousness
+ of the unity of the individual self with the universal is the
+ result, according to Buddha, and also according to the
+ advocates of "impersonality," of a highly developed
+ consciousness of self. It is not a simple state of
+ undifferentiated mind, but a complex and derivative
+ one&mdash;absolutely incomprehensible to a primitive people.
+ The means for this suppression of self <i>depends entirely on
+ the development of the consciousness of self</i>. The self is
+ the means for casting out the self, and it is done by that
+ introspection which ultimately leads to the realization of the
+ unity. If, then, Japanese Buddhism seeks to suppress the self,
+ this very effort is the most conclusive proof we could demand
+ of the possession by this people of a highly developed
+ consciousness of self.</p>
+
+ <p>It is one of the boasts of Buddhism that a man's saviour is
+ himself; no other helper, human or divine, can do aught for
+ him. Those who reject Christianity in Christian lands are quite
+ apt to praise Buddhism for this rejection of all external help.
+ They urge that by the very nature of the case salvation is no
+ external thing; each one must work out his own salvation. It
+ cannot be given by another. Salvation through an external
+ Christ who lived 1900 years ago is an impossibility. Such a
+ criti<a name='Page_380'
+ id="Page_380"></a>cism of Christianity shows real
+ misunderstanding of the Christian doctrine and method of
+ salvation. Yet the point to which attention is here directed
+ is not the correctness or incorrectness of these
+ characterizations of Christianity, but rather to the fact
+ that "ji-riki," salvation through self-exertion, which is
+ the boast of Buddhism, is but another proof of the
+ essentially self-conscious character of Buddhism. It aims at
+ Nirvana, it is true, at self-suppression, but it depends on
+ the attainment of clear self-consciousness in the first
+ place, and then on prolonged self-exertion for the
+ attainment of that end. In proportion as Buddhism is
+ esoteric is it self-conscious.</p>
+
+ <p>Such being the nature of Buddhism, we naturally ask whether
+ or not it is calculated to develop strongly personalized men
+ and women. If consciousness of self is the main element of
+ personality, we must pronounce Buddhism a highly personal
+ rather than impersonal religion, as is commonly stated. But a
+ religion of the Buddhistic type, which casts contempt on the
+ self, and seeks its annihilation as the only means of
+ salvation, has ever tended to destroy personality; it has made
+ men hermits and pessimists; it has drawn them out of the great
+ current of active life, and thus has severed them from their
+ fellow-men. But a prime condition of developed personalities is
+ largeness and intensity of life, and constant intercourse with
+ mankind. Personality is developed in the society of persons,
+ not in the company of trees and stones. Buddhism, which runs
+ either to gross and superstitious polytheism on its popular
+ side or to pessimistic introspection on its philosophical side,
+ may possibly, by a stretch of the term, be called "impersonal"
+ in the sense that it does not help in the production of strong,
+ rounded personality among its votaries, but not in the sense
+ that it does not produce self-consciousness. Buddhism,
+ therefore, cannot be accurately described in terms of
+ personality or impersonality.</p>
+
+ <p>We would do well in this connection to ponder the fact that
+ although Buddhism in its higher forms does certainly develop
+ consciousness of self, it does not attribute to that self any
+ worth. In consequence of this, it never has modified, and
+ however long it might be allowed to <a name='Page_381'
+ id="Page_381"></a>run its course, never could modify, the
+ general social order in the direction of individualism. This
+ is one reason why the whole Orient has maintained to modern
+ times its communal nature, in spite of its high development
+ in so many ways, even in introspection and
+ self-consciousness.</p>
+
+ <p>This failure of Buddhism is all the more striking when we
+ stop to consider how easy and, to us, natural an inference it
+ would have been to pass from the perception of the essential
+ unity between the separate self and the universal soul, to the
+ assertion of the supreme worth of that separate soul because of
+ the fact of that unity. But Buddhism never seems to have made
+ that inference. Its compassion on animals and even insects
+ depended on its doctrine of the transmigration of souls, not on
+ its doctrine of universal soul unity. Its mercy was shown to
+ animals in certain whimsical ways, but the universal lack of
+ sympathy for suffering man, man who could suffer the most
+ exquisite pains, exposed the shallowness of its solicitude
+ about destroying life. The whole influence of Buddhism on the
+ social order was not conducive to the development of
+ personality in the Orient. The so-called impersonal influence
+ of Buddhism upon the Eastern peoples, then, is not due to its
+ failure to recognize the separateness of the human self, on the
+ one hand, nor to its emphasis on the universal unity subsisting
+ between the separate finite self and the infinite soul, on the
+ other; but only on its failure to see the infinite worth of the
+ individual; and in consequence of this failure, its inability
+ to modify the general social order by the introduction of
+ individualism.</p>
+
+ <p>The asserted "impersonal" characteristic of Buddhism and of
+ the Orient, therefore, I am not willing to call
+ "impersonality"; for it is a very defective description, a real
+ misnomer. I think no single term can truly describe the
+ characteristic under consideration. As regards the general
+ social order, the so-called impersonal characteristic is its
+ communal nature; as regards the popular religious thought,
+ whether of Shintoism or Buddhism, its so-called impersonality
+ is its simple, artless objectivity; as regards philosophic
+ Buddhism its so-called impersonality is its morbid
+ introspective self-consciousness, leading <a name='Page_382'
+ id="Page_382"></a>to the desire and effort to annihilate the
+ separateness of the self. These are different
+ characteristics and cannot be described by any single term.
+ So far as there are in Japan genuine altruism, real
+ suppression of selfish desires, and real possession of
+ kindly feelings for others and desires to help them, and so
+ far as these qualities arise through a sense of the
+ essential unity of the human race and of the unity of the
+ human with the divine soul, this is not
+ "impersonality"&mdash;but a form of highly developed
+ personality&mdash;not infra-personality, but true
+ personality.</p>
+
+ <p>We have noted that although esoteric Buddhism developed a
+ highly accentuated consciousness of self, it attributed no
+ value to that self. This failure will not appear strange if we
+ consider the historical reasons for it. Indeed, the failure was
+ inevitable. Neither the social order nor the method of
+ introspective thought suggested it. Both served, on the
+ contrary, absolutely to preclude the idea.</p>
+
+ <p>When introspective thought began in India the social order
+ was already far beyond the undifferentiated communal life of
+ the tribal stage. Castes were universal and fixed. The warp and
+ woof of daily life and of thought were filled with the
+ distinctions of castes and ranks. Man's worth was conceived to
+ be not in himself, but in his rank or caste. The actual life of
+ the people, therefore, did not furnish to speculative thought
+ the slightest suggestion of the worth of man as man. It was a
+ positive hindrance to the rise of such an idea.</p>
+
+ <p>Equally opposed to the rise of this idea was the method of
+ that introspective thought which discovered the fact of the
+ self. It was a method of abstraction; it denied as part of the
+ real self everything that could be thought of as separate;
+ every changing phase or expression of the self could not be the
+ real self, it was argued, because, if a part of the real self,
+ how could it sometimes be and again not be? Feeling cannot be a
+ part of the real self, for sometimes I feel and sometimes I do
+ not. Any particular desire cannot be a part of my real self,
+ for sometimes I have it and sometimes I do not. A similar
+ argument was applied to every objective thing. In the famous
+ "Questions of King Melinda," the argument as to the
+ <a name='Page_383'
+ id="Page_383"></a>real chariot is expanded at length; the
+ wheels are not the chariot; the spokes are not the chariot;
+ the seat is not the chariot; the tongue is not the chariot;
+ the axle is not the chariot; and so, taking up each
+ individual part of the chariot, the assertion is made that
+ it is not the chariot. But if the chariot is not in any of
+ its parts, then they are not essential parts of the chariot.
+ So of the soul&mdash;the self; it does not consist of its
+ various qualities or attributes or powers; hence they are
+ not essential elements of the self. The real self exists
+ apart from them.</p>
+
+ <p>Now is it not evident that such a method of introspection
+ deprives the conception of self of all possible value? It is
+ nothing but a bare intellectual abstraction. To say that this
+ self is a part of the universal self is no relief,&mdash;brings
+ no possible worth to the separate self,&mdash;for the
+ conception of the universal soul has been arrived at by a
+ similar process of thought. It, too, is nothing but a bare
+ abstraction, deprived of all qualities and attributes and
+ powers. I can see no distinction between the absolute universal
+ soul of Brahmanism and Buddhism, and the Absolute Nothing of
+ Hegel.<a name='FNanchor_CX_103'
+ id="FNanchor_CX_103"></a><a href='#Footnote_CX_103'><sup>[CX]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Both are the farthest possible abstraction that the mind can
+ make. The Absolute Soul of Buddhism, the Atman of Brahmanism,
+ and Hegel's Nothing are the farthest possible remove from the
+ Christian's conception of God. The former is the utter
+ emptiness of being; the latter the perfect fullness of being
+ and completeness of quality. The finite emptiness receives and
+ can receive no richness of life or increase in value by its
+ consciousness of unity <a name='Page_384'
+ id="Page_384"></a>with the infinite emptiness; whereas the
+ finite limited soul receives in the Christian view an
+ infinite wealth and value by reason of the consciousness of
+ its unity with the divine infinite fullness. The usual
+ method of stating the difference between the Christian
+ conception of God and the Hindu conception of the root of
+ all being is that the one is personal and the other
+ impersonal. But these terms are inadequate. Rather say the
+ one is perfectly personal and the other perfectly abstract.
+ Impersonality, even in its strictest meaning, <i>i.e.</i>,
+ without "conscious separate existence as an intelligent and
+ voluntary being," only partially expresses the conception of
+ Buddhism. The full conception rejects not only personality,
+ but also every other quality; the ultimate and the absolute
+ of Buddhism&mdash;we may not even call it being&mdash;is the
+ absolutely abstract.</p>
+
+ <p>With regard, then, to the conception of the separate self
+ and of the supreme self, the Buddhistic view may be called
+ "impersonal," not in the sense that it lacks the consciousness
+ of a separate self; not in the sense that it emphasizes the
+ universal unity&mdash;nay, the identity of all the separate
+ abstract selves and the infinite abstract self; but in the
+ sense that all the qualities and characteristics of human
+ beings, such as consciousness, thought, emotion, volition, and
+ even being itself, are rejected as unreal. The view is
+ certainly "impersonal," but it is much more. My objection to
+ the description of Buddhism as "impersonal," then, is not
+ because the word is too strong, but because it is too weak; it
+ does not sufficiently characterize its real nature. It is as
+ much below materialism, as materialism is below monotheism.
+ Such a scheme of thought concerning the universe necessarily
+ reacts on those whom it possesses, to destroy what sense they
+ may have of the value of human personality; that which we hold
+ to be man's glory is broken into fragments and thrown away.</p>
+
+ <p>But this does not constitute the whole of the difficulty.
+ This method of introspective thought necessarily resulted in
+ the doctrine of Illusion. Nothing is what it seems to be. The
+ reality of the chariot is other than it appears. So too with
+ the self and everything we see or think. The
+ igno<a name='Page_385'
+ id="Page_385"></a>ant are perfectly under the spell of the
+ illusion and cannot escape it. The deluded mind creates for
+ itself the world of being, with all its woes and evils. The
+ great enlightenment is the discovery of this fact and the
+ power it gives to escape the illusion and to see that the
+ world is nothing but illusion. To see that the illusion is
+ an illusion destroys it as such. It is then no longer an
+ illusion, but only a passing shadow. We cannot now stop to
+ see how pessimism, the doctrine of self-salvation, and the
+ nature of that salvation through contemplation and
+ asceticism and withdrawal from active life, all inevitably
+ follow from such a course of thought. That which here needs
+ emphasis is that all this thinking renders it still more
+ impossible to think of the self as having any intrinsic
+ worth. On-the contrary, the self is the source of evil, of
+ illusion. The great aim of Buddhism is necessarily to get
+ rid of the self, with all its illusions and pains and
+ disappointments.</p>
+
+ <p>Is it now clear why Buddhism failed to reach the idea of the
+ worth of the individual self? It was due to the nature of the
+ social order, and the nature of its introspective and
+ speculative thinking. Lacking, therefore, the conception of
+ individual worth, we see clearly why it failed, even after
+ centuries of opportunity, to secure individualism in the social
+ order and a general development of personality either as an
+ idea or as a fact among any of the peoples to which it has
+ gone. It is not only a fact of history, but we have seen that
+ it could not have been otherwise. The very nature of its
+ conception of self and, in consequence, the nature of its
+ conception of salvation absolutely prohibited
+ it.<a name='FNanchor_CY_104'
+ id="FNanchor_CY_104"></a><a href='#Footnote_CY_104'><sup>[CY]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_386'
+ id="Page_386"></a>We have thus far confined our view
+ entirely to philosophic Buddhism. It is important,
+ therefore, to state again that very few of the Japanese
+ people outside of the priesthood have any such ideas with
+ regard to the abstract nature of the individual, of the
+ absolute self, and of their mutual relations as I have just
+ described. These ideas are a part of esoteric Buddhism, the
+ secret truth, which is an essential part of the great
+ enlightenment, but far too profound for the vulgar
+ multitudes. The vast majority, even of the priesthood, I am
+ told, do not get far enough to be taught these views. The
+ sweep of such conceptions, therefore, is very limited. That
+ they are held, however, by the leaders, that they are the
+ views of the most learned expounders and the most advanced
+ students of Buddhism serves to explain why Buddhism has
+ never been, and can never become, a power in reorganizing
+ society in the direction of individualism.</p>
+
+ <p>Popular Buddhism contains many elements alien to philosophic
+ Buddhism. For a full study of the subject of this chapter we
+ need to ask whether popular Buddhism tended to produce
+ "impersonality," and if so, in what sense. The doctrine of
+ "ingwa,"<a name='FNanchor_CZ_105'
+ id="FNanchor_CZ_105"></a><a href='#Footnote_CZ_105'><sup>[CZ]</sup></a>
+ with its consequences on character, demands fresh attention
+ at this point. According to this doctrine every event of
+ this life, even the minutest, is the result of one's conduct
+ in a previous life, and is unalterably fixed by inflexible
+ law. "Ingwa" is the crude idea of fate held by all primitive
+ peoples, stated in somewhat philosophic and scientific form.
+ It became a central element in the thought of Oriental
+ peoples. Each man is born into his caste and class by a law
+ over which neither he nor his parents have any control, and
+ for which they are without responsibility. The misfortunes
+ of life, and the good fortunes as well, come by the same
+ impartial, inflexible laws. By this system of thought moral
+ responsibility is practically removed from the individual's
+ shoulders. This doctrine is held in Japan far more widely
+ than the philosophic doctrine of the self, and is
+ correspondingly baleful.</p>
+
+ <p>This system of thought, when applied to the details of life,
+ means that individual choice and will, and their effect
+ <a name='Page_387'
+ id="Page_387"></a>in determining both external life and
+ internal character have been practically lost sight of. As a
+ sociological fact the origin of this conception is not
+ difficult to understand. The primitive freedom of the
+ individual in the early communal order of the tribe became
+ increasingly restricted with the multiplication and
+ development of the Hindu peoples; each class of society
+ became increasingly specialized. Finally the individual had
+ no choice whatever left him, because of the extreme rigidity
+ of the communal order. As a matter of fact, the individual
+ choice and will was allowed no play whatever in any
+ important matter. Good sense saw that where no freedom is,
+ there moral responsibility cannot be. All one's life is
+ predetermined by the powers that be. Thus we again see how
+ vital a relation the social order bears to the innermost
+ thinking and belief of a people.</p>
+
+ <p>Still further. Once let the idea be firmly grounded in an
+ individual that he has no freedom of belief, of choice, or of
+ act, and in the vast majority of cases, as a matter of fact, he
+ will have none. "As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he."
+ "According to your faith be it unto you." This doctrine of
+ individual freedom is one of those that cannot be forced on a
+ man who does not choose to believe it. In a true sense, it is
+ my belief that I am free that makes me free. As Prof. James
+ well says, the doctrine of the freedom of the will cannot be
+ rammed down any man's intellectual throat, for that very act
+ would abridge his real freedom. Man's real freedom is proved by
+ his freedom to reject even the doctrine of his freedom. But so
+ long as he rejects it, his freedom is only potential. Because
+ of his belief in his bondage he is in bondage. Now this
+ doctrine of fate has been the warp and woof of the thinking of
+ the bulk of the Japanese people in their efforts to explain all
+ the vicissitudes of life. Not only, therefore, has it failed to
+ stimulate the volitional element of the psychic nature, but in
+ the psychology of the Orient little if any attention has been
+ given to this faculty. Oriental psychology practically knows
+ nothing of personality because it has failed to note one of its
+ central elements, the freedom of the will. The individual,
+ therefore, has not been appealed to to exercise his free moral
+ <a name='Page_388'
+ id="Page_388"></a>choice, one of the highest prerogatives of
+ his nature. Moral responsibility has not been laid on his
+ individual shoulders. A method of moral appeal fitted to
+ develop the deepest element of his personality has thus been
+ precluded.</p>
+
+ <p>It thus resulted that although philosophic Buddhism
+ developed a high degree of self-consciousness, yet because it
+ failed to discover personal freedom it did not deliver popular
+ Buddhism from its grinding doctrine of fate, rather it fastened
+ this incubus of social progress more firmly upon it.
+ Philosophic and popular Buddhism alike thus threw athwart the
+ course of human and social evolution the tremendous obstacle of
+ fatalism, which the Orient has never discovered a way either to
+ surmount or evade. Buddhism teaches the impotence of the
+ individual will; it destroys the sense of moral responsibility;
+ it thus fails to understand the real nature of man, his glory
+ and power and even his divinity, which the West sums up in the
+ term personality. In this sense, then, the influence of
+ Buddhism and the condition of the Orient may be called
+ "impersonal," but it is the impersonality of a defective
+ religious psychology, and of communalism in the social order.
+ Whether it is right to call this feature of Japan
+ "impersonality," I leave with the reader to judge.</p>
+
+ <p>We draw this chapter to a close with a renewed conception of
+ the inadequacy of the "impersonal" theory to explain Japanese
+ religious and social phenomena. Further considerations,
+ however, still merit attention ere we leave this subject.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXIII'
+ id="XXXIII"></a><a name='Page_389'
+ id="Page_389"></a>XXXIII</h2>
+
+ <h3>TRACES OF PERSONALITY IN SHINTOISM, BUDDHISM, AND
+ CONFUCIANISM</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Regret as we sometimes must the illogicalness of the human
+ mind, yet it is a providential characteristic of our as yet
+ defective nature; for thanks to it few men or nations carry out
+ to their complete logical results erroneous opinions and
+ metaphysical speculations. Common sense in Japan has served
+ more or less as an antidote for Buddhistic poison. The
+ blighting curse of logical Buddhism has been considerably
+ relieved by various circumstances. Let us now consider some of
+ the ways in which the personality-destroying characteristics of
+ Buddhism have been lessened by other ideas and influences.</p>
+
+ <p>First of all there is the distinction, so often noted,
+ between esoteric and popular Buddhism. Esoteric Buddhism was
+ content to allow popular Buddhism a place and even to invent
+ ways for the salvation of the ignorant multitudes who could not
+ see the real nature of the self. Resort was had to the use of
+ magic prayers and symbols and idols. These were bad enough, but
+ they did not bear so hard on the development of personality as
+ did esoteric Buddhism.</p>
+
+ <p>The doctrine of the transmigration of the soul was likewise
+ a relief from the pressure of philosophic Buddhism, for,
+ according to this doctrine, the individual soul continues to
+ live its separate life, to maintain its independent identity
+ through infinite ages, while passing through the ten worlds of
+ existence, from nethermost hell to highest heaven; and the
+ particular world into which it is born after each death is
+ determined by the moral character of its life in the
+ immediately preceding stage. By this doc<a name='Page_390'
+ id="Page_390"></a>trine, then, a practical appeal is made to
+ the common man to exert his will, to assert his personality,
+ and so far forth it was calculated to undo a part of the
+ mischief done by the paralyzing doctrine of fate and
+ illusion.</p>
+
+ <p>But a more important relief from the blight of Buddhistic
+ doctrine was afforded by its own practice. At the very time
+ that it declared the worthlessness of the self and the
+ impotence of the will, it declared that salvation can come only
+ from the self, by the most determined exercise of the will.
+ What more convincing evidence of powerful, though distorted,
+ wills could be asked than that furnished by Oriental
+ asceticism? Nothing in the West exceeds it. As an <i>idea</i>,
+ then, Buddhism interfered with the development of the
+ conception of personality; but by its <i>practice</i> it helped
+ powerfully to develop it as a fact in certain phases of
+ activity. The stoicism of the Japanese is one phase of
+ developed personality. It shows the presence of a powerful,
+ disciplined will keeping the body in control, so that it gives
+ no sign of the thoughts and emotions going on in the mind,
+ however fierce they may be.</p>
+
+ <p>That in Japan, however, which has interfered most powerfully
+ with the spread and dominance of Buddhism has been the
+ practical and prosaic Confucian ethics. Apparently, Confucius
+ never speculated. Metaphysics and introspection alike had no
+ charm for him. He was concerned with conduct. His developed
+ doctrine demanded of all men obedience to the law of the five
+ relations. In spite, therefore, of the fact that he said
+ nothing about individuality and personality, his system laid
+ real emphasis on personality and demanded its continuous
+ activity. In all of his teachings the idea of personality in
+ the full and proper sense of this word is always implicit, and
+ sometimes is quite distinct.</p>
+
+ <p>The many strong and noble characters which glorify the
+ feudal era are the product of Japonicized Confucianism,
+ "Bushido," and bear powerful witness to its practical emphasis
+ on personality. The loyalty, filial piety, courage, rectitude,
+ honor, self-control, and suicide which it taught, defective
+ though we must pronounce them from certain points of view, were
+ yet very lofty and noble, <a name='Page_391'
+ id="Page_391"></a>and depended for their realization on the
+ development of personality.</p>
+
+ <p>Advocates of the "impersonal" interpretation of the Orient
+ have much to say about pantheism. They assert the difficulty of
+ conveying to the Oriental mind the idea of the personality of
+ the Supreme Being. Although some form of pantheism is doubtless
+ the belief of the learned, the evidence that a personal
+ conception of deity is widespread among the people seems so
+ manifest that I need hardly do more than call attention to it.
+ This belief has helped to neutralize the paralyzing tendency of
+ Buddhist fatalistic pantheism.</p>
+
+ <p>Shinto is personal from first to last. Every one of its
+ myriads of gods is a personal being, many of them deified
+ men.</p>
+
+ <p>The most popular are the souls of men who became famous for
+ some particularly noble, brave, or admirable deed. Hero-worship
+ is nothing if not personal. Furthermore, in its doctrine of
+ "San-shin-ittai," "three gods, one body," it curiously suggests
+ the doctrine of the Trinity.</p>
+
+ <p>Popular Buddhism holds an equally personal conception of
+ deity. The objects of its worship are personifications of
+ various qualities. "Kwannon," the goddess of mercy; "Jizo," the
+ guardian of travelers and children; "Emma O," "King of Hell,"
+ who punishes sinners; "Fudo Sama," "The Immovable One," are all
+ personifications of the various attributes of deity and are
+ worshiped as separate gods, each being represented by a uniform
+ type of idol. It is a curious fact that Buddhism, which started
+ out with such a lofty rejection of deity, finally fell to the
+ worship of idols, whereas Shinto, which is peculiarly the
+ worship of personality, has never stooped to its representation
+ in wood or stone.</p>
+
+ <p>Confucianism, however, surpasses all in its intimations of
+ the personality of the Supreme Being. Although it never
+ formulated this doctrine in a single term, nor definitely
+ stated it as a tenet of religion, yet the entire ethical and
+ religious thinking of the classically educated Japanese is shot
+ through with the idea. Consider the Chinese expression
+ "Jo-Tei," which the Christians of Japan freely
+ <a name='Page_392'
+ id="Page_392"></a>use for God; it means literally "Supreme
+ Emperor," and refers to the supreme ruler of the universe;
+ he is here conceived in the form of a human ruler having of
+ course human, that is to say, personal, attributes. A phrase
+ often heard on the lips of the Japanese is:</p>
+
+ <p>"Aoide Ten ni hajizu; fushite Chi ni hajizu."</p>
+
+ <p>"Without self-reproach, whether looking up to Heaven, or
+ down to Earth."</p>
+
+ <p>This phrase has reference to the consciousness of one's life
+ and conduct, such that he is neither ashamed to look up in the
+ face of Heaven nor to look about him in the presence of man.
+ Paul expressed this same idea when he wrote "having a
+ conscience void of offense to God and to man." Or take another
+ phrase:</p>
+
+ <p>"Ten-mo kwaikwai so ni shite morasazu."</p>
+
+ <p>"Heaven's net is broad as earth; and though its meshes are
+ large, none can escape it." This is constantly used to
+ illustrate the certainty that Heaven punishes the wicked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ten ni kuchi ari; kabe ni mimi ari."</p>
+
+ <p>"Heaven has a mouth and even the wall has ears," signifies
+ that all one does is known to the ruler of heaven and earth.
+ Another still more striking saying ascribing knowledge to
+ Heaven is the "Yoshin no Shichi," "the four knowings of
+ Yoshin." This sage was a Chinaman of the second century A.D.
+ Approached with a large bribe and urged to accept it with the
+ assurance that no one would know it, he replied, "Heaven knows
+ it; Earth knows it; you know it; and I know it. How say you
+ that none will know it?" This famous saying condemning bribery
+ is well known in Japan. The references to "Heaven" as knowing,
+ seeing, doing, sympathizing, willing, and always identifying
+ the activity of "Heaven" with the noblest and loftiest ideals
+ of man, are frequent in Chinese and Japanese literature. The
+ personality of God is thus a doctrine clearly foreshadowed in
+ the Orient. It is one of those great truths of religion which
+ the Orient has already received, but which in a large measure
+ lies dormant because of its incomplete expression. The advent
+ of the fully expressed teaching of this truth, freed from all
+ vagueness and ambiguity, is a capital illustration of the way
+ in which Christianity comes to Japan to fulfill
+ <a name='Page_393'
+ id="Page_393"></a>rather than to destroy; it brings that
+ fructifying element that stirs the older and more or less
+ imperfectly expressed truths into new life, and gives them
+ adequate modes of expression. But the point to which I am
+ here calling attention is the fact that the idea of the
+ personality of the Supreme Being is not so utterly alien to
+ Oriental thought as some would have us think. Even though
+ there is no single word with which conveniently to translate
+ the term, the idea is perfectly distinct to any Japanese to
+ whom its meaning is explained.</p>
+
+ <p>The statement is widely made that because the Japanese
+ language has no term for "personality" the people are lacking
+ in the idea; that consequently they have difficulty in grasping
+ it even when presented to them, and that as a further
+ consequence they are not to be criticised for their hesitancy
+ in accepting the doctrine of the "Personality of God." It must
+ be admitted that if "personality" is to be defined in the
+ various ambiguous and contradictory ways in which we have seen
+ it defined by advocates of Oriental "impersonality" much can be
+ said in defense of their hesitancy. Indeed, no thinking
+ Christian of the Occident for a moment accepts it. But if
+ "personality" is defined in the way here presented, which I
+ judge to be the usage of thoughtful Christendom, then their
+ hesitancy cannot be so defended. It is doubtless true that
+ there is in Japanese no single word corresponding to our term
+ "personality." But that is likewise true of multitudes of other
+ terms. The only significance of this fact is that Oriental
+ philosophy has not followed in exactly the same lines as the
+ Occidental. As a matter of fact I have not found the idea of
+ personality to be a difficult one to convey to the Japanese, if
+ clear definitions are used. The Japanese language has, as we
+ have seen, many words referring to the individuality, to the
+ self of manhood; it merely lacks the general abstract term,
+ "personality." This is, however, in keeping with the general
+ characteristics of the language. Abstract terms are, compared
+ with English, relatively rare. Yet with the new civilization
+ they are being coined and introduced. Furthermore, the English
+ term "personality" is readily used by the great majority of
+ educated Christians just as they use such words as
+ "<a name='Page_394'
+ id="Page_394"></a>life," "power," "success," "patriotism,"
+ and "Christianity."</p>
+
+ <p>In the summer of 1898, with the Rev. C.A. Clark I was
+ invited to speak on the "Outlines of Christianity" in a school
+ for Buddhist priests. At the close of our thirty-minute
+ addresses, a young man arose and spoke for fifty minutes,
+ outlining the Buddhist system of thought; his address consisted
+ of an exposition of the law of cause and effect; he also stated
+ some of the reasons why the Christian conception of God and the
+ universe seemed to him utterly unsatisfactory; the objections
+ raised were those now current in Japan&mdash;such, for example,
+ as that if God really were the creator of the universe, why are
+ some men rich and some poor, some high-born and some low-born.
+ He also asked the question who made God? In a two-minute reply
+ I stated that his objections showed that he did not understand
+ the Christian's position; and I asked in turn what was the
+ origin of the law of cause and effect. The following day the
+ chief priest, the head of the school and its most highly
+ educated instructor, dined with us. We of course talked of the
+ various aspects of Christian and Buddhist doctrine. Finally he
+ asked me how I would answer the question as to who created God,
+ and as to the origin of the law of cause and effect. I
+ explained as clearly as I could the Christian view of God, in
+ his personality and as being the original and only source of
+ all existence, whether of physical or of human nature. He
+ seemed to drink it all in and expressed his satisfaction at the
+ close in the words, "Taihen ni man zoku shimashita," "That is
+ exceedingly satisfactory"; these words he repeated several
+ times. This is not my first personal proof of the fact that the
+ idea of personality is not alien or incomprehensible to the
+ Orient, nor even to a Buddhist priest, steeped in Buddhist
+ speculation, provided the idea is clearly stated.</p>
+
+ <p>Before bringing to a close this discussion of the problem of
+ personality in Japan, it would seem desirable to trace the
+ history of the development of Japanese personality. In view of
+ all that has now been said, and not forgetting what was said as
+ to the principles of National
+ Evolution,<a name='FNanchor_DA_106'
+ id="FNanchor_DA_106"></a><a href='#Footnote_DA_106'><sup>[DA]</sup></a>
+ this may be done in a paragraph.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_395'
+ id="Page_395"></a>The amalgamation of tribes, the
+ development of large clans, and finally the establishment of
+ the nation, with world-wide relations, has reacted on the
+ individual members of the people, giving them larger and
+ richer lives. This constitutes one important element of
+ personal development. The subordination of individual will
+ to that of the group, the desire and effort to live for the
+ advantage, not of the individual self, but of the group,
+ whether family, tribe, clan, nation, or the world, is not a
+ limitation of personality. On the contrary, it is its
+ expansion and development. Shinto and Japonicized
+ Confucianism contributed powerful motives to this
+ subordination, and thus to this personal development. These
+ were attended, however, by serious limitations in that they
+ confined their attention to the upper and ruling classes.
+ The development of personality was thus extremely limited.
+ Buddhism contributed to the development of Japanese
+ personality in so far as it taught Japanese the marvels
+ revealed by introspection and self-victory. Its
+ contribution, however, was seriously hampered by defects
+ already sufficiently emphasized. Japan has developed
+ personality to a high degree in a few and to a relatively
+ low degree in the many. The problem confronting New Japan is
+ the development of a high degree of personality among the
+ masses. This is to be accomplished by the introduction of an
+ individualistic social order.</p>
+
+ <p>One further topic demands our attention in closing. What is
+ the nature of personal heredity? Is it biological and inherent,
+ or, like all the characteristics of the Japanese people thus
+ far studied, is personality transmitted by social heredity?
+ Distinguishing between intrinsic or inherent
+ personality,<a name='FNanchor_DB_107'
+ id="FNanchor_DB_107"></a><a href='#Footnote_DB_107'><sup>[DB]</sup></a>
+ which constitutes the original endowment differentiating man
+ from animal, and extrinsic or acquired personality, which
+ consists of the various forms in which the inherent
+ personality has manifested itself in the different races of
+ men and the different ages of "history, it is safe to say
+ that the latter is transmitted according to the laws of
+ association or social heredity. Intrinsic personality can be
+ inherited only by lineal offspring, passing from father to
+ son. Extrinsic personality may fail <a name='Page_396'
+ id="Page_396"></a>to be inherited by lineal descendants and
+ may be inherited by others than lineal descendants. It is
+ transmitted and determined by social inheritance. Yet it is
+ through personality that the individual may break away from
+ the dominant currents of the social order, and become thus
+ the means for the transformation of that order. The secret
+ of social progress lies in personality. In proportion as the
+ social order is fitted, accordingly, widely to develop
+ high-grade personality,<a name='FNanchor_DC_108'
+ id="FNanchor_DC_108"></a><a href='#Footnote_DC_108'><sup>[DC]</sup></a>
+ is its own progress rapid and safe.</p>
+
+ <p>Does acquired personality react on intrinsic personality?
+ This is the problem of "the inheritance of acquired
+ characteristics." Into this problem I do not enter further than
+ to note that in so far as newly developed personal traits
+ produce transformations of body and brain transmittable from
+ parent to offspring by the bare fact of parentage, in that
+ degree does acquired pass over into intrinsic personality and
+ thereby become intrinsic. In regard to the degree in which
+ acquired has passed over into intrinsic personality, thus
+ differentiating the leading races of mankind, we contend that
+ it is practically non-existent. The phe<a name='Page_397'
+ id="Page_397"></a>nomena of personality characterizing the
+ chief races of men are due, not to intrinsic, but to
+ acquired personality; in other words they are the products
+ of the respective social orders and are transmitted from
+ generation to generation by social rather than by biological
+ heredity.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXIV'
+ id="XXXIV"></a><a name='Page_398'
+ id="Page_398"></a>XXXIV</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE BUDDHIST WORLD-VIEW</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Fully to comprehend the genius and history of Japan and her
+ social order, we need to gain a still more thorough insight
+ into the various conceptions of the universe that have
+ influenced the people. What have been their views as to the
+ nature of the ultimate reality lying behind all phenomena? What
+ as to the relation of mankind to that Ultimate Reality? And
+ what has been the relation of these world-views to the social
+ order? To prepare the way for our final answer to these
+ questions, we confine ourselves in this chapter to a study of
+ the inner nature of the Buddhist world-view.</p>
+
+ <p>Since the Buddhist conception of the Ultimate Reality and of
+ the universe is one of the three important types of world-views
+ dominating the human mind, a type too that is hardly known in
+ Western lands, in order to set it forth in terms intelligible
+ to the Occidental and the Christian, it will be necessary in
+ expounding it to contrast it with the two remaining types;
+ namely, the Greek and the Christian. As already pointed out,
+ according to the Buddhistic conception, the Ultimate is a
+ thoroughgoing Abstraction. All the elements of personality are
+ denied. It is perfectly passionless, perfectly thoughtless, and
+ perfectly motionless. It has neither feeling, idea, nor will.
+ As a consequence, the phenomena of the universe are wholly
+ unrelated to it; all that is, is only illusion; it has no
+ reality of being. Human beings who think the world real, and
+ who think even themselves real, are under the spell. This
+ illusion is the great misery and source of pain. Salvation is
+ the discovery of the illusion; and this discovery is the
+ victory over it; for no one fears the lion's skin, however much
+ he may fear the lion. This discovery secures the dropping back
+ from the little, limited, individual self-line,
+ <a name='Page_399'
+ id="Page_399"></a>into the infinite passionless,
+ thoughtless, and motionless existence of the absolute being,
+ Nirvana.</p>
+
+ <p>The Ancient Greek and not a little modern thought, conceived
+ of the Ultimate as a thorough-going intellectualism. One aspect
+ of personality was perceived and emphasized. God was conceived
+ as a thinker, as one who contemplates the universe. He does not
+ create matter, nor force, nor does he rule them. They are
+ eternal and real, and subject to fate. God simply observes. He
+ is absolute reason. The Greek view is thus essentially
+ dualistic. Sin, from the Greek point of view, is merely
+ ignorance, and salvation the attainment of knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>In vital and vitalizing contrast to both the Buddhist and
+ Greek conceptions is the Jud&aelig;o-Christian. To the
+ Christian the Ultimate is a thoroughgoing personality. To him
+ the central element in God is will, guided by reason and
+ controlled by love and righteousness. God creates and rules
+ everything. There is nothing that is not wholly subject to him.
+ There is no dualism for the Christian, nor any illusion. Sin is
+ an act of human will, not an illusion nor a failure of
+ intellect. Salvation is the correction of the will, which comes
+ about through a "new birth."</p>
+
+ <p>The elemental difference, then, between these three
+ conceptions of the Ultimate is that in Buddhism the effort to
+ rationalize and ethicize the universe of experience is
+ abandoned as a hopeless task; the world entirely and completely
+ resists the rational and ethical process. The universe is
+ pronounced completely irrational and non-moral. Change is
+ branded as illusion. There is no room for progress in
+ philosophic, thoroughgoing Buddhism.</p>
+
+ <p>In the Greek view the universe is subject in part to the
+ rationalizing process; but only in part. The effort at
+ ethicization is entirely futile. The Greek view, equally with
+ the Buddhistic, is at a loss to understand change. It does not
+ brand it as unreal, but change produced by man is branded as a
+ departure from nature. Greeks and Hindus alike have no
+ philosophy of history. In the Christian view the universe is
+ completely subject to the rational and ethical process. God is
+ creator of all that is and it is necessarily good. God is an
+ active will and He is, therefore, still in the process of
+ creating; hence change, evolution, is justi<a name='Page_400'
+ id="Page_400"></a>fied and understood. History is rational
+ and has a philosophy. Evolution and revelation have their
+ place at the very heart of the universe. Hence it is that
+ science, philosophy, and history, in a word a high-grade
+ civilization, finds its intellectual justification, its
+ foundation, its primary postulates, its possibility, only in
+ a land permeated with the Christian idea of God.</p>
+
+ <p>In the Buddhistic conception God is an abstract vacuity; in
+ the Greek, a static intellect; in the Christian, a dynamic
+ will. As is the conception of God, so is the conception and
+ character of man. The two are so intimately interdependent that
+ it is useless at this time to discuss which is the cause and
+ which the result. They are doubtless the two aspects of the
+ same movement of thought. The following differences are
+ necessary characteristics of the three religions:</p>
+
+ <p>The Buddhist seeks salvation through the attainment of
+ vacuity&mdash;Nirvana&mdash;in order to escape from the world
+ in which he says there is no reason and no morality. The Greek
+ seeks salvation through the activity of the intellect; all that
+ is needful to salvation is knowledge of the truth. The
+ Christian seeks salvation through the activity of the will;
+ this is secured through the new birth. The Buddhist leaves each
+ man to save himself from his illusion by the discovery that it
+ is an illusion. The Greek relies on intellectual education, on
+ philosophy&mdash;the Christian recreates the will. The Buddhist
+ and Greek gods make no effort to help the lost man. The
+ Christian God is dominated by love; He is therefore a
+ missionary God, sending even His only begotten Son to reconcile
+ and win the world of sinning, willful children back to
+ Himself.</p>
+
+ <p>In Buddhism salvation is won only by the few and after ages
+ of toil and ceaseless re-births. In the Greek plan only the
+ philosopher who comes to full understanding can attain
+ salvation. In the Christian plan salvation is for all, for all
+ are sons of God, in fact, and may through Christ become so in
+ consciousness. In the Buddhistic plan the hopeless masses
+ resort to magic and keep on with their idolatry and countless
+ gross superstitions. In the Greek plan the hopeless resort to
+ the "mysteries" for the attainment of salvation. In the
+ Christian plan there are <a name='Page_401'
+ id="Page_401"></a>no hopeless masses, for all may gain the
+ regenerated will and become conscious sons of God.</p>
+
+ <p>The Buddhist mind gave up all effort to grasp or even to
+ understand reality. The Greek mind thought it could arrive at
+ reality through the intellect. But two thousand years of
+ philosophic study and evolution drove philosophy into the
+ absurd positions of absolute subjective idealism on the one
+ hand and sensationalism and absolute materialism on the other.
+ The Christian mind lays emphasis on the will and accordingly is
+ alone able to reach reality, a reality justifiable alike to the
+ reason and to the heart. For will is the creative faculty in
+ man as well as in God. As God through His will creates reality,
+ so man through his will first comes to know reality. Mere
+ intellect can never pass over from thought to being. Being can
+ be known as a reality only through the will.</p>
+
+ <p>In consequence of the above-stated methods of thought, the
+ Buddhist was of necessity a pessimist; the Greek only less so;
+ while the Jew and the Christian could alone be thoroughgoing
+ optimists. The Buddhist ever asserts the is-not; the Greek, the
+ is; while the Jew and Christian demand the ought-to be, as the
+ supreme thing. Hence flows the perennial life of the Christian
+ civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>Those races and civilizations whose highest and deepest
+ conception of the ultimate is that of mere reason, no less than
+ those races and civilizations whose highest and deepest
+ conception of reality is that of an abstract emptiness, must be
+ landed in an unreal world, must arrive at irrational results,
+ for they have not taken into account the most vital element of
+ thought and life. Such races and civilizations cannot rise to
+ the highest levels of which man is capable; they must of
+ necessity give way to those races and that civilization which
+ build on larger and more complete foundations, which worship
+ Will, Human and Divine, and seek for its larger development
+ both in self and in all mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>But I must not pause to trace the contrasts further. Enough
+ has been said to show the source of Occidental belief in the
+ infinite worth of man. In almost diametrical contrast to the
+ Buddhist conception, according to the Christian view, man is a
+ real being, living in a real world, <a name='Page_402'
+ id="Page_402"></a>involved in a real intellectual problem,
+ fighting a real battle, on whose issue hang momentous, nay,
+ infinite results. So great is man's value, not only to
+ himself, but also to God, his Father, that the Father
+ himself suffers with him in his sin, and for him, to save
+ him from his sin. The question will be asked how widely the
+ Buddhistic interpretation of the universe has spread in
+ Japan. The doctrine of illusion became pretty general. We
+ may doubt, however, whether the rationale of the philosophy
+ was very generally understood. One Sutra, read by all
+ Japanese sects, is taught to all who would become acquainted
+ with the essentials of Buddhist doctrine. It is so short
+ that I give it in full.<a name='FNanchor_DD_109'
+ id="FNanchor_DD_109"></a><a href='#Footnote_DD_109'><sup>[DD]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>THE SMALLER-PRAGNA-PARAMITA-HRIDYA-SUTRA</p>
+
+ <div class='blkquot'>
+ <p>"Adoration to the Omniscient. The venerable Bodhisattva
+ Avalokitesvara performing his study in the deep
+ Pragna-paramita [perfection of Wisdom] thought thus: There
+ are the five Skandhas, and these he considered as by their
+ nature empty [phenomenal]. O Sariputra, he said, form here
+ is emptiness, and emptiness indeed is form. Emptiness is
+ not different from form, and form is not different from
+ emptiness. What is form that is emptiness, what is
+ emptiness that is form. The same applies to perception,
+ name, conception, and knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Here, O Sariputra, all things have the character of
+ emptiness; they have no beginning, no end, they are
+ faultless and not faultless, they are not imperfect and not
+ perfect. Therefore, O Sariputra, in this emptiness there is
+ no form, no perception, no name, no concepts, no knowledge.
+ No eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind. No form, sound,
+ smell, taste, touch, objects.... There is no knowledge, no
+ ignorance, no destruction of knowledge, no destruction of
+ ignorance, etc., there is no decay and death, no
+ destruction of decay and death; there are not the four
+ truths, viz., that there is pain, the origin of pain,
+ stopping of pain, and the path to it. There is no
+ knowledge, no obtaining of Nirvana.</p>
+
+ <p>"A man who has approached the Pragna-paramita of
+ <a name='Page_403'
+ id="Page_403"></a>the Bodhisattva dwells enveloped in
+ consciousness. But when the envelop of consciousness has
+ been annihilated, then he becomes free of all fear,
+ beyond the reach of change, enjoying final Nirvana. All
+ Buddhas of the past, present, and future, after
+ approaching the Pragna-paramita, have awakened to the
+ highest perfect knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Therefore one ought to know the great verse of the
+ Pragna-paramita, the verse of the great wisdom, the
+ unsurpassed verse, the peerless verse, which appeases all
+ pain; it is truth because it is not false; the verse
+ proclaimed in the Pragna-paramita: 'O wisdom, gone, gone,
+ gone, to the other shore, landed at the other shore,
+ Shava.'</p>
+
+ <p>"Thus ends the heart of the Pragna-paramita."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A study of this condensed and widely read Buddhist Sutra
+ will convince anyone that the ultimate conceptions of the
+ universe and of the final reality, are as described above.
+ However popular Buddhism might differ from this, it would be
+ the belief of the thoughtless masses, to whom the rational and
+ ethical problems are of no significance or concern, and who
+ contribute nothing to the development of thought or of the
+ social order. Those nobler and more earnestly inquiring souls
+ whose energy and spiritual longing might have been used for the
+ benefit of the masses, were shunted off on a side track that
+ led only into the desert of atomistic individualism,
+ abandonment of society, ecstatic contemplation, and absolute
+ pessimism. The Buddhist theory of the universe and method of
+ thought denied all intelligible reality, and necessitated the
+ conclusion that the universe of experience is neither rational
+ nor ethical. The common beliefs of the unreflective and
+ uninitiated masses in the ultimate rationality and morality of
+ the universe were felt to have no foundation either in religion
+ or philosophy and were accordingly pronounced mere
+ illusions.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXV'
+ id="XXXV"></a><a name='Page_404'
+ id="Page_404"></a>XXXV</h2>
+
+ <h3>COMMUNAL AND INDIVIDUAL ELEMENTS IN THE EVOLUTION OF
+ JAPANESE RELIGIOUS LIFE</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Our study of Japanese religion and religious life thus far
+ has been almost, if not exclusively, from the individualistic
+ standpoint. An adequate statement, however, cannot be made from
+ this standpoint alone, for religion through its mighty
+ sanctions exerts a powerful influence on the entire communal
+ life. Indeed, the leading characteristic of primitive religions
+ is their communal nature. The science of religion shows how
+ late in human history is the rise of individualistic
+ religions.</p>
+
+ <p>In the present chapter we propose to study Japanese
+ religious history from the communal standpoint. This will lead
+ us to study her present religious problem and the nature of the
+ religion required to solve it.</p>
+
+ <p>The real nature of the religious life of Japan has been and
+ still is predominantly communal. Individualism has had a place,
+ but, as we have repeatedly seen, only a minor place in forming
+ the nation. From the communo-individualistic standpoint, in the
+ study of Japan's religious and social evolution, not only can
+ we see clearly that the three religions of Japan are real
+ religions, but we can also understand the nature of the
+ relations of these three religions to each other and the
+ reasons why they have had such relations. Japanese religious
+ history and its main phenomena become luminous in the light of
+ communo-individualistic social principles.</p>
+
+ <p>Shinto, the primitive religion of Japan, corresponded well
+ with the needs of primitive times, when the development of
+ strong communal life was the prime problem and necessity. It
+ furnished the religious sanctions for the social order in its
+ customs of worshiping not only the <a name='Page_405'
+ id="Page_405"></a>gods, but also the Emperor and ancestors.
+ It gave the highest possible justification of the national
+ social order in its deification of the supreme ruler. Shinto
+ was so completely communal in its nature that the individual
+ aspect of religion was utterly ignored. It developed no
+ specific moral code, no eschatological and soteriological
+ systems, no comprehensive view of nature or of the gods.
+ These deficiencies, however, are no proofs that it was not a
+ religion in the proper sense of the term. The real question
+ is, did it furnish any supra-mundane, supra-legal,
+ supra-communal sanctions both for the conduct of the
+ individual in his social relations and for the fact and the
+ right of the social order. Of this there can be no doubt.
+ Those who deny it the name of a religion do so because they
+ judge religion only from the point of view of a highly
+ developed individualistic religion.</p>
+
+ <p>In view of this undoubted fact, it is a strange commentary
+ on the failure of Shinto leaders to realize the real function
+ of the faith they profess that they have sought and obtained
+ from the government the right to be considered and classified
+ no longer as a religion, but only as a society for preserving
+ the memories and shrines of the ancestors of the race. Thus has
+ modern Shinto, so far as it is organized and has a mouth with
+ which to speak, following the abdicating proclivities of the
+ ancient social order, excommunicated itself from its religious
+ heritage, aspiring to be nothing more than a gate-keeper of
+ cemeteries.</p>
+
+ <p>The sources of the power of the Shinto sanctions lies in the
+ nature of its conception of the universe. Although it attempted
+ no interpretation of the universe as a whole, it conceived of
+ the origin of the country and people of Japan as due to the
+ direct creative energy of the gods. Japan was accordingly
+ conceived as a divine land and the people a divine people. The
+ Emperor was thought to have descended in direct line from the
+ gods and thus to be a visible representative of the gods to the
+ people, and to possess divine power and authority with which to
+ rule the people. Whenever Japanese came into contact with
+ foreign peoples, it was natural to consider them outside of the
+ divine providence, aliens, whose presence in the
+ <a name='Page_406'
+ id="Page_406"></a>divine land was more or less of a
+ pollution. This world-view was well calculated to develop a
+ spirit of submissive obedience and loyal adherence to the
+ hereditary rulers of the land, and of fierce antagonism to
+ foreigners. This view constituted the moral foundation for
+ the social order, the intellectual framework within which
+ the state developed. Paternal feudalism was the natural, if
+ not the necessary, accompaniment of this world-view. Even to
+ this day the scholars of the land see no other ground on
+ which to found Imperial authority, no other basis for ethics
+ and religion, than the divine descent of the
+ Emperor.<a name='FNanchor_DE_110'
+ id="FNanchor_DE_110"></a><a href='#Footnote_DE_110'><sup>[DE]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The Shinto world-view, conceiving of men as direct offspring
+ of the gods, has in it potentially the doctrine of the divine
+ nature of all men, and their consequent infinite worth. Shinto
+ never developed this truth, however. It did not discover the
+ momentous implications of its view. Failing to discover them,
+ it failed to introduce into the social order that moral
+ inspiration, that social leaven which would have gradually
+ produced the individualistic social order.</p>
+
+ <p>No attempt has been made either in ancient or modern times
+ to square this Shinto world-view with advancing knowledge of
+ the world, particularly with the modern scientific conception
+ of the universe. Anthropology, ethnology, and the doctrine of
+ evolution both cosmic and human, are all destructive of the
+ primitive Shinto world-view. It would not be difficult to show,
+ however, that in this world-view exists a profound element of
+ truth. The Shinto world-conception needs to be expanded to take
+ the universe and all races of men into its view; and to see
+ that Japan is not alone the object of divine solicitude, but
+ that all races likewise owe their origin to that same divine
+ power, and that even though the Emperor is not more directly
+ the offspring of the gods than are all men, yet in the
+ providence of Him who ruleth the affairs of men, the Emperor is
+ in fact the visible representative of authority and power for
+ the people over whom he reigns. With this expansion and the
+ consequences that flow from it, the world-view that has cradled
+ Old Japan will come into <a name='Page_407'
+ id="Page_407"></a>accord with the scientific Christian
+ world-view, and become fitted to be the foundation for the
+ new and individualistic social order, now arising in Japan,
+ granting full liberty of thought and action, knowing that
+ only so can truth come out of error, and assured that truth
+ is the only ground of permanent welfare.</p>
+
+ <p>Throughout the centuries including the present era of Meiji,
+ it is the Shinto religion that has provided and that still
+ provides religious sanctions for the social order&mdash;even
+ for the new social order that has come in from the West. It is
+ the belief of the people in the divine descent of the Emperor,
+ and his consequent divine right, that to-day unifies the nation
+ and causes it to accept so readily the new social order;
+ desired by him, they raise no questions, make no opposition,
+ even though in some respects it brings them trouble and
+ anxiety.</p>
+
+ <p>Our study of Buddhism has brought to light its extremely
+ individualistic nature, and its lack of asocial ideal. Its
+ world-view we have sufficiently examined in the preceding
+ chapter. We are told that when Buddhism came to Japan it made
+ little headway until it adopted the Shinto deities into its
+ theogony. What does this mean? That only on condition of
+ accepting the Shinto sanctions for the communal order of
+ society was it able to commend itself to the people at large.
+ And Buddhism had no difficulty in fulfilling this condition,
+ because it had no ideal order of society to present and no
+ religious sanctions for any kind of social order; in this
+ respect Buddhism had no ground for conflict with Shinto. Shinto
+ had the field to itself; and Buddhism was perfectly at liberty
+ to adopt, or at least to allow, any social order that might
+ present itself. Furthermore, by its doctrines of incarnation
+ and transmigration, according to which noble souls might appear
+ and reappear in different worlds and different lands, Buddhism
+ could identify Shinto deities with its own deities of Hindu
+ origin, asserting their pre-incarnation. Having accepted the
+ Shinto deities, ideals, and sanctions for the social order,
+ Buddhism became not only tolerable to the people, but also
+ exceedingly popular.</p>
+
+ <p>The Shinto-Buddhistic was in truth a new religion, each of
+ the old religions supplying an essential element.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_408'
+ id="Page_408"></a>One real reason, beside its accommodation
+ to Shintoism, why Buddhism was so popular was that it
+ brought an indispensable element into the national life. For
+ the first time emphasis began to be laid on the individual.
+ Introspection and deliberate meditation were brought into
+ play. Arts demanding individual skill were fostered. A
+ gorgeous ritual, elaborate architecture, complex religious
+ organism, letters and literature, all gave play to
+ individual activity and development whether in manual, in
+ mental, or in &aelig;sthetic lines. The hitherto cramped and
+ primitive life of the Japanese responded to these appeals
+ and opportunities with profound joy. The upper classes
+ especially felt themselves growing in richness and fullness
+ of life. They felt the stimulus in many directions. The
+ reason, then, why Buddhism flourished so mightily, and at
+ the same time caused the nation to bloom, was because it
+ helped develop the individual. The reason, on the other
+ hand, why it failed to carry the nation on from its first
+ bloom into full fruitage was because it failed to develop
+ individualism in the social order. Its religious
+ individualism was, as we have seen, in reality defective. It
+ was abstract and one-sided. It did not discover the whole of
+ the individual. It did not know anything of personality,
+ either human or divine. It accordingly could not recognize
+ the individual's worth, but only his separateness and his
+ weakness. It taught an abstract impoverished idea of self,
+ and made, as the whole aim of the salvation it offered, the
+ final annihilation of all separateness of this individual
+ self. We can now see that its individualism was essentially
+ defective in that it poured contempt on the self, and that
+ if its individualizing salvation were consistently carried
+ out, it was not only no help to the social order, but a
+ positive injury to it. Its individualism was of a nature
+ which could not become an integral part of any social
+ order.</p>
+
+ <p>This character led to another inevitable difficulty.
+ Although Buddhism ostensibly adopted Shinto deities and the
+ Shinto sanctions for the social order, it could not
+ wholeheartedly accept the sanctions nor take the deities into
+ full and legitimate partnership. It found no place in its
+ circle of doctrine to teach the important tenets of
+ Shintoism.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_409'
+ id="Page_409"></a>It left them to survive or perish as
+ chance would have it. In proportion as Buddhism absorbed the
+ life and love of the people, Shinto fell into decay and with
+ it its sanctions. Then came the centuries of civil war
+ during which Imperial power and authority sank to a minimum,
+ and Japan's ignominy and disorder reached their maximum.
+ What the land now needed was the re-introduction, first, of
+ social order, even though it must be by the hand of a
+ dictator, and second, the development of religious sanctions
+ for the order that should be established. The first was
+ secured by those three great generals of Japan, Oda
+ Nobunaga, the Taiko Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu. "The
+ first conceived the idea of centralizing all the authority
+ of the state in a single person; the second, who has been
+ called the Napoleon of Japan, actually put the idea into
+ practice," but died before consolidating his work; the
+ third, by his unsurpassed skill as a diplomat and
+ administrator, carried the idea completely out, arranging
+ the details of the new order so that, without special
+ military genius or power on the part of his successors, the
+ order maintained itself for 250 years.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet it is doubtful if this long maintenance of the social
+ order introduced by Ieyasu would have been possible had he not
+ found ready to hand a system of essentially religious sanctions
+ for the social order he had established by force. Confucianism
+ had lain for a thousand years a dormant germ, receiving some
+ study from learned men, but having no special relation to the
+ education of the day or to the political problems that became
+ each century more pressing. In the Confucian doctrines of
+ loyalty to ruler and piety to parents, a doctrine sanctioned by
+ Heaven and by the customs of all the ancients, Ieyasu, with the
+ insight of a master mind, found just the sanctions he desired.
+ He had the Confucian classics printed&mdash;it is said for the
+ first time in Japan&mdash;"and the whole intellect of the
+ country became molded by Confucian ideas." The classics, edited
+ with diacritical marks for Japanese students, "formed the chief
+ vehicle of every boy's education." These were interpreted by
+ learned Chinese commentators. The intelligence of the land
+ drank of this stream as the European mind refreshed itself with
+ the classic waters of <a name='Page_410'
+ id="Page_410"></a>the Renaissance. The Japanese were weary
+ of Buddhistic puerilities and transcendental doctrines that
+ led nowhere. They demanded sanctions for the moral life and
+ the social order; in response to this need Buddhism gave
+ them Nirvana&mdash;absolute mental and moral vacuity.
+ Confucianism gave them principles whose working and whose
+ results they could see and understand. Its sanctions
+ appealed both to the imagination and to the reason,
+ antiquity and learning and piety being all in their favor.
+ The sanctions were also seen to be wholly independent of
+ puerile superstitions and foolish fears. The Confucian
+ ideals and sanctions, moreover, coincided with the essential
+ elements of the old Shinto world-view and sanctions. In a
+ true sense, the doctrines of Confucius were but the
+ elaborated and succinctly stated implications of their
+ primitive faith. Confucianism, therefore, swept the land.
+ <i>It was</i> accepted as the groundwork and authority for
+ the most flourishing feudal order the world has ever seen.
+ Japan bloomed again.<a name='FNanchor_DF_111'
+ id="FNanchor_DF_111"></a><a href='#Footnote_DF_111'><sup>[DF]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>This difference, however, is to be noted between the Shinto
+ ideal social order and the Confucian, or rather that
+ development of Confucian ethics and civics which arose during
+ the Tokugawa Shogunate; Shinto appears to have been, properly
+ speaking, nationalistic, while feudal Confucianism was tribal.
+ Although in Confucian theory the supreme loyalty may have been
+ due the Emperor, in point of fact it was shown to the local
+ daimyo. Confucian ethics was communal and might easily have
+ turned in the direction of national communalism; it would then
+ have coincided completely with Shinto in this respect. But for
+ various reasons it did not so turn, but developed an intensely
+ local, a tribal communalism, and pushed loyalty to the Emperor
+ as a vital reality entirely into the background. This was one
+ of the defects of feudal Confucianism which <a name='Page_411'
+ id="Page_411"></a>finally led to its own overthrow. Shinto,
+ as we have seen, had long been pushed aside by Buddhism and
+ was practically forgotten by the people. The zeal for
+ Confucian doctrine brought, therefore, no immediate revival
+ to the Shinto cultus, although it did revive the essential
+ elements of the old communal religion. We might say that the
+ old religion was revived under a new name; having a new name
+ and a new body, the real and vital connection between the
+ two was not recognized. We thus discern how the religious
+ history of Japan was not a series of cataclysms or of
+ disconnected leaps in the dark, but an orderly development,
+ one step naturally following the next, as the sun follows
+ the dawn. The different stages of Japan's religious progress
+ have received different names, because due to specific
+ stimuli brought from abroad; the religious life itself,
+ however, has been a continuous development.</p>
+
+ <p>Another difference between Shinto and Confucianism as it
+ existed in Japan should not escape our attention, namely, in
+ regard to their respective world-views. Shinto was confessedly
+ a religion; it frankly believed in gods, whom it worshiped and
+ on whose help it relied. Confucianism, or to use the Japanese
+ name, Bushido, was confessedly agnostic. It did not assume to
+ understand the universe, as Buddhism assumed. Nor did it admit
+ the practical existence of gods or their power in this world,
+ as Shinto believed. It maintained that, "if only the heart
+ follows the way of truth, the gods will protect one even though
+ he does not pray." It laid stress on practical moralities,
+ regardless of their philosophical presumptions, into which it
+ would not probe. When pressed it would ascribe all to "Heaven,"
+ and, as we have seen, it had many implications that would lead
+ the inquiring mind to a belief in the personal nature of
+ "Heaven." Had it developed these implications, Bushido would
+ have become a genuine religion. It was indeed a system of
+ ethics touched with emotion, it was religious, but it failed to
+ become the religion it might have become because it insisted on
+ its agnosticism and refused to worship the highest and best it
+ knew.</p>
+
+ <p>It is interesting to observe that the ideals and sanctions
+ <a name='Page_412'
+ id="Page_412"></a>of Confucianism produced effects which
+ proved its ruin. They did this in two ways; first, by
+ developing the prolonged peace necessary for a high grade of
+ scholarship which, turning its attention to ancient history,
+ discovered that the Shogunate was assuming powers not in
+ accord with the primitive practice nor in accord with the
+ theory of the divine descent of the Imperial house.
+ Imperialistic patriots arose, whose aim was to overthrow the
+ Shogunate and restore the Emperor. They felt that, doing
+ this, they were right; that is to say, they became inspired
+ by the Shinto sanctions for a national life. They thus
+ discovered the defect of the disjointed feudal system
+ sanctioned by feudal Confucianism. The second cause of its
+ undoing grew out of the first. The scholarship which led the
+ patriots against the usurper in political life led them also
+ against all foreign innovations such as Buddhism and
+ Confucianism, which they scorned as modern and
+ anti-imperial. The Shinto cultus thus received a powerful
+ revival. With the overthrow of the Shogunate in 1868
+ Confucianism naturally went with it, and for a time Shinto
+ was the state religion. But its poverty in every line,
+ except the communal sanctions, caused it in a short time to
+ lose its place.</p>
+
+ <p>The two causes just assigned for the fall of Bushido,
+ however, could hardly have wrought its ruin had it been more
+ than a utilitarian and agnostic system of morality, calculated
+ to maintain the social ascendency of a small fraction of the
+ nation. As a religion, Bushido would have secured a
+ conservative power enabling it to survive, by adapting itself
+ to a changed social order. As it was, Bushido was snuffed out
+ by a single breath of the breeze that began to blow from
+ foreign lands. As an ethical system it has conferred a blessing
+ on Japan that should never be forgotten. But its identification
+ with a class and a clan social order rendered it too narrow for
+ the national and international life into which the nation was
+ forced by circumstances beyond its control, and its agnostic
+ utilitarianism did not provide it with sufficient moral power
+ to cope with the problems of the new individualistic age that
+ had suddenly burst upon it. In all Japan there remains to the
+ present day only one of those old Con<a name='Page_413'
+ id="Page_413"></a>fucian schools with its temple to
+ Confucius. All the rest have fallen into ruins or have been
+ used for other purposes, while the gold-covered statues of
+ the once deified teacher have been sold to curio-dealers or
+ for their bullion value. In the worship of Confucius,
+ Bushido almost became a religion, but it worshiped the
+ teacher instead of the Creator, maintaining its agnosticism
+ as to the Creator, as to "Heaven," to the end, and thus
+ lapsed from the path of religious evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>This brings us down to modern times&mdash;into the
+ seventies. Already in the sixties Japan had discovered herself
+ in a totally new environment. She found that foreign nations
+ had made great progress in every direction since she shut them
+ out two hundred and fifty years before. She discovered her
+ helplessness, she discovered, too, that the social order of
+ Western peoples was totally distinct from hers. These
+ discoveries served to break down all the remaining sanctions
+ for her particular type of social order&mdash;Confucianistic
+ feudalism. The whole nation was eager to know the political
+ systems of the West. So long as the Shinto ideal of nationalism
+ was not interfered with, the nation was free to adopt any new
+ social order. Japan's political and commercial intercourse
+ being with England and America, the social order of the
+ Anglo-Saxon had the greatest influence on the Japanese mind.
+ Japan accordingly has become predominantly Anglo-Saxon in its
+ social ideas. Much has been made of the fact that the new
+ social order has come in so easily; that the people have gained
+ rights without fighting for them; and this has been attributed
+ to the peculiarity of Japanese human nature. This is an error.
+ The real reason for the ease with which the individualistic
+ Anglo-Saxon social order has been introduced has been the
+ collapse of the sanctions for the Confucian order. No one had
+ any ground of duty on which to stand and fight. The national
+ mind was open to any newcomer that might have appeared. I am
+ referring, of course, to the thinking classes. All the rest,
+ accustomed to submissive obedience, never thought of any other
+ course than to accept the will of superiors.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, the new social order in one important
+ re<a name='Page_414'
+ id="Page_414"></a>spect fell in with and helped to
+ re-establish the old Shinto ideal, that, namely, of
+ nationalism. In the treaty negotiations, the West would deal
+ with no intermediaries, only with the responsible national
+ head. Western ideals, too, demanded a strong national unity.
+ In this respect, then, the foreign ideals and foreign social
+ order were powerful influences in building up the new
+ patriotism, in re-enforcing the old Shinto social
+ sanctions.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus has Japan come to the parting of the ways. What Japan
+ needs to-day is a religion satisfying the intellect as to its
+ world-view, and thus justifying the sanctions it holds out.
+ These must be neither exclusively communal, like those of
+ Shinto, nor exclusively individual, like those of Buddhism.
+ While maintaining at their full value the sanctions for the
+ social life, it must add thereto the sanctions for the
+ individual. It must not look upon the individual as a being
+ whose salvation depends on his being isolated from, taken out
+ of the community, as Buddhism did and does, nor yet as a mere
+ fraction of the community, as Confucianism did, but as a
+ complete, imperishable unit of infinite worth, necessarily
+ living a double life, partly inseparable from the social order
+ and partly superior to it. This religion must provide not only
+ sanctions, but ideals, for a perfect social order in which,
+ while the most complex organization of society shall be
+ possible, the freedom and the high development of the
+ individual's personality shall also be secured.</p>
+
+ <p>The fulfillment of such conditions would at first thought
+ seem to be impossible. How can a religion give sanctions which
+ at the very time that they authorize the fullest development
+ and organization of society, apparently making society its
+ chief end, also assume the fullest liberty and development of
+ the individual, making him and his salvation its chief end? Are
+ not these ends incompatible? What has been said already along
+ this general line of thought has prepared us to see that they
+ are not. The great, though unconscious, need of the ages, and
+ the unconscious effort of all religious evolution has been the
+ development of just such a religion. As the "cake" of social
+ custom was at first the great need for, and afterwards the
+ great obstacle in the way of, social evolution, so
+ <a name='Page_415'
+ id="Page_415"></a>the sanctions of a communal religion were
+ at first the great need for, and afterwards the great
+ obstacle in the way of, religious evolution and of personal
+ development. Through its sanctions religion is the most
+ powerful of all the factors of the higher human evolution,
+ either helping it onward or holding it back.</p>
+
+ <p>Has, then, any religion secured such a dual development as
+ we have just seen to be necessary? As a matter of fact, one and
+ only one has done so, Christianity. This religion clearly
+ attains and maintains the apparently impossible combination of
+ individualism and communalism by the nature of its conception
+ of the method of individual salvation. Its communalism is
+ guaranteed by, because it rests on, its individualism. At the
+ very moment that it pronounces the individual of inestimable
+ worth,&mdash;a son of God,&mdash;it commands him to show that
+ sonship by loving all God's other sons, and by serving them to
+ the extent of self-sacrifice, and of death if need be. Its
+ communalism is thus inseparable from its individualism and its
+ individualism from its communalism.</p>
+
+ <p>Christian individualism embraces and includes thoroughgoing
+ communalism. True and full Christians are the most devoted
+ patriots. As the acorn sends forth far-reaching; roots into the
+ soil for moisture and nourishment, and a mighty trunk and
+ spreading branches upward for air and sunlight, so the seed of
+ Christian life develops in two directions, individualism as the
+ root and communalism as the beautiful tree. They are not
+ contradictory, but supplementary principles. While his own
+ final gain is a real aim of the individual, it is only a part
+ of his aim; he also desires and labors for the gain of all; and
+ even the individual gain, he well knows, can be secured only
+ through the communal principle, through service to his
+ fellow-men. His own welfare, whether temporal or eternal, is
+ inseparably bound up with that of his fellows.</p>
+
+ <p>The Christian religion finds the sanctions for any and every
+ social order that history knows, in the fact that all physical
+ and social laws and organisms are part of the divine plan.
+ Because any particular social order is the association of
+ imperfect men and women, it must be more or less imperfect. But
+ the Christian, even while he is <a name='Page_416'
+ id="Page_416"></a>seeking to reform the social order and to
+ bring it up to his ideal, must be loyal to it. And for this
+ loyalty to fellow-men and to God, the highest conceivable
+ sanctions are held out, namely, an endless and infinite life
+ of conscious, joyous fellowship with souls made perfect in
+ the Kingdom of God, and with God himself.</p>
+
+ <p>A comprehensive study, therefore, of the real nature and the
+ true function of religion in relation to man's development,
+ whether individual or communal, shows that Christianity
+ fulfills the conditions. A comparative study would show that,
+ of all the existing religions, Christianity alone does this. It
+ alone combines in perfect proportion the individual and the
+ communal elements, and the requisite sanctions.</p>
+
+ <p>An expansion of communal religion is taking place in modern
+ times. The community now arising is international in scope,
+ interracial and universal in character. Cultivated men and
+ women the world around are beginning to talk of national rights
+ and national duties. Europe is thought to be justified in
+ suppressing the slave trade and its accompanying horrors in
+ Africa, and condemned for not preventing the Turk from carrying
+ on his wholesale slaughter of innocent Armenians. The Spaniard
+ is despised and condemned for his prolonged inhumanities in
+ Cuba and the Philippines, and the American is approved in
+ warring for humanity and justified in interfering with Spain's
+ sovereignty. The conscience of the world is beginning to
+ discover that no nation, though sovereign, has an absolute
+ right over its people. Right is only measured by righteousness.
+ International righteousness, duty and rights, regardless of
+ military power, are coming to the forefront of the thinking of
+ advanced nations.</p>
+
+ <p>Looked at closely, and studied in its implications, what is
+ this but a developing form of communal religion? No nation is
+ conceived as existing apart; each exists as but one fraction of
+ the world-wide community; in its relations it has both rights
+ and duties. Does this not mean that appeal has been made from
+ the communal sanctions of might to the supra-communal sanctions
+ of right? We do not simply ask what do other nations think of
+ this or <a name='Page_417'
+ id="Page_417"></a>that national act, but what is right, in
+ view of the whole order of the nature which has brought man
+ into being and set him in families and nations. In other
+ words, national rights and duties are felt to flow from the
+ supra-mundane source, God the Creator of heaven and earth
+ and all that in them is. The sanctions for national rights
+ and duties are religious sanctions and rest on a religious
+ world-view.</p>
+
+ <p>Now the point, of interest for us is the fact that Japan has
+ entered into this universal community and is feeling the
+ sanctions of this universal communal religion. The
+ international rights and duties of Japan are a theme of
+ frequent discourse and conversation. Japan stoutly maintained
+ that the war with China was a "gi-sen," a righteous war, waged
+ primarily for the sake of Korea. Many a Japanese waxes
+ indignant over the cruelty of the Turk, the savage barbarity of
+ the Spaniard, and the impotence and supineness of England and
+ Europe. I have already spoken of the young man who became so
+ indignant at England's compelling China to take Indian opium,
+ that he proposed to go to England to preach an anti-opium
+ crusade. Japan is beginning to enter into the larger communal
+ life of the world, although, of course, she has as yet little
+ perception of its varied implications.</p>
+
+ <p>Many a student of New Japan perceives that she is abandoning
+ her old religious conceptions, and that many moral and social
+ evils are entering the land, who yet does not see that the wide
+ acceptance of some new religion by the people is important for
+ the maintenance of the nation. Some earnest Japanese thinkers
+ are beginning to realize that religion is, indeed, needful to
+ steady the national life, but they fail to see that
+ Christianity alone fulfills the condition. Many are saying that
+ a religion scientifically constructed must be manufactured
+ especially for Japan.</p>
+
+ <p>The reason why individualistic religion takes such an
+ important part in the higher evolution of man is, in a word,
+ because the religious sanctions are so much more powerful than
+ all others, either legal or social. For the legal sanctions are
+ chiefly negative; they are also partial and uncertain, and
+ easily evaded by the selfish individual. The social sanctions,
+ too, are often far from just or impartial or wise. Furthermore,
+ the rise of individualism <a name='Page_418'
+ id="Page_418"></a>in the social order secures privacy for
+ the individual, and so far forth removes him from the
+ restraints and stimuli of the social sanctions. It is the
+ religious sanctions alone that follow the man in every
+ waking moment. Not one of all his acts escapes the eye of
+ the religious judgment. He is his own judge, and he cannot
+ escape bearing witness against himself.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, it is manifest that where superior beings and man's
+ relation to these and the corresponding religious sanctions are
+ defectively conceived, as, for instance, quite apart either
+ from the individual or the communal life, they are valueless to
+ the higher evolution of man and have little interest for the
+ student of social evolution. In proportion, however, as man
+ advances in intellectual grasp of religious truths and in
+ susceptibility to the moral ideas and religious sanctions they
+ provide, conceiving of morality and religion as inseparable
+ parts of the same system, the more powerfully does religion
+ enter into and promote man's higher evolution. An
+ individualistic social order demands the religious sanctions
+ more imperatively than a communal social order; for, in
+ proportion as it is individualistic, the social order is weak
+ in compelling, through the legal and social sanctions alone,
+ the communal or altruistic activity of the individual.
+ Altruistic spirit and action, however, are essential to the
+ maintenance even of that individualistic order. The more highly
+ society develops, therefore, the more religious must each
+ member of the society become.</p>
+
+ <p>The same truth may be stated from another standpoint. The
+ higher man develops, the more impatient he becomes with
+ illogical reasonings and defective conceptions; he thus becomes
+ increasingly skeptical in regard to current traditional
+ religions with their crude, primitive ideas; he is accordingly
+ increasingly freed from the restraints they impose. But unless
+ he finds some new religious sanctions for the communal life,
+ for social conduct, and for the individual life,&mdash;ideals
+ and sanctions that command his assent and direct his
+ life,&mdash;he will drop back into a thoroughgoing atomic,
+ individualistic, selfish life, which can be only a hindrance to
+ the higher development both of society and of the individual.
+ In order that men advancing in <a name='Page_419'
+ id="Page_419"></a>intellectual ability may remain useful
+ members of society, they must remain subject to those ideals
+ and sanctions which will actually secure social conduct.
+ While disregarding the chaff of primitive religious
+ superstitions and ceremonials man must retain the wheat; he
+ must feel the force of the religious spirit in a deeper and
+ profounder, because more personal way than did his
+ ancestors. Increasing intellectual power and knowledge must
+ be balanced by increasing individual experience of the
+ religious motives and spirit. This is the reason why each
+ advancing age should study afresh the whole religious
+ problem, and state in the terms of its own experience the
+ prominent and permanent religious truths of all the ages and
+ the sanctions that flow from them. Hence it is that a
+ religion only traditional and ceremonial is quite unfitted
+ for a developing life.</p>
+
+ <p>Japan is no exception to the general laws of human
+ evolution. As her intellectual abilities increase, the forms of
+ her old religious life will become increasingly unacceptable to
+ the people at large. If, in rejecting the obsolete forms of
+ religious thought, she rejects religion and its sanctions
+ altogether, atomistic individualism can be the only result, and
+ with it wide moral corruption will eat out the vitality of the
+ national life.</p>
+
+ <p>That Christianity alone, of all the religions of the world,
+ fulfills the conditions will not need many words to prove. As a
+ matter of fact Christianity alone has succeeded in surviving
+ the criticism of the nineteenth century. In Christendom, all
+ religions but Christianity have perished. This is a mere matter
+ of fact. As for the reason, Christianity alone gives complete
+ intellectually satisfactory sanctions for both the communal and
+ the individualistic principles of social progress.
+ Christianity, as we have sufficiently shown, has both
+ principles not unrelated to each other, but vitally
+ interrelated. For these reasons it is safe to maintain not only
+ that Japan needs to find a new religion, but that the religion
+ must be Christianity in substance, whatever be the name given
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>The Japanese have been described as essentially irreligious
+ in nature. We have seen how defective such a description is.
+ But have we not now traced one root of <a name='Page_420'
+ id="Page_420"></a>this seeming characteristic of New Japan?
+ The old religious conceptions have been largely outgrown by
+ the educated. They have come to the conclusion that the old
+ religious forms constitute the whole of religion, and that
+ consequently they are unworthy of attention. The spirit of
+ New Japan is indifferent to religion; but this is not due to
+ an inherently non-religious or irreligious nature, but to
+ the empty externalism and shallow puerilities of the only
+ religions they know. How can they be zealous for them or
+ recognize any authority in them? Those few Japanese who have
+ come within the influence of the larger conception of
+ religion brought to Japan by Christianity are showing a
+ religious zeal and power supporting the contention that the
+ generally asserted lack of a religious nature is only
+ apparent and temporary. Preaching the right set of ideas,
+ those which appeal to the national sense of communal needs,
+ by supplying the demand for sanctions for the social order;
+ ideas which appeal to intellects molded by modern thought,
+ by supplying such an intellectual understanding of the
+ universe as justifies the various supra-communal sanctions;
+ and ideas which appeal to the heart, by supplying the
+ personal demand of each individual for a larger life, for
+ intercourse with the Father of all Spirits and for strength
+ for the prolonged battle of life&mdash;preach these and
+ kindred ideas, and the Japanese will again become as
+ conspicuously a religious people as they were when Buddhism
+ came to Japan a thousand years ago.<a name='FNanchor_DG_112'
+ id="FNanchor_DG_112"></a><a href='#Footnote_DG_112'><sup>[DG]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>But if the real nature of a full and perfect religion is to
+ save not only the individual, providing sanctions for
+ <a name='Page_421'
+ id="Page_421"></a>his conduct, but also to justify the
+ social order, and to provide sanctions that shall secure its
+ maintenance, any religion which fails to have both
+ characteristics can hardly claim the name universal. We have
+ seen that Buddhism lacks one of these elements. In my
+ judgment it is not properly universal. So long as it exists
+ in or goes to a land already provided with other religions
+ securing the social order, it may continue to thrive. But,
+ on the one hand, it can never become the exclusive religion
+ of any land for it cannot do without and therefore it cannot
+ depose the other religions; and, on the other hand, it must
+ give way before the stronger religion which has both the
+ individual and communal elements combined. Buddhism,
+ therefore, lacks a vital characteristic of a universal
+ religion. It may better be called a non-local, or an
+ international religion. We now see another reason why
+ Buddhism, although found in many Oriental lands, has never
+ annihilated any of the pre-existing religions, but has only
+ added one more to the many varieties already existing. It is
+ so in Thibet, in China, in Burmah, and in Japan. And in
+ India, its home, it has utterly died out.</p>
+
+ <p>Many of the efforts made by students of comparative religion
+ to classify the various religions, seem to the writer defective
+ through lack of the perception that social and religious
+ evolution are vitally connected. From this point of view, the
+ classification of religions as communal, individual, and
+ communo-individual, would seem to be the best.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXVI'
+ id="XXXVI"></a><a name='Page_422'
+ id="Page_422"></a>XXXVI</h2>
+
+ <h3>WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT?</h3>
+
+ <p>We have now passed in rather detailed review the emotional,
+ &aelig;sthetic, intellectual, moral, and religious
+ characteristics of the Japanese race. We have, furthermore,
+ given considerable attention to the problem of personality. We
+ have tried to understand the relation of each characteristic to
+ the Japanese feudal system and social order.</p>
+
+ <p>The reader will perhaps feel some dissatisfaction with the
+ results of this study. "Are there, then," he may say, "no
+ distinctive Japanese psychical characteristics by which this
+ Eastern race is radically differentiated from those of the
+ Occident?" "Are there no peculiar features of an Oriental,
+ mental and moral, which infallibly and always distinguish him
+ from an Occidental?" The reply to this question given in the
+ preceding chapters of this work is negative. For the sake,
+ however, of the reader who may not yet be thoroughly satisfied,
+ it may be well to examine this problem a little further,
+ analyzing some of the current characterizations of the
+ Orient.</p>
+
+ <p>That Oriental and Occidental peoples are each possessed of
+ certain unique psychic characteristics, sharply and completely
+ differentiating them from each other, is the opinion of
+ scientific sociologists as well as of more popular writers. An
+ Occidental entering the Orient is well-nigh overwhelmed with
+ amusement and surprise at the antipodal characteristics of the
+ two civilizations. Every visible expression of Oriental
+ civilization, every mode of thought, art, architecture;
+ conceptions of God, man, and nature; pronunciation and
+ structure of the language&mdash;all seem utterly different from
+ their corresponding elements in the West. Furthermore, as he
+ visits one Oriental <a name='Page_423'
+ id="Page_423"></a>country after another, although he
+ discovers differences between Japanese, Koreans, Chinese,
+ and Hindus, yet he is impressed with a strange, a baffling
+ similarity.</p>
+
+ <p>The tourist naturally concludes that the unity
+ characterizing the Orient is fundamental; that Oriental
+ civilization is due to Oriental race brain, and Occidental
+ civilization is due to Occidental race brain.</p>
+
+ <p>This impression and this conclusion of the tourist are not,
+ however, limited to him. The "old resident" in the East becomes
+ increasingly convinced with every added year that an Oriental
+ is a different kind of human being from a Westerner. As he
+ becomes accustomed to the externals of the Oriental
+ civilization, he forgets its comical aspects, he even comes to
+ appreciate many of its conveniences. But in proportion as he
+ becomes familiar with its languages, its modes of thought and
+ feeling, its business methods, its politics, its literature,
+ its amusements, does he increasingly realize the gulf set
+ between an Oriental and an Occidental. The inner life of the
+ spirit of an Oriental would be utterly inane, spiritless to the
+ average Occidental. The "old resident" accordingly knows from
+ long experience what the tourist only guesses from a hasty
+ glance, that the characteristic differences distinguishing the
+ peoples of the East and the West are racial and ineradicable.
+ An Oriental is an Oriental, and that is the ultimate, only
+ thoroughgoing explanation of his nature.</p>
+
+ <p>The conception of the tourist and the "old resident" crops
+ up in nearly every article and book touching on Far Eastern
+ peoples. Whatever the point of remark or criticism, if it
+ strikes the writer as different from the custom of Occidentals,
+ it is laid to the account of Orientalism.</p>
+
+ <p>This conception, however, of distinguishing Oriental
+ characteristics, is not confined to popular writers and
+ unscientific persons. Even professed and eminent sociologists
+ advocate it. Prof. Le Bon, in his sophistic volume on the
+ "Psychology of Peoples," advocates it strenuously. A few
+ quotations from this interesting work may not be out of
+ place.</p>
+
+ <p>"The object of this work is to describe the
+ psycho<a name='Page_424'
+ id="Page_424"></a>logical characteristics which constitute
+ the soul of races, and to show how the history of a people
+ and its civilization is determined by these
+ characteristics."<a name='FNanchor_DH_113'
+ id="FNanchor_DH_113"></a><a href='#Footnote_DH_113'><sup>[DH]</sup></a>
+ "The point that has remained most clearly fixed in mind,
+ after long journeys through the most varied countries, is
+ that each people possesses a mental constitution as
+ unaltering as its anatomical characteristics, a constitution
+ which is the source of its sentiments, thoughts,
+ institutions, beliefs, and arts."<a name='FNanchor_DI_114'
+ id="FNanchor_DI_114"></a><a href='#Footnote_DI_114'><sup>[DI]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"The life of a people, its institutions, beliefs, and arts,
+ are but the visible expression of its invisible soul. For a
+ people to transform its institutions, beliefs, and arts it must
+ first transform its soul."<a name='FNanchor_DJ_115'
+ id="FNanchor_DJ_115"></a><a href='#Footnote_DJ_115'><sup>[DJ]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Each race possesses a constitution as unvarying as its
+ anatomical constitution. There seems to be no doubt that the
+ former corresponds to a certain special structure of the
+ brain."<a name='FNanchor_DK_116'
+ id="FNanchor_DK_116"></a><a href='#Footnote_DK_116'><sup>[DK]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"A negro or a Japanese may easily take a university degree
+ or become a lawyer; the sort of varnish he thus acquires is,
+ however, quite superficial and has no influence on his mental
+ constitution. What no education can give him, because they are
+ created by heredity alone, are the forms of thought, the logic,
+ and above all the character of the Western
+ man."<a name='FNanchor_DL_117'
+ id="FNanchor_DL_117"></a><a href='#Footnote_DL_117'><sup>[DL]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Cross-breeding constitutes the only infallible means at our
+ disposal of transforming in a fundamental manner the character
+ of a people, heredity being the only force powerful enough to
+ contend with heredity. Cross-breeding allows of the creation of
+ a new race, possessing new physical and psychological
+ characteristics."<a name='FNanchor_DM_118'
+ id="FNanchor_DM_118"></a><a href='#Footnote_DM_118'><sup>[DM]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Such, then, being the opinion of travelers, residents, and
+ professional sociologists, it is not to be lightly rejected.
+ Nor has it been lightly rejected by the writer. For years he
+ agreed with this view, but repeated study of the problem has
+ convinced him of the fallacy of both the conception and the
+ argument, and has brought him to the position maintained in
+ this work.</p>
+
+ <p>The characteristics differentiating Occidental and</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_425'
+ id="Page_425"></a>Oriental peoples and civilizations are
+ undoubtedly great. But they are differences of social
+ evolution and rest on social, not on biological heredity.
+ Anatomical differences are natal, racial, and necessary. Not
+ so with social characteristics and differences. These are
+ acquired by each individual chiefly after birth, and depend
+ on social environment which determines the education from
+ infancy upward. Furthermore, an entire nation or race, if
+ subjected to the right social environment, may profoundly
+ transform its institutions, beliefs, and arts, which in turn
+ transform what Prof. Le Bon and kindred writers call the
+ invisible "race soul." Racial activity produces race
+ character, for "Function produces organism." I cannot agree
+ with these writers in the view that the race soul is a given
+ fixed entity. Social psychogenesis is a present and a
+ progressive process. Japan is a capital illustration of it.
+ In the development of races and civilizations involution is
+ as continuous a process as evolution. Evolution is, indeed,
+ only one-half of the process. Without involution, evolution
+ is incomprehensible. And involution is the more interesting
+ half, as it is the more significant. In modern discussion
+ much that passes by the name of evolution is, in reality, a
+ discussion of involution.</p>
+
+ <p>The attentive reader will have discovered that the real
+ point of the discussion of Japanese characteristics given in
+ the preceding chapters has been on the point of involution. How
+ have these characteristics arisen? has been our ever-recurring
+ question. The answer has invariably tried to show their
+ relation to the social order. In this way we have traversed a
+ large number of leading characteristics of the Japanese. We
+ have seen how they arose, and also how they are now being
+ transformed by the new Occidentalized social order. We have
+ seen that not one of the characteristics examined is inherent,
+ that is, due to brain structure, to biological heredity. We
+ have concluded, therefore, that the psychical characteristics
+ which differentiate races are all but wholly social.</p>
+
+ <p>It is incumbent on advocates of the biological view to point
+ out in detail the distinguishing inherent traits of the Orient.
+ Let them also catalogue the essential psychic
+ <a name='Page_426'
+ id="Page_426"></a>characteristics of Occidentals. Such an
+ attempt is seldom made. And when it is made it is singularly
+ unconvincing. Although Prof. Le Bon states that the mental
+ constitution of races is as distinctive and unaltering as
+ their anatomical characteristics, he fails to tell us what
+ they are. This is a vital omission. If the differences are
+ as distinct as he asserts, it would seem to be an easy
+ matter to describe them. Whatever the clothing adopted, it
+ is an easy matter for one to distinguish a European from an
+ Asiatic, an Englishman from an Italian, a Japanese from a
+ Korean, a Chinaman from a Hindu. The anatomical
+ characteristics of races are clear and easily described. If
+ the psychic characteristics are equally distinct, why do not
+ they who assert this distinctness describe and catalogue
+ these differences?</p>
+
+ <p>Occasionally a popular writer makes something of an attempt
+ in this direction, but with astonishingly slight results. A
+ recent writer in the London <i>Daily Mail</i> has illustrated
+ afresh the futility of all attempts to catalogue the
+ distinguishing characteristics of the Oriental. He names the
+ inferior position assigned to women, the licentiousness of men,
+ licensed prostitution, lack of the play instinct among Oriental
+ boys, scorn of Occidental civilization, and the rude treatment
+ of foreigners. Many of his statements of facts are sadly at
+ fault. But supposing them to be true, are they the
+ differentiating characteristics of the Orient? Consider for a
+ moment what was the position of woman in ancient times in the
+ Occident, and what was the moral character of Occidental men?
+ Is not prostitution licensed to-day in the leading cities of
+ Europe? And is there not an unblushing prostitution in the
+ larger cities of England and America which would put to shame
+ the licensed prostitution of Japan? Are Orientals and their
+ civilization universally esteemed and considerately treated in
+ the Occident? Surely none of these are uniquely Oriental
+ characteristics, distinguishing them from Occidental peoples as
+ clearly as the anatomical characteristics of oblique eyes and
+ yellow skin.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Percival Lowell has made a careful philosophical effort
+ to discover the essential psychic nature of the Orient. He
+ describes it, as we have seen, as "Imperson<a name='Page_427'
+ id="Page_427"></a>ality." The failure of his effort we have
+ sufficiently considered.</p>
+
+ <p>There remain a few other characterizations of the Orient
+ that we may well examine briefly.</p>
+
+ <p>It has been stated that the characteristic psychic trait
+ distinguishing the East from the West is that the former is
+ intuitive, while the latter is logical. In olden times Oriental
+ instruction relied on the intuitions of the student. No
+ reliance was placed on the logical process. Religion, so far as
+ it was not ceremony and magic, was intuitional, "Satori,"
+ "Enlightenment," was the keyword. Each man attains
+ enlightenment by himself&mdash;through a flash of intuition.
+ Moral instruction likewise was intuitional. Dogmatic statements
+ were made whose truth the learner was to discover for himself;
+ no effort was made to explain them. Teaching aimed to go direct
+ to the point, not stopping to explain the way thither.</p>
+
+ <p>That this was and is a characteristic of the Orient cannot
+ be disputed. The facts are abundant and clear. But the question
+ is whether this is a racial psychic characteristic, such that
+ it inevitably controls the entire thinking of an Oriental,
+ whatever his education, and also whether the Occident is
+ conspicuously deficient in this psychic characteristic. Thus
+ stated, the question almost answers itself.</p>
+
+ <p>Orientals educated in Western methods of thought acquire
+ logical methods of reasoning and teaching. The old educational
+ methods of Japan are now obsolete. On the other hand,
+ intuitionalism is not unknown in the West. Mystics in religion
+ are all conspicuously intuitional. So too are Christian
+ scientists, faith-healers, and spiritualists. Great preachers
+ and poets are intuitionalists rather than logicians.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, if we look to ancient times, we shall see that
+ even Occidentals were dominated by intuitionalism. All
+ primitive knowledge was dominated by intuitions, and was as
+ absurd as many still prevalent Oriental conceptions of nature.
+ The bane of ancient science and philosophy was its reliance on
+ a priori considerations; that is, on intuition. Inductive,
+ carefully logical methods of thought, of science, of
+ philosophy, and even of religion, are rela<a name='Page_428'
+ id="Page_428"></a>tively modern developments of the
+ Occidental mind. We have learned to doubt intuitions
+ unverified by investigation and experimental evidence. The
+ wide adoption of the inductive method is a recent
+ characteristic of the West.</p>
+
+ <p>Modern progress has consisted in no slight degree in the
+ development of logical powers, and particularly in the power of
+ doubting and examining intuitions. To say that the East is
+ conspicuously intuitional and the West is conspicuously logical
+ is fairly true, but this misses the real difference. The West
+ is intuitional plus logical. It uses the intuitional method in
+ every department of life, but it does not stop with it. An
+ intuition is not accepted as truth until it has been subjected
+ by the reason to the most thorough criticism possible. The West
+ distrusts the unverified and unguided intuitive judgment. On
+ the other hand, the East is not inherently deficient in logical
+ power. When brought into contact with Occidental life, and
+ especially when educated in Occidental methods of thought, the
+ Oriental is not conspicuously deficient in logical ability.</p>
+
+ <p>This line of thought leads to the conclusion that the
+ psychic characteristics distinguishing the East from the West,
+ profound though they are, are sociological rather than
+ biological. They are the characteristics of the civilization
+ rather than of essential race nature.</p>
+
+ <p>A fact remarked by many thoughtful Occidentals is the
+ astonishing difficulty&mdash;indeed the impossibility&mdash;of
+ becoming genuinely and intimately acquainted with the Japanese.
+ Said a professor of Harvard University to the writer some years
+ ago: "Do you in Japan find it difficult to become truly
+ acquainted with the Japanese? We see many students here, but we
+ are unable to gain more than a superficial acquaintance. They
+ seem to be incrusted in a shell that we are unable to pierce."
+ The editor of the <i>Japan Mail</i>, speaking of the difficulty
+ of securing "genuinely intimate intercourse with the Japanese
+ people," says: "The language also is needed. Yet even when the
+ language is added, something still remains to be achieved, and
+ what that something is we have never been able to discover,
+ though we have been considering the subject for
+ <a name='Page_429'
+ id="Page_429"></a>thirty-three years. No foreigner has ever
+ yet succeeded in being admitted into the inner circle of
+ Japanese intercourse."</p>
+
+ <p>Is this a fact? If not, why is it so widespread a belief? If
+ it is a fact, what is the interpretation? Like most
+ generalizations it expresses both a truth and an error. As the
+ statement of a general experience, I believe it to be true. As
+ an assertion of universal application I believe it to be false.
+ As a truth, how is it to be explained? Is it due to difference
+ of race soul, and thus to racial antipathy, as some maintain?
+ If so, it must be a universal fact. This, however, is an error,
+ as we shall see. The explanation is not so hard to find as at
+ first appears.</p>
+
+ <p>The difficulty under consideration is due to two classes of
+ facts. The first is that the people have long been taught that
+ Occidentals desire to seize and possess their land. Although
+ the more enlightened have long since abandoned this fear and
+ suspicion, the people still suspect the stranger; they do not
+ propose to admit foreigners to any leading position in the
+ political life of the land. They do not implicitly trust the
+ foreigners, even when taken into their employ. That foreigners
+ should not be admitted to the inner circle of Japanese
+ political life, therefore, is not strange. Nor is it unique to
+ Japan. It is not done in any land except the United States.
+ Secondly, the diverse methods of social intercourse
+ characterizing the East and the West make a deep chasm between
+ individuals of these civilizations on coming into social
+ relations. The Oriental bows low, utters conventional "aisatsu"
+ salutations, listens respectfully, withholds his own opinion,
+ agrees with his vis-&agrave;-vis, weighs every word uttered
+ with a view to inferring the real meaning, for the genius of
+ the language requires him to assume that the real meaning is
+ not on the surface, and chooses his own language with the same
+ circumspection. The Occidental extends his hand for a hearty
+ shake&mdash;if he wishes to be friendly&mdash;looks his visitor
+ straight in the eye, speaks directly from his heart, without
+ suspicion or fear of being misunderstood, expresses his own
+ opinions unreservedly. The Occidental, accustomed to this
+ direct and open manner, spontaneously doubts the man who lacks
+ it. It is impossible <a name='Page_430'
+ id="Page_430"></a>for the Occidental to feel genuinely
+ acquainted with an Oriental who does not respond in
+ Occidental style of frank open intercourse. Furthermore, it
+ is not Japanese custom to open one's heart, to make friends
+ with everyone who comes along. The hail-fellow-well-met
+ characteristic of the Occident is a feature of its
+ individualism, that could not come into being in a feudal
+ civilization in which every respectable man carried two
+ swords with which to take instant vengeance on whoever
+ should malign or doubt him. Universal secretiveness and
+ conventionality, polite forms and veiled expressions, were
+ the necessary shields of a military feudalism. Both the
+ social order and the language were fitted to develop to a
+ high degree the power of attention to minutest details of
+ manner and speech and of inferring important matters from
+ slight indications. The whole social order served to develop
+ the intuitional method in human relations. Reliance was
+ placed more on what was not said than on what was clearly
+ expressed. A doubting state of mind was the necessary
+ psychological prerequisite for such an inferential system.
+ And doubt was directly taught. "Hito wo mireba dorobo to
+ omoye," "when you see a man, count him a robber," may be an
+ exaggeration, but this ancient proverb throws much light on
+ the Japanese chronic state of mind. Mutual
+ suspicion&mdash;and especially suspicion of
+ strangers&mdash;was the rule in Old Japan. Among themselves
+ the Japanese make relatively few intimate friends. They
+ remark on Occidental skill in making friends.</p>
+
+ <p>That the foreigner is not admitted to the inner social life
+ of the Japanese is likewise not difficult of explanation, if we
+ bear in mind the nature of that social life. Is it possible for
+ one who keeps concubines, who takes pleasure in geisha, and who
+ visits houses of prostitution, to converse freely and
+ confidentially with those who condemn these practices? Can he
+ who stands for a high-grade morality, who criticises in
+ unsparing measure the current morality of Japanese society,
+ expect to be admitted to its inner social circles? Impossible.
+ However friendly the relations of Japanese and foreigners may
+ be in business and in the diplomatic corps, the moral chasm
+ separating the social life of the Occident from that of the
+ Orient ef<a name='Page_431'
+ id="Page_431"></a>fectually prevents a foreigner from being
+ admitted to its inner social life.</p>
+
+ <p>It might be thought that immoral Occidentals would be so
+ admitted. Not so. The Japanese distinguish between Occidentals.
+ They know well that immoral Occidentals are not worthy of
+ trust. Although for a season they may hobnob together, the
+ intimacy is shallow and short-lived; it rests on lust and not
+ on profound sympathies of head and heart.</p>
+
+ <p>And this suggests the secret of genuine acquaintance. Men
+ become profoundly acquainted in proportion as they hold in
+ common serious views of life, and labor together for the
+ achievement of great moral ends. Now a gulf separates the
+ ordinary Japanese, even though educated, from the
+ serious-minded Occidental. Their views of life are well-nigh
+ antipodal. If their social intercourse is due only to the
+ accident of business or of social functions, what true intimacy
+ can possibly arise? The acquaintance can only be superficial.
+ Nothing binds the two together beyond the temporary and
+ accidental. Let them, however, become possessed of a common and
+ a serious view of life; let them strive for the attainment of
+ some great moral reform, which they feel of vital importance to
+ the welfare of the nation and the age, and immediately a bond
+ of connection and intercourse will be established which will
+ ripen into real intimacy.</p>
+
+ <p>I dispute the correctness of the generalization above
+ quoted, however, not only on theoretical considerations, but
+ also as a matter of experience. Among Christians, the
+ conditions are fulfilled for intimate relations between
+ Occidentals and Orientals which result, as a matter of fact, in
+ genuine and intimate friendship. The relations existing between
+ many missionaries and the native Christians and pastors refute
+ the assertion of the editor of the <i>Japan Mail</i> that, "no
+ foreigner has ever yet succeeded in being admitted into the
+ inner circle of Japanese intercourse." This assertion is
+ doubtless true in regard to the relation of foreigners to
+ non-Christian society. The reason, for the fact, however, is
+ not because one is Occidental and the other Oriental in psychic
+ nature, but solely because of diverse moral views, aims, and
+ conduct.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_432'
+ id="Page_432"></a>It is not the contention of these pages,
+ however, that intimate friendships between Occidental and
+ Oriental Christians are as easily formed as between members
+ of two Occidental nations. Although common views of life,
+ and common moral aims and conduct may provide the requisite
+ foundations for such intimate friendships, the diverse
+ methods of thought and of social intercourse may still serve
+ to hinder their formation. It is probably a fact that
+ missionaries experience greater difficulty in making genuine
+ intimate friendships with Japanese Christians than with any
+ other race on the face of the globe. The reasons for this
+ fact are manifold. The Japanese racial ambition manifests
+ itself not only in the sphere of political life; it does not
+ take kindly to foreign control in any line. The churches
+ manifest this characteristic. It is a cause of suspicion of
+ the foreign missionary and separation from him; it has
+ broken up many a friendship. Intimacy between missionaries
+ and leading native pastors and evangelists was more common
+ in the earlier days of Christian work than more recently,
+ because the Japanese church organization has recently
+ developed a self-consciousness and an ambition for organic
+ independence which have led to mutual criticisms.</p>
+
+ <p>Furthermore, Japanese Christians are still Japanese. Their
+ methods of social intercourse are Oriental; they bow
+ profoundly, they repeat formal salutations, they refrain from
+ free expression of personal opinion and preference. The crust
+ of polite etiquette remains. The foreigner must learn to
+ appreciate it before he can penetrate to the kindly, sincere,
+ earnest heart. This the foreigner does not easily do, much to
+ the detriment of his work.</p>
+
+ <p>And on the other hand, before the Oriental can penetrate to
+ the kindly, sincere, and earnest heart of the Occidental, he
+ must abandon the inferential method; he must not judge the
+ foreigner by what is left unsaid nor by slight turns of that
+ which is said, but by the whole thought as fully expressed. In
+ other words, as the Occidental must learn and must trust to
+ Oriental methods of social intercourse, so the Oriental must
+ learn and must trust to the corresponding Occidental methods.
+ The difficulty is great in either case, though of an opposite
+ nature. <a name='Page_433'
+ id="Page_433"></a>Which has the greater difficulty is a
+ question I do not attempt to solve.</p>
+
+ <p>Another generalization as to the essential difference
+ marking Oriental and Occidental psychic natures is that the
+ former is meditative and appreciative, and the latter is
+ active. This too is a characterization of no little truth. The
+ easy-going, time-forgetting, dreaming characteristics of the
+ Orient are in marked contrast to the rush, bustle, and hurry of
+ the Occident. One of the first and most forcible impressions
+ made on the Oriental visiting the West is the tremendous energy
+ displayed even in the ordinary everyday business. In the home
+ there is haste; on the streets men, women, and children are
+ "always on the run." It must seem to be literally so, when the
+ walk of the Occidental is compared with the slow, crawling rate
+ at which the Oriental moves. Horse cars, electric cars, steam
+ cars, run at high speed through crowded streets. Conversation
+ is short and hurried. Visits are curtailed&mdash;hardly more
+ than glimpses. Everyone is so nervously busy as to have no time
+ for calm, undisturbed thought. So does the Orient criticise and
+ characterize the Occident.</p>
+
+ <p>In the Orient, on the contrary, time is nothing. Walking is
+ slow, business is deliberate, visiting is a fine art of bows
+ and conventional phrases preliminary to the real purpose of the
+ call; amusements even are long-drawn-out, theatrical
+ performances requiring an entire day. In the home there is no
+ hurry, on the street there is no rush. To the Occidental, the
+ Oriental seems so absorbed in a dream life that the actual life
+ is to him but a dream.</p>
+
+ <p>If the characterization we are considering is meant to
+ signify that the Orient possesses a power of appreciation not
+ possessed by the West, then it seems to me an error. The
+ Occident is not deficient in appreciation. A better statement
+ of the difference suggested by the above characterization is
+ that Western civilization is an expression of Will, whereas
+ Eastern civilization is an expression of subordination to the
+ superior&mdash;to Fate. This feature of Oriental character is
+ due to the fact that the Orient is still as a whole communal in
+ its social order, whereas the Occident is individualistic. In
+ the West each man makes <a name='Page_434'
+ id="Page_434"></a>his own fortune; his position in society
+ rests on his own individual energy. He is free to exert it
+ at will. Society praises him in proportion as he manifests
+ energy, grit, independence, and persistence. The social
+ order selects such men and advances them in political, in
+ business, in social, and in academic life. The energetic,
+ active characteristics of the West are due, then, to the
+ high development of individualism. The entire Occidental
+ civilization is an expression of free will.</p>
+
+ <p>The communal nature of the Orient has not systematically
+ given room for individual progress. The independent, driving
+ man has been condemned socially. Submission, absolute and
+ perpetual, to parents, to lord, to ancestors, to Fate, has been
+ the ruling idea of each man's life. Controlled by such ideas,
+ the easy-going, time-ignoring, dreaming, contemplative
+ life&mdash;if you so choose to call it&mdash;of the Orient is a
+ necessary consequence.</p>
+
+ <p>But has this characteristic become congenital, or is it
+ still only social? Is dreamy appreciation now an inborn racial
+ characteristic of Oriental mind, while active driving energy is
+ the corresponding essential trait of Occidental mind? Or may
+ these characteristics change with the social order? I have no
+ hesitancy whatever in advocating the latter position. The way
+ in which Young Japan, clad in European clothing, using watches
+ and running on "railroad time," has dropped the slow-going
+ style of Old Japan and has acquired habits of rapid walking,
+ direct clear-cut conversation, and punctuality in business and
+ travel (comparatively speaking) proves conclusively the
+ correctness of my contention. New Japan is entering into the
+ hurry and bustle of Occidental life, because, in contact with
+ the West, she has adopted in a large measure, though not yet
+ completely, the individualism of the West.</p>
+
+ <p>As time goes on, Japanese civilization will increasingly
+ manifest the phenomena of will, and will proportionally become
+ assimilated to the civilization of the West. But the ultimate
+ cause of this transformation in civilization will be the
+ increasing introduction of individualism into the social order.
+ And this is possible only because the so-called racial
+ characteristics are sociological, and not <a name='Page_435'
+ id="Page_435"></a>biological. The transformation of "race
+ soul" therefore does not depend on the intermarriage of
+ diverse races, but only on the adoption of new ideas and
+ practices through social intercourse.</p>
+
+ <p>We conclude, then, that the only thoroughgoing
+ interpretation of the differences characterizing Eastern and
+ Western psychic nature is a social one, and that social
+ differences can be adequately expressed only by contrasting the
+ fundamental ideas ruling their respective social orders,
+ namely, communalism for the East and individualism for the
+ West.</p>
+
+ <p>The unity that pervades the Orient, if it is not due to the
+ inheritance of a common psychic nature, to what is it due?
+ Surely to the possession of a common civilization and social
+ order. It would be hard to prove that Japanese, Koreans,
+ Chinese, Siamese, Burmese, Hindus (and how many distinct races
+ does the ethnologist find in India), Persians, and Turks are
+ all descendants from a common ancestry and are possessed
+ therefore by physical heredity of a common racial psychic
+ nature. Yet such is the requirement of the theory we are
+ opposing. That the races inhabiting the Asiatic continent have
+ had from ancient times mutual social intercourse, whereby the
+ civilization, mental, moral, and spiritual, of the most
+ developed has passed to the other nations, so that China has
+ dominated Eastern Asia, and India has profoundly influenced all
+ the races inhabiting Asia, is an indisputable fact. The psychic
+ unity of the Orient is a civilizational, a social unity, as is
+ also the psychic unity of the Occident. The reason why the
+ Occident is so distinct from the Orient in social, in psychic,
+ and in civilizational characteristics is because these two
+ great branches of the human race have undergone isolated
+ evolution. Isolated biological evolution has produced the
+ diverse races. These are now fixed physical types, which can be
+ modified only by intermarriage. But although isolated social
+ evolution has produced diverse social and psychic
+ characteristics these are not fixed and unalterable. To
+ transform psychic and social characteristics, intimate social
+ intercourse, under special conditions, is needful alone.</p>
+
+ <p>If the characteristics differentiating the Eastern from
+ <a name='Page_436'
+ id="Page_436"></a>the Western peoples are only social, it
+ might be supposed that the results of association would be
+ mutual, the East influencing the West as much as the West
+ influences the East, both at last finding a common level.
+ Such a result, however, is impossible, from the laws
+ regulating psychic and social intercourse. The less
+ developed psychic nature can have no appreciable effect on
+ the more highly developed, just as undeveloped art cannot
+ influence highly developed art, nor crude science and
+ philosophy highly developed science and philosophy. The law
+ governing the relations of diverse civilizations when
+ brought into contact is not like the law of hydrostatics,
+ whereby two bodies of water of different levels, brought
+ into free communication, finally find a common level,
+ determined by the difference in level and their respective
+ masses. In social intercourse the higher civilization is
+ unaffected by the lower, in any important way, while the
+ lower is mightily modified, and in sufficient time is lifted
+ to the grade of the higher in all important respects. This
+ is a law of great significance. The Orient is becoming
+ Occidentalized to a degree and at a rate little realized by
+ travelers and not fully appreciated by the Orientals
+ themselves. They know that mighty changes have taken place,
+ and are now taking place, but they do not fully recognize
+ their nature, and the multitudes do not know the source of
+ these changes. In so far as the East has surpassed the West
+ in any important direction will the East influence the
+ West.</p>
+
+ <p>In saying, then, as we did in our first chapter, that the
+ Japanese have already formed an Occidento-Oriental
+ civilization, we meant that Japan has introduced not only the
+ external and mechanical elements of Western civilization into
+ her new social order, but also its inner and determinative
+ principle&mdash;individualism. In saying that, as the Ethiopian
+ cannot change his skin nor the leopard his spots, so Japan will
+ never become thoroughly Occidentalized, we did not intend to
+ say that she was so Oriental in her physiological nature, in
+ her "race soul," that she could make no fundamental social
+ transformation; but merely that she has a social heredity that
+ will always and inevitably modify every Occidental custom and
+ conception <a name='Page_437'
+ id="Page_437"></a>that may be brought to this land. Although
+ in time Japan may completely individualize her social order,
+ it will never be identical with that of the West. It will
+ always bear the marks of her Oriental social heredity in
+ innumerable details. The Occidental traveler will always be
+ impressed with the Orientalisms of her civilization.
+ Although the Oriental familiar with the details of the
+ pre-Meiji social order will be impressed with what seems to
+ him the complete Occidentalization of her new civilization
+ and social order, although to-day communalism and
+ individualism are the distinguishing characteristics
+ respectively of the East and the West, they are not
+ necessary characteristics due to inherent race nature. The
+ Orient is sure to become increasingly individualistic. The
+ future evolution of the great races of the earth is to be
+ increasingly convergent in all the essentials of individual
+ and racial prosperity, but in countless non-essential
+ details the customs of the past will remain, to give each
+ race and nation distinctive psychic and social
+ characteristics.</p>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='XXXVII'
+ id="XXXVII"></a><a name='Page_438'
+ id="Page_438"></a>XXXVII</h2>
+
+ <h3>GENERAL CONCLUSIONS</h3>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The aim of the present work has been to gain insight into
+ the real nature of both Japanese character and its modern
+ transformation.</p>
+
+ <p>In doing this we have necessarily entered the domain of
+ social science, where we have been compelled to take issue with
+ many, to us, defective conceptions. Our discussions of social
+ principles have, however, been narrowly limited. We have
+ confined our attention to the interpretation of those social
+ and psychic characteristics differentiating the Japanese from
+ other races. Our chief contention has been that these
+ characteristics are due to the nature of the social order that
+ has prevailed among them, and not to the inherent nature of the
+ people; and that the evolution of the psychic characteristics
+ of all races is due to social more than to biological
+ evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>This position and the discussions offered to prove it imply
+ more than has been explicitly stated. In this closing chapter
+ it seems desirable to state concisely, and therefore with
+ technical terminology, some of the more fundamental principles
+ of social philosophy assumed or implied in this work. Brevity
+ requires that this statement take the form of dogmatic
+ propositions and unillustrated abstractions. The average reader
+ will find little to interest him, and is accordingly advised to
+ omit it entirely.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us first clearly see that we have made no effort to
+ account for the origin or inherent nature of psychic life. That
+ association or the social order is the original producing cause
+ of psychic life is by no means our contention. Given the
+ psychic nature as we find it in man, the problem is to account
+ for its diverse manifestation in the different races and
+ civilizations. This, and this alone, has been our problem.</p>
+
+ <p><a name='Page_439'
+ id="Page_439"></a>Psychic nature is the sole and final cause
+ of social life. Without psychic nature there could be no
+ association. Personalized psychic nature is the sole and
+ final cause of human social life. Numberless conditions
+ determine by stimulation or imitation the manifestation of
+ psychic life. These conditions differ for different lands,
+ peoples, ages, and political relations, producing diverse
+ social orders for each separated group. These diverse social
+ orders determine the psychic characteristics differentiating
+ the various groups. Social life and social order are
+ objective expressions of a reality of which psychic nature
+ is the subjective and therefore deeper reality. The two
+ cannot be ruthlessly torn apart and remain complete, nor can
+ they be understood, or completely interpreted, apart from
+ each other. They are correlative and complementary
+ expressions for the same reality.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly physical and psychical life are to be conceived as
+ profoundly interrelated, being respectively objective and
+ subjective expressions of a reality incapable of separate
+ interpretation. Yet each has markedly distinct characteristics
+ and is the subject of distinct laws of activity and
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p>Heredity is of two kinds, biological heredity, transmitting
+ innate characters, and social heredity, transmitting acquired
+ habits and their physiological results.</p>
+
+ <p>The innate characters transmitted by biological heredity are
+ either physiological, anatomical, or psychical.</p>
+
+ <p>The acquired habits transmitted by social heredity are
+ essentially psychical: but they may result in acquired
+ physiological, or even anatomical, characters. Here belong the
+ physiological effects of diet, housing, clothing, occupation,
+ education, etc., which have not yet been taken up and
+ incorporated into the innate physiological constitution by
+ biological heredity. The physiological effects of social
+ heredity are through the daily physical life and activity of
+ each individual, in accordance with the requirements of the
+ social order in which he is reared; and these are reached
+ through its influence on the acquired psychical habits, which
+ are transmitted through association, imitation, and the control
+ of activities by language and education. <a name='Page_440'
+ id="Page_440"></a>In biological heredity the transmission is
+ exclusively prior to birth, while in social heredity it is
+ chiefly, if not entirely, after birth.</p>
+
+ <p>In social heredity the transmission is not determined by
+ consanguinity, and therefore extends to members of alien races
+ when they are incorporated in the social organization.</p>
+
+ <p>While the transmission of biological inheritance to each
+ offspring is inevitable and complete, that of social
+ inheritance is largely voluntary. It is also more or less
+ complete, according to the knowledge, purpose, and effort of
+ the individuals concerned. The transmission of acquired social
+ and psychic characteristics even from parents to offspring
+ depends on their association, and the imposition on their
+ offspring by parents of their own modes of life. Sharing with
+ parents their bodily activities, their language and their
+ environment, both social and psychical, the offspring
+ necessarily develop psychic and social characteristics similar
+ to those of the parents.</p>
+
+ <p>Evolution takes place through the transformation of
+ inheritance. The evolution of <i>innate</i> physiological,
+ anatomical, and psychical characters takes place through the
+ transformation of biological inheritance; and the evolution of
+ society and of <i>acquired</i> characters chiefly through the
+ transformation of social inheritance.</p>
+
+ <p>Nearly all biologists admit that change in the form of
+ natural selection is one of the principles transforming
+ biological inheritance; but whether the <i>acquired</i>
+ characters of parents are even in the least degree inherited by
+ the offspring, thus becoming <i>innate</i> characters, is one
+ of the important biological problems of recent years. Into this
+ problem we have not entered, though we recognize that it must
+ have important bearings on sociological science. Briefly
+ stated, it is this: Do social and psychic characteristics,
+ acquired by individuals or by groups of individuals, affect the
+ intrinsic inherited and transmissible psychic nature in such
+ ways that offspring, by the mere fact of being offspring,
+ necessarily manifest those characteristics, regardless of the
+ particular social environment in which they may be reared? Into
+ this problem, thus broadly stated, we do not enter. Limiting
+ our view to <a name='Page_441'
+ id="Page_441"></a>those advanced races which manifest
+ practically equal physiological development, we ask whether
+ or not their differentiating psychic characteristics are due
+ to modifications of their inherited and intrinsic psychic
+ nature, such that those characteristics are necessarily
+ transmitted to offspring through intrinsic biological
+ heredity. Current popular and scientific sociology seems to
+ give an affirmative answer to this question. The reply of
+ this work emphasizes the negative. Although it is not
+ maintained that there is absolutely no difference whatever
+ in the psychic nature of the different races, or that the
+ psychic differences distinguishing the races are entirely
+ transmitted by social heredity, it is maintained that this
+ is very largely the case&mdash;far more largely than is
+ usually perceived or admitted. Such inherent differences, if
+ they exist, are so vague and intangible as practically to
+ defy discovery and clear statement, and may be practically
+ ignored.</p>
+
+ <p>The only adequate disproof of the position here maintained
+ would be about as follows. Let a Japanese infant be reared in
+ an American home from infancy, not only fed and clothed as an
+ American, but loved as a member of the family and trained as
+ carefully and affectionately as one's own child. The full
+ conditions require that not only the child himself, but
+ everyone else, be ignorant of his parentage and race in order
+ that he be thought to be, and be treated as though he were, a
+ genuine member of his adopting home and people. What would be
+ the psychic characteristics of that child when grown to
+ manhood? If he should manifest psychic traits like those of his
+ Japanese parents, if he should think in the Japanese order, if
+ he should have a tendency to use prepositions as postpositions,
+ if he should drop pronouns and should use honorific words in
+ their place, if he should be markedly suspicious and
+ inferential, if he should bow in making his salutations rather
+ than shake hands, if he should show marked preference for
+ sitting on the floor rather than on chairs, and for chopsticks
+ to knives and forks, and if developing powers as an artist he
+ should naturally paint Japanese pictures, Japanese landscapes,
+ and Japanese faces, finding himself unable to draw according to
+ the canons of Western art, if on developing poetic tastes he
+ should find <a name='Page_442'
+ id="Page_442"></a>special pleasure in seventeen syllable or
+ thirty-one syllable exclamatory poems, finding little
+ interest in Longfellow or Shakespeare, if, in short, he
+ should develop a predilection for any distinctive Japanese
+ custom, habit of thought, method of speech, emotion or
+ volition, it would evidently be due to his intrinsic
+ heredity. If in all these matters, however, he should prove
+ to be like an American, acquiring an American education like
+ any American boy, and if on being brought to Japan, at, say,
+ thirty years of age, still supposing himself to be an
+ American, he should have equal difficulty with any American
+ in mastering the language and adapting himself to and
+ understanding the Japanese people, then it would follow that
+ his psychic characteristics have been inherited socially and
+ he is what he is, nationally, because of his social
+ heritage. Such a result would show that the psychic traits
+ differentiating races are social and not intrinsic.</p>
+
+ <p>We have limited our discussion to the advanced races because
+ the problem is then relatively simple, the material abundant,
+ and the issue clear. Much discussion in theology, psychology,
+ and sociology is futile because it concerns that practically
+ mythical being, the aboriginal man, about whose social and
+ psychic life no one knows anything, and any theorizer can say
+ what he chooses without fear of shipwreck on incontrovertible
+ facts. Whether the lowest races known to-day are differentiated
+ from the highest only by acquired social and psychic
+ characteristics, or also by differences of psychic nature, may
+ perhaps be an open question. However this may be, the case is
+ fairly clear in regard to the higher races inhabiting the
+ earth. Their differentiating psychic characteristics are, for
+ the most part, not due to diverse psychic nature, but to
+ diverse social orders, while the transmission of these
+ characteristics takes place, as a matter of observation,
+ through social heredity.</p>
+
+ <p>The discussions of this work are exclusively concerned with
+ the evolution of society and of psychic characteristics. But
+ even in this limited field we have not attempted to cover the
+ whole ground. We have given our chief attention to the
+ interdependence of social phenomena and psychic
+ characteristics. The causes of evolution in the
+ <a name='Page_443'
+ id="Page_443"></a>social order have not been the main
+ subject under discussion.</p>
+
+ <p>Segregation is the essential condition on which divergent
+ evolution is dependent. Many forms of segregation may be
+ specified, under each of which evolution proceeds on a
+ different principle. In brief, it may be said that biological
+ segregation prevents the swamping of incipient organic
+ divergences, by preventing the intermarriage of those
+ possessing such divergences, while social segregation prevents
+ the swamping of incipient social divergences and their
+ corresponding incipient psychic characteristics by preventing
+ the inter-association of those having such tendencies.</p>
+
+ <p>Biologically segregated groups undergo divergent biological
+ evolution through segregated marriage, producing distinct
+ physiological unities or racial types. These racial types are
+ now relatively fixed and can be appreciably modified only by
+ the intermarriage of different races.</p>
+
+ <p>Socially segregated groups undergo divergent social
+ evolution through the segregated social intercourse of the
+ members of each group, producing distinct civilizational and
+ psychic unities. The differences between these social or
+ psychic groups are relatively plastic and are the subject of
+ constant variation. The modification of the social and psychic
+ characteristics of a group takes place through a change in the
+ physical or social environment of the group, or through the
+ rise of strong personalities within the group.</p>
+
+ <p>Biologically distinct groups may thus be unified
+ biologically only by intermarriage, while socially physically
+ distinct groups may be unified socially and psychically without
+ intermarriage, but exclusively through association.</p>
+
+ <p>The psychic defects of the offspring of interracial
+ marriages may be largely due to the defective social heredity
+ transmitted by the parents, rather than to mixed intrinsic
+ inheritance.</p>
+
+ <p>The term "race soul" is a convenient, though delusive,
+ because highly figurative, expression for the psychic unity of
+ a social group. The unity is due entirely to the more or less
+ complete possession by the individual members of
+ <a name='Page_444'
+ id="Page_444"></a>the group, of common ideas, ideals,
+ methods of thought, emotions, volitions, customs,
+ institutions, arts, and beliefs.</p>
+
+ <p>Each individual is molded psychically to the type of the
+ social group in which he is reared. The "race soul" is thus
+ imposed on the individual by conscious and unconscious
+ education.</p>
+
+ <p>The psychic evolution of social groups is divergent so long
+ as isolation is fairly complete, but becomes convergent in
+ proportion to association. Perfect association produces
+ complete psychic unity, though it should be noted that perfect
+ association of geographically separated social groups is
+ practically unattainable.</p>
+
+ <p>The essential elements constituting national unity are
+ psychic and social, not biological. Racial unity is biological.
+ The same race may accordingly separate into different social
+ and psychic groups. And members of different races may belong
+ to the same social psychic group.</p>
+
+ <p>The so-called "race soul" of many sociologists is,
+ therefore, a fiction and indicates mental confusion. The term
+ refers not to the racial unity of inherent psychic nature, but
+ only to the social unity of socially inherited psychic
+ characteristics. Groups thus socially unified may or may not be
+ racially homogeneous. In point of fact no race is strictly
+ homogeneous biologically, nor is any social group completely
+ unified psychically.</p>
+
+ <p>In sociology as in biology function produces organism, that
+ is to say, activity produces the organ or faculty fitted to
+ perform the activity.<a name='FNanchor_2_119'
+ id="FNanchor_2_119"></a><a href='#Footnote_2_119'><sup>[DN]</sup></a>
+ The psychic characteristics differentiating social groups
+ are chiefly, and perhaps exclusively, due to diverse social
+ activities. These activities are determined by innumerable
+ causes, geographical, climatic, economic, political,
+ intellectual, emotional, and personal.</p>
+
+ <p>The plasticity of a psychic group is due to the plasticity
+ of the infant mind and brain, which is wonderfully capable of
+ acquiring the language, thought forms, and differentiating
+ <a name='Page_445'
+ id="Page_445"></a>characteristics of any group in which it
+ may be reared. To what extent this plasticity extends only
+ carefully conducted experiments can show. In the higher
+ Asiatic and European races we find it to be much greater
+ than is generally supposed to be the case, but it is not
+ improbable that the lowest races possess it in a much lower
+ degree.</p>
+
+ <p>The relative fixity of a psychic group is due to the fact
+ that in full-grown adults, who form the majority of every
+ group, function has produced structure. Body, brain, and mind
+ have "set" or crystallized in the mold provided by the social
+ order. Influences sufficiently powerful to transform the young
+ have little effect on the adult. The relative fixity of a
+ psychic group is also due to the difficulty&mdash;well-nigh
+ impossibility&mdash;of bringing new psychic influences to bear
+ on all members of the group simultaneously. The majority, being
+ oblivious to the new psychic forces, maintain the old psychic
+ r&eacute;gime. The difficulty of reform, of transforming a
+ social order, is principally due to these two causes.</p>
+
+ <p>The "character" of a people (psychic group) consists of its
+ more or less unconscious, because structuralized or incarnate,
+ ideas, emotions, and volitions. Chief among them are those
+ concerning the character of God, the nature and value of man
+ and woman, the necessary relation of character to destiny, the
+ nature and meaning of life and death, and the nature and the
+ authority of moral law. In proportion as the social order
+ incorporates high or low views on these vital subjects, is the
+ character of the people elevated and strong, or debased and
+ weak.</p>
+
+ <p>The destiny of a people, and the r&ocirc;le it plays in
+ history, are determined not by chance nor yet by environment,
+ but in the last analysis by its own character. Yet this
+ character is not something given it complete at the start, an
+ intrinsic psychical inheritance, nor is it dependent for
+ transmission on biological heredity, passing only from parents
+ to offspring. Character belongs to the sphere of social psychic
+ life and is the subject of social heredity. Through social
+ intercourse the moral character dominating a psychic group may
+ be transmitted to members of an alien psychic group. This
+ usually takes place through <a name='Page_446'
+ id="Page_446"></a>missionary activity. The moral character
+ of a psychic group may in this way be fundamentally
+ transformed, and with character, destiny.</p>
+
+ <p>Floating ideas, not yet woven into the warp and woof of
+ life, not yet incarnate in the individual or in the social
+ order, have little influence on the character of the individual
+ or the group, however beautiful, true, or elevating such ideas
+ may be in themselves. The character of a people is to be
+ judged, therefore, not by the beauty or elevation of every idea
+ that may be found in its literature, but only by those ideas
+ that have been assimilated, that have become incorporated into
+ the social order. These determine a people's character and
+ destiny. According as these ideas persist in the social order,
+ is its character permanent.</p>
+
+ <p>Progress consists of expanding life, communal and
+ individual, extensive and intensive, physical and psychical.
+ True progress is balanced. High communal development, that is,
+ highly organized society, is impossible without the wide
+ attainment of highly developed individuals. Progressive mastery
+ of nature likewise is impossible apart from growing psychic
+ development in all its branches, emotional, intellectual and
+ volitional, communal and individual.</p>
+
+ <p>Historically, communalism is the first principle to emerge
+ in consciousness. To succeed, however, it must be accompanied
+ by at least a certain degree of individualism, even though it
+ be quite implicit. The full development of the communal
+ principle is impossible apart from the correspondingly full
+ development of the individual principle. These are
+ complementary principles of progress. Each alone is impossible.
+ In proportion as either is emphasized at the expense of the
+ other, is progress impeded. Arrested civilizations are due to
+ the disproportionate and excessive development of one or the
+ other of these principles.</p>
+
+ <p>Personality, expressing and realizing itself in communal and
+ individual life, in objective and subjective forms, is at once
+ the cause and the goal of progress. Social and psychic
+ evolution are, therefore, in the last analysis, personal
+ processes. The irreducible and final <a name='Page_447'
+ id="Page_447"></a>factor in social evolution and in social
+ science is personality; for personality is the determinative
+ factor of a human being.</p>
+
+ <p>Progress in personal development consists of increasing
+ extent and accuracy of knowledge, refinement and elevation of
+ emotions, and nobility and reliability of volitions. Progress
+ in personal development requires the individual to pass from
+ objective heterocratic to subjective autocratic or
+ self-regulative ethical life. He must pass from the traditional
+ to the enlightened, from the communal to the individualistic
+ stage in ethics and religion. He must feel with increasing
+ force the binding nature of the supra-communal sanctions for
+ communal and individual life, accepting the highest dictates of
+ the enlightened moral consciousness as the laws of the
+ universe. But this means that the individual must secure
+ increasing insight into the immutable and eternal laws of
+ spiritual being and must identify his personal interests, his
+ very self with those laws, with the Heart of the. Universe,
+ with God himself. Only so will he become completely autonomous,
+ self-regulative. Only thus will the individual become and
+ remain an altruistic communo-individual, fitted to meet and
+ survive the relaxation of the historic communal and
+ supra-communal sanctions for communal and individual life, a
+ relaxation induced by growing political liberty and growing
+ intellectual rejection of primitive or defective religious
+ beliefs.</p>
+
+ <p>Progress in personality is thus at bottom an
+ ethico-religious process. The wide attainment of developed
+ personality permits the formation of enlarging highly organized
+ psychic groups, accompanied by increasing specialization of its
+ individual members. This communal expansion, ramifying
+ organization and individual specialization, secures increasing
+ extensive and intensive intellectual understanding of the
+ universe, and this in turn active mastery of nature, with all
+ the consequences of growing ease and richness of life.</p>
+
+ <p>Ethico-religious, autonomous personality is thus the
+ tap-root of highly developed and permanently progressive
+ civilizations. Personality is, therefore, the criterion of
+ progress. Mere ease of physical life, freedom from
+ anx<a name='Page_448'
+ id="Page_448"></a>iety, light-hearted, care-free happiness,
+ mastery of nature, material civilization, highly developed
+ art, literature, and music, or even refined culture, are
+ partial and inadequate, if not positively false,
+ criteria.</p>
+
+ <p>Personality, as a nature, is an inherent psychic heritage
+ shared by all human beings. It is transmitted only from parents
+ to offspring, and its transmission depends only on that
+ relation. Personality, as a varying psychic characteristic, is
+ a matter of social inheritance, and is profoundly dependent,
+ therefore, on the nature of the social order and the social
+ evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>Religion, as incorporated in life, is the most important
+ single factor determining the personality and character of its
+ adherents, either hindering or promoting their progress.</p>
+
+ <p>Japanese social and psychic evolution have in no respects
+ violated the universal laws of evolution. Japanese personal and
+ other psychic characteristics are the product not of essential,
+ but of social inheritance and social evolution. Japan has
+ recently entered into a new social inheritance from which she
+ is joyfully accepting new conceptions and principles of
+ communal and individual life. These she is working into her
+ social organism.</p>
+
+ <p>Already these are producing profound, and we may believe
+ permanent, transformations in her social order and
+ correspondingly profound and permanent transformations of her
+ character and destiny.</p>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+
+ <h3>THE END</h3>
+ <hr style='width:65%;' />
+
+ <h2><a name='INDEX'
+ id="INDEX"></a><a name='Page_449'
+ id="Page_449"></a>INDEX</h2>"Abdication": in church work,
+ <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>due to past social conditions,
+ <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>explains prominence of young men,
+ <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> , <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>&AElig;sthetic characteristics: development unbalanced,
+ <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>speech and conduct,
+ <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>development of masses,
+ <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>development, social not racial,
+ <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Adoption; family maintained, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Affection: post-marital,
+ <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>its expression,
+ <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Agnosticism, old not new, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Alcock, Sir Rutherford: quotation misleading,
+ <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>on untruthfulness,
+ <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Altruism, social or racial? <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ambition, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ancestral worship and the importance of sons,
+ <a href='#Page_98'>98</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Apotheosis, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>"Divine right of kings,"
+ <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>in Japan expresses unity,
+ <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Architectural development and social heredity,
+ <a href='#Page_188'>188</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Arisaka, Colonel, inventions, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Arnold, Sir Edwin, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_17'>17</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Art; simplicity its characteristic,
+ <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>lacking the nude, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>
+ -177;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its ideal in representing gods and men,
+ <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>defects,
+ <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>original or imitative?
+ <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not "impersonal,"
+ <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Artistic and inartistic contrasts,
+ <a href='#Page_184'>184</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Aston, Mr. W.G.: on poetic form,
+ <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>intellectual inferiority of Japanese claimed,
+ <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>"Japanese Literature,"
+ <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Baelz, Dr. E., measurements of skull,
+ <a href='#Page_191'>191</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Bakufu," "curtain government,"
+ <a href='#Page_214'>214</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Bargaining, a personal experience,
+ <a href='#Page_212'>212</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Baths, public, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>cleanliness,
+ <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Birthday festivals, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>method of reckoning age,
+ <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Brain weights, comparative figures,
+ <a href='#Page_190'>190</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Brown, Rev. S.R., <a href='#Page_90'>90</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Buckley, Prof. E., Phallic worship,
+ <a href='#Page_325'>325</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Buddhism: relation to the family,
+ <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>suppression of emotion,
+ <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>modified in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>early influence,
+ <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>teachings about woman,
+ <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>lack of moral teachings,
+ <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>religious ecstasy,
+ <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>nature and history,
+ <a href='#Page_306'>306</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>terms "ingwa" and "mei,"
+ <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>"impersonal"? <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>
+ -388;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>introspection,
+ <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>salvation through self,
+ <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>consciousness of self, highly developed,
+ <a href='#Page_379'>379</a> -380;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>attributes no worth to self,
+ <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>failure of its influence,
+ <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>mercy to animals and shallow reasoning,
+ <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>thought of self an intellectual abstraction,
+ <a href='#Page_383'>383</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not impersonal, but abstract,
+ <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>doctrine of illusion,
+ <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>failure of social order,
+ <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>popular acceptance not philosophical,
+ <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not logically</span><br />
+ <a name='Page_450'
+ id="Page_450"></a> <span class='i1'>carried out,
+ <a href='#Page_389'>389</a> -390.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>appeal to personal activity,
+ <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>conversion of a priest to Christianity,
+ <a href='#Page_394'>394</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>conception of God,
+ <a href='#Page_398'>398</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>the universe characterized,
+ <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Nirvana,
+ <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>supplementary to Shintoism,
+ <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>popularity explained,
+ <a href='#Page_408'>408</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>individualism defective,
+ <a href='#Page_408'>408</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not exclusive in any land,
+ <a href='#Page_421'>421</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Buddhistic doctrines and sociological consequences,
+ <a href='#Page_388'>388</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Caricature in art: its prominence,
+ <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Cary's, Rev. Otis, "Japan and Its Regeneration,"
+ <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Chamberlain, Prof. B.H., <a href='#Page_17'>17</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_55'>55</a> , <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>quotation on imitation,&mdash;over-emphasis,
+ <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>people irreligious,
+ <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Character and destiny, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>how judged, <a href='#Page_446'>446</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Children: their festivals,
+ <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>love for the young in Occident and Orient
+ compared, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>infanticide,
+ <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Chinese characters and the common schools,
+ <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Chinese philosophy not accepted without question,
+ <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Christianity: relation to the family,
+ <a href='#Page_111'>111</a> -114.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>the support of new ideals,
+ <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>fluctuating interest in,
+ <a href='#Page_162'>162</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>influence on woman,
+ <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>criticised by a Japanese,
+ <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>relation to new social order,
+ <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its growth in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>monotheism, its attraction,
+ <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its view of the universe,
+ <a href='#Page_399'>399</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>involving communalism and individualism,
+ <a href='#Page_415'>415</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Civilization: two types in conflict,
+ <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>social not racial,
+ <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its rapid modernization,
+ <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Clark, Pres., <a href='#Page_90'>90</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Cleanliness: exaggerated reputation,
+ <a href='#Page_315'>315</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Cocks of Tosa: the abnormal,
+ <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Communalism: and human progress,
+ <a href='#Page_332'>332</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>defined,
+ <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its altruism,
+ <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>throws light on religious history,
+ <a href='#Page_404'>404</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>difficulty of combining it with
+ individualistic religious elements,
+ <a href='#Page_414'>414</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Japan appreciates its spirit,
+ <a href='#Page_417'>417</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Comte, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Conceit, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>not the only conceited nation,
+ <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Concubinage: children of the Emperor,
+ <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Buddhistic and Confucian teaching,
+ <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its sociological interpretation,
+ <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>increase of,
+ <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>statistics of,
+ <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Confidence and suspicion,
+ <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>feudal explanation,
+ <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Confucian ethics: leave gods alone,
+ <a href='#Page_286'>286</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>antidote to Buddhism,
+ <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Confucianism: its relation to the family,
+ <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>modified in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>metaphysical foundation of,
+ <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its relation to morality,
+ <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>nature and history of,
+ <a href='#Page_307'>307</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its doctrines restored,
+ <a href='#Page_409'>409</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its limitations,
+ <a href='#Page_410'>410</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not a religion,
+ <a href='#Page_411'>411</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>cause of failure,
+ <a href='#Page_412'>412</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Confucius and Lao-tse about returning good for evil,
+ <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>influence opposed to progress,
+ <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Constitution, authority from Emperor,
+ <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Conversation: realistic baldness,
+ <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Courtesy: conventional not racial,
+ <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>.<br />
+ <span class='i1'>phrases of,
+ <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not proof of "impersonality,"
+ <a href='#Page_362'>362</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>.</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Culture: more apparent than real,
+ <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Curiosity: real though concealed,&mdash;illustration,
+ <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Curtain government," its significance,
+ <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Daimyo, a figurehead, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>.<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Darwin, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+ <a name='Page_451'
+ id="Page_451"></a>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Decoration of rooms, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Dening, Mr, Walter, lack of idealism,
+ <a href='#Page_233'>233</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>De Quatrefages, African brains,
+ <a href='#Page_191'>191</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Deity: conception of, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>monotheistic terms,
+ <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>common people,
+ <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Disposition: apparently cheerful,
+ <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>pessimists out of sight,
+ <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Divorce: grounds for, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>frequency of,
+ <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Civil Code of 1898,
+ <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>statistics,
+ <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>divorce and "impersonality,"
+ <a href='#Page_352'>352</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Doshisha, endangered, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>American benefactors of,
+ <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Drama and novel: weakness explained,
+ <a href='#Page_187'>187</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Drummond, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Dwarfed plants,&mdash;delight in the abnormal,
+ <a href='#Page_177'>177</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Eastern and Western civilizations blending,
+ <a href='#Page_30'>30</a> -32<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Educational Department and Imperial Edict,
+ <a href='#Page_328'>328</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Emotional nature, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a> -84;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>due to social order,
+ <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Emperor: concubines and children of,
+ <a href='#Page_151'>151</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>English study and methods of thinking,
+ <a href='#Page_212'>212</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ethics: pivotal points, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Etiquette: superficial not radical requirements,
+ <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>its collapse explained,
+ <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>relation to imagination,
+ <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Evolution: real explanation of progress,
+ <a href='#Page_24'>24</a> -27, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>
+ -34;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>national, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>
+ -343;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>intellectual,
+ <a href='#Page_419'>419</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Involution one half the process,
+ <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>defined, <a href='#Page_440'>440</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Express train, "nominal" destination,
+ <a href='#Page_216'>216</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Fairbanks, Prof., <a href='#Page_20'>20</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Falling in love" not recognized,
+ <a href='#Page_102'>102</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Family life: false registration checks affection,
+ <a href='#Page_107'>107</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><i>Far East</i>: quotation from, adaptation of foreign
+ systems, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Farmer, higher rank than merchant,
+ <a href='#Page_257'>257</a> (note)<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Fate: "Ingwa," in development of personality,
+ <a href='#Page_386'>386</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Feudal times: moderation,
+ <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>courage cultivated,
+ <a href='#Page_153'>153</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>trade, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Fickleness: its manifestation,
+ <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>a modern trait,
+ <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>shown chiefly in methods,
+ <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>among Christians, apparent not real,
+ <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Filial obedience: extreme application,
+ <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>piety, moral ideal,
+ <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>piety and religion,
+ <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Fiske, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Flexibility of mental constitution,
+ <a href='#Page_77'>77</a> -78<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Flowering trees, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Forty-seven Ronin, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_250'>250</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Freedom: relation of belief to the fact,
+ <a href='#Page_387'>387</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Fukuzawa, Mr., on monogamy, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>condemning concubinage,
+ <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>on religion,
+ <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Furniture; recent introduction,
+ <a href='#Page_181'>181</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Future life: Shinto, Confucian,
+ <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Buddhistic, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Geisha," dancing girl, vivacity,
+ <a href='#Page_168'>168</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Generalization, capacity for,
+ <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>use of philosophical terms,
+ <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Giddings, Prof., <a href='#Page_19'>19</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Go-between," illustrations,
+ <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>advantages, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>God: Greek, Buddhist, Christian,
+ <a href='#Page_399'>399</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>conceptions compared,
+ <a href='#Page_400'>400</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Governmental initiative: explains rapid reforms,
+ <a href='#Page_201'>201</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Gratitude: religious sentiment,
+ <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>ingratitude shown
+ <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></span> <br />
+ <br />
+ <a name='Page_452'
+ id="Page_452"></a> Greek universe characterized,
+ <a href='#Page_400'>400</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Green, T.H., <a href='#Page_397'>397</a> (note)<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Greene, Dr. D.C., teaching of Shinto sect,
+ <a href='#Page_269'>269</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Griffis, W.E., on suicide,
+ <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>on religions,
+ <a href='#Page_315'>315</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Gubbins, introduction to translation of New Civil Code of
+ Japan, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>on woman's position,
+ <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Harris, Townsend, quoted,
+ <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>regulation by authority,
+ <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>as to untruthfulness,
+ <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Hawaii, musical development, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Head, size of, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Hearn, Mr. Lafcadio, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_17'>17</a> , <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>mistaken contention,
+ <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>privacy,
+ <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>gratitude, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Hegel, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>; "Nothing" and
+ Universal Soul of Buddhism, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a>
+ (note)<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Heredity: social and physiological contrasted,
+ <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>defined and analyzed,
+ <a href='#Page_439'>439</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Heroes and hero-worship, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>
+ -95;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>"The forty-seven Ronin" as heroes,
+ <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>craving for modern heroes,
+ <a href='#Page_90'>90</a> -92;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Omi Sajin,
+ <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Dr. Neesima,
+ <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Hirase, Mr., scientist, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>History, research suppressed,
+ <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>its claims,
+ <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>apparent credulity of scholars due to social
+ system, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Holy towels," physical disease,
+ <a href='#Page_314'>314</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Honesty: decline of, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>explanation,
+ <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Honorifics," shades of courtesy,
+ <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>indefiniteness of speech,
+ <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Houses, privacy impossible, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Housewife, simple requirements,
+ <a href='#Page_181'>181</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Idealizing tendency, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_236'>236</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Idols, imported feature of Japanese religion,
+ <a href='#Page_174'>174</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ikeno, Mr., scientific discovery,
+ <a href='#Page_207'>207</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Illusion, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Imagination: is it lacking?
+ <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>shown in etiquette, political life, ambition,
+ self-conceit, etc., <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>seen in optimism,
+ <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>related to fancy,&mdash;caricature,
+ <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not disproved by imitation,
+ <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>sociological explanation,
+ <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>constructive,
+ <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>suppression of,
+ <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Imitation in Japanese progress, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>
+ -81;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>creditable characteristic,
+ <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Immorality, increase of, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Impassiveness, "putty-face," <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Imperial and popular sovereignty, conflict between,
+ <a href='#Page_152'>152</a> -153<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Imperial Edict, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Imperialists during the Shogunate,
+ <a href='#Page_146'>146</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Imperial succession of Oriental type,
+ <a href='#Page_150'>150</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Impersonality": Hegel, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>
+ :<br />
+ <span class='i1'>definitions contradictory,
+ <a href='#Page_347'>347</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>related, to art,
+ <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>family life,
+ <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>divorce,
+ <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>"falling in love,"
+ <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>definition, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>outcome of social order,
+ <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>not proved by courtesy of people,
+ <a href='#Page_362'>362</a> , <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>
+ ,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>nor by lack of personal pronouns,
+ <a href='#Page_368'>368</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>arguments against,
+ <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>diverse elements analyzed,
+ <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>objection to term,
+ <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Impersonality" and altruism, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Impractical idealism: claimed by Japanese,
+ <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>illustrations, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"In," and "Yo," significance of,
+ <a href='#Page_221'>221</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>India and Japan contrasted, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>
+ -34<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Indirectness, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Individual, small value, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Individualism: expressed, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>changing social order and honesty,
+ <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>;</span><br />
+ <a name='Page_453'
+ id="Page_453"></a> <span class='i1'>importance of,
+ <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>how possible,
+ <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>defined,
+ <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>easy acceptance explained,
+ <a href='#Page_413'>413</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Individualistic religion as a sociological factor in
+ higher, human<br />
+ <span class='i1'>evolution, <a href='#Page_418'>418</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Infanticide, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a> -101<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Ingwa," fate, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Inouye, Dr. T., Japonicized Christianity,
+ <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>claims for Japanese,
+ <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>philosophical writer,
+ <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Intellectual characteristics, social,
+ <a href='#Page_244'>244</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Inventions: originality, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Irreligious phenomena explained,
+ <a href='#Page_302'>302</a> , <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ishii, Mr., father of orphan asylums in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_94'>94</a> , <a href='#Page_131'>131</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_145'>145</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Isolation of nations impossible,
+ <a href='#Page_71'>71</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ito, Marquis, on religion, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Iyeyasu: his testament,
+ <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>use of Confucian doctrines,
+ <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Japanese people: international responsibility,
+ <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>need of understanding them,
+ <a href='#Page_15'>15</a> -20;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>change of opinion regarding,
+ <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> -25;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>defects, conscious of,
+ <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>acquaintance with,
+ <a href='#Page_428'>428</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>reasons for difficulty in, acquaintance with,
+ <a href='#Page_429'>429</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_430'>430</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>secret of acquaintance,
+ <a href='#Page_431'>431</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><i>Japan Mail</i>: quotation,
+ <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>originality of Japanese art,
+ <a href='#Page_203'>203</a> :</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>on wealth,
+ <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>on honesty,
+ <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>on acquaintance,
+ <a href='#Page_428'>428</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Jealousy and women, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>
+ -128<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Kato, Mr. H., <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>on religion,
+ <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>patriotism is loyalty to throne,
+ <a href='#Page_373'>373</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Ki," defined, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Kidd, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Kissing unknown, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Kitazato, Dr., scientific research,
+ <a href='#Page_207'>207</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Knapp, Mr. A.M., <a href='#Page_16'>16</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Knox, Dr. G.W., quotation,
+ <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>"A Japanese Philosopher,"
+ <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>translator of Muro Kyuso,
+ <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Ladd, Prof. G.T., <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>sentimentality of Japanese,
+ <a href='#Page_234'>234</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Language: its acquirement and Japanese students,
+ <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>diversities of, not due to diversities in
+ brain type, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Lao-tse, on doing good in return for evil,
+ <a href='#Page_128'>128</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Le Bon's physiological theory of character inadequate,
+ <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> -20;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>quotation,
+ <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>dissent from opinion,
+ <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>quotation, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Le Conte, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Literature, ancient, its impurity,
+ <a href='#Page_253'>253</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Lowell, Mr. Percival, "The Soul of the Far East,"
+ <a href='#Page_103'>103</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Japanese unimaginative,
+ <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>opinion criticised,
+ <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>"sense and incense,"
+ <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>pilgrimages,
+ <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>"impersonality," <a href='#Page_359'>359</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_363'>363</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>teaching of philosophic Buddhism,
+ <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Loyalty and religion, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>sentimental, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Lunatics and lepers, cruel treatment,
+ <a href='#Page_130'>130</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Magic formul&aelig;, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Man and nature: differing artistic treatment of,
+ <a href='#Page_175'>175</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Manners; influenced by Western ways,
+ <a href='#Page_182'>182</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Marriage, Civil Code of 1898, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Marsh, Prof., size of Japanese brain,
+ <a href='#Page_190'>190</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Matter-of-factness" explained,
+ <a href='#Page_245'>245</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Memorizing: mechanical,
+ <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>defective method,
+ <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>as related to higher mental powers,
+ <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Memory; power overrated,
+ <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>in daily affairs not exceedng</span> <br />
+ <a name='Page_454'
+ id="Page_454"></a>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Occidental, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>characteristics sociological, not biological,
+ <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Mnemonic power and social selection,
+ <a href='#Page_193'>193</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Mencius, teaching, the "Way" of Heaven and Earth,
+ <a href='#Page_250'>250</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Mental faculties: are the Japanese deficient?
+ <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>power of generalization,
+ <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Metaphysical tendencies, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>
+ :<br />
+ <span class='i1'>denial of ability unjustifiable,
+ <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Metaphysics and ethics, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Monotheism, why attractive, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Morality: courage in persecucution,
+ <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>illustration,
+ <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>discrimination developed,
+ <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>parents, children, patriots,
+ <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>ideals communal,
+ <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>standards differing for men and women,
+ <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>teaching focused on rulers,
+ <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Imperial Edict,
+ <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>standards of, and individualism,
+ <a href='#Page_275'>275</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>social, not racial,
+ <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>on authority,
+ <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>morality and Old Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_261'>261</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_264'>264</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Motora, Prof. Y., <a href='#Page_229'>229</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>M&uuml;ller, Prof. Max, statement about Vedas,
+ <a href='#Page_193'>193</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Murata rifle, invention of, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Muro Kyuso, philosopher,
+ <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>ancient books condemned,
+ <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>on immorality,
+ <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>teachings, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Music, Japanese deficiency, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Nakashima, Prof. Rikizo, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Nash, Prof. H.S., on Apotheosis in Rome,
+ <a href='#Page_153'>153</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ National life, stimulus from the West,
+ <a href='#Page_43'>43</a> -48<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Natural scenery in art, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Neesima, Dr., founder of the Doshisha,
+ <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>monotheism,
+ <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>his character,
+ <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Netsuke," comical carvings, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>New &aelig;on, characterized,
+ <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>the consequences,
+ <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Newton's, Rev. J.C.E., "Japan: Country, Court, and
+ People" <a href='#Page_10'>10</a> , <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Nichiren," a sect, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Nirvana characterized, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Nitobe's, Prof. J., "Bushido: The Soul of Japan,"
+ <a href='#Page_10'>10</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Nominal": Pedigree, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>church contributions,
+ <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>express train,
+ <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Nominality": illustrated in history,
+ <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>in family life,
+ <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>in Christian work,
+ <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>explained by old order,
+ <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>giving way under Western influence,
+ <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Norman, Mr. Henry, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>his "Real Japan,"
+ <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Nude in art: its lack, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>
+ -177<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Obsequiousness, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Occident and Orient: conflict not unending,
+ <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>social intercourse and mutual influence,
+ <a href='#Page_436'>436</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Occidental civilization; a defect in,
+ <a href='#Page_71'>71</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ohashi, Junzo, opposed to Western thought,
+ <a href='#Page_254'>254</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Old Japan, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a> -37;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>its oppression, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>emptiness of common life,
+ <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>condition of woman, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>
+ , <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>divorce, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>moral and legal maxims,
+ <a href='#Page_252'>252</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its morality, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Omi Sajin," Sage of Omi, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Oriental characteristics: are they distinctive?
+ <a href='#Page_422'>422</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>general opinion of,
+ <a href='#Page_423'>423</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>view of author,
+ <a href='#Page_425'>425</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>social, not racial,
+ <a href='#Page_425'>425</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_434'>434</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Originality in art, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>judicious imitation,
+ <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Orphan asylums, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Oyomei, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Patriotism, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a> -51;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>relation to apotheosis,
+ <a href='#Page_144'>144</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>to war,
+ <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Christian orphans,
+ <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Peasants, stolidity, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Pedigree, "nominal" not actual ancestry,
+ <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <br />
+ <br />
+ <a name='Page_455'
+ id="Page_455"></a> Peery, Dr., Japanese philosophical
+ incompetence, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Personality: <a href='#Page_21'>21</a> -22;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>importance of,
+ <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>defined, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>
+ -357;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>characteristics of,
+ <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>"strong" and "weak,"
+ <a href='#Page_374'>374</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Confucian ethics,
+ <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Supreme Being,
+ <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>gods of popular Buddhism,
+ <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>idea grasped by Japanese,
+ <a href='#Page_393'>393</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>sketch of development,
+ <a href='#Page_394'>394</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>racial or social inheritance,
+ <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>progress in ethico-religious process,
+ <a href='#Page_447'>447</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>the criterion of progress,
+ <a href='#Page_447'>447</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Personality in conception of nationality,
+ <a href='#Page_373'>373</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Personal pronouns, their lack possible proof of
+ personality, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>"honorific" particles,
+ <a href='#Page_368'>368</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>substitutes, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_371'>371</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Pfleiderer, Prof., religious deficiency of Japanese,
+ <a href='#Page_286'>286</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Phallicism: its suppression,
+ <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Western influence,
+ <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Philosophy: Occidental ignorance of its history in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>terms used,
+ <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Japanese students of,
+ <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>individuals interested,
+ <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Philosophical ability, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>
+ -232;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Japanese claims,
+ <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>constructive power,
+ <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>writers mentioned,
+ <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>East and West compared,
+ <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Pilgrimages: statistics, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>
+ -291;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>immorality, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></span>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Poetry characterized, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Powder, smokeless, invention of,
+ <a href='#Page_207'>207</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Pride, sociological explanation,
+ <a href='#Page_19'>19</a> , <a href='#Page_21'>21</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Progress, modern characteristic,
+ <a href='#Page_52'>52</a> -60;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>defined,
+ <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>light-heartedness no proof of,
+ <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>its method, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>
+ -71;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>recognition of individual worth,
+ <a href='#Page_63'>63</a> -67;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>knowledge of implements and methods,
+ <a href='#Page_67'>67</a> -70;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>imitation, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>
+ -81;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>passion for it,
+ <a href='#Page_143'>143</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Psychic nature and social life,
+ <a href='#Page_439'>439</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Psychic evolution, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Psychic function and psychic organism,
+ <a href='#Page_445'>445</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Psychological similarities, Japanese and Anglo-Saxon,
+ <a href='#Page_189'>189</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Public speaking, fluency, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Putty-face," <a href='#Page_164'>164</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Race-soul," <a href='#Page_444'>444</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ransome, Mr. Stanford, quoted,
+ <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>"Japan in Transition,"
+ <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Reforms, governmental initiative,
+ <a href='#Page_201'>201</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Religion: its characteristics social, not racial,
+ <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>loyalty and filial piety,
+ <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>liberty in belief,
+ <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>the Imperial Edict,
+ <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>forms determined by history,
+ <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>the problem of to-day,
+ <a href='#Page_414'>414</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Religions classified,
+ <a href='#Page_421'>421</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Religious or not? appearances explained,
+ <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>judged by phenomena,
+ <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>prayer, shrines, charms,
+ <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Buddha-shelves, God-shelves,
+ <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>emotion and social training,
+ <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>emotion shown in abstraction,
+ <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Religious life, <a href='#Page_404'>404</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_421'>421</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>communal,
+ <a href='#Page_404'>404</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>present difficulty in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_420'>420</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Renaissance of Japan, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a> -30<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Revenge: the ancient law,
+ <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>teachings of Confucius and Lao-tse,
+ <a href='#Page_128'>128</a> -129</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Reverence, apparent lack of, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Ri" defined, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Roman alphabet: adoption recommended by many,
+ <a href='#Page_192'>192</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Roundaboutness": characteristic of speech and action,
+ <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>recent improvement,
+ <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sadness and isolation of many,
+ <a href='#Page_116'>116</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sage of Omi, <i>see</i> "Omi Sajin."<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Salvation and sin, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Buddhist and Christian,
+ <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></span> <br />
+ <br />
+ <a name='Page_456'
+ id="Page_456"></a> Samurai: high mental power,<br />
+ <span class='i1'>social leaders, impractical,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_244'>244</a>; their relation to
+ trade,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_252'>252</a>; new ideals,
+ <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>; revolt</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>from religious forms,
+ <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Segregation and divergent evolution,
+ <a href='#Page_443'>443</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Self-confidence not without<br />
+ <span class='i1'>grounds, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>; reorganization</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>by young men, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>
+ -142</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Self-control: moral teaching,<br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_250'>250</a>; Kujuro, the
+ self-controlled, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sensitiveness to environment,<br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>; illustrated by students</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>abroad, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a> , by life in
+ Japan, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a> -77</span><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Shimose, Mr., invention, smokeless powder,
+ <a href='#Page_207'>207</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Shinshu," "Reformed" Buddhism,
+ <a href='#Page_198'>198</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Shinto: nature and history,<br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_305'>305</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>; personal gods,
+ <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>communal, <a href='#Page_405'>405</a>; no
+ longer a</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>religion, <a href='#Page_405'>405</a>; world
+ view,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_406'>406</a>; religious
+ sanction for</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>social order, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a>;
+ revived, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sin, terminology, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>;
+ consciousness<br />
+ <span class='i1'>of, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a>; instance of
+ conversion, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Shusi, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social evil, the, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>
+ (note)<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social segregation and social divergence,
+ <a href='#Page_21'>21</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social and racial unity distinguished,
+ <a href='#Page_443'>443</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social evolution convergent,<br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a>; principle revealed,
+ <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>personal process,
+ <a href='#Page_446'>446</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social heredity, transmitting results of toil,
+ <a href='#Page_71'>71</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social intercourse of Occident and Orient,
+ <a href='#Page_436'>436</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Social order from the West,<br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_413'>413</a>; the parting of
+ the ways, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sociological theory of: character,<br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_446'>446</a>; pride, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;
+ fear</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>of ridicule, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;
+ cruelty, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>kindness, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;
+ stolidity, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>power of generalization,
+ <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>philosophical development,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_231'>231</a>; apparent
+ deficiency in</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>imagination, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;
+ differences</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>characterizing Eastern and</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Western psychic nature,
+ <a href='#Page_247'>247</a> ,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_435'>435</a>; untruthfulness,
+ <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>; concubinage,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_260'>260</a>; religious
+ characteristics,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_309'>309</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>; the suppression</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>of Phallicism,
+ <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>religious tolerance,
+ <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>; divorce</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>and "falling in love,"</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_355'>355</a>; courtesy,
+ <a href='#Page_363'>363</a> , <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>;
+ the</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>personal pronoun, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>;
+ the</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>failure of Buddhism,
+ <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>the conception of Fate,
+ <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sociology and individual religion,
+ <a href='#Page_405'>405</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>and Shintoism,
+ <a href='#Page_407'>407</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Southerland, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Soul of Japan," the, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Soul of the Far East," quotation,
+ <a href='#Page_234'>234</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Spencer, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Stolidity: easily distinguished<br />
+ <span class='i1'>from stoicism, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>; the</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>peasants, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>; social,
+ not</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>racial, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;
+ cultivated, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Students: testimony of foreign<br />
+ <span class='i1'>teachers, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>; at home
+ and abroad, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Suicide, a matter of honor, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>
+ -156<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Sutra, translation of, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Suspiciousness and military feudalism,
+ <a href='#Page_125'>125</a> -126<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Taguchi, Dr., brain statistics, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Tai-ku Reform, epoch-making period,
+ <a href='#Page_201'>201</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Takahashi, Mr. G., <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>; the<br />
+ <span class='i1'>monks and consciousness of sin,
+ <a href='#Page_317'>317</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Taste and lack of taste in woman's dress,
+ <a href='#Page_182'>182</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Temples, statistics, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Tokugawa Shogunate, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a> -40;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>how overthrown, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a> -43;
+ prohibitive</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>of progress, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;
+ last</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>of "Curtain governments,"
+ <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></span> <br />
+ <br />
+ <a name='Page_457'
+ id="Page_457"></a> Torture, in Japan,
+ <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>; in Europe,
+ <a href='#Page_133'>133</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Toys and toy-stores, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Trade estimates, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>; Old
+ Japan,<br />
+ <span class='i1'>the Greeks, the Jews</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>compared, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a> , note;
+ trade</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>and the feudal order,
+ <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Transmigration, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>; theory<br />
+ <span class='i1'>illogical, but helpful,
+ <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Truthfulness, undeveloped, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Tyranny and Western wives <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>
+ <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Un&aelig;sthetic phenomena, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Verbeck, Dr. G.F., <a href='#Page_91'>91</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Visionary tendency, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_237'>237</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Vivacity, Geisha girl, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Wallace, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Ward, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Way," <i>see</i> Muro Kyuso,
+ <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>reference to,
+ <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Wealth increasing, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Wedding, Prince Imperial,
+ <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>Imperial silver wedding,
+ <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Woman: obedience, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>estimates of East and West</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>contrasted, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a> -103;
+ Western</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>estimates, recent growth,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_111'>111</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_113'>113</a> (note); Buddhist and</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>Confucian teaching,
+ <a href='#Page_112'>112</a> ,
+ <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>jealousy, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>; her
+ position,</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'><a href='#Page_258'>258</a>; influenced by
+ Hindu</span><br />
+ <span class='i1'>philosophy, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;
+ improvement, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>Writing, a fine art, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Xavier, Francis, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ Yamaguchi, Mr., quotation, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;<br />
+ <span class='i1'>the Imperial throne,
+ <a href='#Page_373'>373</a></span> <br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Yamato Damashii," <i>see</i> "The Soul of Japan."<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div>"Yumei-mujitsu," <i>see</i> "Nominality."<br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ FOOTNOTES:
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_A_1'
+ id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href='#FNanchor_A_1'>[A]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Things Japanese," p. 156.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_B_2'
+ id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href='#FNanchor_B_2'>[B]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Let not the reader gather from the very brief glance at
+ the attainments of New Japan, that she has overtaken the
+ nations of Christendom in all important respects; for such
+ is far from the case. He needs to be on his guard not to
+ overestimate what has been accomplished.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_C_3'
+ id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href='#FNanchor_C_3'>[C]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Prof. B.H. Chamberlain.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_D_4'
+ id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href='#FNanchor_D_4'>[D]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Only since the coming of the new period has it become
+ possible for a woman to gain a divorce from her
+ husband.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_E_5'
+ id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href='#FNanchor_E_5'>[E]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapter xxix. Some may care to read this chapter at this
+ point.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_F_6'
+ id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href='#FNanchor_F_6'>[F]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter ii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_G_7'
+ id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href='#FNanchor_G_7'>[G]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Kokoro," by L. Hearn, p. 31.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_H_8'
+ id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href='#FNanchor_H_8'>[H]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Japan Mail</i>, September 30, 1899.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_I_9'
+ id="Footnote_I_9"></a><a href='#FNanchor_I_9'>[I]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Part II. p. xxxii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_J_10'
+ id="Footnote_J_10"></a><a href='#FNanchor_J_10'>[J]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Japan Mail</i>, June 4, 1898, p. 586.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_K_11'
+ id="Footnote_K_11"></a><a href='#FNanchor_K_11'>[K]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>If all that has been said above as to the relative lack
+ of affection between husband and wife is true, it will help
+ to make more credible, because more intelligible, the
+ preceding chapter as to the relative lack of love for
+ children. Where the relation between husband and wife is
+ what we have depicted it, where the children are
+ systematically taught to feel for their father respect
+ rather than love, the relation between the father and the
+ children, or the mother and the children, cannot be the
+ same as in lands where all these customs are reversed.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_L_12'
+ id="Footnote_L_12"></a><a href='#FNanchor_L_12'>[L]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>The effect of Christian missions cannot be measured by
+ the numbers of those who are to be counted on the church
+ rolls; almost unconsciously the nation is absorbing
+ Christian ideals from the hundreds of Christian
+ missionaries and tens of thousands of Christian natives.
+ The necessities of the new social order make their
+ teachings intelligible and acceptable as the older social
+ order did not and could not. This accounts for the
+ astonishing change in the anti-Christian spirit of the
+ Japanese. This spirit did not cease at once on the
+ introduction of the new social order, nor indeed is it now
+ entirely gone. But the change from the Japan of thirty
+ years ago to the Japan of to-day, in its attitude toward
+ Christianity, is more marked than that of any great nation
+ in history. A similar change in the Roman Empire took
+ place, but it required three hundred years. This change in
+ Japan may accordingly be called truly miraculous, not in
+ the sense, however, of a result without a cause, for the
+ causes are well understood.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the Christians, especially, the old order is
+ rapidly giving way to the new. Christianity has brought a
+ new conception of woman and her place in the home and her
+ relation to her husband. Japanese Christian girls, and
+ recently non-Christian girls, are seeking an education
+ which shall fit them for their enlarging life. Many of the
+ more Christian young men do not want heathen wives, with
+ their low estimate of themselves and their duties, and they
+ are increasingly unwilling to marry those of whom they know
+ nothing and for whom they care not at all. Already the idea
+ that love is the only safe foundation for the home is
+ beginning to take root in Japan. This changing ideal is
+ bringing marked social changes. In some churches an
+ introduction committee is appointed whose special function
+ is to introduce marriageable persons and to hold social
+ meetings where the young people may become acquainted. Here
+ an important evolution in the social order is taking place
+ before our eyes, but not a few of the world's wise men are
+ too exalted to see it. Love and demonstrative affection
+ between husband and <span style='margin-left: 0.5em;'>wife
+ will doubtless become as characteristic of Japan in
+ the</span> future as their absence has been characteristic
+ in the past. To recapitulate: these distinctive
+ characteristics of the emotional life of the Japanese might
+ at first seem to be so deep-rooted as to be inherent, yet
+ they are really due to the ideas and customs of the social
+ order, and are liable to change with any new system of
+ ideas and customs that may arise. The higher development of
+ the emotional life of the Japanese waits now on the
+ reorganization of the family life; this rests on a new idea
+ as to the place and value of woman as such and as a human
+ being; this in turn rests on the wide acceptance of
+ Christian ideals as to God and their mutual relations. It
+ involves, likewise, new ideals as to man's final destiny.
+ In Japan's need of these Christian ideals we find one main
+ ground and justification, if justification be needed, for
+ missionary enterprise among this Eastern people.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_M_13'
+ id="Footnote_M_13"></a><a href='#FNanchor_M_13'>[M]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapter v. p. 82.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_N_14'
+ id="Footnote_N_14"></a><a href='#FNanchor_N_14'>[N]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 133</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_O_15'
+ id="Footnote_O_15"></a><a href='#FNanchor_O_15'>[O]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"R&eacute;sum&eacute; Statistique l'Empire du Japan,"
+ published by the Imperial Cabinet, 1897.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_P_16'
+ id="Footnote_P_16"></a><a href='#FNanchor_P_16'>[P]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>As illustrating the point under discussion see portions
+ of addresses reported in "The World's Parliament of
+ Religions," vol. ii. pp. 1014, 1283.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_Q_17'
+ id="Footnote_Q_17"></a><a href='#FNanchor_Q_17'>[Q]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Japan Mail</i>, December 10, 1898.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_R_18'
+ id="Footnote_R_18"></a><a href='#FNanchor_R_18'>[R]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>I have found it difficult to secure exact information on
+ the subject of the Imperial concubines (who, by the way,
+ have a special name of honor), partly for the reason that
+ this is not a matter of general information, and partly
+ because of the unwillingness to impart information to a
+ foreigner which is felt to tarnish the luster of the
+ Imperial glory. A librarian of a public library refused to
+ lend a book containing the desired facts, saying that
+ foreigners might be freely informed of that which reveals
+ the good, the true, and the beautiful of Japanese history,
+ customs, and character, but nothing else. By the educated
+ and more earnest members of the nation much sensitiveness
+ is felt, especially in the presence of the Occidental, on
+ the subject of the Imperial concubinage. It is felt to be a
+ blot on Japan's fair name, a relic of her less civilized
+ days, and is, accordingly, kept in the background as much
+ as possible. The statements given in the text in regard to
+ the number of the concubines and children are correct so
+ far as they go. A full statement might require an increase
+ in the figures given.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_S_19'
+ id="Footnote_S_19"></a><a href='#FNanchor_S_19'>[S]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 59.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_T_20'
+ id="Footnote_T_20"></a><a href='#FNanchor_T_20'>[T]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 119.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_U_21'
+ id="Footnote_U_21"></a><a href='#FNanchor_U_21'>[U]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Aston's "Japanese Literature," p. 29.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_V_22'
+ id="Footnote_V_22"></a><a href='#FNanchor_V_22'>[V]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Japanese Literature," p. 24.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_W_23'
+ id="Footnote_W_23"></a><a href='#FNanchor_W_23'>[W]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xxxiii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_X_24'
+ id="Footnote_X_24"></a><a href='#FNanchor_X_24'>[X]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Gustave Le Bon maintains, in his brilliant, but
+ sophistical, work on "The Psychology of Peoples," that the
+ "soul of a race" unalterably determines even its art. He
+ states that a Hindu artist, in copying an European model
+ several times, gradually eliminates the European
+ characteristics, so that, "the second or third copy ...
+ will have become exclusively Hindu." His entire argument is
+ of this nature; I must confess that I do not in the least
+ feel its force. The reason the Hindu artist transforms a
+ Western picture in copying it is because he has been
+ trained in Hindu art, not because he is a Hindu
+ physiologically. If that same Hindu artist, taken in
+ infancy to Europe and raised as a European and trained in
+ European art, should still persist in replacing European by
+ Hindu art characteristics, then the argument would have
+ some force, and his contention that the "soul of races" can
+ be modified only by intermarriage of races would seem more
+ reasonable.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_Y_25'
+ id="Footnote_Y_25"></a><a href='#FNanchor_Y_25'>[Y]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"The Human Species," p. 283.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_Z_26'
+ id="Footnote_Z_26"></a><a href='#FNanchor_Z_26'>[Z]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 282.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AA_27'
+ id="Footnote_AA_27"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AA_27'>[AA]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Ibid.</i>, p. 384.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AB_28'
+ id="Footnote_AB_28"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AB_28'>[AB]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>The manuscript of this work was largely prepared in 1897
+ and 1898. Since writing the above lines, a vigorous
+ discussion has been carried on in the Japanese press as to
+ the advantages and disadvantages of the present system of
+ writing. Many have advocated boldly the entire abandonment
+ of the Chinese character and the exclusive use of the Roman
+ alphabet. The difficulties of such a step are enormous and
+ cannot be appreciated by anyone not familiar with the
+ written language of Japan. One or the strongest arguments
+ for such a course, however, has been the obstacle placed by
+ the Chinese in the way of popular education, due to the
+ time required for its mastery and the mechanical nature of
+ the mind it tends to produce. In August of 1900 the
+ Educational Department enacted some regulations that have
+ great significance in this connection. Perhaps the most
+ important is the requirement that not more than one
+ thousand two hundred Chinese characters are to be taught to
+ the common-school children, and the form of the character
+ is not to be taught independently of the meaning. The
+ remarks in the text above are directed chiefly to the
+ ancient methods of education.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AC_29'
+ id="Footnote_AC_29"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AC_29'>[AC]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Griffis' "Religions of Japan," p. 272.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AD_30'
+ id="Footnote_AD_30"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AD_30'>[AD]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 24.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AE_31'
+ id="Footnote_AE_31"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AE_31'>[AE]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Far East</i> for January, 1898.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AF_32'
+ id="Footnote_AF_32"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AF_32'>[AF]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>January 20, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AG_33'
+ id="Footnote_AG_33"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AG_33'>[AG]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Japan Mail</i>, November 12, 1898.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AH_34'
+ id="Footnote_AH_34"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AH_34'>[AH]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 17.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AI_35'
+ id="Footnote_AI_35"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AI_35'>[AI]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 18.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AJ_36'
+ id="Footnote_AJ_36"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AJ_36'>[AJ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 18.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AK_37'
+ id="Footnote_AK_37"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AK_37'>[AK]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"History of the Empire of Japan," compiled and
+ translated for the Imperial Japanese Commission of the
+ World's Columbian Exposition.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AL_38'
+ id="Footnote_AL_38"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AL_38'>[AL]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Japanese Literature," p. 4.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AM_39'
+ id="Footnote_AM_39"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AM_39'>[AM]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xvi. p. 199.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AN_40'
+ id="Footnote_AN_40"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AN_40'>[AN]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xvii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AO_41'
+ id="Footnote_AO_41"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AO_41'>[AO]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Quotations from "A Japanese Philosopher" will be found
+ in chapters xxiv. and xxvi.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AP_42'
+ id="Footnote_AP_42"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AP_42'>[AP]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Things Japanese," p. 133.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AQ_43'
+ id="Footnote_AQ_43"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AQ_43'>[AQ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 213.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AR_44'
+ id="Footnote_AR_44"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AR_44'>[AR]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 30.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AS_45'
+ id="Footnote_AS_45"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AS_45'>[AS]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter vii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AT_46'
+ id="Footnote_AT_46"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AT_46'>[AT]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xv. pp. 186, 187.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AU_47'
+ id="Footnote_AU_47"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AU_47'>[AU]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapters xvi. and xvii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AV_48'
+ id="Footnote_AV_48"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AV_48'>[AV]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapter xv.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AW_49'
+ id="Footnote_AW_49"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AW_49'>[AW]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapters xix. and xx.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AX_50'
+ id="Footnote_AX_50"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AX_50'>[AX]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 39.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AY_51'
+ id="Footnote_AY_51"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AY_51'>[AY]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 36.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_AZ_52'
+ id="Footnote_AZ_52"></a><a href='#FNanchor_AZ_52'>[AZ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Pp. 42, 43.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BA_53'
+ id="Footnote_BA_53"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BA_53'>[BA]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 45.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BB_54'
+ id="Footnote_BB_54"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BB_54'>[BB]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 61.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BC_55'
+ id="Footnote_BC_55"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BC_55'>[BC]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 120.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BD_56'
+ id="Footnote_BD_56"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BD_56'>[BD]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 129.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BE_57'
+ id="Footnote_BE_57"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BE_57'>[BE]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 130.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BF_58'
+ id="Footnote_BF_58"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BF_58'>[BF]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Dickenson's "Japan," chapter vii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BG_59'
+ id="Footnote_BG_59"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BG_59'>[BG]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xxi.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BH_60'
+ id="Footnote_BH_60"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BH_60'>[BH]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 163.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BI_61'
+ id="Footnote_BI_61"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BI_61'>[BI]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 169.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BJ_62'
+ id="Footnote_BJ_62"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BJ_62'>[BJ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>It is interesting to observe that the contempt of Old
+ Japan for trade, and the feeling that interest and profit
+ by commerce were in their nature immoral, are in close
+ accord with the old Greek and Jewish ideas regarding
+ property profits and interest. Aristotle held, for
+ instance, that only the gains of agriculture, of fishing,
+ and of hunting are natural gains. Plato, in the Laws,
+ forbids the taking of interest. Cato says that lending
+ money on interest is dishonorable, is as bad as murder. The
+ Old Testament, likewise, forbids the taking of interest
+ from a Jew. The reason for this universal feeling of
+ antiquity, both Oriental and Occidental, lies in the fact
+ that trade and money were not yet essential parts of the
+ social order. Positive production, such as hunting and
+ farming, seemed the natural method of making a living,
+ while trade seemed unnatural&mdash;living upon the labor of
+ others. That Japan ranked the farmer higher in the social
+ scale than the merchant is, thus, natural. In moral
+ character, too, it is altogether probable that they were
+ much higher.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BK_63'
+ id="Footnote_BK_63"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BK_63'>[BK]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf</i>. chapter ix. p. 103.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BL_64'
+ id="Footnote_BL_64"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BL_64'>[BL]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapter vi.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BM_65'
+ id="Footnote_BM_65"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BM_65'>[BM]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapter xxix. p. 339.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BN_66'
+ id="Footnote_BN_66"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BN_66'>[BN]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>An anonymous writer, in a pamphlet entitled "How the
+ Social Evil is Regulated in Japan," gives some valuable
+ facts on this subject. He describes the early history of
+ the "Social Evil," and the various classes of prostitutes.
+ He distinguishes between the "jigoku" (unlicensed
+ prostitutes), the "shogi" (licensed prostitutes), and the
+ "geisha" (singing and dancing girls). He gives translations
+ of the various documents in actual use at present, and
+ finally attempts to estimate the number of women engaged in
+ the business. The method of reaching his conclusions does
+ not commend itself to the present writer and his results
+ seem absurdly wide of the mark, when compared with more
+ carefully gathered figures. They are hardly worth quoting,
+ yet they serve to show what exaggerated views are held by
+ some in regard to the numbers of prostitutes in Japan. He
+ tells us that a moderate estimate for licensed prostitutes
+ and for geisha is 500,000 each, while the unlicensed number
+ at least a million, making a total of 2,000,000 or 10 per
+ cent. of the total female population of Japan! A careful
+ statistical inquiry on this subject has been recently made
+ by Rev. U.G. Murphy. His figures were chiefly secured from
+ provincial officers. According to these returns the number
+ of licensed prostitutes is 50,553 and of dancing girls is
+ 30,386. Mr. Murphy's figures cannot be far astray, and
+ furnish us something of a basis for comparison with
+ European countries. Statistics regarding unlicensed
+ prostitutes are naturally not to be had.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BO_67'
+ id="Footnote_BO_67"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BO_67'>[BO]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 148.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BP_68'
+ id="Footnote_BP_68"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BP_68'>[BP]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>June 25, 1898.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BQ_69'
+ id="Footnote_BQ_69"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BQ_69'>[BQ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>The last line of figures, those for 1897, is taken from
+ Rev. U.G. Murphy's statistical pamphlet on "The Social Evil
+ in Japan."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BR_70'
+ id="Footnote_BR_70"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BR_70'>[BR]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>It is stated that Mill's work on "Representative
+ Government," which, translated, fills a volume of five
+ hundred pages in Japanese, has reached its third
+ edition.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BS_71'
+ id="Footnote_BS_71"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BS_71'>[BS]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>The <i>Japan Mail</i> for February 5, 1896; quoting from
+ the <i>Jiji Shimpo</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BT_72'
+ id="Footnote_BT_72"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BT_72'>[BT]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>The best summary of this discussion which I have seen in
+ English is found in the <i>Japan Mail</i> for February 4,
+ 1899.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BU_73'
+ id="Footnote_BU_73"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BU_73'>[BU]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Japan Mail,</i> January 14, 1899.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BV_74'
+ id="Footnote_BV_74"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BV_74'>[BV]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Japan Mail,</i> June 24, 1898.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BW_75'
+ id="Footnote_BW_75"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BW_75'>[BW]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>The constituency of the Doshisha consists principally of
+ Kumiai Christians.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BX_76'
+ id="Footnote_BX_76"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BX_76'>[BX]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Occult Japan," p. 23.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BY_77'
+ id="Footnote_BY_77"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BY_77'>[BY]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xxiv.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_BZ_78'
+ id="Footnote_BZ_78"></a><a href='#FNanchor_BZ_78'>[BZ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"A Japanese Philosopher," p. 120.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CA_79'
+ id="Footnote_CA_79"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CA_79'>[CA]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>In immediate connection with this oft-quoted statement,
+ however, I would put the following, as much more recent,
+ and probably representing more correctly the Marquis's
+ matured opinion. Mr. Kakehi, for some time one of the
+ editors of the Osaka <i>Mainichi Shinbun</i> (Daily News),
+ after an interview with the illustrious statesman in which
+ many matters of national importance were discussed, was
+ asked by the Marquis where he had been educated. On
+ learning that he was a graduate of the Doshisha, the
+ Marquis remarked: "The only true civilization is that which
+ rests on Christian principles, and that consequently, as
+ Japan must attain her civilization on these principles,
+ those young men who receive Christian education will be the
+ main factors in the development of future Japan."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CB_80'
+ id="Footnote_CB_80"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CB_80'>[CB]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chamberlain's "Things Japanese," p. 358.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CC_81'
+ id="Footnote_CC_81"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CC_81'>[CC]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Things Japanese," p. 70, and Murray's "Hand-book for
+ Japan," p. 37.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CD_82'
+ id="Footnote_CD_82"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CD_82'>[CD]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Things Japanese," p. 93.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CE_83'
+ id="Footnote_CE_83"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CE_83'>[CE]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 85.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CF_84'
+ id="Footnote_CF_84"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CF_84'>[CF]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xxiii. p. 271.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CG_85'
+ id="Footnote_CG_85"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CG_85'>[CG]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>By the term "centralization" I mean personal
+ centralization. Political centralization is the gathering
+ of all the lines of governmental authority to a single head
+ or point. Personal centralization, on the contrary, is the
+ development in the individual of enlarging and joyous
+ consciousness of his relations with his fellow-countrymen,
+ and the bringing of the individual into increasingly
+ immediate relations of interdependence with ever-increasing
+ numbers of his fellow-men, economically, intellectually,
+ and spiritually. These enlarging relations and the
+ consciousness of them must be loyally and joyfully
+ accepted. They should arouse enthusiasm. The real unity of
+ society, true national centralization, includes both the
+ political and the personal phase. The more conscious the
+ process and the relation, the more real is the unity. By
+ this process each individual becomes of more importance to
+ the entire body, as well as more dependent upon it. While
+ each individual becomes with increasing industrial
+ development more specialized in economic function, if his
+ personal development has been properly carried on, he also
+ becomes in mind and in character a micro-community, summing
+ up in his individual person the national unity with all its
+ main interests, knowledge, and character.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CGA_86'
+ id="Footnote_CGA_86"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CGA_86'>[CGa]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 14.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CH_87'
+ id="Footnote_CH_87"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CH_87'>[CH]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 15.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CI_88'
+ id="Footnote_CI_88"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CI_88'>[CI]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Pp. 88, 89.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CJ_89'
+ id="Footnote_CJ_89"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CJ_89'>[CJ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Pp. 203, 204.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CK_90'
+ id="Footnote_CK_90"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CK_90'>[CK]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter viii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CL_91'
+ id="Footnote_CL_91"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CL_91'>[CL]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>See the <i>Rikugo Zasshi</i> for March, 1898.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CM_92'
+ id="Footnote_CM_92"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CM_92'>[CM]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xv.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CN_93'
+ id="Footnote_CN_93"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CN_93'>[CN]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Buddhism is largely responsible for the wide practice of
+ "joshi," through its doctrine that lovers whom fate does
+ not permit to be married in this world may be united in the
+ next because of the strength of their love.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CO_94'
+ id="Footnote_CO_94"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CO_94'>[CO]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 88.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CP_95'
+ id="Footnote_CP_95"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CP_95'>[CP]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 12.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CQ_96'
+ id="Footnote_CQ_96"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CQ_96'>[CQ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 14.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CR_97'
+ id="Footnote_CR_97"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CR_97'>[CR]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 15.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CS_98'
+ id="Footnote_CS_98"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CS_98'>[CS]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>In their relations with foreigners, the people, but
+ especially the Christians, are exceedingly lenient,
+ forgiving and overlooking our egregious blunders both of
+ speech and of manner, particularly if they feel that we
+ have a kindly heart. Yet it is the uniform experience of
+ the missionary that he frequently hurts unawares the
+ feelings of his Japanese fellow-workers. Few thoughts more
+ frequently enter the mind of the missionary, as he deals
+ with Christian workers, than how to say this needful truth
+ and do that needful deed so as not to hurt the feelings of
+ those whom he would help. The individual who feels slighted
+ or insulted will probably give no active sign of his wound.
+ He is too polite or too politic for that. He will merely
+ close like a clam and cease to have further cordial
+ feelings and relations with the person who has hurt
+ him.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CT_99'
+ id="Footnote_CT_99"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CT_99'>[CT]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter xiii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CU_100'
+ id="Footnote_CU_100"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CU_100'>[CU]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>See chapter xxix.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CV_101'
+ id="Footnote_CV_101"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CV_101'>[CV]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 201.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CW_102'
+ id="Footnote_CW_102"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CW_102'>[CW]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter vii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CX_103'
+ id="Footnote_CX_103"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CX_103'>[CX]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>It seems desirable to guard against an inference that
+ might be made from what I have said about Hegel's
+ "Nothing." Hegel saw clearly that his "Nothing" was only
+ the farthest limit of abstraction, and that it was
+ consequently absolutely empty and worthless. It was only
+ his starting point of thought, not his end, as in the case
+ of Brahmanism and of Buddhism. Only after Hegel had passed
+ the "Nothing" through all the successive stages of thesis,
+ antithesis, and synthesis, and thus clothed it with the
+ fullness of being and character, did he conceive it to be
+ the concrete, actual Absolute. There is, therefore, the
+ farthest possible difference between Hegel's Absolute Being
+ and Buddha's Absolute. Hegel sought to understand and state
+ in rational form the real nature of the Christian's
+ conception of God. Whether he did so or not, this is not
+ the place to say.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CY_104'
+ id="Footnote_CY_104"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CY_104'>[CY]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>I remark, in passing, that Western non-Christian thought
+ has experienced, and still experiences, no little
+ difficulty in conceiving the ultimate nature of being, and
+ thus in solving the problem, into which, as a cavernous
+ tomb, the speculative religions of the Orient have fallen.
+ Western non-Christian systems, whether materialism,
+ consistent agnosticism, impersonal pantheism, or other
+ systems which reject the Christian conception of God as
+ perfect personality endowed with all the fullness of being
+ and character, equally with philosophic Buddhism, fail to
+ provide any theoretic foundation for the doctrine of the
+ value of man as man, and consequently fail to provide any
+ guarantee for individualism in the social order and the
+ wide development of personality among the masses.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_CZ_105'
+ id="Footnote_CZ_105"></a><a href='#FNanchor_CZ_105'>[CZ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapter vi.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DA_106'
+ id="Footnote_DA_106"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DA_106'>[DA]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Foot of chapter xxix.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DB_107'
+ id="Footnote_DB_107"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DB_107'>[DB]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Chapter xxxiii. p. 498.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DC_108'
+ id="Footnote_DC_108"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DC_108'>[DC]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>It seems desirable to append a brief additional
+ statement on the doctrine of the "personality of God," and
+ its acceptability to the Japanese. I wish to make it clear,
+ in the first place, that the difficulties felt by the
+ Japanese in adopting this doctrine are not due primarily to
+ the deficiency either of the Japanese language or to the
+ essential nature of the Japanese mind, that is to say,
+ because of its asserted structural "impersonality." We have
+ seen how the entire thought of the people, and even the
+ direct moral teachings, imply both the fact of personality
+ in man, and also its knowledge. The religious teachings,
+ likewise, imply the personality even of "Heaven."</p>
+
+ <p>That there are philosophical or, more correctly
+ speaking, metaphysical difficulties attending this
+ doctrine, I am well aware; and that they are felt by some
+ few Japanese, I also know. But I maintain that these
+ difficulties have been imported from the West. The
+ difficulties raised by a sensational philosophy which
+ results in denying the reality even of man's psychic
+ nature, no less than the difficulties due to a
+ thoroughgoing idealism, have both been introduced among
+ educated Japanese and have found no little response. I am
+ persuaded that the real causes of the doubt entertained by
+ a few of the Christians in Japan as to the personality of
+ God are of foreign origin. These doubts are to be answered
+ in exactly the same way as the same difficulties are
+ answered in other lands. It must be shown that the
+ sensational and "positive" philosophies, ending in
+ agnosticism as to all the great problems of life and of
+ reality, are essentially at fault in not recognizing the
+ nature of the mind that knows. The searching criticism of
+ these assumptions and methods made by T.H. Green and other
+ careful thinkers, and to which no answer has been made by
+ the sensational and agnostic schools of thought, needs to
+ be presented in intelligible Japanese for the fairly
+ educated Japanese student and layman. So, too, the
+ discussions of such writers and philosophical thinkers as
+ Seth, and Illingworth, and especially Lotze, whose
+ discussions of "personality" are unsurpassed, should be
+ presented to Japanese thinkers in native garb. But, again I
+ repeat, it seems to me that the difficulty felt in Japan on
+ these subjects is due not to the "impersonality" of the
+ language or the native mind, or to the hitherto prevalent
+ religions, but wholly to the imported philosophies and
+ sciences. The individuals who feel or at least express any
+ sense of difficulty on these topics&mdash;so far at least
+ as my knowledge of the subject goes&mdash;are not those who
+ know nothing but their own language and their own native
+ religions, but rather those who have had exceptional
+ advantages in foreign study, many of them having spent
+ years abroad in Western universities. They furnish a fresh
+ revelation of the quickness with which the Japanese take up
+ with new ideas. They did not evolve these difficulties for
+ themselves, but gathered them from their reading of Western
+ literature and by their mingling with men of unevangelical
+ temper and thought in the West.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DD_109'
+ id="Footnote_DD_109"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DD_109'>[DD]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>"Sacred Books of the East," vol. xlix, part ii. p.
+ 147.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DE_110'
+ id="Footnote_DE_110"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DE_110'>[DE]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p><i>Cf.</i> chapters xiii. and xxxi.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DF_111'
+ id="Footnote_DF_111"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DF_111'>[DF]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>It is not strange that in all the centers of this new
+ learning Confucius was deified and worshiped. In connection
+ with many schools established for the study of his works,
+ temples were built to his honor, in which his statue alone
+ was placed, before which a stately religious service was
+ performed at regular intervals. Thus did Confucianism
+ become a living and vitalizing, although, as we shall soon
+ see, an incomplete religion.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DG_112'
+ id="Footnote_DG_112"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DG_112'>[DG]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Writers on the history and philosophy of religion have
+ much to say about the differences between national and
+ universal religions. The three religions which they
+ pronounce universal are Mahomedanism, Buddhism, and
+ Christianity. The ground for this statement is the fact
+ that each of these religions has developed strong
+ individualistic characteristics. They are concerned with
+ individual salvation. The importance of this element none
+ will deny, least of all the writer. But I question the
+ correctness of the descriptive adjective. Because of their
+ individualistic character they are fitted to leap
+ territorial boundaries and can find acceptance in every
+ community; for this they are not dependent on the
+ territorial expansion of the communities in which they
+ arose.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DH_113'
+ id="Footnote_DH_113"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DH_113'>[DH]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. xvii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DI_114'
+ id="Footnote_DI_114"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DI_114'>[DI]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. xviii.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DJ_115'
+ id="Footnote_DJ_115"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DJ_115'>[DJ]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 19.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DK_116'
+ id="Footnote_DK_116"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DK_116'>[DK]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 6.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DL_117'
+ id="Footnote_DL_117"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DL_117'>[DL]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 37.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_DM_118'
+ id="Footnote_DM_118"></a><a href='#FNanchor_DM_118'>[DM]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>P. 83.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><a name='Footnote_2_119'
+ id="Footnote_2_119"></a><a href='#FNanchor_2_119'>[DN]</a>
+
+ <div class='note'>
+ <p>Whether or not the activity modifies the transmissible
+ nature is the problem as to the inheritance of acquired
+ characteristics. The dictum that function produces organism
+ does not say whether that organism is transmissible or not,
+ either in biology or sociology.</p>
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div>
+ <br />
+ </div><br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And
+Psychic, by Sidney L. Gulick
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And Psychic
+
+Author: Sidney L. Gulick
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2004 [EBook #13831]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE, ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Michael Ciesielski and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE
+
+
++----------------------------------------------------------------+
+| THE GROWTH OF THE KINGDOM OF GOD |
+| By |
+| |
+| SIDNEY L. GULICK, M.A. |
+| |
+| Illustrated with Twenty-six Diagrams _12 mo, Cloth, $1.50_ |
+| |
+| "Commends itself to thoughtful, earnest men of any nation as a |
+| most valuable missionary paper. Mr. Gulick traces the |
+| Christian religion through history and up to now. The survey |
+| is calm, patient, thoroughly honest, and quietly assured." |
+| --_Evangelist_. |
+| |
+| FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY |
+| |
+| Publishers |
+| |
++----------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE
+
+_SOCIAL AND PSYCHIC_
+
+BY
+
+SIDNEY L. GULICK, M.A.
+
+_Missionary of the American Board in Japan_
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+NEW YORK CHICAGO TORONTO
+
+Fleming H. Revell Company
+
+LONDON AND EDINBURGH
+
+
+New York: 158 Fifth Avenue Chicago: 63 Washington Street Toronto: 27
+Richmond Street, W. London: 21 Paternoster Square Edinburgh: 30 St.
+Mary Street
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The present work is an attempt to interpret the characteristics of
+modern Japan in the light of social science. It also seeks to throw
+some light on the vexed question as to the real character of so-called
+race-nature, and the processes by which that nature is transformed. If
+the principles of social science here set forth are correct, they
+apply as well to China and India as to Japan, and thus will bear
+directly on the entire problem of Occidental and Oriental social
+intercourse and mutual influence.
+
+The core of this work consists of addresses to American and English
+audiences delivered by the writer during his recent furlough. Since
+returning to Japan, he has been able to give but fragments of time to
+the completion of the outlines then sketched, and though he would
+gladly reserve the manuscript for further elaboration, he yields to
+the urgency of friends who deem it wise that he delay no longer in
+laying his thought before the wider public.
+
+To Japanese readers the writer wishes to say that although he has not
+hesitated to make statements painful to a lover of Japan, he has not
+done it to condemn or needlessly to criticise, but simply to make
+plain what seem to him to be the facts. If he has erred in his facts
+or if his interpretations reflect unjustly on the history or spirit of
+Japan, no one will be more glad than he for corrections. Let the
+Japanese be assured that his ruling motive, both in writing about
+Japan and in spending his life in this land, is profound love for the
+Japanese people. The term "native" has been freely used because it is
+the only natural correlative for "foreign." It may be well to say that
+neither the one nor the other has any derogatory implication,
+although anti-foreign natives, and anti-native foreigners, sometimes
+so use them.
+
+The indebtedness of the writer is too great to be acknowledged in
+detail. But whenever he has been conscious of drawing directly from
+any author for ideas or suggestions, effort has been made to indicate
+the source.
+
+Since the preparation of the larger part of this work several
+important contributions to the literature on Japan have appeared which
+would have been of help to the writer, could he have referred to them
+during the progress of his undertaking. Rev. J.C.C. Newton's "Japan:
+Country, Court, and People"; Rev. Otis Cary's "Japan and Its
+Regeneration"; and Prof. J. Nitobe's "Bushido: The Soul of Japan,"
+call for special mention. All are excellent works, interesting,
+condensed, informative, and well-balanced. Had the last named come to
+hand much earlier it would have received frequent reference and
+quotation in the body of this volume, despite the fact that it sets
+forth an ideal rather than the actual state of Old Japan.
+
+Special acknowledgment should be made of the help rendered by my
+brothers, Galen M. Fisher and Edward L. Gulick, and by my sister, Mrs.
+F.F. Jewett, in reading and revising the manuscript. Acknowledgment
+should also be made of the invaluable criticisms and suggestions in
+regard to the general theory of social evolution advocated in these
+pages made by my uncle, Rev. John T. Gulick, well known to the
+scientific world for his contributions to the theory as well as to the
+facts of biological evolution.
+
+S.L.G.
+
+MATSUYAMA, JAPAN.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+INTRODUCTION 13
+
+
+I. PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS
+
+Occidental conceptions of the recent history of Japan--Japan seems to
+be contradicting our theory of national evolution--Similarities of
+ancient and modern Japan--Japanese evolution is "natural"--The study
+of Japanese social evolution is of unusual interest, because it has
+experienced such marked changes--Because it is now in a stage of rapid
+growth--And is taking place before our eyes--Also because here is
+taking place a unique union of Occidental and Oriental
+civilizations--Comparison between India and Japan, 23
+
+
+II. HISTORICAL SKETCH
+
+Mythology and tradition--Authentic history--Old Japan--The transition
+from Old to New Japan--New Japan--Compelled by foreign nations to
+centralize--Ideals and material instruments supplied from
+abroad--Exuberant Patriotism--"Ai-koku-shin," 35
+
+
+III. THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS
+
+Is Japan making progress?--Happiness as a criterion--The oppressive
+rule of militarism--The emptiness of the ordinary life--The condition
+of woman--"The Greater Learning for Woman"--Divorce--Progress
+defined--Deficiency of the hedonistic criterion of progress, 52
+
+
+IV. THE METHOD OF PROGRESS
+
+Progress a modern conception and ideal--How was the "cake of custom"
+broken?--"Government by discussion" an insufficient principle of
+progress--Two lines of progress, Ideal and Material--The significance
+of Perry's coming to Japan--Effect on Japan of Occidental ideas--The
+material element of progress--Mistaken praise of the simplicity of Old
+Japan, L. Hearn--The significance of the material element of
+civilization--Mastery of nature--The defect of Occidental
+civilization, 61
+
+
+V. JAPANESE SENSITIVENESS TO ENVIRONMENT
+
+Our main question--Illustrations--Japanese students
+abroad--Sensitiveness to ridicule--Advantages and disadvantages of
+this characteristic--National sensitiveness to foreign
+criticism--Nudity--Formosa--Mental and physical
+flexibility--Adjustability--Some apparent exceptions--Chinese
+ideographs--How account for these characteristics, 72
+
+
+VI. WAVES OF FEELING--ABDICATION
+
+The Japanese are emotional--An illustration from politics--The
+tendency to run to extremes--Danger of overemphasizing this
+tendency--Japanese silent dissent--Men of balance in public
+life--Abdication--Gubbins quoted--Is abdication an inherent trait? 82
+
+
+VII. HEROES AND HERO-WORSHIP
+
+Popular national heroes--The craving for modern heroes--Townsend
+Harris's insight into Oriental character--Hero-worship an obstacle to
+missionary work--Capt. Jaynes--An experience in Kumamoto--"The sage of
+Omi"--"The true hero"--Moral heroes in Japan--The advantage and
+disadvantage of hero-worship--Modern moral heroes--Hero-worship
+depends on personality and idealism--The new social order is producing
+new ideals and new heroes, 89
+
+
+VIII. LOVE FOR CHILDREN
+
+Japanese love for children--Children's festivals--Toys and
+toy-stores--Do Japanese love children more than Americans
+do?--Importance in Japan of maintaining the family line--The looseness
+of the Japanese family tie--Early cessation of demonstrative
+affection--Infanticide, 96
+
+
+IX. MARITAL LOVE
+
+Affection between husband and wife--Occidental and Oriental estimate
+of woman contrasted--This a subject easily-misunderstood--Kissing a
+social habit unknown in Japan--Demonstrative affection a social, not a
+racial characteristic--Some specific illustrations, Dr. Neesima--A
+personal experience--Illegitimate children--Fraudulent
+registration--Adult adoption--Divorce--Monogamy, polygamy, and
+prostitution--Race character, social order, and affection--Position of
+women--The social order and affection--The social order and the
+valuation of man and woman--The new social order and the valuation of
+man--The spread of Christian ideals and the re-organization of the
+family, 102
+
+
+X. CHEERFULNESS--INDUSTRY--TRUTHFULNESS--SUSPICIOUSNESS
+
+Japanese cheerfulness--Festivals--Pessimism existent, but easily
+overlooked--The ubiquity of children gives an appearance of
+cheerfulness--Industry--Illustrations--Easy-going--Sociological
+interpretation--Mutual confidence and trustfulness--Relation to
+communalistic feudalism--Changes in the social order and in
+character--The American Board's experience in trusting Japanese
+honor--The Doshisha and its difficulties--Suspiciousness--Necessary
+under the old social order--The need of constant care in conversation,
+115
+
+
+XI. JEALOUSY--REVENGE--HUMANE FEELINGS
+
+Jealousy particularly ascribed to women--How related to the social
+order--Is jealousy limited to women?--Revenge--Taught as a moral
+duty--Revenge and the new social order--Are the Japanese cruel?--First
+impressions--Treatment of the insane--Of lepers--The cruelty and
+hardness of heart of Old Japan--Buddhistic teaching and
+practice--Buddhist and Christian Orphan Asylums--Treatment of
+horses--Torture in Old Japan--Crucifixion and transfixion by
+spears--Hard-heartedness cultivated under feudalism--Cruelty and the
+humane feelings in the Occident--Abolition of cruel customs in ancient
+and in Old Japan--Cruelty a sociological, not a biological
+characteristic--The rise of humane feelings--Doctors and
+hospitals--Philanthropy, 127
+
+
+XII. AMBITION--CONCEIT
+
+Ambition, both individual and national--The "Kumamoto
+Band"--Self-confidence and conceit--Refined in nature--Illustrations
+in the use of English--Readiness of young men to assume grave
+responsibilities--A product of the social order--Assumptions of
+inferiority by the common people--Obsequiousness--Modern
+self-confidence and assumptions not without ground--Self-confidence
+and success--Self-confidence and physical size--Young men and the
+recent history of Japan--The self-confidence and conceit of Western
+nations--The open-mindedness of most Japanese, 137
+
+
+XIII. PATRIOTISM--APOTHEOSIS--COURAGE
+
+"Yamato-Damashii": "The Soul of Japan"--Patriotism and the recent war
+with China--Patriotism of Christian orphans--Mr. Ishii--Patriotism is
+for a person, not for country--National patriotism is
+modern--Passionate devotion to the Emperor--A gift of 20,000,000 yen
+to the Emperor--The constitution derives its authority from the
+Emperor--A quotation from Prof. Yamaguchi--Japanese Imperial
+succession is of Oriental type--Concubines and children of the
+reigning Emperor--Apotheosis, Oriental and Occidental--Apotheosis and
+national unity--The political conflict between Imperial and popular
+sovereignty--Japanese and Roman apotheosis--Prof. Nash
+quoted--Courage--Cultivated in ancient times--A peculiar feature of
+Japanese courage--"Harakiri"--E. Griffis quoted--A boy hero--Relation
+of courage to social order--Japanese courage not only physical--modern
+instance of moral courage, 144
+
+
+XIV. FICKLENESS--STOLIDITY--STOICISM
+
+Illustrations of fickleness--Prof. Chamberlain's
+explanation--Fickleness a modern trait--Continuity of purpose in spite
+of changes of method--The youth of those on whom responsibility
+rests--Fluctuation of interest in Christianity not a fair
+illustration--The period of fluctuation is passing
+away--Impassiveness--"Putty faces"--Distinguish between stupidity and
+stoicism--Stupid stolidity among the farmers--Easily removed--Social
+stolidity cultivated--Demanded by the old social order--The influence
+of Buddhism in suppressing expression of emotion--An illustration of
+suppressed curiosity--Lack of emotional manifestations when the
+Emperor appears in public--Stolidity a social, not a racial trait--A
+personal experience--The increased vivacity of Christian
+women--Relations of emotional to intellectual development and to the
+social order, 159
+
+
+XV. AESTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS
+
+The wide development of the aesthetic sense in Japan--Japanese aesthetic
+development is unbalanced--The sense of smell--Painting--Japanese art
+pays slight attention to the human form--Sociological
+interpretation--The nude in Japanese art--Relation to the social
+order--Art and immorality--Caricature--Fondness for the abnormal in
+nature--Abnormal stones--Tosa cocks--AEsthetics of speech--The aesthetic
+sense and the use of personal pronouns--Deficiency of the aesthetic
+development in regard to speech--Sociological explanations--Close
+relation of aesthetics and conduct--Sociological explanation for the
+wide development of the aesthetic sense--The classes lived in close
+proximity--The spirit of dependence and imitation--Universality of
+culture more apparent than real--Defects of aesthetic taste--Defective
+etiquette--How accounted for--Old and new conditions--"Western taste
+debasing Japanese art"--Illustration of aboriginal aesthetic
+defects--Colored photographs--AEsthetic defects of popular shrines--The
+aesthetics of music--Experience of the Hawaiian people--Literary
+aesthetic development--Aston quoted--Architectural aesthetic
+development--AEsthetic development is sociological rather than
+biological, 170
+
+
+XVI. MEMORY--IMITATION
+
+Psychological unity of the East and the West--Brain size and social
+evolution--The size of the Japanese brain--Memory--Learning Chinese
+characters--Social selection and mnemonic power--Japanese memory in
+daily life--Memory of uncivilized and semi-civilized peoples--Hindu
+memory--Max Mueller quoted--Japanese acquisition of foreign
+languages--The argument from language for the social as against the
+biological distinction of races--The faculty of imitation; is not to
+be despised--Prof. Chamberlain's over-emphasis of Japanese
+imitation--Originality in adopting Confucianism and
+Buddhism--"Shinshu"--"Nichirenshu"--Adoption of Chinese
+philosophy--Dr. Knox's over-emphasis of servile adoption--Our
+ignorance of Japanese history of thought--A reason for Occidental
+misunderstanding--The incubus of governmental initiative--Relation of
+imitation to the social order, 189
+
+
+XVII. ORIGINALITY--INVENTIVENESS
+
+Originality in art--Authoritative suppression of originality--Townsend
+Harris quoted--Suppression of Christianity and of heterodox
+Confucianism--Modern suppression of historical research--Yet Japan is
+not wholly lacking in originality--Recent discoveries and
+inventions--Originality in borrowing from the West--Quotations from a
+native paper, 203
+
+
+XVIII. INDIRECTNESS--"NOMINALITY"
+
+"Roundaboutness"--Some advantages of this
+characteristic--Illustrations--Study of English for direct and
+accurate habits of thought--Rapid modern growth of
+directness--"Nominality"--All Japanese history an illustration--The
+Imperial rule only nominal--The daimyo as a figure-head--"Nominality"
+in ordinary life--In family relations--Illustrations in Christian
+work--A "nominal" express train--"Nominality" and the social order,
+210
+
+
+XIX. INTELLECTUALITY
+
+Do Japanese lack the higher mental faculties?--Evidence of
+inventions--Testimony of foreign teachers--Japanese students, at home
+and abroad--Readiness in public speech--Powers of generalization in
+primitive Japan--"Ri" and "Ki," "In" and "Yo"--Japanese use of Chinese
+generalized philosophical terms--Generalization and the social
+order--Defective explanation of puerile Oriental science--Relation to
+the mechanical memory method of education--High intellectuality
+dependent on social order, 218
+
+
+XX. PHILOSOPHICAL ABILITY
+
+Do Japanese lack philosophical ability?--Some opinions--Some
+distinctions--Japanese interest in metaphysical problems--Buddhist and
+Confucian metaphysics--Metaphysics and ethics--Japanese students of
+Occidental philosophy--A personal experience--"The little
+philosopher"--A Buddhist priest--Rarity of original philosophical
+ability and even interest--Philosophical ability and the social order
+in the West, 225
+
+
+XXI. IMAGINATION
+
+Some criticisms of Japanese mental traits--Wide range of imaginative
+activity--Some salient points--Unbalanced imaginative
+development--Prosaic matter-of-factness--Visionariness--Impractical
+idealism--Illustrations--An evangelist--A principal--Visionariness in
+Christian work--Visionariness in national ambition--Imagination and
+optimism--Mr. Lowell's opinion criticised--Fancy and
+imagination--Caricature--Imagination and imitation--Sociological
+interpretation of visionariness--And of prosaic
+matter-of-factness--Communalism and the higher mental
+powers--Suppression of the constructive imagination--Racial
+intellectual characteristics are social rather than inherent, 233
+
+
+XXII. MORAL IDEALS
+
+Loyalty and filial piety as moral ideals--Quotations from an ancient
+moralist, Muro Kyuso--On the heavenly origin of moral teaching--On
+self-control--Knowledge comes through obedience--On the impurity of
+ancient literature--On the ideal of the samurai in relation to
+trade--Old Japan combined statute and ethical law--"The testament of
+Iyeyasu"--Ohashi's condemnation of Western learning for its
+impiety--Japanese moral ideals were communal--Truthfulness
+undeveloped--Relations of samurai to tradesman--The business standards
+are changing with the social order--Ancient Occidental contempt for
+trade--Plato and Aristotle, 249
+
+
+XXIII. MORAL IDEALS (_Continued_)
+
+The social position of woman--Valuation of the individual--Confucian
+and Buddhistic teaching in regard to concubinage and
+polygamy--Sociological interpretation--Japan not exceptional--Actual
+morality of Old Japan--Modern growth of immorality--Note on the
+"Social Evil"--No ancient teaching in regard to masculine
+chastity--Mr. Hearn's mistaken contention--Filial obedience and
+prostitution--How could the social order produce two different moral
+ideals?--The new Civil Code on marriage--Divorce--Statistics--Modern
+advance of woman--Significance of the Imperial Silver Wedding--The
+Wedding of the Prince Imperial--Relation of Buddhism and Confucianism
+to moral ideals and practice--The new spirit of Buddhism--Christian
+influence on Shinto; Tenri Kyo--The ancient moralists confined their
+attention to the rulers--The Imperial Edict in regard to Moral
+Education, 258
+
+
+XXIV. MORAL PRACTICE
+
+The publicity of Japanese life--Public bathing--Personal experience at
+a hot-spring--Mr. Hearn on privacy--Individualism and variation from
+the moral standard--Standards advancing--Revenge--Modern liberty of
+travel--Increase of wealth--Increasing luxury and vice--Increase of
+concubinage--Native discussions--Statistics--Business honesty--A
+native paper quoted--Some experiences with Christians--Testimony of a
+Japanese consul--Difference of gifts to Buddhist and to Christian
+institutions--Christian condemnation of Doshisha
+mismanagement--Misappropriation of trust funds in the West--Business
+honesty and the social order--Fitness of Christianity to the new
+social order--A summary--Communal virtues--Individual Vices--The
+authority of the moral ideal--Moral characteristics are not inherent,
+but social, in nature, 273
+
+
+XXV. ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?
+
+Prof. Pfleiderer's view--Percival Lowell's definition of
+religion--Japanese appearance of irreligion due to many
+facts--Skeptical attitude of Confucius towards the gods--Ready
+acceptance of Western agnosticism--Prof. Chamberlain's assertion that
+the Japanese take their religion lightly--Statements concerning
+religion by Messrs. Fukuzawa, Kato, and Ito--Statements of Japanese
+irreligion are not to be lightly accepted--Incompetence of many
+critics--We must study all the religious
+phenomena--Pilgrimages--Statistics--Mr. Lowell's criticism of
+"peripatetic picnic parties"--Is religion necessarily gloomy?--God and
+Buddha shelves universal in Japan--Temples and shrines--Statistics,
+286
+
+
+XXVI. SOME RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA
+
+Stoical training conceals religious emotions--The earnestness of many
+suppliants--Buddhistic and Shinto practice of religious ecstasy--The
+revolt from Buddhism a religious movement--Muro Kyu-so
+quoted--"Heaven's Way"--"God's omnipresence"--Pre-Christian teachers
+of Christian truth--Interpretation of modern irreligious
+phenomena--Japanese apparent lack of reverence--Not an inherent racial
+characteristic--Sketch of Japanese religious
+history--Shinto--Buddhism--Confucianism--Christianity--Roman
+Catholicism--Protestantism--Religious characteristics are social, not
+essential or racial, 296
+
+
+XXVII. SOME RELIGIOUS CONCEPTIONS
+
+Japanese conceptions as to deity--The number and relation of the gods
+to the universe--Did the Japanese have the monotheistic
+conception?--Attractiveness of Christian monotheism--Confucian and
+Buddhist monism--Religious conception of man--Conception of
+sin--Defective terminology--Relation of sin to salvation--"Holy
+water"--Holy towels and the spread of disease--The slight connection
+between physical and moral pollution--W.E. Griffis quoted--Exaggerated
+cleanliness of the Japanese--Public bathing houses--Consciousness of
+sin in the sixteenth century--A recent experience--Doctrine of the
+future life--Salvation from fate--"Ingwa"--These are important
+doctrines--"Mei" (Heaven's decree)--Japan not unique--Sociological
+interpretations of religious characteristics, 310
+
+
+XXVIII. SOME RELIGIOUS PRACTICES
+
+Loyalty and filial piety as religious phenomena--Gratitude as a
+religions trait--Hearn quoted--Unpleasant experiences of
+ingratitude--Modern suppression of phallicism--Brothels and
+prostitutes at popular shrines--The failure of higher ethnic faiths to
+antagonize the lower--Suppression of phallicism due to Western
+opinion--The significance of this suppression to sociological
+theory--Religious liberty--Some history--Inconsistent attitude of the
+Educational Department--Virtual establishment of compulsory state
+religion--Review and summary--The Japanese ready learners of foreign
+religions--The significance of this to sociology--Japanese future
+religion is to be Christianity, 322
+
+
+XXIX. SOME PRINCIPLES OF NATIONAL EVOLUTION
+
+Progress is from smaller to larger communities--Arrest of
+development--The necessity of individualism--The relation of communal
+to individual development--A possible misunderstanding--The problem of
+distribution--Personality, 332
+
+
+XXX. ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?
+
+Assertion of Oriental impersonality--Quotations from Percival
+Lowell--Defective and contradictory definitions--Arguments for
+impersonality resting on mistaken interpretations--Children's
+festivals--Occidental and Oriental method of counting ages--Argument
+for impersonality from Japanese art--From the characteristics of the
+Japanese family--The bearing of divorce on this argument--Do Japanese
+"fall in love"?--Suicide and murder for love--Occidental approval and
+Oriental condemnation of "falling in love"--Sociological significance
+of divorce and of "falling in love," 344
+
+
+XXXI. THE JAPANESE NOT IMPERSONAL
+
+The problem stated--Definitions--Remarks on
+definitions--Characteristics of a person--Impersonality defined--A
+preliminary summary statement--Definitions of Communalism and
+Individualism--The argument for "impersonality" from Japanese
+politeness--Some difficulties of this interpretation--The sociological
+interpretation of politeness--The significance of Japanese
+sensitiveness--Altruism as a proof of impersonality--Japanese
+selfishness and self-assertiveness--Distinction between communal and
+individualistic altruism--Deficiency of personal pronouns as a proof
+of impersonality--A possible counter-argument--Substitutes for
+personal pronouns--Many personal words in Japanese--Origin of
+pronouns, personal and others--The relation of the social order to the
+use of personal pronouns--Japanese conceive Nationality only through
+Personality--"Strong" and "weak" personality--Strong personalities in
+Japan--Feudalism and strong personalities, 356
+
+
+XXXII. IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?
+
+Self-suppression as a proof of impersonality--Self-suppression cannot
+be ascribed to a primitive people--Esoteric Buddhism not
+popular--Buddhism emphasized introspection and self-consciousness--Mr.
+Lowell on the teaching of Buddha--Consciousness of union with the
+Absolute a developed, not a primitive, trait--Buddhist
+self-suppression proves a developed self--Buddhist self-salvation and
+Christian salvation by faith--Buddhism does not develop rounded
+personality--Buddhism attributes no worth to the self--Buddhist mercy
+rests on the doctrine of transmigration, not on the inherent worth of
+man--Analysis of the diverse elements in the asserted "Impersonality
+"--Why Buddhism attributed no value to the self--The Infinite Absolute
+Abstraction--Buddhism not impersonal but abstract--Buddhist doctrine
+of illusion--Popular Buddhism not philosophical--Relation of "ingwa,"
+Fate, to the development of personality--Relation of belief in freedom
+to the fact of freedom--Sociological consequences of Buddhist
+doctrine, 377
+
+
+XXXIII. TRACES OF PERSONALITY IN SHINTOISM, BUDDHISM, AND CONFUCIANISM
+
+Human illogicalness providential--Some devices for avoiding the evils
+of logical conclusions--Buddhistic actual appeal to personal
+self-activity--Practical Confucianism an antidote to Buddhist
+poison--Confucian ethics produced strong persons--The personal
+conception of deity is widespread--Shinto gods all persons--Popular
+Buddhist gods are personal--Confucian "Heaven" implies
+personality--The idea of personality not wholly wanting in the
+Orient--The idea of divine personality not difficult to impart to a
+Japanese--A conversation with a Buddhist priest--Sketch of the
+development of Japanese personality--Is personality
+inherent?--Intrinsic and phenomenal personality--Note on the doctrine
+of the personality of God, 389
+
+
+XXXIV. THE BUDDHIST WORLD-VIEW
+
+Comparison of Buddhist, Greek, and Christian conceptions of
+God--Nirvana--The Buddhistic Ultimate Reality absolute vacuity--Greek
+affirmation of intelligence in the Ultimate Reality--Christian
+affirmation of Divine Personality--The Buddhist universe is partly
+rational and ethical--The Greek universe is partly rational and
+ethical--Corresponding views of sin, salvation, change, and
+history--Resulting pessimism and optimism--Consequences to the
+respective civilizations and their social orders, 398
+
+
+XXXV. COMMUNAL AND INDIVIDUAL ELEMENTS IN THE EVOLUTION OF JAPANESE
+RELIGIOUS LIFE
+
+Japanese religious life has been predominantly communal--Shinto
+provided the sanctions for the social order--Recent abdication of
+Shinto as a religion--Primitive Shinto world--view--Shinto and modern
+science--Shinto sanctions for the modern social order--Buddhism is
+individualistic--Lacks social ideals and sanctions--Hence it could not
+displace Shinto--Shinto and Buddhism are supplementary--Produced a
+period of prosperity--The defect of Buddhist individualism--Imperfect
+acceptance of Shinto--Effect of political history--Confucianism
+restored the waning communal sanctions--The difference between Shinto
+and Confucian social ideals and sanctions--The difference between
+Shinto and Confucian world-views--Rejection of the Confucian social
+order--An interpretation--The failure of Confucianism to become a
+religion--Western intercourse re-established Shinto sanctions--Japan's
+modern religious problem--Difficulty of combining individual and
+communal religious elements--Christianity has accomplished
+it--Individualism in and through communalism--A modern expansion of
+communal religion--Shared by Japan--Some Japanese recognize the need
+of religion for Japan--Sociological function of individualistic
+religion in the higher human evolution--Obstacle to evolution through
+the development of intellect--The Japanese mind is outgrowing its old
+religious conceptions--The dependence of religious phenomena on the
+ideas dominating society--Note on National and Universal
+religions--Buddhism not properly classified as Universal--The
+classification of religions, 404
+
+
+XXXVI. WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT
+
+The conclusion reached in this work--Contrary to the opinion of
+tourists, residents, and many sociologists--Professor Le Bon
+quoted--Social psychic characteristics not inherent--Evolution and
+involution--Advocates of inherent Oriental traits should catalogue
+those traits--An attempt by the London _Daily Mail_--Is the East
+inherently intuitive, and the West logical?--The difficulty of
+becoming mutually acquainted--The secret of genuine acquaintance--Is
+the East inherently meditative and the West active?--Oriental unity
+and characteristics are social, not inherent--Isolated evolution is
+divergent--Mutual influence of the East and the West--Summary
+statement, 422
+
+
+XXXVII. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS
+
+Review of our course of thought--Purpose of this chapter--The problem
+studied in this work--Interrelation of social and psychic
+phenomena--Heredity defined and analyzed--Evolution defined--Exact
+definition of our question, and our reply--What would be an adequate
+disproof of our position--Reasons for limiting the discussion to
+advanced races--Divergent evolution dependent on
+segregation--Distinction between racial and social unity--Relation of
+the individual psychic character to the social order--"Race soul" a
+convenient fiction--Psychic function produces psychic organism--Causes
+and nature of plasticity and fixity of society--Relation of incarnate
+ideas to character and destiny--Valuelessness of "floating"
+ideas--Progress is at once communal and individual--Personality is its
+cause, aim, and criterion--Progress in personality is
+ethico-religious--Japanese social and psychic evolution not
+exceptional, 438
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The tragedy enacted in China during the closing year of the nineteenth
+century marks an epoch in the history of China and of the world. Two
+world-views, two types of civilization met in deadly conflict, and the
+inherent weakness of isolated, belated, superstitious and corrupt
+paganism was revealed. Moreover, during this, China's crisis, Japan
+for the first time stepped out upon the world's stage of political and
+military activity. She was recognized as a civilized nation, worthy to
+share with the great nations of the earth the responsibility of ruling
+the lawless and backward races.
+
+The correctness of any interpretation as to the significance of this
+conflict between the opposing civilizations turns, ultimately, on the
+question as to what is the real nature of man and of society. If it be
+true, as maintained by Prof. Le Bon and his school, that the mental
+and moral character of a people is as fixed as its physiological
+characteristics, then the conflict in China is at bottom a conflict of
+races, not of civilizations.
+
+The inadequacy of the physiological theory of national character may
+be seen almost at a glance by a look at Japan. Were an Oriental
+necessarily and unchangeably Oriental, it would have been impossible
+for Japan to have come into such close and sympathetic touch with the
+West.
+
+The conflict of the East with the West, however, is not an inherent
+and unending conflict, because it is not racial, but civilizational.
+It is a conflict of world-views and systems of thought and life. It is
+a conflict of heathen and Christian civilizations. And the conflict
+will come to an end as soon as, and in proportion as, China awakes
+from her blindness and begins to build her national temple on the
+bedrock of universal truth and righteousness. The conflict is
+practically over in Japan because she has done this. In loyally
+accepting science, popular education, and the rights of every
+individual to equal protection by the government, Japan has accepted
+the fundamental conceptions of civilization held in the West, and has
+thus become an integral part of Christendom, a fact of world-wide
+significance. It proves that the most important differences now
+separating the great races of men are civilizational, not
+physiological. It also proves that European, American, and Oriental
+peoples may be possessed by the same great ideals of life and
+principles of action, enabling them to co-operate as nations in great
+movements to their mutual advantage.
+
+While even we of the West may be long in learning the full
+significance of what has been and still is taking place in Japan and
+more conspicuously just now, because more tragically, in China, one
+thing is clear: steam and electricity have abolished forever the old
+isolation of the nations.
+
+Separated branches of the human race that for thousands of years have
+been undergoing divergent evolution, producing radically different
+languages, customs, civilizations, systems of thought and world-views,
+and have resulted even in marked physiological and psychological
+differences, are now being brought into close contact and inevitable
+conflict. But at bottom it is a conflict of ideas, not of races. The
+age of isolation and divergent evolution is passing away, and that of
+international association and convergent social evolution has begun.
+Those races and nations that refuse to recognize the new social order,
+and oppose the cosmic process and its forces, will surely be pushed to
+the wall and cease to exist as independent nations, just as, in
+ancient times, the tribes that refused to unite with neighboring
+tribes were finally subjugated by those that did so unite.
+
+Universal economic, political, intellectual, moral, and religious
+intercourse is the characteristic of the new aeon on which we are
+entering. What are to be the final consequences of this wide
+intercourse? Can a people change its character? Can a nation fully
+possessed by one type of civilization reject it, and adopt one
+radically different? Do races have "souls" which are fixed and
+incapable of radical transformations? What has taken place in Japan, a
+profound, or only a superficial change in psychical character? Are the
+destinies of the Oriental races already unalterably determined?
+
+The answers to these questions have already been suggested in the
+preceding paragraphs, in regard to what has already taken place in
+Japan. But we may add that that answer really turns on our conception
+as to the nature of the characteristics separating the East from the
+West. In proportion as national character is reckoned to be
+biological, will it be considered fixed and the national destiny
+predetermined. In proportion as it is reckoned to be sociological,
+will it be considered alterable and the national destiny subject to
+new social forces. Now that the intercourse of widely different races
+has begun on a scale never before witnessed, it is highly important
+for us to know its probable consequences. For this we need to gain a
+clear idea of the nature both of the individual man and of society, of
+the relation of the social order to individual and to race character,
+and of the law regulating and the forces producing social evolution.
+Only thus can we forecast the probable course and consequences of the
+free social intercourse of widely divergent races.
+
+It is the belief of the writer that few countries afford so clear an
+illustration of the principles involved in social evolution as Japan.
+Her development has been so rapid and so recent that some principles
+have become manifest that otherwise might easily have escaped notice.
+The importance of understanding Japan, because of the light her recent
+transformations throw on the subject of social evolution and of
+national character and also because of the conspicuous role to which
+she is destined as the natural leader of the Oriental races in their
+adoption of Occidental modes of life and thought, justifies a careful
+study of Japanese character. He who really understands Japan, has
+gained the magic key for unlocking the social mysteries of China and
+the entire East. But the Japanese people, with their institutions and
+their various characteristics, merit careful study also for their own
+sakes. For the Japanese constitute an exceedingly interesting and even
+a unique branch of the human race. Japan is neither a purgatory, as
+some would have it, nor a paradise, as others maintain, but a land
+full of individuals in an interesting stage of social evolution.
+
+Current opinions concerning Japan, however, are as curious as they are
+contradictory. Sir Edwin Arnold says that the Japanese "Have the
+nature rather of birds or butterflies than of ordinary human beings."
+Says Mr. A.M. Knapp: "Japan is the one country in the world which does
+not disappoint ... It is unquestionably the unique nation of the
+globe, the land of dream and enchantment, the land which could hardly
+differ more from our own, were it located in another planet, its
+people not of this world." An "old resident," however, calls it "the
+land of disappointments." Few phenomena are more curious than the
+readiness with which a tourist or professional journalist, after a few
+days or weeks of sight-seeing and interviewing, makes up his mind in
+regard to the character of the people, unless it be the way in which
+certain others, who have resided in this land for a number of years,
+continue to live in their own dreamland. These two classes of writers
+have been the chief contributors of material for the omnivorous
+readers of the West.
+
+It appears to not a few who have lived many years in this Far Eastern
+land, that the public has been fed with the dreams of poets or the
+snap-judgments of tourists instead of with the facts of actual
+experience. A recent editorial article in the _Japan Mail_, than whose
+editor few men have had a wider acquaintance with the Japanese people
+or language, contains the following paragraph:
+
+ "In the case of such writers as Sir Edwin Arnold and Mr. Lafcadio
+ Hearn it is quite apparent that the logical faculty is in
+ abeyance. Imagination reigns supreme. As poetic nights or
+ outbursts, the works of these authors on Japan are delightful
+ reading. But no one who has studied the Japanese in a deeper
+ manner, by more intimate daily intercourse with all classes of the
+ people than either of these writers pretends to have had, can
+ possibly regard a large part of their description as anything more
+ than pleasing fancy. Both have given rein to the poetic fancy and
+ thus have, from a purely literary point of view, scored a success
+ granted to few.... But as exponents of Japanese life and thought
+ they are unreliable.... They have given form and beauty to much
+ that never existed except in vague outline or in undeveloped germs
+ in the Japanese mind. In doing this they have unavoidably been
+ guilty of misrepresentation.... The Japanese nation of Arnold and
+ Hearn is not the nation we have known for a quarter of a century,
+ but a purely ideal one manufactured out of the author's brains. It
+ is high time that this was pointed out. For while such works please
+ a certain section of the English public, they do a great deal of
+ harm among a section of the Japanese public, as could be easily
+ shown in detail, did space allow."--_Japan Mail, May 7, 1898_.
+
+But even more harmful to the reading public of England and America are
+the hastily formed yet, nevertheless, widely published opinions of
+tourists and newspaper correspondents. Could such writers realize the
+inevitable limitations under which they see and try to generalize, the
+world would be spared many crudities and exaggerations, not to say
+positive errors. The impression so common to-day that Japan's recent
+developments are anomalous, even contrary to the laws of national
+growth, is chiefly due to the superficial writings of hasty observers.
+Few of those who have dilated ecstatically on her recent growth have
+understood either the history or the genius of her people.
+
+ "To mention but one among many examples," says Prof. Chamberlain,
+ "the ingenious Traveling Commissioner of the _Pall Mall Gazette_,
+ Mr. Henry Norman, in his lively letters on Japan published nine or
+ ten years ago, tells the story of Japanese education under the
+ fetching title of 'A Nation at School'; but the impression left is
+ that they have been their own schoolmasters. In another letter on
+ 'Japan in Arms,' he discourses concerning 'The Japanese Military
+ Re-organizers,' 'The Yokosuka dockyard,' and other matters, but
+ omits to mention that the reorganizers were Frenchmen, and that the
+ Yokosuka dockyard was also a French creation. Similarly, when
+ treating of the development of the Japanese newspaper, he ignores
+ the fact that it owed its origin to an Englishman, which surely, to
+ a man whose object was reality, should have seemed an object worth
+ recording. These letters, so full and apparently so frank, really
+ so deceptive, are, as we have said, but one instance among many of
+ the way in which popular writers on Japan travesty history by
+ ignoring the part which foreigners have played. The reasons for
+ this are not far to seek. A wonderful tale will please folks at a
+ distance all the better if made more wonderful still. Japanese
+ progress, traced to its causes and explained by references to the
+ means employed, is not nearly such fascinating reading as when
+ represented in the guise of a fairy creation, sprung from nothing,
+ like Aladdin's palace."--"_Things Japanese," p. 116_.
+
+But inter-racial misunderstanding is not, after all, so very strange.
+Few things are more difficult than to accommodate one's self in
+speech, in methods of life, and even in thought, to an alien people;
+so identifying one's deepest interest with theirs as really to
+understand them. The minds of most men are so possessed by notions
+acquired in childhood and youth as to be unable to see even the
+plainest facts at variance with those notions. He who comes to Japan
+possessed with the idea that it is a dreamland and that its old social
+order was free from defects, is blind to any important facts
+invalidating that conception; while he who is persuaded that Japan,
+being Oriental, is necessarily pagan at heart, however civilized in
+form, cannot easily be persuaded that there is anything praiseworthy
+in her old civilization, in her moral or religious life, or in any of
+her customs.
+
+If France fails in important respects to understand England; and
+England, Germany; and Germany, its neighbors; if even England and
+America can so misunderstand one another as to be on the verge of war
+over the boundary dispute of an alien country, what hope is there that
+the Occident shall understand the Orient, or the Orient the Occident?
+
+Though the difficulty seems insurmountable, I am persuaded that the
+most fruitful cause of racial misunderstandings and of defective
+descriptions both of the West by Orientals, and of the East by
+Occidentals, is a well-nigh universal misconception as to the nature
+of man, and of society, and consequently of the laws determining their
+development. In the East this error arises from and rests upon its
+polytheism, and the accompanying theories of special national creation
+and peculiar national sanctity. On these grounds alien races are
+pronounced necessarily inferior. China's scorn for foreigners is due
+to these ideas.
+
+Although this pagan notion has been theoretically abandoned in the
+West, it still dominates the thought not only of the multitudes, but
+also of many who pride themselves on their high education and liberal
+sentiments. They bring to the support of their national or racial
+pride such modern sociological theories as lend themselves to this
+view. Evolution and the survival of the fittest, degeneration and the
+arrest of development, are appealed to as justifying the arrogance and
+domineering spirit of Western nations.
+
+But the most subtle and scholarly doctrine appealed to in support of
+national pride is the biological conception of society. Popular
+writers assume that society is a biological organism and that the laws
+of its evolution are therefore biological. This assumption is not
+strange, for until recent times the most advanced professional
+sociologists have been dominated by the same misconception. Spencer,
+for example, makes sociology a branch of biology. More recent
+sociological writers, however, such as Professors Giddings and
+Fairbanks, have taken special pains to assert the essentially psychic
+character of society; they reject the biological conception, as
+inadequate to express the real nature of society. The biological
+conception, they insist, is nothing more than a comparison, useful for
+bringing out certain features of the social life and structure, but
+harmful if understood as their full statement. The laws of psychic
+activity and development differ as widely from those of biologic
+activity and development as these latter do from those that hold in
+the chemical world. If the laws which regulate psychic development and
+the progress of civilization were understood by popular writers on
+Japan, and if the recent progress of Japan had been stated in the
+terms of these laws, there would not have been so much mystification
+in the West in regard to this matter as there evidently has been.
+Japan would not have appeared to have "jumped out of her skin," or
+suddenly to have escaped from the heredity of her past millenniums of
+development. This wide misunderstanding of Japan, then, is not simply
+due to the fact that "Japanese progress, traced to its causes and
+explained by reference to the means employed, is not nearly such
+fascinating reading as when represented in the guise of a fairy
+creation," but it is also due to the still current popular view that
+the social organism is biological, and subject therefore to the laws
+of biological evolution. On this assumption, some hold that the
+progress of Japan, however it may appear, is really superficial, while
+others represent it as somehow having evaded the laws regulating the
+development of other races. A nation's character and characteristics
+are conceived to be the product of brain-structure; these can change
+only as brain structure changes. Brain is held to determine
+civilization, rather than civilization brain. Hampered by this
+defective view, popular writers inevitably describe Japan to the West
+in terms that necessarily misrepresent her, and that at the same time
+pander to Occidental pride and prejudice.
+
+But this misunderstanding of Japan reveals an equally profound
+misunderstanding in regard to ourselves. Occidental peoples are
+supposed to be what they are in civilization and to have reached their
+high attainments in theoretical and applied science, in philosophy and
+in practical politics, because of their unique brain-structures,
+brains secured through millenniums of biological evolution. The
+following statement may seem to be rank heresy to the average
+sociologist, but my studies have led me to believe that the main
+differences between the great races of mankind to-day are not due to
+biological, but to social conditions; they are not
+physico-psychological differences, but only socio-psychological
+differences. The Anglo-Saxon is what he is because of his social
+heredity, and the Chinaman is what he is because of his social
+heredity. The profound difference between social and physiological
+heredity and evolution is unappreciated except by a few of the most
+recent sociological writers. The part that association, social
+segregation, and social heredity take in the maintenance, not only of
+once developed languages and civilizations, but even in their genesis,
+has been generally overlooked.
+
+But a still more important factor in the determination of social and
+psychic evolution, generally unrecognized by sociologists, is the
+nature and function of personality. Although in recent years it has
+been occasionally mentioned by several eminent writers, personality as
+a principle has not been made the core of any system of sociology. In
+my judgment, however, this is the distinctive characteristic of human
+evolution and of human association, and it should accordingly be the
+fundamental principle of social science. Many writers on the East have
+emphasized what they call its "impersonal" characteristics. So
+important is this subject that I have considered it at length in the
+body of this work.
+
+Sociological phenomena cannot be fully expressed by any combination of
+exclusively physical, biological, and psychic terms, for the
+significant element of man and of society consists of something more
+than these--namely, personality. It is this that differentiates human
+from animal evolution. The unit of human sociology is a
+self-conscious, self-determinative being. The causative factor in the
+social evolution of man is his personality. The goal of that evolution
+is developed personality. Personality is thus at once the cause and
+the end of social progress. The conditions which affect or determine
+progress are those which affect or determine personality.
+
+The biological evolution of man from the animal has been, it is true,
+frankly assumed in this work. No attempt is made to justify this
+assumption. Let not the reader infer, however, that the writer
+similarly assumes the adequacy of the so-called naturalistic or
+evolutionary origin of ethics, of religion, or even of social
+progress. It may be doubted whether Darwin, Wallace, Le Conte, or any
+exponent of biological evolution has yet given a complete statement of
+the factors of the physiological evolution of man. It is certain,
+however, that ethical, religious, and social writers who have striven
+to account for the higher evolution of man, by appealing to factors
+exclusively parallel to those which have produced the physiological
+evolution of man, have conspicuously failed. However much we may find
+to praise in the social interpretations of such eminent writers as
+Comte, Spencer, Ward, Fiske, Giddings, Kidd, Southerland, or even
+Drummond, there still remains the necessity of a fuller consideration
+of the moral and religious evolution of man. The higher evolution of
+man cannot be adequately expressed or even understood in any terms
+lower than those of personality.
+
+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF THE JAPANESE
+
+I
+
+PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS
+
+
+Said a well educated and widely read Englishman to the writer while in
+Oxford, "Can you explain to me how it is that the Japanese have
+succeeded in jumping out of their skins?" And an equally thoughtful
+American, speaking about the recent strides in civilization made by
+Japan, urged that this progress could not be real and genuine. "How
+can such a mushroom-growth, necessarily without deep roots in the
+past, be real and strong and permanent? How can it escape being
+chiefly superficial?" These two men are typical of much of the thought
+of the West in regard to Japan.
+
+Seldom, perhaps never, has the civilized world so suddenly and
+completely reversed an estimate of a nation as it has that with
+reference to Japan. Before the recent war, to the majority even of
+fairly educated men, Japan was little more than a name for a few small
+islands somewhere near China, whose people were peculiar and
+interesting. To-day there is probably not a man, or woman, or child
+attending school in any part of the civilized world, who does not know
+the main facts about the recent war: how the small country and the men
+of small stature, sarcastically described by their foes as "Wojen,"
+pygmy, attacked the army and navy of a country ten times their size.
+
+Such a universal change of opinion regarding a nation, especially
+regarding one so remote from the centers of Western civilization as
+Japan, could not have taken place in any previous generation. The
+telegraph, the daily paper, the intelligent reporters and writers of
+books and magazine articles, the rapid steam travel and the many
+travelers--all these have made possible this sudden acquisition of
+knowledge and startling reversal of opinion.
+
+There is reason, however, to think that much misapprehension and real
+ignorance still exists about Japan and her leap into power and
+world-wide prestige. Many seem to think that Japan has entered on her
+new career through the abandonment of her old civilization and the
+adoption of one from the West--that the victories on sea and land, in
+Korea, at Port Arthur, and a Wei-hai-wei, and more recently at
+Tientsin and Pekin, were solely due to her Westernized navy and army.
+Such persons freely admit that this process of Westernization had been
+going on for many years more rapidly than the world at large knew, and
+that consequently the reputation of Japan before the war was not such
+as corresponded with her actual attainments. But they assume that
+there was nothing of importance in the old civilization; that it was
+little superior to organized barbarism.
+
+These people conceive of the change which has taken place in Japan
+during the past thirty years as a revolution, not as an evolution; as
+an abandonment of the old, and an adoption of the new, civilization.
+They conceive the old tree of civilization to have been cut down and
+cast into the fire, and a new tree to have been imported from the West
+and planted in Japanese soil. New Japan is, from this view-point, the
+new tree.
+
+Not many months ago I heard of a wealthy family in Kyoto which did not
+take kindly to the so-called improvements imported from abroad, and
+which consequently persisted in using the instruments of the older
+civilization. Even such a convenience as the kerosene lamp, now
+universally adopted throughout the land of the Rising Sun, this family
+refused to admit into its home, preferring the old-style andon with
+its vegetable oil, dim light, and flickering flame. Recently, however,
+an electric-light company was organized in that city, and this
+brilliant illuminant was introduced not only into the streets and
+stores, but into many private houses. Shortly after its introduction,
+the family was converted to the superiority of the new method of
+illumination, and passed at one leap from the old-style lantern to the
+latest product of the nineteenth century. This incident is considered
+typical of the transformations characteristic of modern Japan. It is
+supposed that New Japan is in no proper sense the legitimate product
+through evolution of Old Japan.
+
+In important ways, therefore, Japan seems to be contradicting our
+theories of national growth. We have thought that no "heathen" nation
+could possibly gain, much less wield, unaided by Westerners, the
+forces of civilized Christendom. We have likewise held that national
+growth is a slow process, a gradual evolution, extending over scores
+and centuries of years. In both respects our theories seem to be at
+fault. This "little nation of little people," which we have been so
+ready to condemn as "heathen" and "uncivilized," and thus to despise,
+or to ignore, has in a single generation leaped into the forefront of
+the world's attention.
+
+Are our theories wrong? Is Japan an exception? Are our facts correct?
+We instinctively feel that something is at fault. We are not satisfied
+with the usual explanation of the recent history of Japan. We are
+perhaps ready to concede that "the rejection of the old and the
+adoption of Western civilization" is the best statement whereby to
+account for the new power of Japan and her new position among the
+nations, but when we stop to think, we ask whether we have thus
+explained that for which we are seeking an explanation? Do not the
+questions still remain--Why did the Japanese so suddenly abandon
+Oriental for Occidental civilization? And what mental and other traits
+enabled a people who, according to the supposition, were far from
+civilized, so suddenly to grasp and wield a civilization quite alien
+in character and superior to their own; a civilization ripened after
+millenniums of development of the Aryan race? And how far, as a matter
+of fact, has this assimilation gone? Not until these questions are
+really answered has the explanation been found, So that, after all,
+the prime cause which we must seek is not to be found in the external
+environment, but rather in the internal endowment.
+
+An effort to understand the ancient history of Japan encounters the
+same problem as that raised by her modern history. What mental
+characteristics led the Japanese a thousand years ago so to absorb the
+Chinese civilization, philosophy, and language that their own suffered
+a permanent arrest? What religious traits led them so to take on a
+religion from China and India that their own native religion never
+passed beyond the most primitive development, either in doctrine, in
+ethics, in ritual, or in organization? On the other hand, what mental
+characteristics enabled them to preserve their national independence
+and so to modify everything brought from abroad, from the words of the
+new language to the philosophy of the new religions, that Japanese
+civilization, language, and religion are markedly distinct from the
+Chinese? Why is it that, though the Japanese so fell under the bondage
+of the Chinese language as permanently to enslave and dwarf their own
+beautiful tongue, expressing the dominant thought of every sentence
+with characters (ideographs) borrowed from China, yet at the same time
+so transformed what they borrowed that no Chinaman can read and
+understand a Japanese book or newspaper?
+
+The same questions recur at this new period of Japan's national life.
+Why has she so easily turned from the customs of centuries? What are
+the mental traits that have made her respond so differently from her
+neighbor to the environment of the nineteenth-century civilization of
+the West Why is it that Japan has sent thousands of her students to
+these Western lands to see and study and bring back all that is good
+in them, while China has remained in stolid self-satisfaction, seeing
+nothing good in the West and its ways? To affirm that the difference
+is due to the environment alone is impossible, for the environment
+seems to be essentially the same. This difference of attitude and
+action must be traced, it would seem, to differences of mental and
+temperamental characteristics. Those who seek to understand the
+secret of Japan's newly won power and reputation by looking simply at
+her newly acquired forms of government, her reconstructed national
+social structure, her recently constructed roads and railroads,
+telegraphs, representative government, etc., and especially at her
+army and navy organized on European models and armed with European
+weapons, are not unlike those who would discover the secret of human
+life by the study of anatomy.
+
+This external view and this method of interpretation are, therefore,
+fundamentally erroneous. Never, perhaps, has the progress of a nation
+been so manifestly an evolution as distinguished from a revolution. No
+foreign conquerors have come in with their armies, crushing down the
+old and building up a new civilization. No magician's wand has been
+waved over the land to make the people forget the traditions of a
+thousand years and fall in with those of the new regime. No rite or
+incantation has been performed to charm the marvelous tree of
+civilization and cause it to take root and grow to such lofty
+proportions in an unprepared soil.
+
+In contrast to the defective views outlined above, one need not
+hesitate to believe that the actual process by which Old Japan has
+been transformed into New Japan is perfectly natural and necessary. It
+has been a continuous growth; it is not the mere accumulation of
+external additions; it does not consist alone of the acquisition of
+the machinery and the institutions of the Occident. It is rather a
+development from within, based upon already existing ideas and
+institutions. New Japan is the consequence of her old endowment and
+her new environment. Her evolution has been in progress and can be
+traced for at least a millennium and a half, during which she has been
+preparing for this latest step. All that was necessary for its
+accomplishment was the new environment. The correctness of this view
+and the reasons for it will appear as we proceed in our study of
+Japanese characteristics. But we need to note at this point the
+danger, into which many fall, of ascribing to Japan an attainment of
+western civilization which the facts will not warrant. She has
+secured much, but by no means all, that the West has to give.
+
+We may suggest our line of thought by asking what is the fundamental
+element of civilization? Does it consist in the manifold appliances
+that render life luxurious; the railroad, the telegraph, the post
+office, the manufactures, the infinite variety of mechanical and other
+conveniences? Or is it not rather the social and intellectual and
+ethical state of a people? Manifestly the latter. The tools indeed of
+civilization may be imported into a half-civilized, or barbarous
+country; such importation, however, does not render the country
+civilized, although it may assist greatly in the attainment of that
+result. Civilization being mental, social, and ethical, can arise only
+through the growth of the mind and character of the vast multitudes of
+a nation. Now has Japan imported only the tools of civilization? In
+other words, is her new civilization only external, formal, nominal,
+unreal? That she has imported much is true. Yet that her attainments
+and progress rest on her social, intellectual, and ethical development
+will become increasingly clear as we take up our successive chapters.
+Under the new environment of the past fifty years, this growth,
+particularly in intellectual, in industrial, and in political lines,
+has been exceedingly rapid as compared with the growths of other
+peoples.
+
+This conception of the rise of New Japan will doubtless approve itself
+to every educated man who will allow his thought to rest upon the
+subject. For all human progress, all organic evolution, proceeds by
+the progressive modification of the old organs under new conditions.
+The modern locomotive did not spring complete from the mind of James
+Watt; it is the result of thousands of years of human experience and
+consequent evolution, beginning first perhaps with a rolling log,
+becoming a rude cart, and being gradually transformed by successive
+inventions until it has become one of the marvels of the nineteenth
+century. It is impossible for those who have attained the view-point
+of modern science to conceive of discontinuous progress; of
+continually rising types of being, of thought, or of moral life, in
+which the higher does not find its ground and root and thus an
+important part of its explanation, in the lower. Such is the case not
+only with reference: to biological evolution; it is especially true of
+social evolution. He who would understand the Japan of to-day cannot
+rest with the bare statement that her adoption of the tools and
+materials of Western civilization has given her her present power and
+place among the nations. The student with historical insight knows
+that it is impossible for one nation, off-hand, without preparation,
+to "adopt the civilization" of another.
+
+The study of the evolution of Japan is one of unusual interest; first,
+because of the fact that Japan has experienced such unique changes in
+her environment. Her history brings into clear light some principles
+of evolution which the visual development of a people does not make so
+clear.
+
+In the second place, New Japan is in a state of rapid growth. She is
+in a critical period, resembling a youth, just coming to manhood, when
+all the powers of growth are most vigorous. The latent qualities of
+body and mind and heart then burst forth with peculiar force. In the
+course of four or five short years the green boy develops into a
+refined and noble man; the thoughtless girl ripens into the full
+maturity of womanhood and of motherhood. These are the years of
+special interest to those who would observe nature in her time of most
+critical activity.
+
+Not otherwise is it in the life of nations. There are times when their
+growth is phenomenally rapid; when their latent qualities are
+developed; when their growth can be watched with special ease and
+delight, because so rapid. The Renaissance was such a period in
+Europe. Modern art, science, and philosophy took their start with the
+awakening of the mind of Europe at that eventful and epochal period of
+her life. Such, I take it, is the condition of Japan to-day. She is
+"being born again"; undergoing her "renaissance." Her intellect,
+hitherto largely dormant, is but now awaking. Her ambition is equaled
+only by her self-reliance. Her self-confidence and amazing
+expectations have not yet been sobered by hard experience. Neither
+does she, nor do her critics, know how much she can or cannot do. She
+is in the first flush of her new-found powers; powers of mind and
+spirit, as well as of physical force. Her dreams are gorgeous with all
+the colors of the rainbow. Her efforts are sure, to be noble in
+proportion as her ambitions are high. The growth of the past
+half-century is only the beginning of what we may expect to see.
+
+Then again, this latest and greatest step in the evolution of Japan
+has taken place at a time unparalleled for opportunities of
+observation, under the incandescent light of the nineteenth century,
+with its thousands of educated men to observe and record the facts,
+many of whom are active agents in the evolution in progress. Hundreds
+of papers and magazines, native and European, read by tens of
+thousands of intelligent men and women, have kept the world aware of
+the daily and hourly events. Telegraphic dispatches and letters by the
+million have passed between the far East and the West. It would seem
+as if the modernizing of Japan had been providentially delayed until
+the last half of the nineteenth century with its steam and
+electricity, annihilators of space and time, in order that her
+evolution might be studied with a minuteness impossible in any
+previous age, or by any previous generation. It is almost as if one
+were conducting an experiment in human evolution in his own
+laboratory, imposing the conditions and noting the results.
+
+For still another reason is the evolution of New Japan of special
+interest to all intelligent persons. To illustrate great things by
+small, and human by physical, no one who has visited Geneva has failed
+to see the beautiful mingling of the Arve and the Rhone. The latter
+flowing from the calm Geneva lake is of delicate blue, pure and
+limpid. The former, running direct from the glaciers of Mont Blanc and
+the roaring bed of Chamouni, bears along in its rushing waters
+powdered rocks and loosened soil. These rivers, though joined in one
+bed, for hundreds of rods are quite distinct; the one, turbid; the
+other, clear as crystal; yet they press each against the other, now a
+little of the Rhone's clear current forces its way into the Arve, soon
+to be carried off, absorbed and discolored by the mass of muddy water
+around it. Now a little of the turbid Arve forces its way into the
+clear blue Rhone, to lose there its identity in the surrounding
+waters. The interchange goes on, increasing with the distance until,
+miles below, the two-rivers mingle as one. No longer is it the Arve or
+the old Rhone, but the new Rhone.
+
+In Japan there is going on to-day a process unique in the history of
+the human race. Two streams of civilization, that of the far East and
+that of the far West, are beginning to flow in a single channel. These
+streams are exceedingly diverse, in social structure, in government,
+in moral ideals and standards, in religion, in psychological and
+metaphysical conceptions. Can they live together? Or is one going to
+drive out and annihilate the other? If so, which will be victor? Or is
+there to be modification of both? In other words, is there to be a new
+civilization--a Japanese, an Occidento-Oriental civilization?
+
+The answer is plain to him who has eyes with which to see. Can the
+Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? No more can Japan
+lose all trace of inherited customs of daily life, of habits of
+thought and language, products of a thousand years of training in
+Chinese literature, Buddhist doctrine, and Confucian ethics. That "the
+boy is father to the man" is true of a nation no less than of an
+individual. What a youth has been at home in his habits of thought, in
+his purpose and spirit and in their manifestation in action, will
+largely determine his after-life. In like manner the mental and moral
+history of Japan has so stamped certain characteristics on her
+language, on her thought, and above all on her temperament and
+character, that, however she may strive to Westernize herself, it is
+impossible for her to obliterate her Oriental features. She will
+inevitably and always remain Japanese.
+
+Japan has already produced an Occidento-Oriental civilization. Time
+will serve progressively to Occidentalize it. But there is no reason
+for thinking that it will ever become wholly Occidentalized. A
+Westerner visiting Japan will always be impressed with its Oriental
+features, while an Asiatic will be impressed with its Occidental
+features. This progressive Occidentalization of Japan will take place
+according to the laws of social evolution, of which we must speak
+somewhat more fully in a later chapter.
+
+An important question bearing on this problem is the precise nature of
+the characteristics differentiating the Occident and the Orient. What
+exactly do we mean when we say that the Japanese are Oriental and will
+always bear the marks of the Orient in their civilization, however
+much they may absorb from the West? The importance and difficulty of
+this question have led the writer to defer its consideration till
+toward the close of this work.
+
+If one would gain adequate conception of the process now going on, the
+illustration already used of the mingling of two rivers needs to be
+supplemented by another, corresponding to a separate class of facts.
+Instead of the mingling of rivers, let us watch the confluence of two
+glaciers. What pressures! What grindings! What upheavals! What
+rendings! Such is the mingling of two civilizations. It is not smooth
+and Noiseless, but attended with pressure and pain. It is a collision
+in more ways than one. The unfortunates on whom the pressures of both
+currents are directed are often quite destroyed.
+
+Comparison is often made between Japan and India. In both countries
+enormous social changes are taking place; in both, Eastern and Western
+civilizations are in contact and in conflict. The differences,
+however, are even more striking than the likenesses. Most conspicuous
+is the fact that whereas, in India, the changes in civilization are
+due almost wholly to the force and rule of the conquering race, in
+Japan these changes are spontaneous, attributable entirely to the
+desire and initiative of the native rulers. This difference is
+fundamental and vital. The evolution of society in India is to a large
+degree compulsory; in a true sense it is an artificial evolution. In
+Japan, on the other hand, evolution is natural. There has not been
+the slightest physical compulsion laid on her from without. With two
+rare exceptions, Japan has never heard the boom of foreign cannon
+carrying destruction to her people. During these years of change,
+there have been none but Japanese rulers, and such has been the case
+throughout the entire period of Japanese history. Their native rulers
+have introduced changes such as foreign rulers would hardly have
+ventured upon. The adoption of the Chinese language, literature, and
+religions from ten to twelve centuries ago, was not occasioned by a
+military occupancy of Japanese soil by invaders from China. It was due
+absolutely to the free choice of their versatile people, as free and
+voluntary as was the adoption by Rome of Greek literature and
+standards of learning. The modern choice of Western material
+civilization no doubt had elements of fear as motive power. But
+impulsion through a knowledge of conditions differs radically from
+compulsion exercised by a foreign military occupancy. India
+illustrates the latter; Japan, the former.
+
+Japan and her people manifest amazing contrasts. Never, on the one
+hand, has a nation been so free from foreign military occupancy
+throughout a history covering more than fifteen centuries, and at the
+same time, been so influenced by and even subject to foreign psychical
+environment. What was the fact in ancient times is the fact to-day.
+The dominance of China and India has been largely displaced by that of
+Europe. Western literature, language, and science, and even customs,
+are being welcomed by Japan, and are working their inevitable effects.
+But it is all perfectly natural, perfectly spontaneous. The present
+choice by Japan of modern science and education and methods and
+principles of government and nineteenth-century literature and
+law,--in a word, of Occidental civilization,--is not due to any
+artificial pressure or military occupancy. But the choice and the
+consequent evolution are wholly due to the free act of the people. In
+this, as in several other respects, Japan reminds us of ancient
+Greece. Dr. Menzies, in his "History of Religion," says: "Greece was
+not conquered from the East, but stirred to new life by the
+communication of new ideas." Free choice has made Japan reject Chinese
+astronomy, surgery, medicine, and jurisprudence. The early choice to
+admit foreigners to Japan to trade may have been made entirely through
+fear, but is now accepted and justified by reason and choice.
+
+The true explanation, therefore, of the recent and rapid rise of Japan
+to power and reputation, is to be found, not in the externals of her
+civilization, not in the pressure of foreign governments, but rather
+in the inherited mental and temperamental characteristics, reacting on
+the new and stimulating environment, and working along the lines of
+true evolution. Japan has not "jumped out of her skin," but a new
+vitality has given that skin a new color.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HISTORICAL SKETCH
+
+
+How many of the stories of the Kojiki (written in 712 A.D.) and
+Nihongi (720 A.D.) are to be accepted is still a matter of dispute
+among scholars. Certain it is, however, that Japanese early history is
+veiled in a mythology which seems to center about three prominent
+points: Kyushu, in the south; Yamato, in the east central, and Izumo
+in the west central region. This mythological history narrates the
+circumstances of the victory of the southern descendants of the gods
+over the two central regions. And it has been conjectured that these
+three centers represent three waves of migration that brought the
+ancestors of the present inhabitants of Japan to these shores. The
+supposition is that they came quite independently and began their
+conflicts only after long periods of residence and multiplication.
+
+Though this early record is largely mythological, tradition shows us
+the progenitors of the modern Japanese people as conquerors from the
+west and south who drove the aborigines before them and gradually took
+possession of the entire land. That these conquerors were not all of
+the same stock is proved by the physical appearance of the Japanese
+to-day, and by their language. Through these the student traces an
+early mixture of races--the Malay, the Mongolian, and the Ural-Altaic.
+Whether the early crossing of these races bears vital relation to the
+plasticity of the Japanese is a question which tempts the scholar.
+
+Primitive, inter-tribal conflicts of which we have no reliable records
+resulted in increasing intercourse. Victory was followed by
+federation. And through the development of a common language, of
+common customs and common ideas, the tribes were unified socially and
+psychically. Consciousness of this unity was emphasized by the
+age-long struggle against the Ainu, who were not completely conquered
+until the eighteenth century.
+
+With the dawn of authentic history (500-600 A.D.) we find amalgamation
+of the conquering tribes, with, however, constantly recurring
+inter-clan and inter-family wars. Many of these continued for scores
+and even hundreds of years--proving that, in the modern sense, of the
+word, the Japanese were not yet a nation, though, through
+inter-marriage, through the adoption of important elements of
+civilization brought from China and India via Korea, through the
+nominal acceptance of the Emperor as the divinely appointed ruler of
+the land, they were, in race and in civilization, a fairly homogeneous
+people.
+
+The national governmental system was materially affected by the need,
+throughout many centuries, of systematic methods of defense against
+the Ainu. The rise of the Shogunate dates back to 883 A.D., when the
+chief of the forces opposing the Ainu was appointed by the Emperor and
+bore the official title, "The Barbarian-expelling Generalissimo." This
+office developed in power until, some centuries later, it usurped in
+fact, if not in name, all the imperial prerogatives.
+
+It is probable that the Chinese written language, literature, and
+ethical teachings of Confucius came to Japan from Korea after the
+Christian era. The oldest known Japanese writings (Japanese written
+with Chinese characters) date from the eighth century. In this period
+also Buddhism first came to Japan. For over a hundred years it made
+relatively little progress. But when at last in the ninth and tenth
+centuries native Japanese Buddhists popularized its doctrines and
+adopted into its theogony the deities of the aboriginal religion, now
+known as Shinto, Buddhism became the religion of the people, and
+filled the land with its great temples, praying priests, and gorgeous
+rituals.
+
+Even in those early centuries the contact of Japan with her Oriental
+neighbors revealed certain traits of her character which have been
+conspicuous in recent times--great capacity for acquisition, and
+readiness to adopt freely from foreign nations. Her contact with
+China, at that time so far in advance of herself in every element of
+civilization, was in some respects disastrous to her original growth.
+Instead of working out the problems of thought and life for herself,
+she took what China and Korea had to give. The result was an arrest in
+the development of everything distinctively native. The native
+religion was so absorbed by Buddhism that for a thousand years it lost
+all self-consciousness. Indeed the modern clear demarcation between
+the native and the imported religions is a matter of only a few
+decades, due to the researches of native scholars during the latter
+part of the last and the early part of this century. Even now,
+multitudes of the common people know no difference between the various
+elements of the composite religion of which they are the heirs.
+
+Moreover, early contact with China and her enormous literature checked
+the development of the native language and the growth of the native
+literature. The language suffered arrest because of the rapid
+introduction of Chinese terms for all the growing needs of thought and
+civilization. Modern Japanese is a compound of the original tongue and
+Japonicized Chinese. Native speculative thought likewise found little
+encouragement or stimulus to independent activity in the presence of
+the elaborate and in many respects profound philosophies brought from
+India and China.
+
+From earliest times the government of Japan was essentially feudal.
+Powerful families and clans disputed and fought for leadership, and
+the political history of Japan revolves around the varying fortunes of
+these families. While the Imperial line is never lost to sight, it
+seldom rises to real power.
+
+When, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Japan's conquering arm
+reached across the waters, to ravage the coast of China, to extend her
+influence as far south as Siam, and even to invade Korea with a large
+army in 1592, it looked as if she were well started on her career as a
+world-power. But that was not yet to be. The hegemony of her clans
+passed into the powerful and shrewd Tokugawa family, the policy of
+which was peace and national self-sufficiency.
+
+The representatives of the Occidental nations (chiefly of Spain and
+Portugal) were banished. The Christian religion (Roman Catholic),
+which for over fifty years had enjoyed free access and had made great
+progress, was forbidden and stamped out, not without much bloodshed.
+Foreign travel and commerce were strictly interdicted. A particular
+school of Confucian ethics was adopted and taught as the state
+religion. Feudalism was systematically established and intentionally
+developed. Each and every man had his assigned and recognized place in
+the social fabric, and change was not easy. It is doubtful if any
+European country has ever given feudalism so long and thorough a
+trial. Never has feudalism attained so complete a development as it
+did in Japan under the Tokugawa regime of over 250 years.
+
+During this period no influences came from other lands to disturb the
+natural development. With the exception of three ships a year from
+Holland, an occasional stray ship from other lands, and from fifteen
+to twenty Dutchmen isolated in a little island in the harbor of
+Nagasaki, Japan had no communication with foreign lands or alien
+peoples.
+
+Of this period, extending to the middle of the present century, the
+ordinary visitor and even the resident have but a superficial
+knowledge. All the changes that have taken place in Japan, since the
+coming of Perry in 1854, are attributed by the easy-going tourist to
+the external pressure of foreign nations. But such travelers know
+nothing of the internal preparations that had been making for
+generations previous to the arrival of Perry. The tourist is quite
+ignorant of the line of Japanese scholars that had been undermining
+the authority of the military rulers, "the Tokugawa," in favor of the
+Imperial line which they had practically supplanted.
+
+The casual student of Japan has been equally ignorant of the real
+mental and moral caliber of the Japanese. Dressed in clothing that
+appeared to us fantastic, and armed with cumbersome armor and
+old-fashioned guns, it was easy to jump to the conclusion that the
+people were essentially uncivilized. We did not know the intellectual
+discipline demanded of one, whether native or foreign, who would
+master the native language or the native systems of thought. We forgot
+that we appeared as grotesque and as barbarous to them as they to us,
+and that mental ability and moral worth are qualities that do not show
+on the surface of a nation's civilization. While they thought us to be
+"unclean," "dogs," "red-haired devils," we perhaps thought them to be
+clever savages, or at best half-civilized heathen, without moral
+perceptions or intellectual ability.
+
+Of Old Japan little more needs to be said. Without external commerce,
+there was little need for internal trade; ships were small; roads were
+footpaths; education was limited to the samurai, or military class,
+retainers of the daimyo, "feudal lords"; inter-clan travel was limited
+and discouraged; Confucian ethics was the moral standard. From the
+beginning of the seventeenth century Christianity was forbidden by
+edict, and was popularly known as the "evil way"; Japan was thought to
+be especially sacred, and the coming of foreigners was supposed to
+pollute the land and to be the cause of physical evils. Education, as
+in China, was limited to the Chinese classics. Mathematics, general
+history, and science, in the modern sense, were of course wholly
+unknown. Guns and powder were brought from the West in the sixteenth
+century by Spaniards and Portuguese, but were never improved.
+Ship-building was the same in the middle of the nineteenth century as
+in the middle of the sixteenth, perhaps even less advanced.
+Architecture had received its great impulse from the introduction of
+Buddhism in the ninth and tenth centuries and had made no material
+improvement thereafter.
+
+But while there was little progress in the external and mechanical
+elements of civilization, there was progress in other respects. During
+the "great peace," first arose great scholars. Culture became more
+general throughout the nation. Education was esteemed. The corrupt
+lives of the priests were condemned and an effort was made to reform
+life through the revival of a certain school of Confucian teachers
+known as "Shin-Gaku"--"Heart-Knowledge." Art also made progress, both
+pictorial and manual. It would almost seem as if modern artificers and
+painters had lost the skill of their forefathers of one or two hundred
+years ago.
+
+Many reasons explain the continuance of the old political and social
+order: the lack of a foreign foe to compel abandonment of the tribal
+organisation; the mountainous nature of the country with its slow,
+primitive means of intercommunication; the absence of all idea of a
+completely centralized nation. Furthermore, the principle of complete
+subordination to superiors and ancestors had become so strong that
+individual innovations were practically impossible. Japan thus lacked
+the indispensable key to further progress, the principle of
+individualism. The final step in the development of her nationality
+has been taken, therefore, only in our own time.
+
+Old Japan seemed absolutely committed to a thorough-going antagonism
+to everything foreign. New Japan seems committed to the opposite
+policy. What are the steps by which she has effected this apparent
+national reversal of attitude?
+
+We should first note that the absolutism of the Tokugawa Shogunate
+served to arouse ever-growing opposition because of its stern
+repression of individual opinion. It not only forbade the Christian
+religion, but also all independent thought in religious philosophy and
+in politics. The particular form of Confucian moral philosophy which
+it held was forced on all public teachers of Confucianism. Dissent was
+not only heretical, but treasonable. Although, by its military
+absolutism, the Tokugawa rule secured the great blessing of peace,
+lasting over two hundred years, and although the curse of Japan for
+well-nigh a thousand preceding years had been fierce inter-tribal and
+inter-family wars and feuds, yet it secured that peace at the expense
+of individual liberty of thought and act. It thus gradually aroused
+against itself the opposition of many able minds. The enforced peace
+rendered it possible for these men to devote themselves to problems of
+thought and of history. Indeed, they had no other outlet for their
+energies. As they studied the history of the past and compared their
+results with the facts of the present, it gradually dawned on the
+minds of the scholars of the eighteenth century, that the Tokugawa
+family were exercising functions of government which had never been
+delegated to them; and that the Emperor was a poverty-stricken puppet
+in the hands of a family that had seized the military power and had
+gradually absorbed all the active functions of government, together
+with its revenues.
+
+It is possible for us to see now that these early Japanese scholars
+idealized their ancient history, and assigned to the Emperor a place
+in ancient times which in all probability he has seldom held. But,
+however that may be, they thought their view correct, and held that
+the Emperor was being deprived of his rightful rule by the Tokugawa
+family.
+
+These ideas, first formulated in secret by scholars, gradually
+filtered down, still in secrecy, and were accepted by a large number
+of the samurai, the military literati of the land. Their opposition to
+the actual rulers of the land, aroused by the individual-crushing
+absolutism of the Tokugawa rule, naturally allied itself to the
+religious sentiment of loyalty to the Emperor. Few Westerners can
+appreciate the full significance of this fact. Throughout the
+centuries loyalty to the Emperor has been considered a cardinal
+virtue. With one exception, according to the popular histories, no one
+ever acknowledged himself opposed to the Emperor. Every rebellion
+against the powers in actual possession made it the first aim to gain
+possession of the Emperor, and proclaim itself as fighting for him.
+When, therefore, the scholars announced that the existing government
+was in reality a usurpation and that the Emperor was robbed of his
+rightful powers, the latent antagonism to the Tokugawa rule began to
+find both intellectual and moral justification. It could and did
+appeal to the religious patriotism of the people. It is perhaps not
+too much to say that the overthrow of the Tokugawa family and the
+restoration of the Imperial rule to the Imperial family would have
+taken place even though there had been no interference of foreign
+nations, no extraneous influences. But equally certain is it that
+these antagonisms to the ruling family were crystallized, and the
+great internal changes hastened by the coming in of the aggressive
+foreign nations. How this external influence operated must and can be
+told in a few words.
+
+When Admiral Perry negotiated his treaty with the Japanese, he
+supposed he was dealing with responsible representatives of the
+government. As was later learned, however, the Tokugawa rulers had not
+secured the formal assent of the Emperor to the treaty. The Tokugawa
+rulers and their counselors, quite as much as the clan-rulers, wished
+to keep the foreigners out of the country, but they realized their
+inability. The rulers of the clans, however, felt that the Tokugawa
+rulers had betrayed the land; they were, accordingly, in active
+opposition both to the foreigners and to the national rulers. When the
+foreigners requested the Japanese government, "the Tokugawa
+Shogunate," to carry out the treaties, it was unable to comply with
+the request because of the antagonism of the clan-rulers. When the
+clan-rulers demanded that the government annul the treaties and drive
+out the hated and much-feared foreigners, it found itself utterly
+unable to do so, because of the formidable naval power of the
+foreigners.
+
+As a consequence of this state of affairs, a few serious collisions
+took place between the foreigners and the two-sworded samurai,
+retainers of the clan-rulers. The Tokugawa rulers apparently did their
+best to protect the foreigners, and, when there was no possible method
+of evasion, to execute the treaties they had made. But they could not
+control the clans already rebellious. A few murders of foreigners,
+followed by severe reprisals, and two bombardments of native towns by
+foreign gunboats, began to reveal to the military class at large that
+no individual or local action against the foreigners was at all to be
+thought of. The first step necessary was the unification of the Empire
+under the Imperial rule. This, however, could be done only by the
+overthrow of the Tokugawa Shogunate; which was effected in 1867-68
+after a short struggle, marked by great clemency.
+
+We thus realize that the overthrow of the Shogunate as also the final
+abolishment of feudalism with its clans, lords, and hereditary rulers,
+and the establishment of those principles of political and personal
+centralization which lie at the foundation of real national unity, not
+only were hastened by, but in a marked degree dependent on, the
+stimulus and contribution of foreigners. They compelled a more
+complete Japanese unity than had existed before, for they demanded
+direct relations with the national head. And when treaty negotiations
+revealed the lack of such a head, they undertook to show its necessity
+by themselves punishing those local rulers who did not recognize the
+Tokugawa headship.
+
+With the establishment of the Emperor on the throne, began the modern
+era in Japanese history, known in Japan as "Meiji"--"Enlightened
+Rule."
+
+But not even yet was the purpose of the nation attained, namely, the
+expulsion of the polluters of the sacred soil of Japan. As soon as the
+new government was established and had turned its attention to foreign
+affairs, it found itself in as great a dilemma as had its
+predecessors, the Tokugawa rulers. For the foreign governments
+insisted that the treaties negotiated with the old government should
+be accepted in full by the new. It was soon as evident to the new
+rulers as it had been to the old that direct and forcible resistance
+to the foreigners was futile. Not by might were they to be overcome.
+Westerners had, however, supplied the ideals whereby national,
+political unity was to be secured. Mill's famous work on
+"Representative Government" was early translated, and read by all the
+thinking men of the day. These ideas were also keenly studied in their
+actual workings in the West. The consequence was that feudalism was
+utterly rejected and the new ideas, more or less modified, were
+speedily adopted, even down to the production of a constitution and
+the establishment of local representative assemblies and a national
+diet. In other words, the theories and practices of the West in regard
+to the political organization of the state supplied Japan with those
+new intellectual variations which were essential to the higher
+development of her own national unity.
+
+A further point of importance is the fact that at the very time that
+the West applied this pressure and supplied Japan with these political
+ideals she also put within her reach the material instruments which
+would enable her to carry them into practice. I refer to steam
+locomotion by land and sea, the postal and telegraphic systems of
+communication, the steam printing press, the system of popular
+education, and the modern organization of the army and the navy. These
+instruments Japan made haste to acquire. But for these, the rapid
+transformation of Old Japan into New Japan would have been an
+exceedingly long and difficult process. The adoption of these tools of
+civilization by the central authority at once gave it an immense
+superiority over any local force. For it could communicate speedily
+with every part of the Empire, and enforce its decisions with a
+celerity and a decisiveness before unknown. It became once more the
+actual head of the nation.
+
+We have thus reached the explanation of one of the most astonishing
+changes in national attitude that history has to record, and the new
+attitude seems such a contradiction of the old as to be inexplicable,
+and almost incredible. But a better knowledge of the facts and a
+deeper understanding of their significance will serve to remove this
+first impression.
+
+What, then, did the new government do? It simply said, "For us to
+drive out these foreigners is impossible; but neither is it desirable.
+We need to know the secrets of their power. We must study their
+language, their science, their machinery, their steamboats, their
+battle-ships. We must learn all their secrets, and then we shall be
+able to turn them out without difficulty. Let us therefore restrict
+them carefully to the treaty ports, but let us make all the use of
+them we can."
+
+This has virtually been the national policy of Japan ever since. And
+this policy gained the acceptance of the people as a whole with
+marvelous readiness, for a reason which few foreigners can appreciate.
+Had this policy been formulated and urged by the Tokugawa rulers,
+there is no probability that it would have been accepted. But because
+it was, ostensibly at least, the declared will of the Emperor, loyalty
+to him, which in Japan is both religion and patriotism, led to a
+hearty and complete acceptance which could hardly have been realized
+in any other land. During the first year of his "enlightened" rule
+(1868), the Emperor gave his sanction to an Edict, the last two
+clauses of which read as follows:
+
+ "The old, uncivilized way shall be replaced by the eternal
+ principles of the universe.
+
+ "The best knowledge shall be sought throughout the world, so as to
+ promote the Imperial welfare."
+
+It is the wide acceptance of this policy, which, however, is in accord
+with the real genius of the people, that has transformed Japan. It has
+sent hundreds of its young men to foreign lands to learn and bring
+back to Japan the secrets of Western power and wealth; it has
+established roads and railways, postal and telegraphic facilities, a
+public common-school system, colleges and a university in which
+Western science, history, and languages have been taught by foreign
+and foreign-trained instructors; daily, weekly, and monthly papers and
+magazines; factories, docks, drydocks; local and foreign commerce;
+representative government--in a word, all the characteristic features
+of New Japan. The whole of New Japan is only the practical carrying
+out of the policy adopted at the beginning of the new era, when it was
+found impossible to cast out the foreigners by force. Brute force
+being found to be out of the question, resort was thus made to
+intellectual force, and with real success.
+
+The practice since then has not been so much to retain the foreigner
+as to learn of him and then to eliminate him. Every branch of learning
+and industry has proved this to be the consistent Japanese policy. No
+foreigner may hope to obtain a permanent position in Japanese employ,
+either in private firms or in the government. A foreigner is useful
+not for what he can do, but for what he can teach. When any Japanese
+can do his work tolerably well, the foreigner is sure to be dropped.
+
+The purpose of this volume does not require of us a minute statistical
+statement of the present attainments of New Japan. Such information
+may be procured from Henry Norman's "Real Japan," Ransome's "Japan in
+Transition," and Newton's "Japan: Country, Court, and People." It is
+enough for us to realize that Japan has wholly abandoned or profoundly
+modified all the external features of her old, her distinctively
+Oriental civilization and has replaced them by Occidental features. In
+government, she is no longer arbitrary, autocratic, and hereditary,
+but constitutional and representative. Town, provincial, and national
+legislative assemblies are established, and in fairly good working
+order, all over the land. The old feudal customs have been replaced by
+well codified laws, which are on the whole faithfully administered
+according to Occidental methods. Examination by torture has been
+abolished. The perfect Occidentalization of the army, and the creation
+of an efficient navy, are facts fully demonstrated to the world. The
+limited education of the few--- and in exclusively Chinese
+classics--has given place to popular education. Common schools number
+over 30,000, taught by about 100,000 teachers (4278 being women),
+having over 4,500,000 pupils (over 1,500,000 being girls). The school
+accommodation is insufficient; it is said that 30,000 additional
+teachers are needed at once. Middle and high schools throughout the
+land are rejecting nearly one-half of the student applicants for lack
+of accommodation.
+
+Feudal isolation, repression, and seclusion have given way to free
+travel, free speech, and a free press. Newspapers, magazines, and
+books pour forth from the universal printing press in great profusion.
+Twenty dailies issue in the course of a year over a million copies
+each, while two of them circulate 24,000,000 and 21,000,000 copies,
+respectively.
+
+Personal, political, and religious liberty has been practically secure
+now for over two decades, guaranteed by the constitution, and enforced
+by the courts.
+
+Chinese medical practice has largely been replaced by that from the
+West, although many of the ignorant classes still prefer the old
+methods. The government enforces Western hygienic principles in all
+public matters, with the result that the national health has improved
+and the population is growing at an alarming rate. While in 1872 the
+people numbered 33,000,000, in 1898 they numbered 45,000,000. The
+general scale of living for the common people has also advanced
+conspicuously. Meat shops are now common throughout the land--a thing
+unknown in pre-Meiji times--and rice, which used to be the luxury of
+the wealthy few, has become the staple necessity of the many.
+
+Postal and telegraph facilities are quite complete. Macadamized roads
+and well-built railroads have replaced the old footpaths, except in
+the most mountainous districts. Factories of many kinds are appearing
+in every town and city. Business corporations, banks, etc., which
+numbered only thirty-four so late as 1864 are now numbered by the
+thousand, and trade flourishes as in no previous period of Japanese
+history. Instead of being a country of farmers and soldiers, Japan is
+to-day a land of farmers and merchants. Wealth is growing apace.
+International commerce, too, has sprung up and expanded phenomenally.
+Japanese merchant steamers may now be seen in every part of the world.
+
+All these changes have taken place within about three decades, and so
+radical have they been,--so productive of new life in Japan,--that
+some have urged the re-writing of Japanese history, making the first
+year of Meiji (1868) the year one of Japan, instead of reckoning from
+the year in which Jimmu Tenno is said to have ascended the throne,
+2560 years ago (B.C. 660).
+
+The way in which Japanese regard the transformations produced by the
+"restoration" of the present Emperor, upon the overthrow of the
+"Bakufu," or "Curtain Government," may be judged from the following
+graphic paragraph from _The Far East_:
+
+ "The Restoration of Meiji was indeed the greatest of revolutions
+ that this island empire ever underwent. Its magic wand left
+ nothing untouched and unchanged. It was the Restoration that
+ overthrew the Tokugawa Shogunate, which reigned supreme for over
+ two centuries and a half. It was the Restoration that brought us
+ face to face with the Occidentals. It was the Restoration that
+ pulled the demigods of the Feudal lords down to the level of the
+ commoners. It was the Restoration that deprived the samurai of
+ their fiefs and reduced them to penury. It was the Restoration that
+ taught the people to build their houses of bricks and stones and to
+ construct ships and bridges of iron instead of wood. It was the
+ Restoration that informed us that eclipses and comets are not to be
+ feared, and that earthquakes are not caused by a huge cat-fish in
+ the bottom of the earth. It was the Restoration that taught the
+ people to use the "drum-backing" thunder as their messenger, and to
+ make use of the railroad instead of the palanquin. It was the
+ Restoration that set the earth in motion, and proved that there is
+ no rabbit in the moon. It was the Restoration that bestowed on
+ Socrates and Aristotle the chairs left vacant by Confucius and
+ Mencius. It was the Restoration that let Shakspere and Goethe take
+ the place of Bakin and Chikamatsu. It was the Restoration that
+ deprived the people of the swords and topnots. In short, after the
+ Restoration a great change took place in administration, in art, in
+ science, in literature, in language spoken and written, in taste,
+ in custom, in the mode of living, nay in everything" (p. 541).
+
+A natural outcome of the Restoration is the exuberant patriotism that
+is so characteristic a feature of New Japan. The very term
+"ai-koku-shin" is a new creation, almost as new as the thing. This
+word is an incidental proof of the general correctness of the
+contention of this chapter that true nationality is a recent product
+in Japan. The term, literally translated, is "love-country heart"; but
+the point for us to notice particularly is the term for country,
+"koku"; this word has never before meant the country as a whole, but
+only the territory of a clan. If I wish to ask a Japanese what part
+of Japan is his native home, I must use this word. And if a Japanese
+wishes to ask me which of the foreign lands I am a native of, he must
+use the same word. The truth is that Old Japan did not have any common
+word corresponding to the English term, "My country." In ancient
+times, this could only mean, "My clan-territory." But with the passing
+away of the clans the old word has taken on a new significance. The
+new word, "ai-koku-shin," refers not to love of clan, but to love of
+the whole nation. The conception of national unity has at last seized
+upon the national mind and heart, and is giving the people an
+enthusiasm for the nation, regardless of the parts, which they never
+before knew. Japanese patriotism has only in this generation come to
+self-consciousness. This leads it to many a strange freak. It is
+vociferous and imperious, and often very impractical and Chauvinistic.
+It frequently takes the form of uncompromising disdain for the
+foreigner, and the most absolute loyalty to the Emperor of Japan; it
+demands the utmost respect of expression in regard to him and the form
+of government he has graciously granted the nation. The slightest hint
+or indirect suggestion of defect or ignorance, or even of limitation,
+is most vehemently resented.
+
+A few illustrations of the above statements from recent experience
+will not be out of place. In August, 1891, the Minister of Education,
+Mr. Y. Osaki, criticising the tendency in Japan to pay undue respect
+to moneyed men, said, in the course of a long speech, "You Japanese
+worship money even more reverently than the Americans do. If you had a
+republic as they have, I believe you would nominate an Iwazaki or a
+Mitsui to be president, whereas they don't think of nominating a
+Vanderbilt or a Gould." It was not long before a storm was raging
+around his head because of this reference to a republican form of
+government as a possibility in Japan. The storm became so fierce that
+he was finally compelled to resign his post and retire, temporarily,
+from political life.
+
+In October, 1898, the High Council of Education was required to
+consider various questions regarding the conduct of the educational
+department after the New Treaties should come into force. The most
+important question was whether foreigners should be allowed to have a
+part in the education of Japanese youth. The general argument, and
+that which prevailed, was that this should not be allowed lest the
+patriotism of the children be weakened. So far as appears but one
+voice was raised for a more liberal policy. Mr. Y. Kamada maintained
+that "patriotism in Japan was the outcome of foreign intercourse.
+Patriotism, that is to say, love of country--not merely of fief--and
+readiness to sacrifice everything for its sake, was a product of the
+Meiji era."
+
+In 1891 a teacher in the Kumamoto Boys' School gave expression to the
+thought in a public address that, as all mankind are brothers, the
+school should stand for the principle of universal brotherhood and
+universal goodwill to men. This expression of universalism was so
+obnoxious to the patriotic spirit of so large a number of the people
+of Kumamoto Ken, or Province, that the governor required the school to
+dismiss that teacher. There is to-day a strong party in Japan which
+makes "Japanism" their cry; they denounce all expressions of universal
+good-will as proofs of deficiency of patriotism. There are not wanting
+those who see through the shallowness of such views and who vigorously
+oppose and condemn such narrow patriotism. Yet the fact that it exists
+to-day with such force must be noted and its natural explanation, too,
+must not be forgotten. It is an indication of self-conscious
+nationality.
+
+That this love of country, even this conception of country, is a
+modern thing will appear from two further facts. Until modern times
+there was no such thing as a national flag. The flaming Sun on a field
+of white came into existence as a national flag only in 1859. The use
+of the Sun as the symbol for the Emperor has been in vogue since 700
+A.D., the custom having been adopted from China. "When in 1859 a
+national flag corresponding to those of Europe became necessary, the
+Sun Banner naturally stepped into the vacant place."[A]
+
+The second fact is the recent origin of the festival known as
+"Kigensetsu." It occurs on February 11 and celebrates the alleged
+accession of Jimmu Tenno, the first Emperor of Japan, to the throne
+2560 years ago (660 B.C.). The festival itself, however, was
+instituted by Imperial decree ten years ago (1890).
+
+The transformation which has come over Japan in a single generation
+requires interpretation. Is the change real or superficial? Is the new
+social order "a borrowed trumpery garment, which will soon be rent by
+violent revolutions," according to the eminent student of racial
+psychology, Professor Le Bon, or is it of "a solid nature" according
+to the firm belief of Mr. Stanford Ransome, one of the latest writers
+on Japan?
+
+This is the problem that will engage our attention more or less
+directly throughout this work. We shall give our chief thought to the
+nature and development of Japanese racial characteristics, believing
+that this alone gives the light needed for the solution of the
+problem.[B]
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS
+
+
+What constitutes progress? And what is the true criterion for its
+measurement? In adopting Western methods of life and thought, is Japan
+advancing or receding? The simplicity of the life of the common
+people, their freedom from fashions that fetter the Occidental, their
+independence of furniture in their homes, their few wants and fewer
+necessities--these, when contrasted with the endless needs and demands
+of an Occidental, are accepted by some as evidences of a higher stage
+of civilization than prevails in the West.
+
+The hedonistic criterion of progress is the one most commonly adopted
+in considering the question as to whether Japan is the gainer or the
+loser by her rapid abandonment of old ways and ideas and by her
+equally rapid adoption of Western ones in their place. Yet this appeal
+to happiness seems to me a misleading because vague, if not altogether
+false, standard of progress. Those who use it insist that the people
+of Japan are losing their former happiness under the stress of new
+conditions. Now there can be no doubt that during the "Kyu-han jidai,"
+the times before the coming in of Western waves of life, the farmers
+were a simple, unsophisticated people; living from month to month with
+little thought or anxiety. They may be said to have been happy. The
+samurai who lived wholly on the bounty of the daimyo led of course a
+tranquil life, at least so far as anxiety or toil for daily rice and
+fish was concerned. As the fathers had lived and fought and died, so
+did the sons. To a large extent the community had all things in
+common; for although the lord lived in relative luxury, yet in such
+small communities there never was the great difference between classes
+that we find in modern Europe and America. As a rule the people were
+fed, if there was food. The socialistic principle was practically
+universal. Especially was emphasis laid on kinship. As a result, save
+among the outcast classes, the extremes of poverty did not exist.
+
+Were we to rest our inquiries at this point, we might say that in
+truth the Japanese had attained the summit of progress; that nothing
+further could be asked. But pushing our way further, we find that the
+peace and quiet of the ordinary classes of society were accompanied by
+many undesirable features.
+
+Prominent among them was the domineering spirit of the military class.
+They alone laid claim to personal rights, and popular stories are full
+of the free and furious ways in which they used their swords. The
+slightest offense by one of the swordless men would be paid for by a
+summary act of the two-sworded swashbucklers, while beggars and
+farmers were cut down without compunction, sometimes simply to test a
+sword. In describing those times one man said to me, "They used to cut
+off the heads of the common people as farmers cut off the head of the
+daikon" (a variety of giant radish). I have frequently asked my
+Japanese friends and acquaintances, whether, in view of the increasing
+difficulties of life under the new conditions, the country would not
+like to return to ancient times and customs. But none have been ready
+to give me an affirmative reply. On detailed questioning I have always
+found that the surly, domineering methods, the absolutism of the
+rulers, and the defenselessness of the people against unjust arbitrary
+superiors would not be submitted to by a people that has once tasted
+the joy arising from individual rights and freedom and the manhood
+that comes from just laws for all.
+
+A striking feature of those Japanese who are unchanged by foreign ways
+is their obsequious manner toward superiors and officials. The lordly
+and oftentimes ruthless manner of the rulers has naturally cowed the
+subject. Whenever the higher nobility traveled, the common people were
+commanded to fall on the ground in obeisance and homage. Failure to do
+so was punishable with instant death at the hands of the retainers
+who accompanied the lord. During my first stay in Kumamoto I was
+surprised that farmers, coming in from the country on horseback,
+meeting me as I walked, invariably got down from their horses,
+unfastened the handkerchiefs from their heads, and even took off their
+spectacles if there were nothing else removable. These were signs of
+respect given to all in authority. Where my real status began to be
+generally known, these signs of politeness gave place to rude staring.
+It is difficult for the foreigner to appreciate the extremes of the
+high-handed and the obsequious spirit which were developed by the
+ancient form of government. Yet it is comparatively easy to
+distinguish between the evidently genuine humility of the non-military
+classes and the studied deference of the dominant samurai.
+
+Another feature of the old order of things was the emptiness of the
+lives of the people. Education was rare. Limited to the samurai, who
+composed but a fraction of the population, it was by no means
+universal even among them. And such education as they had was confined
+to the Chinese classics. Although there were schools in connection
+with some of the temples, the people as a whole did not learn to read
+or write. These were accomplishments for the nobility and men of
+leisure. The thoughts of the people were circumscribed by the narrow
+world in which they lived, and this allowed but an occasional
+glimpse of other clans through war or a chance traveler. For, in those
+times, freedom of travel was not generally allowed. Each man, as a
+rule, lived and labored and died where he was born. The military
+classes had more freedom. But when we contrast the breadth of thought
+and outlook enjoyed by the nation to-day, through newspapers and
+magazines, with the outlook and knowledge of even the most progressive
+and learned of those of ancient times, how contracted do their lives
+appear!
+
+A third feature of former times is the condition of women during those
+ages. Eulogizers of Old Japan not only seem to forget that working
+classes existed then, but also that women, constituting half the
+population, were essential to the existence of the nation. Though
+allowing more freedom than was given to women in other Oriental
+nations, Japan did not grant such liberty as is essential to the full
+development of her powers. "Woman is a man's plaything" expresses a
+view still held in Japan. "Woman's sole duty is the bearing and
+rearing of children for her husband" is the dominant idea that has
+determined her place in the family and in the state for hundreds of
+years. That she has any independent interest or value as a human being
+has not entered into national conception. "The way in which they are
+treated by the men has hitherto been such as might cause a pang to any
+generous European heart.... A woman's lot is summed up in what is
+termed 'the three obediences,' obedience, while yet unmarried, to a
+father; obedience, when married, to a husband; obedience, when
+widowed, to a son. At the present moment the greatest duchess or
+marchioness in the land is still her husband's drudge. She fetches and
+carries for him, bows down humbly in the hall when my lord sallies
+forth on his good pleasure."[C] "The Greater Learning for Women," by
+Ekken Kaibara (1630-1714), an eminent Japanese moralist, is the name
+of a treatise on woman's duties which sums up the ideas common in
+Japan upon this subject. For two hundred years or more it has been
+used as a text-book in the training of girls. It enjoins such abject
+submission of the wife to her husband, to her parents-in-law, and to
+her other kindred by marriage, as no self-respecting woman of Western
+lands could for a moment endure. Let me prove this through a few
+quotations.
+
+"A woman should look on her husband as if he were Heaven itself and
+never weary of thinking how she may yield to her husband, and thus
+escape celestial castigation." "Woman must form no friendships and no
+intimacy, except when ordered to do so by her parents or by the
+middleman. Even at the peril of her life, must she harden her heart
+like a rock or metal, and observe the rules of propriety." "A woman
+has no particular lord. She must look to her husband as her lord and
+must serve him with all reverence and worship, not despising or
+thinking lightly of him. The great life-long duty of a woman is
+obedience.... When the husband issues his instructions, the wife must
+never disobey them.... Should her husband be roused to anger at any
+time, she must obey him, with fear and trembling." Not one word in all
+these many and specific instructions hints at love and affection. That
+which to Western ears is the sweetest word in the English language,
+the foundation of happiness in the home, the only true bond between
+husband and wife, parents and children--LOVE--does not once appear in
+this the ideal instruction for Japanese women.
+
+Even to this day divorce is the common occurrence in Japan. According
+to Confucius there are seven grounds of divorce: disobedience,
+barrenness, lewd conduct, jealousy, leprosy or any other foul or
+incurable disease, too much talking, and thievishness. "In plain
+English, a man may send away his wife whenever he gets tired of her."
+
+Were the man's duties to the wife and to her parents as minutely
+described and insisted on as are those of the wife to the husband and
+to his parents, this "Greater Learning for Women" would not seem so
+deficient; but such is not the case. The woman's rights are few, yet
+she bears her lot with marvelous patience. Indeed, she has acquired a
+most attractive and patient and modest behavior despite, or is it
+because of, centuries of well-nigh tyrannical treatment from the male
+sex. In some important respects the women of Japan are not to be
+excelled by those of any other land. But that this lot has been a
+happy one I cannot conceive it possible for a European, who knows the
+meaning of love or home, to contend. The single item of one divorce
+for every three marriages tells a tale of sorrow and heartache that is
+sad to contemplate. Nor does this include those separations where
+tentative marriage takes place with a view to learning whether the
+parties can endure living together. I have known several such cases.
+Neither does this take account of the great number of concubines that
+may be found in the homes of the higher classes. A concubine often
+makes formal divorce quite superfluous.
+
+I by no means contend that the women of Old Japan were all and always
+miserable. There was doubtless much happiness and even family joy;
+affection between husband and wife could assuredly have been found in
+numberless cases. But the hardness of life as a whole, the low
+position held by woman in her relations to man, her lack of legal
+rights,[D] and her menial position, justify the assertion that there
+was much room for improvement.
+
+These three conspicuous features of the older life in Japan help us to
+reach a clear conception as to what constitutes progress. We may say
+that true progress consists in that continuous, though slow,
+transformation of the structure of society which, while securing its
+more thorough organization, brings to each individual the opportunity
+of a larger, richer, and fuller life, a life which increasingly calls
+forth his latent powers and capacities. In other words, progress is a
+growing organization of society, accompanied by a growing liberty of
+the individual resulting in richness and fullness of life. It is not
+primarily a question of unreflecting happiness, but a question of the
+wide development of manhood and womanhood. Both men and women have as
+yet unmeasured latent capacities, which demand a certain liberty,
+accompanied by responsibilities and cares, in order for their
+development. Intellectual education and a wide horizon are likewise
+essential to the production of such manhood and womanhood. In the long
+run this is seen to bring a deeper and a more lasting happiness than
+was possible to the undeveloped man or woman.
+
+The question of progress is confused and put on a wrong footing when
+the consciousness of happiness or unhappiness, is made the primary
+test. The happiness of the child is quite apart from that of the
+adult. Regardless of distressing circumstances, the child is able to
+laugh and play, and this because he is a child; a child in his
+ignorance of actual life, and in his inability to perceive the true
+conditions in which he lives. Not otherwise, I take it, was the
+happiness of the vast majority in Old Japan. Theirs was the happiness
+of ignorance and simple, undeveloped lives. Accustomed to tyranny,
+they did not think of rebellion against it. Familiar with brutality
+and suffering, they felt nothing of its shame and inhumanity. The
+sight of decapitated bodies, the torture of criminals, the despotism
+of husbands, the cringing obedience of the ruled, the haughtiness of
+the rulers, the life of hard toil and narrow outlook, were all so
+usual that no thought of escape from such an order of society ever
+suggested itself to those who endured it.
+
+From time to time wise and just rulers did indeed strive to introduce
+principles of righteousness into their methods of government; but
+these men formed the exception, not the rule. They were individuals
+and not the system under which the people lived. It was always a
+matter of chance whether or not such men were at the head of affairs,
+for the people did not dream of the possibility of having any voice in
+their selection. The structure of society was and always had been
+absolute militarism. Even under the most benevolent rulers the use of
+cruel torture, not only on convicted criminals, but on all suspected
+of crime, was customary. Those in authority might personally set a
+good example, but they did not modify the system. They owned not only
+the soil but practically the laborers also, for these could not leave
+their homes in search of others that were better. They were serfs, if
+not slaves, and the system did not tend to raise the standard of life
+or education, of manhood or womanhood among the people. The happiness
+of the people in such times was due in part to their essential
+inhumanity of heart and lack of sympathy with suffering and sorrow.
+Each individual bore his own sorrow and pain alone. The community, as
+such, did not distress itself over individuals who suffered. Sympathy,
+in its full meaning, was unknown in Old Japan. The barbarous custom of
+casting out the leper from the home, to wander a lonely exile, living
+on the charity of strangers, is not unknown even to this day. We are
+told that in past times the "people were governed by such strong
+aversion to the sight of sickness that travelers were often left to
+die by the roadside from thirst, hunger, or disease; and householders
+even went the length of thrusting out of doors and abandoning to utter
+destitution servants who suffered from chronic maladies." So universal
+was this heartlessness that the government at one time issued
+proclamations against the practices it allowed. "Whenever an epidemic
+occurred the number of deaths was enormous." Seven men of the outcast,
+"the Eta," class were authoritatively declared equal in value to one
+common man. Beggars were technically called "hi-nin," "not men."
+
+Those who descant on the happiness of Old Japan commit the great error
+of overlooking all these sad features of life, and of fixing their
+attention exclusively on the one feature of the childlike, not to say
+childish, lightness of heart of the common people. Such writers are
+thus led to pronounce the past better than the present time. They also
+overlook the profound happiness and widespread prosperity of the
+present era. Trade, commerce, manufactures, travel, the freest of
+intercommunication, newspapers, and international relations, have
+brought into life a richness and a fullness that were then unknown.
+But in addition, the people now enjoy a security of personal
+interests, a possession of personal rights and property, and a
+personal liberty, that make life far more worthy and profoundly
+enjoyable, even while they bring responsibilities and duties and not a
+few anxieties. This explains the fact that no Japanese has expressed
+to me the slightest desire to abandon the present and return to the
+life and conditions of Old Japan.
+
+Let me repeat, therefore, with all possible emphasis, that the problem
+of progress is not primarily one of increasing light-heartedness, pure
+and simple, nor yet a problem of racial unification or of political
+centralization; it is rather a problem of so developing the structure
+of society that the individual may have the fullest opportunity for
+development.
+
+The measure of progress is not the degree of racial unification, of
+political centralization, or of unreflective happiness, but rather the
+degree and the extent of individual personality. Racial unification,
+political centralization, and increasing happiness are in the
+attainment of progress, but they are not to be viewed as sufficient
+ends. Personality, can alone be that end. The wide development of
+personality, therefore, is at once the goal and the criterion of
+progress.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE METHOD OF PROGRESS
+
+
+Progress as an ideal is quite modern in its origin. For although the
+ancients were progressing, they did it unconsciously, blindly,
+stumbling on it by chance, forced to it, as we have seen, by the
+struggle for existence. True of the ancient civilizations of Europe
+and Western Asia and Africa, this is emphatically true of the Orient.
+Here, so far from seeking to progress, the avowed aim has been not to
+progress; the set purpose has been to do as the fathers did; to follow
+their example even in customs and rites whose meaning has been lost in
+the obscurity of the past. This blind adherence was the boast of those
+who called themselves religious. They strove to fulfill their duties
+to their ancestors.
+
+Under such conditions how was progress possible? And how has it come
+to pass that, ruled by this ideal until less than fifty years ago,
+Japan is now facing quite the other way? The passion of the nation
+to-day is to make the greatest possible progress in every direction.
+Here is an anomaly, a paradox; progress made in spite of its
+rejection; and, recently, a total volte-face. How shall we explain
+this paradox?
+
+In our chapter on the Principles of National Evolution,[E] we see that
+the first step in progress was made through the development of
+enlarging communities by means of extending boundaries and hardening
+customs. We see that, on reaching this stage, the great problem was so
+to break the "cake of custom" as to give liberty to individuals
+whereby to secure the needful variations. We do not consider how this
+was to be accomplished. We merely show that, if further progress was
+to be made, it could only be through the development of the
+individualistic principle to which we give the more exact name
+communo-individualism. This problem as to how the "cake of custom" is
+successfully broken must now engage our attention.
+
+Mr. Bagehot contends that this process consisted, as a matter of
+history, in the establishment of government by discussion. Matters of
+principle came to be talked over; the desirability of this or that
+measure was submitted to the people for their approval or disapproval.
+This method served to stimulate definite and practical thought on a
+wide scale; it substituted the thinking of the many for the thinking
+of the few; it stimulated independent thinking and consequently
+independent action. This is, however, but another way of saying that
+it stimulated variation. A government whose action was determined
+after wide discussion would be peculiarly fitted to take advantage of
+all useful variations of ideas and practice. Experience shows, he
+continues, that the difficulty of developing a "cake of custom" is far
+more easily surmounted than that of developing government by
+discussion; _i.e._, that it is far less difficult to develop
+communalism than communo-individualism. The family of arrested
+civilizations, of which China and India and Japan, until recent times,
+are examples, were caught in the net of what had once been the source
+of their progress. The tyranny of their laws and customs was such that
+all individual variations were nipped in the bud. They failed to
+progress because they failed to develop variations. And they failed in
+this because they did not have government by discussion.
+
+No one will dispute the importance of Mr. Bagehot's, contribution to
+this subject. But it may be doubted whether he has pointed out the
+full reason for the difficulty of breaking the "cake of custom" or
+manifested the real root of progress. To attain progress in the full
+sense, not merely of an oligarchy or a caste, but of the whole people,
+there must not only be government by discussion, but the
+responsibilities of the government must be snared more or less fully
+by all the governed.
+
+History, however, shows that this cannot take place until a
+conception of intrinsic manhood and womanhood has arisen, a conception
+which emphasizes their infinite and inherent worth. This conception is
+not produced by government by discussion, while government by
+discussion is the necessary consequence of the wide acceptance of this
+conception. It is therefore the real root of progress.
+
+As I look over the history of the Orient, I find no tendency to
+discover the inherent worth of man or to introduce the principle of
+government by discussion. Left to themselves, I see no probability
+that any of these nations would ever have been able to break the
+thrall of their customs, and to reach that stage of development in
+which common individuals could be trusted with a large measure of
+individual liberty. Though I can conceive that Japan might have
+secured a thorough-going political centralization under the old
+_regime_, I cannot see that that centralization would have been
+accompanied by growing liberty for the individual or by such
+constitutional rights for the common man as he enjoys to-day. Whatever
+progress she might have made in the direction of nationality it would
+still have been a despotism. The common man would have remained a
+helpless and hopeless slave. Art might have prospered; the people
+might have remained simple-minded and relatively contented. But they
+could not have attained that freedom and richness of life, that
+personality, which we saw in our last chapter to be the criterion and
+goal of true progress.
+
+If the reader judges the above contention correct and agrees with the
+writer that the conception of the inherent value of a human being
+could not arise spontaneously in Japan, he will conclude that the
+progress of Japan depended on securing this important conception from
+without. Exactly this has taken place. By her thorough-going
+abandonment of the feudal social order and adoption of the
+constitutional and representative government of Christendom, whether
+she recognizes it or not, she has accepted the principles of the
+inherent worth of manhood and womanhood, as well as government by
+discussion. Japan has thus, by imitation rather than by origination,
+entered on the path of endless progress.
+
+So important, however, is the step recently taken that further
+analysis of this method of progress is desirable for its full
+comprehension. We have already noted quite briefly[F] how Japan was
+supplied by the West with the ideal of national unity and the material
+instruments essential to its attainment. In connection with the high
+development of the nation as a whole, these two elements of progress,
+the ideal and the material, need further consideration.
+
+We note in the first place that both begin with imitation, but if
+progress is to be real and lasting, both must grow to independence.
+
+The first and by far the most important is the psychical, the
+introduction of new ideas. So long as the old, familiar ideas hold
+sway over the mind of a nation, there is little or no stimulus to
+comparison and discussion. Stagnation is well-nigh complete. But let
+new ideas be so introduced as to compel attention and comprehension,
+and the mind spontaneously awakes to wonderful activity. The old
+stagnation is no longer possible. Discussion is started; and in the
+end something must take place, even if the new ideas are not accepted
+wholly or even in part. But they will not gain attention if presented
+simply in the abstract, unconnected with real life. They must bring
+evidence that, if accepted and lived, they will be of practical use,
+that they will give added power to the nation.
+
+Exactly this took place in 1854 when Admiral Perry demanded entrance
+to Japan. The people suddenly awoke from their sleep of two and a half
+centuries to find that new nations had arisen since they closed their
+eyes, nations among which new sets of ideas had been at work, giving
+them a power wholly unknown to the Orient and even mysterious to it.
+Those ideas were concerned, not alone with the making of guns, the
+building of ships, the invention of machinery, the taming and using of
+the forces of nature, but also with methods of government and law,
+with strange notions, too, about religion and duty, about the family
+and the individual, which the foreigners said were of inestimable
+value and importance. It needed but a few years of intercourse with
+Western peoples to convince the most conservative that unless the
+Japanese themselves could gain the secret of their power, either by
+adopting their weapons or their civilization, they themselves must
+fade away before the stronger nations. The need of self-preservation
+was the first great stimulus that drove new thoughts into unwilling
+brains.
+
+There can be no doubt that the Japanese were right in this analysis of
+the situation. Had they insisted on maintaining their old methods of
+national life and social order and ancient customs, there can be no
+doubt as to the result. Africa and India in recent decades and China
+and Korea in the most recent years tell the story all too clearly.
+Those who know the course of treaty conferences and armed collisions,
+as at Shimonoseki and Kagoshima between Japan and the foreign nations,
+have no doubt that Japan, divided into clans and persisting in her
+love of feudalism, would long since have become the territory of some
+European Power. She was saved by the possession of a remarkable
+combination of national characteristics,--the powers of observation,
+of appreciation, and of imitation. In a word, her sensitiveness to her
+environment and her readiness to respond to it proved to be her
+salvation.
+
+But the point on which I wish to lay special emphasis is that the
+prime element of the form in which the deliverance came was through
+the acquisition of numerous new ideas. These were presented by persons
+who thoroughly believed in them and who admittedly had a power not
+possessed by the Japanese themselves. Though unable to originate these
+ideas, the Japanese yet proved themselves capable of understanding and
+appreciating them--in a measure at least. They were at first attracted
+to that which related chiefly to the externals of civilization, to
+that which would contribute immediately to the complete political
+centralization of the nation. With great rapidity they adopted Western
+ideas about warfare and weapons. They sent their young men abroad to
+study the civilization of the foreign nations. At great expense they
+also employed many foreigners to teach them in their own land the
+things they wished to learn. Thus have the Japanese mastered so
+rapidly the details of those ideas which, less than fifty years ago,
+were not only strange but odious to them.
+
+Under their influence, the conditions which history shows to be the
+most conducive to the continuous growth of civilization have been
+definitely accepted and adopted by the people, namely, popular rights,
+the liberty of individuals to differ from the past so far as this does
+not interfere with national unity, and the direct responsibility and
+relation of each individual to the nation without any mediating group.
+These rights and liberties are secured to the individual by a
+constitution and by laws enacted by representative legislatures.
+Government by discussion has been fairly inaugurated.
+
+During these years of change the effort has been to leave the old
+social order as undisturbed as possible. For example, it was hoped
+that the reorganization of the military and naval forces of the Empire
+would be sufficient without disturbing the feudal order and without
+abolishing the feudal states. But this was soon found ineffectual. For
+a time it was likewise thought that the adoption of Western methods of
+government might be made without disturbing the old religious ideas
+and without removing the edicts against Christianity. But experience
+soon showed that the old civilization was a unit. No part could be
+vitally modified without affecting the whole structure. Having knocked
+over one block in the long row that made up their feudal social order,
+it was found that each successive block was touched and fell, until
+nothing was left standing as before. It was found also that the old
+ideas of education, of travel, of jurisprudence, of torture and
+punishment, of social ranks, of the relation of the individual to the
+state, of the state to the family, and of religion to the family, were
+more or less defective and unsuited to the new civilization. Before
+this new movement all obstructive ideas, however, sanctioned by
+antiquity, have had to give way. The Japanese of to-day look, as it
+were, upon a new earth and a new heaven. Those of forty years ago
+would be amazed, not only at the enormous changes in the externals,
+life and government, but also at the transformation which has
+overtaken every element of the older civilization. Putting it rather
+strongly, it is now not the son who obeys the father, but the father
+the son. The rulers no longer command the people, but the people
+command the rulers. The people do not now toil to support the state;
+but the state toils to protect the people.
+
+Whether the incoming of these new ideas and practices be thought to
+constitute progress or not will depend on one's view of the aim of
+life. If this be as maintained in the previous chapter, then surely
+the transformation of Japan must be counted progress. That, however,
+to which I call attention is the fact that the essential requisite of
+progress is the attainment of new ideas, whatever be their source.
+Japan has not only taken up a great host of these, but in doing so she
+has adopted a social structure to stimulate the continuous production
+of new ideas, through the development of individuality. She is thus in
+the true line of continuously progressive evolution. Imitating the
+stronger nations, she has introduced into her system the life-giving
+blood of free discussion, popular education, and universal individual
+rights and liberty. In a word, she has begun to be an individualistic
+nation. She has introduced a social order fitted to a wide development
+of personality.
+
+The importance of the second line of progress, the physical, would
+seem to be too obvious to call for any detailed consideration. But so
+much has been said by both graceful and able writers on Japan as to
+the advantages she enjoys from her simple non-mechanical civilization,
+and the mistake she is making in adopting the mechanical civilization
+of the West, that it may not be amiss to dwell for a few moments upon
+it. I wish to show that the second element of progress consists in the
+_increasing use of mechanisms_.
+
+The enthusiastic admirer of Japan hardly finds words wherewith
+sufficiently to praise the simplicity of her pre-Meiji civilization.
+No furniture brings confusion to the room; no machinery distresses the
+ear with its groanings or the eye with its unsightliness. No factories
+blacken the sky with smoke. No trains screeching through the towns and
+cities disturb sleepers and frighten babies. The simple bed on the
+floor, the straw sandal on the foot, wooden chopsticks in place of
+knives and forks, the small variety of foods and of cooking utensils,
+the simple, homespun cotton clothing, the fascinating homes, so small
+and neat and clean--in truth all that pertains to Old Japan finds
+favor in the eyes of the enthusiastic admirer from the Occident. One
+such writer, in an elaborate paper intended to set forth the
+superiority of the original Japanese to the Occidental civilization,
+uses the following language: "Ability to live without furniture,
+without impedimenta, with the least possible amount of neat clothing,
+shows more than the advantage held by the Japanese race in the
+struggle of life; it shows also the real character of some of the
+weaknesses in our own civilization. It forces reflection upon the
+useless multiplicity of our daily wants. We must have meat and bread
+and butter; glass windows and fire; hats, white shirts, and woolen
+underwear; boots and shoes; trunks, bags, and boxes; bedsteads,
+mattresses, sheets, and blankets; all of which a Japanese can do
+without, and is really better off without."[G] Surely one finds much
+of truth in this, and there is no denying the charm of the simpler
+civilization, but the closing phrase of the quotation is the
+assumption without discussion of the disputed point. Are the Japanese
+really better off without these implements of Western civilization?
+Evidently they themselves do not think so. For, in glancing through
+the list as given by the writer quoted, one realizes the extent of
+Japanese adoption of these Western devices. Hardly an article but is
+used in Japan, and certainly with the supposition of the purchaser
+that it adds either to his health or his comfort. In witness are the
+hundreds of thousands of straw hats, the glass windows everywhere,
+and the meat-shops in each town and city of the Empire. The charm of a
+foreign fashion is not sufficient explanation for the rapidly
+spreading use of foreign inventions.
+
+That there are no useless or even evil features in our Western
+civilization is not for a moment contended. The stiff starched shirt
+may certainly be asked to give an account of itself and justify its
+continued existence, if it can. But I think the proposition is capable
+of defense that the vast majority of the implements of our Occidental
+civilization have their definite place and value, either in
+contributing directly to the comfort and happiness of their possessor,
+or in increasing his health and strength and general mental and
+physical power. What is it that makes the Occidental longer-lived than
+the Japanese? Why is he healthier? Why is he more intelligent? Why is
+he a more developed personality? Why are his children more energetic?
+Or, reversing the questions, why has the population of Japan been
+increasing with leaps and bounds since the introduction of Western
+civilization and medical science? Why is the rising generation so free
+from pockmarks? Why is the number of the blind steadily diminishing?
+Why are mechanisms multiplying so rapidly--the jinrikisha, the
+railroads, the roads, the waterworks and sewers, the chairs, the
+tables, the hats and umbrellas, lamps, clocks, glass windows and
+shoes? A hundred similar questions might be asked, to which no
+definite answers are needful.
+
+Further discussion of details seems unnecessary. Yet the full
+significance of this point can hardly be appreciated without a
+perception of the great principle that underlies it. The only way in
+which man has become and continues to be increasingly superior to
+animals is in his use of mechanisms. The animal does by brute force
+what man accomplishes by various devices. The inventiveness of
+different races differs vastly. But everywhere, the most advanced are
+the most powerful. Take the individual man of the more developed race
+and separate him from his tools and machines, and it is doubtless
+true that he cannot in some selected points compete with an individual
+of a less developed race. But let ten thousand men of the higher
+development compete with ten thousand of the lower, each using the
+mechanisms under his control, and can there be any doubt as to which
+is the superior?
+
+In other words, the method of human progress consists, in no small
+degree, in the progressive mastery of nature, first through
+understanding her and then through the use of her immense forces by
+means of suitable mechanisms. All the machines and furniture, and
+tools and clothing, and houses and canned foods, and shoes and boots,
+and railroads and telegraph lines, and typewriters and watches, and
+the ten thousand other so-called "impedimenta" of the Occidental
+civilization are but devices whereby Western man has sought to
+increase his health, his wealth, his knowledge, his comfort, his
+independence, his capacity of travel--in a word, his well-being.
+Through these mechanisms he masters nature. He extracts a rich living
+from nature; he annihilates time and space; he defies the storms; he
+tunnels the mountains; he extracts precious ores and metals from the
+rock-ribbed hills; with a magic touch he loosens the grip of the
+elements and makes them surrender their gold, their silver, and, more
+precious still, their iron; with these he builds his spacious cities
+and parks, his railroads and ocean steamers; he travels the whole
+world around, fearing neither beast nor alien man; all are subject to
+his command and will. He investigates and knows the constitution of
+stellar worlds no less than that of the world in which he lives. By
+his instruments he explores the infinite depths of heaven and the no
+less infinite depths of the microscopic world. All these reviled
+"impedimenta" thus bring to the race that has them a wealth of life
+both physical and psychical, practical and ideal, that is otherwise
+unattainable. By them he gains and gives external expression to the
+reality of his inner nature, his freedom, his personality. True,
+instead of bringing health and long life, knowledge and deep
+enjoyment, they may become the means of bitterest curses. But the
+lesson to learn from this fact is how to use these powers aright, not
+how to forbid their use altogether. They are not to be branded as
+hindrances to progress.
+
+The defect of Occidental civilization to-day is hot its multiplicity
+of machinery, but the defective view that still blinds the eyes of the
+multitude as to the true nature and the legitimate goal of progress.
+Individual, selfish happiness is still the ideal of too many men and
+women to permit of the ideal which carries the Golden Rule into the
+markets and factories, into the politics of parties and nations, which
+is essential to the attainment of the highest progress. But no one who
+casts his eyes over the centuries of struggle and effort through which
+man has been slowly working his way upward from the rank of a beast to
+that of a man, can doubt that progress has been made. The worth of
+character has been increasingly seen and its possession desired. The
+true end of effort and development was never more clear than it is at
+the close of the nineteenth century. Never before were the conditions
+of progress so bright, not only for the favored few in one or two
+lands, but for the multitudes the world over. Isolation and separation
+have passed from this world forever. Free social intercourse between
+the nations permits wide dissemination of ideas and their application
+to practical life in the form of social organization and mechanical
+invention. This makes it possible for nations more or less backward in
+social and civilizational development to gain in a relatively short
+time the advantages won by advanced nations through ages of toil and
+under favoring circumstances. Nation thus stimulates nation, each
+furnishing the other with important variations in ideas, customs,
+institutions, and mechanisms resulting from long-continued divergent
+evolution. The advantages slowly gained by advanced peoples speedily
+accrues through social heredity to any backward race really desiring
+to enter the social heritage.
+
+Thus does the paradox of Japan's recent progress become thoroughly
+intelligible.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+JAPANESE SENSITIVENESS TO ENVIRONMENT
+
+
+With this chapter we begin a more detailed study of Japanese social
+and psychic evolution. We shall take up the various characteristics of
+the race and seek to account for them, showing their origin in the
+peculiar nature of the social order which so long prevailed in Japan.
+This is a study of Japanese psychogenesis. The question to which we
+shall continually return is whether or not the characteristic under
+consideration is inherent and congenital and therefore inevitable. Not
+only our interpretation of Japanese evolution, past, present, and
+future, but also our understanding of the essential nature of social
+evolution in general, depends upon the answer to this question.
+
+We naturally begin with that characteristic of Japanese nature which
+would seem to be more truly congenital than any other to be mentioned
+later. I refer to their sensitiveness to environment. More quickly
+than most races do the Japanese seem to perceive and adapt themselves
+to changed conditions.
+
+The history of the past thirty years is a prolonged illustration of
+this characteristic. The desire to imitate foreign nations was not a
+real reason for the overthrow of feudalism, but there was, rather, a
+more or less conscious feeling, rapidly pervading the whole people,
+that the feudal system would be unable to maintain the national
+integrity. As intimated, the matter was not so much reasoned out as
+felt. But such a vast illustration is more difficult to appreciate
+than some individual instances, of which I have noted several.
+
+During a conversation with Drs. Forsythe and Dale, of Cambridge,
+England, I asked particularly as to their experience with the Japanese
+students who had been there to study. They both remarked on the fact
+that all Japanese students were easily influenced by those with whom
+they customarily associated; so much so that, within a short time,
+they acquired not only the cut of coats and trousers, but also the
+manner and accent, of those with whom they lived. It was amusing, they
+said, to see what transformations were wrought in those who went to
+the Continent for their long vacations. From France they returned with
+marked French manners and tones and clothes, while from Germany they
+brought the distinctive marks of German stiffness in manner and
+general bearing. It was noted as still more curious that the same
+student would illustrate both variations, provided he spent one summer
+in Germany and another in France.
+
+Japanese sensitiveness is manifested in many unexpected ways. An
+observant missionary lady once remarked that she had often wondered
+how such unruly, self-willed children as grow up under Japanese
+training, or its lack, finally become such respectable members of
+society. She concluded that instead of being punished out of their
+misbehaviors they were laughed out of them. The children are
+constantly told that if they do so and so they will be laughed at--a
+terrible thing.
+
+The fear of ridicule has thus an important sociological function in
+maintaining ethical standards. Its power may be judged by the fact
+that in ancient times when a samurai gave his note to return a
+borrowed sum, the only guarantee affixed was the permission to be
+laughed at in public in case of failure. The Japanese young man who is
+making a typewritten copy of these pages for me says that, when still
+young, he heard an address to children which he still remembers. The
+speaker asked what the most fearful thing in the world was. Many
+replies were given by the children--"snakes," "wild beasts,"
+"fathers," "gods," "ghosts," "demons," "Satan," "hell," etc. These
+were admitted to be fearful, but the speaker told the children that
+one other thing was to be more feared than all else, namely, "to be
+laughed at." This speech, with its vivid illustrations, made a lasting
+impression on the mind of the boy, and on reading what I had written
+he realized how powerful a motive fear of ridicule had been in his own
+life; also how large a part it plays in the moral education of the
+young in Japan.
+
+Naturally enough this fear of being laughed at leads to careful and
+minute observation of the clothing, manners, and speech of one's
+associates, and prompt conformity to them, through imitation. The
+sensitiveness of Japanese students to each new environment is thus
+easily understood. And this sensitiveness to environment has its
+advantages as well as its disadvantages. I have already referred to
+the help it gives to the establishment of individual conformity to
+ethical standards. The phenomenal success of many reforms in Japan may
+easily be traced to the national sensitiveness to foreign criticism.
+Many instances of this will be given in the course of this work, but
+two may well be mentioned at this point. According to the older
+customs there was great, if not perfect, freedom as to the use of
+clothing by the people. The apparent indifference shown by them in the
+matter of nudity led foreigners to call the nation uncivilized. This
+criticism has always been a galling one, and not without reason. In
+many respects their civilization has been fully the equal of that of
+any other nation; yet in this respect it is true that they resembled
+and still do resemble semi-civilized peoples. In response to this
+foreign criticism, however, a law was passed, early in the Meiji era,
+prohibiting nudity in cities. The requirement that public bathing
+houses be divided into two separate compartments, one for men and one
+for women, was likewise due to foreign opinion. That this is the case
+may be fairly inferred from the fact that the enforcement of these
+laws has largely taken places where foreigners abound, whereas, in the
+interior towns and villages they receive much less attention. It must
+be acknowledged, however, that now at last, twenty-five years after
+their passage, they are almost everywhere beginning to be enforced by
+the authorities.
+
+My other illustration of sensitiveness to foreign opinion is the
+present state of Japanese thought about the management of Formosa. The
+government has been severely criticised by many leading papers for its
+blunders there. But the curious feature is the constant reference to
+the contempt into which such mismanagement will bring Japan in the
+sight of the world--as if the opinion of other nations were the most
+important issue involved, and not the righteousness and probity of the
+government itself. It is interesting to notice how frequently the
+opinion of other nations with regard to Japan is a leading thought in
+the mind of the people.
+
+In this connection the following extract finds its natural place:
+
+ In a very large number of schools throughout the country special
+ instructions have been given to the pupils as to their behavior
+ towards foreigners. From various sources we have culled the
+ following orders bearing on special points, which we state as
+ briefly as possible.
+
+ (1) Never call after foreigners passing along the streets or roads.
+
+ (2) When foreigners make inquiries, answer them politely. If unable
+ to make them understand, inform the police of the fact.
+
+ (3) Never accept a present from a foreigner when there is no reason
+ for his giving it, and never charge him anything above what is
+ proper.
+
+ (4) Do not crowd around a shop when a foreigner is making
+ purchases, thereby causing him much annoyance. The continuance of
+ this practice disgraces us as a nation.
+
+ (5) Since all human beings are brothers and sisters, there is no
+ reason for fearing foreigners. Treat them as equals and act
+ uprightly in all your dealings with them. Be neither servile nor
+ arrogant.
+
+ (6) Beware of combining against the foreigner and disliking him
+ because he is a foreigner; men are to be judged by their conduct
+ and not by their nationality.
+
+ (7) As intercourse with foreigners becomes closer and extends over
+ a series of years, there is danger that many Japanese may become
+ enamored of their ways and customs and forsake the good old customs
+ of their forefathers. Against this danger you must be on your
+ guard.
+
+ (8) Taking off your hat is the proper way to salute a foreigner.
+ The bending of the body low is not be commended.
+
+ (9) When you see a foreigner be sure and cover up naked parts of
+ the body.
+
+ (10) Hold in high regard the worship of ancestors and treat your
+ relations with warm cordiality, but do not regard a person as your
+ enemy because he or she is a Christian.
+
+ (11) In going through the world you will often find a knowledge of
+ a foreign tongue absolutely essential.
+
+ (12) Beware of selling your souls to foreigners and becoming their
+ slaves. Sell them no houses or lands.
+
+ (13) Aim at not being beaten in your competition with foreigners.
+ Remember that loyalty and filial piety are our most precious
+ national treasures and do nothing to violate them.
+
+ Many of the above rules are excellent in tone. Number 7, however,
+ which hails from Osaka, is somewhat narrow and prejudiced. The
+ injunction not to sell houses to foreigners is, as the _Jiji
+ Shimpo_ points out, absurd and mischievous.[H]
+
+The sensitiveness of the people also works to the advantage of the
+nation in the social unity which it helps to secure. Indeed I cannot
+escape the conviction that the striking unity of the Japanese is
+largely due to this characteristic. It tends to make their mental and
+emotional activities synchronous. It retards reform for a season, to
+be sure, but later it accelerates it. It makes it difficult for
+individuals to break away from their surroundings and start out on new
+lines. It leads to a general progress while it tends to hinder
+individual progress. It tends to draw back into the general current of
+national life those individuals who, under exceptional conditions, may
+have succeeded in breaking away from it for a season. This, I think,
+is one of the factors of no little power at work among the Christian
+churches in Japan. It is one, too, that the Japanese themselves little
+perceive; so far as I have observed, foreigners likewise fail to
+realize its force.
+
+Closely connected with this sensitiveness to environment are other
+qualities which make it effective. They are: great flexibility,
+adjustability, agility (both mental and physical), and the powers of
+keen attention to details and of exact imitation.
+
+As opposed to all this is the Chinese lack of flexibility. Contrast a
+Chinaman and a Japanese after each has been in America a year. The one
+to all appearances is an American; his hat, his clothing, his manner,
+seem so like those of an American that were it not for his small size,
+Mongolian type of face, and defective English, he could easily be
+mistaken for one. How different is it with the Chinaman! He retains
+his curious cue with a tenacity that is as intense as it is
+characteristic. His hat is the conventional one adopted by all Chinese
+immigrants. His clothing likewise, though far from Chinese, is
+nevertheless entirely un-American. He makes no effort to conform to
+his surroundings. He seems to glory in his separateness.
+
+The Japanese desire to conform to the customs and appearances of those
+about him is due to what I have called sensitiveness; his success is
+due to the flexibility of his mental constitution.
+
+But this characteristic is seen in multitudes of little ways. The new
+fashion of wearing the hair according to the Western styles; of
+wearing Western hats, and Western clothing, now universal in the army,
+among policemen, and common among officials and educated men; the use
+of chairs and tables, lamps, windows, and other Western things is due
+in no small measure to that flexibility of mind which readily adopts
+new ideas and new ways; is ready to try new things and new words, and
+after trial, if it finds them convenient or useful or even amusing, to
+retain them permanently, and this flexibility is, in part, the reason
+why the Japanese are accounted a fickle people. They accept new ways
+so easily that those who do not have this faculty have no explanation
+for it but that of fickleness. A frequent surprise to a missionary in
+Japan is that of meeting a fine-looking, accomplished gentleman whom
+he knew a few years before as a crude, ungainly youth. I am convinced
+that it is the possession of this set of characteristics that has
+enabled Japan so quickly to assimilate many elements of an alien
+civilization.
+
+Yet this flexibility of mind and sensitiveness to changed conditions
+find some apparently striking exceptions. Notable among these are the
+many customs and appliances of foreign nations which, though adopted
+by the people, have not been completely modified to suit their own
+needs. In illustration is the Chinese ideograph, for the learning of
+which even in the modern common-school reader, there is no arrangement
+of the characters in the order of their complexity. The possibility of
+simplifying the colossal task of memorizing these uncorrelated
+ideographs does not seem to have occurred to the Japanese; though it
+is now being attempted by the foreigner. Perhaps a partial explanation
+of this apparent exception to the usual flexibility of the people in
+meeting conditions may be found in their relative lack of originality.
+Still I am inclined to refer it to a greater sensitiveness of the
+Japanese to the personal and human, than to the impersonal and
+physical environment.
+
+The customary explanation of the group of characteristics considered
+in this chapter is that they are innate, due to brain and nerve
+structure, and acquired by each generation through biological
+heredity. If closely examined, however, this is seen to be no
+explanation at all. Accepting the characteristics as empirical
+inexplicable facts, the real problem is evaded, pushed into
+prehistoric times, that convenient dumping ground of biological,
+anthropological, and sociological difficulties.
+
+Japanese flexibility, imitativeness, and sensitiveness to environment
+are to be accounted for by a careful consideration of the national
+environment and social order. Modern psychology has called attention
+to the astonishing part played by imitation, conscious and
+unconscious, in the evolution of the human race, and in the
+unification of the social group. Prof. Le Tarde goes so far as to make
+this the fundamental principle of human evolution. He has shown that
+it is ever at work in the life of every human being, modifying all his
+thoughts, acts, and feelings. In the evolution of civilization the
+rare man thinks, the millions imitate.
+
+A slight consideration of the way in which Occidental lands have
+developed their civilization will convince anyone that imitation has
+taken the leading part. Japan, therefore, is not unique in this
+respect. Her periods of wholesale imitation have indeed called special
+notice to the trait. But the rapidity of the movement has been due to
+the peculiarities of her environment. For long periods she has been in
+complete isolation, and when brought into contact with foreign
+nations, she has found them so far in advance of herself in many
+important respects that rapid imitation was the only course left her
+by the inexorable laws of nature. Had she not imitated China in
+ancient times and the Occident in modern times, her independence, if
+not her existence, could hardly have been maintained.
+
+Imitation of admittedly superior civilizations has therefore been an
+integral, conscious element of Japan's social order, and to a degree
+perhaps not equaled by the social order of any other race.
+
+The difference between Japanese imitation and that of other nations
+lies in the fact that whereas the latter, as a rule, despise foreign
+races, and do not admit the superiority of alien civilizations as a
+whole, imitating only a detail here and there, often without
+acknowledgment and sometimes even without knowledge, the Japanese, on
+the other hand, have repeatedly been placed in such circumstances as
+to see the superiority of foreign civilizations as a whole, and to
+desire their general adoption. This has produced a spirit of imitation
+among all the individuals of the race. It has become a part of their
+social inheritance. This explanation largely accounts for the striking
+difference between Japanese and Chinese in the Occident. The Japanese
+go to the West in order to acquire all the West can give. The Chinaman
+goes steeled against its influences. The spirit of the Japanese
+renders him quickly susceptible to every change in his surroundings.
+He is ever noting details and adapting himself to his circumstances.
+The spirit of the Chinaman, on the contrary, renders him quite
+oblivious to his environment. His mind is closed. Under special
+circumstances, when a Chinaman has been liberated from the
+prepossession of his social inheritance, he has shown himself as
+capable of Occidentalization in clothing, speech, manner, and thought
+as a Japanese. Such cases, however, are rare.
+
+But a still more effective factor in the development of the
+characteristics under consideration is the nature of Japanese
+feudalism. Its emphasis on the complete subordination of the inferior
+to the superior was one of its conspicuous features. This was a factor
+always and everywhere at work in Japan. No individual was beyond its
+potent influence. Attention to details, absolute obedience, constant,
+conscious imitation, secretiveness, suspiciousness, were all highly
+developed by this social system. Each of these traits is a special
+form of sensitiveness to environment. From the most ancient times the
+initiative of superiors was essential to the wide adoption by the
+people of any new idea or custom. Christianity found ready acceptance
+in the sixteenth century and Buddhism in the eighth, because they had
+been espoused by exalted persons. The superiority of the civilization
+of China in early times, and of the West in modern times, was first
+acknowledged and adopted by a few nobles and the Emperor. Having
+gained this prestige they promptly became acceptable to the rank and
+file of people who vied with each other in their adoption. A
+peculiarity of the Japanese is the readiness with which the ideas and
+aims of the rulers are accepted by the people. This is due to the
+nature of Japanese feudalism. It has made the body of the nation
+conspicuously subject to the ruling brain and has conferred on Japan
+her unique sensitiveness to environment.
+
+Susceptibility to slight changes in the feelings of lords and masters
+and corresponding flexibility were important social traits, necessary
+products of the old social order. Those deficient in these regards
+would inevitably lose in the struggle for social precedence, if not in
+the actual struggle for existence. These characteristics would,
+accordingly, be highly developed.
+
+Bearing in mind, therefore, the character of the factors that have
+ever been acting on the Japanese psychic nature, we see clearly that
+the characteristics under consideration are not to be attributed to
+her inherent race nature, but may be sufficiently accounted for by
+reference to the social order and social environment.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+WAVES OF FEELING--ABDICATION
+
+
+It has long been recognized that the Japanese are emotional, but the
+full significance of this element of their nature is far from
+realized. It underlies their entire life; it determines the mental
+activities in a way and to a degree that Occidentals can hardly
+appreciate. Waves of feeling have swept through the country, carrying
+everything before them in a manner that has oftentimes amazed us of
+foreign lands. An illustration from the recent political life of the
+nation comes to mind in this connection. For months previous to the
+outbreak of the recent war with China, there had been a prolonged
+struggle between the Cabinet and the political parties who were united
+in their opposition to the government, though in little else. The
+parties insisted that the Cabinet should be responsible to the party
+in power in the Lower House, as is the case in England, that thus they
+might stand and fall together. The Cabinet, on the other hand,
+contended that, according to the constitution, it was responsible to
+the Emperor alone, and that consequently there was no need of a change
+in the Cabinet with every change of party leadership. The nation waxed
+hot over the discussion. Successive Diets were dissolved and new Diets
+elected, in none of which, however, could the supporters of the
+Cabinet secure a majority; the Cabinet was, therefore, incapable of
+carrying out any of its distinctive measures. Several times the
+opposition went so far as to decline to pass the budget proposed by
+the Cabinet, unless so reduced as to cripple the government, the
+reason constantly urged being that the Cabinet was not competent to
+administer the expenditure of such large sums of money. There were no
+direct charges of fraud, but simply of incompetence. More than once
+the Cabinet was compelled to carry on the government during the year
+under the budget of the previous year, as provided by the
+constitution. So intense was the feeling that the capital was full of
+"soshi,"--political ruffians,--and fear was entertained as to the
+personal safety of the members of the Cabinet. The whole country was
+intensely excited over the matter. The newspapers were not loath to
+charge the government with extravagance, and a great explosion seemed
+inevitable, when, suddenly, a breeze from a new quarter arose and
+absolutely changed the face of the nation.
+
+War with China was whispered, and then noised around. Events moved
+rapidly. One or two successful encounters with the Chinese stirred the
+warlike passion that lurked in every breast. At once the feud with the
+Cabinet was forgotten. When, on short notice, an extra session of the
+Diet was called to vote funds for a war, not a word was breathed about
+lack of confidence in the Cabinet or its incompetence to manage the
+ordinary expenditures of the government; on the contrary, within five
+minutes from the introduction of the government bill asking a war
+appropriation of 150,000,000 yen, the bill was unanimously passed.
+
+Such an absolute change could hardly have taken place in England or
+America, or any land less subject to waves of emotion. So far as I
+could learn, the nation was a unit in regard to the war. There was not
+the slightest sign of a "peace party." Of all the Japanese with whom I
+talked only one ever expressed the slightest opposition to the war,
+and he on religious grounds, being a Quaker.
+
+The strength of the emotional element tends to make the Japanese
+extremists. If liberals, they are extremely liberal; if conservative,
+they are extremely conservative. The craze for foreign goods and
+customs which prevailed for several years in the early eighties was
+replaced by an almost equally strong aversion to anything foreign.
+
+This tendency to swing to extremes has cropped out not infrequently in
+the theological thinking of Japanese Christians. Men who for years
+had done effective work in upbuilding the Church, men who had lifted
+hundreds of their fellow-countrymen out of moral and religious
+darkness into light and life, have suddenly, as it has appeared, lost
+all appreciation of the truths they had been teaching and have swung
+off to the limits of a radical rationalism, losing with their
+evangelical faith their power of helping their fellow-men, and in some
+few cases, going over into lives of open sin. The intellectual reasons
+given by them to account for their changes have seemed insufficient;
+it will be found that the real explanation of these changes is to be
+sought not in their intellectual, but in their emotional natures.
+
+Care must be taken, however, not to over-emphasize this extremist
+tendency. In some respects, I am convinced that it is more apparent
+than real. The appearance is due to the silent passivity even of those
+who are really opposed to the new departure. It is natural that the
+advocates of some new policy should be enthusiastic and noisy. To give
+the impression to an outsider that the new enthusiasm is universal,
+those who do not share it have simply to keep quiet. This takes place
+to some degree in every land, but particularly so in Japan. The
+silence of their dissent is one of the striking characteristics of the
+Japanese. It seems to be connected with an abdication of personal
+responsibility. How often in the experience of the missionary it has
+happened that his first knowledge of friction in a church, wholly
+independent and self-supporting and having its own native pastor, is
+the silent withdrawal of certain members from their customary places
+of worship. On inquiry it is learned that certain things are being
+done or said which do not suit them and, instead of seeking to have
+these matters righted, they simply wash their hands of the whole
+affair by silent withdrawal.
+
+The Kumi-ai church, in Kumamoto, from being large and prosperous, fell
+to an actual active membership of less than a dozen, solely because,
+as each member became dissatisfied with the high-handed and radical
+pastor, he simply withdrew. Had each one stood by the church,
+realizing that he had a responsibility toward it which duty forbade
+him to shirk, the conservative and substantial members of the church
+would soon have been united in their opposition to the radical pastor
+and, being in the majority, could have set matters right. In the case
+of perversion of trust funds by the trustees of the Kumamoto School,
+many Japanese felt that injustice was being done to the American Board
+and a stain was being inflicted on Japan's fair name, but they did
+nothing either to express their opinions or to modify the results. So
+silent were they that we were tempted to think them either ignorant of
+what was taking place, or else indifferent to it. We now know,
+however, that many felt deeply on the matter, but were simply silent
+according to the Japanese custom.
+
+But silent dissent does not necessarily last indefinitely, though it
+may continue for years. As soon as some check has been put upon the
+rising tide of feeling, and a reaction is evident, those who before
+had been silent begin to voice their reactionary feeling, while those
+who shortly before had been in the ascendant begin to take their turn
+of silent dissent. Thus the waves are accentuated, both in their rise
+and in their relapse, by the abdicating proclivity of the people.
+
+Yet, in spite of the tendency of the nation to be swept from one
+extreme to another by alternate waves of feeling, there are many
+well-balanced men who are not carried with the tide. The steady
+progress made by the nation during the past generation, in spite of
+emotional actions and reactions, must be largely attributed to the
+presence in its midst of these more stable natures. These are the men
+who have borne the responsibilities of government. So far as we are
+able to see, they have not been led by their feelings, but rather by
+their judgments. When the nation was wild with indignation over
+Europe's interference with the treaty which brought the China-Japanese
+war to a close, the men at the helm saw too clearly the futility of an
+attempt to fight Russia to allow themselves to be carried away by
+sentimental notions of patriotism. Theirs was a deeper and truer
+patriotism than that of the great mass of the nation, who, flushed
+with recent victories by land and by sea, were eager to give Russia
+the thrashing which they felt quite able to administer.
+
+Abdication is such an important element in Japanese life, serving to
+throw responsibility on the young, and thus helping to emphasize the
+emotional characteristics of the people, that we may well give it
+further attention at this point. In describing it, I can do no better
+than quote from J.H. Gubbins' valuable introduction to his translation
+of the New Civil Code of Japan.[I]
+
+ "Japanese scholars who have investigated the subject agree in
+ tracing the origin of the present custom to the abdication of
+ Japanese sovereigns, instances of which occur at an early period of
+ Japanese history. These earlier abdications were independent of
+ religious influences, but with the advent of Buddhism abdication
+ entered upon a new phase. In imitation, it would seem, of the
+ retirement for the purpose of religious contemplation of the Head
+ Priests of Buddhist monasteries, abdicating sovereigns shaved their
+ heads and entered the priesthood, and when subsequently the custom
+ came to be employed for political purposes, the cloak of religion
+ was retained. From the throne the custom spread to Regents and high
+ officers of state, and so universal had its observance amongst
+ officials of the high ranks become in the twelfth century that, as
+ Professor Shigeno states, it was almost the rule for such persons
+ to retire from the world at the age of forty or fifty, and
+ nominally enter the priesthood, both the act and the person
+ performing it being termed 'niu do.' In the course of time, the
+ custom of abdication ceased to be confined to officials, and
+ extended to feudal nobility and the military class generally,
+ whence it spread through the nation, and at this stage of its
+ transition its connection with the phase it finally assumed becomes
+ clear. But with its extension beyond the circle of official
+ dignitaries, and its consequent severance from tradition and
+ religious associations, whether real or nominal abdication changed
+ its name. It was no longer termed 'niu do,' but 'in kio,' the old
+ word being retained only in its strict religious meaning, and
+ 'inkyo' is the term in use to-day.
+
+ "In spite of the religious origin of abdication, its connection
+ with religion has long since vanished, and it may be said without
+ fear of contradiction that the Japanese of to-day, when he or she
+ abdicates, is in no way actuated by the feeling which impelled
+ European monarchs in past times to end their days in the seclusion
+ of the cloister, and which finds expression to-day in the Irish
+ phrase, 'To make one's soul.' Apart from the influence of
+ traditional convention, which counts for something and also
+ explains the great hold on the nation which the custom has
+ acquired, the motive seems to be somewhat akin to that which leads
+ people in some Western countries to retire from active life at an
+ age when bodily infirmity cannot be adduced as the reason. But with
+ this great difference, that in the one case, that of Western
+ countries, it is the business or profession, the active work of
+ life, which is relinquished, the position of the individual
+ vis-a-vis the family being unaffected; in the other case, it is the
+ position of head of the family which is relinquished, with the
+ result of the complete effacement of the individual so far as the
+ family is concerned. Moreover, although abdication usually implies
+ the abandonment of the business, or profession, of the person who
+ abdicates, this does not necessarily follow, abdication being in no
+ way incompatible with the continuation of the active pursuits in
+ which the person-in question is engaged. And if an excuse be needed
+ in either case, there would seem to be more for the Japanese head
+ of family, who, in addition to the duties and responsibilities
+ incumbent upon his position, has to bear the brunt of the tedious
+ ceremonies and observances which characterize family life in Japan,
+ and are a severe tax upon time and energies, while at the same time
+ he is fettered by the restrictions upon individual freedom of
+ action imposed by the family system. That in many cases the reason
+ for abdication lies in the wish to escape from the tyrannical
+ calls of family life, rather than in mere desire for idleness and
+ ease, is shown by the fact that just as in past times the
+ abdication of an Emperor, a Regent, or a state dignitary, was often
+ the signal for renewed activity on his part, so in modern Japanese
+ life the period of a person's greatest activity not infrequently
+ dates from the time of his withdrawal from the headship of his
+ family."
+
+The abdicating proclivities of the nation in pre-Meiji times are well
+shown by the official list of daimyos published by the Shogunate in
+1862. To a list of 268 ruling daimyos is added a list of 104 "inkyo."
+
+In addition to what we may call political and family abdication,
+described above, is personal abdication, referred to on a previous
+page.
+
+Are the traits of Japanese character considered in this chapter
+inherent and necessary? Already our description has conclusively shown
+them to be due to the nature of the social order. This was manifestly
+the case in regard to political and family abdication. The like origin
+of personal abdication is manifest to him who learns how little there
+was in the ancient training tending to give each man a "feeling of
+independent responsibility to his own conscience in the sight of
+Heaven." He was taught devotion to a person rather than to a
+principle. The duty of a retainer was not to think and decide, but to
+do. He might in silence disapprove and as far as possible he should
+then keep out of his lord's way; should he venture to think and to act
+contrary to his lord's commands, he must expect and plan to commit
+"harakiri" in the near future. Personal abdication and silent
+disapproval, therefore, were direct results of the social order.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HEROES AND HERO-WORSHIP
+
+
+If a clew to the character of a nation is gained by a study of the
+nature of the gods it worships, no less valuable an insight is gained
+by a study of its heroes. Such a study confirms the impression that
+the emotional life is fundamental in the Japanese temperament. Japan
+is a nation of hero-worshipers. This is no exaggeration. Not only is
+the primitive religion, Shintoism, systematic hero-worship, but every
+hero known to history is deified, and has a shrine or temple. These
+heroes, too, are all men of conspicuous valor or strength, famed for
+mighty deeds of daring. They are men of passion. The most popular
+story in Japanese literature is that of "The Forty-seven Ronin," who
+avenged the death of their liege-lord after years of waiting and
+plotting. This revenge administered, they committed harakiri in
+accordance with the etiquette of the ethical code of feudal Japan.
+Their tombs are to this day among the most frequented shrines in the
+capital of the land, and one of the most popular dramas presented in
+the theaters is based on this same heroic tragedy.
+
+The prominence of the emotional element may be seen in the popular
+description of national heroes. The picture of an ideal Japanese hero
+is to our eyes a caricature. His face is distorted by a fierce frenzy
+of passion, his eyeballs glaring, his hair flying, and his hands hold
+with a mighty grip the two-handed sword wherewith he is hewing to
+pieces an enemy. I am often amazed at the difference between the
+pictures of Japanese heroes and the living Japanese I see. This
+difference is manifestly due to the idealizing process; for they love
+to see their heroes in their passionate moods and tenses.
+
+The craving for heroes, even on the part of those who are familiar
+with Western thought and customs, is a feature of great interest. Well
+do I remember the enthusiasm with which educated, Christian young men
+awaited the coming to Japan of an eminent American scholar, from whose
+lectures impossible things were expected. So long as he was in America
+and only his books were known, he was a hero. But when he appeared in
+person, carrying himself like any courteous gentleman, he lost his
+exalted position.
+
+Townsend Harris showed his insight into Oriental thought never more
+clearly than by maintaining his dignity according to Japanese
+standards and methods. On his first entry into Tokyo he states, in his
+journal, that although he would have preferred to ride on horseback,
+in order that he might see the city and the people, yet as the highest
+dignitaries never did so, but always rode in entirely closed
+"norimono" (a species of sedan chair carried by twenty or thirty
+bearers), he too would do the same; to have ridden into the limits of
+the city on horseback would have been construed by the Japanese as an
+admission that he held a far lower official rank than that of a
+plenipotentiary of a great nation.
+
+It is not difficult to understand how these ideals of heroes arose.
+They are the same in every land where militarism, and especially
+feudalism, is the foundation on which the social order rests.
+
+Some of the difficulties met by foreign missionaries in trying to do
+their work arise from the fact that they are not easily regarded as
+heroes by their followers. The people are accustomed to commit their
+guidance to officials or to teachers or advisers whom they can regard
+as heroes. Since missionaries are not officials and do not have the
+manners of heroes, it is not to be expected that the Japanese will
+accept their leadership.
+
+A few foreigners have, however, become heroes in Japanese eyes.
+President Clark and Rev. S.R. Brown had great influence on groups of
+young men in the early years of Meiji, while giving them secular
+education combined with Christian instruction. The conditions,
+however, were then extraordinarily exceptional, and it is a noticeable
+fact that neither man remained long in Japan at that time. Another
+foreigner who was exalted to the skies by a devoted band of students
+was a man well suited to be a hero--for he had the samurai spirit to
+the full. Indeed, in absolute fearlessness and assumption of
+superiority, he out-samuraied the samurai. He was a man of impressive
+and imperious personality. Yet it is a significant fact that when he
+was brought back to Japan by his former pupils, after an absence of
+about eighteen years, during which they had continued to extol his
+merits and revere his memory, it was not long before they discovered
+that he was not the man their imagination had created. Not many months
+were needed to remove him from his pedestal. It would hardly be a fair
+statement of the whole case to leave the matter here. So far as I
+know, President Clark and Rev. S.R. Brown have always retained their
+hold on the imagination of the Japanese. The foreigner who of all
+others has perhaps done the most for Japan, and whose services have
+been most heartily acknowledged by the nation and government, was Dr.
+Guido F. Verbeck, who began his missionary work in 1859; he was the
+teacher of large numbers of the young men who became leaders in the
+transformation of Japan; he alone of foreigners was made a citizen and
+was given a free and general pass for travel; and his funeral in 1898
+was attended by the nobility of the land, and the Emperor himself made
+a contribution toward the expenses. Dr. Verbeck is destined to be one
+of Japan's few foreign heroes.
+
+Among the signs of Japanese craving for heroes may be mentioned the
+constant experience of missionaries when search is being made for a
+man to fill a particular place. The descriptions of the kind of man
+desired are such that no one can expect to meet him. The Christian
+boys' school in Kumamoto, and the church with it, went for a whole
+year without principal and pastor because they could not secure a man
+of national reputation. They wanted a hero-principal, who would cut a
+great figure in local politics and also be a hero-leader for the
+Christian work in the whole island of Kyushu, causing the school to
+shine not only in Kumamoto, but to send forth its light and its fame
+throughout the Empire and even to foreign lands. The unpretentious,
+unprepossessing-looking man who was chosen temporarily, though endowed
+with common sense and rather unusual ability to harmonize the various
+elements in the school, was not deemed satisfactory. He was too much
+like Socrates. At last they found a man after their own heart. He had
+traveled and studied long abroad; was a dashing, brilliant fellow;
+would surely make things hum; so at least said those who recommended
+him (and he did). But he was still a poor student in Scotland; his
+passage money must be raised by the school if he was to be secured.
+And raised it was. Four hundred and seventy-five dollars those one
+hundred and fifty poor boys and girls, who lived on two dollars a
+month, scantily clothed and insufficiently warmed, secured from their
+parents and sent across the seas to bring back him who was to be their
+hero-principal and pastor. The rest of the story I need not tell in
+detail, but I may whisper that he was more of a slashing hero than
+they planned for; in three months the boys' school was split in twain
+and in less than three years both fragments of the school had not only
+lost all their Christian character, but were dead and gone forever.
+And the grounds on which the buildings stood were turned into mulberry
+fields.
+
+Talking not long since to a native friend, concerning the
+hero-worshiping tendency of the Japanese, I had my attention called to
+the fact that, while what has been said above is substantially correct
+as concerns a large proportion of the people, especially the young
+men, there is nevertheless a class whose ideal heroes are not
+military, but moral. Their power arises not through self-assertion,
+but rather through humility; their influence is due entirely to
+learning coupled with insight into the great moral issues of life.
+Such has been the character of not a few of the "moral" teachers. I
+have recently read a Japanese novel based upon the life of one such
+hero. Omi Seijin, or the "Sage of Omi," is a name well known among
+the people of Japan; and his fame rests rather on his character than
+on his learning. If tradition is correct, his influence on the people
+of his region was powerful enough to transform the character of the
+place, producing a paradise on earth whence lust and crime were
+banished. Whatever the actual facts of his life may have been, this is
+certainly the representation of his character now held up for honor
+and imitation. There are also indications that the ideal military hero
+is not, for all the people, the self-assertive type that I have
+described above, though this is doubtless the prevalent one. Not long
+since I heard the following couplet as to the nature of a true hero:
+
+ "Makoto no Ei-yu;
+Sono yo, aizen to shite shumpu no gotoshi;
+Sono shin, kizen to shite kinseki no gotoshi.
+
+ "The true Hero;
+In appearance, charming like the spring breeze.
+In heart, firm as a rock."
+
+Another phrase that I have run across relating to the ideal man is, "I
+atte takakarazu," which means in plain English, "having authority, but
+not puffed up." In the presence of these facts, it will not do to
+think that the ideal hero of all the Japanese is, or even in olden
+times was, only a military hero full of swagger and bluster; in a
+military age such would, of necessity, be a popular ideal; but just in
+proportion as men rose to higher forms of learning, and character, so
+would their ideals be raised.
+
+It is not to be lightly assumed that the spirit of hero-worship is
+wholly an evil or a necessarily harmful thing. It has its advantages
+and rewards as well as its dangers and evils. The existence of
+hero-worship in any land reveals a nature in the people that is
+capable of heroic actions. Men appreciate and admire that which in a
+measure at least they are, and more that which they aspire to become.
+The recent war revealed how the capacity for heroism of a warlike
+nature lies latent in every Japanese breast and not in the descendants
+of the old military class alone. But it is more encouraging to note
+that popular appreciation of moral heroes is growing.
+
+Education and religion are bringing forth modern moral heroes. The
+late Dr. Neesima, the founder of the Doshisha, is a hero to many even
+outside the Church. Mr. Ishii, the father of Orphan Asylums in Japan,
+promises to be another. A people that can rear and admire men of this
+character has in it the material of a truly great nation.
+
+The hero-worshiping characteristic of the Japanese depends on two
+other traits of their nature. The first is the reality of strong
+personalities among them capable of becoming heroes; the second is the
+possession of a strong idealizing tendency. Prof. G.T. Ladd has called
+them a "sentimental" people, in the sense that they are powerfully
+moved by sentiment. This is a conspicuous trait of their character
+appearing in numberless ways in their daily life. The passion for
+group-photographs is largely due to this. Sentimentalism, in the sense
+given it by Prof. Ladd, is the emotional aspect of idealism.
+
+The new order of society is reacting on the older ideal of a hero and
+is materially modifying it. The old-fashioned samurai, girded with two
+swords, ready to kill a personal foe at sight, is now only the ideal
+of romance. In actual life he would soon find himself deprived of his
+liberty and under the condemnation not only of the law, but also of
+public opinion. The new ideal with which I have come into most
+frequent contact is far different. Many, possibly the majority, of the
+young men and boys with whom I have talked as to their aim in life,
+have said that they desired to secure first of all a thorough
+education, in order that finally they might become great "statesmen"
+and might guide the nation into paths of prosperity and international
+power. The modern hero is one who gratifies the patriotic passion by
+bringing some marked success to the nation. He must be a gentleman,
+educated in science, in history, and in foreign languages; but above
+all, he must be versed in political economy and law. This new ideal of
+a national hero has been brought in by the order of society, and in
+proportion as this order continues, and emphasis continues to be laid
+on mental and moral power, rather than on rank or official position,
+on the intrinsic rather than on the accidental, will the old ideal
+fade away and the new ideal take its place. Among an idealizing and
+emotional people, such as the Japanese, various ideals will naturally
+find extreme expression. As society grows complex also and its various
+elements become increasingly differentiated, so will the ideals pass
+through the same transformations. A study of ideals, therefore, serves
+several ends; it reveals the present character of those whose ideals
+they are; it shows the degree of development of the social organism in
+which they live; it makes known, likewise, the degree of the
+differentiation that has taken place between the various elements of
+the nation.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+LOVE FOR CHILDREN
+
+
+An aspect of Japanese life widely remarked and praised by foreign
+writers is the love for children. Children's holidays, as the third
+day of the third moon and the fifth day of the fifth moon, are general
+celebrations for boys and girls respectively, and are observed with
+much gayety all over the land. At these times the universal aim is to
+please the children; the girls have dolls and the exhibition of
+ancestral dolls; while the boys have toy paraphernalia of all the
+ancient and modern forms of warfare, and enormous wind-inflated paper
+fish, symbols of prosperity and success, fly from tall bamboos in the
+front yard. Contrary to the prevailing opinion among foreigners, these
+festivals have nothing whatever to do with birthday celebrations. In
+addition to special festivals, the children figure conspicuously in
+all holidays and merry-makings. To the famous flower-festival
+celebrations, families go in groups and make an all-day picnic of the
+joyous occasion.
+
+The Japanese fondness for children is seen not only at festival times.
+Parents seem always ready to provide their children with toys. As a
+consequence toy stores flourish. There is hardly a street without its
+store.
+
+A still further reason for the impression that the Japanese are
+especially fond of their children is the slight amount of punishment
+and reprimand which they administer. The children seem to have nearly
+everything their own way. Playing on the streets, they are always in
+evidence and are given the right of way.
+
+That Japanese show much affection for their children is clear. The
+question of importance, however, is whether they have it in a marked
+degree, more, for instance, than Americans? And if so, is this due to
+their nature, or may it be attributed to their family life as molded
+by the social order? It is my impression that, on the whole, the
+Japanese do not show more affection for their children than
+Occidentals, although they may at first sight appear to do so. Among
+the laboring classes of the %est, the father, as a rule, is away from
+home all through the hours of the day, working in shop or factory. He
+seldom sees his children except upon the Sabbath. Of course, the
+father has then very little to do with their care or education, and
+little opportunity for the manifestation of affection. In Japan,
+however, the industrial organization of society is still such that the
+father is at home a large part of the time. The factories are few as
+yet; the store is usually not separate from the home, but a part of
+it, the front room of the house. Family life is, therefore, much less
+broken in upon by the industrial necessities of civilization, and
+there are accordingly more opportunities for the manifestation of the
+father's affection for the children. Furthermore, the laboring-people
+in Japan live much on the street, and it is a common thing to see the
+father caring for children. While I have seldom seen a father with an
+infant tied to his back, I have frequently seen them with their infant
+sons tucked into their bosoms, an interesting sight. This custom gives
+a vivid impression of parental affection. But, comparing the middle
+classes of Japan and the West, it is safe to say that, as a whole, the
+Western father has more to do by far in the care and education of the
+children than the Japanese father, and that there is no less of
+fondling and playing with children. If we may judge the degree of
+affection by the signs of its demonstrations, we must pronounce the
+Occidental, with his habits of kissing and embracing, as far and away
+more affectionate than his Oriental cousin. While the Occidental may
+not make so much of an occasion of the advent of a son as does the
+Oriental, he continues to remember the birthdays of all his children
+with joy and celebrations, as the Oriental does not. Although the
+Japanese invariably say, when asked about it, that they celebrate
+their children's birthdays, the uniform experience of the foreigner
+is that birthday celebrations play a very insignificant part in the
+joys and the social life of the home.
+
+It is not difficult to understand why, apart from the question of
+affection, the Japanese should manifest special joy on the advent of
+sons, and particularly of a first son. The Oriental system of
+ancestral worship, with the consequent need, both religious and
+political, of maintaining the family line, is quite enough to account
+for all the congratulatory ceremonies customary on the birth of sons.
+The fact that special joy is felt and manifested on the birth of sons,
+and less on the birth of daughters, clearly shows that the dominant
+conceptions of the social order have an important place in determining
+even so fundamental a trait as affection for offspring.
+
+Affection for children is, however, not limited to the day of their
+birth or the period of their infancy. In judging of the relative
+possession by different races of affection for children, we must ask
+how the children are treated during all their succeeding years. It
+must be confessed that the advantage is then entirely on the side of
+the Occidental. Not only does this appear in the demonstrations of
+affection which are continued throughout childhood, often even
+throughout life, but more especially in the active parental solicitude
+for the children's welfare, striving to fit them for life's duties and
+watching carefully over their mental and moral education. In these
+respects the average Occidental is far in advance of the average
+Oriental.
+
+I have been told that, since the coming in of the new civilization and
+the rise of the new ideas about woman, marriage, and home, there is
+clearly observable to the Japanese themselves a change in the way in
+which children are being treated. But, even still, the elder son takes
+the more prominent place in the affection of the family, and sons
+precede daughters.
+
+A fair statement of the case, therefore, is somewhat as follows: The
+lower and laboring classes of Japan seem to have more visible
+affection for their children than the same classes in the Occident.
+Among the middle and upper classes, however, the balance is in favor
+of the West. In the East, while, without doubt, there always has been
+and is now a pure and natural affection, it is also true that this
+natural affection has been more mixed with utilitarian considerations
+than in the West. Christian Japanese, however, differ little from
+Christian Americans in this respect. The differences between the East
+and the West are largely due to the differing industrial and family
+conditions induced by the social order.
+
+The correctness of this general statement will perhaps be better
+appreciated if we consider in detail some of the facts of Japanese
+family life. Let us notice first the very loose ties, as they seem to
+us, holding the Japanese family together. It is one of the constant
+wonders to us Westerners how families can break up into fragments, as
+they constantly do. One third of the marriages end in divorce; and in
+case of divorce, the children all stay with the father's family. It
+would seem as if the love of the mother for her children could not be
+very strong where divorce under such a condition is so common. Or,
+perhaps, it would be truer to say that divorce would be far more
+frequent than it is but for the mother's love for her children. For I
+am assured that many a mother endures most distressing conditions
+rather than leave her children. Furthermore, the way in which parents
+allow their children to leave the home and then fail to write or
+communicate with them, for months or even years at a time, is
+incomprehensible if the parental love were really strong. And still
+further, the way in which concubines are brought into the home,
+causing confusion and discord, is a very striking evidence of the lack
+of a deep love on the part of the father for the mother of his
+children and even for his own legitimate children. One would expect a
+father who really loved his children to desire and plan for their
+legitimacy; but the children by his concubines are not "ipso facto"
+recognized as legal. One more evidence in this direction is the
+frequency of adoption and of separation. Adoption in Japan is largely,
+though by no means exclusively, the adoption of an adult; the cases
+where a child is adopted by a childless couple from love of children
+are rare, as compared with similar cases in the United States, so far,
+at least, as my observation goes. I recently heard of a conversation
+on personal financial matters between a number of Christian
+evangelists. After mutual comparisons they agreed that one of their
+number was more fortunate than the rest in that he did not have to
+support his mother. On inquiring into the matter, the missionary
+learned that this evangelist, on becoming a Buddhist priest many years
+before, had secured from the government, according to the laws of the
+land, exemption from this duty. When he became a Christian it did not
+seem to occur to him that it was his duty and his privilege to support
+his indigent mother. I may add that this idea has since occurred to
+him and he is acting upon it.
+
+Infanticide throws a rather lurid light on Japanese affection. First,
+in regard to the facts: Mr. Ishii's attention was called to the need
+of an orphan asylum by hearing how a child, both of whose parents had
+died of cholera, was on the point of being buried alive with its dead
+mother by heartless neighbors when it was rescued by a fisherman.
+Certain parts of Japan have been notorious from of old for this
+practice. In Tosa the evil was so rampant that a society for its
+prevention has been in existence for many years. It helps support
+children of poor parents who might be tempted to dispose of them
+criminally. In that province from January to March, 1898, I was told
+that "only" four cases of conviction for this crime were reported. The
+registered annual birth rate of certain villages has increased from
+40-50 to 75-80, and this without any immigration from outside. The
+reason assigned is the diminution of infanticide.
+
+In speaking of infanticide in Japan, let us not forget that every race
+and nation has been guilty of the same crime, and has continued to be
+guilty of it until delivered by Christianity.
+
+Widespread infanticide proves a wide lack of natural affection.
+Poverty is, of course, the common plea. Yet infanticide has been
+practiced not so much by the desperately poor as by small
+land-holders. The amount of farming land possessed by each family was
+strictly limited and could feed only a given number of mouths. Should
+the family exceed that number, all would be involved in poverty, for
+the members beyond that limit did not have the liberty to travel in
+search of new occupation. Infanticide, therefore, bore direct relation
+to the rigid economic nature of the old social order.
+
+Whatever, therefore, be the point of view from which we study the
+question of Japanese affection for children, we see that it was
+intimately connected with the nature of the social order. Whether we
+judge such affection or its lack to be a characteristic trait of
+Japanese nature, we must still maintain that it is not an inherent
+trait of the race nature, but only a characteristic depending for its
+greater or less development on the nature of the social order.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+MARITAL LOVE
+
+
+If the Japanese are a conspicuously emotional race, as is commonly
+believed, we should naturally expect this characteristic to manifest
+itself in a marked degree in the relation of the sexes. Curiously
+enough, however, such does not seem to be the case. So slight a place
+does the emotion of sexual love have in Japanese family life that some
+have gone to the extreme of denying it altogether. In his brilliant
+but fallacious volume, entitled "The Soul of the Far East," Mr.
+Percival Lowell states that the Japanese do not "fall in love." The
+correctness of this statement we shall consider in connection with the
+argument for Japanese impersonality. That "falling in love" is not a
+recognized part of the family system, and that marriage is arranged
+regardless not only of love, but even of mutual acquaintance, are
+indisputable facts.
+
+Let us confine our attention here to Japanese post-marital emotional
+characteristics. Do Japanese husbands love their wives and wives their
+husbands? We have already seen that in the text-book for Japanese
+women, the "Onna Daigaku," not one word is said about love. It may be
+stated at once that love between husband and wife is almost as
+conspicuously lacking in practice as in precept. In no regard,
+perhaps, is the contrast between the East and the West more striking
+than the respective ideas concerning woman and marriage. The one
+counts woman the equal, if not the superior of man; the other looks
+down upon her as man's inferior in every respect; the one considers
+profound love as the only true condition of marriage; the other thinks
+of love as essentially impure, beneath the dignity of a true man, and
+not to be taken into consideration when marriage is contemplated; in
+the one, the two persons most interested have most to say in the
+matter; in the other, they have the least to say; in the one, a long
+and intimate previous acquaintance is deemed important; in the other,
+the need for such an acquaintance does not receive a second thought;
+in the one, the wife at once takes her place as the queen of the home;
+in the other, she enters as the domestic for her husband and his
+parents; in the one, the children are hers as well as his; in the
+other, they are his rather than hers, and remain with him in case of
+divorce; in the one, divorce is rare and condemned; in the other, it
+is common in the extreme; in the one, it is as often the woman as the
+man who seeks the divorce; in the other, until most recent times, it
+is the man alone who divorces the wife; in the one, the reasons for
+divorce are grave; in the other, they are often trivial; in the one,
+the wife is the "helpmate"; in the other, she is the man's
+"plaything"; or, at most, the means for continuing the family lineage;
+in the one, the man is the "husband"; in the other, he is the "danna
+san" or "teishu" (the lord or master); in the ideal home of the one,
+the wife is the object of the husband's constant affection and
+solicitous care; in the ideal home of the other, she ever waits upon
+her lord, serves his food for him, and faithfully sits up for him at
+night, however late his return may be; in the one, the wife is
+justified in resenting any unfaithfulness or immorality on the part of
+her husband; in the other, she is commanded to accept with patience
+whatever he may do, however many concubines he may have in his home or
+elsewhere; and however immoral he may be, she must not be jealous. The
+following characterization of the women of Japan is presumably by one
+who would do them no injustice, having himself married a Japanese wife
+(the editor of the _Japan Mail_).
+
+ "The woman of Japan is a charming personage in many ways--gracious,
+ refined, womanly before everything, sweet-tempered, unselfish,
+ virtuous, a splendid mother, and an ideal wife from the point of
+ view of the master. But she is virtually excluded from the whole
+ intellectual life of the nation. Politics, art, literature,
+ science, are closed books to her. She cannot think logically about
+ any of these subjects, express herself clearly with reference to
+ them, or take an intellectual part in conversations relating to
+ them. She is, in fact, totally disqualified to be her husband's
+ intellectual companion, and the inevitable result is that he
+ despises her."[J]
+
+In face of all these facts, it is evident that the emotional element
+of character which plays so large a part in the relation of the sexes
+in the West has little, if any, counterpart in the Far East. Where the
+emotional element does come in, it is under social condemnation. There
+are doubtless many happy marriages in Japan, if the wife is faithful
+in her place and fills it well; and if the master is honorable
+according to the accepted standards, steady in his business, not given
+to wine or women. But even then the affection must be different from
+that which prevails in the West. No Japanese wife ever dreams of
+receiving the loving care from her husband which is freely accorded
+her Western sister by her husband.[K]
+
+I wish, however, to add at once that this is a topic about which it is
+dangerous to dogmatize, for the customs of Japan demand that all
+expressions of affection between husband and wife shall be sedulously
+concealed from the outer world. I can easily believe that there is no
+little true affection existing between husband and wife. A Japanese
+friend with whom I have talked on this subject expresses his belief
+that the statement made above, to the effect that no Japanese wife
+dreams of receiving the loving care which is expected by her Western
+sister, is doubtless true of Old Japan, but that there has been a
+great change in this respect in recent decades; and especially among
+the Christian community. That Christians excel the others with whom I
+have come in contact, has been evident to me. But that even they are
+still very different from Occidentals in this respect, is also clear.
+Whatever be the affection lavished on the wife in the privacy of the
+home, she does not receive in public the constant evidence of special
+regard and high esteem which the Western wife expects as her right.
+
+How much affection can be expressed by low formal bows? The fact is
+that Japanese civilization has striven to crush out all signs of
+emotion; this stoicism is exemplified to a large degree even in the
+home, and under circumstances when we should think it impossible.
+Kissing was an unknown art in Japan, and it is still unknown, except
+by name, to the great majority of the people. Even mothers seldom kiss
+their infant children, and when they do, it is only while the children
+are very young.
+
+The question, however, which particularly interests us, is as to the
+explanation for these facts. Is the lack of demonstrative affection
+between husband and wife due to the inherent nature of the Japanese,
+or is it not due rather to the prevailing social order? If a Japanese
+goes to America or. England, for a few years, does he maintain his
+cold attitude toward all women, and never show the slightest tendency
+to fall in love, or exhibit demonstrative affection? These questions
+almost answer themselves, and with them the main question for whose
+solution we are seeking.
+
+A few concrete instances may help to illustrate the generalization
+that these are not fixed because racial characteristics, but variable
+ones dependent on the social order. Many years ago when the late Dr.
+Neesima, the founder, with Dr. Davis, of the Doshisha, was on the
+point of departure for the United States on account of his health, he
+made an address to the students. In the course of his remarks he
+stated that there were three principal considerations that made him
+regret the necessity for his departure at that time; the first was
+that the Doshisha was in a most critical position; it was but
+starting on its larger work, and he felt that all its friends should
+be on hand to help on the great undertaking. The second was that he
+was compelled to leave his aged parents, whom he might not find living
+on his return to Japan. The third was his sorrow at leaving his
+beloved wife. This public reference to his wife, and especially to his
+love for her, was so extraordinary that it created no little comment,
+not to say scandal; especially obnoxious was it to many, because he
+mentioned her after having mentioned his parents. In the reports of
+this speech given by his friends to the public press no reference was
+made to this expression of love for his wife. And a few months after
+his death, when Dr. Davis prepared a short biography of Dr. Neesima,
+he was severely criticised by some of the Japanese for reproducing the
+speech as Dr. Neesima gave it.
+
+Shortly after my first arrival in Japan, I was walking home from
+church one day with an English-speaking Japanese, who had had a good
+deal to do with foreigners. Suddenly, without any introduction, he
+remarked that he did not comprehend how the men of the West could
+endure such tyranny as was exercised over them by their wives. I, of
+course, asked what he meant. He then said that he had seen me
+buttoning my wife's shoes. I should explain that on calling on the
+Japanese, in their homes, it is necessary that we leave our shoes at
+the door, as the Japanese invariably do; this is, of course, awkward
+for foreigners who wear shoes; especially so is the necessity of
+putting them on again. The difficulty is materially increased by the
+invariably high step at the front door. It is hard enough for a man to
+kneel down on the step and reach for his shoes and then put them on;
+much more so is it for a woman. And after the shoes are on, there is
+no suitable place on which to rest the foot for buttoning and tying. I
+used, therefore, very gladly to help my wife with hers. Yet, so
+contrary to Japanese precedent was this act of mine that this
+well-educated gentleman and Christian, who had had much intercourse
+with foreigners, could not see in it anything except the imperious
+command of the wife and the slavish obedience of the husband. His
+conception of the relation between the Occidental husband and wife is
+best described as tyranny on the part of the wife.
+
+One of the early shocks I received on this general subject was due to
+the discovery that whenever my wife took my arm as we walked the
+street to and from church, or elsewhere, the people looked at us in
+surprised displeasure. Such public manifestation of intimacy was to be
+expected from libertines alone, and from these only when they were
+more or less under the influence of drink. Whenever a Japanese man
+walks out with his wife, which, by the way, is seldom, he invariably
+steps on ahead, leaving her to follow, carrying the parcels, if there
+are any. A child, especially a son, may walk at his side, but not his
+wife.
+
+Let me give a few more illustrations to show how the present family
+life of the Japanese checks the full and free development of the
+affections. In one of our out-stations I but recently found a young
+woman in a distressing condition. Her parents had no sons, and
+consequently, according to the custom of the land, they had adopted a
+son, who became the husband of their eldest daughter; the man proved a
+rascal, and the family was glad when he decided that he did not care
+to be their son any longer. Shortly after his departure a child was
+born to the daughter; but, according to the law, she had no husband,
+and consequently the child must either be registered as illegitimate,
+or be fraudulently registered as the child of the mother's father.
+There is much fraudulent registration, the children of concubines are
+not recognized as legitimate; yet it is common to register such
+children as those of the regular wife, especially if she has few or
+none of her own.
+
+An evangelist who worked long in Kyushu was always in great financial
+trouble because of the fact that he had to support two mothers,
+besides giving aid to his father, who had married a third wife. The
+first was his own mother, who had been divorced, but, as she had no
+home, the son took her to his. When the father divorced his second
+wife, the son was induced to take care of her also. Another
+evangelist, with whom I had much to do, was the adopted son of a
+scheming old man; it seems that in the earlier part of the present era
+the eldest son of a family was exempt from military draft. It often
+happened, therefore, that families who had no sons could obtain large
+sums of money from those who had younger sons whom they wished to have
+adopted for the purpose of escaping the draft. This evangelist, while
+still a boy, was adopted into such a family, and a certain sum was
+fixed upon to be paid at some time in the future. But the adopted son
+proved so pleasing to the adopting father that he did not ask for the
+money; by some piece of legerdemain, however, he succeeded in adopting
+a second son, who paid him the desired money. After some years the
+first adopted son became a Christian, and then an evangelist, both
+steps being taken against the wishes of the adopting father. The
+father finally said that he would forego all relations to the son, and
+give him back his original name, provided the son would pay the
+original sum that had been agreed on, plus the interest, which
+altogether would, at that time, amount to several hundred yen. This
+was, of course, impossible. The negotiations dragged on for three or
+four years. Meanwhile, the young man fell in love with a young girl,
+whom he finally married; as he was still the son of his adopting
+father, he could not have his wife registered as his wife, for the old
+man had another girl in view for him and would not consent to this
+arrangement. And so the matter dragged for several months more. Unless
+the matter could be arranged, any children born to them must be
+registered as illegitimate. At this point I was consulted and, for the
+first time, learned the details of the case. Further consultations
+resulted in an agreement as to the sum to be paid; the adopted son was
+released, and re-registered under his newly acquired name and for the
+first time his marriage became legal. The confusion and suffering
+brought into the family by this practice of adoption and of separation
+are almost endless.
+
+The number of cases in which beautiful and accomplished young women
+have been divorced by brutal and licentious husbands is appalling. I
+know several such. What wonder that Christians and others are
+constantly laying emphasis, in public lectures and sermons and private
+talks, on the crying need of reform in marriage and in the home?
+
+Throughout the land the newspapers are discussing the pros and cons of
+monogamy and polygamy. In January of 1898 the _Jiji Shimpo_, one of
+the leading daily papers of Tokyo, had a series of articles on the
+subject from the pen of one of the most illustrious educators of New
+Japan, Mr. Fukuzawa. His school, the "Keio Gijiku," has educated more
+thousands of young men than any other, notwithstanding the fact that
+it is a private institution. Though not a Christian himself, nor
+making any professions of advocating Christianity, yet Mr. Fukuzawa
+has come out strongly in favor of monogamy. His description of the
+existing social and family life is striking, not to say sickening. If
+I mistake not, it is he who tells of a certain noble lady who shed
+tears at the news of the promotion of her husband in official rank;
+and when questioned on the matter she confessed that, with added
+salary, he would add to the number of his concubines and to the
+frequency of his intercourse with famous dancing and singing girls.
+
+The distressing state of family life may also be gathered from the
+large numbers of public and secret prostitutes that are to be found in
+all the large cities, and the singing girls of nearly every town.
+According to popular opinion, their number is rapidly increasing.
+Though this general subject trenches on morality rather than on the
+topic immediately before us, yet it throws a lurid light on this
+question also. It lets us see, perhaps, more clearly than we could in
+any other way, how deficient is the average home life of the people. A
+professing Christian, a man of wide experience and social standing,
+not long since seriously argued at a meeting of a Young Men's
+Christian Association that dancing and singing girls are a necessary
+part of Japanese civilization to-day. He argued that they supply the
+men with that female element in social life which the ordinary woman
+cannot provide; were the average wives and daughters sufficiently
+accomplished to share in the social life of the men as they are in the
+West, dancing and singing girls, being needless, would soon cease to
+be.
+
+One further question in this connection merits our attention. How are
+we to account for an order of society that allows so little scope for
+the natural affections of the heart, unless by saying that that order
+is the true expression of their nature? Must we not say that the
+element of affection in the present social order is deficient because
+the Japanese themselves are naturally deficient? The question seems
+more difficult than it really is.
+
+In the first place, the affectionate relation existing between
+husbands and wives and between parents and children, in Western lands,
+is a product of relatively recent times. In his exhaustive work on
+"The History of Human Marriage," Westermarck makes this very plain.
+Wherever the woman is counted a slave, is bought and sold, is
+considered as merely a means of bearing children to the family, or in
+any essential way is looked down upon, there high forms of affection
+are by the nature of the case impossible, though some affection
+doubtless exists; it necessarily attains only a rudimentary
+development. Now it is conspicuous that the conception of the nature
+and purpose of woman, as held in the Orient, has always been debasing
+to her. Though individual women might rise above their assigned
+position the whole social order, as established by the leaders of
+thought, was against her. The statement that there was a primitive
+condition of society in Japan in which the affectionate relations
+between husband and wife now known in the West prevailed, is, I think,
+a mistake.
+
+We must remember, in the second place, what careful students of human
+evolution have pointed out, that those tribes and races in which the
+family was most completely consolidated, that is to say, those in
+which the power of the father was absolute, were the ones to gain the
+victory over their competitors. The reason for this is too obvious to
+require even a statement. Every conquering race has accordingly
+developed the "patria potestas" to a greater or less degree. Now one
+general peculiarity of the Orient is that that stage of development
+has remained to this day; it has not experienced those modifications
+and restrictions which have arisen in the West. The national
+government dealt with families and clans, not with individuals, as the
+final social unit. In the West, however, the individual has become the
+civil unit; the "patria potestas" has thus been all but lost. This,
+added to religious and ethical considerations, has given women and
+children an ever higher place both in society and in the home. Had
+this loss of authority by the father been accompanied with a weakening
+of the nation, it would have been an injury; but, in the West, his
+authority has been transferred to the nation. These considerations
+serve to render more intelligible and convincing the main proposition
+of these chapters, that the distinctive emotional characteristics of
+the Japanese are not inherent; they are the results of the social and
+industrial order; as this order changes, they too will surely change.
+The entire civilization of a land takes its leading, if not its
+dominant, color from the estimate set by the people as a whole on the
+value of human life. The relatively late development of the tender
+affections, even in the West, is due doubtless to the extreme slowness
+with which the idea of the inherent value of a human being, as such,
+has taken root, even though it was clearly taught by Christ. But the
+leaven of His teaching has been at work for these hundreds of years,
+and now at last we are beginning to see its real meaning and its vital
+relation to the entire progress of man. It may be questioned whether
+Christ gave any more important impetus to the development of
+civilization than by His teaching in regard to the inestimable worth
+of man, grounding it, as He did, on man's divine sonship. Those
+nations which insist on valuing human life only by the utilitarian
+standard, and which consequently keep woman in a degraded place,
+insisting on concubinage and all that it implies, are sure to wane
+before those nations which loyally adopt and practice the higher
+ideals of human worth. The weakness of heathen lands arises in no
+slight degree from their cheap estimate of human life.
+
+In Japan, until the Meiji era, human life was cheap. For criminals of
+the military classes, suicide was the honorable method of leaving this
+world; the lower orders of society suffered loss of life at the hands
+of the military class without redress. The whole nation accepted the
+low standards of human value; woman was valued chiefly, if not
+entirely, on a utilitarian basis, that, namely, of bearing children,
+doing house and farm work, and giving men pleasure. So far as I know,
+not among all the teachings of Confucius or Buddha was the supreme
+value of human life, as such, once suggested, much less any adequate
+conception of the worth and nature of woman. The entire social order
+was constructed without these two important truths.
+
+By a great effort, however, Japan has introduced a new social order,
+with unprecedented rapidity. By one revolution it has established a
+set of laws in which the equality of all men before the law is
+recognized at least; for the first time in Oriental history, woman is
+given the right to seek divorce. The experiment is now being made on a
+great scale as to whether the new social order adopted by the rulers
+can induce those ideas among the people at large which will insure its
+performance. Can the mere legal enactments which embody the principles
+of human equality and the value of human life, regardless of sex,
+beget those fundamental conceptions on which alone a steady and
+lasting government can rest? Can Japan really step into the circle of
+Western nations, without abandoning her pagan religions and pushing
+onward into Christian monotheism with all its corollaries as to the
+relations and mutual duties of man? All earnest men are crying out for
+a strengthening of the moral life of the nation through the reform of
+the family and are proclaiming the necessity of monogamy; but, aside
+from the Christians, none appear to see how this is to be done. Even
+Mr. Fukuzawa says that the first step in the reform of the family and
+the establishment of monogamy is to develop public sentiment against
+prostitution and plural or illegal marriage; and the way to do this
+is first to make evil practices secret. This, he says, is more
+important than to give women a higher education. He does not see that
+Christianity with its conceptions of immediate responsibility of the
+individual to God, the loving Heavenly Father, and of the infinite
+value of each human soul, thus doing away with the utilitarian scale
+for measuring both men and women, together with its conceptions of the
+relations of the sexes and of man to man, can alone supply that
+foundation for all the elements of the new social order, intellectual
+and emotional, which will make it workable and permanent, and of which
+monogamy is but one element.[L] He does not see that representative
+government and popular rights cannot stand for any length of time on
+any other foundation.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+CHEERFULNESS--INDUSTRY--TRUTHFULNESS--SUSPICIOUSNESS
+
+
+Many writers have dwelt with delight on the cheerful disposition that
+seems so common in Japan. Lightness of heart, freedom from all anxiety
+for the future, living chiefly in the present, these and kindred
+features are pictured in glowing terms. And, on the whole, these
+pictures are true to life. The many flower festivals are made
+occasions for family picnics when all care seems thrown to the wind.
+There is a simplicity and a freshness and a freedom from worry that is
+delightful to see. But it is also remarked that a change in this
+regard is beginning to be observed. The coming in of Western
+machinery, methods of government, of trade and of education, is
+introducing customs and cares, ambitions and activities, that militate
+against the older ways. Doubtless, this too is true. If so, it but
+serves to establish the general proposition of these pages that the
+more outstanding national characteristics are largely the result of
+special social conditions, rather than of inherent national character.
+
+The cheerful disposition, so often seen and admired by the Westerner,
+is the cheerfulness of children. In many respects the Japanese are
+relatively undeveloped. This is due to the nature of their social
+order during the past. The government has been largely paternal in
+form and fully so in theory. Little has been left to individual
+initiative or responsibility. Wherever such a system has been dominant
+and the perfectly accepted order, the inevitable result is just such a
+state of simple, childish cheerfulness as we find in Japan. It
+constitutes that golden age sung by the poets of every land. But being
+the cheerfulness of children, the happiness of immaturity, it is
+bound to change with growth, to be lost with coming maturity.
+
+Yet the Japanese are by no means given up to a cheerful view of life.
+Many an individual is morose and dejected in the extreme. This
+disposition is ever stimulated by the religious teachings of Buddhism.
+Its great message has been the evanescent character of the present
+life. Life is not worth living, it urges; though life may have some
+pleasures, the total result is disappointment and sorrow. Buddhism has
+found a warm welcome in the hearts of many Japanese. For more than a
+thousand years it has been exercising a potent influence on their
+thoughts and lives. Yet how is this consistent with the cheerful
+disposition which seems so characteristic of Japan? The answer is not
+far to seek. Pessimism is by its very nature separative, isolating,
+silent. Those oppressed by it do not enter into public joys. They hide
+themselves in monasteries, or in the home. The result is that by its
+very nature the actual pessimism of Japan is not a conspicuous feature
+of national character. The judgment that all Japanese are cheerful
+rests on shallow grounds. Because, forsooth, millions on holidays bear
+that appearance, and because on ordinary occasions the average man and
+woman seem cheerful and happy, the conclusion is reached that all are
+so. No effort is made to learn of those whose lives are spent in
+sadness and isolation. I am convinced that the Japan of old, for all
+its apparent cheer, had likewise its side of deep tragedy. Conditions
+of life that struck down countless individuals, and mental conditions
+which made Buddhism so popular, both point to this conclusion.
+
+Again I wish to call attention to the fact that the prominence of
+children and young people is in part the cause of the appearance of
+general happiness. The Japanese live on the street as no Western
+people do. The stores and workshops are the homes; when these are
+open, the homes are open. When the children go out of the house to
+play they use the streets, for they seldom have yards. Here they
+gather in great numbers and play most enthusiastically, utterly
+regardless of the passers-by, for these latter are all on foot or in
+jinrikishas, and, consequently, never cause the children any alarm.
+
+The Japanese give the double impression of being industrious and
+diligent on the one hand, and, on the other, of being lazy and utterly
+indifferent to the lapse of time. The long hours during which they
+keep at work is a constant wonder to the Occidental. I have often been
+amazed in Fukuoka to find stores and workshops open, apparently in
+operation, after ten and sometimes even until eleven o'clock at night,
+while blacksmiths and carpenters and wheelwrights would be working
+away as if it were morning. Many of the factories recently started
+keep very long hours. Indeed most of the cotton mills run day and
+night, having two sets of workers, who shift their times of labor
+every week. Those who work during the night hours one week take the
+day hours the following week. In at least one such factory, with which
+I am acquainted, the fifteen hundred girls who work from six o'clock
+Saturday evening until six o'clock Sunday morning, are then supposed
+to have twenty-four hours of rest before they begin their day's work
+Monday morning; but, as a matter of fact, they must spend three or
+four and sometimes five hours on Sunday morning cleaning up the
+factory.
+
+In a small silk-weaving factory that I know the customary hours for
+work were from five in the morning until nine at night, seven days in
+the week. The wife, however, of the owner became a Christian. Through
+her intervention time for rest was secured on Sunday long enough for a
+Bible class, which the evangelist of the place was invited to teach.
+After several months of instruction a number of the hands became
+Christian, and all were sufficiently interested to ask that the whole
+of the Sabbath be granted to them for rest; but in order that the
+master might not lose thereby, they agreed to begin work at four each
+morning and to work on until ten at night. With such hours one would
+have expected them to fall at once into their beds when the work of
+the day was over. But for many months, at ten o'clock in the evening,
+my wife and I heard them singing a hymn or two in their family
+worship before retiring for the night.
+
+In certain weaving factories I have been told that the girls are
+required to work sixteen hours a day; and that on Sundays they are
+allowed to have some rest, being then required to work but ten hours!
+The diligence of mail deliverers, who always run when on duty, the
+hours of consecutive running frequently performed by jin-irikisha men
+(several have told me that they have made over sixty miles in a single
+day), the long hours of persistent study by students in the higher
+schools, and many kindred facts, certainly indicate a surprising
+capacity for work.
+
+But there are equally striking illustrations of an opposite nature.
+The farmers and mechanics and carpenters, among regular laborers, and
+the entire life of the common people in their homes, give an
+impression of indifference to the flight of time, if not of absolute
+laziness. The workers seem ready to sit down for a smoke and a chat at
+any hour of the day. In the home and in ordinary social life, the loss
+of time seems to be a matter of no consequence whatever. Polite
+palaver takes unstinted hours, and the sauntering of the people
+through the street emphasizes the impression that no business calls
+oppress them.
+
+In my opinion these characteristics, also, are due to the conditions
+of society, past and present, rather than to the inherent nature of
+the people. The old civilization was easy-going; it had no clocks; it
+hardly knew the time of day; it never hastened. The hour was estimated
+and was twice as long as the modern hour. The structure of society
+demanded the constant observance of the forms of etiquette; this, with
+its numberless genuflections and strikings of the head on the floor,
+always demanded time. Furthermore, the very character of the footgear
+compelled and still compels a shuffling, ambling gait when walking the
+streets. The clog is a well-named hindrance to civilization in the
+waste of time it compels. The slow-going, time-ignoring
+characteristics of New Japan are social inheritances from feudal
+times, characteristics which are still hampering its development. The
+industrious spirit that is to be found in so many quarters to-day is
+largely the gift of the new civilization. Shoes are taking the place
+of clogs. The army and all the police, on ordinary duty, wear shoes.
+Even the industry of the students is largely due to the new conditions
+of student life. The way in which the Japanese are working to-day, and
+the feverish haste that some of them evince in their work, shows that
+they are as capable as Occidentals of acquiring the rush of
+civilization.
+
+The home life of the people gives an impression of listlessness that
+is in marked contrast to that of the West. This is partly due to the
+fact that the house work is relatively light, there being no furniture
+to speak of, the rooms small, and the cooking arrangements quite
+simple. Housewives go about their work with restful deliberation,
+which is trying, however, to one in haste. It is the experience of the
+housekeepers from the West that one Japanese domestic is able to
+accomplish from a third to a half of what is done by a girl in
+America. This is not wholly due to slowness of movement, however, but
+also to smallness of stature and corresponding lack of strength. On
+the other hand, the long hours of work required of women in the
+majority of Japanese homes is something appalling. The wife is
+expected to be up before the husband, to prepare his meals, and to
+wait patiently till his return at night, however late that may be. In
+all except the higher ranks of society she takes entire care of the
+children, except for the help which her older children may give her.
+During much of the time she goes about her work with an infant tied to
+her back. Though she does not work hard at any one time (and is it to
+be wondered at?) yet she works long. Especially hard is the life of
+the waiting girls in the hotels. I have learned that, as a rule, they
+are required to be up before daylight and to remain on duty until
+after midnight. In some hotels they are allowed but four or five hours
+out of the twenty-four. The result is, they are often overcome and
+fall asleep while at service. Sitting on the floor and waiting to
+serve the rice, with nothing to distract their thoughts or hold their
+attention, they easily lose themselves for a few moments.
+
+Two other strongly contrasted traits are found in the Japanese
+character, absolute confidence and trustfulness on the one hand, and
+suspicion on the other. It is the universal testimony that the former
+characteristic is rapidly passing away; in the cities it is well-nigh
+gone. But in the country places it is still common. The idea of making
+a bargain when two persons entered upon some particular piece of work,
+the one as employer, the other as employed, was entirely repugnant to
+the older generation, since it was assumed that their relations as
+inferior and superior should determine their financial relations; the
+superior would do what was right, and the inferior should accept what
+the superior might give without a question or a murmur. Among the
+samurai, where the arrangement is between equals, bargaining or making
+fixed and fast terms which will hold to the end, and which may be
+carried to the courts in case of differences, was a thing practically
+unknown in the older civilization. Everything of a business nature was
+left to honor, and was carried on in mutual confidence.
+
+A few illustrations of this spirit of confidence from my own
+experience may not be without interest. On first coming to Japan, I
+found it usual for a Japanese who wished to take a jinrikisha to call
+the runner and take the ride without making any bargain, giving him at
+the end what seemed right. And the men generally accepted the payment
+without question. I have found that recently, unless there is some
+definite understanding arrived at before the ride, there is apt to be
+some disagreement, the runner presuming on the hold he has, by virtue
+of work done, to get more than is customary. This is especially true
+in case the rider is a foreigner. Another set of examples in which
+astonishing simplicity and confidence were manifested was in the
+employment of evangelists. I have known several instances in which a
+full correspondence with an evangelist with regard to his employment
+was carried on, and the settlement finally concluded, and the man set
+to work without a word said about money matters. It need hardly be
+said that no foreigner took part in that correspondence.
+
+The simple, childlike trustfulness of the country people is seen in
+multiplied ways; yet on the whole I cannot escape the conviction that
+it is a trustfulness which is shown toward each other as equals.
+Certain farmers whom I have employed to care for a cow and to
+cultivate the garden, while showing a trustful disposition towards me,
+have not had the same feelings toward their fellows apparently.
+
+This confidence and trustfulness were the product of a civilization
+resting on communalistic feudalism; the people were kept as children
+in dependence on their feudal lord; they had to accept what he said
+and did; they were accustomed to that order of things from the
+beginning and had no other thought; on the whole too, without doubt,
+they received regular and kindly treatment. Furthermore, there was no
+redress for the peasant in case of harshness; it was always the wise
+policy, therefore, for him to accept whatever was given without even
+the appearance of dissatisfaction. This spirit was connected with the
+dominance of the military class. Simple trustfulness was, therefore,
+chiefly that of the non-military classes. The trustfulness of the
+samurai sprang from their distinctive training. As already mentioned,
+when drawing up a bond in feudal times, in place of any tangible
+security, the document would read, "If I fail to do so and so, you may
+laugh at me in public."
+
+Since the overthrow of communal feudalism and the establishment of an
+individualistic social order, necessitating personal ownership of
+property, and the universal use of money, trustful confidence is
+rapidly passing away. Everything is being more and more accurately
+reduced to a money basis. The old samurai scorn for money seems to be
+wholly gone, an astonishing transformation of character. Since the
+disestablishment of the samurai class many of them have gone into
+business. Not a few have made tremendous failures for lack of business
+instinct, being easily fleeced by more cunning and less honorable
+fellows who have played the "confidence" game most successfully;
+others have made equally great successes because of their superior
+mental ability and education. The government of Japan is to-day chiefly
+in the hands of the descendants of the samurai class. They have their
+fixed salaries and everything is done on a financial basis, payment
+being made for work only. The lazy and the incapable are being pushed
+to the wall. Many of the poorest and most pitiable people of the land
+to-day are the proud sons of the former aristocracy, who glory in the
+history of their ancestors, but are not able or willing to change
+their old habits of thought and manner of life.
+
+The American Board has had a very curious, not to say disastrous,
+experience with the spirit of trustful confidence that was the
+prevailing business characteristic of the older civilization.
+According to the treaties which Japan had made with foreign nations,
+no foreigner was allowed to buy land outside the treaty ports. As,
+however, mission work was freely allowed by the government and
+welcomed by many of the people in all parts of the land, and as it
+became desirable to have continuous missionary work in several of the
+interior towns, it seemed wise to locate missionaries in those places
+and to provide suitable houses for them. In order to do this, land was
+bought and the needed houses erected, and the title was necessarily
+held in the names of apparently trustworthy native Christians. The
+government was, of course, fully aware of what was being done and
+offered no objection. It was well understood that the property was not
+for the private ownership of the individual missionary, but was to be
+held by the Christians for the use of the mission to which the
+missionary belonged. For many years no questions were raised and all
+moved along smoothly. The arrangement between the missionaries and the
+Christian or Christians in whose names the property might be held was
+entirely verbal, no document being of any legal value, to say nothing
+of the fact that in those early days the mention of documentary
+relationships would have greatly hurt the tender feelings of honor
+which were so prominent a part of samurai character. The financial
+relations were purely those of honor and trust.
+
+Under this general method, large sums of money were expended by the
+American Board for homes for its missionaries in various parts of
+Japan, and especially in Kyoto. Here was the Doshisha, which grew from
+a small English school and Evangelists' training class to a prosperous
+university with fine buildings. Tens of thousands of dollars were put
+into this institution, besides the funds needful for the land and the
+houses for nine foreign families. An endowment was also raised, partly
+in Japan, but chiefly in America. In a single bequest, Mr. Harris of
+New London gave over one hundred thousand dollars for a School of
+Science. It has been estimated that, altogether, the American Board
+and its constituency have put into the Doshisha, including the
+salaries of the missionary teachers, toward a million dollars.
+
+In the early nineties the political skies were suddenly darkened. The
+question of treaty revision loomed up black in the heavens. The
+politicians of the land clamored for the absolute refusal of all right
+of property ownership by foreigners. In their political furore they
+soon began to attack the Japanese Christians who were holding the
+property used by the various missions. They accused them of being
+traitors to the country. A proposed law was drafted and presented in
+the National Diet, confiscating all such property. The Japanese
+holders naturally became nervous and desirous of severing the
+relationships with the foreigners as soon as possible. In the case of
+corporate ownership the trustees began to make assumptions of absolute
+ownership, regardless of the moral claims of the donors of the funds.
+In the earlier days of the trouble frequent conferences on the
+question were held by the missionaries of the American Board with the
+leading Christians of the Empire, and their constant statement was,
+"Do not worry; trust us; we are samurai and will do nothing that is
+not perfectly honorable." So often were these sentiments reiterated,
+and yet so steadily did the whole management of the Doshisha move
+further and further away from the honorable course, that finally the
+"financial honor of the samurai" came to have an odor far from
+pleasant. A deputation of four gentlemen, as representatives of the
+American Board, came from America especially to confer with the
+trustees as to the Christian principles of the institution, and the
+moral claims of the Board, but wholly in vain. The administration of
+the Doshisha became so distinctly non-Christian, to use no stronger
+term, that the mission felt it impossible to co-operate longer with
+the Doshisha trustees; the missionary members of the faculty
+accordingly resigned. In order to secure exemption from the draft for
+its students the trustees of the Doshisha abrogated certain clauses of
+the constitution relating to the Christian character of the
+institution, in spite of the fact that these clauses belonged to the
+"unchangeable" part of the constitution which the trustees, on taking
+office, had individually sworn to maintain. Again the Board sent out a
+man, now a lawyer vested with full power to press matters to a final
+issue. After months of negotiations with the trustees in regard to the
+restoration of the substance of the abrogated clauses, without result,
+he was on the point of carrying the case into the courts, when the
+trustees decided to resign in a body. A new board of trustees has been
+formed, who bid fair to carry on the institution in accord with the
+wishes of its founders and benefactors, as expressed in the original
+constitution. At one stage of the proceedings the trustees voted
+magnanimously, as they appeared to think, to allow the missionaries of
+the Board to live for fifteen years, rent free, in the foreign houses
+connected with the Doshisha; this, because of the many favors it had
+received from the Board! By this vote they maintained that they had
+more than fulfilled every requirement of honor. That they were
+consciously betraying the trust that had been reposed in them is not
+for a moment to be supposed.
+
+It would not be fair not to add that this experience in Kyoto does not
+exemplify the universal Japanese character. There are many Japanese
+who deeply deplore and condemn the whole proceeding. Some of the
+Doshisha alumni have exerted themselves strenuously to have
+righteousness done.
+
+Passing now from the character of trustful confidence, we take up its
+opposite, suspiciousness. The development of this quality is a natural
+result of a military feudalism such as ruled Japan for hundreds of
+years. Intrigue was in constant use when actual war was not being
+waged. In an age when conflicts were always hand to hand, and the man
+who could best deceive his enemy as to his next blow was the one to
+carry off his head, the development of suspicion, strategy, and deceit
+was inevitable. The most suspicious men, other things being equal,
+would be the victors; they, with their families, would survive and
+thus determine the nature of the social order. The more than two
+hundred and fifty clans and "kuni," "clan territory," into which the
+land was divided, kept up perpetual training in the arts of intrigue
+and subtlety which are inevitably accompanied by suspicion.
+
+Modern manifestations of this characteristic are frequent. Not a
+cabinet is formed, but the question of its make-up is discussed from
+the clannish standpoint. Even though it is now thirty years since the
+centralizing policy was entered upon and clan distinctions were
+effectually broken down, yet clan suspicion and jealousy is not dead.
+
+The foreigner is impressed by the constant need of care in
+conversation, lest he be thought to mean something more or other than
+he says. When we have occasion to criticise anything in the Japanese,
+we have found by experience that much more is inferred than is said.
+Shortly after my arrival in Japan I was advised by one who had been in
+the land many years to be careful in correcting a domestic or any
+other person sustaining any relation to myself, to say not more than
+one-tenth of what I meant, for the other nine-tenths would be
+inferred. Direct and perfectly frank criticism and suggestion, such as
+prevail among Anglo-Americans at least, seem to be rare among the
+Japanese.
+
+In closing, it is in order to note once again that the emotional
+characteristics considered in this chapter, although customarily
+thought to be deep-seated traits of race nature, are, nevertheless,
+shown to be dependent on the character of the social order. Change the
+order, and in due season corresponding changes occur in the national
+character, a fact which would be impossible were that character
+inherent and essential, passed on from generation to generation by the
+single fact of biological heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+JEALOUSY--REVENGE--HUMANE FEELINGS
+
+
+According to the teachings of Confucius, jealousy is one of the seven
+just grounds on which a woman may be divorced. In the "Greater
+Learning for Women,"[M] occur the following words: "Let her never even
+dream of jealousy. If her husband be dissolute, she must expostulate
+with him, but never either render her countenance frightful or her
+accents repulsive, which can only result in completely alienating her
+husband from her, and making her intolerable in his eyes." "The five
+worst maladies that afflict the female mind are indocility,
+discontent, slander, jealousy, and silliness. Without any doubt, these
+five maladies infest seven or eight out of every ten women, and it is
+from these that arises the inferiority of women to men ... Neither
+when she blames and accuses and curses innocent persons, nor when in
+her jealousy of others she thinks to set herself up alone, does she
+see that she is her own enemy, estranging others and incurring their
+hatred."
+
+The humiliating conditions to which women have been subjected in the
+past and present social order, and to which full reference has been
+made in previous chapters, give sufficient explanation of the jealousy
+which is recognized as a marked, and, as might appear, inevitable
+characteristic of Japanese women. Especially does this seem inevitable
+when it is remembered how slight is their hold on their husbands, on
+whose faithfulness their happiness so largely depends. Only as this
+order changes and the wife secures a more certain place in the home,
+free from the competition of concubines and harlots and dancing girls,
+can we expect the characteristic to disappear. That it will do so
+under such conditions, there is no reason to question. Already there
+are evidences that in homes where the husband and the wife are both
+earnest Christians, and where each is confident of the loyalty of the
+other, jealousy is as rare as it is in Christian lands.
+
+But is jealousy a characteristic limited to women? or is it not also a
+characteristic of men? I am assured from many quarters that men also
+suffer from it. The jealousy of a woman is aroused by the fear that
+some other woman may supplant her in the eyes of her husband; that of
+a man by the fear that some man may supplant him in rank or influence.
+Marital jealousy of men seems to be rare. Yet I heard not long since
+of a man who was so afraid lest some man might steal his wife's
+affections that he could not attend to his business, and finally,
+after three months of married wretchedness, he divorced her. A year
+later he married her again, but the old trouble reappeared, and so he
+divorced her a second time. If marital jealousy is less common among
+men than among women, the explanation is at hand in the lax moral
+standard for man. The feudal order of society, furthermore, was
+exactly the soil in which to develop masculine jealousy. In such a
+society ambition and jealousy go hand in hand. Wherever a man's rise
+in popularity and influence depends on the overthrow of someone
+already in possession, jealousy is natural. Connected with the spirit
+of jealousy is that of revenge. Had we known Japan only during her
+feudal days, we should have pronounced the Japanese exceedingly
+revengeful. Revenge was not only the custom, it was also the law of
+the land and the teaching of moralists. One of the proverbs handed
+down from the hoary past is: "Kumpu no ada to tomo ni ten we
+itadakazu." "With the enemy of country, or father, one cannot live
+under the same heaven." The tales of heroic Japan abound in stories of
+revenge. Once when Confucius was asked about the doctrine of Lao-Tse
+that one should return good for evil, he replied, "With what then
+should one reward good? The true doctrine is to return good for good,
+and evil with justice." This saying of Confucius has nullified for
+twenty-four hundred years that pearl of truth enunciated by Lao-Tse,
+and has caused it to remain an undiscovered diamond amid the rubbish
+of Taoism. By this judgment Confucius sanctified the rough methods of
+justice adopted in a primitive order of society. His dictum peculiarly
+harmonized with the militarism of Japan. Being, then, a recognized
+duty for many hundred years, it would be strange indeed were not
+revengefulness to appear among the modern traits of the Japanese.
+
+But the whole order of society has been transformed. Revenge is now
+under the ban of the state, which has made itself responsible for the
+infliction of corporal punishment on individual transgressors. As a
+result conspicuous manifestations of the revengeful spirit have
+disappeared, and, may we not rightly say, even the spirit itself? The
+new order of society leaves no room for its ordinary activity; it
+furnishes legal methods of redress. The rapid change in regard to this
+characteristic gives reason for thinking that if the industrial and
+social order could be suitably adjusted, and the conditions of
+individual thought and life regulated, this, and many other evil
+traits of human character, might become radically changed in a short
+time. Intelligent Christian Socialism is based on this theory and
+seems to have no little support for its position.
+
+Are Japanese cruel or humane? The general impression of the casual
+tourist doubtless is that they are humane. They are kind to children
+on the streets, to a marked degree; the jinrikisha runners turn out
+not only for men, women, and children, but even for dogs. The
+patience, too, of the ordinary Japanese under trying circumstances is
+marked; they show amazing tolerance for one another's failings and
+defects, and their mutual helpfulness in seasons of distress is often
+striking. To one traveling through New Japan there is usually little
+that will strike the eye as cruel.
+
+But the longer one lives in the country, the more is he impressed with
+certain aspects of life which seem to evince an essentially
+unsympathetic and inhumane disposition. I well remember the shock I
+received when I discovered, not far from my home in Kumamoto, an
+insane man kept in a cage. He was given only a slight amount of
+clothing, even though heavy frost fell each night. Food was given him
+once or twice a day. He was treated like a wild animal, not even being
+provided with bedding. This is not an exceptional instance, as might,
+perhaps, at first be supposed. The editor of the _Japan Mail_, who has
+lived in Japan many years, and knows the people well, says: "Every
+foreigner traveling or residing in Japan must have been shocked from
+time to time by the method of treating lunatics. Only a few months ago
+an imbecile might have been seen at Hakone confined in what was
+virtually a cage, where, from year's end to year's end, he received
+neither medical assistance nor loving tendance, but was simply fed
+like a wild beast in a menagerie. We have witnessed many such sights
+with horror and pity. Yet humane Japanese do not seem to think of
+establishing asylums where these unhappy sufferers can find refuge.
+There is only one lunatic asylum in Tokyo. It is controlled by the
+municipality, its accommodation is limited, and its terms place it
+beyond the reach of the poor." And the amazing part is that such
+sights do not seem to arouse the sentiment of pity in the Japanese.
+
+The treatment accorded to lepers is another significant indication of
+the lack of sympathetic and humane sentiments among the people at
+large. For ages they have been turned from home and house and
+compelled to wander outcasts, living in the outskirt of the villages
+in rude booths of their own construction, and dependent on their daily
+begging, until a wretched death gives them relief from a more wretched
+life. So far as I have been able to learn, the opening of hospitals
+for lepers did not take place until begun by Christians in recent
+times. This casting out of leper kindred was not done by the poor
+alone, but by the wealthy also, although I do hot affirm or suppose
+that the practice was universal. I am personally acquainted with the
+management of the Christian Leper Hospital in Kumamoto, and the sad
+accounts I have heard of the way in which lepers are treated by their
+kindred would seem incredible, were they not supported by the
+character of my informants, and by many other facts of a kindred
+nature.
+
+A history of Japan was prepared by Japanese scholars under appointment
+from the government and sent to the Columbian Exposition in 1893; it
+makes the following statement, already referred to on a previous page:
+"Despite the issue of several proclamations ... people were governed
+by such strong aversion to the sight of sickness that travelers were
+often left to die by the roadside from thirst, hunger, or disease, and
+householders even went to the length of thrusting out of doors and
+abandoning to utter destitution servants who suffered from chronic
+maladies.... Whenever an epidemic occurred, the number of deaths that
+resulted was enormous."[N] This was the condition of things after
+Buddhism, with its civilizing and humanizing influences, had been at
+work in the land for about four hundred years, and Old Japan was at
+the height of her glory, whether considered from the standpoint of her
+government, her literature, her religious development, or her art.
+
+Of a period some two hundred years earlier, it is stated that, by the
+assistance of the Sovereign, Buddhism established a charity hospital
+in Nara, "where the poor received medical treatment and drugs gratis,
+and an asylum was founded for the support of the destitute. Measures
+were also taken to rescue foundlings, and, in general, to relieve
+poverty and distress" (p. 92). The good beginning made at that time
+does not seem to have been followed up. As nearly as I can make out,
+relying on the investigations of Rev. J.H. Pettee and Mr. Ishii, there
+are to-day in Japan fifty orphan asylums, of which eleven are of
+non-Christian, and thirty-nine of Christian origin, support, and
+control. Of the non-Christian, five are in Osaka, two in Tokyo, four
+in Kyoto, and one each in Nagoya, Kumamoto, and Matsuye. Presumably
+the majority of these are in the hands of Buddhists. Of the Christian
+asylums twenty are Roman Catholic and nineteen are Protestant. It is a
+noteworthy fact that in this form of philanthropy and religious
+activity, as in so many others, Christians are the pioneers and
+Buddhists are the imitators. In a land where Buddhism has been so
+effective as to modify the diet of the nation, leading them in
+obedience to the doctrines of Buddha, as has been stated, to give up
+eating animal food, it is exceedingly strange that the people
+apparently have no regard for the pain of living animals. Says the
+editor of the _Mail_ in the article already quoted: "They will not
+interfere to save a horse from the brutality of its driver, and they
+will sit calmly in a jinrikisha while its drawer, with throbbing heart
+and straining muscles, toils up a steep hill." How often have I seen
+this sight! How the rider can endure it, I cannot understand, except
+it be that revolt at cruelty and sympathy with suffering do not stir
+within his heart. Of course, heartless individuals are not rare in the
+West also. I am speaking here, however, not of single individuals, but
+of general characteristics.
+
+But a still more conspicuous evidence of Japanese deficiency of
+sympathy is the use, until recently, of public torture. It was the
+theory of Japanese jurisprudence that no man should be punished, even
+though proved guilty by sufficient evidence, until he himself
+confessed his guilt; consequently, on the flimsiest evidence, and even
+on bare suspicion, he was tortured until the desired confession was
+extracted. The cruelty of the methods employed, we of the nineteenth
+century cannot appreciate. Some foreigner tells how the sight of
+torture which he witnessed caused him to weep, while the Japanese
+spectators stood by unmoved. The methods of execution were also
+refined devices of torture. Townsend Harris says that crucifixion was
+performed as follows: "The criminal is tied to a cross with his arms
+and legs stretched apart as wide as possible; then a spear is thrust
+through the body, entering just under the bottom of the shoulder blade
+on the left side, and coming out on the right side, just by the
+armpit. Another is then thrust through in a similar manner from the
+right to the left side. The executioner endeavors to avoid the heart
+in this operation. The spears are thrust through in this manner until
+the criminal expires, but his sufferings are prolonged as much as
+possible. Shinano told me that a few years ago a very strong man lived
+until the eleventh spear had been thrust through him."
+
+From these considerations, which might be supported by a multitude of
+illustrations, we conclude that in the past there has certainly been a
+great amount of cruelty exhibited in Japan, and that even to this day
+there is in this country far less sympathy for suffering, whether
+animal or human, than is felt in the West.
+
+But we must not be too quick to jump to the conclusion that in this
+regard we have discovered an essential characteristic of the Japanese
+nature. With reference to the reported savagery displayed by Japanese
+troops at Port Arthur, it has been said and repeated that you have
+only to scratch the Japanese skin to find the Tartar, as if the recent
+development of human feelings were superficial, and his real character
+were exhibited in his most cruel moments. To get a true view of the
+case let us look for a few moments at some other parts of the world,
+and ask ourselves a few questions.
+
+How long is it since the Inquisition was enforced in Europe? Who can
+read of the tortures there inflicted without shuddering with horror?
+It is not necessary to go back to the times of the Romans with their
+amphitheaters and gladiators, and with their throwing of Christians to
+wild animals, or to Nero using Christians as torches in his garden.
+How long is it since witches were burned, not only in Europe by the
+thousand, but in enlightened and Christian New England? although it is
+true that the numbers there burned were relatively few and the reign
+of terror brief. How long is it since slaves were feeling the lash
+throughout the Southern States of our "land of freedom"? How long is
+it since fiendish mobs have burned or lynched the objects of their
+rage? How long is it since societies for preventing cruelty to animals
+and to children were established in England and America? Is it not a
+suggestive fact that it was needful to establish them and that it is
+still needful to maintain them? The fact is that the highly developed
+humane sense which is now felt so strongly by the great majority of
+people in the West is a late development, and is not yet universal. It
+is not for us to boast, or even to feel superior to the Japanese,
+whose opportunities for developing this sentiment have been limited.
+
+Furthermore, in regard to Japan, we must not overlook certain facts
+which show that Japan has made gradual progress in the development of
+the humane feelings and in the legal suppression of cruelty. The Nihon
+Shoki records that, on the death of Yamato Hiko no Mikoto, his
+immediate retainers were buried alive in a standing position around
+the grave, presumably with the heads alone projecting above the
+surface of the ground. The Emperor Suijin Tenno, on hearing the
+continuous wailing day after day of the slowly dying retainers, was
+touched with pity and said that it was a dreadful custom to bury with
+the master those who had been most faithful to him when alive. And he
+added that an evil custom, even though ancient, should not be
+followed, and ordered it to be abandoned. A later record informs us
+that from this time arose the custom of burying images in the place of
+servants. According to the ordinary Japanese chronology, this took
+place in the year corresponding to 1 B.C. The laws of Ieyasu (1610
+A.D.) likewise condemn this custom as unreasonable, together with the
+custom in accordance with which the retainers committed suicide upon
+the master's death. These same laws also refer to the proverb on
+revenge, given in the third paragraph of this chapter, and add that
+whoever undertakes thus to avenge himself or his father or mother or
+lord or elder brother must first give notice to the proper office of
+the fact and of the time within which he will carry out his intention;
+without such a notice, the avenger will be considered a common
+murderer. This provision was clearly a limitation of the law of
+revenge. These laws of Ieyasu also describe the old methods of
+punishing criminals, and then add: "Criminals are to be punished by
+branding, or beating, or tying up, and, in capital cases, by spearing
+or decapitation; but the old punishments of tearing to pieces and
+boiling to death are not to be used." Torture was finally legally
+abolished in Japan only as late as 1877.
+
+It has already become quite clear that the prevalence of cruelty or of
+humanity depends largely upon the social order that prevails. It is
+not at all strange that cruelty, or, at least, lack of sympathy for
+suffering in man or beast, should be characteristic of an order based
+on constant hand-to-hand conflict. Still more may we expect to find a
+great indifference to human suffering wherever the value of man as man
+is slighted. Not until the idea of the brotherhood of man has taken
+full possession of one's heart and thought does true sympathy spring
+up; then, for the first time, comes the power of putting one's self in
+a brother's place. The apparently cruel customs of primitive times, in
+their treatment of the sick, and particularly of those suffering from
+contagious diseases, is the natural, not to say necessary, result of
+superstitious ignorance. Furthermore, it was often the only ready
+means to prevent the spread of contagious or epidemic diseases.
+
+In the treatment of the sick, the first prerequisite for the
+development of tenderness is the introduction of correct ideas as to
+the nature of disease and its proper treatment. As soon as this has
+been effectually done, a great proportion of the apparent indifference
+to human suffering passes away. The cruelty which is to-day so
+universal in Africa needs but a changed social and industrial order to
+disappear. The needed change has come to Japan. Physicians trained in
+modern methods of medical practice are found all over the land. In
+1894 there were 597 hospitals, 42,551 physicians, 33,921 nurses and
+midwives, 2869 pharmacists, and 16,106 druggists, besides excellent
+schools of pharmacy and medicine.[O]
+
+It is safe to say that nearly all forms of active cruelty have
+disappeared from Japan; some amount of active sympathy has been
+developed, though, as compared to that of other civilized lands, it is
+still small. But there can be no doubt that the rapid change which has
+come over the people during the past thirty years is not a change in
+essential innate character, but only in the social order. As soon as
+the idea takes root that every man has a mission of mercy, and that
+the more cruel are not at liberty to vent their barbarous feelings on
+helpless creatures, whether man or beast, a strong uprising of humane
+activity will take place which will demand the formation of societies
+for the prevention of cruelty and for carrying active relief to the
+distressed and wretched. Lepers will no longer need to eke out a
+precarious living by exhibiting their revolting misery in public;
+lunatics will no longer be kept in filthy cages and left with
+insufficient care or clothing. The stream of philanthropy will rise
+high, to be at once a blessing and a glory to a race that already has
+shown itself in many ways capable of the highest ideals of the West.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+AMBITION--CONCEIT
+
+
+Ambition is a conspicuous characteristic of New Japan. I have already
+spoken of the common desire of her young men to become statesmen. The
+stories of Neesima and other young Japanese who, in spite of
+opposition and without money, worked their way to eminence and
+usefulness, have fired the imagination of thousands of youths. They
+think that all they need is to get to America, when their difficulties
+will be at an end. They fancy that they have but to look around to
+find some man who will support them while they study.
+
+Not only individuals, but the people as a whole, have great ambitions.
+Three hundred years ago the Taiko, Hideyoshi, the Napoleon of Japan,
+and the virtual ruler of the Empire, planned, after subjugating Korea,
+to conquer China and make himself the Emperor of the East. He thought
+he could accomplish this in two years. During the recent war, it was
+the desire of many to march on to Pekin. Frequent expression was given
+to the idea that it is the duty of Japan to rouse China from her long
+sleep, as America roused Japan in 1854. It is frequently argued, in
+editorial articles and public speeches, that the Japanese are
+peculiarly fitted to lead China along the path of progress, not only
+indirectly by example, as they have been doing, but directly by
+teaching, as foreigners have led Japan. "The Mission of Japan to the
+Orient" is a frequent theme of public discourse. But national
+ambitions do not rest here. It is not seldom asserted that in Japan a
+mingling of the Occidental and Oriental civilizations is taking place
+under such favorable conditions that, for the first time in history,
+the better elements of both are being selected; and that before long
+the world will sit to learn at her feet. The lofty ambition of a group
+of radical Christians is to discover or create a new religion which
+shall unite the best features of Oriental and Occidental religious
+thought and experience. The religion of the future will be, not
+Christianity, nor Buddhism, but something better than either, more
+consistent, more profound, more universal; and this religion, first
+developed in Japan, will spread to other lands and become the final
+religion of the world.
+
+A single curious illustration of the high-flying thoughts of the
+people may well find mention here. When the Kumamoto Boys' School
+divided over the arbitrary, tyrannical methods of their newly secured,
+brilliant principal, already referred to in a previous chapter, the
+majority of the trustees withdrew and at once established a new school
+for boys. For some time they struggled for a name which should set
+forth the principles for which the school stood, and finally they
+fixed on that of "To-A Gakko." Translated into unpretentious English,
+this means "Eastern Asia School"; the idea was that the school stood
+for no narrow methods of education, and that its influence was to
+extend beyond the confines of Japan. This interpretation is not an
+inference, but was publicly stated oil various occasions. The school
+began with twenty-five boys, if my memory is correct, and never
+reached as many as fifty. In less than three years it died an untimely
+death through lack of patronage.
+
+The young men of the island of Kyushu, especially of Kumamoto and
+Kagoshima provinces, are noted for their ambitious projects. The once
+famous "Kumamoto Band" consisted entirely of Kyushu boys. Under the
+masterful influence of Captain Jaynes those high-spirited sons of
+samurai, who had come to learn foreign languages and science, in a
+school founded to combat Christianity and to upbuild Buddhism, became
+impressed with the immense superiority of foreign lands, which
+superiority they were led to attribute to Christianity. They
+accordingly espoused the Christian cause with great ardor, and, in
+their compact with one another, agreed to work for the reform of
+Japan. I have listened to many addresses by the Kumamoto schoolboys,
+and I have been uniformly impressed with the political and national
+tendencies of their thought.
+
+Accompanying ambition is a group of less admirable qualities, such as
+self-sufficiency and self-conceit. They are seldom manifested with
+that coarseness which in the West we associate with them, for the
+Japanese is usually too polished to be offensively obtrusive. He
+seldom indulges in bluster or direct assertion, but is contented
+rather with the silent assumption of superiority.
+
+I heard recently of a slight, though capital, illustration of my
+point. Two foreign gentlemen were walking through the town of Tadotsu
+some years since and observed a sign in English which read
+"Stemboots." Wondering what the sign could mean they inquired the
+business of the place, and learning that it was a steamboat office,
+they gave the clerk the reason for their inquiry, and at his request
+made the necessary correction. A few days later, however, on their
+return, they noticed that the sign had been re-corrected to
+"Stem-boats," an assumption of superior knowledge on the part of some
+tyro in English. The multitude of signboards in astonishing English,
+in places frequented by English-speaking people, is one of the amusing
+features of Japan. It would seem as if the shopkeepers would at least
+take the pains to have the signs correctly worded and spelled, by
+asking the help of some foreigner or competent Japanese. Yet they
+assume that they know all that is needful.
+
+Indications of perfect self-confidence crop out in multitudes of ways
+far too numerous to mention. The aspiring ambition spoken of in the
+immediately preceding pages is one indication of this characteristic.
+Another is the readiness of fledglings to undertake responsibilities
+far beyond them. Young men having a smattering of English, yet wholly
+unable to converse, set up as teachers. Youths in school not
+infrequently undertake to instruct their teachers as to what courses
+of study and what treatment they should receive. Still more
+conspicuous is the cool assumption of superiority evinced by so many
+Japanese in discussing intellectual and philosophical problems. The
+manner assumed is that of one who is complete master of the subject.
+The silent contempt often poured on foreigners who attempt to discuss
+these problems is at once amusing and illustrative of the
+characteristic of which I am speaking.[P]
+
+We turn next to inquire for the explanation of these characteristics.
+Are they inherent traits of the race? Or are they the product of the
+times? Doubtless the latter is the true explanation. It will be found
+that those individuals in whom these characteristics appear are
+descendants of the samurai. A small class of men freed from heavy
+physical toil, given to literature and culture, ever depending on the
+assumption of superiority for the maintenance of their place in
+society and defending their assumption by the sword--such a class, in
+such a social order, would develop the characteristics in question to
+a high degree. Should we expect an immediate change of character when
+the social order has been suddenly changed?
+
+In marked contrast to the lofty assumptions of superiority which
+characterized the samurai of Old Japan, was the equally marked
+assumption of inferiority which characterized the rest of the people,
+or nineteen-twentieths of the nation. I have already sufficiently
+dwelt on this aspect of national character. I here recur to it merely
+to enforce the truth that self-arrogation and self-abnegation,
+haughtiness and humility, proud, high-handed, magisterial manners, and
+cringing, obsequious obedience, are all elements of character that
+depend on the nature of the social order. They are passed on from
+generation to generation more by social than by biological heredity.
+Both of these sets of contrasted characteristics are induced by a
+full-fledged feudal system, and must remain for a time as a social
+inheritance after that system has been overthrown, particularly if its
+overthrow is sudden. In proportion as the principles of personal
+rights and individual worth on the basis of manhood become realized
+by the people and incorporated into the government and customs of the
+land, will abnegating obsequiousness, as well as haughty lordliness,
+be replaced by a straightforward manliness, in which men of whatever
+grade of society will frankly face each other, eye to eye.
+
+But what shall we say in regard to the assumption made by young Japan
+in its attitude to foreigners? Are the assumptions wholly groundless?
+Is the self-confidence unjustified? Far from it. When we study later
+the intellectual elements of Japanese character, we shall see some
+reasons for their feeling of self-reliance. The progress which the
+nation has made in many lines within thirty years shows that it has
+certain kinds of power and, consequently, some ground for
+self-reliance. Furthermore, self-reliance, if fairly supported by
+ability and zeal, is essential in the attainment of any end whatever.
+Faint heart never won fair lady. Confidence in self is one form of
+faith. No less of peoples than individuals is it true, that without
+faith in themselves they cannot attain their goal. The impression of
+undue self-confidence made by the Japanese may be owing partly to
+their shortness of stature. It is a new experience for the West to see
+a race of little people with large brains and large plans. Especially
+does it seem strange and conceited for a people whose own civilization
+is so belated to assume a role of such importance in the affairs of
+the world. Yet we must learn to dissociate physical size from mental
+or spiritual capacity. The future alone will disclose what Japanese
+self-reliance and energy can produce.
+
+The present prominence of this characteristic in Japan is still
+further to be accounted for by her actual recent history. The
+overthrow of the Shogunate was primarily the work of young men; the
+introduction of almost all the sweeping reforms which have transformed
+Japan has been the work of young men who, though but partly equipped
+for their work, approached it with energy and perfect confidence, not
+knowing enough perhaps to realize the difficulties they were
+undertaking. They had to set aside the customs of centuries; to do
+this required startling assumptions of superiority to their ancestors
+and their immediate parents. The young men undertook to dispute and
+doubt everything that stood in the way of national re-organization. In
+what nation has there ever been such a setting aside of parental
+teaching and ancestral authority? These heroic measures secured
+results in which the nation glories. Is it strange, then, that the
+same spirit should show itself in every branch of life, even in the
+attitude of the people to the Westerners who have brought them the new
+ways and ideas?
+
+The Japanese, however, is not the only conceited nation. Indeed, it
+would be near the truth to say that there is no people without this
+quality. Certainly the American and English, French and German nations
+cannot presume to criticise others. The reason why we think Japan
+unique in this respect is that in the case of these Western nations we
+know more of the grounds for national self-satisfaction than in the
+case of Japan. Yet Western lands are, in many respects, truly
+provincial to this very day, in spite of their advantages and
+progress; the difficulty with most of them is that they do not
+perceive it. The lack of culture that prevails among our working
+classes is in some respects great. The narrow horizon still bounding
+the vision of the average American or Briton is very conspicuous to
+one who has had opportunities to live and travel in many lands. Each
+country, and even each section of a country, is much inclined to think
+that it has more nearly reached perfection than any other.
+
+This phase of national and local feeling is interesting, especially
+after one has lived in Japan a number of years and has had
+opportunities to mingle freely with her people. For they, although
+self-reliant and self-conceited, are at the same time surprisingly
+ready to acknowledge that they are far behind the times. Their
+open-mindedness is truly amazing. In describing the methods of land
+tenure, of house-building, of farming, of local government, of
+education, of moral instruction, of family life, indeed, of almost
+anything in the West that has some advantageous feature, the remark
+will be dropped incidentally that these facts show how uncivilized
+Japan still is. In their own public addresses, if any custom is
+attacked, the severest indictment that can be brought against it is
+that it is uncivilized. In spite, therefore, of her self-conceit,
+Japan is in a fairer way of making progress than many a Western
+nation, because she is also so conscious of defects. A large section
+of the nation has a passion for progress. It wishes to learn of the
+good that foreign lands have attained, and to apply the knowledge in
+such wise as shall fit most advantageously into the national life.
+Although Japan is conceited, her conceit is not without reason, nor is
+it to be attributed to her inherent race nature. It is manifestly due
+to her history and social order past and present.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+PATRIOTISM--APOTHEOSIS--COURAGE
+
+
+No word is so dear to the patriotic Japanese as the one that leaps to
+his lips when his country is assailed or maligned, "Yamato-Damashii."
+In prosaic English this means "Japan Soul." But the native word has a
+flavor and a host of associations that render it the most pleasing his
+tongue can utter. "Yamato" is the classic name for that part of Japan
+where the divinely honored Emperor, Jimmu Tenno, the founder of the
+dynasty and the Empire, first established his court and throne.
+"Damashii" refers to the soul, and especially to the noble qualities
+of the soul, which, in Japan of yore, were synonymous with bravery,
+the characteristic of the samurai. If, therefore, you wish to stir in
+the native breast the deepest feelings of patriotism and courage, you
+need but to call upon his "Yamato-Damashii."
+
+There has been a revival in the use of this word during the last
+decade. The old Japan-Spirit has been appealed to, and the watchword
+of the anti-foreign reaction has been "Japan for the Japanese." Among
+English-speaking and English-reading Japanese there has been a
+tendency to give this term a meaning deeper and broader than the
+historic usage, or even than the current usage, will bear. One
+Japanese writer, for instance, defines the term as meaning, "a spirit
+of loyalty to country, conscience, and ideal." An American writer
+comes more nearly to the current usage in the definition of it as "the
+aggressive and invincible spirit of Japan." That there is such a
+spirit no one can doubt who has the slightest acquaintance with her
+past or present history.
+
+Concerning the recent rise of patriotism I have spoken elsewhere,
+perhaps at sufficient length. Nor is it needful to present extensive
+evidence for the statement that the Japanese have this feeling of
+patriotism in a marked degree. One or two rather interesting items
+may, however, find their place here.
+
+The recent war with China was the occasion of focusing patriotism and
+fanning it into flame. Almost every town street, and house, throughout
+the Empire, was brilliantly decked with lanterns and flags, not on a
+single occasion only, but continuously. Each reported victory, however
+small, sent a thrill of delight throughout the nation. Month after
+month this was kept up. In traveling through the land one would not
+have fancied that war was in progress, but rather, that a
+long-continued festival was being observed.
+
+An incident connected with sending troops to Korea made a deep
+impression on the nation. The Okayama Orphan Asylum under the
+efficient management of its founder, Mr. Ishii, had organized the
+older boys into a band, securing for them various kinds of musical
+instruments. These they learned to use with much success. When the
+troops were on the point of leaving, Mr. Ishii went with his band to
+the port of Hiroshima, erected a booth, prepared places for heating
+water, and as often as the regiments passed by, his little orphans
+sallied forth with their teapots of hot tea for the refreshment of the
+soldiers. Each regiment was also properly saluted, and if opportunity
+offered, the little fellows played the national anthem, "Kimi-ga yo,"
+which has been thus translated: "May Our Gracious Sovereign reign a
+thousand years, reign till the little stone grow into a mighty rock,
+thick velveted with ancient moss." And finally the orphans would raise
+their shrill voices with the rhythmical national shout, "Tei-koku
+Ban-zai, Tei-koku Ban-zai"; "Imperial-land, a myriad years,
+Imperial-land, a myriad years." This thoughtful farewell was
+maintained for the four or five days during which the troops were
+embarking for the seat of war, well knowing that some would never
+return, and that their children would be left fatherless even as were
+these who saluted them. So deep was the impression made upon the
+soldiers that many of them wept and many a bronzed face bowed in
+loving recognition of the patriotism of these Christian boys. It is
+said that the commander-in-chief of the forces himself gave the little
+fellows the highest military salute in returning theirs.
+
+Throughout the history of Japan, the aim of every rebellious clan or
+general was first to get possession of the Emperor. Having done this,
+the possession of the Imperial authority was unquestioned. Whoever was
+opposed to the Emperor was technically called "Cho-teki," the enemy of
+the throne, a crime as heinous as treason in the West. The existence
+of this sentiment throughout the Empire is an interesting fact. For,
+at the very same time, there was the most intense loyalty to the local
+lord or "daimyo." This is a fine instance of a certain characteristic
+of the Japanese of which I must speak more fully in another
+connection, but which, for convenience, I term "nominality." It
+accepts and, apparently at least, is satisfied with a nominal state of
+affairs, which may be quite different from the real. The theoretical
+aspect of a question is accepted without reference to the actual
+facts. The real power may be in the hands of the general or of the
+daimyo, but if authority nominally proceeds from the throne, the
+theoretical demands are satisfied. The Japanese themselves describe
+this state as "yumei-mujitsu." In a sense, throughout the centuries
+there has been a genuine loyalty to the throne, but it has been of the
+"yumei-mujitsu" type, apparently satisfied with the name only. In
+recent times, however, there has been growing dissatisfaction with
+this state of affairs. Some decades before Admiral Perry appeared
+there were patriots secretly working against the Tokugawa Shogunate.
+Called in Japanese "Kinnoka," they may be properly termed in English
+"Imperialists." Their aim was to overthrow the Shogunate and restore
+full and direct authority to the Emperor. Not a few lost their lives
+because of their views, but these are now honored by the nation as
+patriots.
+
+There is a tendency among scholars to-day to magnify the patriotism
+and loyalty of preceding ages, also to emphasize the dignity and
+Imperial authority of the Emperor. The patriotic spirit is now so
+strong that it blinds their eyes to many of the salient facts of
+their history. Their patriotism is more truly a passion than an idea.
+It is an emotion rather than a conception. It demands certain methods
+of treatment for their ancient history that Western scholarship cannot
+accept. It forbids any really critical research into the history of
+the past, since it might cast doubt on the divine descent of the
+Imperial line. It sums itself up in passionate admiration, not to say
+adoration, of the Emperor. In him all virtues and wisdom abound. No
+fault or lack in character can be attributed to him. I question if any
+rulers have ever been more truly apotheosized by any nation than the
+Emperors of Japan. The essence of patriotism to-day is devotion to the
+person of the Emperor. It seems impossible for the people to
+distinguish between the country and its ruler. He is the fountain of
+authority. Lower ranks gain their right and their power from him
+alone. Power belongs to the people only because, and in proportion as,
+he has conferred it upon them. Even the Constitution has its authority
+only because he has so determined. Should he at any time see fit to
+change or withdraw it, it is exceedingly doubtful whether one word of
+criticism or complaint would be publicly uttered, and as for forcible
+opposition, of such a thing no one would dream.
+
+Japanese patriotism has had some unique and interesting features. In
+some marked respects it is different from that of lands in which
+democratic thought has held sway. For 1500 years, under the military
+social order, loyalty has consisted of personal attachment to the
+lord. It has ever striven to idealize that lord. The "yumei-mujitsu"
+characteristic has helped much in this idealizing process, by bridging
+the chasm between the prosaic fact and the ideal. Now that the old
+form of feudalism has been abruptly abolished, with its local lords
+and loyalty, the old sentiment of loyalty naturally fixes itself on
+the Emperor. Patriotism has perhaps gained intensity in proportion as
+it has become focalized. The Emperor is reported to be a man of
+commanding ability and good sense. It is at least true that he has
+shown wisdom in selecting his councilors. There is general agreement
+that he is not a mere puppet in the hands of his advisers, but that he
+exercises a real and direct influence on the government of the day.
+During the late war with China it was currently reported that from
+early morning until late at night, week after week and month after
+month, he worked upon the various matters of business that demanded
+his attention. No important move or decision was made without his
+careful consideration and final approval. These and other noble
+qualities of the present Emperor have, without doubt, done much toward
+transferring the loyalty of the people from the local daimyo to the
+national throne.
+
+An event in the political world has recently occurred which
+illustrates pointedly the statements just made in regard to the
+enthusiastic loyalty of the people toward the Emperor. In spite of the
+fact that the national finances are in a distressing state of
+confusion, and notwithstanding the struggle which has been going on
+between successive cabinets and political parties, the former
+insisting on, and the latter refusing, any increase in the land tax,
+no sooner was it suggested by a small political party, to make a
+thank-offering to the Emperor of 20,000,000 yen out of the final
+payment of the war indemnity lately received, than the proposal was
+taken up with zeal by both of the great and utterly hostile political
+parties, and immediately by both houses of the Diet. The two reasons
+assigned were, "First, that the victory over China would never have
+been won, nor the indemnity obtained, had not the Emperor been the
+victorious, sagacious Sovereign that he is, and that, therefore, it is
+only right that a portion of the indemnity should be offered to him;
+secondly, that His Majesty is in need of money, the allowance granted
+by the state for the maintenance of the Imperial Household being
+insufficient, in view of the greatly enhanced prices of commodities
+and the large donations constantly made by His Majesty for charitable
+purposes."[Q] This act of the Diet appeals to the sentiment of the
+people as the prosaic, business-like method of the Occident would not
+do. The significance of the appropriation made by the Diet will be
+better realized if it is borne in mind that the post-bellum programme
+for naval and military expansion which was adopted in view of the
+large indemnity (being, by the way, 50,000,000 yen), already calls for
+an expenditure in excess of the indemnity. Either the grand programme
+must be reduced, or new funds be raised, yet the leading political
+parties have been absolutely opposed to any substantial increase of
+the land tax, which seems to be the only available source of increase
+even to meet the current expenses of the government, to say nothing of
+the post-bellum programme. So has a burst of sentiment buried all
+prudential considerations. This is a species of loyalty that
+Westerners find hard to appreciate. To them it would seem that the
+first manifestation of loyalty would be to provide the Emperor's
+Cabinet and executive officers with the necessary funds for current
+expenses; that the second would be to give the Emperor an allowance
+sufficient to meet his actual needs, and the third,--if the funds held
+out,--to make him a magnificent gift. This sentimental method of
+loyalty to the Emperor, however, is matched by many details of common
+life. A sentimental parting gift or speech will often be counted as
+more friendly than thoroughly business-like relations. The prosaic
+Occidental discounts all sentiment that has not first satisfied the
+demands of business and justice. Such a standard, however, seems to be
+repugnant to the average Japanese mind.
+
+The theory that all authority resides in the Emperor is also enforced
+by recent history. For the constitution was not wrung from an
+unwilling ruler by an ambitious people, but was conferred by the
+Emperor of his own free will, under the advice of his enlightened and
+progressive councilors.
+
+As an illustration of some of the preceding statements let me quote
+from a recent article by Mr. Yamaguchi, Professor of History in the
+Peeresses' School and Lecturer in the Imperial Military College. After
+speaking of the abolition of feudalism and the establishment of a
+constitutional monarchy, he goes on to say: "But we must not suppose
+that the sovereign power of the state has been transferred to the
+Imperial Diet. On the contrary, it is still in the hands of the
+Emperor as before.... The functions of the government are retained in
+the Emperor's own hands, who merely delegates them to the Diet, the
+Government (Cabinet), and the Judiciary, to exercise the same in his
+name. The present form of government is the result of the history of a
+country which has enjoyed an existence of many centuries. Each country
+has its own peculiar characteristics which differentiate it from
+others. Japan, too, has her history, different from that of other
+countries. Therefore we ought not to draw comparisons between Japan
+and other countries, as if the same principles applied to all
+indiscriminately. The Empire of Japan has a history of 3000 [!] years,
+which fact distinctly marks out our nationality as unique. The
+monarch, in the eyes of the people, is not merely on a par with an
+aristocratic oligarchy which rules over the inferior masses, or a few
+nobles who equally divide the sovereignty among themselves. According
+to our ideas, the monarch reigns over and governs the country in his
+own right, and not by virtue of rights conferred by the
+constitution.... Our Emperor possesses real sovereignty and also
+exercises it. He is quite different from other rulers who possess but
+a partial sovereignty.... He has inherited the rights of sovereignty
+from his ancestors. Thus it is quite legitimate to think that the
+rights of sovereignty exist in the Emperor himself.... The Empire of
+Japan shall be reigned over and governed by a line of Emperors
+unbroken for ages eternal. (Constitution, Art. LXXIII.) ... The
+sovereign power of the state cannot be dissociated from the Imperial
+Throne. It lasts forever, along with the Imperial line of succession,
+unbroken for ages eternal. If the Imperial house cease to exist, the
+Empire falls."
+
+In a land where adopted sons are practically equivalent to lineal
+descendants (another instance of the "yumei-mujitsu" type of thought),
+and where marriage is essentially polygamous, and where the
+"yumei-mujitsu" spirit has allowed the sovereignty to be usurped in
+fact, though it may not be in name, it is not at all wonderful that
+the nation can boast of a longer line of Emperors than any other land.
+But when monogamy becomes the rule in Japan, as it doubtless will some
+day, and if lineal descent should be considered essential to
+inheritance, as in the Occident, it is not at all likely that the
+Imperial line will maintain itself unbroken from father to son
+indefinitely. Although the present Emperor has at least five
+concubines besides his wife, the Empress, and has had, prior to 1896,
+no less than thirteen children by them, only two of these are still
+living, both of them the offspring of his concubines; one of these is
+a son born in 1879, proclaimed the heir in 1887, elected Crown Prince
+in 1889, and married in 1900; he is said to be in delicate health; the
+second child is a daughter born in 1890. Since 1896 several children
+have been born to the Emperor and two or three have died, so that at
+present writing there are but four living children. These are all
+offspring of concubines.[R]
+
+In speaking, however, of the Japanese apotheosis of their Emperor, we
+must not forget how the "divine right of kings" has been a popular
+doctrine, even in enlightened England, until the eighteenth century,
+and is not wholly unknown in other lands at the present day. Only in
+recent times has the real source of sovereignty been discovered by
+historical and political students. That the Japanese are not able to
+pass at one leap from the old to the new conception in regard to this
+fundamental element of national authority is not at all strange. Past
+history, together with that which is recent, furnishes a satisfactory
+explanation for the peculiar nature of Japanese patriotism. This is
+clearly due to the nature of the social order.
+
+A further fact in this connection is that, in a very real sense, the
+existence of Japan as a unified nation has depended on apotheosis. It
+is the method that all ancient nations have adopted at one stage of
+their social development for expressing their sense of national unity
+and the authority of national law. In that stage of social development
+when the common individual counts for nothing, the only possible
+conception of the authority of law is that it proceeds from a superior
+being--the highest ruler. And in order to secure the full advantage of
+authority, the supreme ruler must be raised to the highest possible
+pinnacle, must be apotheosized. That national laws should be the
+product of the unvalued units which compose the nation was unthinkable
+in an age when the worth of the individual was utterly unrecognized.
+The apotheosis of the Emperor was neither an unintelligible nor an
+unreasonable practice. But now that an individualistic, democratic
+organization of society has been introduced resting on a principle
+diametrically opposed to that of apotheosis, a struggle of most
+profound importance has been inaugurated. Does moral or even national
+authority really reside in the Emperor? The school-teachers are
+finding great difficulty in teaching morality as based exclusively on
+the Imperial Edict. The politicians of Japan are not content with
+leaving all political and state authority to the Emperor. Not long ago
+(June, 1898), for the first time in Japan, a Cabinet acknowledging
+responsibility to a political party took the place of one
+acknowledging responsibility only, to the Emperor. For this end the
+politicians have been working since the first meeting of the national
+Diet. Which principle is to succeed, apotheosis and absolute Imperial
+sovereignty, or individualism with democratic sovereignty? The two
+cannot permanently live together. The struggle is sure to be intense,
+for the question of authority, both political and moral, is inevitably
+involved.
+
+The parallel between Japanese and Roman apotheosis is interesting. I
+can present it no better than by quoting from that valuable
+contribution to social and moral problems, "The Genesis of the Social
+Conscience," by Prof. H.S. Nash: "Yet Rome with all her greatness
+could not outgrow the tribal principle.... We find something that
+reveals a fundamental fault in the whole system. It is the apotheosis
+of the Emperors. The process of apotheosis was something far deeper
+than servility in the subject conspiring with vanity in the ruler. It
+was a necessity of the state. There was no means of insuring the
+existence of the state except religion. In the worship of the Caesars
+the Empire reverenced its own law. There was no other way in which
+pagan Rome could guarantee the gains she had made for civilization.
+Yet the very thing that was necessary to her was in logic her
+undoing.... The worship of the Emperor undid the definition of
+equality the logic of the Empire demanded. Again apotheosis violated
+the divine unity of humanity upon which alone the Empire could
+securely build."[S]
+
+That the final issue of Japan's experience will be like that of Rome I
+do not believe. For her environment is totally different. But the same
+struggle of the two conflicting principles is already on. Few, even
+among the educated classes, realize its nature or profundity. The
+thinkers who adhere to the principle of apotheosis do so admittedly
+because they see no other way in which to secure authority for law,
+whether political or moral. Here we see the importance of those
+conceptions of God, of law, of man, which Christianity alone can give.
+
+From patriotism we naturally pass to the consideration of courage.
+Nothing was more prized and praised in Old Japan. In those days it was
+the deliberate effort of parents and educators to develop courage in
+children. Many were their devices for training the young in bravery.
+Not content with mere precept, they were sent alone on dark stormy
+nights to cemeteries, to houses reputed to be haunted, to dangerous
+mountain peaks, and to execution grounds. Many deeds were required of
+the young whose sole aim was the development of courage and daring.
+The worst name you could give to a samurai was "koshinuke" (coward).
+Many a feud leading to a fatal end has resulted from the mere use of
+this most hated of all opprobrious epithets. The history of Japan is
+full of heroic deeds. I well remember a conversation with a son of the
+old samurai type, who told me, with the blood tingling in his veins,
+of bloody deeds of old and the courage they demanded. He remarked
+incidentally that, until one had slain his first foe, he was ever
+inclined to tremble. But once the deed had been done, and his sword
+had tasted the life blood of a man, fear was no more. He also told me
+how for the sake of becoming inured to ghastly sights under
+nerve-testing circumstances, the sons of samurai were sent at night to
+the execution grounds, there, by faint moonlight to see, stuck on
+poles, the heads of men who had been recently beheaded.
+
+The Japanese emotion of courage is in some respects peculiar. At least
+it appears to differ from that of the Anglo-Saxon. A Japanese seems to
+lose all self-control when the supreme moment comes; he throws himself
+into the fray with a frenzied passion and a fearless madness allied to
+insanity. Such is the impression I have gathered from the descriptions
+I have heard and the pictures I have seen. Even the pictures of the
+late war with China give evidence of this.
+
+But their courage is not limited to fearlessness in the face of death;
+it extends to complete indifference to pain. The honorable method by
+which a samurai who had transgressed some law or failed in some point
+of etiquette, might leave this world is well known to all, the
+"seppuku," the elegant name for the vulgar term "hara-kiri" or
+"belly-cutting." To one who is sensitive to tales of blood,
+unexpurgated Japanese history must be a dreadful thing. The vastness
+of the multitudes who died by their own hands would be incredible,
+were there not ample evidence of the most convincing nature. It may be
+said with truth that suicide became apotheosized, a condition that I
+suppose cannot be said to have prevailed in any other land.
+
+In thus describing the Japanese sentiment in regard to "seppuku,"
+there is, however, some danger of misrepresenting it. "Seppuku" itself
+was not honored, for in the vast majority of cases those who performed
+it were guilty of some crime or breach of etiquette. And not
+infrequently those who were condemned to commit "seppuku" were
+deficient in physical courage; in such cases, some friend took hold of
+the victim's hand and forced him to cut himself. Such cowards were
+always despised. To be condemned to commit "seppuku" was a disgrace,
+but it was much less of a disgrace than to be beheaded as a common
+man, for it permitted the samurai to show of what stuff he was made.
+It should be stated further that in the case of "seppuku," as soon as
+the act of cutting the abdomen had been completed, always by a single
+rapid stroke, someone from behind would, with a single blow, behead
+the victim. The physical agony of "seppuku" was, therefore, very
+brief, lasting but a few seconds.
+
+I can do no better than quote in this connection a paragraph from the
+"Religions of Japan" by W.E. Griffis:
+
+ "From the prehistoric days when the custom of 'Junshi,' or dying
+ with the master, required the interment of living retainers with
+ their dead lord, down through all the ages to the Revolution of
+ 1868, when at Sendai and Aidzu scores of men and boys opened their
+ bowels, and mothers slew their infant sons and cut their own
+ throats, there has been flowing a river of suicides' blood having
+ its springs in devotion of retainers to masters, and of soldiers to
+ a lost cause.... Not only a thousand, but thousands of thousands of
+ soldiers hated their parents, wife, child, friend, in order to be
+ disciples to the supreme loyalty. They sealed their creed by
+ emptying their own veins.... The common Japanese novels read like
+ records of slaughter-houses. No Molech or Shivas won more victims
+ to his shrine than has this idea of Japanese loyalty, which is so
+ beautiful in theory but so hideous in practice ... Could the
+ statistics of the suicides during this long period be collected,
+ their publication would excite in Christendom the utmost
+ incredulity."[T]
+
+I well remember the pride, which almost amounted to glee, with which a
+young blood gave me the account of a mere boy, perhaps ten or twelve
+years old, who cut his bowels in such a way that the deed was not
+quite complete, and then tying his "obi" or girdle over it, walked
+into the presence of his mother, explained the circumstances which
+made it a point of honor that he should commit "seppuku," and
+forthwith untied his "obi" and died in her presence.
+
+These are the ideals of courage and loyalty that have been held up
+before Japanese youth for centuries. Little comment is needful. From
+the evolutionary standpoint, it is relatively easy to understand the
+rise of these ideas and practices. It is clear that they depend
+entirely on the social order. With the coming in of the Western social
+order, feudal lords and local loyalty and the carrying of swords were
+abolished. Are the Japanese any less courageous now than they were
+thirty years ago? The social order has changed and the ways of showing
+courage have likewise changed. That is all that need be said.
+
+Are we to say that the Japanese are more courageous than other
+peoples? Although no other people have manifested such phenomena as
+the Japanese in regard to suicide for loyalty, yet any true
+appreciation of Western peoples will at once dispel the idea that they
+lack courage. Manifestations of courage differ according to the nature
+of the social order, but no nation could long maintain itself, to say
+nothing of coming into existence, without a high degree of this
+endowment.
+
+But Japanese courage is not entirely of the physical order, although
+that is the form in which it has chiefly shown itself thus far. The
+courage of having and holding one's own convictions is known in Japan
+as elsewhere. There has been a long line of martyrs. During the
+decades after the introduction of Buddhism, there was such opposition
+that it required much courage for converts to hold to their beliefs.
+So, too, at the time of the rise of the new Buddhist sects, there was
+considerable persecution, especially with the rise of the Nichiren
+Shu. And when the testing time of Christianity came, under the edict
+of the Tokugawas by which it was suppressed, tens of thousands were
+found who preferred death to the surrender of their faith. In recent
+times, too, much courage has been shown by the native Christians.
+
+As an illustration is the following: When an eminent American teacher
+of Japanese youth returned to Japan after a long absence, his former
+pupils gathered around him with warm admiration. They had in the
+interval of his absence become leaders among the trustees and faculty
+of the most prosperous Christian college in Japan. He was accordingly
+invited to deliver a course of lectures in the Chapel. It was
+generally known that he was no longer the earnest Christian that he
+had once been, when, as teacher in an interior town, he had inspired a
+band of young men who became Christians under his teaching and a power
+for good throughout the land. But no one was prepared to hear such
+extreme denunciations of Christianity and Christian missions and
+missionaries as constituted the substance of his lectures. At first
+the matter was passed over in silence. But, by the end of the second
+lecture, the missionaries entered a protest, urging that the Christian
+Chapel should not again be used for such lectures. The faculty,
+however, were not ready to criticise their beloved teacher. The third
+lecture proved as abusive as the others; the speaker seemed to have no
+sense of propriety. A glimpse of his thought, and method of expression
+may be gained from a single sentence: "I have been commissioned,
+gentlemen, by Jesus Christ, to tell you that there is no such thing as
+a soul or a future life." Although the missionary members of the
+faculty urged it, the Japanese members, most of whom were his former
+pupils, were unwilling to take any steps whatever to prevent the
+continuation of the blasphemous lectures. The students of the
+institution accordingly held a mass-meeting, in which the matter was
+discussed, and it was decided to inform the speaker that the students
+did not care to hear any more such lectures. The question then arose
+as to who would deliver the resolution. There was general hesitancy,
+and anyone who has seen or known the lecturer, and has heard him
+speak, can easily understand this feeling; for he is a large man with
+a most impressive and imperious manner. The young man, however, who
+had perhaps been most active in agitating the matter, and who had
+presented the resolution to the meeting, volunteered to go. He is
+slight and rather small, even for a Japanese. Going to the home of the
+lecturer, he delivered calmly the resolution of the students. To the
+demand as to who had drawn up and presented the resolution to the
+meeting, the reply was: "I, sir." That ended the conversation, but not
+the matter. From that day the idolized teacher was gradually lowered
+from his pedestal. But the moral courage of the young man who could
+say in his enraged presence, "I, sir," has not been forgotten. Neither
+has that of the young man who had acted as interpreter for the first
+lecture; not only did he decline to act in that capacity any longer,
+but, taking the first public opportunity, at the chapel service the
+following day, which proved to be Sunday, he went to the platform and
+asked forgiveness of God and of men that he had uttered such language
+as he had been compelled to use in his translating. Here, too, was
+moral courage of no mean order.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+FICKLENESS--STOLIDITY--STOICISM
+
+
+A frequent criticism of the Japanese is that they are fickle; that
+they run from one fad to another, from one idea to another, quickly
+tiring of each in turn. They are said to lack persistence in their
+amusements no less than in the most serious matters of life.
+
+None will deny the element of truth in this charge. In fact, the
+Japanese themselves recognize that of late their progress has been by
+"waves," and not a few lament it. A careful study of school attendance
+will show that it has been subject to alternate waves of popularity
+and disfavor. Private schools glorying in their hundreds of pupils
+have in a short time lost all but a few score. In 1873 there was a
+passion for rabbits, certain varieties of which were then for the
+first time introduced into Japan. For a few months these brought
+fabulous prices, and became a subject of the wildest speculation. In
+1874-75 cock-fighting was all the rage. Foreign waltzing and gigantic
+funerals were the fashion one year, while wrestling was the fad at
+another time, even the then prime minister, Count Kuroda, taking the
+lead. But the point of our special interest is as to whether
+fickleness is an essential element of Japanese character, and so
+dominant that wherever the people may be and whatever their
+surroundings, they will always be fickle; or whether this trait is due
+to the conditions of their recent history. Let us see.
+
+Prof. Basil H. Chamberlain says, "Japan stood still so long that she
+has to move quickly and often now to make up for lost time." This
+states the case pretty well. Had we known Japan only through her
+Tokugawa period, the idea of fickleness would not have occurred to us;
+on the contrary, the dominant impression would have been that of the
+permanence and fixity of her life and customs. This quality or
+appearance of fickleness is, then, a modern trait, due to the
+extraordinary circumstances in which Japan finds herself. The
+occurrence of wave after wave of fresh fashions and fads is neither
+strange nor indicative of an essentially fickle disposition. Glancing
+below the surface for a moment, we shall see that there is an
+earnestness of purpose which is the reverse of fickle.
+
+What nation, for example, ever voluntarily set itself to learn the
+ways and thoughts and languages of foreign nations as persistently as
+Japan? That there has been fluctuation of intensity is not so
+surprising as that, through a period of thirty years, she has kept
+steadily at it. Tens of thousands of her young men are now, able to
+read the English language with some facility; thousands are also able
+to read German and French. Foreign languages are compulsory in all the
+advanced schools. A regulation going into force in September, 1900,
+requires the study of two foreign languages. This has been done at a
+cost of many hundred thousands of dollars. There has been a fairly
+permanent desire and effort to learn all that the West has to teach.
+The element of fickleness is to be found chiefly in connection with
+the methods rather than in connection with the ends to be secured.
+From the moment when Japan discovered that the West had sources of
+power unknown to herself, and indispensable if she expected to hold
+her own with the nations of the world, the aim and end of all her
+efforts has been to master the secrets of that power. She has seen
+that education is one important means. That she should stumble in the
+adoption of educational methods is not strange. The necessary
+experience is being secured. But for a lesson of this sort, more than
+one generation of experience is required of a nation. For some time to
+come Japan is sure to give signs of unsteadiness, of lack of perfect
+balance.
+
+A pitiful sight in Japan is that of boys not more than five or six
+years of age pushing or pulling with all their might at heavily loaded
+hand-carts drawn by their parents. Yet this is typical of one aspect
+of Japanese civilization. The work is largely done by young people
+under thirty, and vast multitudes of the workers are under twenty
+years of age. This is true not only of menial labor, but also in
+regard to labor involving more or less responsibility. In the post
+offices, for instance, the great majority of the clerks are mere boys.
+In the stores one rarely sees a man past middle age conducting the
+business or acting as clerk. Why are the young so prominent? Partly
+because of the custom of "abdication." As "family abdication" is
+frequent, it has a perceptible effect on the general character of the
+nation, and accounts in part for rash business ventures and other
+signs of impetuosity and unbalanced judgment. Furthermore, under the
+new civilization, the older men have become unfitted to do the
+required work. The younger and more flexible members of the rising
+generation can quickly adjust themselves to the new conditions, as in
+the schools, where the older men, who had received only the regular
+training in Chinese classics, were utterly incompetent as teachers of
+science. Naturally, therefore, except for instruction in these
+classics, the common-school teachers, during the earlier decades, were
+almost wholly young boys. The extreme youthfulness of school-teachers
+has constantly surprised me. In the various branches of government
+this same phenomenon is equally common. Young men have been pushed
+forward into positions with a rapidity and in numbers unknown in the
+West, and perhaps unknown in any previous age in Japan.
+
+The rise and decline of the Christian Church in Japan has been
+instanced as a sign of the fickleness of the people. It is a mistaken
+instance, for there are many other causes quite sufficient to account
+for the phenomenon in question. Let me illustrate by the experience of
+an elderly Christian. He had been brought to Christ through the
+teachings of a young man of great brilliancy, whose zeal was not
+tempered with full knowledge--which, however, was not strange, in view
+of his limited opportunities for learning. His instruction was
+therefore narrow, not to say bigoted. Still the elderly gentleman
+found the teachings of the young man sufficiently strong and clear
+thoroughly to upset all his old ideas of religion, his polytheism, his
+belief in charms, his worship of ancestors, and all kindred ideas. He
+accepted the New Testament in simple unquestioning faith. But, after
+six or eight years, the young instructor began to lose his own
+primitive and simple faith. He at once proceeded to attack that which
+before he had been defending and expounding. Soon his whole
+theological position was changed. Higher criticism and religious
+philosophy were now the center of his preaching and writing. The
+result was that this old gentleman was again in danger of being upset
+in his religious thinking. He felt that his new faith had been
+received in bulk, so to speak, and if a part of it were false, as his
+young teacher now asserted, how could he know that any of it was true?
+Yet his heart's experience told him that he had secured something in
+this faith that was real; he was loath to lose it; consequently, for
+some years now, he has systematically stayed away from church
+services, and refrained from reading magazines in which these new and
+destructive views have been discussed; he has preferred to read the
+Bible quietly at home, and to have direct communion with God, even
+though, in many matters of Biblical or theoretical science, he might
+hold his mistaken opinions. A surface view of this man's conduct might
+lead one to think of him as fickle; but a deeper consideration will
+lead to the opposite conclusion.
+
+The fluctuating condition of the Christian churches is not cause for
+astonishment, nor is it to be wholly, if at all, attributed to the
+fickleness of the national character, but rather, in a large degree,
+to the peculiar conditions of Japanese life. The early Christians had
+much to learn. They knew, experimentally, but little of Christian
+truth. The whole course of Christian thought, the historical
+development of theology, with the various heresies, the recent
+discussions resting on the so-called "higher criticism" of the Bible,
+together with the still more recent investigations into the history
+and philosophy of religion in general, were of course wholly unknown
+to them. This was inevitable, and they were blameless. All could not
+be learned at once.
+
+Nor is there any blame attached to the missionaries. It was as
+impossible for them to impart to young and inexperienced Christians a
+full knowledge of these matters as it was for the latter to receive
+such information. The primary interest of the missionaries was in the
+practical and everyday duties of the Christian life, in the great
+problem of getting men and women to put away the superstitions and
+narrowness and sins springing from polytheism or practical atheism,
+and getting them started in ways of godliness. The training schools
+for evangelists were designed to raise up practical workers rather
+than speculative theologians. Missionaries considered it their duty
+(and they were beyond question right) to teach religion rather than
+the science and philosophy of religion. When, therefore, the
+evangelists discovered that they had not been taught these advanced
+branches of knowledge, it is not strange that some should rush after
+them, and, in their zeal for that which they supposed to be important,
+hasten to criticise their former teachers. As a result, they
+undermined both their own faith and that of many who had become
+Christians through their teaching.
+
+The dullness of the church life, so conspicuous at present in many of
+the churches, is only partly due to the fact that the Christians are
+tired of the services. It is true that these services no longer afford
+them that mental and spiritual stimulus which they found at the first,
+and that, lacking this, they find little inducement to attend. But
+this is only a partial explanation. Looking over the experience of the
+past twenty-five years, we now see that the intense zeal of the first
+few years was a natural result of a certain narrowness of view. It is
+an interesting fact that, during one of the early revivals in the
+Doshisha, the young men were so intense and excited that the
+missionaries were compelled to restrain them. These young Christians
+felt and said that the missionaries were not filled with the Holy
+Spirit; they accordingly considered it their duty to exhort their
+foreign leaders, even to chide them for their lack of faith. The
+extraordinary expectations entertained by the young Japanese workers
+of those days and shared by the missionaries, that Japan was to
+become a Christian nation before the end of the century, was due in
+large measure to an ignorance alike of Christianity, of human nature,
+and of heathenism, but, under the peculiar conditions of life, this
+was well-nigh inevitable. And that great and sudden changes in feeling
+and thought have come over the infant churches, in consequence of the
+rapid acquisition of new light and new experience, is equally
+inevitable. These changes are not primarily attributable to fickleness
+of nature, but to the extraordinary additions to their knowledge.
+
+There is good reason to think, however, that the period of these rapid
+fluctuations is passing away. All the various fads, fancies, and
+follies, together with the sciences, philosophies, ologies, and isms
+of the Western world, have already come to Japan, and are fairly well
+known. No essentially new and sudden experiences lie before the
+people.
+
+Furthermore, the young men are year by year growing older. Experience
+and age together are giving a soberness and a steadiness otherwise
+unattainable. In the schools, in the government, in politics, and in
+the judiciary, and in the churches, men of years and of training in
+the new order are becoming relatively numerous, and erelong they will
+be in the majority. We may expect to see Japan gradually settling down
+to a steadiness and a regularity that have been lacking during the
+past few decades. The newcomer to Japan is much impressed with the
+expressionless character of so many Japanese faces. They appear like
+the images of Buddha, who is supposed to be so absorbed in profound
+meditation that the events of the passing world make no impression
+upon him. I have sometimes heard the expression "putty face" used to
+describe the appearance of the common Japanese face. This immobility
+of the Oriental is more conspicuous to a newcomer than to one who has
+seen much of the people and who has learned its significance. But
+though the "putty" effect wears off, there remains an impression of
+stoicism that never fades away. These two features, stolidity and
+stoicism, are so closely allied in appearance that they are easily
+mistaken, yet they are really distinct. The one arises from
+stupidity, from dullness of mind. The other is the product of
+elaborate education and patient drill. Yet it is often difficult to
+determine where the one ends and the other begins.
+
+The stolidity of stupidity is, of course, commonest among the peasant
+class. For centuries they have been in closest contact with the soil;
+nothing has served to awaken their intellectual faculties. Reading and
+writing have remained to them profound mysteries. Their lives have
+been narrow in the extreme. But the Japanese peasant is not peculiar
+in this respect. Similar conditions in other lands produce similar
+results, as in France, according to Millet's famous painting, "The Man
+with the Hoe."
+
+It is an interesting fact, however, that this stolidity of stupidity
+can be easily removed. I have often heard comments on the marked
+change in the facial expression of those adults who learn to read the
+Bible. Their minds are awakened; a new light is seen in their eyes as
+new ideas are started in their minds.
+
+The impression of stolidity made on the foreigner is, due less,
+however, to stupidity than to a stoical education. For centuries the
+people have been taught to repress all expression of their emotions.
+It has been required of the inferior to listen quietly to his superior
+and to obey implicitly. The relations of superior and inferior have
+been drilled into the people for ages. The code of a military camp has
+been taught and enforced in all the homes. Talking in the presence of
+a superior, or laughter, or curious questions, or expressions of
+surprise, anything revealing the slightest emotion on the part of the
+inferior was considered a discourtesy.
+
+Education in these matters was not confined to oral instruction;
+infringements were punished with great rigor. Whenever a daimyo
+traveled to Yedo, the capital, he was treated almost as a god by the
+people. They were required to fall on their knees and bow their faces
+to the ground, and the death penalty was freely awarded to those who
+failed to make such expressions of respect.
+
+One source, then, of the systematic repression of emotional expression
+is the character of the feudal order of society that so long
+prevailed. The warrior who had best control of his facial expression,
+who could least expose to his foe or even to his ordinary friends the
+real state of his feelings, other things being equal, would come off
+the victor. In further explanation of this repression is the religion
+of Buddha. For 1200 years it has helped to mold the middle and the
+lower classes of the people. According to its doctrine, desire is the
+great evil; from it all other evils spring. For this reason, the aim
+of the religious life is to suppress all desire, and the most natural
+way to accomplish this is to suppress the manifestation of desire; to
+maintain passive features under all circumstances. The images of
+Buddha and of Buddhist saints are utterly devoid of expression. They
+indicate as nearly as possible the attainment of their desire, namely,
+freedom from all desire. This is the ambition of every earnest
+Buddhist. Being the ideal and the actual effort of life, it does
+affect the faces of the people. Lack of expression, however, does not
+prove absence of desire.
+
+Every foreigner has had amusing proof of this. A common experience is
+the passing of a group of Japanese who, apparently, give no heed to
+the stranger. Neither by the turn of the head nor by the movement of a
+single facial muscle do they betray any curiosity, yet their eyes take
+in each detail, and involuntarily follow the receding form of the
+traveler. In the interior, where foreigners are still objects of
+curiosity, young men have often run up from behind, gone to a distance
+ahead of me, then turned abruptly, as though remembering something,
+and walked slowly back again, giving me, apparently, not the slightest
+attention. The motive was the desire to get a better look at the
+foreigner. They hoped to conceal it by a ruse, for there must be no
+manifestation of curiosity.
+
+Phenomena which a foreigner may attribute to a lack of emotion of, at
+least, to its repression, may be due to some very different cause. Few
+things, for instance, are more astonishing to the Occidental than the
+silence on the part of the multitude when the Emperor, whom they all
+admire and love, appears on the street. Under circumstances which
+would call forth the most enthusiastic cheers from Western crowds, a
+Japanese crowd will maintain absolute silence. Is this from lack of
+emotion? By no means. Reverence dominates every breast. They would no
+more think of making noisy demonstrations of joy in the presence of
+the Emperor than a congregation of devout Christians would think of
+doing the same during a religious service. This idea of reverence for
+superiors has pervaded the social order--the intensity of the
+reverence varying with the rank of the superior. But a change has
+already begun. Silence is no longer enforced; no profound bowings to
+the ground are now demanded before the nobility; on at least one
+occasion during the recent China-Japan war the enthusiasm of the
+populace found audible expression when the Emperor made a public
+appearance. Even the stoical appearance of the people is passing away
+under the influence of the new order of society, with its new,
+dominant ideas. Education is bringing the nation into a large and
+throbbing life. Naturalness is taking the place of forced repression.
+A sense of the essential equality of man is springing up, especially
+among the young men, and is helping to create a new atmosphere in this
+land, where, for centuries, one chief effort has been to repress all
+natural expression of emotion.
+
+While touring in Kyushu several years ago, I had an experience which
+showed me that the stolidity, or vivacity, of a people is largely
+dependent on the prevailing social order rather than on inherent
+nature. Those who have much to do with the Japanese have noted the
+extreme quiet and reserve of the women. It is a trait that has been
+lauded by both native and foreign writers. Because of this
+characteristic it is difficult for a stranger, to carry on
+conversation with them. They usually reply in monosyllables and in low
+tones. The very expression of their faces indicates a reticence, a
+calm stolidity, and a lack of response to the stimulus of social
+intercourse that is striking and oppressive to an Occidental. I have
+always found it a matter of no little difficulty to become acquainted
+with the women, and especially with the young women, in the church
+with which I have been connected. With the older women this reticence
+is not so marked. Now for my story:
+
+One day I called on a family, expecting to meet the mother, with whom
+I was well acquainted. She proved to be out; but a daughter of whom I
+had not before heard was at home, and I began to talk with her.
+Contrary to all my previous experience, this young girl of less than
+twenty years looked me straight in the face with perfect composure,
+replied to my questions with clear voice and complete sentences, and
+asked questions in her turn without the slightest embarrassment. I was
+amazed. Here was a Japanese girl acting and talking with the freedom
+of an American. How was this to be explained? Difficult though it
+appeared, the problem was easily solved. The young lady had been in
+America, having spent several years in Radcliffe College. There it was
+that her Japanese demureness was dropped and the American frankness
+and vivacity of manner acquired. It was a matter simply of the
+prevailing social customs, and not of her inherent nature as a
+Japanese.
+
+And this conclusion is enforced by the further fact that there is a
+marked increase in vivacity in those who become Christian. The
+repressive social restraints of the old social order are somewhat
+removed. A freedom is allowed to individuals of the Christian
+community, in social life, in conversation between men and women, in
+the holding of private opinions, which the non-Christian order of
+society did not permit. Sociability between the sexes was not allowed.
+The new freedom naturally results in greater vivacity and a far freer
+play of facial expression than the older order could produce. The
+vivacity and sociability of the geisha (dancing and singing girls),
+whose business it is to have social relations with the men, freely
+conversing with them, still further substantiates the view that the
+stolid, irrepressive features of the usual Japanese woman are social,
+not essential, characteristics. The very same girls exhibit
+alternately stolidity and vivacity according as they are acting as
+geisha or as respectable members of society.
+
+This completes our direct study of the various elements characterizing
+the emotional nature of the Japanese. It is universally admitted that
+the people are conspicuously emotional. We have shown, however, that
+their feelings are subject to certain remarkable suppressions.
+
+It remains to be asked why the Japanese are more emotional than other
+races? One reason doubtless is that the social conditions were such as
+to stimulate their emotional rather than their intellectual powers.
+The military system upon which the social structure rested kept the
+nation in its mental infancy. Twenty-eight millions of farmers and a
+million and a half of soldiers was the proportion during the middle of
+the nineteenth century. Education was limited to the soldiers. But
+although they cultivated their minds somewhat, their very occupation
+as soldiers required them to obey rather than to think; their
+hand-to-hand conflicts served mightily to stimulate the emotions. The
+entire feudal order likewise was calculated to have the same effect.
+The intellectual life being low, its inhibitions were correspondingly
+weak. When, in the future, the entire population shall have become
+fairly educated, and taught to think independently; and when
+government by the people shall have become much more universal,
+throwing responsibility on the people as never before, and stimulating
+discussion of the general principles of life, of government, and of
+law, then must the emotional features of the nation become less
+conspicuous.
+
+It is a question of relative development. As children run to extremes
+of thought and action on the slightest occasion, simply because their
+intellects have not come into full activity, weeping at one moment and
+laughing at the next, so it is with national life. Where the general
+intellectual development of a people is retarded, the emotional
+manifestations are of necessity correspondingly conspicuous.
+
+Even so fundamental a racial trait, then, as the emotional, is seen to
+be profoundly influenced by the prevailing social order. The emotional
+characteristics which distinguish the Japanese from other races are
+due, in the last analysis, to the nature of their social order rather
+than to their inherent nature or brain structure.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+AESTHETIC CHARACTERISTICS
+
+
+In certain directions, the Japanese reveal a development of aesthetic
+taste which no other nation has reached. The general appreciation of
+landscape-views well illustrates this point. The home and garden of
+the average workman are far superior artistically to those of the same
+class in the West. There is hardly a home without at least a
+diminutive garden laid out in artistic style with miniature lake and
+hills and winding walks. And this garden exists solely for the delight
+of the eye.
+
+The general taste displayed in many little ways is a constant delight
+to the Western "barbarian" when he first comes to Japan. Nor does this
+delight vanish with time and familiarity, though it is tempered by a
+later perception of certain other features. Indeed, the more one knows
+of the details of their artistic taste, the more does he appreciate
+it. The "toko-no-ma," for example, is a variety of alcove usually
+occupying half of one side of a room. It indicates the place of honor,
+and guests are always urged to sit in front of it. The floor of the
+"toko-no-ma" is raised four or five inches above the level of the room
+and should never be stepped upon. In this "toko-no-ma" is usually
+placed some work of art, or a vase with flowers, and on the wall is
+hung a picture or a few Chinese characters, written by some famous
+calligraphist, which are changed with the seasons. The woodwork and
+the coloring of this part of the room is of the choicest. The
+"toko-no-ma" of the main room of the house is always restful to the
+eye; this "honorable spot" is found in at least one room in every
+house; and if the owner has moderate means, there are two or three
+such rooms. Only the homes of the poorest of the poor are without this
+ornament.
+
+The Japanese show a refined taste in the coloring and decoration of
+rooms; natural woods, painted and polished, are common; every post and
+board standing erect must stand in the position in which it grew. A
+Japanese knows at once whether a board or post is upside down, though
+it would often puzzle a Westerner to decide the matter. The natural
+wood ceilings and the soft yellows and blues of the walls are all that
+the best trained Occidental eye could ask. Dainty decorations called
+the "ramma," over the neat "fusuma," consist of delicate shapes and
+quaint designs cut in thin boards, and serve at once as picture and
+ventilator. The drawings, too, on the "fusuma" (solid thick paper
+sliding doors separating adjacent rooms or shutting off the closet)
+are simple and neat, as is all Japanese pictorial art.
+
+Japanese love for flowers reveals a high aesthetic development. Not
+only are there various flower festivals at which times the people
+flock to suburban gardens and parks, but sprays, budding branches, and
+even large boughs are invariably arranged in the homes and public
+halls. Every church has an immense vase for the purpose. The proper
+arrangement of flowers and of flowering sprays and boughs is a highly
+developed art. It is often one of the required studies in girls'
+schools. I have known two or three men who made their entire living by
+teaching this art. Miniature flowering trees are reared with
+consummate skill. An acquaintance of mine glories in 230 varieties of
+the plum tree, all in pots, some of them between two and three hundred
+years old. Shinto and Buddhist temples also reveal artistic qualities
+most pleasing to the eye.
+
+But the main point of our interest lies in the explanation of this
+characteristic. Is the aesthetic sense more highly developed in Japan
+than in the West? Is it more general? Is it a matter of inherent
+nature, or of civilization?
+
+In trying to meet these problems, I note, first of all, that the
+development of the Japanese aesthetic taste is one-sided; though
+advanced in certain respects it is belated in others. In illustration
+is the sense of smell. It will not do to say that "the Japanese have
+no use for the nose," and that the love of sweet smells is unknown.
+Sir Rutherford Alcock's off-quoted sentence that "in one of the most
+beautiful and fertile countries in the whole world the flowers have no
+scent, the birds no song, and the fruit and vegetables no flavor," is
+quite misleading, for it has only enough truth to make it the more
+deceptive. It is true that the cherry blossom has little or no odor,
+and that its beauty lies in its exquisite coloring and abounding
+luxuriance, but most of the native flowers are praised and prized by
+the Japanese for their odors, as well as for their colors, as the
+plum, the chrysanthemum, the lotus, and the rose. The fragrance of
+flowers is a frequent theme in Japanese poetry. Japanese ladies, like
+those of every land, are fond of delicate scents. Cologne and kindred
+wares find wide sale in Japan, and I am told that expensive musk is
+not infrequently packed away with the clothing of the wealthy.
+
+But in contrast to this appreciation is a remarkable indifference to
+certain foul odors. It is amazing what horrid smells the cultivated
+Japanese will endure in his home. What we conceal in the rear and out
+of the way, he very commonly places in the front yard; though this is,
+of course, more true of the country than of large towns or cities. It
+would seem as if a high aesthetic development should long ago have
+banished such sights and smells. As a matter of fact, however, the
+aesthetics of the subject does not seem to have entered the national
+mind, any more than have the hygienics of the same subject.
+
+In explanation of these facts, may it not be that the Japanese method
+of agriculture has been a potent hindrance to the aesthetic development
+of the sense of smell? In primitive times, when wealth was small, the
+only easy method which the people had of preserving the fertilizing
+properties of that which is removed from our cities by the
+sewer-system was such as we still find in use in Japan to-day. Perhaps
+the necessities of the case have toughened the mental, if not the
+physical, sense of the people. Perhaps the unaesthetic character of the
+sights and smells has been submerged in the great value of fertilizing
+materials. Then, too, with the Occidental, the thought is common that
+such odors are indications of seriously unhealthful conditions. We are
+accordingly offended not simply by the odor itself, but also by the
+associations of sickness and death which it suggests. Not so the
+unsophisticated Oriental. Such a correlation of ideas is only now
+arising in Japan, and changes are beginning to be made, as a
+consequence.
+
+I cannot leave this point without drawing attention to the fact that
+the development of the sense of smell in these directions is
+relatively recent, even in the West. Of all the non-European nations
+and races, I have no doubt Japan is most free from horrid smells and
+putrid odors. And in view of our own recent emancipation it is not for
+us to marvel that others have made little progress. Rather is it
+marvelous that we should so easily forget the hole from which we have
+been so recently digged.
+
+In turning to study certain features of Japanese pictorial art, we
+notice that a leading characteristic is that of simplicity. The
+greatest results are secured with the fewest possible strokes. This
+general feature is in part due to the character of the instrument
+used, the "fude," "brush." This same brush answers for writing. It
+admits of strong, bold outlines; and a large brush allows the
+exhibition of no slight degree of skill. As a result, "writing" is a
+fine art in Japan. Hardly a family that makes any pretense at culture
+but owns one or more framed specimens of writing. In Japan these rank
+as pictures do or mottoes in the West, and are prized not merely for
+the sentiment expressed, but also for the skill displayed in the use
+of the brush. Skillful writers become famous, often receiving large
+sums for small "pictures" which consist of but two or three Chinese
+characters.
+
+No doubt the higher development of appreciation for natural scenery
+among the people in general is largely due to the character of the
+scenery itself. Steep hills and narrow valleys adjoin nearly every
+city in the land. Seas, bays, lakes, and rivers are numerous;
+reflected mountain scenes are common; the colors are varied and
+marked. Flowering trees of striking beauty are abundant. Any people
+living under these physical conditions, and sufficiently advanced in
+civilization to have leisure and culture, can hardly fail to be
+impressed with such wealth of beauty in the scenery itself.
+
+In the artistic reproduction of this scenery, however, Japanese
+artists are generally supposed to be inferior to those of the West.
+
+As often remarked, Japanese art has directed its chief endeavor to
+animals and to nature, thus failing to give to man his share of
+attention. This curious one-sidedness shows itself particularly in
+painting and in sculpture. In the former, when human beings are the
+subject, the aim has apparently been to extol certain characteristics;
+in warriors, the military or heroic spirit; in wise men, their wisdom;
+in monks and priests, their mastery over the passions and complete
+attainment of peace; in a god, the moral character which he is
+supposed to represent. Art has consequently been directed to bringing
+into prominence certain ideal features which must be over-accentuated
+in order to secure recognition; caricatures, rather than lifelike
+forms, are the frequent results. The images of multitudes of gods are
+frightful to behold; the aim being to show the character of the
+emotion of the god in the presence of evil. These idols are easily
+misunderstood, for we argue that the more frightful he is, the more
+vicious must be the god in his real character; not so the Oriental. To
+him the more frightful the image, the more noble the character. Really
+evil gods, such as demons, are always represented, I think, as
+deformed creatures, partly human and partly beast. It is to be
+remembered, in this connection, that idols are an imported feature of
+Japanese religion; Shinto to this day has no "graven image." All idols
+are Buddhistic. Moreover, they are but copies of the hideous idols of
+India; the Japanese artistic genius has added nothing to their
+grotesque appearance. But the point of interest for us is that the
+aesthetic taste which can revel in flowers and natural scenery has
+never delivered Japanese art from truly unaesthetic representations of
+human beings and of gods.
+
+Standing recently before a toy store and looking at the numberless
+dolls offered for sale, I was impressed afresh with the lack of taste
+displayed, both in coloring and in form; their conventionality was
+exceedingly tiresome; their one attractive feature was their
+absurdity. But the moment I turned away from the imitations of human
+beings to look at the imitations of nature, the whole impression was
+changed. I was pleased with the artistic taste displayed in the
+perfectly imitated, delicately colored flowers. They were beautiful
+indeed.
+
+Why has Japanese art made so little of man as man? Is it due to the
+"impersonality" of the Orient, as urged by some? This suggests, but
+does not give, the correct interpretation of the phenomenon in
+question. The reason lies in the nature of the ruling ideas of
+Oriental civilization. Man, as man, has not been honored or highly
+esteemed. As a warrior he has been honored; consequently, when
+pictured or sculptured as a warrior, he has worn his armor; his face,
+if visible, is not the natural face of a man, but rather that of a
+passionate victor, slaying his foe or planning for the same. And so
+with the priests and the teachers, the emperors and the generals; all
+have been depicted, not for what they are in themselves, but for the
+rank which they have attained; they are accordingly represented with
+their accouterments and robes and the characteristic attitudes of
+their rank. The effort to preserve their actual appearance is
+relatively rare. Manhood and womanhood, apart from social rank, have
+hardly been recognized, much less extolled by art. This feature, then,
+corresponds to the nature of the Japanese social order. The art of a
+land necessarily reveals the ruling ideals of its civilization. As
+Japan failed to discover the inherent nature and value of manhood and
+womanhood, estimating them only on a utilitarian basis, so has her art
+reflected this failure.
+
+Apparently it has never attempted to depict the nude human form. This
+is partly explained, perhaps, by the fact that the development of a
+perfect physical form through exercise and training has not been a
+part of Oriental thought. Labor of every sort has been regarded as
+degrading. Training for military skill and prowess has indeed been
+common among the military classes; but the skill and strength
+themselves have been the objects of thought, rather than the beauty of
+the muscular development which they produce. When we recall the
+prominent place which the games of Greece took in her civilization
+previous to her development of art, and the stress then laid on
+perfect bodily form, we shall better understand why there should be
+such difference in the development of the art of these two lands. I
+have never seen a Japanese man or youth bare his arm to show with
+pride the development of his biceps; and so far as I have observed,
+the pride which students in the United States feel over well-developed
+calves has no counterpart in Japan--this, despite the fact that the
+average Japanese has calves which would turn the American youth green
+with envy.
+
+From the absence of the nude in Japanese art it has been urged that
+Japan herself is far more morally pure than the West. Did the moral
+life of the people correspond to their art in this respect, the
+argument would have force. Unfortunately, such does not seem to be the
+case. It is further suggested as a reason that the bodily form of
+Oriental peoples is essentially unaesthetic; that the men are either
+too fat or too lean, and the women too plump when in the bloom of
+youth and too wrinkled and flabby when the first bloom is over. The
+absurdity of this suggestion raises a smile, and a query as to the
+experience which its author must have had. For any person who has
+lived in Japan must have seen individuals of both sexes, whom the most
+fastidious painter or sculptor would rejoice to secure as models.
+
+It might be thought that a truly artistic people, who are also
+somewhat immoral, would have developed much skill in the portrayal of
+the nude female form. But such an attempt does not seem to have been
+made until recent times, and in imitation of Western art. At least
+such attempts have not been recognized as art nor have they been
+preserved as such. I have never seen either statue or picture of a
+nude Japanese woman. Even the pictures of famous prostitutes are
+always faultlessly attired. The number and size of the conventional
+hairpins, and the gaudy coloring of the clothing, alone indicate the
+immoral character of the woman represented.
+
+It is not to be inferred, however, that immoral pictures have been
+unknown in Japan, for the reverse is true. Until forcibly suppressed
+by the government under the incentive of Western criticism, there was
+perfect freedom to produce and sell licentious and lascivious
+pictures. The older foreign residents in Japan testify to the
+frequency with which immoral scenes were depicted and exposed for
+sale. Here I merely say that these were not considered works of art;
+they were reproduced not in the interests of the aesthetic sense, but
+wholly to stimulate the taste for immoral things.
+
+The absence of the nude from Japanese art is due to the same causes
+that led to the relative absence of all distinctively human nature
+from art. Manhood and womanhood, as such, were not the themes they
+strove to depict.
+
+A curious feature of the artistic taste of the people is the marked
+fondness for caricature. It revels in absurd accentuations of special
+features. Children with protruding foreheads; enormously fat little
+men; grotesque dwarf figures in laughable positions; these are a few
+common examples. Nearly all of the small drawings and sculpturings of
+human figures are intentionally grotesque. But the Japanese love of
+the grotesque is not confined to its manifestation in art. It also
+reveals itself in other surprising ways. It is difficult to realize
+that a people who revel in the beauties of nature can also delight in
+deformed nature; yet such is the case. Stunted and dwarfed trees,
+trees whose branches have been distorted into shapes and proportions
+that nature would scorn--these are sights that the Japanese seem to
+enjoy, as well as "natural" nature. Throughout the land, in the
+gardens of the middle and higher classes, may be found specimens of
+dwarfed and stunted trees which have required decades to raise. The
+branches, too, of most garden shrubs and trees are trimmed in
+fantastic shapes. What is the charm in these distortions? First,
+perhaps, the universal human interest in anything requiring skill.
+Think of the patience and persistence and experimentation necessary
+to rear a dwarf pear tree twelve or fifteen inches high, growing its
+full number of years and bearing full-size fruit in its season! And
+second is the no less universal human interest in the strange and
+abnormal. All primitive people have this interest. It shows itself in
+their religions. Abnormal stones are often objects of religious
+devotion. Although I cannot affirm that such objects are worshiped in
+Japan to-day, yet I can say that they are frequently set up in temple
+grounds and dedicated with suitable inscriptions. Where nature can be
+made to produce the abnormal, there the interest is still greater. It
+is a living miracle. Witness the cocks of Tosa, distinguished by their
+two or three tail feathers reaching the extraordinary length of ten or
+even fifteen feet, the product of ages of special breeding.
+
+According to the ordinary use of the term, aesthetics has to do with
+art alone. Yet it also has intimate relations with both speech and
+conduct. Poetry depends for its very existence on aesthetic
+considerations. Although little conscious regard is paid to aesthetic
+claims in ordinary conversation, yet people of culture do, as a matter
+of fact, pay it much unconscious attention. In conduct too, aesthetic
+ideas are often more dominant than we suppose. The objection of the
+cultured to the ways of the boorish rests on aesthetic grounds. This is
+true in every land. In the matter of conduct it is sometimes hard to
+draw the line between aesthetics and ethics, for they shade
+imperceptibly into one another; so much so that they are seen to be
+complementary rather than contradictory. Though it is doubtless true
+that conduct aesthetically defective may not be defective ethically,
+still is it not quite as true that conduct bad from the ethical is bad
+also from the aesthetical standpoint?
+
+In no land have aesthetic considerations had more force in molding both
+speech and conduct than in Japan. Not a sentence is uttered by a
+Japanese but has the characteristic marks of aestheticism woven into
+its very structure. By means of "honorifics" it is seldom necessary
+for a speaker to be so pointedly vulgar as even to mention self. There
+are few points in the language so difficult for a foreigner to
+master, whether in speaking himself, or in listening to others, as the
+use of these honorific words. The most delicate shades of courtesy and
+discourtesy may be expressed by them. Some writers have attributed the
+relative absence of the personal pronouns from the language to the
+dominating force of impersonal pantheism. I am unable to take this
+view for reasons stated in the later chapters on personality.
+
+Though the honorific characteristics of the language seem to indicate
+a high degree of aesthetic development, a certain lack of delicacy in
+referring to subjects that are ruled out of conversation by cultivated
+people in the West make the contrary impression upon the uninitiated.
+Such language in Japan cannot be counted impure, for no such idea
+accompanies the words. They must be described simply as aesthetically
+defective. Far be it from me to imply that there is no impure
+conversation in Japan. I only say that the particular usages to which
+I refer are not necessarily a proof of moral tendency. A realistic
+baldness prevails that makes no effort to conceal even that which is
+in its nature unpleasant and unaesthetic. A spade is called a spade
+without the slightest hesitation. Of course specific illustrations of
+such a point as this are out of place. AEsthetic considerations forbid.
+
+And how explain these unaesthetic phenomena? By the fact that Japan has
+long remained in a state of primitive development. Speech is but the
+verbal expression of life. Every primitive society is characterized by
+a bald literalism shocking to the aesthetic sense of societies which
+represent a higher stage of culture. In Japan, until recently, little
+effort has been made to keep out of sight objects and acts which we of
+the West have considered disagreeable and repulsive. Language alters
+more slowly than acts. Laws are making changes in the latter, and they
+in time will take effect in the former. But many decades will
+doubtless pass before the cultivated classes of Japan will reach, in
+this respect, the standard of the corresponding classes of the West.
+
+As for the aesthetics of conduct in Japan, enough is indicated by what
+has been said already concerning the aesthetics of speech. Speech and
+conduct are but diverse expressions of the same inner life. Japanese
+etiquette has been fashioned on the feudalistic theory of society,
+with its numberless gradations of inferior and superior. Assertive
+individualism, while allowed a certain range among the samurai, always
+had its well-marked limits. The mass of the people were compelled to
+walk a narrow line of respectful obedience and deference both in form
+and speech. The constant aim of the inferior was to please the
+superior. That individuals of an inferior rank had any inherent
+rights, as opposed to those of a superior rank, seldom occurred to
+them. Furthermore, this whole feudal system, with its characteristic
+etiquette of conduct and speech, was authoritatively taught by
+moralists and religious leaders, and devoutly believed by the noblest
+of the land. Ethical considerations, therefore, combined powerfully
+with those that were social and aesthetic to produce "the most polite
+race on the face of the globe." Recent developments of rudeness and
+discourtesy among themselves and toward foreigners have emphasized my
+general contention that these characteristics are not due to inherent
+race nature, but rather to the social order.
+
+How are we to account for the wide aesthetic development of all classes
+of the Japanese? As already suggested, the beautiful scenery explains
+much. But I pass at once to the significant fact that although the
+classes of Japanese society were widely differentiated in social rank,
+yet they lived in close proximity to each other. There was no spatial
+gulf of separation preventing the lower from knowing fully and freely
+the thoughts, ideals, and customs of the upper classes. The
+transmission of culture was thus an easy matter, in spite of social
+gradations.
+
+Moreover, the character of the building materials, and the methods of
+construction used by the more prosperous among the people, were easily
+imitated in kind, if not in costliness, by the less prosperous. Take,
+for example, the structure of the room; it is always of certain fixed
+proportions, that the uniform mats may be easily fitted to it. The
+mats themselves are always made of a straw "toko," "bed," and an
+"omote," "surface," of woven straw; they vary greatly in value, but,
+of whatever grade, may always be kept neat and fresh at comparatively
+small cost. The walls of the average houses are made of mud wattles.
+The outer layers of plaster consist of selected earth and tinted lime.
+Whether put up at large or small expense, these walls may be neat and
+attractive. So, too, with other parts of the house.
+
+The utter lack of independent thinking throughout the middle and lower
+classes, and the constant desire of the inferior to imitate the
+superior, have also helped to make the culture of the classes the
+possession of the masses. This subserviency and spirit of imitation
+has been further stimulated by the enforced courtesy and deference and
+obedience of the common people.
+
+In this connection it should be noted, however, that the universality
+of culture in Japan is more apparent than real. The appearance is due
+in part to the lack of furniture in the homes. Without chairs or
+tables, bedsteads or washstands, and the multitude of other things
+invariably found in the home of the Occidental, it is easy for the
+Japanese housewife to keep her home in perfect order. No special
+culture is needful for this.
+
+How it came about that the Japanese people adopted their own method of
+sitting on the feet, I cannot say; neither have I heard any plausible
+explanation of the practice. Yet this habit has relieved them of all
+necessity for heavy furniture. Given the custom of sitting on the
+feet, and a large part of the furniture of the house will be useless.
+Already is the introduction of furniture after Western patterns
+producing changes in the homes of the people; and it will be
+interesting to see whether the aesthetic sense of the Japanese will be
+able to assimilate and harmonize with itself these useful, but bulky
+and unaesthetic, elements of Occidental civilization.
+
+That no part of the fine taste of the Japanese is due to the general
+civilization, rather than to the individual possession of the aesthetic
+faculty, may be inferred from many little signs. In spite of the fact
+that, following the long-established social fashions, the women
+usually display good taste in the choice of colors for their clothing,
+it sometimes happens that they also manifest not the slightest sense
+of the harmony of colors. Daughters of wealthy families will array
+themselves in brilliant discordant hues, yet apparently without
+causing the wearers or their friends the slightest aesthetic
+discomfort. Little children are arrayed in clothing that would
+doubtless put Joseph's coat of many colors quite out of countenance.
+Combinations and brilliancy that to the Western eye of culture seem
+crude and gaudy, typical of barbaric splendor, are in constant use,
+and are apparently thought to be fine. The Japanese display both taste
+and its lack in the choice of colors for clothing; this contradiction
+is the more striking in view of the taste manifest in the decorations
+of the homes of all classes of the people. Few sights are more
+ludicrously unaesthetic than the red, yellow, and blue worsted
+crocheted caps and shawls for infants, which shock all our ideas of
+aesthetic harmony.
+
+In connection with Western ways or articles of clothing, the native
+aesthetic faculty often seems to take its flight. In a foreign house
+many a Japanese seems to lose his sense of fitness. I have had
+schoolboys, and even gentlemen, enter my home with hobnailed muddied
+boots, without wiping their feet on the conspicuous door mat, which is
+the more remarkable since, in their own homes, they invariably take
+off their shoes on entering. I have frequently noticed that in railway
+cars the first comers monopolize the seats, and the later ones receive
+not the slightest notice, being often compelled to stand for an hour
+at a time, although, with a little moving, there would be abundant
+room for all. I have noticed this so often that I cannot think it an
+exceptional occurrence. I do not believe it to be intentional
+rudeness, but to be due simply to a lack of real heart politeness. Yet
+a true and deep aesthetic development, so far at least as relates to
+conduct, to say nothing of the spirit of altruism, would not permit
+such indifference to another's discomfort.
+
+My explanation for this, and for all similar defects in etiquette, is
+somewhat as follows. Etiquette is popularly conceived as consisting of
+rules of conduct, rather than as the outward expression of the state
+of the heart. From time immemorial rules for the ordinary affairs of
+life have been formulated by superiors and have been taught the
+people. In all usual and conventional relations, therefore, the
+average farmer and peasant know how to express perfect courtesy. But
+in certain situations, as in foreign houses and the railroad car,
+where there are no precedents to follow, or rules to obey, all
+evidence of politeness takes its flight. The old rules do not fit the
+new conditions. Not being grounded on the inner principles of
+etiquette, the people are not able to formulate new rules for new
+conditions. To the Westerner, on the other hand, these seem to follow
+from the simplest principles of common sense and kindliness. The
+general collapse of etiquette in Japan, which native writers note and
+deplore, is due, therefore, not only to the withdrawal of feudal
+pressure, but also to introduction of strange circumstances for which
+the people have no rules, and to the fact that the people have not
+been taught those underlying principles of high courtesy which are
+applicable on all occasions.
+
+An impression seems to have gained currency in the United States that
+the unaesthetic features seen in Japan to-day are due to the debasing
+influences of Western art and Occidental intercourse. There can be no
+doubt that a certain type of tourist, ignorant of Japanese art, by
+greedily buying strange, gaudy things at high prices, has stimulated a
+morbid production of truly unaesthetic pseudo-Japanese art. But this
+accounts for only a small part of the grossly inartistic features of
+Japan. The instances given of hideous worsted bibs for babes and
+collars for dogs, combining in the closest proximity the most
+uncomplementary and mutually repellent colors, has nothing whatever to
+do with foreign art or foreign intercourse. What foreigner ever
+decorated a little lapdog with a red-green-yellow-blue-and purple
+crocheted collar, four or five inches wide?
+
+Westerners have been charmed with the exquisite colored photographs
+produced in Japan. It is strange, yet true, that the same artistic
+hand that produces these beautiful effects will also, by a slight
+change of tints, produce the most unnatural and spectral views. Yet
+the strangest thing is, not that he produces them, but that he does
+not seem conscious of the defect, for he will put them on sale in his
+own shop or send them to purchasers in America, without the slightest
+apparent hesitation. The constant care of the purchaser in selection
+and his insistence on having only truly artistic work are what keep
+the Japanese artist up to the standard.
+
+If other evidence is needed of aesthetic defect in the still
+unoccidentalized Japanese taste let the doubter go to any popular
+second-grade Shinto shrine or Buddhist temple. Here unaesthetic objects
+and sights abound. Hideous idols, painted and unpainted, big and
+little, often decorated with soiled bibs; decaying to-rii; ruined
+sub-shrines; conglomerate piles of cast-off paraphernalia, consisting
+of broken idols, old lanterns, stones, etc., filthy towels at the
+holy-water basins, piously offered to the gods and piously used by
+hundreds of dusty pilgrims; equally filthy bell-ropes hung in front of
+the main shrines, pulled by ten thousand hands to call the attention
+of the deity; travel-stained hands, each of which has left its mark on
+the once beautiful enormous tasselated cord; ex-voto tufts of human
+hair; scores of pictures, where the few may be counted works of art
+while the rest are hideous beyond belief; frightful faces of tengu,
+with their long noses and menacing teeth, decorated with scores of
+spit-balls or even with mud-balls; these are some of the more
+conspicuous unaesthetic features of multitudes of popular shrines and
+temples. And none of these can be attributed to the debasing influence
+of Western art. And these inartistic features will be found
+accompanying scrupulous neatness in well-swept walks, new sub-shrines,
+floral decorations, and much that pleases the eye--a strange compound
+of the beautiful and the ugly. Truly the aesthetic development of the
+Japanese is curiously one-sided.
+
+A survey of Japanese musical history leads to the conclusion that
+while the people are fairly developed in certain aspects of the
+aesthetics of music, such as rhythm, they are certainly undeveloped in
+other directions--in melody, for example, and in harmony. Their
+instrumental music is primitive and meager. They have no system of
+musical notation. The love of music, such as it is, is well-nigh
+universal. Their solo-vocal music, a semi-chanting in minors, has
+impressive elements; but these are due to the passionate outbursts and
+plaintive wails, rather than to the musically aesthetic character of
+the melodies. The universal twanging samisen, a species of guitar,
+accompanied by the shrill, hard voices of the geisha (singing girls),
+marks at once the universality of the love of music and the
+undeveloped quality of the musical taste, both vocal and instrumental.
+But in comparing the musical development of Japan with that of the
+West, we must not forget how recent is that of the former.
+
+The conditions which have served to develop musical taste in the West
+have but recently come to Japan. Sufficient time has not yet elapsed
+for the nation to make much visible progress in the lines of
+Occidental music. But it has already done something. The popularity of
+brass bands, the wide introduction of organs, their manufacture in
+this land, their use in all public schools, the exclusive use of
+Occidental music in Christian churches, the ability of trained
+individuals in foreign vocal and instrumental music--all these facts
+go to show that in time we may expect great musical evolution in
+Japan. Those who doubt this on the ground of inherent race nature may
+be reminded of the evolution which has taken place among the Hawaiians
+during the past two generations. From being a race manifesting marked
+deficiency in music they have developed astonishing musical taste and
+ability. During a recent visit to these islands after an absence of
+twenty-seven years, I attended a Sunday-school exhibition, which was
+largely a musical contest; the voices were sweet and rich; and the
+difficulty of the part songs, easily carried through by children and
+adults, revealed a musical sense that surpasses any ordinary Sunday
+school of the United States or England with which I am acquainted.
+
+The development of Japanese literature likewise conspicuously
+reflects the ruling ideas of the social order, and reveals the
+dependence of literary taste on the order. As in other aspects in
+Japanese aesthetic development, so in this do we see marked lack of
+balance. "It is wonderful what felicity of phrase, melody of
+versification, and true sentiment can be compressed within the narrow
+limits (of the Tanka). In their way nothing can be more perfect than
+some of these little poems."[U] The deficiencies of Japanese poetry
+have been remarked by the foreigners most competent to judge. The
+following general characterization from the volume just quoted merits
+attention.
+
+ "Narrow in its scope and resources, it is chiefly remarkable for
+ its limitations--for what it has not, rather than what it has. In
+ the first place there are no long poems. There is nothing which
+ even remotely resembles an epic--no Iliad or Divina Commedia--not
+ even a Nibelungen Lied or Chevy Chase. Indeed, narrative poems of
+ any kind are short and very few, the only ones which I have met
+ with being two or three ballads of a sentimental cast. Didactic,
+ philosophical, political, and satirical poems are also
+ conspicuously absent. The Japanese muse does not meddle with such
+ subjects, and it is doubtful whether, if it did, the native Pegasus
+ possesses sufficient staying power for them to be dealt with
+ adequately. For dramatic poetry we have to wait until the
+ fourteenth century. Even then there are no complete dramatic poems,
+ but only dramas containing a certain poetical element.
+
+ "Japanese poetry is, in short, confined to lyrics, and what, for
+ want of a better word, may be called epigrams. It is primarily an
+ expression of emotion. We have amatory verse poems of longing for
+ home and absent dear ones, praise of love and wine, elegies on the
+ dead, laments over the uncertainty of life. A chief place is given
+ to the seasons, the sound of purling streams, the snow of Mount
+ Fuji, waves breaking on the beach, seaweed drifting to the shore,
+ the song of birds, the hum of insects, even the croaking of frogs,
+ the leaping of trout in a mountain stream, the young shoots of fern
+ in spring, the belling of deer in autumn, the red tints of the
+ maple, the moon, flowers, rain, wind, mist; these are among the
+ favorite subjects which the Japanese poets delight to dwell upon.
+ If we add some courtly and patriotic effusions, a vast number of
+ conceits more or less pretty, and a very few poems of a religious
+ cast, the enumeration is tolerably complete. But, as Mr.
+ Chamberlain has observed, there are curious omissions. War
+ songs--strange to say--are almost wholly absent. Fighting and
+ bloodshed are apparently not considered fit themes for poetry."[V]
+
+The drama and the novel have both achieved considerable development,
+yet judged from Occidental standards, they are comparatively weak and
+insipid. They, of course, conspicuously reflect the characteristics of
+the social order to which they belong. Critics call repeated attention
+to the lack of sublimity in Japanese literature, and ascribe it to
+their inherent race nature. While the lack of sublimity in Japanese
+scenery may in fact account for the characteristic in question, still
+a more conclusive explanation would seem to be that in the older
+social order man, as such, was not known. The hidden glories of the
+soul, its temptations and struggles, its defects and victories, could
+not be the themes of a literature arising in a completely communal
+social order, even though it possessed individualism of the Buddhistic
+type.[W] These are the themes that give Western literature--poetic,
+dramatic, and narrative--its opportunity for sustained power and
+sublimity. They portray the inner life of the spirit.
+
+The poverty of poetic form is another point of Western criticism. Mr.
+Aston has shown how this poverty is directly due to the phonetic
+characteristics of the language. Diversities of both rhyme and rhythm
+are practically excluded from Japanese poetry by the nature of the
+language. And this in turn has led to the "preference of the national
+genius for short poems." But language is manifestly the combined
+product of linguistic heredity and the social order, and can in no
+sense be ascribed to inherent race nature. Thus directly are social
+heredity and social order determinative of the literary
+characteristics and aesthetic tastes of a nation.
+
+Even more manifestly may Japanese architectural development be traced
+to the social heredity derived from China and India. The needs of the
+developing internal civilization have determined its external
+manifestation. So far as Japanese differs from Chinese architecture,
+it may be attributed to Japan's isolation, to the different demands of
+her social order, to the difference of accessible building materials,
+and to the different social heredity handed down from prehistoric
+times. That the distinguishing characteristics of Japanese
+architecture are due to the inherent race nature cannot for a moment
+be admitted.
+
+We conclude that the Japanese are not possessed of a unique and
+inherent aesthetic taste. In some respects they are as certainly ahead
+of the Occidental as they are behind him in other respects. But this,
+too, is a matter of social development and social heredity, rather
+than of inherent race character, of brain structure. If aesthetic
+nature were a matter of inherited brain structure, it would be
+impossible to account for rapid fluctuations in aesthetic judgment, for
+the great inequality of aesthetic development in the different
+departments of life, or for the ease of acquiring the aesthetic
+development of alien races.[X]
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+MEMORY--IMITATION
+
+
+The differences which separate the Oriental from the Occidental mind
+are infinitesimal as compared with the likenesses which unite them.
+This is a fact that needs to be emphasized, for many writers on Japan
+seem to ignore it. They marvel at the differences. The real marvel is
+that the differences are so few and so superficial. The Japanese are a
+race whose ancestors were separated from their early home nearly three
+thousand years ago; during this period they have been absolutely
+prevented from intermarriage with the parent stock. Furthermore, that
+original stock was not the Indo-European race. And no one has ventured
+to suggest how long before the migration of the ancestors of the
+Japanese to Japan their ancestors parted from those who finally became
+the progenitors of modern Occidental peoples. For thousands of years,
+certainly, the Japanese and Anglo-Saxon races have had no ancestry in
+common. Yet so similar is the entire structure and working of their
+minds that the psychological textbooks of the Anglo-Saxon are adopted
+and perfectly understood by competent psychological students among the
+Japanese. I once asked a professor of psychology in the Matsuyama
+Normal School if he had no difficulty in teaching his classes the
+psychological system of Anglo-Saxon thinkers, if there were not
+peculiarities of the Anglo-Saxon mind which a Japanese could not
+understand, and if there were not psychological phenomena of the
+Japanese mind which were ignored in Anglo-Saxon psychological
+text-books. The very questions surprised him; to each he gave a
+negative reply. The mental differences that characterize races so
+dissimilar as the Japanese and the Anglo-Saxon, I venture to repeat,
+are insignificant as compared with their resemblances.
+
+Our discussions shall have reference, not to those general
+psychological characteristics which all races have in common, but only
+to those which may seem to stamp the Japanese people as peculiar. We
+wish to understand the distinguishing features of the Japanese mind.
+We wish to know whether they are due to brain structure, to inherent
+race nature, or whether they are simply the result of education, of
+social heredity. This is our ever-recurring question.
+
+First, in regard to Japanese brain development. Travelers have often
+been impressed with the unusual size of the Japanese head. It has
+sometimes been thought, however, that the size is more apparent than
+real, and the appearance has been attributed to the relatively short
+limbs of the people and to the unusual proportion of round heads which
+one sees everywhere. It may also be due to the shape of the head. But,
+after all has been said, it remains true that the Japanese head, as
+related to his body, is unexpectedly large.
+
+Prof. Marsh of Yale University is reported to have said that, on the
+basis of brain size, the Japanese is the race best fitted to survive
+in the struggle for existence, or at least in the struggle for
+pre-eminence.
+
+Statements have been widely circulated to the effect that not only
+relatively to the body, but even absolutely, the Japanese possess
+larger brains than the European, but craniological statistics do not
+verify the assertion. The matter has been somewhat discussed in
+Japanese magazines of late, to which, through the assistance of a
+Japanese friend, I am indebted for the following figures. They are
+given in Japanese measurements, but are, on this account, however,
+none the less satisfactory for comparative purposes.
+
+According to Dr. Davis, the average European male brain weighs 36,498
+momme, and the Australian, 22,413, while the Japanese, according to
+Dr. Taguchi weighs 36,205. Taking the extremes, the largest English
+male brain weighs 38,100 momme and the smallest 35,377, whereas the
+corresponding figures for Japan are 43,919 and 30,304, respectively,
+showing an astonishing range between extremes. According to Dr. E.
+Baelz of the Imperial University of Tokyo, the lower classes of Japan
+have a larger skull circumference than either the middle or upper
+classes (1.8414, 1.7905, and 1.8051 feet, respectively), and the Ainu
+(1.8579) exceed the Japanese. From these facts it might almost appear
+that brain size and civilizational development are in inverse ratio.
+Were the Japanese brain larger, then, than that of the European, it
+might plausibly be argued that they are therefore inferior in brain
+power. This would be in accord with certain of De Quatrefages's
+investigations. He has shown that negroes born in America have smaller
+brains, but are intellectually superior to their African brothers.
+"With them, therefore, intelligence increases, while the cranial
+capacity diminishes."[Y]
+
+Those who trace racial and civilizational nature to brain development
+cannot gain much consolation from a comparative statistical study of
+race brains. De Quatrefages's conclusion is repeatedly forced home:
+"We must confess that there can be no real relation between the
+dimension of the cranial capacity and social development."[Z] "The
+development of the intellectual faculties of man is, to a great
+extent, independent of the capacity of the cranium and the volume of
+the brain."[AA]
+
+We may conclude at once, then, that Japanese intellectual
+peculiarities are in no way due to the size of their brains, but
+depend rather on their social evolution. Yet it will not be amiss to
+study in detail the various mental peculiarities of the race, real and
+supposed, and to note their relation to the social order.
+
+In becoming acquainted with the Japanese and Chinese peoples, an
+Occidental is much impressed with their powers of memory, and this
+especially in connection with the written language, the far-famed
+"Chinese Character," or ideograph. My Chinese dictionary contains over
+50,000 different characters. The task of learning them is appalling.
+How the Japanese or Chinese do it is to us a constant wonder. We
+assume at once their possession of astonishing memories. We argue
+that, for hundreds of years, each generation has been developing
+powers of memory through efforts to conquer this cumbersome
+contrivance for writing, and that, as a consequence for the nations
+using this system, there is now prodigious ability to remember.
+
+It is my impression, however, that we greatly overrate these powers.
+In the first place, few Japanese claim any acquaintance with the
+entire 50,000 characters; only the educated make any pretense of
+knowing more than a few hundred, and a vast majority even of learned
+men do not know more than 10,000 characters. Some Japanese newspapers
+have undertaken to limit themselves in the use of the ideograph. It is
+said that between four and five thousand characters suffice for all
+the ordinary purposes of communication. These are, without doubt,
+fairly well known to the educated classes. But for the masses, there
+is need that the pronunciation be placed beside each printed
+character, before it can be read. Furthermore, we must remember that a
+Japanese youth gives the best years of his life to the bare memorizing
+of these symbols.[AB]
+
+Were European or American youth to devote to the study of Chinese the
+same number of hours each day for the same number of years, I doubt if
+there would be any conspicuous difference in the results. We should
+not forget also that some Occidentals manifest astonishing facility in
+memorizing Chinese characters.
+
+In this connection is the important fact that the social order serves
+to sift out individuals of marked mnemonic powers and bring them into
+prominence, while those who are relatively deficient are relegated to
+the background. The educated class is necessarily composed of those
+who have good powers of memory. All others fail and are rejected. We
+see and admire those who succeed; of those who fail we know nothing
+and we even forget that there are such.
+
+In response to my questions Japanese friends have uniformly assured me
+that they are not accustomed to think of the Japanese as possessed of
+better memories than the people of the West. They appear surprised
+that the question should be raised, and are specially surprised at our
+high estimate of Japanese ability in this direction.
+
+If, however, we inquire about their powers of memory in connection
+with daily duties and the ordinary acquisition of knowledge and its
+retention, my own experience of twelve years, chiefly with the middle
+and lower classes of society, has left the impression that, while some
+learn easily and remember well, a large number are exceedingly slow.
+On the whole, I am inclined to believe that, although the Japanese may
+be said to have good memories, yet it can hardly be maintained that
+they conspicuously exceed Occidentals in this respect.
+
+In comparing the Occidental with the Oriental, it is to be remembered
+that there is not among Occidental nations that attention to bare
+memorizing which is so conspicuous among the less civilized nations.
+The astonishing feats performed by the transmitters of ancient poems
+and religious teachings seem to us incredible. Professor Max Mueller
+says that the voluminous Vedas have been handed down for centuries,
+unchanged, simply from mouth to mouth by the priesthood. Every
+progressive race, until it has attained a high development of the art
+of writing, has manifested similar power of memory. Such power is not,
+however, inherent; that is to say, it is not due to the innate
+peculiarity of brain structure, but rather to the nature of the social
+order which demands such expenditure of time and strength for the
+maintenance of its own higher life. Through the art of writing
+Occidental peoples have found a cheaper way of retaining their history
+and of preserving the products of their poets and religious teachers.
+Even for the transactions of daily life we have resorted to the
+constant use of pen and notebook and typewriter, by these devices
+saving time and strength for other things. As a result, our memories
+are developed in directions different from those of semi-civilized or
+primitive man. The differences of memory characterizing different
+races, then, are for the most part due to differences in the social
+order and to the nature of the civilization, rather than to the
+intrinsic and inherited structure of the brain itself.
+
+Since memory is the foundation of all mental operations, we have given
+to it the first place in the present discussion. And that the Japanese
+have a fair degree of memory argues well for the prospect of high
+attainment in other directions. With this in mind, we naturally ask
+whether they show any unusual proficiency or deficiency in the
+acquisition of foreign languages? In view of her protracted separation
+from the languages of other peoples, should we not expect marked
+deficiency in this respect? On the contrary, however, we find that
+tens of thousands of Japanese students have acquired a fairly good
+reading knowledge of English, French, and German. Those few who have
+had good and sufficient teaching, or who have been abroad and lived in
+Occidental lands, have in addition secured ready conversational use of
+the various languages. Indeed, some have contended that since the
+Japanese learn foreign languages more easily than foreigners learn
+Japanese, they have greater linguistic powers than the foreigner. It
+should be borne in mind, however, that in such a comparison, not only
+are the time required and the proficiency; attained to be considered,
+but also the inherent difficulty of the language studied and the
+linguistic helps provided the student.
+
+I have come gradually to the conclusion that the Japanese are neither
+particularly gifted nor particularly deficient in powers of language
+acquisition. They rank with Occidental peoples in this respect.
+
+To my mind language affords one of the best possible proofs of the
+general contention of this volume that the characteristics which
+distinguish the races are social rather than biological. The reason
+why the languages of the different races differ is not because the
+brain-types of the races are different, but only because of the
+isolated social evolution which the races have experienced. Had it
+been possible for Japan to maintain throughout the ages perfect and
+continuous social intercourse with the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon
+race, while still maintaining biological isolation, _i.e._, perfect
+freedom from intermarriage, there is no reason to think that two
+distinct languages so different as English and Japanese would have
+arisen. The fact that Japanese children can accurately acquire
+English, and that English or American children can accurately acquire
+Japanese, proves conclusively that diversities of language do not rest
+on brain differences and brain heredity, but exclusively on social
+differences and social heredity.
+
+If this is true, then the argument can easily be extended to all the
+features that differentiate the civilizations of different races; for
+the language of any race is, in a sense, the epitome of the
+civilization of that race. All its ideas, customs, theologies,
+philosophies, sciences, mythologies; all its characteristic thoughts,
+conceptions, ideals; all its distinguishing social features, are
+represented in its language. Indeed, they enter into it as determining
+factors, and by means of it are transmitted from age to age. This
+argument is capable of much extension and illustration.
+
+The charge that the Japanese are a nation of imitators has been
+repeated so often as to become trite, and the words are usually spoken
+with disdain. Yet, if the truth were fully told, it would be found
+that, from many points of view, this quality gives reason rather for
+congratulation. Surely that nation which can best discriminate and
+imitate has advantage over nations that are so fixed in their
+self-sufficiency as to be able neither to see that which is
+advantageous nor to imitate it. In referring to the imitative powers
+of the Japanese, then, I do not speak in terms of reproach, but rather
+in those of commendation. "Monkeyism" is not the sort of imitation
+that has transformed primitive Japan into the Japan of the early or
+later feudal ages, nor into the Japan of the twentieth century. Bare
+imitation, without thought, has been relatively slight in Japan. If it
+has been known at times, those times have been of short duration.
+
+In his introduction to "The Classic Poetry of the Japanese" Professor
+Chamberlain has so stated the case for the imitative quality of the
+people that I quote the following:
+
+ "The current impression that the Japanese are a nation of imitators
+ is in the main correct. As they copy us to-day, so did they copy
+ the Chinese and Koreans a millennium and a half ago. Religion,
+ philosophy, laws, administration, written characters, all arts but
+ the very simplest, all science, or at least what then went by that
+ name, everything was imported from the neighboring continent; so
+ much so that of all that we are accustomed to term 'Old Japan'
+ scarce one trait in a hundred is really and properly Japanese. Not
+ only are their silk and lacquer not theirs by right of invention,
+ nor their painting (albeit so often praised by European critics for
+ its originality), nor their porcelain, nor their music, but even
+ the larger part of their language consists of mispronounced
+ Chinese; and from the Chinese they have drawn new names for already
+ existing places, and new titles for their ancient Gods."
+
+While the above cannot be disputed in its direct statements, yet I can
+but feel that it makes, on the whole, a false impression. Were these
+same tests applied to any European people, what would be the result?
+Of what European nation may it be said that its art, or method of
+writing, or architecture, or science, or language even, is "its own by
+right of invention"? And when we stop to examine the details of the
+ancient Japanese civilization which is supposed to have been so,
+slavishly copied from China and India, we shall find that, though the
+beginnings were indeed imitated, there were also later developments of
+purely Japanese creation. In some instances the changes were vital.
+
+In examining the practical arts, while we acknowledge that the
+beginnings of nearly all came from Korea or China, we must also
+acknowledge that in many important respects. Japan has developed along
+her own lines. The art of sword-making, for instance, was undoubtedly
+imported; but who does not know of the superior quality and beauty of
+Japanese swords, the Damascus blades of the East? So distinct is this
+Japanese production that it cannot be mistaken for that of any other
+nation. It has received the impress of the Japanese social order. Its
+very shape is due to the habit of carrying the sheath in the "obi" or
+belt.
+
+If we study the home of the laborer, or the instruments in common use,
+we shall find proof that much more than imitation has been involved.
+
+Were the Japanese mere imitators, how could we explain their
+architecture, so different from that of China and Korea? How explain
+the multiplied original ways in which bamboo and straw are used?
+
+For a still closer view of the matter, let us consider the imported
+ethical and religious codes of the country. In China the emphasis of
+Confucianism is laid on the duty of filial piety. In Japan the primary
+emphasis is on loyalty. This single change transformed the entire
+system and made the so-called Confucianism of Japan distinct from that
+of China. In Buddhism, imported from India, we find greater changes
+than Occidental nations have imposed on their religion imported from
+Palestine. Indeed, so distinct has Japanese Buddhism become that it is
+sometimes difficult to trace its connections in China and India. And
+the Buddhistic sects that have sprung up in Japan are more radically
+diverse and antagonistic to each other and to primitive Buddhism than
+the denominations of Christianity are to each other and to primitive
+Christianity.
+
+In illustration is the most popular of all the Buddhist sects to-day,
+Shinshu. This has sometimes been called by foreigners "Reformed"
+Buddhism; and so similar are many of its doctrines to those of
+Christianity that some have supposed them to have been derived from
+it, but without the slightest evidence. All its main doctrines and
+practices were clearly formulated by its founder, Shinrah, six hundred
+years ago. The regular doctrines of Buddhism that salvation comes only
+through self-effort and self-victory are rejected, and salvation
+through the merits of another is taught. "Ta-riki," "another's power,"
+not "Ji-riki," "self-power," is with them the orthodox doctrine.
+Priests may marry and eat meat, practices utterly abhorrent to the
+older and more primitive Buddhism. The sacred books are printed in the
+vernacular, in marked contrast to the customs of the other sects.
+Women, too, are given a very different place in the social and
+religious scale and are allowed hopes of attaining salvation that are
+denied by all the older sects. "Penance, fasting, prescribed diet,
+pilgrimages, isolation from society, whether as hermits or in the
+cloister, and generally amulets and charms, are all tabooed by this
+sect. Monasteries imposing life vows are unknown within its pale.
+Family life takes the place of monkish seclusion. Devout prayer,
+purity, earnestness of life, and trust in Buddha himself as the only
+worker of perfect righteousness, are insisted on. Morality is taught
+as more important than orthodoxy."[AC] It is amazing how far the Shin
+sect has broken away from regular Buddhistic doctrine and practice.
+Who can say that no originality was required to develop such a system,
+so opposed at vital points to the prevalent Buddhism of the day?
+
+Another sect of purely Japanese origin deserving notice is the "Hokke"
+or "Nicheren." Its founder, known by the name of Nichiren, was a man
+of extraordinary independence and religious fervor. Wholly by his
+original questions and doubts as to the prevailing doctrines and
+customs of the then dominant sects, he was led to make independent
+examination into the history and meaning of Buddhistic literature and
+to arrive at conclusions quite different from those of his
+contemporaries. Of the truth and importance of his views he was so
+persuaded that he braved not only fierce denunciations, but prolonged
+opposition and persecution. He was rejected and cast out by his own
+people and sect; he was twice banished by the ruling military powers.
+But he persevered to the end, finally winning thousands of converts to
+his views. The virulence of the attacks made upon him was due to the
+virulence with which he attacked what seemed to him the errors and
+corruption of the prevailing sects. Surely his was no case of servile
+imitation. His early followers had also to endure opposition and
+severe persecution.
+
+Glancing at the philosophical ideas brought from China, we find here
+too a suggestion of the same tendency toward originality. It is true
+that Dr. Geo. Wm. Knox, in his valuable monograph on "A Japanese
+Philosopher," makes the statement that, "In acceptance and rejection
+alike no native originality emerges, nothing beyond a vigorous power
+of adoption and assimilation. No improvements of the new philosophy
+were even attempted. Wherein it was defective and indistinct,
+defective and indistinct it remained. The system was not thought out
+to its end and independently adopted. Polemics, ontology, ethics,
+theology, marvels, heroes--all were enthusiastically adopted on faith.
+It is to be added that the new system was superior to the old, and so
+much of discrimination was shown."[AD] And somewhat earlier he
+likewise asserts that "There is not an original and valuable
+commentary by a Japanese writer. They have been content to brood over
+the imported works and to accept unquestioningly politics, ethics, and
+metaphysics." After some examination of these native philosophers, I
+feel that, although not without some truth, these assertions cannot be
+strictly maintained. It is doubtless true that no powerful thinker and
+writer has appeared in Japan that may be compared to the two great
+philosophers of China, Shushi and Oyomei. The works and the system of
+the former dominated Japan, for the simple reason that governmental
+authority forbade the public teaching or advocacy of the other.
+Nevertheless, not a few Japanese thinkers rejected the teachings and
+philosophy of Shushi, regardless of consequences. Notable among those
+rejecters was Kaibara Yekken, whose book "The Great Doubt" was not
+published until after his death. In it he rejects in emphatic terms
+the philosophical and metaphysical ideas of Shushi. An article[AE] by
+Dr. Tetsujiro Inouye, Professor of Philosophy in the Imperial
+University in Tokyo, on the "Development of Philosophical Ideas in
+Japan," concludes with these words:
+
+ "From this short sketch the reader can clearly see that
+ philosophical considerations began in our country with the study of
+ Shushi and Oyomei. But many of our thinkers did not long remain
+ faithful to that tradition; they soon formed for themselves new
+ conceptions of life and of the world, which, as a rule, are not
+ only more practical, but also more advanced than those of the
+ Chinese."
+
+An important reason for our Western thought, that the Japanese have
+had no independence in philosophy, is our ignorance of the larger part
+of Japanese and Chinese literature. Oriental speculation was moving in
+a direction so diverse from that of the West that we are impressed
+more with the general similarity that prevails throughout it than with
+the evidences of individual differences. Greater knowledge would
+reveal these differences. In our generalized knowledge, we see the
+uniformity so strongly that we fail to discover the originality.
+
+As a traveler from the West, on reaching some Eastern land, finds it
+difficult at first to distinguish between the faces of different
+individuals, his mind being focused on the likeness pervading them
+all, so the Occidental student of Oriental thought is impressed with
+the remarkable similarity that pervades the entire Oriental
+civilization, modes of thought, and philosophy, finding it difficult
+to discover the differences which distinguish the various Oriental
+races. In like manner, a beginner in the study of Japanese philosophy
+hardly gives the Japanese credit for the modifications of Chinese
+philosophy which they have originated.
+
+In this connection it is well to remember that, more than any
+Westerner can realize, the Japanese people have been dependent on
+governmental initiative from time immemorial. They have never had any
+thought but that of implicit obedience, and this characteristic of the
+social order has produced its necessary consequences in the present
+characteristics of the people. Individual initiative and independence
+have been frowned upon, if not always forcibly repressed, and thus the
+habit of imitation has been stimulated. The people have been
+deliberately trained to imitation by their social system. The
+foreigner is amazed at the sudden transformations that have swept the
+nation. When the early contact with China opened the eyes of the
+ruling classes to the fact that China had a system of government that
+was in many respects better than their own, it was an easy thing to
+adopt it and make it the basis for their own government. This
+constituted the epoch-making period in Japanese history known as the
+Taikwa Reform. It occurred in the seventh century, and consisted of a
+centralizing policy; under which, probably for the first time in
+Japanese history, the country was really unified. Critics ascribe it
+to an imitation of the Chinese system. Imitation it doubtless was; but
+its significant feature was its imposition by the few rulers on the
+people; hence its wide prevalence and general acceptance.
+
+Similarly, in our own times, the Occidentalized order now dominant in
+Japan was adopted, not by the people, but by the rulers, and imposed
+by them on the people; these had no idea of resisting the new order,
+but accepted it loyally as the decision of their Emperor, and this
+spirit of unquestioning obedience to the powers that be is, I am
+persuaded, one of the causes of the prevalent opinion respecting
+Japanese imitativeness as well as of the fact itself.
+
+The reputation for imitativeness, together with the quality itself,
+is due in no small degree, therefore, to the long-continued dominance
+of the feudal order of society. In a land where the dependence of the
+inferior on the superior is absolute, the wife on the husband, the
+children on the parents, the followers on their lord, the will of the
+superior being ever supreme, individual initiative must be rare, and
+the quality of imitation must be powerfully stimulated.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+ORIGINALITY--INVENTIVENESS
+
+
+Originality is the obverse side of imitation. In combating the notion
+that Japan is a nation of unreflective imitators, I have given
+numerous examples of originality. Further extensive illustration of
+this characteristic is, accordingly, unnecessary. One other may be
+cited, however.
+
+The excellence of Japanese art is admitted by all. Japanese temples
+and palaces are adorned with mural paintings and pieces of sculpture
+that command the admiration of Occidental experts. The only question
+is as to their authors. Are these, properly speaking, Japanese works
+of art--or Korean or Chinese? That Japan received her artistic
+stimulus, and much of her artistic ideas and technique, from China is
+beyond dispute. But did she develop nothing new and independent? This
+is a question of fact. Japanese art, though Oriental, has a
+distinctive quality. A magnificent work entitled "Solicited Relics of
+Japanese Art" is issuing from the press, in which there is a large
+number of chromo-xylographic and collotype reproductions of the best
+specimens of ancient Japanese art. Reviewing this work, the _Japan
+Mail_ remarks:
+
+ "But why should the only great sculptors that China or Korea ever
+ produced have come to Japan and bequeathed to this country the
+ unique results of their genius? That is the question we have to
+ answer before we accept the doctrine that the noblest masterpieces
+ of ancient Japan were from foreign lands. When anything comparable
+ is found in China or Korea, there will be less difficulty in
+ applying this doctrine of over-sea-influence to the genius that
+ enriched the temples of antique Japan."[AF]
+
+Under the early influence of Buddhism (900-1200 A.D.) Japan fairly
+bloomed. Those were the days of her glory in architecture, literature,
+and art. But a blight fell upon her from which she is only now
+recovering. The causes of this blight will receive attention in a
+subsequent chapter. Let us note here only one aspect of it, namely,
+official repression of originality.
+
+Townsend Harris, in his journal, remarks on the way in which the
+Japanese government has interfered with the originality of the people.
+"The genius of their government seems to forbid any exercise of
+ingenuity in producing articles for the gratification of wealth and
+luxury. Sumptuary laws rigidly enforce the forms, colors, material,
+and time of changing the dress of all. As to luxury of furniture, the
+thing is unknown in Japan.... It would be an endless task to attempt
+to put down all the acts of a Japanese that are regulated by
+authority."
+
+The Tokugawa rule forbade the building of large ships; so that, by the
+middle of the nineteenth century, the art of ship-building was far
+behind what it had been two centuries earlier. Government authority
+exterminated Christianity in the early part of the seventeenth century
+and freedom of religious belief was forbidden. The same power that put
+the ban on Christianity forbade the spread of certain condemned
+systems of Confucianism. Even in the study of Chinese literature and
+philosophy, therefore, such originality as the classic models
+stimulated was discouraged by the all-powerful Tokugawa government.
+The avowed aim and end of the ruling powers of Japan was to keep the
+nation in its _status quo_. Originality was heresy and treason;
+progress was impiety. The teaching of Confucius likewise lent its
+support to this policy. To do exactly as the fathers did is to honor
+them; to do, or even to think, otherwise is to dishonor them. There
+have not been wanting men of originality and independence in both
+China and Japan; but they were not great enough to break over, or
+break down, the incrusted system in which they lived--the system of
+blind devotion to the past. This system, that deliberately opposed all
+invention and originality, has been the great incubus to national
+progress, in that it has rejected and repressed every tendency to
+variation. What results might not the country have secured, had
+Christianity been allowed to do its work in stimulating individual
+development and in creating the sense of personal responsibility
+towards God and man!
+
+A curious anomaly still remains in Japan on the subject of liberty in
+study and belief. Though perfect liberty is the rule, one topic is
+even yet under official embargo. No one may express public dissent
+from the authorized version of primitive Japanese history. A few years
+ago a professor in the Imperial University made an attempt to
+interpret ancient Japanese myths. His constructions were supposed to
+threaten the divine descent of the Imperial line, and he was summarily
+dismissed.
+
+Dr. E. Inouye, Professor of Buddhist Philosophy in the Imperial
+University, addressing a Teachers' Association of Sendai, delivered a
+conservative, indirectly anti-foreign speech. He insisted, as reported
+by a local English correspondent, that the Japanese people "were
+descended from the gods. In all other countries the sovereign or
+Emperor was derived from the people, but here the people had the honor
+of being derived from the Emperor. Other countries had filial piety
+and loyalty, but no such filial piety and loyalty as exist in Japan.
+The moral attainments of the people were altogether unique. He
+informed his audience that though they might adopt foreign ways of
+doing things, their minds needed no renovating; they were good enough
+as they were."[AG]
+
+As a result of this position, scholarship and credulity are curiously
+combined in modern historical production. Implicit confidence seems to
+be placed in the myths of the primitive era. Tales of the gods are
+cited as historical events whose date, even, can be fixed with some
+degree of accuracy. Although writing was unknown in Japan until early
+in the Christian era, the chronology of the previous six or eight
+hundred years is accepted on the authority of a single statement in
+the Kojiki, written 712 years A.D. This statement was reproduced from
+the memory of a single man, who remembered miraculously the contents
+of a book written shortly before, but accidentally destroyed by fire.
+In the authoritative history of Japan, prepared and translated into
+English at the command of the government for the Columbian Exposition,
+we find such statements as these:
+
+"From the time that Amaterasu-Omikami made Ninigi-no-mikoto to descend
+from the heavens and subject to his administrative sway
+Okini-nushi-no-mikoto and other offspring of the deities in the land,
+descendants of the divine beings have sat upon the throne, generation
+after generation in succession."[AH] "Descended in a direct line from
+the heavenly deities, the Emperor has stood unshaken in his high place
+through all generations, his prestige and dignity immutable from time
+immemorial and independent of all the vicissitudes of the world about
+him."[AI] "Never has there been found a single subject of the realm
+who sought to impair the Imperial prestige."[AJ] It is true that in a
+single passage the traditions of the "age of the Deities" are
+described as "strange and incredible legends," but it is added that,
+however singular they are, in order to understand the history of the
+Empire's beginnings, they must be studied. Then follows, without a
+word of criticism or dissent, the account of the doings of the
+heavenly deities, in creating Japan and its people, as well as the
+myriads of gods. There is no break between the age of the gods and the
+history of men. The first inventions and discoveries, such as those of
+fire, of mining, and of weaving are ascribed to Amate rasu-Omikami
+(the Sun Goddess). According to these traditions and the modern
+histories built upon them, the Japanese race came into existence
+wholly independently of all other races of men. Such is the
+authoritative teaching in the schools to-day.
+
+Occidental scholars do not accept these statements or dates. That the
+Japanese will evince historical and critical ability in the study of
+their own early history, as soon as the social order will allow it,
+can hardly be doubted. Those few who even now entertain advanced ideas
+do not dare to avow them. And this fact throws an interesting light on
+the way in which the social order, or a despotic government, may
+thwart for a time the natural course of development. The present
+apparent credulity of Japanese historical scholarship is due neither
+to race character nor to superstitions lodged in the inherited race
+brain, but simply to the social system, which, as yet, demands the
+inviolability of the Imperial line.
+
+Now that the Japanese have been so largely relieved from the incubus
+of the older social order, the question rises whether they are showing
+powers of originality. The answer is not doubtful, for they have
+already made several important discoveries and inventions. The Murata
+rifle, with which the army is equipped, is the invention of a
+Japanese. In 1897 Colonel Arisaka invented several improvements in
+this same rifle, increasing the velocity and accuracy, and lessening
+the weight. Still more recently he has invented a rapid-fire
+field-piece to superintend whose manufacture he has been sent to
+Europe. Mr. Shimose has invented a smokeless powder, which the
+government is manufacturing for its own use. Not infrequently there
+appear in the papers notices of new inventions. I have recently noted
+the invention of important improvements in the hand loom universally
+used in Japan, also a "smoke-consumer" which not only abolishes the
+smoke, but reduces the amount of coal used and consequently the
+expense. These are but a few of the ever-increasing number of Japanese
+inventions.
+
+In the, field of original scientific research is the famous
+bacteriologist, Dr. Kitazato. Less widely known perhaps, but none the
+less truly original explorers in the field of science, are Messrs.
+Hirase and Ikeno, whose discoveries of spermatozoids in Ginko and
+Cycas have no little value for botanists, especially in the
+development of the theory of certain forms of fertilization. These
+instances show that the faculty of original thought is not entirely
+lacking among the Japanese. Under favorable conditions, such as now
+prevail, there is good reason for holding that the Japanese will take
+their place among the peoples of the world, not only as skillful
+imitators and adapters, but also as original contributors to the
+progress of civilization and of science.
+
+Originality may be shown in imitation as well as in production, and
+this type of originality the Japanese have displayed in a marked way.
+They have copied the institutions of no single country. It might even
+be difficult to say which Western land has had the greatest influence
+in molding the new social order of Japan. In view of the fact that it
+is the English language which has been most in favor during the past
+thirty years, it might be assumed that England and America are the
+favored models. But no such hasty conclusion can be drawn. The
+Japanese have certainly taken ideas and teachers from many different
+sources; and they have changed them frequently, but not thoughtlessly.
+A writer in _The Far East_ brings this points out clearly:
+
+ "While Japan remained secluded from other countries, she had no
+ necessity for and scarcely any war vessels, but after the country
+ was opened to the free intercourse of foreign powers--immediately
+ she felt the urgent necessity of naval defense and employed a Dutch
+ officer to construct her navy. In 1871 the Japanese government
+ employed a number of English officers, and almost wholly
+ reconstructed her navy according to the English system. But in the
+ matter of naval education our rulers found the English system
+ altogether unsatisfactory, and adopted the American system for the
+ model of our naval academy. So, in discipline, our naval officers
+ found the German principle much superior to the English, and
+ adopted that in point of discipline. Thus the Japanese navy is not
+ wholly after the English system, or the American, or the French, or
+ the German system. But it has been so constructed as to include the
+ best portions of all the different systems. In the case of the
+ army, we had a system of our own before we began to utilize
+ gunpowder and foreign methods of discipline. Shortly before the
+ present era we reorganized our army by adopting the Dutch system,
+ then the English, then the French, and after the Franco-Prussian
+ war, made an improvement by adopting the German system. But on
+ every occasion of reorganization we retained the most advantageous
+ parts of the old systems and harmonized them with the new one. The
+ result has been the creation of an entirely new system, different
+ from any of those models we have adopted. So in the case of our
+ civil code, we consulted most carefully the laws of many civilized
+ nations, and gathered the cream of all the different codes before
+ we formulated our own suited to the customs of our people. In the
+ revision of our monetary system, our government appointed a number
+ of prominent economists to investigate the characteristics of
+ foreign systems, as to their merits and faults, and also the
+ different circumstances under which various systems present their
+ strength and weakness. The investigation lasted more than two
+ years, which finally culminated in our adoption of the gold in the
+ place of the old silver standard."
+
+This quotation gives an idea of the selective method that has been
+followed. There has been no slavish or unconscious imitation. On the
+contrary, there has been a constant conscious effort to follow the
+best model that the civilized world afforded. Of course, it may be
+doubted whether in fact they have always chosen the best; but that is
+a different matter. The Japanese think they have; and what foreigner
+can say that, under the circumstances and in view of the conditions of
+the people, they have not? One point is clear, that on the whole the
+nation has made great progress in recent decades, and that the conduct
+of the government cannot fail to command the admiration of every
+impartial student of Oriental lands. This is far from saying that all
+is perfection. Even the Japanese make no such claim. Nor is this
+equivalent to an assertion of Japan's equality with the leading lands
+of the West, although many Japanese are ready to assert this. But I
+merely say that the leaders of New Japan have revealed a high order of
+judicious originality in their imitation of foreign nations.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+INDIRECTNESS--"NOMINALITY"
+
+
+The Japanese have two words in frequent use which aptly describe
+certain striking aspects of their civilization. They are "tomawashi
+ni," "yumei-mujitsu," the first translated literally signifying
+"roundabout" or "indirect," the second meaning "having the name, but
+not the reality." Both these aspects of Japanese character are forced
+on the attention of any who live long in Japan.
+
+Some years ago I had a cow that I wished to sell. Being an American,
+my natural impulse was to ask a dairyman directly if he did not wish
+to buy; but that would not be the most Japanese method. I accordingly
+resorted to the help of a "go-between." This individual, who has a
+regular name in Japanese, "nakadachi," is indispensable for many
+purposes. When land was being bought for missionary residences in
+Kumamoto, there were at times three or even four agents acting between
+the purchaser and the seller and each received his "orei," "honorable
+politeness," or, in plain English, commission. In the purchase of two
+or three acres of land, dealings were carried on with some fifteen or
+more separate landowners. Three different go-betweens dealt directly
+with the purchaser, and each of these had his go-between, and in some
+cases these latter had theirs, before the landowner was reached. A
+domestic desiring to leave my employ conferred with a go-between, who
+conferred with his go-between, who conferred with me! In every
+important consultation a go-between seems essential in Japan. That
+vexatious delays and misunderstandings are frequent may be assumed.
+
+The system, however, has its advantages. In case of disagreeable
+matters the go-between can say the disagreeable things in the third
+person, reducing the unpleasant utterances to a minimum.
+
+I recall the case of two evangelists in the employ of the Kumamoto
+station. Each secured the other to act as go-between in presenting his
+own difficulties to me. To an American the natural course would have
+been for each man to state his own grievances and desires, and secure
+an immediate settlement.
+
+The characteristic of "roundaboutness" is not, however, confined to
+Japanese methods of action, but also characterizes their methods of
+speech. In later chapters on the alleged Japanese impersonality we
+shall consider the remarkable deficiency of personal pronouns in the
+language, and the wide use of "honorifics." This substitution of the
+personal pronouns by honorifics makes possible an indefiniteness of
+speech that is exceedingly difficult for an Anglo-Saxon to appreciate.
+Fancy the amount of implication in the statement, "Ikenai koto-we
+shimashita" which, strictly translated, means "Can't go thing have
+done." Who has done? you? or he? or I? This can only be inferred, for
+it is not stated. If a speaker wishes to make his personal allusion
+blind, he can always do so with the greatest ease and without the
+slightest degree of grammatical incorrectness. "Caught cold," "better
+ask," "honorably sorry," "feel hungry," and all the common sentences
+of daily life are entirely free from that personal definiteness which
+an Occidental language necessitates. We shall see later that the
+absence of the personal element from the wording of the sentence does
+not imply, or prove, its absence from the thought of either the
+speaker or hearer. The Japanese language abounds in roundabout methods
+of expression. This is specially true in phrases of courtesy. Instead
+of saying, "I am glad to see you," the Japanese say, "Well, honorably
+have come"; instead of, "I am sorry to have troubled you," they say,
+"Honorable hindrance have done"; instead of "Thank you," the correct
+expression is, "It is difficult."
+
+In a conversation once with a leading educator, I was maintaining that
+a wide study of English was not needful for the Japanese youth; that
+the majority of the boys would never learn enough English to make it
+of practical use to them in after-life, and that it would be wiser for
+them to spend the same amount of time on more immediately practical
+subjects. The reply was that the boys needed to have the drill in
+English in order to gain clear methods of thought: that the sharp
+distinctness of the English sentence, with its personal pronouns and
+tense and number, affords a mental drill which the Japanese can get in
+no other way; and that even if the boys should never make the
+slightest after-use of English in reading or conversation, the
+advantage gained was well worth the time expended. I have since
+noticed that those men who have spent some time in the study of a
+foreign language speak very much more clearly in Japanese than those
+who have not had this training. In the former case, the enunciation is
+apt to be more distinct, and the sentences rounded into more definite
+periods. The conversation of the average Japanese tends to ramble on
+in a never-ending sentence. But a marked change has come over vast
+numbers of the people during the last three decades. The
+roundaboutness of to-day is as nothing to that which existed under the
+old order of society. For the new order rests on radically different
+ideas; directness of speech and not its opposite is being cultivated,
+and in absolute contrast to the methods of the feudal era, directness
+of governmental procedure is well-nigh universal to-day. In trade,
+too, there has come a straightforwardness that is promising, though
+not yet triumphant. It is safe to assume that in all respectable
+stores the normal price is charged; for the custom of fixed prices has
+been widely adopted. If individuals are known to have the "beating
+down" habit, special prices are added for their sakes.
+
+A personal experience illustrates the point. My wife and I had priced
+several lamps, had made note of the most satisfactory, and had gone
+home without buying. The next day a domestic was sent to secure the
+one which pleased us best. He was charged more than we had been, and
+in surprise mentioned the sum which we had authorized him to pay. The
+shopkeeper explained by saying that he always told us the true price
+in the beginning, because we never tried to beat him down. In truth,
+modern industrial conditions have pretty well banished the old-time
+custom of haggling. A premium is set on straightforwardness in
+business unknown to the old social order.
+
+Roundaboutness is, however, closely connected with "yumei-mujitsu,"
+the other characteristic mentioned at the beginning of this chapter.
+This, for the sake of simplicity, I venture to call "nominality."
+Japanese history is a prolonged illustration of this characteristic.
+For over a thousand years "yumei-mujitsu" has been a leading feature
+in governmental life. Although the Emperor has ostensibly been seated
+on the throne, clothed with absolute power, still he has often reigned
+only in name.[AK] Even so early as 130 A.D., the two families of Oomi
+and Omuraji began to exercise despotic authority in the central
+government, and the feudal system, as thus early established,
+continued with but few breaks to the middle of the present century.
+There were also the great families which could alone furnish wives to
+the Imperial line. These early took possession of the person of the
+Emperor, and the fathers of the wives often exercised Imperial power.
+The country was frequently and long disturbed by intense civil wars
+between these rival families. In turn the Fujiwaras, the Minamotos,
+and the Tairas held the leading place in the control of the Emperor;
+they determined the succession and secured frequent abdication in
+favor of their infant sons, but within these families, in turn, there
+appeared the influence of the "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic. Lesser
+men, the retainers of these families, manipulated the family leaders,
+who were often merely figureheads of the contending families and
+clans. Emperors were made and unmade at the will of these men behind
+the scenes, most of whom are quite unknown to fame. The creation of
+infant Emperors, allowed to bear the Imperial name in their infancy
+and youth, but compelled to abdicate on reaching manhood, was a common
+device for maintaining nominal Imperialism with actual impotence.
+
+When military clans began to monopolize Imperial power, the people
+distinctly recognized the nature of their methods and gave it the name
+of "Bakufu" or "curtain government," a roundabout expression for
+military government. There has been a succession of these "curtain
+governments," the last and most successful being that of the Tokugawa,
+whose fall in 1867-68 brought the entire system to an end and placed
+the true Emperor on the throne.
+
+But this "yumei-mujitsu" characteristic of Japanese life has been by
+no means limited to the national government. Every daimyate was more
+or less blighted by it; the daimyo, or "Great Name," was in too many
+cases but a puppet in the hands of his "kerai," or family retainers.
+These men, who were entirely out of sight, were, in very many cases,
+the real holders of the power which was supposed to be exercised by
+the daimyo. The lord was often a "great name" and nothing more. That
+this state of affairs was always attended with evil results is by no
+means the contention of these pages. Not infrequently the people were
+saved by it from the incompetence and ignorance and selfishness of
+hereditary rulers. Indeed, this system of "yumei-mujitsu" government
+was one of the devices whereby the inherent evils of hereditary rulers
+were more or less obviated. It may be questioned, however, whether the
+device did not in the long run cost more than it gained. Did it not
+serve to maintain, if not actually to produce, a system of
+dissimulation and deception which could but injure the national
+character? It certainly could not stimulate the straightforward
+frankness and outspoken directness and honesty so essential to the
+well-being of the human race.
+
+Although "yumei-mujitsu" government is now practically extinct in
+Japan, yet in the social structure it still survives.
+
+The Japanese family is a maze of "nominality." Full-grown young men
+and women are adopted as sons and daughters, in order to maintain the
+family line and name.
+
+A son is not a legal son unless he is so registered, while an
+illegitimate child is recognized as a true son if so registered. A man
+may be the legal son of his grandmother, or of his sister, if so
+registered. Although a family may have no children, it does not die
+out unless there has been a failure to adopt a son or daughter, and an
+extinct family may be revived by the legal appointment of someone to
+take the family name and worship at the family shrine. The family
+pedigree, therefore, does not describe the actual ancestry, but only
+the nominal, the fictitious. There is no deception in this. It is a
+well-recognized custom of Old Japan. Its origin, moreover, is not
+difficult to explain. Nor is this kind of family peculiar to Japan. It
+is none the less a capital illustration of the "yumei-mujitsu"
+characteristic permeating the feudal civilization, and still exerting
+a powerful influence. Even Christians are not free from "nominalism,"
+as we have frequently found in our missionary work.
+
+A case in mind is of an evangelist employed by our mission station. He
+was to receive a definite proportion of his salary from the church for
+which he worked and the rest from the station. On inquiry I learned
+that he was receiving only that provided by the station, and on
+questioning him further he said that probably the sum promised by the
+church was being kept as his monthly contribution to the expenses of
+the church! Instances of this kind are not infrequent. While in Kyushu
+I more than once discovered that a body of Christians, whose
+evangelists we were helping to support proportionately, were actually
+raising not a cent of their proportion. On inquiry, I would be told
+that the evangelists themselves contributed out of their salary the
+sums needed, and that, therefore, the Christians did not need to raise
+it.
+
+The mission, at one time, adopted the plan of throwing upon the local
+churches the responsibility of deciding as to the fitness of young men
+for mission aid in securing a theological education. It was agreed by
+representatives of the churches and the mission that each candidate
+should secure the approval of the deacons of the church of which he
+was a member, and that the church should pay a certain proportion of
+the candidate's school expenses. It was thought that by this method
+the leading Christians of the young man's acquaintance would become
+his sponsors, and that they would be unwilling to take this
+responsibility except for men in whom they had personal confidence,
+and for whom they would be willing to make personal contributions. In
+course of time the mission discovered that the plan was not working as
+expected. The young men could secure the approval of the deacons of
+their church without any difficulty; and as for the financial aid from
+the church, that could be very easily arranged for by the student's
+making a monthly contribution to the church of the sum which the
+church should contribute toward his expenses. Although this method
+seems to the average Occidental decidedly deceptive, it seemed to the
+Japanese perfectly proper. The arrangement, it is needless to state,
+was not long continued. I am persuaded that the correct explanation of
+these cases is "yumei-mujitsu."
+
+Not long since express trains were put on between Kobe and Tokyo. One
+morning at Osaka I planned to take the early express to Kyoto, distant
+about thirty miles. These are the second and third cities of Japan,
+and the travel between them is heavy. On applying for a ticket I was
+refused and told there was no train for Kyoto. But as multitudes were
+buying tickets, and going out upon the platform, I asked an official
+what the trouble was, and received the explanation that for this
+express train no tickets could be sold for less than forty miles; but
+if I would buy a ticket for the next station beyond Kyoto, it would be
+all right; I could get off at Kyoto. I was assured that I would be
+allowed to land and leave the station at Kyoto. This I did then, and
+have repeatedly done since. The same absurd rule is applied, I am
+told, between Yokohama and Tokyo.
+
+But our interest in these illustrations is the light they shed on
+Japanese character. They indicate the intellectual angle from which
+the people have looked out on life. What is the origin of the
+characteristic? Is it due to deep-lying race nature, to the quality of
+the race brain? Even more clearly than in the case of
+"roundaboutness," it seems to me that "nominality" is due to the
+nature of the old social order. Feudalism has always exhibited more or
+less of these same features. To Anglo-Saxons, reared in a land blessed
+by direct government of the people, by the people, and for the people,
+such methods were not only needless but obnoxious. Nominal
+responsibility without real power has been seen to breed numberless
+evils. We have learned to hate all nominalism, all fiction in
+government, in business and, above all, in personal character. But
+this is due to the Anglo-Saxon social order, the product in large
+measure of centuries of Christian instruction.
+
+Through contact with Westerners and the ideas they stand for,
+directness and reality are being assimilated and developed by the
+Japanese. This would be impossible were the characteristic in question
+due to inherent race nature necessarily bequeathed from generation to
+generation by intrinsic heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+INTELLECTUALITY
+
+
+Some writers hold that the Japanese are inherently deficient in the
+higher mental faculties. They consider mediocre mentality to be an
+inborn characteristic of Japan and assert that it lies at the root of
+the civilizational differences distinguishing the East from the West.
+The puerility of Oriental science in all its departments, the
+prevalence of superstition even among the cultivated, the lack of
+historical insight and interpretation of history are adduced as
+conclusive evidences of this view.
+
+Foreign teachers in Japanese employ have told me that Japanese
+students, as compared with those of the West, manifest deficient
+powers of analysis and of generalization. Some even assert that the
+Japanese have no generalizing ability whatever, their progress in
+civilization being entirely due to their remarkable power of clever
+imitation. Mr. W.G. Aston, in ascribing the characteristic features of
+Japanese literature to the fundamental nature of the race, says they
+are "hardly capable of high intellectual achievement."[AL]
+
+While we may admit that the Japanese do not seem to have at present
+the same power of scientific generalization as Occidentals, we
+naturally ask ourselves whether the difference is due to natal
+deficiency, or whether it may not be due to difference in early
+training. We must not forget that the youth who come under the
+observation of foreign teachers in Japanese schools are already
+products of the Japanese system of education, home and school, and
+necessarily are as defective as it is.
+
+In a previous chapter a few instances of recent invention and
+important scientific discovery were given.
+
+These could not have been made without genuine powers of analysis and
+generalization. We need not linger to elaborate this point.
+
+Another set of facts throwing light on our problem is the success of
+so many Japanese students, at home and in foreign lands, in mastering
+modern thought. Great numbers have come back from Europe and America
+with diplomas and titles; not a few have taken high rank in their
+classes. The Japanese student abroad is usually a hard worker, like
+his brother at home. I doubt if any students in the new or the old
+world study more hours in a year than do these of Japan. It has often
+amazed me to learn how much they are required to do. This is one fair
+sign of intellectuality. The ease too with which young Japan, educated
+in Occidental schools and introduced to Occidental systems of thought,
+acquires abstruse speculations, searching analyses, and generalized
+abstractions proves conclusively Japanese possession of the higher
+mental faculties, in spite of the long survival in their civilization
+of primitive puerility and superstitions and the lack of science,
+properly so called.
+
+Japanese youths, furthermore, have a fluency in public speech
+decidedly above anything I have met with in the United States. Young
+men of eighteen or twenty years of age deliver long discourses on
+religion or history or politics, with an apparent ease that their
+uncouth appearance would not lead one to expect. In the little school
+of less than 150 boys in Kumamoto there were more individuals who
+could talk intelligibly and forcefully on important themes of national
+policy, the relation of religion and politics, the relation of Japan
+to the Occident and the Orient, than could be found in either of the
+two colleges in the United States with which I was connected. I do not
+say that they could bring forth original ideas on these topics. But
+they could at least remember what they had heard and read and could
+reproduce the ideas with amazing fluency.
+
+A recent public meeting in Tokyo in which Christian students of the
+University spoke to fellow-students on the great problems of religion,
+revealed a power of no mean order in handling the peculiar
+difficulties encountered by educated young men. A competent listener,
+recently graduated from an American university and widely acquainted
+with American students, declared that those Japanese speakers revealed
+greater powers of mind and speech than would be found under similar
+circumstances in the United States.
+
+The fluency with which timid girls pray in public has often surprised
+me. Once started, they never seem to hesitate for ideas or words. The
+same girls would hardly be able to utter an intelligible sentence in
+reply to questions put to them by the pastor or the missionary, so
+faint would be their voices and so hesitating their manner.
+
+The question as to whether the Japanese have powers of generalization
+receives some light from a study of the language of the people. An
+examination of primitive Japanese proves that the race, prior to
+receiving even the slightest influence from China, had developed
+highly generalized terms. It is worth while to call attention here to
+a simple fact which most writers seem to ignore, namely, that all
+language denotes and indeed rests on generalization. Consider the word
+"uma," "horse"; this is a name for a whole class of objects, and is
+therefore the product of a mind that can generalize and express its
+generalization in a concept which no act of the imagination can
+picture; the imagination can represent only individuals; the mind that
+has concepts of classes of things, as, for instance, of horses,
+houses, men, women, trees, has already a genuine power of
+generalization. Let me also call attention to such words as "wake,"
+"reason"; "mono," "thing"; "koto," "fact"; "aru," "is"; "oro,"
+"lives"; "aru koto," "is fact," or "existence"; "ugoku koto,"
+"movement"; "omoi," "thought"; this list might be indefinitely
+extended. Let the reader consider whether these words are not highly
+generalized; yet these are all pure Japanese words, and reveal the
+development of the Japanese mind before it was in the least influenced
+by Chinese thought. Evidently it will not do to assert the entire lack
+of the power of generalization to the Japanese mind.
+
+Still further evidence proving Japanese possession of the higher
+mental faculties may be found in the wide prevalence and use of the
+most highly generalized philosophical terms. Consider for instance,
+"Ri" and "Ki," "In" and "Yo." No complete translation can be found for
+them in English; "Ri" and "Ki" may be best translated as the rational
+and the formative principles in the universe, while "In" and "Yo"
+signify the active and the passive, the male and the female, the light
+and the darkness; in a word, the poles of a positive and negative. It
+is true that these terms are of Chinese origin as well as the thoughts
+themselves, but they are to-day in universal use in Japan. Similar
+abstract terms of Buddhistic origin are the possession of the common
+people.
+
+Of course the possession of these Chinese terms is not offered as
+evidence of independent generalizing ability. But wide use proves
+conclusively the possession of the higher mental faculties, for,
+without such faculties, the above terms would be incomprehensible to
+the people and would find no place in common speech. We must be
+careful not to give too much weight to the foreign origin of these
+terms. Chinese is to Japanese what Latin and Greek are to modern
+European languages. The fact that a term is of Chinese origin proves
+nothing as to the nature of the modern Japanese mind. The developing
+Japanese civilization demanded new terms for her new instruments and
+increasing concepts. These for over fifteen centuries have been
+borrowed from, or constructed out of, Chinese in the same way that all
+our modern scientific terms are constructed out of Latin and Greek. It
+is doubtful if any of the Chinese terms, even those borrowed bodily,
+have in Japan the same significance as in China. If this is true, then
+the originating feature of Japanese power of generalization becomes
+manifest.
+
+Indeed from this standpoint, the fact that the Japanese have made such
+extensive use of the Chinese language shows the degree to which the
+Japanese mind has outgrown its primitive development, demanding new
+terms for the expression of its expanding life. But mental growth
+implies energy of acquisition. The adoption of Chinese terms is not a
+passive but an active process.
+
+Acquisition of generalized terms can only take place with the
+development of a generalizing mind. Foreign terms may help, but they
+do not cause that development.
+
+In a study of the question whether or not the Japanese possess
+independent powers of analysis and generalization, we must ever
+remember the unique character of the social environment to which they
+have been subjected. Always more or less of an isolated nation, they
+have been twice or thrice suddenly confronted with a civilization much
+superior to that which they in their isolation had developed. Under
+such circumstances, adoption and modification of ideas and language as
+well as of methods and machinery were the most rational and natural
+courses.
+
+The explanation usually given for the puerilities of Oriental science,
+history, and religion has been short and simple, namely, the inherent
+nature of the Oriental races, as if this were the final fact, needing
+and admitting no further explanation. That the Orient has not
+developed history or science is doubtless true, but the correct
+explanation of this fact is, in my opinion, that the educational
+method of the entire Orient has rested on mechanical memorization;
+during the formative period of the mind the exclusive effort of
+education has been to develop a memory which acts by arbitrary or
+fanciful connections and relations. A Japanese boy of Old Japan, for
+instance, began his education at from seven to eight years of age and
+spent three or four years in memorizing the thousands of Chinese
+hieroglyphic characters contained in the Shisho and Gokyo, nine of the
+Chinese classics. This completed, his teacher would begin to explain
+to him the meaning of the characters and sentences. The entire
+educational effort was to develop the powers of observing and
+memorizing accidental, superficial, or even purely artificial
+relations. This double faculty of observing trifling and irrelevant
+details, and of remembering them, became phenomenally and abnormally
+developed.
+
+Recent works on the psychology of education, however, have made plain
+how an excessive development of a child's lower mental faculties may
+arrest its later growth in all the higher departments of its
+intellectual nature; the development of a mechanical memory is well
+known as a serious obstacle to the higher activities of reason. Now
+Japanese education for centuries, like Chinese, has developed such
+memory. It trained the lower and ignored the higher. Much of the
+Japanese education of to-day, although it includes mathematics,
+science, and history, is based on the mechanical memory method. The
+Orient is thus a mammoth illustration of the effects of
+over-development of the mechanical memory, and the consequent arrest
+of the development of the remaining powers of the mind.
+
+Encumbered by this educational ideal and system, how could the ancient
+Chinese and Japanese men of education make a critical study of
+history, or develop any science worthy of the name? The childish
+physics and astronomy, the brutal therapeutics and the magical and
+superstitious religions of the Orient, are a necessary consequence of
+its educational system, not of its inherent lack of the higher mental
+powers.
+
+If Japanese children brought up from infancy in American homes, and
+sent to American schools from kindergarten days onward, should still
+manifest marked deficiencies in powers of analysis and generalization,
+as compared with American children, we should then be compelled to
+conclude that this difference is due to diverse natal psychic
+endowment. Generalizations as to the inherent intellectual
+deficiencies of the Oriental are based on observations of individuals
+already developed in the Oriental civilization, whose psychic defects
+they accordingly necessarily inherit through the laws of social
+heredity. Such observations have no relevancy to our main problem. We
+freely admit that Oriental civilization manifests striking
+deficiencies of development of the higher mental faculties, although
+it is not nearly so great as many assert; but we contend that these
+deficiencies are due to something else than the inherent psychic
+nature of the Oriental individual. Innumerable causes have combined to
+produce the Oriental social order and to determine its slow
+development. These cannot be stated in a sentence, nor in a paragraph.
+
+In the final analysis, however, the causes which produce the
+characteristic features of Japanese social order are the real sources
+of the differentiating intellectual traits now characterizing the
+Japanese. Introduce a new social heredity,--a new system of
+education,--one which relegates a mechanical memory to the
+background,--one which exalts powers of rational observation of the
+profound causal relations of the phenomena of nature, and which sets a
+premium on such observation, analysis, and generalization, and the
+results will show the inherent psychic nature of the Oriental to be
+not different from that of the Occidental.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+PHILOSOPHICAL ABILITY
+
+
+We are now prepared to consider whether or not the Japanese have
+philosophical ability. The average educated Japanese believe such to
+be the case. The rapidity and ease with which the upper classes have
+abandoned their superstitious faiths is commonly attributed by
+themselves to the philosophical nature of their minds. Similarly the
+rapid spread of so-called rationalism and Unitarian thought and Higher
+Criticism among once earnest Christians, during the past decade, they
+themselves ascribe to their interest in philosophical questions, and
+to their ability in handling philosophical problems.
+
+Foreigners, on the other hand, usually deny them the possession of
+philosophical ability.
+
+Dr. Peery, in his volume entitled "The Gist of Japan," says: "By
+nature, I think, they are more inclined to be practical than
+speculative. Abstract theological ideas have little charm for them.
+There is a large element in Japan that simulates a taste for
+philosophical study. Philosophy and metaphysics are regarded by them
+as the profoundest of all branches of learning, and in order to be
+thought learned they profess great interest in these studies. Not only
+are the highly metaphysical philosophies of the East studied, but the
+various systems of the West are looked into likewise. Many of the
+people are capable of appreciating these philosophies, too; but they
+do it for a purpose." Other writers make the same general charge of
+philosophical incompetence. One or two quotations from Dr. Knox's
+writings were given on this subject, under the head of Imitation.[AM]
+
+What, then, are the facts? Do the Japanese excel in philosophy, or
+are they conspicuously deficient? In either case, is the
+characteristic due to essential race nature or to some other cause?
+
+We must first distinguish between interest in philosophical problems
+and ability in constructing original philosophical systems. In this
+distinction is to be found the reconciliation of many conflicting
+views. Many who argue for Japanese philosophical ability are impressed
+with the interest they show in metaphysical problems, while those who
+deny them this ability are impressed with the dependence of Japanese
+on Chinese philosophy.
+
+The discussions of the previous chapter as to the nature of Japanese
+education and its tendency to develop the lower at the expense of the
+higher mental faculties, have prepared us not to expect any
+particularly brilliant history of Japanese philosophy. Such is indeed
+the case. Primitive Japanese cosmology does not differ in any
+important respect from the primitive cosmology of other races. The
+number of those in Old Japan who took a living interest in distinctly
+metaphysical problems is indisputably small. While we admit them to
+have manifested some independence and even originality, as Professor
+Inouye urges,[AN] yet it can hardly be maintained that they struck out
+any conspicuously original philosophical systems. There is no
+distinctively Japanese philosophy.
+
+These facts, however, should not blind us to the distinction between
+latent ability in philosophical thought and the manifestation of that
+ability. The old social order, with its defective education, its habit
+of servile intellectual dependence on ancestors, and its social and
+legal condemnation of independent originality, particularly in the
+realm of thought, was a mighty incubus on speculative philosophy.
+Furthermore, crude science and distorted history could not provide the
+requisite material from which to construct a philosophical
+interpretation of the universe that would appeal to the modern
+Occidental.
+
+
+In spite, however, of social and educational hindrances, the Japanese
+have given ample evidence of interest in metaphysical problems and of
+more or less ability in their solution. Religious constructions of the
+future life, conceptions as to the relations of gods and men and the
+universe, are in fact results of the metaphysical operations of the
+mind. Primitive Japan was not without these. As she developed in
+civilization and came in contact with Chinese and Hindu metaphysical
+thought, she acquired their characteristic systems. Buddhist first,
+and later Confucian, metaphysics dominated the thought of her educated
+men. In view of the highly metaphysical character of Buddhist
+doctrines and the interest they have produced at least among the
+better trained priests, the assertion that the Japanese have no
+ability in metaphysics cannot be maintained.
+
+At one period in the history of Buddhism in Japan, prolonged public
+discussions were all the fashion. Priests traveled from temple to
+temple to engage in public debate. The ablest debater was the abbot,
+and he had to be ready to face any opponent who might appear. If a
+stranger won, the abbot yielded his place and his living to the
+victor. Many an interesting story is told of those times, and of the
+crowds that would gather to hear the debates. But our point is that
+this incident in the national life shows the appreciation of the
+people for philosophical questions. And although that particular
+fashion has long since passed away, the national interest in
+discussions and arguments still exists. No monks of the West ever
+enjoyed hair-splitting arguments more than do many of the Japanese.
+They are as adept at mental refinements and logical juggling as any
+people of the West, though possibly the Hindus excel them.
+
+If it be said that Confucianism was not only non-metaphysical, but
+uniquely practical, and for this reason found wide acceptance in
+Japan, the reply must be first that, professing to be
+non-metaphysical, it nevertheless had a real metaphysical system of
+thought in the background to which it ever appealed for authority, a
+system, be it noted, more in accord with modern science and philosophy
+than Buddhist metaphysics; and secondly, although Confucianism became
+the bulwark of the state and the accepted faith of the samurai, it
+was limited to them. The vast majority of the nation clung to their
+primitive Buddhistic cosmology. That Confucianism rested on a clearly
+implied and more or less clearly expressed metaphysical foundation may
+be seen in the quotations from the writings of Muro Kyuso which are
+given in chapter xxiv. We should note that the revolt of the educated
+classes of Japan from Buddhism three hundred years ago, and their
+general adoption of Confucian doctrine, was partly in the interests of
+religion and partly in the interests of metaphysics. In both respects
+the progressive part of the nation had become dissatisfied with
+Buddhism. The revolt proves not lack of religious or metaphysical
+interest and insight, but rather the reverse.
+
+Not a little of the teaching of Shushi (1130-1200 A.D.) and of Oyomei
+(1472-1528 A.D.), Chinese philosophical expounders of Confucianism, is
+metaphysical. The doctrine of the former was widely studied and was
+the orthodox doctrine in Japan for more than two centuries, all other
+doctrine and philosophy being forbidden by the state. It is true that
+the central interest in this philosophical instruction was the
+ethical. It was felt that the entire ethical system rested on the
+acceptance of a particular metaphysical system. But so far from
+detracting from our argument this statement rather adds. For in what
+land has not the prime interest in metaphysics been ethical? A study
+of the history of philosophy shows clearly that philosophy and
+metaphysics arose out of religious and ethical problems, and have ever
+maintained their hold on thinking men, because of their mutually vital
+relations. In Japan it has not been otherwise. If anyone doubts this
+he should read the Japanese philosophers--in the original, if
+possible; if not, then in such translations and extracts as Dr. Knox
+has given us in his "A Japanese Philosopher," and Mr. Aston in his
+"Japanese Literature." The ethical interest is primary, and the
+metaphysical interest is secondary,[AO] to be sure, but not to be
+denied.
+
+Occidental philosophy has found many earnest and capable Japanese
+students. The Imperial University has a strong corps of philosophical
+instructors. Occidental metaphysical thought, both materialistic and
+idealistic, has found many congenial minds. Indeed, it is not rash to
+say that in the thought of New Japan the distinguishing Oriental
+metaphysical conceptions of the universe have been entirely displaced
+by those of the West. Christians, in particular, have entirely
+abandoned the old polytheistic, pantheistic, and fatalistic
+metaphysics and have adopted thoroughgoing monotheism.
+
+Ability to understand and sufficient interest to study through
+philosophical and metaphysical systems of foreign lands indicate a
+mental development of no slight order, whatever may be the ability, or
+lack of it, in making original contributions to the subject. That
+educated Japanese have shown real ability in the former sense can
+hardly be doubted by those who have read the writings of such men as
+Goro Takahashi, ex-president Hiroyuki Kato, Prof. Yujiro Motora, Prof.
+Rikizo Nakashima, or Dr. Tetsujiro Inouye. The philosophical
+brightness of many of Japan's foreign as well as home-trained scholars
+argues well for the philosophical ability of the nation.
+
+A recent conversation with a young Japanese gives point to what has
+just been said. The young man suddenly appeared at my study door, and,
+with unusually brief salutations, said that he wished me to talk to
+him about religion. In answer to questions he explained that he had
+been one of my pupils ten years ago in the Kumamoto Boys' School; that
+he had been baptized as a Christian at that time, but had become cold
+and filled with doubts; that he had been studying ever since, having
+at one time given considerable attention to the Zen sect of Buddhism;
+but that he had found no satisfaction there. He accordingly wished to
+study Christianity more carefully. For three hours we talked, he
+asking questions about the Christian conception of God, of the
+universe, of man, of sin, of evolution, of Christ, of salvation, of
+the object of life, of God's purpose in creation, of the origin and
+nature of the Bible. Toward the latter part of our conversation,
+referring to one idea expressed, he said, "That is about what Hegel
+held, is it not?" As he spoke he opened his knapsack, which I then saw
+to be full of books, and drew out an English translation of Hegel's
+"Philosophy of History"; he had evidently read it carefully, making
+his notes in Japanese on the margin. I asked him if he had read it
+through. "Yes," he replied, "three times." He also incidentally
+informed me that he had thought of entering our mission theological
+training class during the previous winter, but that he was then in the
+midst of the study of the philosophy of Kant, and had accordingly
+decided to defer entering until the autumn. How thoroughly he had
+mastered these, the most profound and abstruse metaphysicians that the
+West can boast, I cannot state. But this at least is clear; his
+interest in them was real and lasting. And in his conversation he
+showed keen appreciation of philosophical problems. It is to be noted
+also that he was a self-taught philosopher--for he had attended no
+school since he studied elementary English, ten years before, while a
+lad of less than twenty.
+
+As a sample of the kind of men I not infrequently meet, let me cite
+the case of a young business man who once called on me in the hotel at
+Imabari, popularly called "the little philosopher." He wished to talk
+about the problem of the future life and to ask my personal belief in
+the matter. He said that he believed in God and in Jesus as His unique
+son and revealer, but that he found great difficulty in believing in
+the continued life of the soul after death. His difficulty arose from
+the problems of the nature of future thinking; shall we continue to
+think in terms of sense perception, such as time, space, form, color,
+pleasure, and pain? If not, how can we think at all? And can we then
+remember our present life? If we do, then the future life will not be
+essentially different from this, _i.e._, we must still have physical
+senses, and continue to live in an essentially physical world. Here
+was a set of objections to the doctrine of the future life that I
+have never heard as much as mentioned by any Occidental youth. Though
+without doubt not original with him, yet he must have had in some
+degree both philosophical ability and interest in order to appreciate
+their force and to seek their solution.
+
+In conversation not long since with a Buddhist priest of the Tendai
+sect, after responding to his request for a criticism of Buddhism, I
+asked him for a similarly frank criticism of Christianity. To my
+surprise, he said that while Christianity was far ahead of Buddhism in
+its practical parts and in its power to mold character, it was
+deficient in philosophical insight and interest. This led to a
+prolonged conversation on Buddhistic philosophy, in which he explained
+the doctrines of the "Ku-ge-chu," and the "Usa and Musa." Without
+attempting to explain them here, I may say that the first is amazingly
+like Hegel's "absolute nothing," with its thesis, antithesis, and
+synthesis, and the second a psychological distinction between
+volitional and spontaneous emotions.
+
+In discussing Japanese philosophical ability, a point often forgotten
+is the rarity of philosophical ability or even interest in the West.
+But a small proportion of college students have the slightest interest
+in philosophical or metaphysical problems. The majority do not
+understand what the distinctive metaphysical problems are. In my
+experience it is easier to enter into a conversation with an educated
+man in Japan on a philosophical question than with an American. If
+interest in philosophical and metaphysical questions in the West is
+rare, original ability in their investigation is still rarer.
+
+We conclude, then, that in regard to philosophical ability the
+Japanese have no marked racial characteristic differentiating them
+from other races. Although they have not developed a distinctive
+national philosophy, this is not due to inherent philosophical
+incompetence. Nor, on the other hand, is the relatively wide interest
+now manifest in philosophical problems attributable to the inherent
+philosophical ability of the race. So far as Japan is either behind or
+in advance of other races, in this respect, it is due to her social
+order and social inheritance, and particularly to the nature, methods,
+and aims of the educational system, but not to her intrinsic psychic
+inheritance.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+IMAGINATION
+
+
+In no respect, perhaps, have the Japanese been more sweepingly
+criticised by foreigners than in regard to their powers of imagination
+and idealism. Unqualified generalizations not only assert the entire
+lack of these powers, but they consider this lack to be the
+distinguishing inherent mental characteristic of the race. The
+Japanese are called "prosaic," "matter-of-fact," "practical,"
+"unimaginative."
+
+Mr. Walter Dening, describing Japanese mental characteristics, says:
+
+ "Neither their past history nor their prevailing tastes show any
+ tendency to idealism. They are lovers of the practical and the
+ real; neither the fancies of Goethe nor the reveries of Hegel are
+ to their liking. Our poetry and our philosophy and the mind that
+ appreciates them are alike the results of a network of subtle
+ influences to which the Japanese are comparative strangers. It is
+ maintained by some, and we think justly, that the lack of idealism
+ in the Japanese mind renders the life of even the most cultivated a
+ mechanical, humdrum affair when compared with that of Westerners.
+ The Japanese cannot understand why our controversialists should wax
+ so fervent over psychological, ethical, religious, and
+ philosophical questions, failing to perceive that this fervency is
+ the result of the intense interest taken in such subjects. The
+ charms that the cultured Western mind finds in the world of fancy
+ and romance, in questions themselves, irrespective of their
+ practical bearings, is for the most part unintelligible to the
+ Japanese."[AP]
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell expends an entire chapter in his "Soul of the Far
+East," in showing how important imagination is as a factor in art,
+religion, science, and civilization generally, and how strikingly
+deficient Japanese are in this faculty. "The Far Orientals," he
+argues, "ought to be a particularly unimaginative set of people. Such
+is precisely what they are. Their lack of imagination is a
+well-recognized fact."[AQ]
+
+Mr. Aston, characterizing Japanese literature, says:
+
+ "A feature which strikingly distinguishes the Japanese poetic muse
+ from that of Western nations is a certain lack of imaginative
+ power. The Japanese are slow to endow inanimate objects with life.
+ Shelley's 'Cloud,' for example, contains enough matter of this kind
+ for many volumes of Japanese verse. Such lines as:
+
+ 'From my wings are shaken
+ The dews that waken
+ The sweet buds every one,
+ When rocked to rest
+ On their mother's breast
+ As she dances about the sun,'
+
+ would appear to them ridiculously overcharged with metaphor, if not
+ absolutely unintelligible."[AR]
+
+
+On the other hand, some writers have called attention to the contrary
+element of Japanese mental nature. Prof. Ladd, for instance, maintains
+that the characteristic mental trait of the Japanese is their
+sentimentality. He has shown how their lives are permeated with and
+regulated by sentiment. Ancestral worship, patriotism, Imperial
+apotheosis, friendship, are fashioned by idealizing sentiment. In our
+chapters on the emotional elements of Japanese character we have
+considered how widespread and powerful these ideals and sentiments
+have been and still are.
+
+Writers who compare the Chinese with the Japanese remark the practical
+business nature of the former and the impractical, visionary nature of
+the latter.
+
+For a proper estimate of our problem we should clearly distinguish
+between the various forms of imagination. It reveals itself not merely
+in art and literature, in fantastic conception, in personification and
+metaphor, but in every important department of human life. It is the
+tap-root of progress, as Mr. Lowell well points out. It pictures an
+ideal life in advance of the actual, which ideal becomes the object of
+effort. The forms of imagination may, therefore, be classified
+according to the sphere of life in which it appears. In addition to
+the poetic fancy and the idealism of art and literature generally, we
+must distinguish the work of imagination in the aesthetic, in the
+moral, in the religious, in the scientific, and in the political life.
+The manifestation of the imaginative faculty in art and in literature
+is only one part of the aesthetic imagination.
+
+In studying Japanese aesthetic characteristics, we noted how unbalanced
+was the development of their aesthetic sense. This proposition of
+unbalanced development applies with equal force to the imaginative
+faculty as a whole. Conspicuously lacking in certain directions, it is
+as conspicuously prominent in others. Rules of etiquette are the
+products of the aesthetic imagination, and in what land has etiquette
+been more developed than in feudal Japan? Japanese imagination has
+been particularly active in the political world. The passionate
+loyalty of retainers to their lord, of samurai to their daimyo, of all
+to their "kuni," or clan, in ancient times, and now, of the people to
+their Emperor, are the results of a vivid political idealizing
+imagination. Imperial apotheosis is a combination of the political and
+religious imagination. And in what land has the apotheosizing
+imagination been more active than in Japan? Ambition and self-conceit
+are likewise dependent on an active imaginative faculty.
+
+There can be no doubt the writers quoted above have drawn attention to
+some salient features of Japanese art. In the literature of the past,
+the people have not manifested that high literary imagination that we
+discover in the best literature of many other nations.
+
+This fact, however, will not justify the sweeping generalizations
+based upon it. Judging from the pre-Elizabethan literature, who would
+have expected the brilliancy of the Elizabethan period? Similarly in
+regard to the Victorian period of English literature. Because the
+Japanese have failed in the past to produce literature equal to the
+best of Western lands, we are not justified in asserting that she
+never will and that she is inherently deficient in literary
+imagination. In regard to certain forms of light fancy, all admit that
+Japanese poems are unsurpassed by those of other lands. Japanese
+amative poetry is noted for its delicate fancies and plays on words
+exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, of translation, or even of
+expression, to one unacquainted with the language.
+
+The deficiencies of Japanese literature, therefore, are not such as to
+warrant the conclusion that they both mark and make a fundamental
+difference in the race mind. For such differences as exist are capable
+of a sociological explanation.
+
+The prosaic matter-of-factness of the Japanese mind has been so widely
+emphasized that we need not dwell upon it here. There is, however,
+serious danger of over-emphasis, a danger into which all writers fall
+who make it the ground for sweeping condemnatory criticism.
+
+They are right in ascribing to the average Japanese a large amount of
+unimaginative matter-of-factness, but they are equally wrong in
+unqualified dogmatic generalizations. They base their inductions on
+insufficient facts, a habit to which foreigners are peculiarly liable,
+through ignorance of the language and also of the inner thoughts and
+life of the people.
+
+The prosaic nature of the Japanese has not impressed me so much as the
+visionary tendency of the people, and their idealism. The Japanese
+themselves count this idealism a national characteristic. They say
+that they are theorizers, and numberless experiences confirm this
+view.
+
+They project great undertakings; they scheme; they discuss
+contingencies; they make enormous plans; all with an air of
+seriousness and yet with a nonchalance which shows a semi-conscious
+sense of the unreality of their proposals. In regard to Korea and
+China and Formosa, they have hatched political and business schemes
+innumerable. The kaleidoscopic character of Japanese politics is in
+part due to the rapid succession of visionary schemes. One idea reigns
+for a season, only to be displaced by another, causing constant
+readjustment of political parties. Frequent attacks on government
+foreign policy depend for their force on lordly ideas as to the part
+Japan should play in international relations. Writing about the recent
+discussions in the public press over the question of introducing
+foreign capital into Japan, one contributor to the _Far East_ remarks
+that "It has been treated more from a theoretical than from a
+practical standpoint.... This seems to me to arise from a peculiar
+trait of Japanese mind which is prone to dwell solely on the
+theoretical side until the march of events compels a sudden leap
+toward the practical." This visionary faculty of the Japanese is
+especially conspicuous in the daily press. Editorials on foreign
+affairs and on the relations of Japan to the world are full of it.
+
+I venture to jot down a few illustrations of impractical idealism out
+of my personal knowledge. An evangelist in the employ of the Kumamoto
+station exemplified this visionary trait in a marked degree. Nervous
+in the extreme, he was constantly having new ideas. For some reason
+his attention was turned to the subject of opium and the evils China
+was suffering from the drug, forced on her by England. Forthwith he
+came to me for books on the subject; he wished to become fully
+informed, and then he proposed to go to China and preach on the
+subject. For a few weeks he was full of his enterprise. It seemed to
+him that if he were only allowed the opportunity he could convince the
+Chinese of their error, and the English of their crime. One of his
+plans was to go to England and expostulate with them on their
+un-Christian dealings with China. A few weeks later his attention was
+turned to the wrongs inflicted on the poor on account of their
+ignorance about law and their inability to get legal assistance. This
+idea held him longer than the previous.
+
+He desired to study law and become a public pleader in order to
+defend the poor against unjust men of wealth. In his theological ideas
+he was likewise extreme and changeable; swinging from positive and
+most emphatic belief to extreme doubt, and later back again. In his
+periods of triumphant faith it seemed to him that he could teach the
+world; and his expositions of truth were extremely interesting. He
+proposed to formulate a new theology that would dissolve forever the
+difficulties of the old theology. In his doubts, too, he was no less
+interesting and assertive. His hold on practical matters was
+exceedingly slender. His salary, though considerably larger than that
+of most of the evangelists, was never sufficient. He would spend
+lavishly at the beginning of the month so long as he had the money,
+and then would pinch himself or else fall into debt.
+
+Mr. ----, the head of the Kumamoto Boys' School during the period of
+its fierce struggles and final collapse, whom I have already referred
+to as the Hero-Principal,[AS] is another example of this impractical
+high-strung visionariness. No sooner had he reached Kumamoto, than
+there opened before our enchanted eyes the vision of this little
+insignificant school blooming out into a great university. True, there
+had been some of this bombast before his arrival; but it took on new
+and gorgeous form under his master hand. The airs that he put on,
+displaying his (fraudulent) Ph.D., and talking about his schemes, are
+simply amusing to contemplate from this distance. His studies in the
+philosophy of religion had so clarified his mind that he was going to
+reform both Christianity and Buddhism. His sermons of florid eloquence
+and vociferous power, never less than an hour in length, were as
+marked in ambitious thoughts as in pulpit mannerisms. He threw a spell
+over all who came in contact with him. He overawed them by his
+vehemence and tremendous earnestness and insistence on perfect
+obedience to his masterful will. In one of his climactic sermons,
+after charging missionaries with teaching dangerous errors, he said
+that while some were urging that the need of the times was to "his
+back to Luther," and others were saying, that we must "his back to
+Christ" (these English words being brought into his Japanese sermon),
+they were both wrong; we must "hie back to God"; and he prophesied a
+reformation in religion, beginning there in Kumamoto, in that school,
+which would be far and away more important in the history of the world
+than was the Lutheran Reformation.
+
+The recent history of Christianity in Japan supplies many striking
+instances of visionary plans and visionary enthusiasts. The confident
+expectation entertained during the eighties of Christianizing the
+nation before the close of the century was such a vision. Another,
+arising a few years later, was the importance of returning all foreign
+missionaries to their native lands and of intrusting the entire
+evangelistic work to native Christians, and committing to them the
+administration of the immense sums thus set free. For it was assumed
+by these brilliant Utopians that the amount of money expended in
+supporting missionaries would be available for aggressive work should
+the missionaries be withdrawn, and that the Christians in foreign
+lands would continue to pour in their contributions for the
+evangelization of Japan.
+
+Still another instance of utopian idealism is the vision that Japan
+will give birth to that perfect religion, meeting the demands of both
+heart and head, for which the world waits. In January, 1900, Prof. T.
+Inouye, of the Imperial University, after showing quite at length, and
+to his own satisfaction, the inadequacy of all existing religions to
+meet the ethical and religious situation in Japan, maintained this
+ambitious view.
+
+Some Japanese Christians are declaring the need of Japonicized
+Christianity. "Did not the Greeks transform Christianity before they
+accepted it? And did not the Romans, and finally the Germans, do the
+same? Before Japan will or can accept the religion of Christ, it must
+be Japonicized." So they argue; "and who so fit to do it as we?" lies
+in the background of their thought.
+
+Many a Christian pastor and evangelist, although not sharing the
+ambition of Prof. Inouye, nevertheless glows with the confident
+expectation that Japonicized Christianity will be its most perfect
+type. "No one need wonder if Japan should be destined to present to
+the world the best type of Christianity that has yet appeared in
+history," writes an exponent of this view, at one time a Christian
+pastor. In this connection the reader may recall what was said in
+chapter xiv. on Japanese Ambition and Conceit, qualities depending on
+the power of seeing visions. We note, in passing, the optimistic
+spirit of New Japan. This is in part due, no doubt, to ignorance of
+the problems that lie athwart their future progress, but it is also
+due to the vivid imaginative faculty which pictures for them the
+glories of the coming decades when they shall lead not only the
+Orient, but also the Occident, in every line of civilization, material
+and spiritual, moral and religious. A dull, unimaginative, prosaic
+nature cannot be exuberantly optimistic. It is evident that writers
+who proclaim the unimaginative matter-of-factness of the Japanese as
+universal and absolute, have failed to see a large side of Japanese
+inner life.
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell states that the root of all the peculiarities of
+Oriental peoples is their marked lack of imagination. This is the
+faculty that "may in a certain sense be said to be the creator of the
+world." The lack of this faculty, according to Mr. Lowell, is the root
+of the Japanese lack of originality and invention; it gives the whole
+Oriental civilization its characteristic features. He cites a few
+words to prove the essentially prosaic character of the Japanese mind,
+such as "up-down" for "pass" (which word, by the way, is his own
+invention, and reveals his ignorance of the language), "the being (so)
+is difficult," in place of "thank you." "A lack of any fanciful
+ideas," he says, "is one of the most salient traits of all Far Eastern
+peoples, if indeed a sad dearth can properly be called salient.
+Indirectly, their want of imagination betrays itself in their everyday
+sayings and doings, and more directly in every branch of thought." I
+note, in passing, that Mr. Lowell does not distinguish between fancy
+and imagination. Though allied faculties, they are distinct. Mr.
+Lowell's extreme estimate of the prosaic nature of the Japanese mind I
+cannot share. Many letters received from Japanese friends refute this
+view by their fanciful expressions. The Japanese language, too, has
+many fanciful terms. Why "pass" is any more imaginative than
+"up-down," to accept Mr. Lowell's etymology, or "the being (so) is
+difficult" than "thank you," I do not see. To me the reverse
+proposition would seem the truer. And are not "breaking-horns" for "on
+purpose," and "breaking-bones" for "with great difficulty," distinctly
+imaginative terms, more imaginative than the English? In the place of
+our English term "sun," the Japanese have several alternative terms in
+common use, such as "_hi_," "day," "_Nichirin_," "day-ball," "_Ten-to
+Sama_," "the god of heaven's light;" and for "moon," it has "_tsuki_,"
+"month," "_getsu-rin_," "month ball." The names given to her
+men-of-war also indicate a fanciful nature. The torpedo destroyers are
+named "Dragon-fly," "Full Moon," "The Moon in the Cloud," "Seabeach,"
+"Dawn of Day," "Clustering Clouds," "Break of Day," "Ripples,"
+"Evening Mist," "Dragon's Lamp," "Falcon," "Magpie," "White-naped
+Crane," and "White Hawk." Surely, it cannot be maintained that the
+Japanese are utterly lacking in fancy.
+
+Distinguishing between fancy as "the power of forming pleasing,
+graceful, whimsical, or odd mental images, or of combining them with
+little regard to rational processes of construction," and imagination,
+in its more philosophical use, as "the act of constructive intellect
+in grouping the materials of knowledge or thought into new, original,
+and rational systems," we assert without fear of successful
+contradiction, that the Japanese race is not without either of these
+important mental faculties.
+
+In addition to the preceding illustrations of visionary and fanciful
+traits, let the reader reflect on the significance of the comic and of
+caricature in art. Japanese _Netsuke_ (tiny carvings of exquisite
+skill representing comical men, women, and children) are famous the
+world over. Surely, the fancy is the most conspicuous mental
+characteristic revealed in this branch of Japanese art. In Japanese
+poetry "a vast number of conceits, more or less pretty," are to be
+found, likewise manifesting the fancy of both the authors who wrote
+and the people who were pleased with and preserved their writings.[AT]
+The so-called "impersonal habit of the Japanese mind," with a
+corresponding "lack of personification of abstract qualities,"
+doubtless prevents Japanese literature from rising to the poetic
+heights attained by Western nations. But this lack does not prove the
+Japanese mind incapable of such flights. As describing the actual
+characteristics of the literature of the past the assertion of "a lack
+of imaginative power" is doubtless fairly correct. But the inherent
+nature of the Japanese mind cannot be inferred from the deficiencies
+of its past literature, without first examining the relation between
+its characteristic features and the nature of the social order and the
+social inheritance.
+
+Are the Japanese conspicuously deficient in imagination, in the sense
+of the definition given above? The constructive imagination is the
+creator of civilization. Not only art and literature, but, as already
+noted, science, philosophy, politics, and even the practical arts and
+prosaic farming are impossible without it. It is the tap-root of
+invention, of discovery, of originality.
+
+It is needless to repeat what has been said in previous chapters[AU]
+on Japanese imitation, invention, discovery, and originality. Yet, in
+consideration of the facts there given, are we justified in counting
+the Japanese so conspicuously deficient in constructive, imagination
+as to warrant the assertion that such a lack is the fundamental
+characteristic of the race psychic nature?
+
+As an extreme case, look for a moment at their imitativeness. Although
+imitation is considered a proof of deficient originality, and thus of
+imagination, yet reflection shows that this depends on the nature of
+the imitation. Japanese imitation has not been, except possibly for
+short periods, of that slavish nature which excludes the work of the
+imagination. Indeed, the impulse to imitation rests on the
+imagination. But for this faculty picturing the state of bliss or
+power secured in consequence of adopting this or that feature of an
+alien civilization, the desire to imitate could not arise. In view,
+moreover, of the selective nature of Japanese imitation, we are
+further warranted in ascribing to the people no insignificant
+development of the imagination.
+
+In illustration, consider Japan's educational system. Established no
+doubt on Occidental models, it is nevertheless a distinctly Japanese
+institution. Its buildings are as characteristically Japonicized
+Occidental school buildings as are its methods of instruction.
+Japanese railroads and steamers, likewise constructed in Japan, are
+similarly Japonicized--adapted to the needs and conditions of the
+people. To our eyes this of course signifies no improvement, but
+assuredly, without such modification, our Western railroads and
+steamers would be white elephants on their hands, expensive and
+difficult of operation.
+
+What now is the sociological interpretation of the foregoing facts?
+How are the fanciful, visionary, and idealistic characteristics, on
+the one hand, and, on the other, the prosaic, matter-of-fact, and
+relatively unimaginative characteristics, related to the social order?
+
+It is not difficult to account for the presence of accentuated
+visionariness in Japan. Indeed, this quality is conspicuous among the
+descendants of the military and literary classes; and this fact
+furnishes us the clew. "From time immemorial," to use a phrase common
+on the lips of Japanese historians, up to the present era, the samurai
+as a class were quite separated from the practical world; they were
+comfortably supported by their liege lords; entirely relieved from the
+necessity of toiling for their daily bread, they busied themselves not
+only with war and physical training, but with literary accomplishments,
+that required no less strenuous mental exertions.
+
+Furthermore, in a class thus freed from daily toil, there was sure to
+arise a refined system of etiquette and of rank distinctions. Even a
+few centuries of life would, under such conditions, develop highly
+nervous individuals in large numbers, hypersensitive in many
+directions. These men, by the very development of their nervous
+constitutions, would become the social if not the practical leaders of
+their class; high-spirited, and with domineering ideas and scheming
+ambitions, they would set the fashion to all their less nervously
+developed fellows. Freed from the exacting conditions of a practical
+life, they would inevitably fly off on tangents more or less
+impractical, visionary.
+
+If, therefore, this trait is more marked in Japanese character than in
+that of many other nations, it may be easily traced to the social
+order that has ruled this land "from time immemorial." More than any
+other of her mental characteristics, impractical visionariness may be
+traced to the development of the nervous organization at the expense
+of the muscular. This characteristic accordingly may be said to be
+more inherently a race characteristic than many others that have been
+mentioned. Yet we should remember that the samurai constitute but a
+small proportion of the people. According to recent statistics (1895)
+the entire class to-day numbers but 2,050,000, while the common people
+number over 40,000,000. It is, furthermore, to be remembered that not
+all the descendants of the samurai are thus nervously organized. Large
+numbers have a splendid physical endowment, with no trace of abnormal
+nervous development. While the old feudal order, with its constant
+carrying of swords, and the giving of honor to the most impetuous,
+naturally tended to push the most high-strung individuals into the
+forefront and to set them up as models for the imitation of the young,
+the social order now regnant in Japan faces in the other direction.
+Such visionary men are increasingly relegated to the rear. Their
+approach to insanity is recognized and condemned. Even this trait of
+character, therefore, which seems to be rooted in brain and nerve
+structure is, nevertheless, more subject to the prevailing social
+order than would at first seem possible.
+
+Its rise we have seen was due to that order, and the setting aside of
+these characteristics as ideals at least, and thus the bringing into
+prominence of more normal and healthy ideals, is due to the coming in
+of a new order.
+
+Japanese prosaic matter-of-factness may similarly be shown to have
+intimate relations to the nature of the social order. Oppressive
+military feudalism, keeping the vast majority of the people in
+practical bondage, physical, intellectual, and spiritual, would
+necessarily render their lives and thoughts narrow in range and
+spiritless in nature. Such a system crushes out hope. From sunrise to
+sunset, "_nembyaku nenju_," "for a hundred years and through all the
+year," the humdrum duties of daily life were the only psychic stimuli
+of the absolutely uneducated masses. Without ambition, without
+self-respect, without education or any stimulus for the higher mental
+life, what possible manifestation of the higher powers of the mind
+could be expected? Should some "sport" appear by chance, it could not
+long escape the sword of domineering samurai. Even though originally
+possessing some degree of imagination, cringing fear of military
+masters, with the continuous elimination by ruthless slaughter of the
+more idealizing, less submissive, and more self-assertive individuals
+of the non-military classes, would finally produce a dull, imitative,
+unimaginative, and matter-of-fact class such as we find in the
+hereditary laboring and merchant classes.
+
+Furthermore, Japanese civilization, like that of the entire Orient,
+with its highly communalized social order, is an expression of passive
+submission to superior authority. Although an incomplete
+characterization, there is still much truth in saying that the Orient
+is an expression of Fate, the Occident of Freedom. We have seen that a
+better contrasted characterization is found in the terms communal and
+individual. The Orient has known nothing of individualism. It has not
+valued the individual nor sought his elevation and freedom. In every
+way, on the contrary, it has repressed and opposed him. The high
+development of the individual culminating in powerful personality has
+been an exceptional occurrence, due to special circumstances. A
+communal social order, often repressing and invariably failing to
+evoke the higher human faculties, must express its real nature in the
+language, literature, and customs of the people. Thus in our chapter
+on the AEsthetic Characteristics of the Japanese[AV] we saw how the
+higher forms of literature were dependent on the development of
+manhood and on a realization of his nature. A communal social order
+despising, or at least ignoring the individual, cannot produce the
+highest forms of literature or art, because it does not possess the
+highest forms of psychic development. Take from Western life all that
+rests on or springs from the principles of individual worth, freedom,
+and immortality, and how much of value or sublimity will remain? The
+absence from Japanese literature and language of the higher forms of
+fancy, metaphor, and personification on the one hand, and, on the
+other, the presence of widespread prosaic matter-of-factness, are thus
+intimately related to the communal nature of Japan's long dominant
+social order.
+
+Similarly, in regard to the constructive imagination, whose
+conspicuous lack in Japan is universally asserted by foreign critics,
+we reply first that the assertion is an exaggeration, and secondly,
+that so far as it is fact, it is intimately related to the social
+order. In our discussions concerning Japanese Intellectuality and
+Philosophical Ability,[AW] we saw how intimate a relation exists
+between the social order, particularly as expressed in its educational
+system, and the development of the higher mental faculties. Now a
+moment's reflection will show how the constructive imagination,
+belonging as it does to the higher faculties, was suppressed by the
+system of mechanical and superficial education required by the social
+order. Religion apotheosized ancestral knowledge and customs, thus
+effectively condemning all conscious use of this faculty. So far as it
+was used, it was under the guise of reviving old knowledge or of
+expounding it more completely.
+
+This, however, has been the experience of every race in certain
+stages of its development. Such periods have been conspicuously
+deficient in powerful literature, progressive science, penetrating
+philosophy, or developing political life. When a nation has once
+entered such a social order it becomes stagnant, its further
+development is arrested. The activity of the higher faculties of the
+mind are in abeyance, but not destroyed. It needs the electric shock
+of contact and conflict with foreign races to startle the race out of
+its fatal repose and start it on new lines of progress by demanding,
+on pain of death, or at least of racial subordination, the
+introduction of new elements into its social order by a renewed
+exercise of the constructive imagination. For without such action of
+the constructive imagination a radical and voluntary modification of
+the dominant social order is impossible.
+
+Old Japan experienced this electric shock and New Japan is the result.
+She is thus a living witness to the inaccuracy of those sweeping
+generalizations as to her inherent deficiency of constructive
+imagination.
+
+It is by no means our contention that Japanese imagination is now as
+widely and profoundly exercised as that of the leading Western
+nations. We merely contend that the exercise of this mental faculty is
+intimately related to the nature of the whole social order; that under
+certain circumstances this important faculty may be so suppressed as
+to give the impression to superficial observers of entire absence, and
+that with a new environment necessitating a new social order, this
+faculty may again be brought into activity.
+
+The inevitable conclusion of the above line of thought is that the
+activity and the manifestation of the higher faculties is so
+intimately related to the nature of the social order as to prevent our
+attributing any particular mental characteristics to a race as its
+inherent and unchangeable nature. The psychic characteristics of a
+race at any given time are the product of the inherited social order.
+To transform those characteristics changes in the social order,
+introduced either from without, or through individuals within the
+race, are alone needful. This completes our specific study of the
+intellectual characteristics of the Japanese. It may seem, as it
+undoubtedly is, quite fragmentary. But we have purposely omitted all
+reference to those characteristics which the Japanese admittedly have
+in common with other races. We have attempted the consideration of
+only the more outstanding characteristics by which they seem to be
+differentiated from other races. We have attempted to show that in so
+far as they are different, the difference is due not to inherent
+psychic nature transmitted by organic heredity, but to the nature of
+the social order, transmitted by social heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+MORAL IDEALS
+
+
+Even a slight study of Japanese history suffices to show that the
+faculty of moral discrimination was highly developed in certain
+directions. In what land have the ideal and practice of loyalty been
+higher? The heroes most lauded by the Japanese to-day are those who
+have proved their loyalty by the sacrifice of their lives. When
+Masashige Kusunoki waged a hopeless war on behalf of one branch of the
+then divided dynasty, and finally preferred to die by his own hand
+rather than endure the sight of a victorious rebel, he is considered
+to have exhibited the highest possible evidence of devoted loyalty.
+One often hears his name in the sermons of Christian preachers as a
+model worthy of all honor. The patriots of the period immediately
+preceding the Meiji era, known as the "Kinnoka," some of whom lost
+their lives because of their devotion to the cause of their then
+impotent Emperor, are accorded the highest honor the nation can give.
+
+The teachings of the Japanese concerning the relations that should
+exist between parents, and children, and, in multitudes of instances,
+their actual conduct also, can hardly be excelled. We can assert that
+they have a keen moral faculty, however further study may compel us to
+pronounce its development and manifestations to be unbalanced.
+
+Better, however, than generalizations as to the ethical ideals of
+Japan, past and present, are actual quotations from her moral
+teachers. The following passages are taken from "A Japanese
+Philosopher," by Dr. Geo. W. Knox, the larger part of the volume
+consisting of a translation of one of the works of Muro Kyuso--who
+lived from 1658 to 1734. It was during his life that the famous
+forty-seven ronin performed their exploit, and Kyu-so gave them the
+name by which they are still remembered, Gi-shi, the "Righteous
+Samurai." The purpose of the work is the defense of the Confucian
+faith and practice, as interpreted by Tei-shu, the philosopher of
+China whom Japan delighted to honor. It discusses among other things
+the fundamental principles of ethics, politics, and religion. Dr. Knox
+has done all earnest Western students of Japanese ethical and
+religious ideas an inestimable service in the production of this work
+in English.
+
+ "The 'Way' of Heaven and Earth is the 'Way' of Gyo and Shun
+ [semi-mythical rulers of ancient China idealized by Confucius]; the
+ 'Way' of Gyo and Shun is the 'Way' of Confucius and Mencius, and
+ the 'Way' of Confucius and Mencius is the 'Way' of Tei-Shu.
+ Forsaking Tei-Shu, we cannot find Confucius and Mencius; forsaking
+ Confucius and Mencius, we cannot find Gyo and Shun; and forsaking
+ Gyo and Shun, we cannot find the 'Way' of Heaven and Earth. Do not
+ trust implicitly an aged scholar; but this I know, and therefore I
+ speak. If I say that which is false, may I be instantly punished by
+ Heaven and Earth."[AX]
+
+ "Recently I was astounded at the words of a philosopher: 'The "Way"
+ comes not from Heaven,' he said, 'it was invented by the sages. Nor
+ is it in accord with nature; it is a mere matter of aesthetics and
+ ornament. Of the five relations, only the conjugal is natural,
+ while loyalty, filial obedience, and the rest were invented by the
+ sages, and have been maintained by their authority ever since.'
+ Surely, among all heresies from ancient days until now, none has
+ been so monstrous as this."[AY]
+
+ "Kujuro, a lad of fifteen years, quarreled with a neighbor's son
+ over a game of _go_, lost his self-control, and before he could be
+ seized, drew his sword and cut the boy down. While the wounded boy
+ was under the surgeon's care, Kujuro was in custody, but he showed
+ no fear, and his words and acts were calm beyond his years. After
+ some days the boy died, and Kujuro was condemned to hara-kiri. The
+ officers in charge gave him a farewell feast the night before he
+ died. He calmly wrote to his mother, took ceremonious farewell of
+ his keeper and all in the house, and then said to the guests: 'I
+ regret to leave you all, and should like to stay and talk till
+ daybreak; but I must not be sleepy when I commit hara-kiri
+ to-morrow, so I'll go to bed at once. Do you stay at your ease and
+ drink the wine.' So he went to his room and fell asleep, all being
+ filled with admiration as they heard him snore. On the morrow he
+ rose early, bathed and dressed himself with care, made all his
+ preparations with perfect calmness, and then, quiet and composed,
+ killed himself. No old, trained, self-possessed samurai could have
+ excelled him. No one who saw it could speak of it for years without
+ tears.... I have told you this that Kujuro may be remembered. It
+ would be shameful were it to be forgotten that so young a boy
+ performed such a deed."[AZ]
+
+ "We are not to cease obeying for the sake of study, nor must we
+ establish the laws before we begin to obey. In obedience we are to
+ establish its Tightness and wrongness."[BA]
+
+ "We learn loyalty and obedience as we are loyal and obedient.
+ To-day I know yesterday's short-comings, and to-morrow I shall know
+ to-day's.... In our occupations we learn whether conduct conforms
+ to right and so advance in the truth by practice."[BB]
+
+ "Besides a few works on history, like the Sankyo Ega Monogatari,
+ which record facts, there are no books worth reading in our
+ literature. For the most part they are sweet stories of the
+ Buddhas, of which one soon wearies. But the evil is traditional,
+ long-continued, and beyond remedy. And other books are full of
+ lust, not even to be mentioned, like the Genji Monogatari, which
+ should never be shown to a woman or a young man. Such books lead to
+ vice. Our nobles call the Genji Monogatari a national treasure,
+ why, I do not know, unless it is that they are intoxicated with its
+ style. That is like plucking the spring blossom unmindful of the
+ autumn's fruit. The book is full of adulteries from beginning to
+ end. Seeing the right, ourselves should become good, seeing the
+ wrong, we should reprove ourselves. The Genji Monogatari, Chokonka,
+ and Seishoki are of a class, vile, mean, comparable to the books of
+ the sages as charcoal to ice, as the stench of decay to the perfume
+ of flowers."[BC]
+
+ "To the samurai, first of all is righteousness; next life, then
+ silver and gold. These last are of value, but some put them in the
+ place of righteousness. But to the samurai even life is as dirt
+ compared to righteousness. Until the middle part of the middle ages
+ customs were comparatively pure, though not really righteous.
+ Corruption has come only during this period of government by the
+ samurai. A maid servant in China was made ill with astonishment
+ when she saw her mistress, soroban (abacus) in hand, arguing prices
+ and values. So was it once with the samurai. They knew nothing of
+ trade, were economical and content."[BD]
+
+ "Even in the days of my youth, young folks never mentioned the
+ price of anything; and their faces reddened if the talk was of
+ women. Their joy was in talk of battles and plans for war. And they
+ studied how parents and lords should be obeyed, and the duty of
+ samurai. But nowadays the young men talk of loss and gain, of
+ dancing girls and harlots and gross pleasures. It is a complete
+ change from fifty or sixty years ago.... Said Aochi to his son:
+ 'There is such a thing as trade. See that you know nothing of it.
+ In trade the profit should always go to the other side.... To be
+ proud of buying high-priced articles cheap is the good fortune of
+ merchants, but should be unknown to samurai. Let it not be even so
+ much as mentioned.... Samurai must have a care of their words, and
+ are not to speak of avarice, cowardice, or lust.'"[BE]
+
+A point of considerable interest to the student of Japanese ethical
+ideals is the fact that the laws of Old Japan combined legal and moral
+maxims. Loyalty and morality were conceived as inseparable. Ieyasu
+(abdicated in 1605, and died in 1616), the founder of the Tokugawa
+Shogunate, left a body of laws to his successors as his last will, in
+accordance with which they should rule the land. These laws were not
+made public, but were kept strictly for the guidance of the rulers.
+They are known as the Testament or "Honorable Will" of Ieyasu, and
+consist of one hundred rules. It will serve our purpose here to quote
+some of those that refer to the moral ideal.
+
+ "No one is to act simply for the gratification of his own desires,
+ but he is to strive to do what may be opposed to his desires,
+ _i.e_., to exercise self-control, in order that everyone may be
+ ready for whatever he may be called upon by his superiors to do."
+
+ "The aged, whether widowers or widows, and orphans, and persons
+ without relations, every one should assist with kindness and
+ liberality; for justice to these four is the root of good
+ government."
+
+ "Respect the gods [or God], keep the heart pure, and be diligent in
+ business during the whole life."
+
+ "When I was young I determined to fight and punish all my own and
+ my ancestors' enemies, and I did punish them; but afterwards, by
+ deep consideration, I found that the way of heaven was to help the
+ people, and not to punish them. Let my successors follow out this
+ policy, or they are not of my line. In this lies the strength of
+ the nation."
+
+ "To insure the Empire peace, the foundation must be laid in the
+ ways of holiness and religion, and if men think they can be
+ educated, and will not remember this, it is as if a man were to go
+ to a forest to catch fish, or thought he could draw water out of
+ fire. They must follow the ways of holiness."
+
+ "Japan is the country of the gods [or God--'Shinkoku']. Therefore,
+ we have among us Confucianism, Buddhism, and Shintoism, and other
+ sects. If we leave our gods [or God] it is like refusing the wages
+ of our master and taking them from another."
+
+ "In regard to dancing women, prostitutes, brothels, night work,
+ and all other improper employments, all these are like caterpillars
+ or locusts in the country. Good men and writers in all times have
+ written against them."
+
+ "It is said that the Mikado, looking down on his people, loves them
+ as a mother does her children. The same may be said of me and my
+ government. This benevolence of mind is called Jin. This Jin may be
+ said to consist of five parts; these are humanity, integrity,
+ courtesy, wisdom, and truth. My mode of government is according to
+ the way of heaven. This I have done to show that I am impartial,
+ and am not assisting my own relatives and friends only."[BF]
+
+These quotations are perhaps sufficient, though one more from a recent
+writer has a peculiar interest of its own, from the fact that the
+purpose of the book from which the quotation is taken was the
+destruction of the tendencies toward approval of Western thought. It
+was published in 1857. The writer, Junzo Ohashi, felt himself to be a
+witness for truth and righteousness, and, in the spirit of the
+doctrine he professed, sealed his faith with a martyr's suffering and
+death, dying (in August, 1868) from the effect of repeated examination
+by torture for a supposed crime, innocence of which he maintained to
+the end. It is interesting to note that two of his granddaughters,
+"with the physics and astronomy of the West, have accepted its
+religion."
+
+ "The West knows not the 'Ri'[BG] of the virtues of the heart which
+ are in all men unchangeably the same. Nor does it know that the
+ body is the organ of the virtues, however careful its analysis of
+ the body may be. The adherents of the Western Philosophy indeed
+ study carefully the outward appearances, but they have no right to
+ steal the honored name of natural philosophy. As when 'Ki' is
+ destroyed, 'Ri' too disappears, so, with their analysis of 'Ki,'
+ they destroy 'Ri,' and thus this learning brings benevolence and
+ righteousness and loyalty and truth to naught. Among the
+ Westerners who from of old have studied details minutely, I have
+ not heard of one who was zealous for the Great Way, for
+ benevolence, righteousness, loyalty, and truth, and who opposed the
+ absurdities of the Lord of Heaven [God].'[BH] 'Let then the child
+ make its parent, Heaven; the retainer, his lord; the wife, her
+ husband; and let each give up life for righteousness. Thus will
+ each serve Heaven. But if we exalt Heaven above parent or lord, we
+ shall come to think that we can serve it though they be disobeyed,
+ and like wolf or tiger shall rejoice to kill them. To such fearful
+ end does the Western learning lead."[BI]
+
+The foregoing quotations reveal the exalted nature of the ideals held
+by at least some of the leaders of ethical thought in Japan. Taken as
+a whole, the moral ideals characterizing the Japanese during their
+entire historical period have been conspicuously communal. The feudal
+structure of society has determined the peculiar character of the
+moral ideal. Loyalty took first rank in the moral scale; the
+subordination of the inferior to the superior has come next, including
+unquestioning obedience of children to parents, and of wife to
+husband. The virtues of a military people have been praised and often
+gloriously exemplified. The possession of these various ideals and
+their attainment in such high degree have given the nation its
+cohesiveness. They make the people a unit. The feudal training under
+local daimyos was fitting the people for the larger life among the
+nations of the world on which they are now entering. Especially is
+their sense of loyalty, as exhibited toward the Emperor, serving them
+well in this period of transition from Oriental to Occidental social
+ideals.
+
+Let us now examine some defective moral standards and observe their
+origin in the social order. Take, for instance, the ideal of
+truthfulness. Every Occidental remarks on the untruthfulness of the
+Japanese. Lies are told without the slightest apparent compunction;
+and when confronted with the charge of lying, the culprit often seems
+to feel little sense of guilt. This trait of character was noted
+repeatedly by the early negotiators with Japan. Townsend Harris and
+Sir Rutherford Alcock made frequent mention of it. When we inquire as
+to the moral ideal and actual instruction concerning truthfulness, we
+are amazed to find how inadequate it was. The inadequacy of the
+teaching, however, was not the primal cause of the characteristic.
+There is a far deeper explanation, yet very simple, namely, the nature
+of the social order. The old social order was feudal, and not
+industrial or commercial. History shows that industrial and commercial
+nations develop the virtue of truthfulness far in advance of military
+nations. For these virtues are essential to them; without them they
+could not long continue to prosper.
+
+So in regard to all the aspects of business morality, it must be
+admitted that, from the Occidental standpoint, Old Japan was very
+deficient. But it must also be stated that new ideals are rapidly
+forming. Buying and selling with a view to making profit, though not
+unknown in Old Japan, was carried on by a despised section of the
+community. Compared with the present, the commercial community of
+feudal times was mean and small. Let us note somewhat in detail the
+attitude of the samurai toward the trader in olden times, and the
+ideals they reveal.
+
+The pursuit of business was considered necessarily degrading, for he
+who handled money was supposed to be covetous. The taking of profit
+was thought to be ignoble, if not deceitful. They who condescended to
+such an occupation were accordingly despised and condemned to the
+lowest place in the social scale. These ideas doubtless helped to make
+business degrading; traders were doubtless sordid and covetous and
+deceitful. In the presence of the samurai they were required to take
+the most abject postures. In addressing him, they must never stand,
+but must touch the ground with their foreheads; while talking with him
+they must remain with their hands on the ground. Even the children of
+samurai always assumed the lordly attitude toward tradesmen. The sons
+of tradesmen might not venture into a quarrel with the sons of
+samurai, for the armed children of the samurai were at liberty to cut
+down and kill the children of the despicable merchant, should they
+insult or even oppose them.
+
+All this, however, has passed away. Commerce is now honored; trade and
+manufacture are recognized not only as laudable, but as the only hope
+of Japan for the future. The new social order is industrial and
+commercial. The entire body of the former samurai, now no longer
+maintaining their distinctive name, are engaged in some form of
+business. Japan is to-day a nation of traders and farmers.
+Accompanying the changes in the social order, new standards as to
+honesty and business integrity are being formulated and enforced.[BJ]
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+MORAL IDEALS
+
+(_Continued_)
+
+
+An Occidental is invariably filled with astonishment on learning that
+a human being, as such, had no value in Old Japan. The explanation
+lies chiefly in the fact that the social order did not rest on the
+inherent worth of the individual. As in all primitive lands and times,
+the individual was as nothing compared to the family and the tribe. As
+time went on, this principle took the form of the supreme worth of the
+higher classes in society. Hence arose the liberty allowed the samurai
+of cutting down, in cold blood, a beggar, a merchant, or a farmer on
+the slightest provocation, or simply for the purpose of testing his
+sword.
+
+Japanese social and religious philosophy had not yet discovered that
+the individual is of infinite worth in himself, apart from all
+considerations of his rank in society. As we have seen, the absence of
+this idea from Japanese civilization resulted in various momentous
+consequences, of which the frequency of murder and suicide is but one.
+
+Another, and this constitutes one of the most striking differences
+between the moral ideals of the East and the West, is the low estimate
+put upon the inherent nature and value of woman, by which was
+determined her social position and the moral relations of the sexes.
+Japan seems to have suffered somewhat in this respect from her
+acceptance of Hindu philosophy. For there seems to be considerable
+unanimity among historians that in primitive times in Japan there
+prevailed a much larger liberty, and consequently a much higher
+regard, for woman than in later ages after Buddhism became powerful.
+With regard, however, to that earlier period of over a thousand years
+ago, it is of little use to speculate. I cannot escape the feeling,
+however, that the condition of woman then has been unconsciously
+idealized, in order to make a better showing in comparison with the
+customs of Western lands. Be that as it may, the notions and ideals
+presented by Buddhism in regard to woman are clear, and clearly
+degrading. She is the source of temptation and sin; she is essentially
+inferior to man in every respect. Before she may hope to enter Nirvana
+she must be born again as man. How widely these extreme views of woman
+have found acceptance in Japan, I am not in a position to state. It is
+my impression, however, that they never received as full acceptance
+here as in India. Nevertheless, as has already been shown,[BK] the
+ideals of what a woman should do and be make it clear that her social
+position for centuries has been relatively low; as wife she is a
+domestic rather than a helpmeet. The "three obediences," to parents,
+to husband, to son, set forth the ideal, although, without doubt, the
+strict application of the third, obedience to one's son after he
+becomes the head of the household, is relatively rare.
+
+What especially strikes the notice of the Occidental is the slight
+amount of social intercourse that prevails to-day between men and
+women. Whenever women enter into the social pleasures of men, they do
+so as professional singers and dancers, they being mere girls and
+unmarried young women; this social intercourse is all but invariably
+accompanied with wine-drinking, even if it does not proceed to further
+licentiousness. The statement that woman is man's plaything has been
+often heard in Japan. Confucian no less than Buddhistic ethics must
+bear the responsibility for putting and keeping woman on so low a
+level. Concubinage, possibly introduced from China, was certainly
+sanctioned by the Chinese classics.
+
+
+The Lei-ki allows an Emperor to have in addition to the Empress three
+consorts, nine maids of high rank, and twenty-seven maids of lower
+rank, all of whom rank as wives, and, beside these, eighty-one other
+females called concubines. Concubinage and polygamy, being thus
+sanctioned by the classics, became an established custom in Japan.
+
+The explanation for this ideal and practice is not far to seek. It
+rests in the communal character of the social order. The family was
+the social unit of Japan. No individual member was of worth except the
+legal head and representative, the father. A striking proof of the
+correctness of this explanation is the fact that even the son is
+obeyed by the father in case he has become "in kio,"[BL] that is, has
+abdicated; the son then becomes the authoritative head. The ideals
+regarding woman then were not unique; they were part of the social
+order, and were determined by the principle of "communalism"
+unregulated by the principle of "individualism." Ideals respecting man
+and woman were equally affected. So long as man is not valued as a
+human being, but solely according to his accidental position in
+society, woman must be regarded in the same way. She is valued first
+as a begetter of offspring, second as a domestic. And when such
+conceptions prevail as to her nature and function in society,
+defective ideals as to morality in the narrower sense of this term,
+leading to and justifying concubinage, easy divorce, and general loose
+morality are necessary consequences.
+
+But this moral or immoral ideal is by no means peculiar to Japan. The
+peculiarity of Japan and the entire Orient is that the social order
+that fostered it lasted so long, before forces arose to modify it.
+But, as will be shown later,[BM] the great problem of human evolution,
+after securing the advantages of "communalism," and the solidification
+of the nation, is that of introducing the principle of individualism
+into the social order. In the Orient the principle of communalism
+gained such headway as effectually to prevent the introduction of this
+new principle. There is, in my opinion, no probability that Japan,
+while maintaining her isolation, would ever have succeeded in making
+any radical change in her social order; her communalism was too
+absolute. She needed the introduction of a new stimulus from without.
+It was providential that this stimulus came from the Anglo-Saxon race,
+with its pronounced principle of "individualism" wrought out so
+completely in social order, in literature, and in government. Had
+Russia or Turkey been the leading influences in starting Japan on her
+new career, it is more than doubtful whether she would have secured
+the principles needful for her healthful moral development.
+
+Justice to the actual ideals and life of Old Japan forbids me to
+leave, without further remark, what was said above regarding the
+ideals of morality in the narrower significance of this word.
+Injunctions that women should be absolutely chaste were frequent and
+stringent. Nothing more could be asked in the line of explicit
+teaching on this theme. And, furthermore, I am persuaded, after
+considerable inquiry, that in Old Japan in the interior towns and
+villages, away from the center of luxury and out of the beaten courses
+of travel, there was purity of moral life that has hardly been
+excelled anywhere. I have repeatedly been assured that if a youth of
+either sex were known to have transgressed the law of chastity, he or
+she would at once be ostracised; and that such transgressions were,
+consequently, exceedingly rare. It is certainly a fact that in the
+vast majority of the interior towns there have never, until recent
+times, been licensed houses of prostitution. Of late there has been a
+marked increase of dancing and singing girls, of whom it is commonly
+said that they are but "secret prostitutes." These may to-day be found
+in almost every town and village, wherever indeed there is a hotel.
+Public as well as secret prostitution has enormously increased during
+the last thirty or forty years.[BN]
+
+Thanks to Mr. Murphy's consecrated energy, the appalling legalized
+and hopeless slavery under which these two classes of girls exist is
+at last coming to light. He has shown, by several test cases, that
+although the national laws are good to look at they are powerless
+because set aside by local police regulations over which the courts
+are powerless! In September, 1900, however, in large part due no doubt
+to the facts made public by him, and backed up by the public press,
+and such leaders of Japan's progressive elements as Shimada Sabur, the
+police regulations were modified, and with amazing results. Whereas,
+previous to that date, the average monthly suicides throughout the
+land among the public prostitutes were between forty and fifty, during
+the two months of September and October there were none! In that same
+period, out of about five thousand prostitutes in the city of Tokyo,
+492 had fled from their brothels and declared their intentions of
+abandoning the "shameful business," as the Japanese laws call it, and
+in consequence a prominent brothel had been compelled to stop the
+business! We are only in the first flush of this new reform as these
+lines are written, so cannot tell what end the whole movement will
+reach. But the conscience of the nation is beginning to waken on this
+matter and we are confident it will never tolerate the old slavery of
+the past, enforced as it was by local laws, local courts, so that
+girls were always kept in debt, and when they fled were seized and
+forced back to the brothels in order to pay their debts!
+
+But in contrast to the undoubted ideal of Old Japan in regard to the
+chastity of women, must be set the equally undoubted fact that the
+sages have very little to say on the subject of chastity for men.
+Indeed there is no word in the Japanese language corresponding to our
+term "chastity" which may be applied equally to men and women. In his
+volume entitled "Kokoro," Mr. Hearn charges the missionaries with the
+assertion that there is no word for chastity in Japanese. "This," he
+says, "is true in the same sense only that we might say that there is
+no word for chastity in the English language, because such words as
+honor, virtue, purity, chastity have been adopted into English from
+other languages."[BO] I doubt if any missionary has made such a
+statement. His further assertion, that "the word most commonly used
+applies to both sexes," would have more force, if Mr. Hearn had stated
+what the word is. His English definition of the term has not enabled
+me to find the Japanese equivalent, although I have discussed this
+question with several Japanese. It is their uniform confession that
+the Japanese language is defective in its terminology on this topic,
+the word with which one may exhort a woman to be chaste being
+inapplicable to a man. The assertion of the missionaries has nothing
+whatever to do with the question as to whether the terms used are pure
+Japanese or imported Chino-Japanese; nor has it any reference to the
+fact that the actual language is deficient in abstract terms. It is
+simply that the term applicable to a woman is not applicable to a man.
+And this in turn proves sharp contrasts between the ideals regarding
+the moral duties of men and of women.
+
+An interesting point in the Japanese moral ideal is the fact that the
+principle of filial obedience was carried to such extremes that even
+prostitution of virtue at the command of the parents, or for the
+support of the parents, was not only permitted but, under special
+conditions, was highly praised. Modern prostitution is rendered
+possible chiefly through the action of this perverted principle.
+Although the sale of daughters for immoral purposes is theoretically
+illegal, yet, in fact, it is of frequent occurrence.
+
+Although concubinage was not directly taught by Confucius, yet it was
+never forbidden by him, and the leaders and rulers of the land have
+lent the custom the authority and justification of their example. As
+we have already seen, the now ruling Emperor has several concubines,
+and all of his children are the offspring of these concubines. In Old
+Japan, therefore, there were two separate ideals of morality for the
+two sexes.
+
+The question may be raised how a social order which required such
+fidelity on the part of the woman could permit such looseness on the
+part of the man, whether married or not. How could the same social
+order produce two moral ideals? The answer is to be found in several
+facts. First, there is the inherent desire of each husband to be the
+sole possessor of his wife's affections. As the stronger of the two,
+he would bring destruction on an unfaithful wife and also on any who
+dared invade his home. Although the woman doubtless has the same
+desire to be the sole possessor of her husband's affection, she has
+not the same power, either to injure a rival or to punish her
+faithless husband. Furthermore, licentiousness in women has a much
+more visibly disastrous effect on her procreative functions than equal
+licentiousness in man. This, too, would serve to beget and maintain
+different ethical standards for the two sexes. Finally, and perhaps no
+less effective than the two preceding, is the fact that the general
+social consciousness held different conceptions in regard to the
+social positions of man and woman. The one was the owner of the
+family, the lord and master; to him belonged the freedom to do as he
+chose. The other was a variety of property, not free in any sense to
+please herself, but to do only as her lord and master required.
+
+An illustration of the first reason given above came to my knowledge
+not long since. Rev. John T. Gulick saw in Kanagawa, in 1862, a man
+going through the streets carrying the bloody heads of a man and a
+woman which he declared to be those of his wife and her seducer, whom
+he had caught and killed in the act of adultery. This act of the
+husband's was in perfect accord with the practices and ideals of the
+time, and not seldom figures in the romances of Old Japan.
+
+The new Civil Code adopted in 1898 furnishes an authoritative
+statement of many of the moral ideals of New Japan. For the following
+summary I am indebted to the _Japan Mail_.[BP] In regard to marriage
+it is noteworthy that the "prohibited degrees of relationship are the
+same as those in England"--including the deceased wife's sister. "The
+minimum age for legal marriage is seventeen in the case of a man and
+fifteen in the case of a woman, and marriage takes effect on
+notification to the registrar, being thus a purely civil contract. As
+to divorce, it is provided that the husband and wife may effect it by
+mutual consent, and its legal recognition takes the form of an entry
+by the registrar, no reference being necessary to the judicial
+authorities. Where mutual consent is not obtained, however, an action
+for divorce must be brought, and here it appears that the rights of
+the woman do not receive the same recognition as those of the man.
+Thus, although adultery committed by the wife constitutes a valid
+ground of divorce, we do not find that adultery on the husband's part
+furnishes a plea to the wife. Ill-treatment or gross insult, such as
+renders living together impracticable, or desertion, constitutes a
+reason for divorce from the wife's point of view." The English
+reviewer here adds that "since no treatment can be worse nor any
+insult grosser than open inconstancy on the part of a husband, it is
+conceivable that a judge might consider that such conduct renders
+living together impracticable. But in the presence of an explicit
+provision with regard to the wife's adultery and in the absence of any
+such provision with regard to the husband's, we doubt whether any
+court of law would exercise discretion in favor of the woman." The
+gross "insult of inconstancy" on the part of the husband is a plea
+that has never yet been recognized by Japanese society. The reviewer
+goes on to say: "One cannot help wishing that the peculiar code of
+morality observed by husbands in this country had received some
+condemnation at the hands of the framers of the new Code. It is
+further laid down that a 'person who is judicially divorced or
+punished because of adultery cannot contract a marriage with the other
+party to the adultery.' If that extended to the husband it would be an
+excellent provision, well calculated to correct one of the worst
+social abuses of this country. Unfortunately, as we have seen, it
+applies apparently to the case of the wife only." The provision for
+divorce by "mutual consent" is striking and ominous. It makes divorce
+a matter of entirely private arrangement, unless one of the parties
+objects. In a land where women are so docile, is it likely that the
+wife would refuse to consent to divorce when her lord and master
+requests or commands her to leave his home? "There are not many women
+in Japan who could refuse to become a party to the 'mutual consent'
+arrangement if they were convinced that they had lost their husband's
+affection and that he could not live comfortably with them." It would
+appear that nothing whatever is said by the Code with reference to
+concubinage, either allowing or forbidding it. Presumably a man may
+have but one legitimate wife, and children by concubines must be
+registered as illegitimate. Nothing, however, on this point seems to
+be stated, although provision is made for the public acknowledgment of
+illegitimate children. "Thus, a father can acknowledge a natural
+child, making what is called a 'shoshi,' and if, subsequent to
+acknowledgment, the father and mother marry, the 'shoshi,' acquires
+the status of a legitimate child, such status reckoning back,
+apparently to the time of birth." Evidently, this provision rests on
+the implication that the mother is an unmarried woman--presumably a
+concubine.
+
+Recent statistics throw a rather lurid light on these provisions of
+the Code. The Imperial Cabinet for some years past has published in
+French and Japanese a resume of national statistics. Those bearing on
+marriage and divorce, in the volume published in 1897, may well be
+given at this point.
+
+ MARRIAGES DIVORCES LEGITIMATE BIRTHS ILLEGITIMATE
+ 1890 325,141 109,088 1,079,121 66,253
+ 1891 325,651 112,411 1,033,653 64,122
+ 1892 349,489 133,498 1,134,665 72,369
+ 1893 358,398 116,775 1,105,119 73,677
+ 1894 361,319 114,436 1,132,897 76,407
+ 1895 365,633 110,838 1,166,254 80,168
+ 1897 395,207 124,075 1,335,125 89,996[BQ]
+
+These authoritative statistics show how divorce is a regular part of
+the Japanese family system, one out of three marriages proving
+abortive.
+
+Morally Japan's weak spot is the relation of the sexes, both before
+and after marriage. Strict monogamy, with the equality of duties of
+husband and wife, is the remedy for the disease.
+
+This slight sketch of the provision of the new Code as it bears on the
+purity of the home, and on the development of noble manhood and
+womanhood, shows that the Code is very defective. It practically
+recognizes and legalizes the present corrupt practices of society, and
+makes no effort to establish higher ideals. Whether anything more
+should be expected of a Code drawn up under the present circumstances
+is, of course, an open question. But the Code reveals the
+astonishingly low condition of the moral standards for the home, one
+of the vital weaknesses of New Japan. The defectiveness of the new
+Code in regard to the matters just considered must be argued, however,
+not from the failure to embody Occidental moral standards, but rather
+from the failure to recognize the actual nature of the social order of
+New Japan. While the Code recognizes the principle of individualism
+and individual rights and worth in all other matters, in regard to the
+home, the most important social unit in the body politic, the Code
+legalizes and perpetuates the old pre-Meiji standards. Individualism
+in the general social order demands its consistent recognition in
+every part.
+
+We cannot conclude our discussion of Japanese ideas as to woman, and
+the consequent results to morality, without referring to the great
+changes which are to-day taking place. Although the new Civil Code has
+not done all that we could ask, we would not ignore what it has
+secured. Says Prof. Gubbins in the excellent introduction to his
+translation of the Codes:
+
+"In no respect has modern progress in Japan made greater strides than
+in the improvement of the position of woman. Though she still labors
+under certain disabilities, a woman can now become a head of a family,
+and exercise authority as such; she can inherit and own property and
+manage it herself; she can exercise parental authority; if single, or
+a widow, she can adopt; she is one of the parties to adoption effected
+by her husband, and her consent, in addition to that of her husband,
+is necessary to the adoption of her child by another person; she can
+act as guardian, or curator, and she has a voice in family councils."
+In all these points the Code marks a great advance, and reveals by
+contrast the legally helpless condition of woman prior to 1898. But in
+certain respects practice is preceding theory. We would call special
+attention to the exalted position and honor publicly accorded to the
+Empress. On more than one historic occasion she has appeared at the
+Emperor's side, a thing unknown in Old Japan. The Imperial Silver
+Wedding (1892) was a great event, unprecedented in the annals of the
+Orient. Commemorative postage stamps were struck off which were first
+used on the auspicious day.
+
+The wedding of the Prince Imperial (in May, 1900) was also an event of
+unique importance in Japanese social and moral history. Never before,
+in the 2600 years claimed by her historians, has an heir to the throne
+been honored by a public wedding. The ceremony was prepared _de novo_
+for the occasion and the pledges were mutual. In the reception that
+followed, the Imperial bride stood beside her Imperial husband. On
+this occasion, too, commemorative postage stamps were issued and first
+used on the auspicious day; the entire land was brilliantly decorated
+with flags and lanterns. Countless congratulatory meetings were held
+throughout the country and thousands of gifts, letters, and
+telegraphic messages expressed the joy and good will of the people.
+
+But the chief significance of these events is the new and exalted
+position accorded to woman and to marriage by the highest personages
+of the land. It is said by some that the ruling Emperor will be the
+last to have concubines. However that may be, woman has already
+attained a rank and marriage an honor unknown in any former age in
+Japan, and still quite unknown in any Oriental land save Japan.
+
+A serious study of Japanese morality should not fail to notice the
+respective parts taken by Buddhism and Confucianism. The contrast is
+so marked. While Confucianism devoted its energies to the inculcation
+of proper conduct, to morality as contrasted to religion, Buddhism
+devoted its energies to the development of a cultus, paying little
+attention to morality. A recent Japanese critic of Buddhism remarks
+that "though Buddhism has a name in the world for the excellence of
+its ethical system, yet there exists no treatise in Japanese which
+sets forth the distinctive features of Buddhist ethics." Buddhist
+literature is chiefly occupied with mythology, metaphysics, and
+eschatology, ethical precepts being interwoven incidentally. The
+critic just quoted states that the pressing need of the times is that
+Buddhist ethics should be disentangled from Buddhist mythology. The
+great moralists of Japan have been Confucianists. Distinctively
+Japanese morality has derived its impulse from Confucian classics. A
+new spirit, however, is abroad among the Buddhist priesthood. Their
+preaching is increasingly ethical. The common people are saying that
+the sermons heard in certain temples are identical with those of
+Christians. How widely this imitation of Christian preaching has
+spread I cannot say; but that Christianity has in any degree been
+imitated is significant, both ethically and sociologically.
+
+Buddhism is not alone, however, in imitating Christianity. A few years
+ago Dr. D.C. Greene attended the preaching services of a modern Shinto
+sect, the "Ten-Ri-Kyo," the Heaven-Reason-Teaching, and was surprised
+to hear almost literal quotations from the "Sermon on the Mount"; the
+source of the sentiment and doctrine was not stated and very likely
+was not known to the speaker. Dr. Greene, who has given this sect
+considerable study, is satisfied that the insistence of its teachers
+on moral conduct is general and genuine. When I visited their
+headquarters, not far from Nara, in 1895, and inquired of one of the
+priests as to the chief points of importance in their teaching, I was
+told that the necessity of leading an honorable and correct life was
+most emphasized. There are reasons for thinking that the Kurozumi sect
+of Shintoism, with its emphasis on morality, is considerably indebted
+to Christianity both for its origin and its doctrine.
+
+It is evident that Christianity is having an influence in Japan, far
+beyond the ranks of its professed believers. It is proving a stimulus
+to the older faiths, stirring them up to an earnestness in moral
+teaching that they never knew in the olden times. It is interesting to
+note that this widespread emphasis on ethical truth comes at a time
+when morality is suffering a wide collapse.
+
+An important point for the sociological student of Japanese moral
+ideals is the fact that her moralists have directed their attention
+chiefly to the conduct of the rulers. The ideal of conduct as stated
+by them is for a samurai. If any action is praised, it is said that it
+becomes a samurai; if condemned, it is on the ground that it is not
+becoming to a samurai. Anything wrong or vulgar is said to be what you
+might expect of the common man. All the terms of the higher morality,
+such as righteousness, duty, benevolence, are expounded from the
+standpoint of a samurai, that is, from the standpoint of loyalty. The
+forty-seven ronin were pronounced "righteous samurai" because they
+avenged the death of their lord, even though in doing so they
+committed deeds that, by themselves, would have been condemned.
+Japanese history and literature proclaim the same ideal. They are
+exclusively concerned with the deeds of the higher class, the court
+and the samurai. The actual condition of the common people in ancient
+times is a matter not easily determined. The morality of the common
+people was more a matter of unreasoning custom than of theory and
+instruction. But these facts are susceptible of interpretation if we
+remember that the interest of the historian and the moralist was not
+in humanity, as such, but in the external features of the social
+order. Their gaze was on the favored few, on the nobility, the court,
+and the samurai.
+
+In closing our discussion of Japanese moral ideals it may not be amiss
+to append the Imperial Edict concerning the moral education of the
+youth of Japan, issued by the Emperor November 31, 1890. This is
+supposed to be the distilled essence of Shinto and Confucian teaching.
+It is to-day the only authoritative teaching on morality given in the
+public schools. It is read with more reverence than is accorded to the
+Bible in England or America. It is considered both holy and inspired.
+
+
+ IMPERIAL EDICT ON MORAL EDUCATION
+
+ "We consider that the Founder of Our Empire and the ancestors of
+ Our Imperial House placed the foundation of the country on a grand
+ and permanent basis, and established their authority on the
+ principles of profound humanity and benevolence.
+
+ "That Our subjects have throughout ages deserved well of the state
+ by their loyalty and piety, and by their harmonious co-operation,
+ is in accordance with the essential character of Our nation; and on
+ these very same principles Our education has been founded.
+
+ "You, Our subjects, be therefore filial to your parents; be
+ affectionate to your brothers; be harmonious as husbands and wives;
+ and be faithful to your friends; conduct yourselves with propriety
+ and carefulness; extend generosity and benevolence toward your
+ neighbors; attend to your studies and follow your pursuits;
+ cultivate your intellects and elevate your morals; advance public
+ benefits and promote social interests; be always found in the good
+ observance of the laws and constitution of the land; display your
+ personal courage and public spirit for the sake of the country
+ whenever required; and thus support the Imperial prerogative,
+ which is coexistent with the Heavens and the Earth.
+
+ "Such conduct on your part will not only strengthen the character
+ of Our good and loyal subjects, but conduce also to the maintenance
+ of the fame of your worthy forefathers.
+
+ "This is the instruction bequeathed by Our ancestors and to be
+ followed by Our subjects; for it is the truth which has guided and
+ guides them in their own affairs and their dealings toward aliens.
+
+ "We hope, therefore, that We and Our subjects will regard these
+ sacred precepts with one and the same heart in order to attain the
+ same ends."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+MORAL PRACTICE
+
+
+One noticeable characteristic of the Japanese is the publicity of the
+life of the individual. He seems to feel no need for privacy. Houses
+are so constructed that privacy is practically impossible. The slight
+paper shoji and fusuma between the small rooms serve only partially to
+shut out peering eyes; they afford no protection from listening ears.
+Moreover, these homes of the middle and lower classes open upon public
+streets, and a passer-by may see much of what is done within. Even the
+desire for privacy seems lacking. The publicity of the private (?)
+baths and sanitary conveniences which the Occidental puts entirely out
+of sight has already been noted.
+
+I once passed through a village and was not a little amazed to see two
+or three bathtubs on the public road, each occupied by one or more
+persons; nor were the occupants children alone, but men and women
+also. Calling at the home of a gentleman in Kyushu with whom I had
+some business, and gaining no notice at the front entrance, I went
+around to the side of the house only to discover the lady of the place
+taking her bath with her children, in a tub quite out of doors, while
+a manservant chopped wood but a few paces distant.
+
+The natural indifference of the Japanese to the exposure of the
+unclothed body is an interesting fact. In the West such indifference
+is rightly considered immodest. In Japan, however, immodesty consists
+entirely in the intention of the heart and does not arise from the
+accident of the moment or the need of the occasion. With a fellow
+missionary, I went some years since to some famous hot springs at the
+foot of Mount Ase, the smoking crater of Kyushu. The spot itself is
+most charming, situated in the center of an old crater, said to be the
+largest in the world. Wearied with a long walk, we were glad to find
+that one of the public bath tubs or tanks, some fifteen by thirty feet
+in size, in a bath house separate from other houses, was quite
+unoccupied; and on inquiry we were told that bathers were few at that
+hour of the day, so that we might go in without fear of disturbance.
+It seems that in such places the tiers of boxes for the clothing on
+either side of the door, are reserved for men and women respectively.
+Ignorant of this custom, we deposited our clothing in the boxes on the
+left hand, and as quickly as we could accommodate ourselves to the
+heat of the water, we got into the great tank. We were scarcely in,
+when a company of six or eight men and women entered the bath house;
+they at once perceived our blunder, but without the slightest
+hesitation, the women as well as the men went over to the men's side
+and proceeded to undress and get into the tank with us, betraying no
+consciousness that aught was amiss. So far as I could see there was
+not the slightest self-consciousness in the entire proceeding. In the
+tank, too, though it is customary for women to occupy the left side,
+on this occasion they mingled freely with the men. I suppose it is
+impossible in England or America to conceive of such a state of
+unconsciousness. Yet it seems to be universal in Japan. It is
+doubtless explained by the custom, practiced from infancy, not only of
+public bathing, but also of living together so unreservedly. The heat
+of the summer and the nature of Japanese clothing, so easily thrown
+off, has accustomed them to the greater or less exposure of the
+person. All these customs have prevented the development of a sense of
+modesty corresponding to that which has developed in the West. Whether
+this familiarity of the sexes is conducive to purity of life or not,
+is a totally different question, on which I do not here enter.
+
+In this connection I can do no better than quote from a popular, and
+in many respects deservedly popular, writer on Japan. Says Mr. Hearn,
+"There is little privacy of any sort in Japan. Among the people,
+indeed, what we term privacy in the Occident does not exist. There are
+only walls of paper dividing the lives of men; there are only sliding
+screens instead of doors; there are neither locks nor bolts to be used
+by day; and whenever the weather permits, the fronts and perhaps even
+the sides of the houses are literally removed, and its interior widely
+opened to the air, the light, and the public gaze. Within a hotel or
+even a common dwelling house, nobody knocks before entering your room;
+there is nothing to knock at except a shoji or a fusuma, which cannot
+be knocked at without being broken. And in this world of paper walls
+and sunshine, nobody is afraid or ashamed of fellow-man or
+fellow-woman. Whatever is done is done after a fashion in public. Your
+personal habits, your idiosyncrasies (if you have any), your foibles,
+your likes and dislikes, your loves and your hates must be known to
+everybody. Neither vices nor virtues can be hidden; there is
+absolutely nowhere to hide them.... There has never been, for the
+common millions at least, even the idea of living unobserved." The
+Japanese language has no term for "privacy," nor is it easy to convey
+the idea to one who does not know the English word. They lack the term
+and the clear idea because they lack the practice.
+
+These facts prove conclusively that the Japanese individual is still a
+gregarious being, and this fact throws light on the moral life of the
+people. It follows of necessity that the individual will conform
+somewhat more closely to the moral standards of the community, than a
+man living in a strong segregarious community.
+
+The converse of this principle is that in a community whose
+individuals are largely segregarious, enjoying privacy, and thus
+liberty of action, variations from the moral standards will be
+frequent and positive transgressions not uncommon. In the one case,
+where "communalism" reigns, moral action is, so to speak, automatic;
+it requires no particular assertion of the individual will to do
+right; conformity to the standard is spontaneous. In the latter case,
+however, where "individualism" is the leading characteristic of the
+community, the acceptance of the moral standards usually requires a
+definite act of the individual will.
+
+The history of Japan is a capital illustration of this principle. The
+recent increase of immorality and crime is universally admitted. The
+usual explanation is that in olden times every slight offense was
+punished with death; the criminal class was thus continuously
+exterminated. Nowadays a robber can ply his trade continuously, though
+interrupted by frequent intervals of imprisonment. In former times,
+once caught, he never could steal again, except in the land of the
+shades. While this explanation has some force, it does not cover the
+ground. A better explanation for the modern increase of lawlessness is
+the change in the social order itself. The new order gives each man
+wider liberty of individual action. He is free to choose his trade and
+his home. Formerly these were determined for him by the accident of
+his birth. His freedom is greater and so, too, are his temptations.
+
+Furthermore, the standards of conduct themselves have been changing.
+Certain acts which would have brought praise and honor if committed
+fifty years ago, such, for instance, as "kataki uchi," revenge, would
+to-day soon land one behind prison doors. In a word, "individualism"
+is beginning to work powerfully on conduct; it has not yet gained the
+ascendancy attained in the West; it is nevertheless abroad in the
+land. The young are especially influenced by it. Taking advantage of
+the liberty it grants, many forms of immorality seem to be on the
+increase. So far as I can gather by inquiry, there has been a great
+collapse not only in honesty, but also in the matter of sexual
+morality. It will hardly do to say dogmatically that the national
+standards of morality have been lowered, but it is beyond question
+that the power of the community to enforce those standards has
+suddenly come to naught by reason of the changing social order.
+Western thought and practice as to the structure of society and the
+freedom of the individual have been emphasized; Spencer and Mill and
+Huxley have been widely read by the educated classes.[BR]
+
+Furthermore, freedom and ease of travel, and liberty to change one's
+residence at will, and thus the ability to escape unpleasant
+restraints, have not a little to do with this collapse in morality.
+Tens of thousands of students in the higher schools are away from
+their homes and are entirely without the steadying support that home
+gives. Then, too, there is a wealth among the common people that was,
+never known in earlier times. Formerly the possession of means was
+limited to a relatively small number of families. To-day we see
+general prosperity, and a consequent tendency to luxury that was
+unknown in any former period.
+
+To be specific, let us note that in feudal times there were some 270
+daimyo living in the utmost luxury. About 1,500,000 samurai were
+dependent on them as retainers, while 30,000,000 people supported
+these sons of luxury. In 1863 the farmers of Japan raised 30,000,000
+koku of rice, and paid 22,000,000 of it to the government as taxes.
+Taxed at the same rate to-day the farmers would have to pay
+280,000,000 yen, whereas the actual payment made by them is only
+38,000,000 yen. "The farmer's manner of life has radically changed. He
+is now prosperous and comfortable, wearing silk where formerly he
+could scarcely afford cotton, and eating rice almost daily, whereas
+formerly he scarcely knew its taste."[BS]
+
+It is stated by the _Japan Mail_ that whereas but "one person out of
+ten was able thirty years ago to afford rice, the nine being content
+to live from year's end to year's end on barley alone or barley mixed
+with a modicum of rice, six persons to-day out of ten count it a
+hardship if they cannot sit down to a square meal of rice daily....
+Rice is no longer a luxury to the mass of the people, but has become a
+necessity."
+
+Financially, then, the farming and middle classes are incomparably
+better off to-day than in olden times. The amount of ready money which
+a man can earn has not a little to do with his morality. If his
+uprightness depends entirely or chiefly on his lack of opportunity to
+do wrong, he will be a moral man so long as he is desperately poor or
+under strict control. But give him the chance to earn ready cash,
+together with the freedom to live where he chooses, and to spend his
+income as he pleases, and he is sure to develop various forms of
+immorality.
+
+I have made a large number of inquiries in regard to the increase or
+decrease of concubinage during the present era. Statistics on this
+subject are not to be had, for concubines are not registered as such
+nor yet as wives. If a concubine lives in the home of the man, she is
+registered as a domestic, and her children should be registered as
+hers, although I am told that they are very often illegally registered
+as his. If she lives in her own home, the concubine still retains the
+name and registry of her own parents. The government takes no notice
+of concubinage, and publishes no statistics in regard to it. The
+children of concubines who live with their own parents are, I am told,
+usually registered as the children of the mother's father; otherwise
+they are registered as illegitimate; statistics, therefore, furnish no
+clew as to the increase or decrease or amount of concubinage and
+illegitimacy, most important questions in Japanese sociology. But my
+informants are unanimous in the assertion that there has been a marked
+increase of concubinage during recent years. The simple and uniform
+explanation given is that multitudes of merchants and officials, and
+even of farmers, can afford to maintain them to-day who formerly were
+unable to do so. The older ideals on this subject were such as to
+allow of concubinage to the extent of one's financial ability.
+
+During the year 1898 the newspapers and leading writers of Japan
+carried on a vigorous discussion concerning concubinage. The _Yorozu
+Choho_ published an inventory of 493 men maintaining separate
+establishments for their concubines, giving not only the names and
+the business of the men, but also the character of the women chosen to
+be concubines. Of these 493 men, 9 are ministers of state and
+ex-ministers; 15 are peers or members of House of Peers; 7 are
+barristers; 3 are learned doctors; the rest are nearly all business
+men. The women were, previous to concubinage, Dancing girls, 183;
+Servants, 69; Prostitutes, 17; "Ordinary young girls," 91; Adopted
+daughters, 15; Widows, 7; Performers, 7; Miscellaneous, 104. In this
+discussion it has been generally admitted that concubinage has
+increased in modern times, and the cause attributed is "general
+looseness of morals." Some of the leading writers maintain that the
+concubinage of former times was largely confined to those who took
+concubines to insure the maintenance of the family line; and also that
+the taking of dancing girls was unknown in olden times.
+
+It is interesting to note in this connection that some of those who
+defend the practice of concubinage appeal to the example of the Old
+Testament, saying that what was good enough for the race that gave to
+Christians the greater part of their Bible is good enough for the
+Japanese. Another point in the discussion interesting to the
+Occidental is the repeated assertion that there is no real difference
+between the East and the West in point of practice; the only
+difference is that whereas in the East all is open and above board, in
+the West extra-marital relations are condemned by popular opinion, and
+are therefore concealed.[BT] A few writers publicly defend
+concubinage; most, however, condemn it vigorously, even though making
+no profession of Christian faith. Of the latter class is Mr. Fukuzawa,
+one of Japan's leaders of public opinion. In his most trenchant
+attack, he asserts that if Japan is to progress in civilization she
+must abandon her system of concubinage. That new standards in regard
+to marital relations are arising in Japan is clear; but they have as
+yet little force; there is no consensus of opinion to give them
+force. He who transgresses them is still recognized as in good
+standing in the community.
+
+Similarly, with respect to business honesty, it is the opinion of all
+with whom I have conversed on the subject that there has been a great
+decline in the honesty of the common people. In feudal days thefts and
+petty dishonesty were practically unknown. To-day these are
+exceedingly common. Foreign merchants complain that it is impossible
+to trust Japanese to carry out verbal or written promises, when the
+conditions of the market change to their disadvantage. It is
+accordingly charged that the Japanese have no sense of honor in
+business matters.
+
+The _Kokumin Shinbun_ (People's News) has recently discussed the
+question of Japanese commercial morality, with the following results:
+It says, first, that goods delivered are not up to sample; secondly,
+that engagements as to time are not kept; thirdly, that business men
+have no adequate appreciation of the permanent interests of business;
+fourthly, that they are without ability to work in common; and
+fifthly, that they do not get to know either their customers or
+themselves.[BU]
+
+"The Japanese consul at Tientsin recently reported to the Government
+that the Chinese have begun to regard Japanese manufactures with
+serious distrust. Merchandise received from Japan, they allege, does
+not correspond with samples, and packing is, in almost all cases,
+miserably unsubstantial. The consul expresses the deepest regret that
+Japanese merchants are disposed to break their faith without regard to
+honor."[BV]
+
+In this connection it may not be amiss to revert to illustrations that
+have come within my own experience. I have already cited instances of
+the apparent duplicity to which deacons and candidates for the
+ministry stoop. I do not believe that either the deacons or the
+candidates had the slightest thought that they were doing anything
+dishonorable. Nor do I for a moment suppose that the President and the
+Trustees of the Doshisha at all realized the gravity of the moral
+aspect of the course they took in diverting the Doshisha from its
+original purposes. They seemed to think that money, once given to the
+Doshisha, might be used without regard to the wishes of the donors. I
+cannot help wondering how much of their thought on this subject is due
+to the custom prevalent in Japan ever since the establishment of
+Buddhist temples and monasteries, of considering property once given
+as irrevocable, so that the individuals who gave it or their heirs,
+have no further interest or right in the property. Large donations in
+Japan have, from time immemorial, been given thus absolutely; the
+giver assumed that the receiver would use it aright; specific
+directions were not added as to the purposes of the gift. American
+benefactors of the Doshisha have given under the standards prevailing
+in the West. The receivers in Japan have accepted these gifts under
+the standards prevailing in the East. Is not this in part the cause of
+the friction that has arisen in recent years over the administration
+of funds and lands and houses held by Japanese for mission purposes?
+
+In this connection, however, I should not fail to refer to the fact
+that the Christians of the Kumiai churches,[BW] in their annual
+meeting (1898), took strong grounds as to the mismanagement of the
+Doshisha by the trustees. The action of the latter in repealing the
+clause of the constitution which declared the six articles of the
+constitution forever unchangeable, and then of striking out the word
+"Christian" in regard to the nature of the moral education to be given
+in all departments of the institution, was characterized as "fu-ho,"
+that is to say, unlawful, unrighteous, or immoral. Resolutions were
+also passed demanding that the trustees should either restore the
+expunged words or else resign and give place to men who would restore
+them and carry out the will of the donors. This act on the part of a
+large majority of the delegates of the churches shows that a standard
+of business morality is arising in Japan that promises well for the
+future.
+
+Before leaving this question, it is important for us to consider how
+widely in lands which have long been both Christian and commercial,
+the standards of truthfulness and business morality are transgressed.
+I for one do not feel disposed to condemn Japanese failure very
+severely, when I think of the failure in Western lands. Then, again,
+when we stop to think of it, is it not a pretty fine line that we draw
+between legitimate and illegitimate profits? What a relative
+distinction this is! Even the Westerner finds difficulty in
+discovering and observing it, especially so when the man with whom he
+is dealing happens to be ignorant of the real value of the goods in
+question. Let us not be too severe, then, in condemning the Japanese,
+even though we must judge them to be deficient in ideals and conduct.
+The explanation for the present state of Japan in regard to business
+morality is neither far to seek nor hard to find. It has nothing
+whatever to do with brain structure or inherent race character, but is
+wholly a matter of changing social order. Feudal communalism has given
+way to individualistic commercialism. The results are inevitable.
+Japan has suddenly entered upon that social order where the
+individuals of the nation are thrown upon their own choice for
+character and life as they have been at no previous time. Old men, as
+well as young, are thrown off their feet by the new temptations into
+which they fall.
+
+One of the strongest arguments in my mind for the necessity of a rapid
+introduction into Japan of the Gospel of Christ, is to be built on
+this fact. An individualistic social order demands an individualizing
+religion. So far as I know, the older religions, with the lofty moral
+teachings which one may freely admit them to have, make no determined
+or even distinct effort to secure the activity of the individual will
+in the adoption of moral ideals. The place both of "conversion" and of
+the public avowal of one's "faith" in the establishment of individual
+character, and the peculiar fitness of a religion having such
+characteristics to a social order in which "individualism" is the
+dominant principle, have not yet been widely recognized by writers on
+sociology. These practices of the Protestant churches are,
+nevertheless, of inestimable value in the upbuilding both of the
+individual and of society. And Japan needs these elements at the
+earliest possible date in order to supplement the new order of society
+which is being established. Without them it is a question whether in
+the long run this new order may not prove a step downward rather than
+upward.
+
+This completes our detailed study of Japanese moral characteristics as
+revealed alike in their ideals and their practices. Let us now seek
+for some general statement of the facts and conclusions thus far
+reached. It has become clear that Japanese moralists have placed the
+emphasis of their ethical thinking on loyalty; subordinated to this
+has been filial piety. These two principles have been the pivotal
+points of Japanese ethics. All other virtues flowed out of them, and
+were intimately dependent upon them. These virtues are especially
+fitted to upbuild and to maintain the feudal order of society. They
+are essentially communal virtues. The first group, depending on and
+growing out of loyalty, was concerned with the maintenance of the
+larger communal unity, formerly the tribe, and now the nation. The
+virtues connected with the second principle--filial piety--were
+concerned with the maintenance of the smaller unit of society--- the
+family. Righteousness and duty, of which much was made by Japanese
+moralists, consisted in the observance of these two ideals.
+
+The morality of individualism was largely wanting. From this lack
+sprang the main defects of the moral ideal and of the actual practice.
+The chief sins of Old Japan--and, as a matter of fact, of all the
+heathen world, as graphically depicted by Mr. Dennis in his great work
+on "Christian Missions and Social Progress"--were sins of omission and
+commission against the individual. The rights of inferiors practically
+received no consideration at the hands of the moralists. In the
+Japanese conception of righteousness and duty, the rights and value of
+the individual, as such, whatever his social standing or sex, were not
+included.
+
+One class of defects in the Japanese moral ideal arose out of the
+feudal order itself, namely, its scorn of trade. Trade had no vital
+relation to the communal unity; hence it found and developed no moral
+sanctions for its guidance. The West conceives of business deceit as
+concerned not only with the integrity of the community, but also with
+the rights of the individual. The moral ideals and sanctions for
+business honesty are therefore doubly strong with us. The old order of
+Japan was in no way dependent for its integrity on business honor and
+honesty, and, as we have seen, individuals, as such, were not thought
+to have inherent rights. Under such conditions, it is difficult to
+conceive how universal moral ideals and sanctions for business
+relations could be developed and maintained.
+
+One further point demands attention. We naturally ask what the grounds
+were on which the ethical ideals were commonly supposed to have
+authority. So far as my knowledge goes, this question received almost
+no consideration by the ordinary person, and but little from the
+moralist. Old Japan was not accustomed to ask "Why?" It accepted
+everything on the authority of the teacher, as children do, and as all
+primitive peoples do. There was little or no thought as to the source
+of the moral ideals or as to the nature or the function of the social
+sanctions. If, as in a few instances, the questions were raised as to
+their authority, the reply ordinarily would be that they had derived
+their teachings from ancient times. And, if the matter were pressed,
+it would be argued that the most ancient times were nearer the
+beginning of men, and, therefore, nearer to Heaven, which decreed that
+all the duties and customs of men; in the final resort, therefore,
+authority would be attributed to Heaven. But such a questioner was
+rare. Moral law was unhesitatingly accepted on the authority of the
+teacher, and no uncomfortable questions were asked. It is easy to see
+that both of the pivotal moral ideals, _i.e._, loyalty and filial
+piety, would support this unquestioning habit of mind, for to ask
+questions as to authority is the beginning both of disloyalty to the
+master and of irreverence to the parents and ancestors.
+
+The whole social order, being one of authority, unquestioned and
+absolute, moral standards were accepted on the ipse dixit of great
+teachers.
+
+In closing, we revert to our ever-recurring question: Are the moral
+characteristics wherein the Japanese differ from other races inherent
+and necessary, as are their physiological characteristics, or are they
+incidental and transient, liable to transformation? Light has been
+thrown on this problem by every illustration adduced. We have seen in
+detail that every characteristically Japanese moral trait is due to
+the nature of her past social order, and is changing With that order.
+Racial moral traits, therefore, are not due to inherent nature, to
+essential character, to brain structure, nor are they transmitted from
+father to son by the mere fact of physical generation. On the
+contrary, the distinguishing ethical characteristics of races, as seen
+in their ethical ideals and their moral conduct, are determined by the
+dominant social order, and vary with it. Ethical characteristics are
+transmitted by association, transmission is therefore not limited to
+the relation of parents and children. The bearing of this fact on the
+problem of the moral transformation of races could be easily shown.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS?
+
+
+Said Prof. Pfleiderer to the writer in the winter of 1897: "I am sorry
+to know that the Japanese are deficient in religious nature." In an
+elaborate article entitled, "Wanted, a Religion," a missionary
+describes the three so-called religions of Japan, Buddhism,
+Confucianism, and Shintoism, and shows to his satisfaction that none
+of these has the essential characteristics of religion.
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell has said that "Sense may not be vital to religion,
+but incense is."[BX] In my judgment, this is the essence of nonsense,
+and is fitted to incense a man's sense.
+
+The impression that the Japanese people are not religious is due to
+various facts. The first is that for about three hundred years the
+intelligence of the nation has been dominated by Confucian thought,
+which rejects active belief in supra-human beings. When asked by his
+pupils as to the gods, Confucius is reported to have said that men
+should respect them, but should have nothing to do with them. The
+tendency of Confucian ethics, accordingly, is to leave the gods
+severely alone, although their existence is not absolutely denied.
+When Confucianism became popular in Japan, the educated part of the
+nation broke away from Buddhism, which, for nearly a thousand years,
+had been universally dominant. To them Buddhism seemed superstitious
+in the extreme. It was not uncommon for them to criticise it severely.
+Muro Kyu-so,[BY] speaking of the immorality that was so common in the
+native literature, says: "Long has Buddhism made Japan to think of
+nothing as important except the worship of Buddha.
+
+So it is that evil customs prevail, and there is no one who does not
+find pleasure in lust.... Take out the lust and Buddhism from that
+book, and the scenery and emotions are well described.... Had he
+learned in the 'Way' of the sages, he had not fallen into
+Buddhism."[BZ] The tendency of all persons trained in Confucian
+classics was toward thoroughgoing skepticism as to divine beings and
+their relation to this world. For this reason, beyond doubt, has
+Western agnosticism found so easy an entrance into Japan. This ready
+acceptance of Western agnosticism is a second fact that has tended to
+give the West the impression referred to above. Complete indifference
+to religion is characteristic of the educated classes of to-day.
+Japanese and foreigners, Christians and non-Christians, alike, unite
+in this opinion. The impression usually conveyed by this statement,
+however, is that agnosticism is a new thing in Japan. In point of
+fact, the old agnosticism is merely re-enforced by the support it
+receives from the agnosticism of the West.
+
+The Occidental impression of Japanese irreligious race nature is
+further strengthened by the frequent assertion of it by writers, some
+of whom at least are neither partial nor ignorant. Prof. Basil H.
+Chamberlain, for instance, repeatedly makes the assertion or
+necessitates the inference. Speaking of pilgrimages, he remarks that
+the Japanese "take their religion lightly." Discussing the general
+question of religion, he speaks of the Japanese as "essentially
+undevotional," but he guards against the inference that they are
+therefore specially immoral. Yet, in the same paragraph, he adds,
+"Though they pray little and make light of supernatural dogma, the
+religion of the family binds them down in truly social bonds."
+Percival Lowell also, as we have seen, makes light of Japanese
+religion.
+
+This conclusion of foreigner observers is rendered the more convincing
+to the average reader when he learns that such an influential man as
+Mr. Fukuzawa declares that "religion is like tea," it serves a social
+end, and nothing more; and that Mr. Hiroyuki Kato, until recently
+president of the Imperial University, and later Minister of Education,
+states that "Religion depends on fear." Marquis Ito, Japan's most
+illustrious statesman, is reported to have said: "I regard religion
+itself as quite unnecessary for a nation's life; science is far above
+superstition, and what is religion--Buddhism or Christianity--but
+superstition, and therefore a possible source of weakness to a nation?
+I do not regret the tendency to free thought and atheism, which is
+almost universal in Japan, because I do not regard it as a source of
+danger to the community."[CA]
+
+If leaders of national thought have such conceptions as to the nature
+and origin of religion, is it strange that the rank and file of
+educated people should have little regard for it, or that foreigners
+generally should believe the Japanese race to be essentially
+non-religious?
+
+But before we accept this conclusion, various considerations demand
+our notice. Although the conception of religion held by the eminent
+Japanese gentlemen just quoted is not accepted by the writer as
+correct, yet, even on their own definitions, a study of Japanese
+superstitions and religious ceremonies would easily prove the people
+as a whole to be exceedingly religious. Never had a nation so many
+gods. It has been indeed "the country of the gods." Their temples and
+shrines have been innumerable. Priests have abounded and worshipers
+swarmed. For worship, however indiscriminate and thoughtless, is
+evidence of religious nature.
+
+Furthermore, utterances like those quoted above in regard to the
+nature and function of religion, are frequently on the lips of
+Westerners also, multitudes of whom have exceedingly shallow
+conceptions of the real nature of religion or the part it plays in the
+development of society and of the individual. But we do not pronounce
+the West irreligious because of such utterances. We must not judge the
+religious many by the irreligious few.
+
+Again, are they competent judges who say the Japanese are
+non-religious? Can a man who scorns religion himself, who at least
+reveals no appreciation of its real nature by his own heart
+experience, judge fairly of the religious nature of the people? Still
+further, the religious phenomena of a people may change from age to
+age. In asking, then, whether a people is religious by nature, we must
+study its entire religious history, and not merely a single period of
+it. The life of modern Japan has been rudely shocked by the sudden
+accession of much new intellectual light. The contents of religion
+depends on the intellect; sudden and widespread accession of knowledge
+always discredits the older forms of religious expression. An
+undeveloped religion, still bound up with polytheistic symbolism, with
+its charms and mementoes, inevitably suffers severely at the hands of
+exact modern science. For the educated minority, especially, the
+inevitable reaction is to complete skepticism, to apparent irreligion.
+For the time being, religion itself may appear to have been
+discredited. In an advancing age, prophets of religious dissolution
+are abundant. Such prophecies, with reference to Christianity, have
+been frequent, and are not unheard even now. Particular beliefs and
+practices of religion have indeed changed and passed away, even in
+Christianity. But the essentially religious nature of man has
+re-asserted itself in every case, and the outward expressions of that
+nature have thereby only become freer from elements of error and
+superstition. Exactly this is taking place in Japan to-day. The
+apparent irreligion of to-day is the groundwork of the purer religion
+of to-morrow.
+
+If the Japanese are emotional and sentimental, we should expect them
+to be, perhaps more than most peoples, religious. This expectation is
+not disappointed by a study of their history. However imperfect as a
+religion we must pronounce original Shinto to have been, consisting of
+little more than a cultus and a theogony, yet even with this alone the
+Japanese should be pronounced a religious people. The universality of
+the respect and adoration, not to say love, bestowed throughout the
+ages of history on the "Kami" (the multitudinous Gods of Shintoism),
+is a standing witness to the depth of the religious feeling in the
+Japanese heart. True, it is associated with the sentiments of love of
+ancestors and country, with filial piety and loyalty; but these, so
+far from lowering the religion, make it more truly religious?
+
+Unending lines of pilgrims, visiting noted Shinto temples and climbing
+sacred mountain peaks, arrest the attention of every thoughtful
+student of Japan. These pilgrims are numbered by the hundreds of
+thousands every year. The visitors to the great shrine at Kizuki of
+Izumo number about 250,000 annually. "The more prosperous the season,
+the larger the number of pilgrims. It rarely falls below two hundred
+thousand." In his "Occult Japan," Mr. Lowell has given us an
+interesting account of the "pilgrim clubs," The largest known to him
+numbered about twelve thousand men, but he thinks they average from
+one hundred to about five hundred persons each. The number of yearly
+visitors to the Shinto shrines at Ise is estimated at half a million,
+and ten thousand pilgrims climb Mt. Fuji every summer. The number of
+pilgrims to Kompira, in Shikoku, is incredibly large; according to the
+count taken during the first half of 1898, the first ever taken, the
+average for six months was 2500 each day; at this rate the number for
+the year is nearly 900,000. The highest for a single day was over
+12,000. These figures were given me by the chief official of this
+district. The highest mountain in Shikoku, Ishidzuchi San, some six
+thousand feet in height, is said to be ascended by ten thousand
+pilgrims each summer. These pilgrims eat little or nothing at hotels,
+depending rather on what they carry until they return from their
+arduous three days' climb; nor do they take any prolonged rest until
+they are on the homeward way. The reason for this is that the climb is
+supposed to be a test of the heart; if the pilgrim fail to reach the
+summit, the inference is that he is at fault, and that the god does
+not favor him. They who offer their prayers from the summit are
+supposed to be assured of having them answered.
+
+But beside these greater pilgranages to mountain summits and national
+shrines, innumerable lesser ones are made. Each district has a more or
+less extended circuit of its own. In Shikoku there is a round known as
+the "Hachi-Ju-hakka sho mairi," or "The Pilgrimage to the 88 Places,"
+supposed to be the round once made by Kobo Daishi (A.D. 774-834), the
+founder of the Shinton sect of Buddhism. The number of pilgrims who
+make this round is exceedingly large, since it is a favorite circuit
+for the people not only of Shikoku, but also of central and western
+Japan. Many of the pilgrims wear on the back, just below the neck, a
+pair of curious miniature "waraji" or straw sandals, because Kobo
+Daishi carried a real pair along with him on his journey. I never go
+to Ishite Temple (just out of Matsuyama), one of the eighty-eight
+places of the circuit, without seeing some of these pilgrims. But this
+must suffice. The pilgrim habit of the Japanese is a strong proof of
+widespread religious enthusiasm, and throws much light on the
+religious nature of the people. There seems to be reason for thinking
+that the custom existed in Japan even before the introduction of
+Buddhism. If this is correct, it bears powerful testimony to the
+inherently religious nature of the Japanese race.
+
+The charge has been made that these pilgrimages are mere pleasure
+excursions. Mr. Lowell says, facetiously, that "They are peripatetic
+picnic parties, faintly flavored with piety; just a sufficient
+suspicion of it to render them acceptable to the easy-going gods."
+Beneath this light alliterative style, which delights the literary
+reader, do we find the truth? To me it seems like a slur on the
+pilgrims, evidently due to Mr. Lowell's idea that a genuine religious
+feeling must be gloomy and solemn. Joy may seem to him incompatible
+with heartfelt religion and aspiration. That these pilgrims lack the
+religious aspiration characteristic of highly developed Christians of
+the West, is, of course, true; but that they have a certain type of
+religious aspiration is equally indisputable. They have definite and
+strong ideas as to the advantage of prayer at the various shrines;
+they confidently believe that their welfare, both in this world and
+the next, will be vitally affected by such pilgrimages and such a
+faithful worship. It is customary for pilgrims, who make extended
+journeys, to carry what may be called a passbook, in which seals are
+placed by the officials of each shrine. This is evidence to friends
+and to the pilgrim himself, in after years, of the reality of his long
+and tedious pilgrimage. Beggars before these shrines are apt to
+display these passbooks as an evidence of their worthiness and need.
+For many a pilgrim supports himself, during his pilgrimage, entirely
+by begging.
+
+Pilgrims also buy from each shrine of note some charm, "o mamori,"
+"honorable preserver," and "o fuda," "honorable ticket," which to them
+are exceedingly precious. There is hardly a house in Japan but has
+some, often many, of these charms, either nailed on the front door or
+placed on the god-shelf. I have seen a score nailed one above another.
+In some cases the year-names are still legible, and show considerable
+age. The sale of charms is a source of no little revenue to the
+temples, in some cases amounting to thousands of yen annually. We may
+smile at the ignorance and superstition which these facts reveal, but,
+as I already remarked, these are external features, the material
+expression or clothing, so to speak, of the inner life. Their
+particular form is due to deficient intellectual development. I do not
+defend them; I merely maintain that their existence shows conclusively
+the possession by the people at large of a real religious emotion and
+purpose. If so, they, are not to be sneered at, although the mood of
+the average pilgrim may be cheerful, and the ordinary pilgrimage may
+have the aspect of a "peripatetic picnic, faintly flavored with
+piety." The outside observer, such as the foreigner of necessity is,
+is quick to detect the picnic quality, but he cannot so easily discern
+the religious significance or the inner thoughts and emotions of the
+pilgrims. The former is discernible at a glance, without knowledge of
+the Japanese language or sympathy with the religious heart; the latter
+can be discovered only by him who intimately understands the people,
+their language and their religion.
+
+If religion were necessarily gloomy, festivals and merry-making would
+be valid proof of Japanese religious deficiency. But such is not the
+case. Primitive religions, like primitive people, are artless and
+simple in religious joy as in all the aspects of their life. Developed
+races increasingly discover the seriousness of living, and become
+correspondingly reflective, if not positively gloomy. Religion shares
+this transformation. But those religions in which salvation is a
+prominent idea, and whose nature is such as to satisfy at once the
+head and the heart, restore joyousness as a necessary consequence.
+While certain aspects of Christianity certainly have a gloomy
+look,--which its critics are much disposed to exaggerate, and then to
+condemn,--yet Christianity at heart is a religion of profound joy, and
+this feature shows itself in such universal festivals as Christmas and
+Easter. Even though the Japanese popular religious life showed itself
+exclusively in festivals and on occasions of joy, therefore, that
+would not prove them to be inherently lacking in religious nature.
+
+But there is another set of phenomena, even more impressive to the
+candid and sympathetic student. It is the presence in every home of
+the "Butsu-dan," or Buddha shelf, and the "Kami-dana," or God shelf.
+The former is Buddhist, and the latter Shinto. Exclusive Shintoists,
+who are rare, have the latter alone. Where both are found, the
+"I-hai," ancestral memorial tablets, are placed on the "Butsu-dan";
+otherwise they are placed on the "Kami-dana." The Kami-dana are always
+quite simple, as are all Shinto charms and utensils. The Butsu-dan are
+usually elaborate and beautiful, and sometimes large and costly. The
+universality of these tokens of family religion, and the constant and
+loving care bestowed upon them, are striking testimony to the
+universality of the religion in Japan. The pathos of life is often
+revealed by the faithful devotion of the mother to these silent
+representatives of divine beings and departed ancestors or children. I
+have no hesitation in saying that, so far as external appearances go,
+the average home in Japan is far more religious than the average home
+in enlightened England or America, especially when compared with such
+as have no family worship. There may be a genuine religious life in
+these Western homes, but it does not appear to the casual visitor. Yet
+no casual visitor can enter a Japanese home, without seeing at once
+the evidences of some sort, at least, of religious life.
+
+It is impossible for me to believe, as many assert, that all is mere
+custom and hollow form, without any kernel of meaning or sincerity.
+Customs may outlast beliefs for a time, and this is particularly the
+case with religious customs; for the form is so often taken to involve
+the very essence of the reality. But customs which have lost all
+significance, and all belief, inevitably dwindle and fade away, even
+if not suddenly rejected; they remain them; they leave their trace
+indeed, but so faintly that only the student of primitive customs can
+detect them and recognize their original nature and purpose. The
+Butsu-dan and Kami-dana do not belong to this order of beliefs. The
+average home of Japan would feel itself desecrated were these to be
+forcibly removed. The piety of the home centers, in large measure,
+about these expressions of the religious heart. Their practical
+universality is a significant witness to the possession by the people
+at large of a religious nature.
+
+If it is fair to argue that the Christian religion has a vital hold on
+the Western peoples because of the cathedrals and churches to be found
+throughout the length and breadth of Christendom, a similar argument
+applies to Japan and the hold of the religions of this land upon its
+people. For over a thousand years the external manifestations of
+religion in architecture have been elaborate. Temples of enormous
+size, comparing not unfavorably with the cathedrals of Europe as
+regards the cost of erection, are to be found in all parts of the
+land. Immense temple bells of bronze, colossal statues of Buddha, and
+lesser ones of saints and worthies innumerable, bear witness to the
+lavish use of wealth in the expression of religious devotion. It is
+sometimes said that Buddhism is moribund in Japan. It is seriously
+asserted that its temples are falling into decay. This is no more true
+of the temples of Buddhism in Japan, than of the cathedrals Of
+Christendom. Local causes greatly affect the prosperity of the various
+temples. Some are falling into decay, but others are being repaired,
+and new ones are being built. No one can have visited any shrine of
+note without observing the large number of signboards along either
+side of the main approach, on which are written the sums contributed
+for the building or repairing of the temple. These gifts are often
+munificent, single gifts sometimes reaching the sum of a thousand yen;
+I have noticed a few exceeding this amount. The total number of these
+temples and shrines throughout the country is amazing. According to
+government statistics, in 1894 the Buddhist temples numbered 71,831;
+and the Shinto temples and shrines which have received official
+registration reached the vast number of 190,803. The largest temple in
+Japan, costing several million dollars, the Nishihongwanji in Kyoto,
+has been built during the past decade. Considering the general poverty
+of the nation, the proportion of gifts made for the erection and
+maintenance of these temples and shrines is a striking testimony to
+the reality of some sort of religious zeal. That it rests entirely on
+form and meaningless rites, is incredible.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+SOME RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA
+
+
+Without doubt, many traits are attributed to the Japanese by the
+casual observer or captious critic, through lack of ability to read
+between the lines. We have already seen how the stoical element of
+Japanese character serves to conceal from the sociologist the
+emotional nature of the people. If a Japanese conceals his ordinary
+emotions, much more does he refrain from public exhibition of his
+deeper religious aspirations. Although he may feel profoundly, his
+face and manner seldom reveal it. When torn with grief over the loss
+of a parent or son, he will tell you of his loss with smiles, if not
+with actual laughter. "The Japanese smile" has betrayed the solemn
+foreigner into many an error of individual and racial character
+interpretation. Particularly frequent have been such errors in matters
+of religion.
+
+Although the light and joyous, "smiling" aspect of Japanese religious
+life is prominent, the careful observer will come incidentally and
+unexpectedly on many signs of an opposite nature, if he mingle
+intimately with the people. Japan has its sorrows and its tragedies,
+no less than other lands. These have their part in determining
+religious phenomena.
+
+The student who takes his stand at a popular shrine and watches the
+worshipers come and go will be rewarded by the growing conviction
+that, although many are manifestly ceremonialists, others are clearly
+subjects of profound feeling. See that mother leading her toddling
+child to the image of Binzuru, the god of healing, and teaching it to
+rub the eyes and face of the god and then its own eyes and face. See
+that pilgrim before a bare shrine repeating in rapt devotion the
+prayer he has known from his childhood, and in virtue of which he has
+already received numberless blessings. Behold that leper pleading with
+merciful Kwannon of the thousand hands to heal his disease. Hear that
+pitiful wail of a score of fox-possessed victims for deliverance from
+their oppressor. Watch that tearful maiden performing the hundred
+circuits of the temple while she prays for a specific blessing for
+herself or some loved one. Observe that merchant solemnly worshiping
+the god of the sea, with offering of rice and wine. Count those
+hundreds of votive pictures, thanksgiving remembrances of the sick who
+have been healed, in answer, as they firmly believe, to their prayers
+to the god of this particular shrine. These are not imaginary cases.
+The writer has seen these and scores more like them. Here is a serious
+side to Japanese religious life easily overlooked by a casual or
+unsympathetic observer.
+
+In addition to these simpler religious phenomena, we find in Japan, as
+in other lands, the practice of ecstatic union with the deity. In
+Shinto it is called "Kami-oroshi," the bringing down of the gods. It
+is doubtless some form of hypnotic trance, yet the popular
+interpretation of the phenomenon is that of divine possession.
+
+Among Buddhists, the practice of ecstasy takes a different form. The
+aim is to attain absolute vacuity of mind and thus complete union with
+the Absolute. When attained, the soul becomes conscious of blissful
+superiority to all the concerns of this mundane life, a foretaste of
+the Nirvana awaiting those who shall attain to Buddhahood. The actual
+attainment of this experience is practically limited to the
+priesthood, who alone have the time and freedom from the cares of the
+world needful for its practice. For it is induced only by long and
+profound "meditation." Especially is this experience the desire of the
+Zen sect, which makes it a leading aim, taking its name "zen" (to sit)
+from this practice. To sit in religious abstraction is the height of
+religious bliss.
+
+The practical business man of the West may perhaps find some
+difficulty in seeing anything particularly religious in ecstasy or
+mental vacuity. But if I mistake not, this religious phenomenon of the
+Orient does not differ in essence from the mystical religious
+experience so common in the middle and subsequent ages in Europe, and
+represented to-day by mystical Christians. Indeed, some of the finest
+religious souls of Western lands have been mystics. Mystic
+Christianity finds ready acceptance with certain of the Japanese.
+
+The critical reader may perhaps admit, in view of the facts thus far
+presented, that the ignorant millions have some degree of religious
+feeling and yet, in view of the apparently irreligious life of the
+educated, he may still feel that the religious nature of the race is
+essentially shallow. He may feel that as soon as a Japanese is lifted
+out of the superstitious beliefs of the past, he is freed from all
+religious ideas and aspirations. I admit at once that there seems to
+be some ground for such an assertion. Yet as I study the character of
+the samurai of the Tokugawa period, who alone may be called the
+irreligious of the olden times, I see good reasons for holding that,
+though rejecting Buddhism, they were religious at heart. They
+developed little or no religious ceremonial to replace that of
+Buddhism, yet there were indications that the religious life still
+remained. Intellectual and moral growth rendered it impossible for
+earnest and honest men to accept the old religious expressions. They
+revolted from religious forms, rather than from religion, and the
+revolt resulted not in deeper superstitions and a poorer life, but in
+a life richer in thought and noble endeavor. Muro Kyu-so, the
+"Japanese Philosopher" to whom we have referred more than once,
+rejected Buddhism, as we have already seen. The high quality of his
+moral teachings we have also noticed. Yet he had no idea that he was
+"religious." Those who reject Buddhism often use the term
+"Shukyo-kusai," "stinking religion." For them religion is synonymous
+with corrupt and superstitious Buddhism. To have told Muro that he was
+religious would doubtless have offended him, but a few quotations
+should satisfy anyone that at heart he was religious in the best sense
+of the term.
+
+"Consider all of you. Whence is fortune? From Heaven. Even the world
+says, Fortune is in Heaven. So then there is no resource save prayer
+to Heaven. Let us then ask: what does Heaven hate, and what does
+Heaven love? It loves benevolence and hates malevolence. It loves
+truth and hates untruth.... That which in Heaven begets all things, in
+man is called love. So doubt not that Heaven loves benevolence and
+hates its opposite. So too is it with truth. For countless ages sun
+and moon and stars constantly revolve and we make calendars without
+mistake. Nothing is more certain. It is the very truth of the
+universe.... I have noticed prayers for good luck, brought year by
+year from famous temples and hills, decorating the entrances to the
+homes of famous samurai. But none the less they have been killed or
+punished, or their line has been destroyed and house extinguished. Or
+at least to many, shame and disgrace have come. They have not learned
+fortune, but foolishly depend on prayers and charms. Confucius said:
+'When punished by Heaven there is no place for prayer.' Women of
+course follow the temples and trust in charms, but not so should men.
+Alas! Now all are astray, those who should be teachers, the samurai
+and those higher still" (pp. 63-5). "Sin is the source of pain and
+righteousness of happiness. This is the settled law. The teaching of
+the sages and the conduct of superior men is determined by principles
+and the result is left to Heaven. Still, we do not obey in the hope of
+happiness, nor do we forbear to sin from fear. Not with this meaning
+did Confucius and Mencius teach that happiness is in virtue and pain
+in sin. But the 'way' is the law of man. It is said, 'The way of
+Heaven blesses virtue and curses sin.' That is intended for the
+ignorant multitude. Yet it is not like the Buddhist 'hoben' (pious
+device), for it is the determined truth" (p. 66). "Heaven is forever
+and is not to be understood at once, like the promises of men.
+Shortsighted men consider its ways and decide that there is no reward
+for virtue or vice. So they doubt when the good are virtuous and fear
+not when the wicked sin. They do not know that there is no victory
+against Heaven when it decrees" (p. 67). "Reason comes from Heaven,
+and is in men.... The philosopher knows the truth as the drinker knows
+the taste of _sake_ and the abstainer the taste of sweets. How shall
+he forget it? How shall he fall into error? Lying down, getting up,
+moving, resting, all is well. In peace, in trouble, in death, in joy,
+in sorrow, all is well. Never for a moment will he leave this 'way.'
+This is to know it in ourselves" (p. 71).
+
+One day, five or six students remained after the lecture to ask Kyu-so
+about his view as to the gods, stating their own dissatisfaction with
+the fantastic interpretations given to the term "Shinto" by the native
+scholars. Making some quotations from the Chinese classics, he went on
+to say for himself:
+
+"I cannot accept that which is popularly called Shinto.... I do not
+profess to understand the profound reason of the deities, but in
+outline this is my idea: The Doctrine of the Mean speaks of the
+'virtue of the Gods' and Shu-shi explains this word 'virtue' to mean
+the 'heart and its revelation.' Its meaning is thus stated in the
+Saden: 'God is pure intelligence and justice.' Now all know that God
+is just, but do not know that he is intelligent. But there is no such
+intelligence elsewhere as God's. Man hears by the ear and where the
+ear is not he hears not ...; man sees with his eyes, and where they
+are not he sees not ...; with his heart man thinks and the swiftest
+thought takes time. But God uses neither ear nor eye, nor does he pass
+over in thought. Directly he feels, and directly does he respond....
+Is not this the divinity of Heaven and Earth? So the Doctrine of the
+Mean says: 'Looked for it cannot be seen, listened to it cannot be
+heard. It enters into all things. There is nothing without it.' ...
+'Everywhere, everywhere, on the right and on the left.' This is the
+revealing of God, the truth not to be concealed. Think not that God is
+distant, but seek him in the heart, for the heart is the House of God.
+Where there is no obstacle of lust, there is communion of one spirit
+with the God of Heaven and Earth.... And now for the application.
+Examine yourselves, make the truth of the heart the foundation,
+increase in learning and at last you will attain. Then will you know
+the truth of what I speak" (pp. 50-52).
+
+In the above passage Dr. Knox has translated the term "Shin," the
+Chinese ideograph for the Japanese word "Kami," by the English
+singular, God. This lends to the passage a fullness of monotheistic
+expression which the original hardly, if at all, justifies. The
+originals are indefinite as to number and might with equal truth be
+translated "gods," as Dr. Knox suggests himself in a footnote.
+
+These and similar passages are of great interest to the student of
+Japanese religious development. They should be made much of by
+Christian preachers and missionaries. Such writers and thinkers as
+Muro evidently was might not improperly be called the pre-Christian
+Christians of Japan. They prepared the way for the coming of more
+light on these subjects. Japanese Christian apologists should collect
+such utterances from her wise men of old, and by them lead the nation
+to an appreciation of the truths which they suggest and for which they
+so fitly prepare the way. Scattered as they now are, and seldom read
+by the people, they lie as precious gems imbedded in the hills, or as
+seed safely stored. They can bear no harvest till they are sown in the
+soil and allowed to spring up and grow.
+
+The more I have pondered the implications of these and similar
+passages, the more clear has it become that their authors were
+essentially religious men. Their revolt from "religion" did not spring
+from an irreligious motive, but from a deeper religious insight than
+was prevalent among Buddhist believers. The irrational and often
+immoral nature of many of the current religious expressions and
+ceremonials and beliefs became obnoxious to the thinking classes, and
+were accordingly rejected. The essence of religion, however, was not
+rejected. They tore off the accumulated husks of externalism, but kept
+intact the real kernel of religion.
+
+The case for the religious nature of modern, educated Japan is not so
+simple. Irreligious it certainly appears. Yet it, too, is not so
+irreligious as perhaps the Occidental thinks. Though immoral, a
+Japanese may still be a filial son and a loyal subject,
+characteristics which have religious value in Japan, Old and New. It
+would not be difficult to prove that many a modern Japanese writer who
+proclaims his rejection of religion--calling all religion but
+superstition and ceremony--is nevertheless a religious man at heart.
+The religions he knows are too superstitious and senseless to satisfy
+the demands of his intellectually developed religious nature. He does
+not recognize that his rejection of what he calls "religion" is a real
+manifestation of his religious nature rather than the reverse.
+
+The widespread irreligious phenomena of New Japan are, therefore, not
+difficult of explanation, when viewed in the light of two thousand
+years of Japanese religious history. They cannot be attributed to a
+deficient racial endowment of religious nature. They are a part of
+nineteenth-century life by no means limited to Japan. If the
+Anglo-Saxon race is not to be pronounced inherently irreligious,
+despite the fact that irreligious phenomena and individuals are in
+constant evidence the world over, neither can New Japan be pronounced
+irreligious for the same reason. The irreligion now so rampant is a
+recent phenomenon in Japan. It may not immediately pass away, but it
+must eventually. Religion freed from superstition and ceremonialism,
+resting in reality, identifying moral and scientific with religious
+truth, is already finding hearty support from many of Japan's educated
+men. If appeal is made under the right conditions, the Japanese
+manifest no lack of a genuine religious nature. That they seem to be
+deficient in the sense of reverence is held by some to be proof
+presumptive of a deficient religious nature. A few illustrations will
+make clear what the critic means and will guide us to an
+interpretation of the phenomena. Occidentals are accustomed to
+consider a religious service as a time of solemn quiet, for we feel
+ourselves in a special sense in the presence of God; His majesty and
+glory are realities to the believing worshiper. But much occurs during
+a Christian service in Japanese churches which would seem to indicate
+a lack of this feeling. It is by no means uncommon for little children
+to run about without restraint during the service, for mothers to
+nurse their infants, and for adults to converse with each other in an
+undertone, though not so low but that the sound of the conversation
+may be heard by all. I know a deacon occupying a front mat in church
+who spends a large part of service time during the first two sabbaths
+of each month in making out the receipts of the monthly contributions
+and distributing them among the members. His apparent supposition is
+that he disturbs no one (and it is amazing how undisturbed the rest of
+the congregation is), but also that he is in no way interfering with
+the solemnity or value of the service. The freedom, too, with which
+individuals come and go during the service is in marked contrast to
+our custom. From our standpoint, there is lack of reverence.
+
+I recently attended a young men's meeting at which the places for each
+were assigned by written quotations, from the Bible, one-half of which
+was given to the individual and the other half placed at the seat. One
+quotation so used was the text, "The birds of the air have nests, but
+the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head." It would hardly seem
+as if earnest Christians could have made such use of this text. Some
+months ago at a social gathering held in connection with the annual
+meeting of the churches of Shikoku, one of the comic performances
+consisted in the effort on the part of three old men to sing through
+to the end without a break-down the song which to us is so sacred,
+"Rock of Ages, cleft for me." Only one man succeeded, the others going
+through a course of quavers and breaks which was exceedingly
+laughable, but absolutely irreverent. The lack of reverence which has
+sometimes characterized the social side of the Christmas services in
+Japan has been the source of frequent regret to the missionaries. In a
+social gathering of earnest young Christians recently, a game
+demanding forfeits was played; these consisted of the recitation of
+familiar texts from the Bible. There certainly seems to be a lack of
+the sense of the fitness of things.
+
+But the question is, are these practices due to an inherent
+deficiency of reverence, arising from the character of the Japanese
+nature, or are they due rather to the religious history of the past
+and the conditions of the present? That the latter seems to me the
+correct view I need hardly state. The fact that the Japanese are an
+emotional people renders it probable, a priori, that under suitable
+conditions they would be especially subject to the emotion of
+reverence. And when we look at their history, and observe the actual
+reverence paid by the multitudes to the rulers, and by the
+superstitious worshipers to the "Kami" and "Hotoke," it becomes
+evident that the apparent irreverence in the Christian churches must
+be due to peculiar conditions. Reverence is a subtle feeling; it
+depends on the nature of the ideas that possess the mind and heart.
+From the very nature of the case, Japanese Christians cannot have the
+same set of associations clustering around the church, the service,
+the Bible, or any of the Christian institutions, as the Occidental who
+has been reared from childhood among them, and who has derived his
+spiritual nourishment from them. All the wealth of nineteen centuries
+of experience has tended to give our services and our churches special
+religious value in our eyes. The average Christian in Japan and in any
+heathen land cannot have this fringe of ideas and subtle feelings so
+essential to a profound feeling of reverence. But as the significance
+of the Christian conception of God, endowed with glory and honor,
+majesty and might, is increasingly realized, and as it is found that
+the spirit of reverence is one that needs cultivation in worship, and
+especially as it is found that the spirit of reverence is important to
+high spiritual life and vitalizing spiritual power, more and more will
+that spirit be manifested by Japanese Christians. But its possession
+or its lack is due not to the inherent character of the people, but
+rather to the character of the ideas which possess them. In taking now
+a brief glance at the nature and history of the three religions of
+Japan it seems desirable to quote freely from the writings of
+recognized authorities on the subject.
+
+ "_Shinto_, which means literally 'the way of the Gods,' is the name
+ given to the mythology and vague ancestor-and nature-worship which
+ preceded the introduction of Buddhism into Japan--Shinto, so often
+ spoken of as a religion, is hardly entitled to that name. It has no
+ set of dogmas, no sacred book, no moral code. The absence of a
+ moral code is accounted for in the writings of modern native
+ commentators by the innate perfection of Japanese humanity, which
+ obviates the necessity for such outward props.... It is necessary,
+ however, to distinguish three periods in the existence of Shinto.
+ During the first of these--roughly speaking, down to A.D. 550--the
+ Japanese had no notion of religion as a separate institution. To
+ pay homage to the gods, that is, to the departed ancestors of the
+ Imperial family, and to the names of other great men, was a usage
+ springing from the same soil as that which produced passive
+ obedience to, and worship of, the living Mikado. Besides this,
+ there were prayers to the wind-gods, to the god of fire, to the god
+ of pestilence, to the goddess of food, and to deities presiding
+ over the sauce-pan, the caldron, the gate, and the kitchen. There
+ were also purifications for wrongdoing.... But there was not even a
+ shadowy idea of any code of morals, or any systematization of the
+ simple notions of the people concerning things unseen. There was
+ neither heaven nor hell--only a kind of neutral-tinted Hades. Some
+ of the gods were good and some were bad; nor was the line between
+ men and gods at all clearly drawn."
+
+The second period of Shinto began with the introduction of Buddhism
+into Japan, in which period Shinto became absorbed into Buddhism
+through the doctrine that the Shinto deities were ancient incarnations
+of Buddhas. In this period Shinto retained no distinctive feature.
+"Only at court and at a few great shrines, such as those of Ise and
+Idzumo, was a knowledge of Shinto in its native simplicity kept up;
+and it is doubtful whether changes did not creep in with the lapse of
+ages. Most Shinto temples throughout the country were served by
+Buddhist priests, who introduced the architectural ornaments and the
+ceremonial of their own religion. Thus was formed the Ryobu Shinto--a
+mixed religion founded on a compromise between the old creed and the
+new, and hence the tolerant ideas on theological subjects of most of
+the middle-lower classes, who worship indifferently at the shrines of
+either faith."
+
+The third period began about 1700. It was introduced by the scholarly
+study of history. "Soon the movement became religious and
+political--above all, patriotic.... The Shogunate was frowned on,
+because it had supplanted the autocracy of the heaven-descended
+Mikados. Buddhism and Confucianism were sneered at because of their
+foreign origin. The great scholars Mabuchi (1697-1769), Motoori
+(1730-1801), and Hirata (1776-1843) devoted themselves to a religious
+propaganda--if that can be called a religion which sets out from the
+principle that the only two things needful are to follow one's natural
+impulses and to obey the Mikado. This order triumphed for a moment in
+the revolution of 1868." It became for a few months the state
+religion, but soon lost its status.[CB]
+
+_Buddhism_ came to Japan from Korea _via_ China in 552 A.D. It was
+already a thousand years old and had, before it reached Japan, broken
+up into numerous sects and subsects differing widely from each other
+and from the original teaching of Sakya Muni. After two centuries of
+propagandism it conquered the land and absorbed the religious life of
+the people, though Shinto was never entirely suppressed. "All
+education was for centuries in Buddhist hands; Buddhism introduced
+art, and medicine, molded the folklore of the country, created its
+dramatic poetry, deeply influenced politics and every sphere of social
+and intellectual activity. In a word, Buddhism was the teacher under
+whose instruction the Japanese nation grew up. As a nation they are
+now grossly forgetful of this fact. Ask an educated Japanese a
+question about Buddhism, and ten to one he will smile in your face. A
+hundred to one that he knows nothing about the subject and glories in
+his nescience." "The complicated metaphysics of Buddhism have awakened
+no interest in the Japanese nation. Another fact, curious but true, is
+that these people have never been at the trouble to translate the
+Buddhist canon into their own language. The priests use a Chinese
+version, and the laity no version at all, though ... they would seem
+to have been given to searching the Scriptures a few hundred years
+ago. The Buddhist religion was disestablished and disendowed during
+the years 1871-74, a step taken in consequence of the temporary
+ascendency of Shinto." Although Confucianism took a strong hold on the
+people in the early part of the seventeenth century, yet its influence
+was limited to the educated and ruling classes. The vast multitude
+still remained Shinto-Buddhists.
+
+As for doctrine, philosophic Buddhism with its dogmas of salvation
+through intellectual enlightenment, by means of self-perfecting, with
+its goal of absorption into Nirvana, has doubtless been the belief and
+aim of the few. But such Buddhism was too deep for the multitudes. "By
+the aid of hoben, or pious devices, the priesthood has played into the
+hands of popular superstition. Here, as elsewhere, there have been
+evolved charms, amulets, pilgrimages, and gorgeous temple services, in
+which the people worship not only the Buddha, who was himself an
+agnostic, but his disciple, and even such abstractions as Amida, which
+are mistaken for actual divine personages."[CC] The deities of Shinto
+have been more or less confused with those of popular Buddhism; in
+some cases, inextricably so.
+
+_Confucianism_, as known in Japan, was the elaborated doctrine of
+Confucius. "He confined himself to practical details of morals and
+government, and took submission to parents and political rulers as the
+corner stone of his system. The result is a set of moral truths--some
+would say truisms--of a very narrow scope, and of dry ceremonial
+observances, political rather than personal." "Originally introduced
+into Japan early in the Christian era, along with other products of
+Chinese civilization, the Confucian philosophy lay dormant during the
+middle ages, the period of the supremacy of Buddhism. It awoke with a
+start in the early part of the seventeenth century when Iccasu, the
+great warrior, ruler, and patron of learning, caused the Confucian
+classics to be printed in Japan for the first time. During the two
+hundred and fifty years that followed, the intellect of the country
+was molded by Confucian ideas. Confucius himself had, it is true,
+labored for the establishment of a centralized monarchy. But his main
+doctrine of unquestioning submission to rulers and parents fitted in
+perfectly with the feudal ideas of Old Japan; and the conviction of
+the paramount importance of such subordination lingers on, an element
+of stability, in spite of the recent social cataclysm which has
+involved Japanese Confucianism, properly so-called, in the ruin of all
+other Japanese institutions."[CD]
+
+_Christianity_ was first brought to Japan by Francis Xavier, who
+landed in Kagoshima in 1549. His zeal knew no bounds and his results
+were amazing. "The converts were drawn from all classes alike.
+Noblemen, Buddhist priests, men of learning, embraced the faith with
+the same alacrity as did the poor and ignorant.... One hundred and
+thirty-eight European missionaries" were then on the field. "Until the
+breaking out of the persecution of 1596 the work of evangelization
+proceeded apace. The converts numbered ten thousand yearly, though all
+were fully aware of the risk to which they exposed themselves by
+embracing the Catholic faith." "At the beginning of the seventeenth
+century, the Japanese Christians numbered about one million, the fruit
+of half a century of apostolic labor accomplished in the midst of
+comparative peace. Another half-century of persecution was about to
+ruin this flourishing church, to cut off its pastors, more than two
+hundred of whom suffered martyrdom, and to leave its laity without the
+offices of religion.... The edicts ordering these measures remained in
+force for over two centuries." Tens of thousands of Christians
+preferred death to perjury. It was supposed that Christianity was
+entirely exterminated by the fearful and prolonged persecutions. Yet
+in the vicinity of Nagasaki over four thousand Christians were
+discovered in 1867, who were again subject to persecution until the
+pressure of foreign lands secured religious toleration in Japan.
+
+Protestant Christianity came to Japan with the beginning of the new
+era, and has been preached with much zeal and moderate success. For a
+time it seemed destined to sweep the land even more astonishingly than
+did Romanism in the sixteenth century. But in 1888 an anti-foreign
+reaction began in every department of Japanese life and thought which
+has put a decided check on the progress of Christian missions.
+
+This must suffice for our historical review of the religious life of
+the Japanese. Were we to forget Japan's long and repeated isolations,
+and also to ignore fluctuations of belief and of other religious
+phenomena in other lands, we might say, as many do, that the Japanese
+have inherently shallow and changeable religious convictions. But
+remembering these facts, and recalling the persecutions of Buddhists
+by each other, of Christianity by the state, and knowing to-day many
+earnest, self-sacrificing and persistent Christians, I am convinced
+that such a judgment is mistaken. There are other and sufficient
+reasons to account for this appearance of changeableness in religion.
+
+I close this chapter with a single observation on the religious
+history just outlined. Bearing in mind the great changes that have
+come over Japanese religious thinking and forms of religion I ask if
+religious phenomena are the expressions of the race nature, as some
+maintain, and if this nature is inherent and unchangeable, how are
+such profound changes to be accounted for? If the religious character
+of the Japanese people is inherent, how is it conceivable that they
+should so easily adopt foreign religions, even to the exclusion of
+their own native religion, as did those who became Buddhist or
+Confucian or Christian? I conclude from these facts, and they are
+paralleled in the history of many other peoples, that even religious
+characteristics are not dependent on biological, but are wholly
+dependent on social evolution. It seems to me capable of the clearest
+proof that the religious phenomena of any age are dependent on the
+general development of the intellect, on the ruling ideas, and on the
+entire conditions of the civilization of the age rather than on brain
+structure or essential race nature.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+SOME RELIGIOUS CONCEPTIONS
+
+
+The conceptions of the common people in regard to deity are chaotic.
+They believe in local spirits who are to be worshiped; some of these
+are of human origin, and some antedate all human life. The gods of the
+Shinto pantheon are "yaoyorodzu" in number, eight thousand myriads;
+yet in their "norito," or prayer rituals, reference is made not only
+to the "yaoyorodzu" who live in the air, but also to the "yaoyorodzu"
+who live on earth, and even to the "yaoyorodzu" who live beneath the
+earth. If we add these together there must be at least twenty-four
+thousand myriads of gods. These of course include sun, moon, stars,
+and all the forces of nature, as well as the spirits of men. Popular
+Buddhism accepts the gods of Shinto and brings in many more,
+worshiping not only the Buddha and his immediate "rakan," disciples,
+five hundred in number, but numberless abstractions of ideal
+qualities, such as the varieties of Kwannon (Avelokitesvara, gods and
+goddesses of mercy), Amida (Amitabha, the ideal of boundless light),
+Jizo (Kshitigarbha, the helper of those in trouble, lost children, and
+pregnant women), Emma O (Yama-raja, ruler of Buddhist hells), Fudo
+(Achala, the "immovable," "unchangeable"), and many others. Popular
+Buddhism also worships every man dead or living who has become a
+"hotoke," that is, has attained Buddhahood and has entered Nirvana.
+The gods of Japan are innumerable in theory and multitudinous in
+practice. Not only are there gods of goodness but also gods of lust
+and of evil, to whom robbers and harlots may pray for success and
+blessing.
+
+In the Japanese pantheon there is no supreme god, such, for instance,
+as the Roman Jupiter, or the Greek Chronos, nor is there a
+thoroughgoing divine hierarchy.
+
+According to the common view (although there is no definite thought
+about it), the idea seems to be that the universe with its laws and
+nature were already existent before the gods appeared on the scene;
+they created specific places, such as Japan, out of already existing
+material. Neither in Shinto nor in popular Buddhism is the conception
+formed of a primal fount of all being with its nature and laws. In
+this respect Japanese thought is like all primitive religious thought.
+There is no word in the Japanese language corresponding to the English
+term "God." The nearest approach to it are the Confucian terms
+"Jo-tei," "Supreme Emperor," "Ten," "Heaven," and "Ten-tei," "Heavenly
+Emperor"; but all of these terms are Chinese, they are therefore of
+late appearance in Japan, and represent rather conceptions of educated
+and Confucian classes than the ideas of the masses. These terms
+approach closely to the idea of monotheism; but though the doctrine
+may be discovered lying implicit in these words and ideas it was never
+developed. Whether "Heaven" was to be conceived as a person, or merely
+as fate, was not clearly thought out; some expressions point in one
+direction while others point in the other.
+
+I may here call attention to a significant fact in the history of
+recent Christian work in Japan. Although the serious-minded Japanese
+is first attracted to Christianity by the character of its ethical
+thought--so much resembling, also so much surpassing that of
+Confucius, it is none the less true that monotheism is another
+powerful source of attraction. I have been repeatedly told by
+Christians that the first religious satisfaction they ever experienced
+was upon their discovery of monotheism. How it affected Dr. Neesima,
+readers of his life cannot have overlooked. He is a type of
+multitudes. In the earlier days of Christian work many felt that they
+had become Christians upon rejection of polytheism and acceptance of
+monotheism. And in truth they were so far forth Christian, although
+they knew little of Christ, and felt little need of His help as a
+personal Saviour. The weakness of the Church in recent years is due in
+part, I doubt not, to the acceptance into its membership of numbers
+who were, properly speaking, monotheistic, but not in the complete
+sense of the term Christian. Their discovery later that more was
+needed than the intellectual acceptance of monotheism ere they could
+be considered, or even be, truly "Christian," has led many such
+"believers" to abandon their relations with the Church. This, while on
+many accounts to be regretted, was nevertheless inevitable. The bare
+acceptance of the monotheistic idea does not secure that
+transformation of heart and produce that warmth of living faith which
+are essential elements in the altruistic life demanded of the
+Christian.
+
+Nor is it difficult to understand why monotheism has proved such an
+attraction to the Japanese when we consider that through it they first
+recognized a unity in the universe and even in their own lives.
+Nature, and human nature took on an intelligibility which they never
+had had under the older philosophy. History likewise was seen to have
+a meaning and an order, to say nothing of a purpose, which the
+non-Christian faiths did not themselves see and could not give to
+their devotees. Furthermore the monotheistic idea furnished a
+satisfactory background and explanation for the exact sciences. If
+there is but one God, who is the fount and cause of all being, it is
+easy to see why the truths of science should be universal and
+absolute, rather than local and diverse, as they would be were they
+subject to the jurisdiction of various local deities. The universality
+of nature's laws was inconceivable under polytheism. Monotheism thus
+found a ready access to many minds. Polytheism pure and simple is the
+belief of no educated Japanese to-day. He is a monist of some kind or
+other. Philosophic Buddhism always was monistic, but not monotheistic.
+Thinking Confucianists were also monistic. But neither philosophic
+Buddhism nor Confucianism emphasized their monistic elements; they did
+not realize the importance to popular thought of monistic conceptions.
+But possessing these ideas, and being now in contact with aggressive
+Christian monotheism, they are beginning to emphasize this truth.
+
+As Japan has had no adequate conception of God, her conception of man
+has been of necessity defective. Indeed, the cause of her inadequate
+conception of God is due in large measure to her inadequate conception
+of man, which we have seen to be a necessary consequence of the
+primitive communal order. Since, however, we have already given
+considerable attention to Japan's inadequate conception of man, we
+need do no more than refer to it in this connection.
+
+Corresponding to her imperfect doctrines of God and of man is her
+doctrine of sin. That the Japanese sense of sin is slight is a fact
+generally admitted. This is the universal experience of the
+missionary. Many Japanese with whom I have conversed seem to have no
+consciousness of it whatever. Indeed, it is a difficult matter to
+speak of to the Japanese, not only because of the etiquette involved,
+but for the deeper reason of the deficiency of the language. There
+exists no term in Japanese which corresponds to the Christian word
+"sin." To tell a man he is a sinner without stopping to explain what
+one means would be an insult, for he is not conscious of having broken
+any of the laws of the land. Yet too much stress must not be laid on
+this argument from the language, for the Buddhistic vocabulary
+furnishes a number of terms which refer to the crime of transgressing
+not the laws of the land, but those of Buddha.
+
+In Shinto, sin is little, if anything, more than physical impurity.
+Although Buddhism brought a higher conception of religion for the
+initiated few, it gave no help to the ignorant multitudes, rather it
+riveted their superstitions upon them. It spoke of law indeed, and
+lust and sin; and of dreadful punishments for sin; but when it
+explained sin it made its nature too shallow, being merely the result
+of mental confusion; salvation, then, became simply intellectual
+enlightenment; it also made the consequences of sin too remote and the
+escape from them too easy. The doctrine of "Don," suddenness of
+salvation, the many external and entirely formal rites, short
+pilgrimages to famous shrines, the visiting of some neighboring temple
+having miniature models of all the other efficacious shrines
+throughout the land, the wearing of charms, the buying of "o fuda,"
+and even the single utterance of certain magic prayers, were taught
+to be quite enough for the salvation of the common man from the worst
+of sins. Where release is so easily obtained, the estimate of the
+heinousness of sin is correspondingly slight. How different was the
+consciousness of sin and the conception of its nature developed by the
+Jewish worship with its system of sin offerings! Life for life.
+Whatever we may think of the efficacy of offering an animal as an
+expiation for sin, it certainly contributed far more toward deepening
+the sense of sin than the rites in common practice among the
+Buddhists. So far as I know, human or animal sacrifice has never been
+known in Japan.
+
+In response to the not unlikely criticism that sacrifice is the result
+of profound sense of sin and not its cause, I reply that it is both.
+The profound sense is the experience of the few at the beginning; the
+practice educates the multitudes and begets that feeling in the
+nation.
+
+Ceremonial purification is an old rite in Japan. In this connection we
+naturally think of the "Chozu-bachi" which may be found before every
+Shinto shrine, containing the "holy water" with which to rinse the
+mouth and wash the hands. Pilgrims and worshipers invariably make use
+of this water, wiping their hands on the towels provided for the
+purpose by the faithful. To our eyes, few customs in Japan are more
+conducive to the spread of impurity and infectious disease than this
+rite of ceremonial purification. No better means could be devised for
+the wide dissemination of the skin diseases which are so common. The
+reformed religion of New Japan--whether Buddhist, Shinto, or
+Christian--could do few better services for the people at large than
+by entering on a crusade against this religious rite. It could and
+should preach the doctrine that sin and defilement of the hearts are
+not removed by such an easy method as the rite implies and the masses
+believe. If retained as a symbol, the purification rite should at
+least be reformed as a practice.
+
+Whether the use of purificatory water is to be traced to the sense of
+moral or spiritual sin is doubtful to my mind; in view of the general
+nature of primitive Shinto. The interpretation given the system by
+W.E. Griffis, in his volume on the "Religions of Japan," is
+suggestive, but in view of all the facts does not seem conclusive.
+"One of the most remarkable features of Shinto" he writes, "was the
+emphasis laid on cleanliness. Pollution was calamity, defilement was
+sin, and physical purity at least was holiness. Everything that could
+in any way soil the body or clothing was looked upon with abhorrence
+and detestation."[CE] The number of specifications given in this
+connection is worthy of careful perusal. But it is a strange nemesis
+of history that the sense of physical pollution should develop a
+religious rite fitted to become the very means for the dissemination
+of physical pollution and disease.
+
+Japanese personal cleanliness is often connected in the descriptions
+of foreigners with ceremonial purification, but the facts are much
+exaggerated. In contrast to nearly if not quite all non-Christian
+peoples, the Japanese are certainly astonishingly cleanly in their
+habits. But it is wholly unnecessary to exaggerate the facts. The
+"tatami," or straw-mats, an inch or more in thickness, give to the
+room an appearance of cleanliness which usually belies the truth. The
+multitudes of fleas that infest the normal Japanese home are
+convincing proof of the real state of the "tatami." There are those
+who declare that a Japanese crowd has the least offensive odor of any
+people in the world. One writer goes so far as to state that not only
+is there no unpleasant odor whatever, but that there is even a
+pleasant intimation of lavender about their exhalations. This exactly
+contradicts my experience. Not to mention the offensive oil with which
+all women anoint their hair to give it luster and stiffness, the
+Japanese habit of wearing heavy cotton wadded clothing, with little or
+no underwear, produces the inevitable result in the atmosphere of any
+closed room. In cold weather I always find it necessary to throw open
+all the doors and windows of my study or parlor, after Bible classes
+of students or even after the visits of cultured and well-to-do
+guests. That the Japanese bathe so frequently is certainly an
+interesting fact and a valuable feature of their civilization; it
+indicates no little degree of cleanliness; but for that, their
+clothing would become even more disagreeable than it is, and the evil
+effect upon themselves of wearing soiled garments would be much
+greater. In point of fact, their frequent baths do not wholly remove
+the need of change in clothing. To a Japanese the size of the weekly
+wash of a foreigner seems extravagant.
+
+As to the frequent bathing, its cleanliness is exaggerated by Western
+thought, for instead of supplying fresh water for each person, the
+Japanese public baths consist usually of a large tank used by
+multitudes in common. Clean water is allowed for the face, but the
+main tank is supplied with clean hot water only once each day. In
+Kumamoto, schoolgirls living with us invariably asked permission to go
+to the bath early in the day that they might have the first use of the
+water. They said that by night it was so foul they could not bear to
+use it. Each hotel has its own private bath for guests; this is
+usually heated in the afternoon, and the guests take their baths from
+four o'clock on until midnight, the waiting girls of the hotel using
+it last. My only experience with public baths has been mentioned
+already. At first glance the conditions were reassuring, for a large
+stream of hot water was running in constantly, and the water in the
+tank itself was quite transparent. But on entering I was surprised,
+not to say horrified, to see floating along the margin of the tank and
+on the bottom of it suggestive proofs of previous bathers. On inquiry
+I learned that the tank was never washed out, nor the water entirely
+discharged at a single time; the natural overflow along the edge of
+the tank being considered sufficient. In the interest of accuracy it
+is desirable to add that New Japan is making progress in the matter of
+public baths. In some of the larger cities, I am told, provision is
+sometimes made for entirely fresh water for each bather in separate
+bathrooms.
+
+In view of these facts--as unpleasant to mention as they are essential
+to a faithful description of the habits of the people--it is clear
+that the "horror of physical impurity" has not been, and is not now,
+so great as some would have us believe. Whatever may have been the
+condition in ancient times, it would be difficult to believe that the
+rite of ceremonial purification could arise out of the present
+practices and habits of thought. One may venture the inquiry whether
+the custom of using the "purificatory water" may not have been
+introduced from abroad.
+
+But whatever be the present thought of the people, on the general
+subject of sin, it may be shown to be due to the prevailing system of
+ideas, moral and religious, rather than to the inherent racial
+character. In an interesting article by Mr. G. Takahashi on the "Past,
+Present, and Future of Christianity in Japan" I find the statement
+that the preaching of the monks who came to Japan in the sixteenth
+century was of such a nature as to produce a very deep consciousness
+of sin among the converts. "The Christians or martyrs repeatedly cried
+out 'we miserable sinners,' 'Christ died for us,' etc., as their
+letters abundantly prove. It was because of this that their
+consciences were aroused by the burning words of Christ, and kept
+awake by means of contrition and confession." Among modern Christians
+the sense of sin is much more clear and pronounced than among the
+unconverted. Individual instances of extreme consciousness of sin are
+not unknown, especially under the earlier Protestant preaching. If the
+Christians of the last decade have less sense of sin, it is due to the
+changed character of recent preaching, in consequence of the changed
+conception of Christianity widely accepted in Protestant lands. Who
+will undertake to say that Christians in New England of the nineteenth
+century have the same oppressive sense of sin that was customary in
+the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries? The sense of sin
+is due more to the character of the dominant religious ideas of the
+age than to brain structure or to race nature. I cannot agree with Mr.
+Takahashi that "To be religious one needs a Semitic tinge of mind." It
+is not a question of mind, of race nature, but of dominant ideas.
+
+In this connection I may refer to an incident that came under my
+notice some years ago. A young man applied for membership in the
+Kumamoto Church, who at one time had been a student in one of my Bible
+classes. I had not known that he had received any special help from
+his study with me, until I heard his statement as to how he had
+discovered his need of a Saviour, and had found that need satisfied in
+Christ. In his statement before the examining committee of the church,
+he said that when he first read the thirteenth chapter of 1
+Corinthians, he was so impressed with its beauty as a poem that he
+wrote it out entire on one of the fusuma (light paper doors) of his
+room, and each morning, as he arose, he read it. This practice
+continued several weeks. Then, as we continued our study of the Bible,
+we took up the third chapter of John, and when he came to the
+sixteenth verse, he was so impressed with its statement that he wrote
+that beside the poem from Corinthians, and read them together.
+Gradually this daily reading, together with the occasional sermons and
+other Christian addresses which he heard at the Boys' School, led him
+to desire to secure for himself the love described by Paul, and to
+know more vitally the love of God described by John. It occurred to
+him, that, to secure these ends, he should pray. Upon doing so he said
+that, for the first time in his life, his unworthiness and his really
+sinful nature overwhelmed him. This was, of course, but the beginning
+of his Christian life. He began then to search the Scriptures in
+earnest, and with increasing delight. It was not long before he wished
+to make public confession of his faith, and thus identify himself with
+the Christian community. This brief account of the way in which this
+young man was brought to Christ illustrates a good many points, but
+that for which I have cited it is the testimony it bears to the fact
+that under similar circumstances the human heart undergoes very much
+the same religious experience, whatever be the race or nationality of
+the individual.
+
+In regard to the future life, Shinto has little specific doctrine. It
+certainly implies the continued existence of the soul after death, as
+its ancestral worship shows, but its conception as to the future state
+is left vague in the extreme. Confucius purposely declined to teach
+anything on this point, and, in part, for this reason, it has been
+maintained that Confucianism cannot properly be called a religion.
+Buddhism brought to Japan an elaborate system of eschatological ideas,
+and so far as the common people of Japan have any conception of the
+future life, it may be attributed to Buddhistic teachings. Into their
+nature I need not inquire at any length. According to popular
+Buddhism, the future world, or more properly speaking, worlds (for
+there are ten of them, into any one of which a soul may be born either
+immediately or in the course of its future transmigrations), does not
+differ in any vital way from the present world. It is a world of
+material blessings or woes; the successive stages or worlds are graded
+one above the other in fantastic ways. Salvation consists in passing
+to higher grades of life, the final or perfect stage being paradise,
+which, once attained, can never be lost. Transmigration is universal,
+the period of life in each world being determined by the merits and
+demerits of the individual soul.
+
+Here we must consider two widely used terms "ingwa" and "mei." The
+first of these is Buddhistic and the other Confucianistic; though
+differing much in origin and meaning, yet in the end they amount to
+much the same thing. "Ingwa" is the law of cause and effect. According
+to the Buddhistic teaching, however, the "in," or cause, is in one
+world, while the "gwa," or effect, is in the other. The suffering, for
+instance, or any misfortune that overtakes one in this present life,
+is the "gwa" or effect of what was done in the previous, and is thus
+inevitable. The individual is working off in this life the "gwa" of
+his last life, and he is also working up the "in" of the next He is
+thus in a kind of vise. His present is absolutely determined for him
+by his past, and in turn is irrevocably fixing his future. Such is the
+Buddhistic "wheel of the law." The common explanation of misfortune,
+sickness, or disease, or any calamity, is that it is the result of
+"ingwa," and that there is, therefore, no help for it. The paralyzing
+nature of this conception on the development of character, or on
+activity of any kind, is apparent not only theoretically but actually.
+As an escape from the inexorable fatality of this scheme of thought,
+the Buddhist faith of the common people has resorted to magic. Magic
+prayers, consisting of a few mystic syllables of whose meaning the
+worshiper may be quite ignorant, are the means for overcoming the
+inexorableness of "ingwa," both for this life and the next. "Namu
+Amida Butsu," "Namu Myo Ho Ren Ge Kyo," "Namu Hen Jo Kongo," are the
+most common of such magic formulae. These prayers are heard on the lips
+of tens of thousands of pious pilgrims, not only at the temples, but
+as they pass along the highways. It is believed that each repetition
+secures its reward. Popular Buddhism's appeal to magic was not only
+winked at by philosophical Buddhism, but it was encouraged. Magic was
+justified by religious philosophy, and many a "hoben," "pious device,"
+for saving the ignorant was invented by the priesthood. It will be
+apparent that while Buddhism has in certain respects a vigorous system
+of punishment for sin, yet its method of relief is such that the
+common people can gain only the most shallow and superficial views of
+salvation. Buddhism has not served to deepen the sense of
+responsibility, nor helped to build up character. That the more
+serious-minded thinkers of the nation have, as a rule, rejected
+Buddhism is not strange.
+
+One point of great interest for us is the fact that this
+eschatological and soteriological system was imported, and is not the
+spontaneous product of Japan. The wide range of national religious
+characteristics thus clearly traceable to Buddhistic influence shows
+beyond doubt how large a part of a nation's character is due to the
+system of thought that for one reason or another prevails, rather than
+to the essential race character.
+
+The other term mentioned above, "mei," literally means "command" or
+"decree"; but while the English terms definitely imply a real being
+who decides, decrees, and commands, the term "mei" is indeterminate on
+this point. It is frequently joined to the word "Ten," or Heaven;
+"Ten-mei," Heaven's decree, seeming to imply a personality in the
+background of the thought. Yet, as I have already pointed out, it is
+only implied; in actual usage it means the fate decreed by Heaven;
+that is, fated fate, or absolute fate. The Chinese and the Japanese
+alike failed to inquire minutely as to the implication of the deepest
+conceptions of their philosophy. But "mei" is commonly used entirely
+unconnected with "Ten," and in this case its best translation into
+English is probably "fate." In this sense it is often used. Unlike
+Buddhism, however, Confucianism provided no way of escape from "mei"
+except moral conduct. One of its important points of superiority was
+its freedom from appeal to magic in any form, and its reliance on
+sincerity of heart and correctness of conduct.
+
+Few foreigners have failed to comment on the universal use by the
+Japanese of the phrase "Shikataga nai," "it can't be helped." The
+ready resignation to "fate," as they deem it, even in little things
+about the home and in the daily life, is astonishing to Occidentals.
+Where we hold ourselves and each other to sharp personal
+responsibility, the sense of subjection to fate often leads them to
+condone mistakes with the phrase "Shikataga nai."
+
+But this characteristic is not peculiar to Japan. China and India are
+likewise marked by it. During the famines in India, it was frequently
+remarked how the Hindus would settle down to starve in their huts in
+submission to fate, where Westerners would have been doing something
+by force, fighting even the decrees of heaven, if needful. But it is
+important to note that this characteristic in Japan is undergoing
+rapid change. The spirit of absolute submission, so characteristic of
+the common people of Old Japan, is passing away and self-assertion is
+taking its place. Education and developing intelligence are driving
+out the fear of fate. Had our estimate of the Japanese race character
+been based wholly on the history of Old Japan, it might have been easy
+to conclude that the spirit of submission to rulers and to fate was a
+national characteristic due to racial nature; but every added year of
+New Japan shows how erroneous that view would have been. Thus we see
+again that the characteristics of Japan, Old and New, are not due to
+race nature, but to the prevailing civilization in the broadest sense
+of the term. The religious characteristics of a people depend
+primarily on the dominant religious ideas, not on the inherent
+religious nature.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+SOME RELIGIOUS PRACTICES
+
+
+Among the truly religious sentiments of the Japanese are those of
+loyalty and filial piety. Having already given them considerable
+attention, we need not delay long upon them here. The point to be
+emphasized is that these two principles are exalted into powerful
+religious sentiments, which have permeated and dominated the entire
+life of the nation. Not only were they at the root of courage, of
+fidelity, of obedience, and of all the special virtues of Old Japan,
+but they were also at the root of the larger part of her religion.
+These emotions, sentiments, and beliefs have built 190,000 Shinto
+shrines. Loyalty to the daimyo was the vital part of the religion of
+the past, as loyalty to the Emperor is the vital part of the popular
+religion of to-day. Next to loyalty came filial piety; it not only
+built the cemeteries, but also maintained god-shelves and family
+ancestral worship throughout the centuries. One of the first questions
+which many an inquirer about Christianity has put to me is as to the
+way we treat our parents living and dead, and the tombs and memories
+of our ancestors. These two religious sentiments of loyalty and filial
+piety were essential elements of primitive Shinto. The imported
+religions, particularly Confucianism and Christianity, served to
+strengthen them. In view of the indubitable religious nature of these
+two sentiments it is difficult to see how anyone can deny the name of
+religion to the religions that inculcate them, Shinto and
+Confucianism. It shows how defective is the current conception of the
+real nature of religion.
+
+Despite the reality of these religious, sentiments, however, many
+things are done in Japan quite opposed to them. Of course this is so.
+These violations spring from irreligion, and irreligion is found in
+every land. Furthermore, many things done in the name of loyalty and
+piety seem to us Westerners exceedingly whimsical and illogical. Deeds
+which to us seem disloyal and unfilial receive no rebuke. Filial piety
+often seems to us more active toward the dead than toward the living.
+
+Closely connected with loyalty and filial piety, and in part their
+expression, is one further religious sentiment, namely, gratitude. In
+his chapter in "Kokoro" "About Ancestor-Worship," Mr. Hearn makes some
+pertinent remarks as to the nature of Shinto. "Foremost among the
+moral sentiments of Shinto is that of loving gratitude to the past."
+This he attributes to the fact that "To Japanese thought the dead are
+not less real than the living. They take part in the daily life of the
+people, sharing the humblest sorrows and the humblest joys ... and
+they are universally thought of as finding pleasure in the offerings
+made to them or the honors conferred upon them." There is much truth
+in these statements, though I by no means share the opinion that in
+connection with the Japanese belief in the dead there "have been
+evolved moral sentiments wholly unknown to Western civilization," or
+that their "loving gratitude to the past" is "a sentiment having no
+real correspondence in our own emotional life." Mr. Hearn may be
+presumed to be speaking for himself in these matters; but he certainly
+does not correctly represent the thought or the feelings of the circle
+of life known to me. The feeling of gratitude of Western peoples is as
+real and as strong as that of the Japanese, though it does not find
+expression in the worship of the dead. That the Japanese are profuse
+in their expressions of gratitude to the past and to the powers that
+be is beyond dispute. It crops out in sermons and public speeches, as
+well as in the numberless temples to national heroes.
+
+But it is a matter of surprise to note how often there is apparent
+ingratitude toward living benefactors. Some years ago I heard a
+conversation between some young men who had enjoyed special
+opportunities of travel and of study abroad by the liberality of
+American gentlemen.
+
+It appeared that the young men considered that instead of receiving
+any special favors, they were conferring them on their benefactors by
+allowing the latter to help such brilliant youth as they, whose
+subsequent careers in Japan would preserve to posterity the names of
+their benefactors. I have had some experience in the line of giving
+assistance to aspiring students, in certain cases helping them for
+years; a few have given evidence of real gratitude; but a large
+proportion have seemed singularly deficient in this grace. It is my
+impression that relatively few of the scores of students who have
+received a large proportion of their expenses from the mission, while
+pursuing their studies, have felt that they were thereby under any
+special debt of gratitude. An experience that a missionary had with a
+class to which he had been teaching the Bible in English for about a
+year is illustrative. At the close of the school year they invited him
+to a dinner where they made some very pleasant speeches, and bade each
+other farewell for the summer. The teacher was much gratified with the
+result of the year's work, feeling naturally that these boys were his
+firm friends. But the following September when he returned, not only
+did the class not care to resume their studies with him, but they
+appeared to desire to have nothing whatever to do with him. On the
+street many of them would not even recognize him. Other similar cases
+come to mind, and it should be remembered that missionaries give such
+instruction freely and always at the request of the recipient. In the
+case cited the teacher came to the conclusion that the elaborate
+dinner and fine farewell speeches were considered by the young men as
+a full discharge of all debts of gratitude and a full compensation for
+services. This, however, is to be said: the city itself was at that
+time the seat of a determined antagonism to Christianity and, of
+course, to the Christian missionary; and this fact may in part, but
+not wholly, account for the appearance of ingratitude.
+
+The Japanese pride themselves on their gratitude. It is, however,
+limited in its scope. It is vigorous toward the dead and toward the
+Emperor, but as a grace of daily life it is not conspicuous.
+
+Few achievements of the Japanese have been more remarkable than the
+suppression of certain religious phenomena. Any complete statement of
+the religious characteristics of the Japanese fifty years ago would
+have included most revolting and immoral practices under the guise of
+religion. Until suppressed by the government in the early years of
+Meiji there were in many parts of Japan phallic shrines of
+considerable popularity, at which, on festivals at least, sexual
+immorality seemed to be an essential part of the worship. At Uji, not
+far from Kyoto, the capital of the Empire, for a thousand years and
+more, and the center of Buddhism, there was a shrine of great repute
+and popularity. Thither resorted the multitudes for bacchanalian
+purposes. Under the auspices of the Goddess Hashihime and the God
+Sumiyoshi, free rein was given to lust. Since the beginning of the new
+regime such revels have been forbidden and apparently stopped; the
+phallic symbols themselves are no longer visible, although it is
+asserted by the keeper of the shrine that they are still there,
+concealed in the boxes on the pedestals formerly occupied by the
+symbols. When I visited the place some years since with a fellow
+missionary we were told that multitudes still come there to pray to
+the deities; those seeking divorce pray to the female deity, while
+those seeking a favorable marriage pray to the male deity; on asking
+as to the proportion of the worshipers, we were told that there are
+about ten of the former to one of the latter, a significant indication
+of the unhappiness of many a home. Prof. Edmund Buckley has made a
+special study of the subject of phallic worship in Japan; in his
+thesis on the topic he gives a list of thirteen places where these
+symbols of phallic worship might be seen a few years since. It is
+significant that at Uji, not a stone's throw from the phallic shrine,
+is a temple to the God Agata, whose special function is the cure of
+venereal diseases.
+
+But though phallic worship and its accompanying immorality have been
+extirpated, immorality in connection with religion is still rampant in
+certain quarters. Not far from the great temples at Ise, the center of
+Shintoism and the goal for half a million pilgrims yearly, are large
+and prosperous brothels patronized by and existing for the sake of
+the pilgrims. A still more popular resort for pilgrims is that at
+Kompira, whither, as we have seen, some 900,000 come each year; here
+the best hotels, and presumably the others also, are provided with
+prostitutes who also serve as waiting girls; on the arrival of a guest
+he is customarily asked whether or not the use of a prostitute shall
+be included in his hotel bill. It seems strange, indeed, that the
+government should take such pains to suppress phallicism, and allow
+such immorality to go on under the eaves of the greatest national
+shrines; for these shrines are not private affairs; the government
+takes possession of the gifts, and pays the regular salaries of the
+attending priests. It would appear from its success in the
+extermination of distinctly phallic worship that the government could
+put a stop to all public prostitution in connection with religion if
+it cared to do so.
+
+One point of interest in connection with the above facts is that the
+old religions, however much of force, beauty, and truth we may concede
+to them, have never made warfare against these obscene forms of
+worship, nor against the notorious immorality of their devotees.
+Whatever may be said of the profound philosophy of life involved in
+phallic worship, for many hundreds of years it has been a source of
+outrageous immorality. Nevertheless, there has never been any
+continued and effective effort on the part of the higher types of
+religion to exterminate the lower. But Japan is not peculiar in this
+respect. India is even now amazingly immoral in certain forms of her
+worship.
+
+Another point of interest in this connection is that the change of the
+nation in its attitude to this form of religion was due largely,
+probably wholly, to contact with the nations of the West. The
+uprooting of phallic worship was due, not to a moral reformation, but
+to a political ambition. It was carried out, not in deference to
+public opinion, but wholly by government command, though without doubt
+the nobler opinion of the land approved of the government action. But
+even this nobler public sentiment was aroused by the Occidental
+stimulus. The success of the effort must be attributed not a little to
+the age-long national custom of submitting absolutely to governmental
+initiative and command.
+
+Another point of interest is that, in consequence of official
+pressure, the religious character of a large number of the people
+seems to have undergone a radical change. The ordinary traveler in
+Japan would not suspect that phallicism had ever been a prominent
+feature of Japanese religious life. Only an inquisitive seeker can now
+find the slightest evidences of this once popular cult. Here we have
+an apparent change in the character of a people sudden and complete,
+induced almost wholly by external causes. It shows that the previous
+characteristic was not so deeply rooted in the physical or spiritual
+nature of the race as many would have us believe. Can we escape the
+conclusion that national characteristics are due much more to the
+circle of dominant ideas and actual practices, than to the inherent
+race nature?
+
+The way in which phallicism has been suppressed during the present era
+raises the general question of religious liberty in Japan. In this
+respect, no less than in many others, a change has taken place so
+great as to amount to a revolution. During two hundred and fifty years
+Christianity was strictly forbidden on pain of extreme penalties. In
+1872 the edict against Christianity was removed, free preaching was
+allowed, and for a time it seemed as if the whole nation would become
+Christian in a few decades; even non-Christians urged that
+Christianity be made the state religion. What an amazing volte-face!
+Religious liberty is now guaranteed by the constitution promulgated in
+1888. There are those who assert that until Christianity invaded
+Japan, religious freedom was perfect; persecutions were unknown. This
+is a mistake. When Buddhism came to Japan, admission was first sought
+from the authorities, and for a time was refused. When various sects
+arose, persecutions were severe. We have seen how belief in
+Christianity was forbidden under pain of death for more than two
+hundred and fifty years. Under this edict, many thousand Japanese
+Christians and over two hundred European missionaries were put to
+death. Yet, on the whole, it may be said that Old Japan enjoyed no
+little religious freedom. Indeed, the same man might worship freely
+at all the shrines and temples in the land. To this day multitudes
+have never asked themselves whether they are Shinto or Buddhist or
+Confucianist. The reason for this religious eclecticism was the
+fractional character of the old religions; they supplemented each
+other. There was no collision between them in doctrine or in morals.
+The religious freedom was, therefore, not one of principle but of
+indifference. As Rome was tolerant of all religions which made no
+exclusive claims, but fiercely persecuted Christianity, so Japan was
+tolerant of the two religions that found their way into her territory
+because they made no claims of exclusiveness. But a religion that
+demanded the giving up of rivals was feared and forbidden.
+
+New Japan, however, following Anglo-Saxon example, has definitely
+adopted religious freedom as a principle. First tacitly allowed after
+the abolition of the edict against Christianity in 1872, it was later
+publicly guaranteed by the constitution promulgated in 1888. Since
+that date there has been perfect religious liberty for the individual.
+
+Yet this statement must be carefully guarded. If we may judge from
+some recent decrees of the Educational Department, it would appear
+that a large and powerful section of the nation is still ignorant of
+the real nature and significance of "religious liberty." Under the
+plea of maintaining secular education, the Educational Department has
+forbidden informal and private Christian teaching, even in private
+schools. An adequate statement of the present struggle for complete
+religious liberty would occupy many pages. We note but one important
+point.
+
+In the very act of forbidding religious instruction in all schools the
+Educational Department is virtually establishing a brand-new religion
+for Japan, a religion based on the Imperial Educational Edict.[CF] The
+essentially religious nature of the attitude taken by the government
+toward this Edict has become increasingly clear in late years. In the
+summer of 1898 one who has had special opportunities of information
+told me that Mr. Kinoshita, a high official in the Educational
+Department, suggested the ceremonial worship of the Emperor's picture
+and edict by all the schools, for the reason that he saw the need of
+cultivating the religious spirit of reverence together with the need
+for having religious sanctions for the moral law. He felt convinced
+that a national school system without any such sanctions would be
+helpless in teaching morality to the pupils. His suggestion was
+adopted by the Educational Department and has been enforced.
+
+In this attitude toward the religious character of entirely private
+schools, the government is materially abridging the religious liberty
+of the people. It is abridging their liberty of carrying belief into
+action in one important respect, that, namely, of giving a Christian
+education. It virtually insists on the acceptance of that form of
+religion which apotheosizes the Emperor, and finds the sanctions for
+morality in his edict; it excludes from the schools every other form
+of religion. It should, of course, be said that this attitude is
+maintained not only toward Christian schools, but theoretically also
+toward all religious schools. It, however, operates more severely on
+Christian schools than upon others, because Christians are the only
+ones who establish high-grade schools for secular education under
+religious influences.
+
+It is evident, therefore, that in the matter of religious liberty the
+present attitude of the government is paradoxical, granting in one
+breath, what, in an important respect, it denies in the next. But
+throughout all these changes and by means of them we see more and more
+clearly that even religious tolerance is a matter of the prevailing
+social ideas and of the dominant social order, rather than of inherent
+race character. By a single transformation of the social order, Japan
+passed from a state of perfect religious intolerance to one just the
+reverse, so far as individual belief was concerned.
+
+Taking a comprehensive review of our study thus far, we see that the
+forms of Japanese religious life have been determined by the history,
+rather than by any inherent racial character of the people. Although
+they had a religion prior to the coming of any external influence,
+yet they have proved ready disciples of the religions of other lands.
+The religion of India, its esoteric, and especially its exoteric
+forms, has found wide acceptance and long-continued popularity. The
+higher life of the nation readily took on in later times the religious
+characteristics of the Chinese, predominantly ethical, it is true, and
+only slightly religious as to forms of worship. When Roman Catholic
+Christianity came to Japan in the sixteenth century, it, too, found
+ready acceptance. It is true that it presented a view of the nature of
+religion not very different from that held by Buddhism in many
+respects, yet in others there was a marked divergence, as for
+instance, in the doctrine of God, of individual sin, and of the nature
+and method of salvation. The Japanese have thus shown themselves ready
+assimilators of all these diverse systems of religious expression.
+Just at present a new presentation of Christianity is being made to
+the Japanese; some are urging upon them the acceptance of the Roman
+Catholic form of it; others are urging the Greek; and still others are
+presenting the Protestant point of view. Each of these groups of
+missionaries seems to be reaping good harvests. Speaking from my own
+experience, I may say, that many of the Japanese show as great an
+appreciation of the essence of the religious life, and find the ideas
+and ideals, doctrines and ceremonies, of Christianity as fitted to
+their heart's deepest needs, as do any in the most enlightened parts
+of Christendom. It is true that the Christian system is so opposed to
+the Buddhistic and Shinto, and in some respects to the Confucian, that
+it is an exceedingly difficult matter at the beginning to give the
+Buddhist or Shintoist any idea of what Christianity is. Yet the
+difficulty arises not from the structure of the brain, nor from the
+inherent race character, but solely from the diversity of hitherto
+prevailing systems of thought. When once the passage from the one
+system of thought to the other has been effected, and the significance
+of the Christian system and life has been appreciated,--in other
+words, when the Japanese Buddhist or Shintoist or Confucianist has
+become a Christian,--he is as truly a Christian and as faithful as is
+the Englishman or American.
+
+Of course I do not mean to say that he looks at every doctrine and at
+every ceremony in exactly the same way as an Englishman or American.
+But I do say that the different point of view is due to the differing
+social and religious history of the past and the differing
+surroundings of the present, rather than to inherent racial character
+or brain structure. The Japanese are human beings before they are
+Japanese.
+
+For these reasons have I absolute confidence in the final acceptance
+of Christianity by the Japanese. There is no race characteristic in
+true Christianity that bars the way. Furthermore, the very growth of
+the Japanese in recent years, intellectually and in the reorganization
+of the social order, points to their final acceptance of Christianity
+and renders it necessary. The old religious forms are not satisfying
+the religious needs of to-day. And if history proves anything, it
+proves that only the religion of Jesus can do this permanently.
+Religion is a matter of humanity, not of nationality. It is for this
+reason that the world over, religions, though of so many forms, are
+still so much alike. And it is because the religion of Jesus is
+pre-eminently the religion of humanity and has not a trace of
+exclusive nationality about it, that it is the true religion, and is
+fitted to satisfy the deepest religious wants of the most highly
+developed as well as the least developed man of any and every race and
+nation. In proportion as man develops, he grows out of his narrow
+surroundings, both physical and mental and even moral; he enters a
+larger and larger world. The religious expressions of his nature in
+the local provincial and even national stages of his life cannot
+satisfy his larger potential life. Only the religion of humanity can
+do this. And this is the religion of Jesus. The white light of
+religion, no less than that of scientific truth, has no local or
+national coloring. Perfect truth is universal, eternal, unchangeable.
+Occidental or Oriental colorations are in reality defects,
+discolorations.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+SOME PRINCIPLES OF NATIONAL EVOLUTION
+
+
+And now, having studied somewhat in detail various distinctive
+Japanese characteristics, it is important that we gain an insight into
+the general principles which govern the development of unified,
+national life. These principles render Japanese history luminous.
+
+Let us first fix our attention on the fact that every step in the
+progress of mankind has been from smaller to larger communities. In
+other words, human progress has been through the increasing extension
+of the communal principle. The primitive segregative man, if there
+ever really was such a being, hardly deserves to be called man. Social
+qualities he had very slight, if at all; his altruistic actions and
+emotions were of the lowest and feeblest type. His life was so
+self-centered--we may not call it selfish, for he was not conscious of
+his self-centeredness--that he was quite sufficient to himself except
+for short periods of time. It was a matter of relative indifference to
+him whether his kinsmen survived or perished. His life was in only the
+slightest degree involved in theirs. The first step of progress for
+him depended on the development of some form of communal life. The
+primary problem of the social evolution of man was that of taking the
+wild, self-centered, self-sufficient man, and of teaching him to move
+in line with his fellow-men. And this problem confronted not only
+mankind at the beginning, but it has also been the great problem of
+each successive stage. After the individual has been taught to live
+with, to work with and for, and to love, his immediate kinsmen (in
+other words to merge his individual interests in those of the family,
+and to count the family interests of more importance than his own),
+the next step was to induce the family to look beyond its little
+world and be willing to work with and for neighboring families. When,
+after ages of conflict, this step was in a measure secured and the
+family-tribe was fairly formed, this group in turn must be taught to
+take into its view a still larger group, the tribal nation. Throughout
+the ages the constant problem has been the development of larger and
+larger communal groups. This general process has been very aptly
+called by Mr. Bagehot the taming process. The selfward thoughts and
+ambitions of the individual man have been thus far driven more and
+more into the background of fact, if not of consciousness. The
+individual has been brought into vital and organic relations with
+ever-increasing multitudes of his fellow-men. It is, therefore,
+pre-eminently a process of social or associational development. It not
+only develops social relations in an ever-increasing scale, but also
+social qualities and ideals and desires.
+
+Now this taming, this socializing process, has been successful because
+it has had back of it, always enforcing it, the law of the survival of
+the strongest. What countless millions of men must have perished in
+the first step! They consisted of the less fit; of those who would
+not, or did not, learn soon enough the secret of existence through
+permanent family union. And what countless millions of families must
+have perished because they did not discover the way, or were too
+independent, to unite with kindred families in order to fight a common
+foe or develop a common food supply. And still later, what countless
+tribes must have perished before the secret of tribal federation was
+widely accepted! In each case the problem has been to secure the
+subordination of the interests of the smaller and local community to
+those of the larger community. Death to self and life to the larger
+interest was often the condition of existence at all. How slow men
+always have been and still are to learn this great lesson of history!
+
+The method whereby this taming process has been carried on has been
+through the formation of increasingly comprehensive and rigid customs
+and ideas. Through the development and continued existence of a common
+language, series of common customs, and sets of common ideas, unity
+was secured for the community; these, indeed, are the means whereby a
+group is transformed into a community. As the smaller community gave
+way to the larger, so the local languages, customs, and ideas had to
+break up and become so far modified as to form a new bond of unity.
+Until this unity was secured the new community was necessarily weak;
+the group easily broke up into its old constituent elements. We here
+gain a glimpse into one reason why the development of large composite
+communities, uniting and for the most part doing away with smaller
+ones, was so difficult and slow.
+
+The process of absorption of smaller groups and their unification into
+larger ones, when carried out completely in any land, tends to arrest
+all further growth, not simply because there is no further room for
+expansion by the absorption of other divergent tribes, but also
+because the "cake of custom" is apt to become so hard, the uniformity
+enforced on all the individuals is liable to become so binding, that
+fruitful variation from within is effectually cut off. The evolution
+of relatively isolated or segregated groups necessarily produces
+variety; and the process whereby these divergent types of life and
+thought and organization are gradually brought together into one large
+community provides wide elements of variation, in the selection and
+general adoption of which the evolution of the whole community may be
+secured. But let the divergent elements of the lesser groups once be
+entirely absorbed by the composite community and let the "cake of
+custom" become so rigid that every individual who varies from it is
+branded as a heretic and a traitor, and the progressive evolution of
+that community must cease.
+
+The great problem, therefore, which then confronts man and seems to
+threaten all further progress is, how to break the bondage of custom
+so as to secure local or individual variations. This can be done only
+through some form of individualism. The individual must be free to
+think and act as experience or fancy may suggest, without fear of
+being branded as a traitor, or at least he must have the courage to do
+so in spite of such fears. And to produce an effect on the community
+he must also be more or less protected in his idiosyncrasies by
+popular toleration.
+
+He must be allowed to live and work out his theories, proving whether
+they are valuable or not. But since individualism is just what all
+previous communal development has been most assiduous in crushing out,
+how is the rise of individualism possible, or even desirable? If the
+first and continued development of man depended on the attainment and
+the maintenance of the communal principle, we may be sure that his
+further progress will not consist in the reversal of that principle.
+If, therfore, individualism must be developed, it must manifestly be
+of a variety which does not conflict with or abrogate communalism.
+Only as the individualistic includes the communal principle will it be
+a source of strength; otherwise it can only be a source of weakness to
+the community. But is not this an impossible condition to satisfy?
+Certainly, before the event, it would seem to be so. The rarity with
+which this step in human evolution has been taken would seem to show
+that it is far more difficult to accomplish than any of the previous
+steps. To give it a name we may call it communo-individualism. What
+this variety of individualism is, how this forward step was first
+actually taken, and how it is maintained and extended to-day, we shall
+consider in a later chapter. In the present place its importance for
+us is twofold. First we must realize the logical difficulty of the
+step--its apparently self-contradictory nature. And secondly we need
+to see that fully developed and continuously progressive national life
+is impossible without it. The development of a nation under the
+communal principle may advance far, even to the attainment of a
+relatively high grade of civilization. But the fully centralized and
+completely self-conscious nation cannot come into existence except on
+the basis of this last step of communo-individualism. The growth of
+nationalism proper, and the high development of civilization through
+the rise of the sciences and the arts based upon individualism, all
+await the dawn of the era of which communo-individualism is the
+leading, though at first unrecognized, characteristic.
+
+This individualistic development of the communal principle is its
+intensive development; it is the focalizing and centralizing of the
+consciousness of the national unity in each individual member. The
+extensive process of communal enlargement must ever be accompanied by
+the intensive establishment in the individual of the communal ideal,
+the objective by the subjective, the physical by the psychical, if the
+accidental association for individual profit is to develop into the
+permanent association for the national as well as the individual life.
+The intensive or subjective development of the communal principle
+does, as a matter of fact, take place in all growing communities, but
+it is largely unconscious. Not until the final stages of national
+development does it become a self-conscious process, deserving the
+distinctive name I have given it here, communo-individualism.[CG]
+
+The point just made is, however, only one aspect of a more general
+fact, too, of cardinal importance for the sociologist and the student
+of human evolution. It is that, throughout the entire period of the
+expansion of the community, there has been an equally profound,
+although wholly unconscious, development of the individual. This fact
+seems to have largely escaped the notice of all but the most recent
+thinkers and writers on the general topic of human and social
+evolution. The fact and the importance of the communal life have been
+so manifest that, in important senses, the individual has been almost,
+if not wholly, dropped out of sight. The individual has been
+conceived to have been from the very beginning of social evolution
+fully endowed with mind, ideas, and brains, and to be perfectly
+regardless of all other human beings. The development of the community
+has accordingly been conceived to be a progressive taming and subduing
+of this wild, self-centered, primitive man; a process of eliminating
+his individualistic instincts. So far as the individual is concerned,
+it has been conceived to be chiefly a negative process; a process of
+destroying his individual desires and plans and passions. Man's
+natural state has been supposed to be that of absolute selfishness.
+Only the hard necessity of natural law succeeded in forcing him to
+curb his natural selfish desires and to unite with his fellows. Only
+on these terms could he maintain even an existence. Those who have not
+accepted these terms have been exterminated. Communal life in all its
+forms, from the family upward to the most unified and developed
+nation, is thus conceived as a continued limiting of the individual--a
+necessity, indeed, to his existence, but none the less a limitation.
+
+I am unable to take this view, which at best is a one-sided statement.
+It appears to me capable of demonstration, that communal and
+individual development proceed pari passu; that every gain in the
+communal life is a gain to the individual and vice versa. They are
+complementary, not contradictory processes. Neither can exist, in any
+proper sense, apart from the other; and the degree of the development
+of the one is a sure index of the degree of the development of the
+other. So important is this matter that we must pause to give it
+further consideration.
+
+Consider, first, man in his earliest stage of development. A
+relatively segregarious animal; with a few ideas about the nuts and
+fruits and roots on which he lives; with a little knowledge as to
+where to find them; the subject of constant fear lest a stronger man
+may suddenly appear to seize and carry off his wife and food;
+possessing possibly a few articulate sounds answering to words; such
+probably was primitive man. He must have been little removed from the
+ape. His "self," his mind, was so small and so empty of content that
+we could hardly recognize him as a man, should we stumble on him in
+the forest.
+
+Look next upon him after he has become a family-man. Living in the
+group, his life enlarges; his existence broadens; his ideas multiply;
+his vocabulary increases with his ideas and experiences; he begins to
+share the life and thinking and interests and joys and sorrows of
+others; their ideas and experiences become his, to his enormous
+advantage. What he now is throws into the shade of night what he used
+to be. So far from being the loser by his acceptance of even this
+limited communal life, he is a gainer in every way. He begins to know
+what love is, and hate; what joy is, and sorrow; what kindness is, and
+cruelty; what altruism is, and selfishness. Thus, not only in ideas
+and language, in industry and property, but also in emotions, in
+character, in morality, in religion, in the knowledge of self, and
+even in opportunity for selfishness, he is the gainer. In just the
+degree that communal life is developed is the life of the individuals
+that compose it extended both subjectively and objectively. Human
+psychogenesis takes place in the communal stage of his life. Human
+association is its chief external cause.
+
+It matters not at what successive stage of man's developing life we
+may choose to look at him, the depth and height and breadth, in a
+word, the fullness and vigor and character of the inner and private
+life of the individual, will depend directly on the nature and
+development of the communal life. As the community expands, taking in
+new families or tribes or nations, reaching out to new regions,
+learning new industries, developing new ideas of man, of nature, of
+the gods, of duty, inventing new industries, discovering new truths,
+and developing a new language, all these fresh acquirements of the
+community become the possession of its individual members. In the
+growing complexity of society the individual unit, it is true, is
+increasingly lost among the millions of his fellow-units, yet all
+these successive steps serve to render his life the larger and richer.
+His horizon is no longer the little family group in which he was born;
+he now looks out over large and populous regions and feels the thrill
+of his growing life as he realizes the unity and community of his
+life and interests with those of his fellow-countrymen. His language
+is increasingly enriched; it serves to shape all his thinking and thus
+even the structure of his mind. His knowledge reaches far beyond his
+own experience; it includes not only that of the few persons whom he
+knows directly, but also that of unnumbered millions, remote in time
+and space. He increasingly discovers, though he never has analyzed,
+and is perhaps wholly unable to analyze, the discovery that he is not
+a thing among things; his life has a universal aspect. He lives more
+and more the universal life, subjecting the demands of the once
+domineering present to decisions of a cool judgment that looks back
+into the past and carefully weighs the interests of the future,
+temporal and eternal. Every advance made by the community is thus
+stored up to the credit of its individual members. So far, then, from
+the development of the communal principle consisting of and coming
+about through a limitation of the individual, it is exactly the
+reverse. Only as the individual develops are communal unity and
+progress possible. And on the other hand, only where the communal
+principle has reached its highest development, both extensively and
+intensively, do we find the most highly developed personality. The one
+is a necessary condition of the other. The deepest, blackest
+selfishness, even, can only come into existence where the communal
+principle has reached its highest development.
+
+The preceding statement, however, is not equivalent to saying that
+when communalism and individualism arose in human consciousness they
+were both accepted as equally important. The reverse seems always to
+have been the case. As soon as the two principles are distinguished in
+thought, the communal is at once ranked as the higher, and the
+individual principle is scorned if not actually rejected. And the
+reason for this is manifest. From earliest times the constant foe
+which the community has had to fight and exterminate has been the
+wanton, selfish individual. Individualism of this type was the
+spontaneous contrast to the communal life, and was ever manifesting
+itself. No age or race has been without it, nor ignorant of it. As
+soon as the two principles became clearly contrasted in thought,
+therefore, because of his actual experience, man could conceive of
+individualism only as the antithesis to communalism; it was felt that
+the two were mutually destructive. It inevitably followed that
+communalism as a principle was accepted and individualism condemned.
+In their minds not only social order, but existence itself, was at
+stake. And they were right. Egoistic individualism is necessarily
+atomistic. No society can long maintain its life as a unified and
+peaceful society, when such a principle has been widely accepted by
+its members. The social ills of this and of every age largely arise
+from the presence of this type of men, who hold this principle of
+life.
+
+If, therefore, after a fair degree of national unity has been
+attained, the higher stages of national evolution depend on the higher
+development of individualism, and if the only kind of individualism of
+which men can conceive is the egoistic, it becomes evident that
+further progress must cease. Stagnation, or degeneration, must follow.
+This is what has happened to nearly all the great nations and races of
+the world. They progressed well up to a certain point. Then they
+halted or fell back. The only possible condition under which a new
+lease of progressive life could be secured by them was a new variety
+of individualism, which would unite the opposite and apparently
+contradictory poles of communalism and egoism, namely,
+communo-individualism. Inconceivable though it be to those men and
+nations who have not experienced this type of life, it is nevertheless
+a fact, and a mighty factor in human and in national evolution. In its
+light we are able to see that the communal life itself has not reached
+its fullest development until the individualistic principle has been
+not only recognized in thought, but exalted, both in theory and in
+fact, to its true and coordinate position beside the communal
+principle. Only then does the nation become fully and completely
+organized. Only then does the national organism contain within itself
+the means for an endless, because a self-sustained, life.
+
+It is important to guard against a misunderstanding of the principles
+just enunciated which may easily arise. In saying that the
+development of the individual has proceeded pari passu with that of
+the community, that every gain by the community has contributed
+directly to the development of the individual, I do not say that the
+communal profits are at once distributed among all the members of the
+group, or that the distribution is at all equal. Indeed, such is far
+from the case. Some few individuals seem to appropriate a large and
+unfair proportion of the communal bank account. So far as a people
+live a simple and relatively undifferentiated life, all sharing in
+much the same kind of pursuits, and enjoying much the same grade of
+life,--such as prevailed in a large measure in the earlier times, and
+decreasingly as society has become industrial,--and so far also as the
+new acquirements of thought are transformed into practical life and
+common language, all the members of the community share these
+acquirements in fairly equal measure. So far, however, as the communal
+profits consist of more or less abstract ideas, embodied in religious
+and philosophic thought, and stored away in books and literature
+accessible only to scholars, they are distributed very unequally. The
+more highly developed and consequently differentiated the society, the
+more difficult does distribution become. The very structure of the
+highly differentiated communal organism forbids the equal distribution
+of these goods. The literary and ruling minority have exclusive access
+to the treasures. The industrial majority are more and more rigidly
+excluded from them. Thus, although it is strictly true that every
+advance in the communal principle accrues to the benefit of the
+individual, it is not true that such advance necessarily accrues to
+the benefit of every individual, or equally to all individuals. In its
+lowest stages, developing communalism lifts all its individual members
+to about the same level of mental and moral acquirement. In its middle
+stages it develops all individuals to a certain degree, and certain
+individuals to a high degree. In its highest stages it develops among
+all its members a uniformly high grade of personal worth and
+acquirement.
+
+Now the great problem on whose solution depends the possibility of
+continued communal evolution is, from this view-point, the problem of
+distributing the gains of the community to all its members more and
+more equally. It is the problem of giving to each human unit all the
+best and truest thought and character, all the highest and noblest
+ideals and motives, which the most advanced individuals have secured.
+If we stop to inquire minutely and analytically just what is the
+nature of the greatest attainments made by the community, we discover
+that it is not the possession of wealth in land or gold, it is not the
+accident of social rank, it is not any incident of temporal happiness
+or physical ease of life. It consists, on the contrary, in the
+discovery of the real nature of man. He is no mere animal, living in
+the realm of things and pleasures, limited by the now and the here. He
+is a person, a rational being. His thoughts and desires can only be
+expressed in terms of infinity. Nothing short of the infinite can
+satisfy either his reason or his heart Though living in nature and
+dependent on it, he is above it, and may and should understand it and
+rule it. His thoughts embrace all time and all being. In a very real
+sense he lives an infinite and eternal life, even here in this passing
+world.
+
+The discovery of this set of facts, slowly emerging into
+consciousness, is the culmination of all past history, and the
+beginning of all man's higher life. It is the turning point in the
+history of the human race. Every onward step in man's preceding life,
+whereby he has united to form higher and higher groups, has been
+leading onward and upward to the development of strong personality, to
+the development of individuals competent to make this great discovery.
+But this is not enough.
+
+The next step is to discover the fact, _and to believe it_, that this
+infinite life is the potential possession of every member of the
+community; that the bank account which the community has been storing
+up for ages is for the use not only of a favored few, but also of the
+masses. That since every man is a man, he has an infinite and an
+eternal life and value, which no accident of birth, or poverty, can
+annul. Each man needs to discover himself. The great problem, then,
+which confronts progressive communal evolution is to take this
+enlarged definition of the individual and scatter it broadcast over
+the land, persuading all men to accept and believe it both for
+themselves and for others. This definition must be carried in full
+confidence to the lowest, meanest, most ignorant man that lives in the
+community, and by its help this down-most man must be shown his
+birthright, and in the light of it he must be raised to actual
+manhood. He must "come to himself"; only so can he qualify for his
+heritage.
+
+After a nation, therefore, has secured a large degree of unity, of the
+confederated tribal type, the step which must be taken, before it can
+proceed to more complete nationalization even, is, first, the
+discovery of personality as the real and essential characteristic of
+men, and secondly the discovery that high-grade personality may and
+can and must be developed in all the members of the community. In
+proportion as the members of the community become conscious persons,
+fully self-conscious and self-regulating, fully imbued with the idea
+and the spirit of true personality, of communo-individualism, in that
+proportion will the community be unified and centralized, as well as
+capable of the most complex and differentiated internal structure. The
+strength of such a nation will be indefinitely greater than that of
+any other less personalized and so less communalized nation.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL?
+
+
+Few phases of the Japanese character have proved so fascinating to the
+philosophical writer on Japan as that of the personality of this Far
+Eastern people. From the writings of Sir Rutherford Alcock, the first
+resident English minister in Japan, down to the last publication that
+has come under my eye, all have something to say on this topic. One
+writer, Mr. Percival Lowell, has devoted an entire volume to it under
+the title of "The Soul of the Far East," in which he endeavors to
+establish the position that the entire civilization of the Orient, in
+its institutions, such as the family and the state, in the structure
+of its language, in its conceptions of nature, in its art, in its
+religion, and finally in its inherent mental nature, is essentially
+_impersonal_. One of the prominent and long resident missionaries in
+Japan once delivered a course of lectures on the influence of
+pantheism in the Orient, in which he contended, among other things,
+that the lack of personal pronouns and other phenomena of Japanese
+life and religion are due to the presence and power in this land of
+pantheistic philosophy preventing the development of personality.
+
+The more I have examined these writings and their fundamental
+assumptions, the more manifest have ambiguities and contradictions in
+the use of terms become. I have become also increasingly impressed
+with the failure of advocates of Japanese "impersonality" to
+appreciate the real nature of the phenomena they seek to explain. They
+have not comprehended the nature or the course of social evolution,
+nor have they discovered the mutual relation existing between the
+social order and personality. The arguments advanced for the
+"impersonal" view are more or less plausible, and this method of
+interpreting the Orient appeals for authority to respectable
+philosophical writers. No less a philosopher than Hegel is committed
+to this interpretation. The importance of this subject, not only for a
+correct understanding of Japan, but also of the relation existing
+between individual, social, and religious evolution, requires us to
+give it careful attention. We shall make our way most easily into this
+difficult discussion by considering some prevalent misconceptions and
+defective arguments. I may here express my indebtedness to the author
+of "The Soul of the Far East" for the stimulus received from his
+brilliant volume, differ though I do from his main thesis. We begin
+this study with a few quotations from Mr. Lowell's now classic work.
+
+"Capability to evolve anything is not one of the marked
+characteristics of the Far East. Indeed, the tendency to spontaneous
+variation, Nature's mode of making experiments, would seem there to
+have been an enterprising faculty that was early exhausted. Sleepy, no
+doubt, from having got up betimes with the dawn, these inhabitants of
+the land of the morning began to look upon their day as already far
+spent before they had reached its noon. They grew old young, and have
+remained much the same age ever since. What they were centuries ago,
+that at bottom they are to-day. Take away the European influences of
+the past twenty years, and each man might almost be his own
+great-grandfather. In race character, he is yet essentially the same.
+The traits that distinguished these peoples in the past have been
+gradually extinguishing them ever since. Of these traits, stagnating
+influences upon their career, perhaps the most important is the great
+quality of "impersonality."[CGa] "The peoples inhabiting it [the
+northern hemisphere] grow steadily more personal as we go West. So
+unmistakable is this gradation that we are almost tempted to ascribe
+it to cosmical rather than to human causes.... The sense of self grows
+more intense as we follow the wake of the setting sun, and fades
+steadily as we advance into the dawn. America, Europe, the Levant,
+India, Japan, each is less personal than the one before. We stand at
+the nearer end of the scale, the Far Orientals at the other. If with
+us the 'I' seems to be the very essence of the soul, then the soul of
+the Far East may be said to be 'Impersonality.'"[CH]
+
+Following the argument through the volume we see that individual
+physical force and aggressiveness, deficiency of politeness, and
+selfishness are, according to this line of thought, essential elements
+of personality. The opposite set of qualities constitutes the essence
+of impersonality. "The average Far Oriental, indeed, talks as much to
+no purpose as his Western cousin, only in his chit-chat politeness
+takes the place of personalities. With him, self is suppressed, and an
+ever-present regard for others is substituted in its stead. A lack of
+personality is, as we have seen, the occasion of this courtesy; it is
+also its cause.... Considered a priori, the connection between the two
+is not far to seek. Impersonality, by lessening the interest in one's
+self, induces one to take an interest in others. Introspection tends
+to make a man a solitary animal, the absence of it a social one. The
+more impersonal the people, the more will the community supplant the
+individual in the popular estimation.... Then, as the social desires
+develop, politeness, being the means of their enjoyment, develops
+also."[CI]
+
+Let us take a look at some definitions:
+
+"Individuality, personality, and the sense of self, are only three
+aspects of the same thing. They are so many various views of the soul,
+according as we regard it from an intrinsic, an altruistic, or an
+egoistic standpoint.... By individuality we mean that bundle of ideas,
+thoughts, and day-dreams which constitute our separate identity, and
+by virtue of which we feel each one of us at home within himself....
+Consciousness is the necessary attribute of mental action. Not only is
+it the sole way we have of knowing mind; without it there would be no
+mind to know. Not to be conscious of one's self is, mentally
+speaking, not to be. This complex entity, this little cosmos of a
+world, the 'I,' has for its very law of existence, self-consciousness,
+while personality is the effect it produces upon the consciousness of
+others."[CJ]
+
+The more we study the above definitions, the more baffling they
+become. Try as I may, I have not been able to fit them, not only to
+the facts of my own experience, which may not be strange, but I cannot
+reconcile them even to each other. There seem to me inherent
+ambiguities and self-contradictions lurking beneath their scientific
+splendor. Individuality is stated to be "that bundle of ideas,
+thoughts, and day-dreams which constitute our separate identity." This
+seems plain and straightforward, but is it really so? Consciousness is
+stated to be not only "the necessary attribute of mental action" (to
+which exception might be taken on the ground of abundant proof of
+unconscious mental action), but it is also considered to be the very
+cause of mind itself. Not only by consciousness do we know mind, but
+the consciousness itself constitutes the mind; "without it there would
+be no mind to know." "Not to be conscious of one's self is not to be."
+Do we then cease to be, when we sleep? or when absorbed in thought or
+action? And do we become new-created when we awake? What is the bond
+of connection that binds into one the successive consciousnesses of
+the successive days? Does not that "bundle of ideas" become broken
+into as many wholly independent fragments as there are intervals
+between our sleepings? Or rather is not each fragment a whole in
+itself, and is not the idea of self-continuity from day to day and
+from week to week a self-delusion? How can it be otherwise if
+consciousness constitutes existence? For after the consciousness has
+ceased and "the bundle of ideas," which constitutes the individuality
+of that day, has therefore gone absolutely out of existence, it is
+impossible that the old bundle shall be resurrected by a new
+consciousness. Only a new bundle can be the product of a new
+consciousness. Evidently there is trouble somewhere. But let us pass
+on.
+
+"The 'I' has for its very law of existence self-consciousness." Is
+not "self-consciousness" here identified with "consciousness" in the
+preceding sentence? The very existence of the mind, the "I," is
+ascribed to each in turn. Is there, then, no difference between
+consciousness and self-consciousness? Finally, personality is stated
+to be "the effect it [the "I"] produces on the self-consciousness of
+others." I confess I gain no clear idea from this statement. But
+whatever else it may mean, this is clear, that personality is not a
+quality or characteristic of the "I," but only some effect which the
+"I" produces on the consciousness of another. Is it a quality, then,
+of the other person? And does impersonality mean the lack of such an
+effect? But does not this introduce us to new confusion? When a human
+being is wholly absorbed in an altruistic act, for instance, wholly
+forgetful of self, he is, according to a preceding paragraph, quite
+impersonal; yet, according to the definition before us, he cannot be
+impersonal, for he is producing most lively effects on the
+consciousness of the poor human being he is befriending; in his
+altruistic deed he is strongly personal, yet not he, for personality
+does not belong to the person acting, but somehow to the person
+affected. How strange that the personality of a person is not his own
+characteristic but another's!
+
+But still more confusing is the definition when we recall that if the
+benevolent man is wholly unconscious of self, and is thinking only of
+the one whom he is helping, then he himself is no longer existing. But
+in that case how can he help the poor man or even continue to think of
+him? Perfect altruism is self-annihilation! Knowledge of itself by the
+mind is that which constitutes it! But enough. It has become clear
+that these terms have not been used consistently, nor are the
+definitions such as to command the assent of any careful psychologist
+or philosopher. What the writer means to say is, I judge, that the
+measure of a man's personality is the amount of impression he makes on
+his fellows. For the whole drift of his argument is that both the
+physical and mental aggressiveness of the Occidental is far greater
+than that of the Oriental; this characteristic, he asserts, is due to
+the deficient development of personality in the Orient, and this
+deficient development he calls "impersonality." If those writers who
+describe the Orient as "impersonal" fail in their definition of the
+term "personal," their failure to define "impersonal" is even more
+striking. They use the term as if it were so well known as to need no
+definition; yet their usage ascribes to it contrary conceptions. As a
+rule they conceive of "impersonality" as a deficiency of development;
+yet, when they attempt to describe its nature, they speak of it as
+self-suppression. A clear statement of this latter point may be found
+in a passage already quoted: "Politeness takes the place of
+personalities. With him [the Oriental], self is suppressed, and an
+ever-present regard for others is substituted." "Impersonality, by
+lessening the interest in one's self, induces one to take interest in
+others." In this statement it will be noted the "_self is
+suppressed_." Does "impersonality" then follow personality, as a
+matter of historical development? It would so appear from this and
+kindred passages. But if this is true, then Japan is _more_ instead of
+less developed than the Occident. Yet this is exactly the reverse of
+that for which this school of thought contends.
+
+Let us now examine some concrete illustrations adduced by those who
+advocate Japanese impersonality. They may be arranged in two classes:
+those that are due wholly to invention, and those that are doubtless
+facts, but that may be better accounted for by some other theory than
+that of "impersonality."
+
+Mr. Lowell makes amusing material out of the two children's festivals,
+known by the Japanese as "Sekku," occurring on March 3 and June 5 (old
+calendar). Because the first of these is exclusively for the girls and
+the second is exclusively for the boys, Mr. Lowell concludes that they
+are general birthdays, in spite of the fact which he seems to know
+that the ages are not reckoned from these days. He calls them "the
+great impersonal birthdays"; for, according to his supposition, all
+the girls celebrate their birthdays on the third day of the third moon
+and all the boys celebrate theirs on the fifth day of the fifth moon,
+regardless of the actual days on which they may have been born. With
+regard to this understanding of the significance of the festival, I
+have asked a large number of Japanese, not one of whom had ever heard
+of such an idea. Each one has insisted that individual birthdays are
+celebrated regardless of these general festivals; the ages of children
+are never computed from these festivals; they have nothing whatever to
+do with the ages of the children.[CK]
+
+The report of the discussions of the Japanese Society of Comparative
+Religion contains quite a minute statement of all the facts known as
+to these festivals, much too long in this connection, but among them
+there is not the slightest reference to the birthday feature
+attributed to them by Mr. Lowell.[CL]
+
+Mr. Lowell likewise invents another fact in support of his theory by
+his interpretation of the Japanese method of computing ages. Speaking
+of the advent of an infant into the home he says, that "from the
+moment he makes his appearance he is spoken of as a year old, and this
+same age he continues to be considered in most simple cases of
+calculation, till the beginning of the next calendar year. When that
+epoch of general rejoicing arrives, he is credited with another year
+himself. So is everybody else. New Year's day is a common birthday for
+the community, a sort of impersonal anniversary for his whole world."
+Now this is a very entertaining conceit, but it will hardly pass
+muster as a serious argument with one who has any real understanding
+of Japanese ideas on the subject. The simple fact is that the Japanese
+does not ordinarily tell you how old the child is, but only in how
+many year periods he has lived. Though born December 31, on January 1
+he has undoubtedly lived in two different year periods. This method of
+counting, however, is not confined to the counting of ages, but it
+characterizes all their counting. If you ask a man how many days
+before a certain festival near at hand he will say ten where we would
+say but nine. In other words, in counting periods the Japanese count
+all, including both the first and the last, whereas we omit the first.
+This as a custom is an interesting psychological problem, but it has
+not the remotest connection with "personality" or "impersonality."
+Furthermore, the Japanese have another method of signifying the age of
+a child which corresponds exactly to ours. You have but to ask what is
+the "full" age of a child to receive a statement which satisfies our
+ideas of the problem. The idea of calling New Year's day a great
+"impersonal" birthday because forsooth all the members of the
+community and the nation then enter on a new year period, and of using
+that as an argument for the "impersonality" of the whole race, is as
+interesting as it is inconclusive.
+
+Much is made of the fact that Japanese art has paid its chief
+attention to nature and to animals, and but little to man. This
+proves, it is argued, that the Japanese artist and people are
+"impersonal"--that they are not self-conscious, for their gaze is
+directed outward, toward "impersonal" nature; had they been an
+aggressive personal people, a people conscious of self, their art
+would have depicted man. The cogency of this logic seems questionable
+to me. Art is necessarily objective, whether it depicts nature or man;
+the gaze is always and necessarily outward, even when it is depicting
+the human form. In our consideration of the aesthetic elements of
+Japanese character[CM] we gave reasons for the Japanese love of
+natural beauty and for their relatively slight attention to the human
+form. If the reasons there given were correct, the fact that Japanese
+art is concerned chiefly with nature has nothing whatever to do with
+the "impersonality" of the people. If "impersonality" is essentially
+altruistic, if it consists of self-suppression and interest in others,
+then it is difficult to see how art that depicts the form even of
+human beings can escape the charge of being "impersonal" except when
+the artist is depicting himself. If, again, supreme interest in
+objective "impersonal" nature proves the lack of "personality," should
+we not argue that the West is supremely "impersonal" because of its
+extraordinary interest in nature and in the natural and physical
+sciences? Are naturalists and scientists "impersonal," and are
+philosophers and psychologists "personal" in nature? If it be argued
+that art which depicts the human emotions is properly speaking
+subjective, and therefore a proof of developed personality, will it be
+maintained that Japan is devoid of such art? How about the pictures
+and the statues of warriors? How about the passionate features of the
+Ni-o, the placid faces of the Buddhas and other religious imagery? Are
+there not here the most powerful representations possible of human
+emotions, both active and passive? But even so, is not the gaze of the
+artist still _outward_ on others, _i.e._, is he not altruistic; and,
+therefore, "impersonal," according to this method of thought and use
+of terms? Are European artists who revel in landscape and animal
+scenes deficient in "personal" development, and are those who devote
+their lives to painting nude women particularly developed in
+"personality"? Truly, a defective terminology and a distorted
+conception of what "personality" is, land one in most contradictory
+positions.
+
+Those who urge the "impersonality" of the Orient make much of the
+Japanese idea of the "family," with the attendant customs. The fact
+that marriage is arranged for by the parents, and that the two
+individuals most concerned have practically no voice in the matter,
+proves conclusively, they argue, that the latter have little
+"personality." Here again all turns on the definition of this
+important word. If by "personality" is meant consciousness of one's
+self as an independent individual, then I do not see what relation the
+two subjects have. If, however, it means the willingness of the
+subjects of marriage to forego their own desires and choices; because
+indeed they do not have any of their own, then the facts will not bear
+out the argument. These writers skillfully choose certain facts out of
+the family customs whereby to illustrate and enforce this theory, but
+they entirely omit others having a significant bearing upon it. Take,
+for instance, the fact that one-third of the marriages end in divorce.
+What does this show? It shows that one-third of the individuals in
+each marriage are so dissatisfied with the arrangements made by the
+parents that they reject them and assert their own choice and
+decision. According to the argument for "impersonality" in marriage,
+these recalcitrant, unsubmissive individuals have a great amount of
+"personality," that is, consciousness of self; and this consciousness
+of self produces a great effect on the other party to the marriage;
+and the effect on the other party (in the vast majority of the cases
+women), that is to say, the effect of the divorce on the consciousness
+of the women, constitutes the personality of the men! The marriage
+customs cited, therefore, do not prove the point, for no account is
+taken of the multitudinous cases in which one party or the other
+utterly refuses to carry out the arrangements of the parents. Many a
+girl declines from the beginning the proposals of the parents. These
+cases are by no means few. Only a few days before writing the present
+lines a waiting girl in a hotel requested me to find her a place of
+service in some foreign family. On inquiry she told me how her parents
+wished her to marry into a certain family; but that she could not
+endure the thought and had run away from home. One of the facts which
+strike a missionary, as he becomes acquainted with the people, is the
+frequency of the cases of running away from home. Girls run away,
+probably not as frequently as boys, yet very often. Are we to believe
+that these are individuals who have an excessive amount of
+"personality"? If so, then the development of "personality" in Japan
+is far more than the advocates of its "impersonality" recognize or
+would allow us to believe. Mr. Lowell devotes three pages to a
+beautiful and truthful description of the experience known in the West
+as "falling in love." Turning his attention to the Orient, because of
+the fact that marriages are arranged for by the families concerned, he
+argues that: "No such blissful infatuation falls to the lot of the Far
+Oriental. He never is the dupe of his own desire, the willing victim
+of his self-delusion. He is never tempted to reveal himself, and by
+thus revealing, realize.... For she is not his love; she is only his
+wife; and what is left of a romance when the romance is left out?"
+Although there is an element of truth in this, yet it is useless as a
+support for the theory of Japanese "impersonality." For it is not a
+fact that the Japanese do not fall in love; it is a well-known
+experience to them. It is inconceivable how anyone at all acquainted
+with either Japanese life or literature could make such an assertion.
+The passionate love of a man and a woman for each other, so strong
+that in multitudes of cases the two prefer a common death to a life
+apart, is a not uncommon event in Japan. Frequently we read in the
+daily papers of a case of mutual suicide for love. This is
+sufficiently common to have received a specific name "joshi."[CN]
+
+
+So far as the argument for "impersonality" is concerned this
+illustration from the asserted lack of love is useless, for it is one
+of those manufactured for the occasion by imaginative and resourceful
+advocates of "impersonality."
+
+But I do not mean to say that "falling in love" plays the same
+important part in the life and development of the youth in Japan that
+it does in the West. It is usually utterly ignored, so far as parental
+planning for marriage is concerned. Love is not recognized as a proper
+basis for the contraction of marriage, and is accordingly frowned
+upon. It is deemed a sign of mental and moral weakness for a man to
+fall in love. Under these conditions it is not at all strange that
+"falling in love" is not so common an experience as in the West.
+Furthermore, this profound experience is not utilized as it is in the
+West as a refining and elevating influence in the life of a young man
+or woman. In a land where "falling in love" is regarded as an immoral
+thing, a breaking out of uncontrollable animal passion, it is not
+strange that it should not be glorified by moralists or sanctified by
+religion. There are few experiences in the West so ennobling as the
+love that a young man and a young woman bear to each other during the
+days of their engagement and lasting onward throughout the years of
+their lengthening married life. The West has found the secret of
+making use of this period in the lives of the young to elevate and
+purify them of which the East knows little.
+
+But there are still other and sadder consequences following from the
+attitude of the Japanese to the question of "falling in love." It can
+hardly be doubted that the vast number of divorces is due to the
+defective method of betrothal, a method which disregards the free
+choice of the parties most concerned. The system of divorce is, we may
+say, the device of society for remedying the inherent defects of the
+betrothal system. It treats both the man and the woman as though they
+were not persons but unfeeling machines. Personality, for a while
+submissive, soon asserts its liberty, in case the married parties
+prove uncongenial, and demands the right of divorce. Divorce is thus
+the device of thwarted personality. But in addition to this evil,
+there is that of concubinage or virtual polygamy, which is often the
+result of "falling in love." And then, there is the resort of
+hopelessly thwarted personality known in the West as well as in the
+East, murder and suicide, and oftentimes even double suicide, referred
+to above. The marriage customs of the Orient are such that hopeless
+love, though mutual, is far more frequent than in the West, and the
+death of lovers in each other's arms, after having together taken the
+fatal draught, is not rare. The number of suicides due to hopeless
+love in 1894 was 407, and the number of murders for the same cause was
+94. Here is a total of over five hundred deaths in a single year, very
+largely due to the defective marriage system. Do not these phenomena
+refute assertions to the effect that the Japanese are so impersonal as
+not to know what it is to "fall in love"? If the question of the
+personality of the Japanese is to be settled by the phenomena of
+family life and the strength of the sexual emotion, would we not have
+to pronounce them possessed of strongly developed personality?
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+THE JAPANESE NOT IMPERSONAL
+
+
+We must now face the far more difficult task of presenting a positive
+statement in regard to the problem of personality in the Orient. We
+need to discover just what is or should be meant by the terms
+"personality" and "impersonality." We must also analyze this Oriental
+civilization and discover its elementary factors, in order that we may
+see what it is that has given the impression to so many students that
+the Orient is "impersonal." In doing this, although our aim is
+constructive, we shall attain our end with greater ease if we rise to
+positive results through further criticism of defective views. We
+naturally begin with definitions.
+
+"Individuality" is defined by the Standard Dictionary as "the state or
+quality of being individual; separate or distinct existence."
+"Individual" is defined as "Anything that cannot be divided or
+separated into parts without losing identity.... A single person,
+animal, or thing." "Personality" is defined as "That which constitutes
+a person; conscious, separate existence as an intelligent and
+voluntary being." "Person" is defined as "Any being having life,
+intelligence, will, and separate individual existence." On these
+various definitions the following observations seem pertinent.
+
+"Individuality" has reference only to the distinctions existing
+between different objects, persons, or things. The term draws
+attention to the fact of distinctness and difference and not to the
+qualities which make the difference, and least of all to the
+consciousness of identity by virtue of which "we feel each one of us
+at home within himself."
+
+"Personality" properly has reference only to that which constitutes a
+person. As contrasted with an animal a person has not only life, but
+also a highly developed and self-conscious intelligence, feeling, and
+will; these involve moral relations toward other persons and religious
+relations toward God.
+
+Consciousness is not attendant on every act of the person, much less
+is self-consciousness, although both are always potential and more or
+less implicit. A person is often so absorbed in thought or act as to
+be wholly unconscious of his thinking or acting; the consciousness is,
+so to speak, submerged for the time being. Self-consciousness implies
+considerable progress in reflection on one's own states of mind, and
+in the attainment of the consciousness of one's own individuality. It
+is the result of introspection. Self-consciousness, however, does not
+constitute one's identity; it merely recognizes it.
+
+The foundation for a correct conception of the term "personality"
+rests on the conception of the term "soul" or "spirit." In my
+judgment, each human being is to be conceived as being a separate
+"soul," endowed by its very nature with definite capacities or
+qualities or attributes which we describe as mental, emotional, and
+volitional, having powers of consciousness more or less developed
+according to the social evolution of the race, the age of the
+individual, his individual environment, and depending also on the
+amount of education he may have received. The possession of a soul
+endowed with these qualities constitutes a person; their possession in
+marked measure constitutes developed personality, and in defective
+measure, undeveloped personality.
+
+The unique character of a "person" is that he combines perfect
+separateness with the possibility and more or less of the actuality of
+perfect universality. A "person" is in a true sense a universal, an
+infinite being. He is thus through the constitution of his psychic
+nature a thinking, feeling, and willing being. Through his intellect
+and in proportion to his knowledge he becomes united with the whole
+objective universe; through his feelings he may become united in
+sympathy and love with all sentient creation, and even with God
+himself, the center and source of all being; through his active will
+he is increasingly creator of his environment. Man is thus in a true
+sense creating the conditions which make him to be what he is. Thus
+in no figurative sense, but literally and actually, man is in the
+process of creating himself. He is realizing the latent and hitherto
+unsuspected potentialities of his nature. He is creating a world in
+which to express himself; and this he does by expressing himself. In
+proportion as man advances, making explicit what is implicit in his
+inner nature, is he said to grow in personality. A man thus both
+possesses personality and grows in personality. He could not grow in
+it did he not already actually possess it. In such growth both
+elements of his being, the individual and the universal, develop
+simultaneously. A person of inferior personal development is at once
+less individual and less universal. This is a matter, however, not of
+endowment but of development. We thus distinguish between the original
+personal endowment, which we may call intrinsic or inherent
+personality, and the various forms in which this personality has
+manifested and expressed itself, which we may call extrinsic or
+acquired personality. Inherent personality is that which
+differentiates man from animal. It constitutes the original involution
+which explains and even necessitates man's entire evolution. There may
+be, nay, must be, varying degrees of expression of the inherent
+personality, just as there may be and must be varying degrees of
+consciousness of personality. These depend on the degree of evolution
+attained by the race and by the individuals of the race.
+
+It is no part of our plan to justify this conception of the nature of
+personality, or to defend these brief summary statements as to its
+inherent nature. It is enough if we have gained a clear idea of this
+conception on which the present chapter, and indeed this entire work,
+rests. In discussing the question as to personality in the Orient, it
+is important for us ever to bear in mind the distinctions between the
+inherent endowment that constitutes personal beings, the explicit and
+external expression of that endowment, and the possession of the
+consciousness of that endowment. For these are three things quite
+distinct, though intimately related.
+
+The term "impersonality" demands special attention, being the most
+misused and abused term of all. The first and natural signification of
+the word is the mere negation of personality; as a stone, for
+instance, is strictly "impersonal." This is the meaning given by the
+dictionaries. But in this sense, of course, it is inapplicable to
+human beings. What, then, is the meaning when applied to them? When
+Mr. Lowell says, "If with us [of the West] the 'I' seems to be of the
+very essence of the soul, then the soul of the Far East may be said to
+be 'impersonal,'" what does he mean? He certainly does not mean that
+the Chinese and Japanese and Hindus have no emotional or volitional
+characteristics, that they are strictly "impersonal"; nor does he mean
+that the Oriental has less development of powers of thinking, willing,
+feeling, or of introspective meditation. The whole argument shows that
+he means that _their sense of the individuality or separateness of the
+Ego is so slight that it is practically ignored; and this not by their
+civilization alone, but by each individual himself_. The supreme
+consciousness of the individual is not of himself, but of his family
+or race; or if he is an intensely religious man, his consciousness is
+concerned with his essential identity with the Absolute and Ultimate
+Being, rather than with his own separate self. In other words, the
+term "impersonal" is made to do duty for the non-existent negative of
+"individual." "Impersonal" is thus equivalent to "universal" and
+personal to "individual." To change the phraseology, the term
+"impersonal" is used to signify a state of mind in which the
+separateness or individuality of the individual ego is not fully
+recognized or appreciated even by the individual himself. The
+prominent element of the individual's consciousness is the unity or
+the universalism, rather than the multiplicity or individualism.
+
+Mr. Lowell in effect says this in his closing chapter entitled
+"Imagination." His thesis seems to be that the universal mind, of
+which, each individual receives a fragment, becomes increasingly
+differentiated as the race mind evolves. In proportion as the
+evolution has progressed does the individual realize his
+individuality--his separateness; this individualization, this
+differentiation of the individual mind is, in his view, the measure as
+well as the cause of the higher civilization. The lack of such
+individualization he calls "impersonality"; in such a mind the
+dominant thought is not of the separateness between, but of the unity
+that binds together, himself and the universal mind.
+
+If the above is a correct statement of the conception of those who
+emphasize the "impersonality" of the Orient, then there are two things
+concerning it which may be said at once. First, the idea is a
+perfectly clear and intelligible one, the proposition is definite and
+tangible. But why do they not so express it? The terms "personality"
+and "individuality" are used synonymously; while "impersonal" is
+considered the equivalent of the negative of individual,
+un-individual--a word which has not yet been and probably never will
+be used. But the negation of individual is universal; "impersonal,"
+therefore, according to the usage of these writers, becomes equivalent
+to universal.
+
+But, secondly, even after the use of terms has become thus understood,
+and we are no longer confused over the words, having arrived at the
+idea they are intended to convey, the idea itself is fundamentally
+erroneous. I freely admit that there is an interesting truth of which
+these writers have got a glimpse and to which they are striving to
+give expression, but apparently they have not understood the real
+nature of this truth and consequently they are fundamentally wrong in
+calling the Far East "impersonal," even in their sense of the word.
+They are furthermore in error, in ascribing this "impersonal"
+characteristic of the Japanese to their inherent race nature, If they
+are right, the problem is fundamentally one of biological evolution.
+
+In contrast to this view, it is here contended, first, that the
+feature they are describing is not such as they describe it; second,
+that it is not properly called "impersonality"; third, that it is not
+a matter of inherent race nature, of brain structure, or of mind
+differentiation, but wholly a matter of social evolution; and, fourth,
+that if there is such a trait as they describe, it is not due to a
+deficiently developed but on the contrary to a superlatively developed
+personality, which might better be called super-personality. To state
+the position here advocated in a nutshell, it is maintained that the
+asserted "impersonality" of the Japanese is the result of the
+communalistic nature of the social order which has prevailed down to
+the most recent times; it has put its stamp on every feature of the
+national and individual life, not omitting the language, the
+philosophy, the religion, or even the inmost thoughts of the people.
+This dominance of the communalistic type of social order has doubtless
+had an effect on the physical and psychic, including the brain,
+development of the people. These physical and psychical developments,
+however, are not the cause, but the product, of the social order. They
+are, furthermore, of no superlative import, since they offer no
+insuperable obstacle to the introduction of a social order radically
+different from that of past millenniums.
+
+Before proceeding to elaborate and illustrate this general position,
+it seems desirable to introduce two further definitions.
+
+Communalism and individualism are the two terms used throughout this
+work to describe two contrasted types of social order.
+
+By communalism I mean that order of society, whether family, tribal,
+or national, in which the idea and the importance of the community are
+more or less clearly recognized, and in which this idea has become the
+constructive principle of the social order, and where at the same time
+the individual is practically ignored and crushed.
+
+By individualism I mean that later order of society in which the worth
+of the individual has been recognized and emphasized, to the extent of
+radically modifying the communalism, securing a liberty for individual
+act and thought and initiative, of which the old order had no
+conception, and which it would have considered both dangerous and
+immoral. Individualism is not that atomic social order in which the
+idea of the communal unity has been rejected, and each separate human
+being regarded as the only unit. Such a society could hardly be called
+an order, even by courtesy. Individualism is that developed stage of
+communalism, wherein the advantages of close communal unity have been
+retained, and wherein, at the same time, the idea and practice of the
+worth of the individual and the importance of giving him liberty of
+thought and action have been added. Great changes in the internal
+structure, of society follow, but the communial unity or idea is
+neither lost nor injured. In taking up our various illustrations
+regarding personality in Japan, three points demand our attention;
+what are the facts? are they due to, and do they prove, the asserted
+"impersonality" of the people? and are the facts sufficiently
+accounted for by the communal theory of the Japanese social order?
+
+Let us begin, then, with the illustration of which advocates of
+"impersonality" make so much, Japanese politeness. As to the reality
+of the fact, it is hardly necessary that I present extended proof.
+Japanese politeness is proverbial. It is carried into the minutest
+acts of daily life; the holding of the hands, the method of entering a
+room, the sucking in of the breath on specific occasions, the
+arrangement of the hair, the relative places of honor in a
+sitting-room, the method of handing guests refreshments, the exchange
+of friendly gifts--every detail of social life is rigidly dominated by
+etiquette. Not only acts, but the language of personal address as
+well, is governed by ideas of politeness which have fundamentally
+affected the structure of the language, by preventing the development
+of personal pronouns.
+
+Now what is the cause of this characteristic of the Japanese? It is
+commonly attributed by writers of the impersonal school to the
+"impersonality" of the Oriental mind. "Impersonality" is not only the
+occasion, it is the cause of the politeness of the Japanese people.
+"Self is suppressed, and an ever-present regard for others is
+substituted in its stead." "Impersonality, by lessening the interest
+in one's self, induces one to take interest in others."[CO] Politeness
+is, in these passages, attributed to the impersonal nature of the
+Japanese mind. The following quotations show that this characteristic
+is conceived of as inherent in race and mind structure, not in the
+social order, as is here maintained. "The nation grew up to man's
+estate, keeping the mind of its childhood."[CP] "In race
+characteristics, he is yet essentially the same.... Of these traits
+... perhaps the most important is the great quality of
+impersonality."[CQ] "The peoples inhabiting it [the earth's temperate
+zone] grow steadily more personal as we go West. So unmistakable is
+this gradation that one is almost tempted to ascribe it to cosmical
+rather than human causes.... The essence of the soul of the Far East
+may be said to be impersonality."[CR]
+
+In his chapter on "Imagination," Mr. Lowell seeks to explain the cause
+of the "impersonality" of the Orient. He attributes it to their marked
+lack of the faculty of "imagination"--the faculty of forming new and
+original ideas. Lacking this faculty, there has been relatively little
+stimulus to growth, and hence no possibility of differentiation and
+thus of individualization.
+
+If politeness were due to the "impersonal" nature of the race mind, it
+would be impossible to account for the rise and decline of Japanese
+etiquette, for it should have existed from the beginning, and
+continued through all time, nor could we account for the gross
+impoliteness that is often met with in recent years. The Japanese
+themselves deplore the changes that have taken place. They testify
+that the older forms of politeness were an integral element of the
+feudal system and were too often a thin veneer of manner by no means
+expressive of heart interest. None can be so absolutely rude as they
+who are masters of the forms of politeness, but have not the kindly
+heart. The theory of "impersonality" does not satisfactorily account
+for the old-time politeness of Japan.
+
+The explanation here offered for the development and decline of
+politeness is that they are due to the nature of the social order.
+Thoroughgoing feudalism long maintained, with its social ranks and
+free use of the sword, of necessity develops minute unwritten rules of
+etiquette; without the universal observance of these customs, life
+would be unbearable and precarious, and society itself would be
+impossible. Minute etiquette is the lubricant of a feudal social
+order. The rise and fall of Japan's phenomenal system of feudal
+etiquette is synchronous with that of her feudal system, to which it
+is due rather than to the asserted "impersonality" of the race mind.
+
+The impersonal theory is amazingly blind to adverse phenomena. Such a
+one is the marked sensitiveness of the middle and upper classes to the
+least slight or insult. The gradations of social rank are scrupulously
+observed, not only on formal occasions, but also in the homes at
+informal and social gatherings. Failure to show the proper attention,
+or the use of language having an insufficient number of honorific
+particles and forms, would be instantly interpreted as a personal
+slight, if not an insult.[CS]
+
+Now if profuse courtesy is a proof of "impersonality," as its
+advocates argue, what does morbid sensitiveness prove but highly
+developed personality? But then arises the difficulty of understanding
+how the same individuals can be both profusely polite and morbidly
+sensitive at one and the same time? Instead of inferring
+"impersonality" from the fact of politeness, from the two facts of
+sensitiveness and politeness we may more logically infer a
+considerable degree of personality. Yet I would not lay much stress on
+this argument, for oftentimes (or is it always true?) the weaker and
+more insignificant the person, the greater the sensitiveness. Extreme
+sensitiveness is as natural and necessary a product of a highly
+developed feudalism as is politeness, and neither is particularly due
+to the high or the low development of personality.
+
+Similarly with respect to the question of altruism, which is
+practically identified with politeness by expounders of Oriental
+"impersonality." They make this term (altruism) the virtual
+equivalent of "impersonality"--interest in others rather than in self,
+an interest due, according to their view, to a lack of differentiation
+of the individual minds; the individuals, though separate, still
+retain the universalism of the original mind-stuff. This use of the
+term altruism makes it a very different thing from the quality or
+characteristic which in the West is described by this term.
+
+But granting that this word is used with a legitimate meaning, we ask,
+is altruism in this sense an inherent quality of the Japanese race?
+Let the reader glance back to our discussion of the possession by the
+Japanese of sympathy, and the humane feelings.[CT] We saw there marked
+proofs of their lack. The cruelty of the old social order was such as
+we can hardly realize. Altruism that expresses itself only in polite
+forms, and does not strive to alleviate the suffering of fellow-men,
+can have very little of that sense, which this theory requires. So
+much as to the fact. Then as to the theory. If this alleged altruism
+were inherent in the mental structure, it ought to be a universal
+characteristic of the Japanese; it should be all-pervasive and
+permanent. It should show itself toward the foreigner as well as
+toward the native. But such is far from the case. Few foreigners have
+received a hearty welcome from the people at large. They are suspected
+and hated; as little room as possible is made for them. The less of
+their presence and advice, the better. So far as there is any interest
+in them, it is on the ground of utility, and not of inherent good will
+because of a feeling of aboriginal unity. Of course there are many
+exceptions to these statements, especially among the Christians. But
+such is the attitude of the people as a whole, especially of the
+middle and upper classes toward the foreigners.
+
+If we turn our attention to the opposite phase of Japanese character,
+namely their selfishness, their self-assertiveness, and their
+aggressiveness, whether as a nation or as individuals, and consider at
+the same time the recent rise of this spirit, we are again impressed
+both with the narrow range of facts to which the advocates of
+"impersonality" call our attention, and also with the utter
+insufficiency of their theory to account for the facts they overlook.
+According to the theory of altruism and "impersonality," these are
+characteristics of undeveloped races and individuals, while the
+reverse characteristics, those of selfishness and self-assertiveness,
+are the products of a later and higher development, marks of strong
+personality. But neither selfishness nor individual aggressiveness is
+a necessary element of developed "personality." If it were, children
+who have never been trained by cultivated mothers, but have been
+allowed to have their own way regardless of the rights or desires of
+others, are more highly developed in "personality" than the adult who
+has, through a long life of self-discipline and religious devotion,
+become regardless of his selfish interests and solicitous only for the
+welfare of others. If the high development of altruism is equivalent
+to the development of "impersonality," then those in the West who are
+renowned for humanity and benevolence are "impersonal," while robbers
+and murderers and all who are regardless of the welfare of others are
+possessed of the most highly developed "personality." And it also
+follows that highly developed altruistic benefactors of mankind are
+such, after all, because they are _undeveloped_,--their minds are
+relatively undifferentiated,--hence their fellow-feeling and kindly
+acts. There is a story of some learned wit who met a half-drunken
+boor; the latter plunged ahead, remarking, "I never get out of the way
+of a fool"; to which the quick reply came, "I always do." According to
+this argument based on self-assertive aggressiveness, the boor was the
+man possessed of a strong personality, while the gentleman was
+relatively "impersonal." If pure selfishness and aggressiveness are
+the measure of personality, then are not many of the carnivorous
+animals endowed with a very high degree of "personality"?
+
+The truth is, a comprehensive and at the same time correct contrast
+between the East and the West cannot be stated in terms of personality
+and impersonality. They fail not only to take in all the facts, but
+they fail to explain even the facts they take in. Such a contrast of
+the East and the West can be stated only in the terms of communalism
+and individualism. As we have already seen,[CU] every nation has to
+pass through the communal stage, in order to become a nation at all.
+The families and tribes of which it is composed need to become
+consolidated in order to survive in the struggle for existence with
+surrounding families, tribes, and nations. In this stage the
+individual is of necessity sunk out of sight in the demands of the
+community. This secures indeed a species of altruism, but of a
+relatively low order. It is communal altruism which nature compels on
+pain of extermination. This, however, is very different from the
+altruism of a high religious experience and conscious ethical
+devotion. This latter is volitional, the product of character. This
+altruism can arise chiefly in a social order where individualism to a
+large extent has gained sway. It is this variety of altruism that
+characterizes the West, so far as the West is altruistic. But on the
+other hand, in a social order in which individualism has full swing,
+the extreme of egoistic selfishness can also find opportunity for
+development. It is accordingly in the West that extreme selfishness,
+the most odious of sins, is seen at its best, or rather its worst.
+
+So again we see that selfish aggressiveness and an exalted
+consciousness of one's individuality or separateness are not necessary
+marks of developed personality, nor their opposite the marks of
+undeveloped personality--so-called "impersonality." On the contrary,
+the reverse statement would probably come nearer the truth. He who is
+intensely conscious of the great unities of nature and of human
+nature, of the oneness that unites individuals to the nation and to
+the race, and who lives a corresponding life of goodness and kindness,
+is by far the more developed personality. But the manifestations of
+personality will vary much with the nature of the social order. This
+may change with astonishing rapidity. Such a change has come over the
+social order of the Japanese nation during the past thirty years,
+radically modifying its so-called impersonal features. Their primitive
+docility, their politeness, their marriage customs, their universal
+adoption of Chinese thoughts, language, and literature, and now, in
+recent times, their rejection of the Chinese philosophy and science,
+their assertiveness in Korea and China and their aggressive attitude
+toward the whole world--all these multitudinous changes and complete
+reversals of ideals and customs, point to the fact that the former
+characteristics of their civilization were not "impersonal," but
+communal, and that they rested on social development rather than on
+inherent nature or on deficient mental differentiation.
+
+A common illustration of Japanese "impersonality," depending for its
+force wholly on invention, is the deficiency of the Japanese language
+in personal pronouns and its surplus of honorifics. At first thought
+this argument strikes one as very strong, as absolutely invincible
+indeed. Surely, if there is a real lack of personal pronouns, is not
+that proof positive that the people using the language, nay, the
+authors of the language, must of necessity be deficient in the sense
+of personality? And if the verbs in large numbers are impersonal, does
+not that clinch the matter? But further consideration of the argument
+and its illustrations gradually shows its weakness. At present I must
+confess that the argument seems to me utterly fallacious, and for the
+sufficient reason that the personal element is introduced, if not
+always explicitly yet at least implicitly, in almost every sentence
+uttered. The method of its expression, it is true, is quite different
+from that adopted by Western languages, but it is none the less there.
+It is usually accomplished by means of the titles, "honorific"
+particles, and honorific verbs and nouns. "Honorable shoes" can't by
+any stretch of the imagination mean shoes that belong to me; every
+Japanese would at once think "your shoes"; his attention is not
+distracted by the term "honorable" as is that of the foreigner; the
+honor is largely overlooked by the native in the personal element
+implied. The greater the familiarity with the language the more clear
+it becomes that the impressions of "impersonality" are due to the
+ignorance of the foreigner rather than to the real "impersonal"
+character of the Japanese thought or mind. In the Japanese methods of
+linguistic expression, politeness and personality are indeed,
+inextricably interwoven; but they are not at all confused. The
+distinctions of person and the consciousness of self in the Japanese
+_thought_ are as clear and distinct as they are in the English
+thought. In the Japanese _sentence_, however, the politeness and the
+personality cannot be clearly separated. On that account, however,
+there is no more reason for denying one element than the other.
+
+So far from the deficiency of personal pronouns being a proof of
+Japanese "impersonality," _i.e._, of lack of consciousness of self,
+this very deficiency may, with even more plausibility, be used to
+establish the opposite view. Child psychology has established the fact
+that an early phenomenon of child mental development is the emphasis
+laid on "meum" and "tuum," mine and yours. The child is a
+thoroughgoing individualist in feelings, conceptions, and language.
+The first personal pronoun is ever on his lips and in his thought.
+Only as culture arises and he is trained to see how disagreeable in
+others is excessive emphasis on the first person, does he learn to
+moderate his own excessive egoistic tendency. Is it not a fact that
+the studied evasion of first personal pronouns by cultured people in
+the West is due to their developed consciousness of self? Is it
+possible for one who has no consciousness of self to conceive as
+impolite the excessive use of egoistic forms of speech? From this
+point of view we might argue that, because of the deficiency of her
+personal pronouns, the Japanese nation has advanced far beyond any
+other nation in the process of self-consciousness. But this too would
+be an error. Nevertheless, so far from saying that the lack of
+personal pronouns is a proof of the "impersonality" of the Japanese, I
+think we may fairly use it as a disproof of the proposition.
+
+The argument for the inherent impersonality of the Japanese mind
+because of the relative lack of personal pronouns is still further
+undermined by the discovery, not only of many substitutes, but also of
+several words bearing the strong impress of the conception of self.
+There are said to be three hundred words which may be used as personal
+pronouns--"Boku," "servant," is a common term for "I," and "kimi,"
+"Lord," for "you"; these words are freely used by the student class.
+Officials often use "Konata," "here," and "Anata," "there," for the
+first and second persons. "Omaye," "honorably in front," is used both
+condescendingly and honorifically; "you whom I condescend to allow in
+my presence," and "you who confer on me the honor of entering your
+presence." The derivation of the most common word for I, "Watakushi,"
+is unknown, but, in addition to its pronominal use, it has the meaning
+of "private." It has become a true personal pronoun and is freely used
+by all classes.
+
+In addition to the three hundred words which may be used as personal
+pronouns the Japanese language possesses an indefinite number of ways
+for delicately suggesting the personal element without its express
+utterance. This is done either by subtle praise, which can then only
+refer to the person addressed or by more or less bald
+self-depreciation, which can then only refer to the first person. "Go
+kanai," "honorable within the house," can only mean, according to
+Japanese etiquette, "your wife," or "your family," while "gu-sai,"
+"foolish wife," can only mean "my wife." "Gufu," "foolish father,"
+"tonji," "swinish child," and numberless other depreciatory terms such
+as "somatsu na mono," "coarse thing," and "tsumaranu mono," "worthless
+thing," according to the genius of the language can only refer to the
+first person, while all appreciative and polite terms can only refer
+to the person addressed. The terms, "foolish," "swinish," etc., have
+lost their literal sense and mean now no more than "my," while the
+polite forms mean "yours." To translate these terms, "my foolish
+wife," "my swinish son," is incorrect, because it twice translates the
+same word. In such cases the Japanese _thought_ is best expressed by
+using the possessive pronoun and omitting the derogative adjective
+altogether. Japanese indirect methods for the expression of the
+personal relation are thus numberless and subtile. May it not be
+plausibly argued since the European has only a few blunt pronouns
+wherewith to state this idea while the Japanese has both numberless
+pronouns and many other delicate ways of conveying the same idea, that
+the latter is far in advance of the European in the development of
+personality? I do not use this argument, but as an argument it seems
+to me much more plausible than that which infers from the paucity of
+true pronouns the absence, or at least the deficiency, of personality.
+
+Furthermore, Japanese possesses several words for self. "Onore,"
+"one's self," and "Ware," "I or myself," are pure Japanese, while "Ji"
+(the Chinese pronunciation for "onore"), "ga," "self," and "shi" (the
+Chinese pronunciation of "watakushi," meaning private) are
+Sinico-Japanese words, that is, Chinese derived words. These
+Sinico-Japanese terms are in universal use in compound words, and are
+as truly Japanese as many Latin, Greek and Norman-derived words are
+real English. "Ji-bun," "one's self"; "jiman," "self-satisfaction";
+"ji-fu," "self-assertion"; "jinin," "self-responsibility"; "ji-bo
+ji-ki," "self-destruction, self-abandonment"; "ji-go ji-toku,"
+"self-act, self-reward"--always in a bad sense; "ga-yoku," "selfish
+desire"; "ga-shin," "selfish heart"; "ga we oru," "self-mastery";
+"muga," "unselfish"; "shi-shin shi-yoku," "private or self-heart,
+private or self-desire," that is, selfishness"; "shi-ai shi-shin,"
+"private-or self-love, private-or-self heart," _i.e._,
+selfishness--these and countless other compound words involving the
+conception of self, can hardly be explained by the "impersonal,"
+"altruistic" theory of Japanese race mind and language. In truth, if
+this theory is unable to explain the facts it recognizes, much less
+can it account for those it ignores.
+
+To interpret correctly the phenomena we are considering, we must ask
+ourselves how personal pronouns have arisen in other languages. Did
+the primitive Occidental man produce them outright from the moment
+that he discovered himself? Far from it. There are abundant reasons
+for believing that every personal pronoun is a degenerate or, if you
+prefer, a developed noun. Pronouns are among the latest products of
+language, and, in the sphere of language, are akin to algebraic
+symbols in the sphere of mathematics or to a machine in the sphere of
+labor. A pronoun, whether personal, demonstrative, or relative, is a
+wonderful linguistic invention, enabling the speaker to carry on long
+trains of unbroken thought. Its invention was no more connected with
+the sense of self, than was the invention of any labor-saving device.
+The Japanese language is even more defective for lack of relative
+pronouns than it is for lack of personal pronouns. Shall we argue from
+this that the Japanese people have no sense of relation? Of course
+personal pronouns could not arise without or before the sense of self,
+but the problem is whether the sense of self could arise without or
+exist before that particular linguistic device, the personal pronoun?
+On this problem the Japanese language and civilization throw
+conclusive light.
+
+The fact is that the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon and Japanese peoples
+parted company so long ago that in the course of their respective
+linguistic evolutions, not only have all common terms been completely
+eliminated, but even common methods of expression. The so-called
+Indo-European races hit upon one method of sentence structure, a
+method in which pronouns took an important part and the personal
+pronoun was needed to express the personal element, while the Japanese
+hit upon another method which required little use of pronouns and
+which was able to express the personal element wholly without the
+personal pronoun. The sentence structure of the two languages is thus
+radically different.
+
+Now the long prevalent feudal social order has left its stamp on the
+Japanese language no less than on every other feature of Japanese
+civilization. Many of the quasi personal pronouns are manifestly of
+feudal parentage. Under the new civilization and in contact with
+foreign peoples who can hardly utter a sentence without a personal
+pronoun, the majority of the old quasi personal pronouns are dropping
+out of use, while those in continued use are fast rising to the
+position of full-fledged personal pronouns. This, however, is not due
+to the development of self-consciousness on the part of the people,
+but only to the development of the language in the direction of
+complete and concise expression of thought. It would be rash to say
+that the feudal social order accounts for the lack of pronouns,
+personal or others, from the Japanese language, but it is safe to
+maintain that the feudal order, with its many gradations of social
+rank, minute etiquette, and refined and highly developed personal
+sensitiveness would adopt and foster an impersonal and honorific
+method of personal allusion. Even though we may not be able to explain
+the rise of the non-pronominal method of sentence structure, it is
+enough if we see that this is a problem in the evolution of language,
+and that Japanese pronominal deficiency is not to be attributed to
+lack of consciousness of self, much less to the inherent
+"impersonality" of the Japanese mind.
+
+An interesting fact ignored by advocates of the "impersonal" theory is
+the Japanese inability of conceiving nationality apart from
+personality. Not only is the Emperor conceived as the living symbol of
+Japanese nationality, but he is its embodiment and substance. The
+Japanese race is popularly represented to be the offspring of the
+royal house. Sovereignty resides completely and absolutely in him.
+Authority to-day is acknowledged only in those who have it from him.
+Popular rights are granted the people by him, and exist because of his
+will alone. A single act of his could in theory abrogate the
+constitution promulgated in 1889 and all the popular rights enjoyed
+to-day by the nation. The Emperor of Japan could appropriate, without
+in the least shocking the most patriotic Japanese, the long-famous
+saying of Louis XIV., "L'etat, c'est moi." Mr. H. Kato, ex-president
+of the Imperial University, in a recent work entitled the "Evolution
+of Morality and Law" says this in just so many words: "Patriotism in
+this country means loyalty to the throne. To the Japanese, the Emperor
+and the country are the same. The Emperor of Japan, without the
+slightest exaggeration, can say, 'L'etat, c'est moi.' The Japanese
+believe that all their happiness is bound up with the Imperial line
+and have no respect for any system of morality or law that fails to
+take cognizance of this fact."
+
+Mr. Yamaguchi, professor of history in the Peeresses' School and
+lecturer in the Imperial Military College, thus writes in the _Far
+East_: "The sovereign power of the State cannot be dissociated from
+the Imperial Throne. It lasts forever along with the Imperial line of
+succession, unbroken for ages eternal. If the Imperial House cease to
+exist, the Empire falls." "According to our ideas the monarch reigns
+over and governs the country in his own right.... Our Emperor
+possesses real sovereignty and also exercises it. He is quite
+different from other rulers, who possess but a partial sovereignty."
+This is to-day the universally accepted belief in Japan. It shows
+clearly that national unity and sovereignty are not conceived in Japan
+apart from personality.
+
+One more point demands our attention before bringing this chapter to a
+close. If "impersonality" were an inherent characteristic of Japanese
+race nature, would it be possible for strong personalities to arise?
+
+Mr. Lowell has described in telling way a very common experience.
+"About certain people," he says, "there exists a subtle something
+which leaves its impress indelibly upon the consciousness of all who
+come in contact with them. This something is a power, but a power of
+so indefinable a description that we beg definition by calling it
+simply the personality of the man.... On the other hand, there are
+people who have no effect upon us whatever. They come and they go with
+a like indifference.... And we say that the difference is due to the
+personality or the want of personality of the man."[CV] The first
+thing to which I would call attention is the fact that "personality"
+is here used in its true sense. It has no exclusive reference to
+consciousness of self, nor does it signify the effect of
+self-consciousness on the consciousness of another. It here has
+reference to those inherent qualities of thinking and feeling and
+willing which we have seen to be the essence of personality. These
+qualities, possessed in a marked way or degree, make strong
+personalities. Their relative lack constitutes weak personality. Bare
+consciousness of self is a minor evidence of personality and may be
+developed to a morbid degree in a person who has a weak personality.
+
+In the second place this distinction between weak and strong
+personalities is as true of the Japanese as of the Occidental. There
+have been many commanding persons in Japanese history; they have been
+the heroes of the land. There are such to-day. The most commanding
+personality of recent times was, I suppose, Takamori Saigo, whose very
+name is an inspiration to tens of thousands of the choicest youth of
+the nation. Joseph Neesima was such a personality. The transparency of
+his purpose, the simplicity of his personal aim, his unflinching
+courage, fixedness of belief, lofty plans, and far-reaching ambitions
+for his people, impressed all who came into contact with him. No one
+mingles much with the Japanese, freely speaking with them in their own
+language, but perceives here and there men of "strong personality" in
+the sense of the above-quoted passage. Now it seems to me that if
+"impersonality" in the corresponding sense were a race characteristic,
+due to the nature of their psychic being, then the occurrence of so
+many commanding personalities in Japan would be inexplicable. Heroes
+and widespread hero-worship[CW] could hardly arise were there no
+commanding personalities. The feudal order lent itself without doubt
+to the development of such a spirit. But the feudal order could hardly
+have arisen or even maintained itself for centuries without commanding
+personalities, much less could it have created them. The whole feudal
+order was built on an exalted oligarchy. It was an order which
+emphasized persons, not principles; the law of the land was not the
+will of the multitudes, but of a few select persons. While, therefore,
+it is beyond dispute that the old social order was communal in type,
+and so did not give freedom to the individual, nor tend to develop
+strong personality among the masses, it is also true that it did
+develop men of commanding personality among the rulers. Those who from
+youth were in the hereditary line of rule, sons of Shoguns, daimyos,
+and samurai, were forced by the very communalism of the social order
+to an exceptional personal development. They shot far ahead of the
+common man. Feudalism is favorable to the development of personality
+in the favored few, while it represses that of the masses.
+Individualism, on the contrary, giving liberty of thought and act,
+with all that these imply, is favorable to the development of the
+personality of all.
+
+In view of the discussions of this chapter, is it not evident that
+advocates of the "impersonal" theory of Japanese mind and civilization
+not only ignore many important elements of the civilization they
+attempt to interpret, but also base their interpretation on a mistaken
+conception of personality? We may not, however, leave the discussion
+at this point, for important considerations still demand our attention
+if we would probe this problem of personality to its core.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL?
+
+
+Advocates of Japanese "impersonality" call attention to the phenomena
+of self-suppression in religion. It seems strange, however, that they
+who present this argument fail to see how "self-suppression"
+undermines their main contention. If "self-suppression" be actually
+attained, it can only be by a people advanced so far as to have passed
+through and beyond the "personal" stage of existence.
+"Self-suppression" cannot be a characteristic of a primitive people, a
+people that has not yet reached the stage of consciousness of self. If
+the alleged "impersonality" of the Orient is that of a primitive
+people that has not yet reached the stage of self-consciousness, then
+it cannot have the characteristic of "self-suppression." If, on the
+other hand, it is the "impersonality" of "self-suppression," then it
+is radically different from that of a primitive people. Advocates of
+"impersonality" present both conceptions, quite unconscious apparently
+that they are mutually exclusive. If either conception is true, the
+other is false.
+
+Furthermore, if self-suppression is a marked characteristic of
+Japanese politeness and altruism (as it undoubtedly is when these
+qualities are real expressions of the heart and of the general
+character), it is a still more characteristic feature of the higher
+religious life of the people, which certainly does not tend to
+"impersonality." The ascription of esoteric Buddhism to the common
+people by advocates of the "impersonal" theory is quite a mistake, and
+the argument for the "impersonality" of the race on this ground is
+without foundation, for the masses of the people are grossly
+polytheistic, wholly unable to understand Buddhistic metaphysics, or
+to conceive of the nebulous, impersonal Absolute of Buddhism. Now if
+consciousness of the unity of nature, and especially of the unity of
+the individual soul with the Absolute, were a characteristic of
+undeveloped, that is, of undifferentiated mind, then all primitive
+peoples should display it in a superlative degree. It should show
+itself in every phase of their life. The more primitive the people,
+the more divine their life--because the less differentiated from the
+original divine mind! Such are the requirements of this theory. But
+what are the facts? The primitive undeveloped mind is relatively
+unconscious of self; it is wholly objective; it is childlike; it does
+not even know that there is self to suppress. Primitive religion is
+purely objective. Implicit, in primitive religion without doubt, is
+the fact of a unity between God and man, but the primitive man has not
+discovered this implication of his religious thinking. This is the
+state of mind of a large majority of Japanese.
+
+Yet this is by no means true of all. No nation, with such a continuous
+history as Japan has had, would fail to develop a class capable of
+considerable introspection. In Japan introspection received early and
+powerful impetus from the religion of Buddha. It came with a
+philosophy of life based on prolonged and profound introspection. It
+commanded each man who would know more than the symbols, who desired,
+like Buddha, to attain the great enlightenment and thus become a
+Tathagata, a Blessed one, a Buddha, an Enlightened one, to know and
+conquer himself. The emphasis laid by thoughtful Buddhism on the need
+of self-knowledge, in order to self-suppression, is well recognized by
+all careful students. Advocates of Oriental "impersonality" are not
+one whit behind others in recognizing it. In this connection we can
+hardly do better than quote a few of Mr. Lowell's happy descriptions
+of the teaching of philosophic Buddhism.
+
+"This life, it says, is but a chain of sorrows.... These desires that
+urge us on are really causes of all our woe. We think they are
+ourselves. We are mistaken. They are all illusion.... This
+personality, this sense of self, is a cruel deception.... Realize once
+the true soul behind it, devoid of attributes ... an invisible part of
+the great impersonal soul of nature, then ... will you have found
+happiness in the blissful quiescence of Nirvana" [p. 186]. "In desire
+alone lies all the ill. Quench the desire, and the deeds [sins of the
+flesh] will die of inanition. Get rid, then, said Buddha, of these
+passions, these strivings, for the sake of self. As a man becomes
+conscious that he himself is something distinct from his body, so if
+he reflect and ponder, he will come to see that in like manner, his
+appetites, ambitions, hopes, are really extrinsic to the spirit
+proper.... Behind desire, behind even the will, lies the soul, the
+same for all men, one with the soul of the universe. When he has once
+realized this eternal truth, the man has entered Nirvana.... It
+[Nirvana] is simply the recognition of the eternal oneness of the two
+[the individual and the universal soul]" [p. 189].
+
+Accepting this description of philosophic Buddhism as fairly accurate,
+it is plain that the attainment of this consciousness of the unity of
+the individual self with the universal is the result, according to
+Buddha, and also according to the advocates of "impersonality," of a
+highly developed consciousness of self. It is not a simple state of
+undifferentiated mind, but a complex and derivative one--absolutely
+incomprehensible to a primitive people. The means for this suppression
+of self _depends entirely on the development of the consciousness of
+self_. The self is the means for casting out the self, and it is done
+by that introspection which ultimately leads to the realization of the
+unity. If, then, Japanese Buddhism seeks to suppress the self, this
+very effort is the most conclusive proof we could demand of the
+possession by this people of a highly developed consciousness of self.
+
+It is one of the boasts of Buddhism that a man's saviour is himself;
+no other helper, human or divine, can do aught for him. Those who
+reject Christianity in Christian lands are quite apt to praise
+Buddhism for this rejection of all external help. They urge that by
+the very nature of the case salvation is no external thing; each one
+must work out his own salvation. It cannot be given by another.
+Salvation through an external Christ who lived 1900 years ago is an
+impossibility. Such a criticism of Christianity shows real
+misunderstanding of the Christian doctrine and method of salvation.
+Yet the point to which attention is here directed is not the
+correctness or incorrectness of these characterizations of
+Christianity, but rather to the fact that "ji-riki," salvation through
+self-exertion, which is the boast of Buddhism, is but another proof of
+the essentially self-conscious character of Buddhism. It aims at
+Nirvana, it is true, at self-suppression, but it depends on the
+attainment of clear self-consciousness in the first place, and then on
+prolonged self-exertion for the attainment of that end. In proportion
+as Buddhism is esoteric is it self-conscious.
+
+Such being the nature of Buddhism, we naturally ask whether or not it
+is calculated to develop strongly personalized men and women. If
+consciousness of self is the main element of personality, we must
+pronounce Buddhism a highly personal rather than impersonal religion,
+as is commonly stated. But a religion of the Buddhistic type, which
+casts contempt on the self, and seeks its annihilation as the only
+means of salvation, has ever tended to destroy personality; it has
+made men hermits and pessimists; it has drawn them out of the great
+current of active life, and thus has severed them from their
+fellow-men. But a prime condition of developed personalities is
+largeness and intensity of life, and constant intercourse with
+mankind. Personality is developed in the society of persons, not in
+the company of trees and stones. Buddhism, which runs either to gross
+and superstitious polytheism on its popular side or to pessimistic
+introspection on its philosophical side, may possibly, by a stretch of
+the term, be called "impersonal" in the sense that it does not help in
+the production of strong, rounded personality among its votaries, but
+not in the sense that it does not produce self-consciousness.
+Buddhism, therefore, cannot be accurately described in terms of
+personality or impersonality.
+
+We would do well in this connection to ponder the fact that although
+Buddhism in its higher forms does certainly develop consciousness of
+self, it does not attribute to that self any worth. In consequence of
+this, it never has modified, and however long it might be allowed to
+run its course, never could modify, the general social order in the
+direction of individualism. This is one reason why the whole Orient
+has maintained to modern times its communal nature, in spite of its
+high development in so many ways, even in introspection and
+self-consciousness.
+
+This failure of Buddhism is all the more striking when we stop to
+consider how easy and, to us, natural an inference it would have been
+to pass from the perception of the essential unity between the
+separate self and the universal soul, to the assertion of the supreme
+worth of that separate soul because of the fact of that unity. But
+Buddhism never seems to have made that inference. Its compassion on
+animals and even insects depended on its doctrine of the
+transmigration of souls, not on its doctrine of universal soul unity.
+Its mercy was shown to animals in certain whimsical ways, but the
+universal lack of sympathy for suffering man, man who could suffer the
+most exquisite pains, exposed the shallowness of its solicitude about
+destroying life. The whole influence of Buddhism on the social order
+was not conducive to the development of personality in the Orient. The
+so-called impersonal influence of Buddhism upon the Eastern peoples,
+then, is not due to its failure to recognize the separateness of the
+human self, on the one hand, nor to its emphasis on the universal
+unity subsisting between the separate finite self and the infinite
+soul, on the other; but only on its failure to see the infinite worth
+of the individual; and in consequence of this failure, its inability
+to modify the general social order by the introduction of
+individualism.
+
+The asserted "impersonal" characteristic of Buddhism and of the
+Orient, therefore, I am not willing to call "impersonality"; for it is
+a very defective description, a real misnomer. I think no single term
+can truly describe the characteristic under consideration. As regards
+the general social order, the so-called impersonal characteristic is
+its communal nature; as regards the popular religious thought, whether
+of Shintoism or Buddhism, its so-called impersonality is its simple,
+artless objectivity; as regards philosophic Buddhism its so-called
+impersonality is its morbid introspective self-consciousness, leading
+to the desire and effort to annihilate the separateness of the self.
+These are different characteristics and cannot be described by any
+single term. So far as there are in Japan genuine altruism, real
+suppression of selfish desires, and real possession of kindly feelings
+for others and desires to help them, and so far as these qualities
+arise through a sense of the essential unity of the human race and of
+the unity of the human with the divine soul, this is not
+"impersonality"--but a form of highly developed personality--not
+infra-personality, but true personality.
+
+We have noted that although esoteric Buddhism developed a highly
+accentuated consciousness of self, it attributed no value to that
+self. This failure will not appear strange if we consider the
+historical reasons for it. Indeed, the failure was inevitable. Neither
+the social order nor the method of introspective thought suggested it.
+Both served, on the contrary, absolutely to preclude the idea.
+
+When introspective thought began in India the social order was already
+far beyond the undifferentiated communal life of the tribal stage.
+Castes were universal and fixed. The warp and woof of daily life and
+of thought were filled with the distinctions of castes and ranks.
+Man's worth was conceived to be not in himself, but in his rank or
+caste. The actual life of the people, therefore, did not furnish to
+speculative thought the slightest suggestion of the worth of man as
+man. It was a positive hindrance to the rise of such an idea.
+
+Equally opposed to the rise of this idea was the method of that
+introspective thought which discovered the fact of the self. It was a
+method of abstraction; it denied as part of the real self everything
+that could be thought of as separate; every changing phase or
+expression of the self could not be the real self, it was argued,
+because, if a part of the real self, how could it sometimes be and
+again not be? Feeling cannot be a part of the real self, for sometimes
+I feel and sometimes I do not. Any particular desire cannot be a part
+of my real self, for sometimes I have it and sometimes I do not. A
+similar argument was applied to every objective thing. In the famous
+"Questions of King Melinda," the argument as to the real chariot is
+expanded at length; the wheels are not the chariot; the spokes are not
+the chariot; the seat is not the chariot; the tongue is not the
+chariot; the axle is not the chariot; and so, taking up each
+individual part of the chariot, the assertion is made that it is not
+the chariot. But if the chariot is not in any of its parts, then they
+are not essential parts of the chariot. So of the soul--the self; it
+does not consist of its various qualities or attributes or powers;
+hence they are not essential elements of the self. The real self
+exists apart from them.
+
+Now is it not evident that such a method of introspection deprives the
+conception of self of all possible value? It is nothing but a bare
+intellectual abstraction. To say that this self is a part of the
+universal self is no relief,--brings no possible worth to the separate
+self,--for the conception of the universal soul has been arrived at by
+a similar process of thought. It, too, is nothing but a bare
+abstraction, deprived of all qualities and attributes and powers. I
+can see no distinction between the absolute universal soul of
+Brahmanism and Buddhism, and the Absolute Nothing of Hegel.[CX]
+
+Both are the farthest possible abstraction that the mind can make. The
+Absolute Soul of Buddhism, the Atman of Brahmanism, and Hegel's
+Nothing are the farthest possible remove from the Christian's
+conception of God. The former is the utter emptiness of being; the
+latter the perfect fullness of being and completeness of quality. The
+finite emptiness receives and can receive no richness of life or
+increase in value by its consciousness of unity with the infinite
+emptiness; whereas the finite limited soul receives in the Christian
+view an infinite wealth and value by reason of the consciousness of
+its unity with the divine infinite fullness. The usual method of
+stating the difference between the Christian conception of God and the
+Hindu conception of the root of all being is that the one is personal
+and the other impersonal. But these terms are inadequate. Rather say
+the one is perfectly personal and the other perfectly abstract.
+Impersonality, even in its strictest meaning, _i.e._, without
+"conscious separate existence as an intelligent and voluntary being,"
+only partially expresses the conception of Buddhism. The full
+conception rejects not only personality, but also every other quality;
+the ultimate and the absolute of Buddhism--we may not even call it
+being--is the absolutely abstract.
+
+With regard, then, to the conception of the separate self and of the
+supreme self, the Buddhistic view may be called "impersonal," not in
+the sense that it lacks the consciousness of a separate self; not in
+the sense that it emphasizes the universal unity--nay, the identity of
+all the separate abstract selves and the infinite abstract self; but
+in the sense that all the qualities and characteristics of human
+beings, such as consciousness, thought, emotion, volition, and even
+being itself, are rejected as unreal. The view is certainly
+"impersonal," but it is much more. My objection to the description of
+Buddhism as "impersonal," then, is not because the word is too strong,
+but because it is too weak; it does not sufficiently characterize its
+real nature. It is as much below materialism, as materialism is below
+monotheism. Such a scheme of thought concerning the universe
+necessarily reacts on those whom it possesses, to destroy what sense
+they may have of the value of human personality; that which we hold to
+be man's glory is broken into fragments and thrown away.
+
+But this does not constitute the whole of the difficulty. This method
+of introspective thought necessarily resulted in the doctrine of
+Illusion. Nothing is what it seems to be. The reality of the chariot
+is other than it appears. So too with the self and everything we see
+or think. The ignoant are perfectly under the spell of the illusion
+and cannot escape it. The deluded mind creates for itself the world of
+being, with all its woes and evils. The great enlightenment is the
+discovery of this fact and the power it gives to escape the illusion
+and to see that the world is nothing but illusion. To see that the
+illusion is an illusion destroys it as such. It is then no longer an
+illusion, but only a passing shadow. We cannot now stop to see how
+pessimism, the doctrine of self-salvation, and the nature of that
+salvation through contemplation and asceticism and withdrawal from
+active life, all inevitably follow from such a course of thought. That
+which here needs emphasis is that all this thinking renders it still
+more impossible to think of the self as having any intrinsic worth.
+On-the contrary, the self is the source of evil, of illusion. The
+great aim of Buddhism is necessarily to get rid of the self, with all
+its illusions and pains and disappointments.
+
+Is it now clear why Buddhism failed to reach the idea of the worth of
+the individual self? It was due to the nature of the social order, and
+the nature of its introspective and speculative thinking. Lacking,
+therefore, the conception of individual worth, we see clearly why it
+failed, even after centuries of opportunity, to secure individualism
+in the social order and a general development of personality either as
+an idea or as a fact among any of the peoples to which it has gone. It
+is not only a fact of history, but we have seen that it could not have
+been otherwise. The very nature of its conception of self and, in
+consequence, the nature of its conception of salvation absolutely
+prohibited it.[CY]
+
+We have thus far confined our view entirely to philosophic Buddhism.
+It is important, therefore, to state again that very few of the
+Japanese people outside of the priesthood have any such ideas with
+regard to the abstract nature of the individual, of the absolute self,
+and of their mutual relations as I have just described. These ideas
+are a part of esoteric Buddhism, the secret truth, which is an
+essential part of the great enlightenment, but far too profound for
+the vulgar multitudes. The vast majority, even of the priesthood, I am
+told, do not get far enough to be taught these views. The sweep of
+such conceptions, therefore, is very limited. That they are held,
+however, by the leaders, that they are the views of the most learned
+expounders and the most advanced students of Buddhism serves to
+explain why Buddhism has never been, and can never become, a power in
+reorganizing society in the direction of individualism.
+
+Popular Buddhism contains many elements alien to philosophic Buddhism.
+For a full study of the subject of this chapter we need to ask whether
+popular Buddhism tended to produce "impersonality," and if so, in what
+sense. The doctrine of "ingwa,"[CZ] with its consequences on
+character, demands fresh attention at this point. According to this
+doctrine every event of this life, even the minutest, is the result of
+one's conduct in a previous life, and is unalterably fixed by
+inflexible law. "Ingwa" is the crude idea of fate held by all
+primitive peoples, stated in somewhat philosophic and scientific form.
+It became a central element in the thought of Oriental peoples. Each
+man is born into his caste and class by a law over which neither he
+nor his parents have any control, and for which they are without
+responsibility. The misfortunes of life, and the good fortunes as
+well, come by the same impartial, inflexible laws. By this system of
+thought moral responsibility is practically removed from the
+individual's shoulders. This doctrine is held in Japan far more widely
+than the philosophic doctrine of the self, and is correspondingly
+baleful.
+
+This system of thought, when applied to the details of life, means
+that individual choice and will, and their effect in determining both
+external life and internal character have been practically lost sight
+of. As a sociological fact the origin of this conception is not
+difficult to understand. The primitive freedom of the individual in
+the early communal order of the tribe became increasingly restricted
+with the multiplication and development of the Hindu peoples; each
+class of society became increasingly specialized. Finally the
+individual had no choice whatever left him, because of the extreme
+rigidity of the communal order. As a matter of fact, the individual
+choice and will was allowed no play whatever in any important matter.
+Good sense saw that where no freedom is, there moral responsibility
+cannot be. All one's life is predetermined by the powers that be. Thus
+we again see how vital a relation the social order bears to the
+innermost thinking and belief of a people.
+
+Still further. Once let the idea be firmly grounded in an individual
+that he has no freedom of belief, of choice, or of act, and in the
+vast majority of cases, as a matter of fact, he will have none. "As a
+man thinketh in his heart, so is he." "According to your faith be it
+unto you." This doctrine of individual freedom is one of those that
+cannot be forced on a man who does not choose to believe it. In a true
+sense, it is my belief that I am free that makes me free. As Prof.
+James well says, the doctrine of the freedom of the will cannot be
+rammed down any man's intellectual throat, for that very act would
+abridge his real freedom. Man's real freedom is proved by his freedom
+to reject even the doctrine of his freedom. But so long as he rejects
+it, his freedom is only potential. Because of his belief in his
+bondage he is in bondage. Now this doctrine of fate has been the warp
+and woof of the thinking of the bulk of the Japanese people in their
+efforts to explain all the vicissitudes of life. Not only, therefore,
+has it failed to stimulate the volitional element of the psychic
+nature, but in the psychology of the Orient little if any attention
+has been given to this faculty. Oriental psychology practically knows
+nothing of personality because it has failed to note one of its
+central elements, the freedom of the will. The individual, therefore,
+has not been appealed to to exercise his free moral choice, one of
+the highest prerogatives of his nature. Moral responsibility has not
+been laid on his individual shoulders. A method of moral appeal fitted
+to develop the deepest element of his personality has thus been
+precluded.
+
+It thus resulted that although philosophic Buddhism developed a high
+degree of self-consciousness, yet because it failed to discover
+personal freedom it did not deliver popular Buddhism from its grinding
+doctrine of fate, rather it fastened this incubus of social progress
+more firmly upon it. Philosophic and popular Buddhism alike thus threw
+athwart the course of human and social evolution the tremendous
+obstacle of fatalism, which the Orient has never discovered a way
+either to surmount or evade. Buddhism teaches the impotence of the
+individual will; it destroys the sense of moral responsibility; it
+thus fails to understand the real nature of man, his glory and power
+and even his divinity, which the West sums up in the term personality.
+In this sense, then, the influence of Buddhism and the condition of
+the Orient may be called "impersonal," but it is the impersonality of
+a defective religious psychology, and of communalism in the social
+order. Whether it is right to call this feature of Japan
+"impersonality," I leave with the reader to judge.
+
+We draw this chapter to a close with a renewed conception of the
+inadequacy of the "impersonal" theory to explain Japanese religious
+and social phenomena. Further considerations, however, still merit
+attention ere we leave this subject.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+TRACES OF PERSONALITY IN SHINTOISM, BUDDHISM, AND CONFUCIANISM
+
+
+Regret as we sometimes must the illogicalness of the human mind, yet
+it is a providential characteristic of our as yet defective nature;
+for thanks to it few men or nations carry out to their complete
+logical results erroneous opinions and metaphysical speculations.
+Common sense in Japan has served more or less as an antidote for
+Buddhistic poison. The blighting curse of logical Buddhism has been
+considerably relieved by various circumstances. Let us now consider
+some of the ways in which the personality-destroying characteristics
+of Buddhism have been lessened by other ideas and influences.
+
+First of all there is the distinction, so often noted, between
+esoteric and popular Buddhism. Esoteric Buddhism was content to allow
+popular Buddhism a place and even to invent ways for the salvation of
+the ignorant multitudes who could not see the real nature of the self.
+Resort was had to the use of magic prayers and symbols and idols.
+These were bad enough, but they did not bear so hard on the
+development of personality as did esoteric Buddhism.
+
+The doctrine of the transmigration of the soul was likewise a relief
+from the pressure of philosophic Buddhism, for, according to this
+doctrine, the individual soul continues to live its separate life, to
+maintain its independent identity through infinite ages, while passing
+through the ten worlds of existence, from nethermost hell to highest
+heaven; and the particular world into which it is born after each
+death is determined by the moral character of its life in the
+immediately preceding stage. By this doctrine, then, a practical
+appeal is made to the common man to exert his will, to assert his
+personality, and so far forth it was calculated to undo a part of the
+mischief done by the paralyzing doctrine of fate and illusion.
+
+But a more important relief from the blight of Buddhistic doctrine was
+afforded by its own practice. At the very time that it declared the
+worthlessness of the self and the impotence of the will, it declared
+that salvation can come only from the self, by the most determined
+exercise of the will. What more convincing evidence of powerful,
+though distorted, wills could be asked than that furnished by Oriental
+asceticism? Nothing in the West exceeds it. As an _idea_, then,
+Buddhism interfered with the development of the conception of
+personality; but by its _practice_ it helped powerfully to develop it
+as a fact in certain phases of activity. The stoicism of the Japanese
+is one phase of developed personality. It shows the presence of a
+powerful, disciplined will keeping the body in control, so that it
+gives no sign of the thoughts and emotions going on in the mind,
+however fierce they may be.
+
+That in Japan, however, which has interfered most powerfully with the
+spread and dominance of Buddhism has been the practical and prosaic
+Confucian ethics. Apparently, Confucius never speculated. Metaphysics
+and introspection alike had no charm for him. He was concerned with
+conduct. His developed doctrine demanded of all men obedience to the
+law of the five relations. In spite, therefore, of the fact that he
+said nothing about individuality and personality, his system laid real
+emphasis on personality and demanded its continuous activity. In all
+of his teachings the idea of personality in the full and proper sense
+of this word is always implicit, and sometimes is quite distinct.
+
+The many strong and noble characters which glorify the feudal era are
+the product of Japonicized Confucianism, "Bushido," and bear powerful
+witness to its practical emphasis on personality. The loyalty, filial
+piety, courage, rectitude, honor, self-control, and suicide which it
+taught, defective though we must pronounce them from certain points of
+view, were yet very lofty and noble, and depended for their
+realization on the development of personality.
+
+Advocates of the "impersonal" interpretation of the Orient have much
+to say about pantheism. They assert the difficulty of conveying to the
+Oriental mind the idea of the personality of the Supreme Being.
+Although some form of pantheism is doubtless the belief of the
+learned, the evidence that a personal conception of deity is
+widespread among the people seems so manifest that I need hardly do
+more than call attention to it. This belief has helped to neutralize
+the paralyzing tendency of Buddhist fatalistic pantheism.
+
+Shinto is personal from first to last. Every one of its myriads of
+gods is a personal being, many of them deified men.
+
+The most popular are the souls of men who became famous for some
+particularly noble, brave, or admirable deed. Hero-worship is nothing
+if not personal. Furthermore, in its doctrine of "San-shin-ittai,"
+"three gods, one body," it curiously suggests the doctrine of the
+Trinity.
+
+Popular Buddhism holds an equally personal conception of deity. The
+objects of its worship are personifications of various qualities.
+"Kwannon," the goddess of mercy; "Jizo," the guardian of travelers and
+children; "Emma O," "King of Hell," who punishes sinners; "Fudo Sama,"
+"The Immovable One," are all personifications of the various
+attributes of deity and are worshiped as separate gods, each being
+represented by a uniform type of idol. It is a curious fact that
+Buddhism, which started out with such a lofty rejection of deity,
+finally fell to the worship of idols, whereas Shinto, which is
+peculiarly the worship of personality, has never stooped to its
+representation in wood or stone.
+
+Confucianism, however, surpasses all in its intimations of the
+personality of the Supreme Being. Although it never formulated this
+doctrine in a single term, nor definitely stated it as a tenet of
+religion, yet the entire ethical and religious thinking of the
+classically educated Japanese is shot through with the idea. Consider
+the Chinese expression "Jo-Tei," which the Christians of Japan freely
+use for God; it means literally "Supreme Emperor," and refers to the
+supreme ruler of the universe; he is here conceived in the form of a
+human ruler having of course human, that is to say, personal,
+attributes. A phrase often heard on the lips of the Japanese is:
+
+"Aoide Ten ni hajizu; fushite Chi ni hajizu."
+
+"Without self-reproach, whether looking up to Heaven, or down to
+Earth."
+
+This phrase has reference to the consciousness of one's life and
+conduct, such that he is neither ashamed to look up in the face of
+Heaven nor to look about him in the presence of man. Paul expressed
+this same idea when he wrote "having a conscience void of offense to
+God and to man." Or take another phrase:
+
+"Ten-mo kwaikwai so ni shite morasazu."
+
+"Heaven's net is broad as earth; and though its meshes are large, none
+can escape it." This is constantly used to illustrate the certainty
+that Heaven punishes the wicked.
+
+"Ten ni kuchi ari; kabe ni mimi ari."
+
+"Heaven has a mouth and even the wall has ears," signifies that all
+one does is known to the ruler of heaven and earth. Another still more
+striking saying ascribing knowledge to Heaven is the "Yoshin no
+Shichi," "the four knowings of Yoshin." This sage was a Chinaman of
+the second century A.D. Approached with a large bribe and urged to
+accept it with the assurance that no one would know it, he replied,
+"Heaven knows it; Earth knows it; you know it; and I know it. How say
+you that none will know it?" This famous saying condemning bribery is
+well known in Japan. The references to "Heaven" as knowing, seeing,
+doing, sympathizing, willing, and always identifying the activity of
+"Heaven" with the noblest and loftiest ideals of man, are frequent in
+Chinese and Japanese literature. The personality of God is thus a
+doctrine clearly foreshadowed in the Orient. It is one of those great
+truths of religion which the Orient has already received, but which in
+a large measure lies dormant because of its incomplete expression. The
+advent of the fully expressed teaching of this truth, freed from all
+vagueness and ambiguity, is a capital illustration of the way in which
+Christianity comes to Japan to fulfill rather than to destroy; it
+brings that fructifying element that stirs the older and more or less
+imperfectly expressed truths into new life, and gives them adequate
+modes of expression. But the point to which I am here calling
+attention is the fact that the idea of the personality of the Supreme
+Being is not so utterly alien to Oriental thought as some would have
+us think. Even though there is no single word with which conveniently
+to translate the term, the idea is perfectly distinct to any Japanese
+to whom its meaning is explained.
+
+The statement is widely made that because the Japanese language has no
+term for "personality" the people are lacking in the idea; that
+consequently they have difficulty in grasping it even when presented
+to them, and that as a further consequence they are not to be
+criticised for their hesitancy in accepting the doctrine of the
+"Personality of God." It must be admitted that if "personality" is to
+be defined in the various ambiguous and contradictory ways in which we
+have seen it defined by advocates of Oriental "impersonality" much can
+be said in defense of their hesitancy. Indeed, no thinking Christian
+of the Occident for a moment accepts it. But if "personality" is
+defined in the way here presented, which I judge to be the usage of
+thoughtful Christendom, then their hesitancy cannot be so defended. It
+is doubtless true that there is in Japanese no single word
+corresponding to our term "personality." But that is likewise true of
+multitudes of other terms. The only significance of this fact is that
+Oriental philosophy has not followed in exactly the same lines as the
+Occidental. As a matter of fact I have not found the idea of
+personality to be a difficult one to convey to the Japanese, if clear
+definitions are used. The Japanese language has, as we have seen, many
+words referring to the individuality, to the self of manhood; it
+merely lacks the general abstract term, "personality." This is,
+however, in keeping with the general characteristics of the language.
+Abstract terms are, compared with English, relatively rare. Yet with
+the new civilization they are being coined and introduced.
+Furthermore, the English term "personality" is readily used by the
+great majority of educated Christians just as they use such words as
+"life," "power," "success," "patriotism," and "Christianity."
+
+In the summer of 1898, with the Rev. C.A. Clark I was invited to speak
+on the "Outlines of Christianity" in a school for Buddhist priests. At
+the close of our thirty-minute addresses, a young man arose and spoke
+for fifty minutes, outlining the Buddhist system of thought; his
+address consisted of an exposition of the law of cause and effect; he
+also stated some of the reasons why the Christian conception of God
+and the universe seemed to him utterly unsatisfactory; the objections
+raised were those now current in Japan--such, for example, as that if
+God really were the creator of the universe, why are some men rich and
+some poor, some high-born and some low-born. He also asked the
+question who made God? In a two-minute reply I stated that his
+objections showed that he did not understand the Christian's position;
+and I asked in turn what was the origin of the law of cause and
+effect. The following day the chief priest, the head of the school and
+its most highly educated instructor, dined with us. We of course
+talked of the various aspects of Christian and Buddhist doctrine.
+Finally he asked me how I would answer the question as to who created
+God, and as to the origin of the law of cause and effect. I explained
+as clearly as I could the Christian view of God, in his personality
+and as being the original and only source of all existence, whether of
+physical or of human nature. He seemed to drink it all in and
+expressed his satisfaction at the close in the words, "Taihen ni man
+zoku shimashita," "That is exceedingly satisfactory"; these words he
+repeated several times. This is not my first personal proof of the
+fact that the idea of personality is not alien or incomprehensible to
+the Orient, nor even to a Buddhist priest, steeped in Buddhist
+speculation, provided the idea is clearly stated.
+
+Before bringing to a close this discussion of the problem of
+personality in Japan, it would seem desirable to trace the history of
+the development of Japanese personality. In view of all that has now
+been said, and not forgetting what was said as to the principles of
+National Evolution,[DA] this may be done in a paragraph.
+
+The amalgamation of tribes, the development of large clans, and
+finally the establishment of the nation, with world-wide relations,
+has reacted on the individual members of the people, giving them
+larger and richer lives. This constitutes one important element of
+personal development. The subordination of individual will to that of
+the group, the desire and effort to live for the advantage, not of the
+individual self, but of the group, whether family, tribe, clan,
+nation, or the world, is not a limitation of personality. On the
+contrary, it is its expansion and development. Shinto and Japonicized
+Confucianism contributed powerful motives to this subordination, and
+thus to this personal development. These were attended, however, by
+serious limitations in that they confined their attention to the upper
+and ruling classes. The development of personality was thus extremely
+limited. Buddhism contributed to the development of Japanese
+personality in so far as it taught Japanese the marvels revealed by
+introspection and self-victory. Its contribution, however, was
+seriously hampered by defects already sufficiently emphasized. Japan
+has developed personality to a high degree in a few and to a
+relatively low degree in the many. The problem confronting New Japan
+is the development of a high degree of personality among the masses.
+This is to be accomplished by the introduction of an individualistic
+social order.
+
+One further topic demands our attention in closing. What is the nature
+of personal heredity? Is it biological and inherent, or, like all the
+characteristics of the Japanese people thus far studied, is
+personality transmitted by social heredity? Distinguishing between
+intrinsic or inherent personality,[DB] which constitutes the original
+endowment differentiating man from animal, and extrinsic or acquired
+personality, which consists of the various forms in which the inherent
+personality has manifested itself in the different races of men and
+the different ages of "history, it is safe to say that the latter is
+transmitted according to the laws of association or social heredity.
+Intrinsic personality can be inherited only by lineal offspring,
+passing from father to son. Extrinsic personality may fail to be
+inherited by lineal descendants and may be inherited by others than
+lineal descendants. It is transmitted and determined by social
+inheritance. Yet it is through personality that the individual may
+break away from the dominant currents of the social order, and become
+thus the means for the transformation of that order. The secret of
+social progress lies in personality. In proportion as the social order
+is fitted, accordingly, widely to develop high-grade personality,[DC]
+is its own progress rapid and safe.
+
+Does acquired personality react on intrinsic personality? This is the
+problem of "the inheritance of acquired characteristics." Into this
+problem I do not enter further than to note that in so far as newly
+developed personal traits produce transformations of body and brain
+transmittable from parent to offspring by the bare fact of parentage,
+in that degree does acquired pass over into intrinsic personality and
+thereby become intrinsic. In regard to the degree in which acquired
+has passed over into intrinsic personality, thus differentiating the
+leading races of mankind, we contend that it is practically
+non-existent. The phenomena of personality characterizing the chief
+races of men are due, not to intrinsic, but to acquired personality;
+in other words they are the products of the respective social orders
+and are transmitted from generation to generation by social rather
+than by biological heredity.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+THE BUDDHIST WORLD-VIEW
+
+
+Fully to comprehend the genius and history of Japan and her social
+order, we need to gain a still more thorough insight into the various
+conceptions of the universe that have influenced the people. What have
+been their views as to the nature of the ultimate reality lying behind
+all phenomena? What as to the relation of mankind to that Ultimate
+Reality? And what has been the relation of these world-views to the
+social order? To prepare the way for our final answer to these
+questions, we confine ourselves in this chapter to a study of the
+inner nature of the Buddhist world-view.
+
+Since the Buddhist conception of the Ultimate Reality and of the
+universe is one of the three important types of world-views dominating
+the human mind, a type too that is hardly known in Western lands, in
+order to set it forth in terms intelligible to the Occidental and the
+Christian, it will be necessary in expounding it to contrast it with
+the two remaining types; namely, the Greek and the Christian. As
+already pointed out, according to the Buddhistic conception, the
+Ultimate is a thoroughgoing Abstraction. All the elements of
+personality are denied. It is perfectly passionless, perfectly
+thoughtless, and perfectly motionless. It has neither feeling, idea,
+nor will. As a consequence, the phenomena of the universe are wholly
+unrelated to it; all that is, is only illusion; it has no reality of
+being. Human beings who think the world real, and who think even
+themselves real, are under the spell. This illusion is the great
+misery and source of pain. Salvation is the discovery of the illusion;
+and this discovery is the victory over it; for no one fears the lion's
+skin, however much he may fear the lion. This discovery secures the
+dropping back from the little, limited, individual self-line, into
+the infinite passionless, thoughtless, and motionless existence of the
+absolute being, Nirvana.
+
+The Ancient Greek and not a little modern thought, conceived of the
+Ultimate as a thorough-going intellectualism. One aspect of
+personality was perceived and emphasized. God was conceived as a
+thinker, as one who contemplates the universe. He does not create
+matter, nor force, nor does he rule them. They are eternal and real,
+and subject to fate. God simply observes. He is absolute reason. The
+Greek view is thus essentially dualistic. Sin, from the Greek point of
+view, is merely ignorance, and salvation the attainment of knowledge.
+
+In vital and vitalizing contrast to both the Buddhist and Greek
+conceptions is the Judaeo-Christian. To the Christian the Ultimate is a
+thoroughgoing personality. To him the central element in God is will,
+guided by reason and controlled by love and righteousness. God creates
+and rules everything. There is nothing that is not wholly subject to
+him. There is no dualism for the Christian, nor any illusion. Sin is
+an act of human will, not an illusion nor a failure of intellect.
+Salvation is the correction of the will, which comes about through a
+"new birth."
+
+The elemental difference, then, between these three conceptions of the
+Ultimate is that in Buddhism the effort to rationalize and ethicize
+the universe of experience is abandoned as a hopeless task; the world
+entirely and completely resists the rational and ethical process. The
+universe is pronounced completely irrational and non-moral. Change is
+branded as illusion. There is no room for progress in philosophic,
+thoroughgoing Buddhism.
+
+In the Greek view the universe is subject in part to the rationalizing
+process; but only in part. The effort at ethicization is entirely
+futile. The Greek view, equally with the Buddhistic, is at a loss to
+understand change. It does not brand it as unreal, but change produced
+by man is branded as a departure from nature. Greeks and Hindus alike
+have no philosophy of history. In the Christian view the universe is
+completely subject to the rational and ethical process. God is creator
+of all that is and it is necessarily good. God is an active will and
+He is, therefore, still in the process of creating; hence change,
+evolution, is justified and understood. History is rational and has a
+philosophy. Evolution and revelation have their place at the very
+heart of the universe. Hence it is that science, philosophy, and
+history, in a word a high-grade civilization, finds its intellectual
+justification, its foundation, its primary postulates, its
+possibility, only in a land permeated with the Christian idea of God.
+
+In the Buddhistic conception God is an abstract vacuity; in the Greek,
+a static intellect; in the Christian, a dynamic will. As is the
+conception of God, so is the conception and character of man. The two
+are so intimately interdependent that it is useless at this time to
+discuss which is the cause and which the result. They are doubtless
+the two aspects of the same movement of thought. The following
+differences are necessary characteristics of the three religions:
+
+The Buddhist seeks salvation through the attainment of
+vacuity--Nirvana--in order to escape from the world in which he says
+there is no reason and no morality. The Greek seeks salvation through
+the activity of the intellect; all that is needful to salvation is
+knowledge of the truth. The Christian seeks salvation through the
+activity of the will; this is secured through the new birth. The
+Buddhist leaves each man to save himself from his illusion by the
+discovery that it is an illusion. The Greek relies on intellectual
+education, on philosophy--the Christian recreates the will. The
+Buddhist and Greek gods make no effort to help the lost man. The
+Christian God is dominated by love; He is therefore a missionary God,
+sending even His only begotten Son to reconcile and win the world of
+sinning, willful children back to Himself.
+
+In Buddhism salvation is won only by the few and after ages of toil
+and ceaseless re-births. In the Greek plan only the philosopher who
+comes to full understanding can attain salvation. In the Christian
+plan salvation is for all, for all are sons of God, in fact, and may
+through Christ become so in consciousness. In the Buddhistic plan the
+hopeless masses resort to magic and keep on with their idolatry and
+countless gross superstitions. In the Greek plan the hopeless resort
+to the "mysteries" for the attainment of salvation. In the Christian
+plan there are no hopeless masses, for all may gain the regenerated
+will and become conscious sons of God.
+
+The Buddhist mind gave up all effort to grasp or even to understand
+reality. The Greek mind thought it could arrive at reality through the
+intellect. But two thousand years of philosophic study and evolution
+drove philosophy into the absurd positions of absolute subjective
+idealism on the one hand and sensationalism and absolute materialism
+on the other. The Christian mind lays emphasis on the will and
+accordingly is alone able to reach reality, a reality justifiable
+alike to the reason and to the heart. For will is the creative faculty
+in man as well as in God. As God through His will creates reality, so
+man through his will first comes to know reality. Mere intellect can
+never pass over from thought to being. Being can be known as a reality
+only through the will.
+
+In consequence of the above-stated methods of thought, the Buddhist
+was of necessity a pessimist; the Greek only less so; while the Jew
+and the Christian could alone be thoroughgoing optimists. The Buddhist
+ever asserts the is-not; the Greek, the is; while the Jew and
+Christian demand the ought-to be, as the supreme thing. Hence flows
+the perennial life of the Christian civilization.
+
+Those races and civilizations whose highest and deepest conception of
+the ultimate is that of mere reason, no less than those races and
+civilizations whose highest and deepest conception of reality is that
+of an abstract emptiness, must be landed in an unreal world, must
+arrive at irrational results, for they have not taken into account the
+most vital element of thought and life. Such races and civilizations
+cannot rise to the highest levels of which man is capable; they must
+of necessity give way to those races and that civilization which build
+on larger and more complete foundations, which worship Will, Human and
+Divine, and seek for its larger development both in self and in all
+mankind.
+
+But I must not pause to trace the contrasts further. Enough has been
+said to show the source of Occidental belief in the infinite worth of
+man. In almost diametrical contrast to the Buddhist conception,
+according to the Christian view, man is a real being, living in a real
+world, involved in a real intellectual problem, fighting a real
+battle, on whose issue hang momentous, nay, infinite results. So great
+is man's value, not only to himself, but also to God, his Father, that
+the Father himself suffers with him in his sin, and for him, to save
+him from his sin. The question will be asked how widely the Buddhistic
+interpretation of the universe has spread in Japan. The doctrine of
+illusion became pretty general. We may doubt, however, whether the
+rationale of the philosophy was very generally understood. One Sutra,
+read by all Japanese sects, is taught to all who would become
+acquainted with the essentials of Buddhist doctrine. It is so short
+that I give it in full.[DD]
+
+
+THE SMALLER-PRAGNA-PARAMITA-HRIDYA-SUTRA
+
+ "Adoration to the Omniscient. The venerable Bodhisattva
+ Avalokitesvara performing his study in the deep Pragna-paramita
+ [perfection of Wisdom] thought thus: There are the five Skandhas,
+ and these he considered as by their nature empty [phenomenal]. O
+ Sariputra, he said, form here is emptiness, and emptiness indeed is
+ form. Emptiness is not different from form, and form is not
+ different from emptiness. What is form that is emptiness, what is
+ emptiness that is form. The same applies to perception, name,
+ conception, and knowledge.
+
+ "Here, O Sariputra, all things have the character of emptiness;
+ they have no beginning, no end, they are faultless and not
+ faultless, they are not imperfect and not perfect. Therefore, O
+ Sariputra, in this emptiness there is no form, no perception, no
+ name, no concepts, no knowledge. No eye, ear, nose, tongue, body,
+ mind. No form, sound, smell, taste, touch, objects.... There is no
+ knowledge, no ignorance, no destruction of knowledge, no
+ destruction of ignorance, etc., there is no decay and death, no
+ destruction of decay and death; there are not the four truths,
+ viz., that there is pain, the origin of pain, stopping of pain, and
+ the path to it. There is no knowledge, no obtaining of Nirvana.
+
+ "A man who has approached the Pragna-paramita of the Bodhisattva
+ dwells enveloped in consciousness. But when the envelop of
+ consciousness has been annihilated, then he becomes free of all
+ fear, beyond the reach of change, enjoying final Nirvana. All
+ Buddhas of the past, present, and future, after approaching the
+ Pragna-paramita, have awakened to the highest perfect knowledge.
+
+ "Therefore one ought to know the great verse of the
+ Pragna-paramita, the verse of the great wisdom, the unsurpassed
+ verse, the peerless verse, which appeases all pain; it is truth
+ because it is not false; the verse proclaimed in the
+ Pragna-paramita: 'O wisdom, gone, gone, gone, to the other shore,
+ landed at the other shore, Shava.'
+
+ "Thus ends the heart of the Pragna-paramita."
+
+A study of this condensed and widely read Buddhist Sutra will convince
+anyone that the ultimate conceptions of the universe and of the final
+reality, are as described above. However popular Buddhism might differ
+from this, it would be the belief of the thoughtless masses, to whom
+the rational and ethical problems are of no significance or concern,
+and who contribute nothing to the development of thought or of the
+social order. Those nobler and more earnestly inquiring souls whose
+energy and spiritual longing might have been used for the benefit of
+the masses, were shunted off on a side track that led only into the
+desert of atomistic individualism, abandonment of society, ecstatic
+contemplation, and absolute pessimism. The Buddhist theory of the
+universe and method of thought denied all intelligible reality, and
+necessitated the conclusion that the universe of experience is neither
+rational nor ethical. The common beliefs of the unreflective and
+uninitiated masses in the ultimate rationality and morality of the
+universe were felt to have no foundation either in religion or
+philosophy and were accordingly pronounced mere illusions.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+COMMUNAL AND INDIVIDUAL ELEMENTS IN THE EVOLUTION OF JAPANESE
+RELIGIOUS LIFE
+
+
+Our study of Japanese religion and religious life thus far has been
+almost, if not exclusively, from the individualistic standpoint. An
+adequate statement, however, cannot be made from this standpoint
+alone, for religion through its mighty sanctions exerts a powerful
+influence on the entire communal life. Indeed, the leading
+characteristic of primitive religions is their communal nature. The
+science of religion shows how late in human history is the rise of
+individualistic religions.
+
+In the present chapter we propose to study Japanese religious history
+from the communal standpoint. This will lead us to study her present
+religious problem and the nature of the religion required to solve it.
+
+The real nature of the religious life of Japan has been and still is
+predominantly communal. Individualism has had a place, but, as we have
+repeatedly seen, only a minor place in forming the nation. From the
+communo-individualistic standpoint, in the study of Japan's religious
+and social evolution, not only can we see clearly that the three
+religions of Japan are real religions, but we can also understand the
+nature of the relations of these three religions to each other and the
+reasons why they have had such relations. Japanese religious history
+and its main phenomena become luminous in the light of
+communo-individualistic social principles.
+
+Shinto, the primitive religion of Japan, corresponded well with the
+needs of primitive times, when the development of strong communal life
+was the prime problem and necessity. It furnished the religious
+sanctions for the social order in its customs of worshiping not only
+the gods, but also the Emperor and ancestors. It gave the highest
+possible justification of the national social order in its deification
+of the supreme ruler. Shinto was so completely communal in its nature
+that the individual aspect of religion was utterly ignored. It
+developed no specific moral code, no eschatological and soteriological
+systems, no comprehensive view of nature or of the gods. These
+deficiencies, however, are no proofs that it was not a religion in the
+proper sense of the term. The real question is, did it furnish any
+supra-mundane, supra-legal, supra-communal sanctions both for the
+conduct of the individual in his social relations and for the fact and
+the right of the social order. Of this there can be no doubt. Those
+who deny it the name of a religion do so because they judge religion
+only from the point of view of a highly developed individualistic
+religion.
+
+In view of this undoubted fact, it is a strange commentary on the
+failure of Shinto leaders to realize the real function of the faith
+they profess that they have sought and obtained from the government
+the right to be considered and classified no longer as a religion, but
+only as a society for preserving the memories and shrines of the
+ancestors of the race. Thus has modern Shinto, so far as it is
+organized and has a mouth with which to speak, following the
+abdicating proclivities of the ancient social order, excommunicated
+itself from its religious heritage, aspiring to be nothing more than a
+gate-keeper of cemeteries.
+
+The sources of the power of the Shinto sanctions lies in the nature of
+its conception of the universe. Although it attempted no
+interpretation of the universe as a whole, it conceived of the origin
+of the country and people of Japan as due to the direct creative
+energy of the gods. Japan was accordingly conceived as a divine land
+and the people a divine people. The Emperor was thought to have
+descended in direct line from the gods and thus to be a visible
+representative of the gods to the people, and to possess divine power
+and authority with which to rule the people. Whenever Japanese came
+into contact with foreign peoples, it was natural to consider them
+outside of the divine providence, aliens, whose presence in the
+divine land was more or less of a pollution. This world-view was well
+calculated to develop a spirit of submissive obedience and loyal
+adherence to the hereditary rulers of the land, and of fierce
+antagonism to foreigners. This view constituted the moral foundation
+for the social order, the intellectual framework within which the
+state developed. Paternal feudalism was the natural, if not the
+necessary, accompaniment of this world-view. Even to this day the
+scholars of the land see no other ground on which to found Imperial
+authority, no other basis for ethics and religion, than the divine
+descent of the Emperor.[DE]
+
+The Shinto world-view, conceiving of men as direct offspring of the
+gods, has in it potentially the doctrine of the divine nature of all
+men, and their consequent infinite worth. Shinto never developed this
+truth, however. It did not discover the momentous implications of its
+view. Failing to discover them, it failed to introduce into the social
+order that moral inspiration, that social leaven which would have
+gradually produced the individualistic social order.
+
+No attempt has been made either in ancient or modern times to square
+this Shinto world-view with advancing knowledge of the world,
+particularly with the modern scientific conception of the universe.
+Anthropology, ethnology, and the doctrine of evolution both cosmic and
+human, are all destructive of the primitive Shinto world-view. It
+would not be difficult to show, however, that in this world-view
+exists a profound element of truth. The Shinto world-conception needs
+to be expanded to take the universe and all races of men into its
+view; and to see that Japan is not alone the object of divine
+solicitude, but that all races likewise owe their origin to that same
+divine power, and that even though the Emperor is not more directly
+the offspring of the gods than are all men, yet in the providence of
+Him who ruleth the affairs of men, the Emperor is in fact the visible
+representative of authority and power for the people over whom he
+reigns. With this expansion and the consequences that flow from it,
+the world-view that has cradled Old Japan will come into accord with
+the scientific Christian world-view, and become fitted to be the
+foundation for the new and individualistic social order, now arising
+in Japan, granting full liberty of thought and action, knowing that
+only so can truth come out of error, and assured that truth is the
+only ground of permanent welfare.
+
+Throughout the centuries including the present era of Meiji, it is the
+Shinto religion that has provided and that still provides religious
+sanctions for the social order--even for the new social order that has
+come in from the West. It is the belief of the people in the divine
+descent of the Emperor, and his consequent divine right, that to-day
+unifies the nation and causes it to accept so readily the new social
+order; desired by him, they raise no questions, make no opposition,
+even though in some respects it brings them trouble and anxiety.
+
+Our study of Buddhism has brought to light its extremely
+individualistic nature, and its lack of asocial ideal. Its world-view
+we have sufficiently examined in the preceding chapter. We are told
+that when Buddhism came to Japan it made little headway until it
+adopted the Shinto deities into its theogony. What does this mean?
+That only on condition of accepting the Shinto sanctions for the
+communal order of society was it able to commend itself to the people
+at large. And Buddhism had no difficulty in fulfilling this condition,
+because it had no ideal order of society to present and no religious
+sanctions for any kind of social order; in this respect Buddhism had
+no ground for conflict with Shinto. Shinto had the field to itself;
+and Buddhism was perfectly at liberty to adopt, or at least to allow,
+any social order that might present itself. Furthermore, by its
+doctrines of incarnation and transmigration, according to which noble
+souls might appear and reappear in different worlds and different
+lands, Buddhism could identify Shinto deities with its own deities of
+Hindu origin, asserting their pre-incarnation. Having accepted the
+Shinto deities, ideals, and sanctions for the social order, Buddhism
+became not only tolerable to the people, but also exceedingly popular.
+
+The Shinto-Buddhistic was in truth a new religion, each of the old
+religions supplying an essential element.
+
+One real reason, beside its accommodation to Shintoism, why Buddhism
+was so popular was that it brought an indispensable element into the
+national life. For the first time emphasis began to be laid on the
+individual. Introspection and deliberate meditation were brought into
+play. Arts demanding individual skill were fostered. A gorgeous
+ritual, elaborate architecture, complex religious organism, letters
+and literature, all gave play to individual activity and development
+whether in manual, in mental, or in aesthetic lines. The hitherto
+cramped and primitive life of the Japanese responded to these appeals
+and opportunities with profound joy. The upper classes especially felt
+themselves growing in richness and fullness of life. They felt the
+stimulus in many directions. The reason, then, why Buddhism flourished
+so mightily, and at the same time caused the nation to bloom, was
+because it helped develop the individual. The reason, on the other
+hand, why it failed to carry the nation on from its first bloom into
+full fruitage was because it failed to develop individualism in the
+social order. Its religious individualism was, as we have seen, in
+reality defective. It was abstract and one-sided. It did not discover
+the whole of the individual. It did not know anything of personality,
+either human or divine. It accordingly could not recognize the
+individual's worth, but only his separateness and his weakness. It
+taught an abstract impoverished idea of self, and made, as the whole
+aim of the salvation it offered, the final annihilation of all
+separateness of this individual self. We can now see that its
+individualism was essentially defective in that it poured contempt on
+the self, and that if its individualizing salvation were consistently
+carried out, it was not only no help to the social order, but a
+positive injury to it. Its individualism was of a nature which could
+not become an integral part of any social order.
+
+This character led to another inevitable difficulty. Although Buddhism
+ostensibly adopted Shinto deities and the Shinto sanctions for the
+social order, it could not wholeheartedly accept the sanctions nor
+take the deities into full and legitimate partnership. It found no
+place in its circle of doctrine to teach the important tenets of
+Shintoism.
+
+It left them to survive or perish as chance would have it. In
+proportion as Buddhism absorbed the life and love of the people,
+Shinto fell into decay and with it its sanctions. Then came the
+centuries of civil war during which Imperial power and authority sank
+to a minimum, and Japan's ignominy and disorder reached their maximum.
+What the land now needed was the re-introduction, first, of social
+order, even though it must be by the hand of a dictator, and second,
+the development of religious sanctions for the order that should be
+established. The first was secured by those three great generals of
+Japan, Oda Nobunaga, the Taiko Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu. "The
+first conceived the idea of centralizing all the authority of the
+state in a single person; the second, who has been called the Napoleon
+of Japan, actually put the idea into practice," but died before
+consolidating his work; the third, by his unsurpassed skill as a
+diplomat and administrator, carried the idea completely out, arranging
+the details of the new order so that, without special military genius
+or power on the part of his successors, the order maintained itself
+for 250 years.
+
+Yet it is doubtful if this long maintenance of the social order
+introduced by Ieyasu would have been possible had he not found ready
+to hand a system of essentially religious sanctions for the social
+order he had established by force. Confucianism had lain for a
+thousand years a dormant germ, receiving some study from learned men,
+but having no special relation to the education of the day or to the
+political problems that became each century more pressing. In the
+Confucian doctrines of loyalty to ruler and piety to parents, a
+doctrine sanctioned by Heaven and by the customs of all the ancients,
+Ieyasu, with the insight of a master mind, found just the sanctions he
+desired. He had the Confucian classics printed--it is said for the
+first time in Japan--"and the whole intellect of the country became
+molded by Confucian ideas." The classics, edited with diacritical
+marks for Japanese students, "formed the chief vehicle of every boy's
+education." These were interpreted by learned Chinese commentators.
+The intelligence of the land drank of this stream as the European mind
+refreshed itself with the classic waters of the Renaissance. The
+Japanese were weary of Buddhistic puerilities and transcendental
+doctrines that led nowhere. They demanded sanctions for the moral life
+and the social order; in response to this need Buddhism gave them
+Nirvana--absolute mental and moral vacuity. Confucianism gave them
+principles whose working and whose results they could see and
+understand. Its sanctions appealed both to the imagination and to the
+reason, antiquity and learning and piety being all in their favor. The
+sanctions were also seen to be wholly independent of puerile
+superstitions and foolish fears. The Confucian ideals and sanctions,
+moreover, coincided with the essential elements of the old Shinto
+world-view and sanctions. In a true sense, the doctrines of Confucius
+were but the elaborated and succinctly stated implications of their
+primitive faith. Confucianism, therefore, swept the land. _It was
+_accepted as the groundwork and authority for the most flourishing
+feudal order the world has ever seen. Japan bloomed again.[DF]
+
+This difference, however, is to be noted between the Shinto ideal
+social order and the Confucian, or rather that development of
+Confucian ethics and civics which arose during the Tokugawa Shogunate;
+Shinto appears to have been, properly speaking, nationalistic, while
+feudal Confucianism was tribal. Although in Confucian theory the
+supreme loyalty may have been due the Emperor, in point of fact it was
+shown to the local daimyo. Confucian ethics was communal and might
+easily have turned in the direction of national communalism; it would
+then have coincided completely with Shinto in this respect. But for
+various reasons it did not so turn, but developed an intensely local,
+a tribal communalism, and pushed loyalty to the Emperor as a vital
+reality entirely into the background. This was one of the defects of
+feudal Confucianism which finally led to its own overthrow. Shinto,
+as we have seen, had long been pushed aside by Buddhism and was
+practically forgotten by the people. The zeal for Confucian doctrine
+brought, therefore, no immediate revival to the Shinto cultus,
+although it did revive the essential elements of the old communal
+religion. We might say that the old religion was revived under a new
+name; having a new name and a new body, the real and vital connection
+between the two was not recognized. We thus discern how the religious
+history of Japan was not a series of cataclysms or of disconnected
+leaps in the dark, but an orderly development, one step naturally
+following the next, as the sun follows the dawn. The different stages
+of Japan's religious progress have received different names, because
+due to specific stimuli brought from abroad; the religious life
+itself, however, has been a continuous development.
+
+Another difference between Shinto and Confucianism as it existed in
+Japan should not escape our attention, namely, in regard to their
+respective world-views. Shinto was confessedly a religion; it frankly
+believed in gods, whom it worshiped and on whose help it relied.
+Confucianism, or to use the Japanese name, Bushido, was confessedly
+agnostic. It did not assume to understand the universe, as Buddhism
+assumed. Nor did it admit the practical existence of gods or their
+power in this world, as Shinto believed. It maintained that, "if only
+the heart follows the way of truth, the gods will protect one even
+though he does not pray." It laid stress on practical moralities,
+regardless of their philosophical presumptions, into which it would
+not probe. When pressed it would ascribe all to "Heaven," and, as we
+have seen, it had many implications that would lead the inquiring mind
+to a belief in the personal nature of "Heaven." Had it developed these
+implications, Bushido would have become a genuine religion. It was
+indeed a system of ethics touched with emotion, it was religious, but
+it failed to become the religion it might have become because it
+insisted on its agnosticism and refused to worship the highest and
+best it knew.
+
+It is interesting to observe that the ideals and sanctions of
+Confucianism produced effects which proved its ruin. They did this in
+two ways; first, by developing the prolonged peace necessary for a
+high grade of scholarship which, turning its attention to ancient
+history, discovered that the Shogunate was assuming powers not in
+accord with the primitive practice nor in accord with the theory of
+the divine descent of the Imperial house. Imperialistic patriots
+arose, whose aim was to overthrow the Shogunate and restore the
+Emperor. They felt that, doing this, they were right; that is to say,
+they became inspired by the Shinto sanctions for a national life. They
+thus discovered the defect of the disjointed feudal system sanctioned
+by feudal Confucianism. The second cause of its undoing grew out of
+the first. The scholarship which led the patriots against the usurper
+in political life led them also against all foreign innovations such
+as Buddhism and Confucianism, which they scorned as modern and
+anti-imperial. The Shinto cultus thus received a powerful revival.
+With the overthrow of the Shogunate in 1868 Confucianism naturally
+went with it, and for a time Shinto was the state religion. But its
+poverty in every line, except the communal sanctions, caused it in a
+short time to lose its place.
+
+The two causes just assigned for the fall of Bushido, however, could
+hardly have wrought its ruin had it been more than a utilitarian and
+agnostic system of morality, calculated to maintain the social
+ascendency of a small fraction of the nation. As a religion, Bushido
+would have secured a conservative power enabling it to survive, by
+adapting itself to a changed social order. As it was, Bushido was
+snuffed out by a single breath of the breeze that began to blow from
+foreign lands. As an ethical system it has conferred a blessing on
+Japan that should never be forgotten. But its identification with a
+class and a clan social order rendered it too narrow for the national
+and international life into which the nation was forced by
+circumstances beyond its control, and its agnostic utilitarianism did
+not provide it with sufficient moral power to cope with the problems
+of the new individualistic age that had suddenly burst upon it. In all
+Japan there remains to the present day only one of those old
+Confucian schools with its temple to Confucius. All the rest have
+fallen into ruins or have been used for other purposes, while the
+gold-covered statues of the once deified teacher have been sold to
+curio-dealers or for their bullion value. In the worship of Confucius,
+Bushido almost became a religion, but it worshiped the teacher instead
+of the Creator, maintaining its agnosticism as to the Creator, as to
+"Heaven," to the end, and thus lapsed from the path of religious
+evolution.
+
+This brings us down to modern times--into the seventies. Already in
+the sixties Japan had discovered herself in a totally new environment.
+She found that foreign nations had made great progress in every
+direction since she shut them out two hundred and fifty years before.
+She discovered her helplessness, she discovered, too, that the social
+order of Western peoples was totally distinct from hers. These
+discoveries served to break down all the remaining sanctions for her
+particular type of social order--Confucianistic feudalism. The whole
+nation was eager to know the political systems of the West. So long as
+the Shinto ideal of nationalism was not interfered with, the nation
+was free to adopt any new social order. Japan's political and
+commercial intercourse being with England and America, the social
+order of the Anglo-Saxon had the greatest influence on the Japanese
+mind. Japan accordingly has become predominantly Anglo-Saxon in its
+social ideas. Much has been made of the fact that the new social order
+has come in so easily; that the people have gained rights without
+fighting for them; and this has been attributed to the peculiarity of
+Japanese human nature. This is an error. The real reason for the ease
+with which the individualistic Anglo-Saxon social order has been
+introduced has been the collapse of the sanctions for the Confucian
+order. No one had any ground of duty on which to stand and fight. The
+national mind was open to any newcomer that might have appeared. I am
+referring, of course, to the thinking classes. All the rest,
+accustomed to submissive obedience, never thought of any other course
+than to accept the will of superiors.
+
+Furthermore, the new social order in one important respect fell in
+with and helped to re-establish the old Shinto ideal, that, namely, of
+nationalism. In the treaty negotiations, the West would deal with no
+intermediaries, only with the responsible national head. Western
+ideals, too, demanded a strong national unity. In this respect, then,
+the foreign ideals and foreign social order were powerful influences
+in building up the new patriotism, in re-enforcing the old Shinto
+social sanctions.
+
+Thus has Japan come to the parting of the ways. What Japan needs
+to-day is a religion satisfying the intellect as to its world-view,
+and thus justifying the sanctions it holds out. These must be neither
+exclusively communal, like those of Shinto, nor exclusively
+individual, like those of Buddhism. While maintaining at their full
+value the sanctions for the social life, it must add thereto the
+sanctions for the individual. It must not look upon the individual as
+a being whose salvation depends on his being isolated from, taken out
+of the community, as Buddhism did and does, nor yet as a mere fraction
+of the community, as Confucianism did, but as a complete, imperishable
+unit of infinite worth, necessarily living a double life, partly
+inseparable from the social order and partly superior to it. This
+religion must provide not only sanctions, but ideals, for a perfect
+social order in which, while the most complex organization of society
+shall be possible, the freedom and the high development of the
+individual's personality shall also be secured.
+
+The fulfillment of such conditions would at first thought seem to be
+impossible. How can a religion give sanctions which at the very time
+that they authorize the fullest development and organization of
+society, apparently making society its chief end, also assume the
+fullest liberty and development of the individual, making him and his
+salvation its chief end? Are not these ends incompatible? What has
+been said already along this general line of thought has prepared us
+to see that they are not. The great, though unconscious, need of the
+ages, and the unconscious effort of all religious evolution has been
+the development of just such a religion. As the "cake" of social
+custom was at first the great need for, and afterwards the great
+obstacle in the way of, social evolution, so the sanctions of a
+communal religion were at first the great need for, and afterwards the
+great obstacle in the way of, religious evolution and of personal
+development. Through its sanctions religion is the most powerful of
+all the factors of the higher human evolution, either helping it
+onward or holding it back.
+
+Has, then, any religion secured such a dual development as we have
+just seen to be necessary? As a matter of fact, one and only one has
+done so, Christianity. This religion clearly attains and maintains the
+apparently impossible combination of individualism and communalism by
+the nature of its conception of the method of individual salvation.
+Its communalism is guaranteed by, because it rests on, its
+individualism. At the very moment that it pronounces the individual of
+inestimable worth,--a son of God,--it commands him to show that
+sonship by loving all God's other sons, and by serving them to the
+extent of self-sacrifice, and of death if need be. Its communalism is
+thus inseparable from its individualism and its individualism from its
+communalism.
+
+Christian individualism embraces and includes thoroughgoing
+communalism. True and full Christians are the most devoted patriots.
+As the acorn sends forth far-reaching; roots into the soil for
+moisture and nourishment, and a mighty trunk and spreading branches
+upward for air and sunlight, so the seed of Christian life develops in
+two directions, individualism as the root and communalism as the
+beautiful tree. They are not contradictory, but supplementary
+principles. While his own final gain is a real aim of the individual,
+it is only a part of his aim; he also desires and labors for the gain
+of all; and even the individual gain, he well knows, can be secured
+only through the communal principle, through service to his
+fellow-men. His own welfare, whether temporal or eternal, is
+inseparably bound up with that of his fellows.
+
+The Christian religion finds the sanctions for any and every social
+order that history knows, in the fact that all physical and social
+laws and organisms are part of the divine plan. Because any particular
+social order is the association of imperfect men and women, it must be
+more or less imperfect. But the Christian, even while he is seeking
+to reform the social order and to bring it up to his ideal, must be
+loyal to it. And for this loyalty to fellow-men and to God, the
+highest conceivable sanctions are held out, namely, an endless and
+infinite life of conscious, joyous fellowship with souls made perfect
+in the Kingdom of God, and with God himself.
+
+A comprehensive study, therefore, of the real nature and the true
+function of religion in relation to man's development, whether
+individual or communal, shows that Christianity fulfills the
+conditions. A comparative study would show that, of all the existing
+religions, Christianity alone does this. It alone combines in perfect
+proportion the individual and the communal elements, and the requisite
+sanctions.
+
+An expansion of communal religion is taking place in modern times. The
+community now arising is international in scope, interracial and
+universal in character. Cultivated men and women the world around are
+beginning to talk of national rights and national duties. Europe is
+thought to be justified in suppressing the slave trade and its
+accompanying horrors in Africa, and condemned for not preventing the
+Turk from carrying on his wholesale slaughter of innocent Armenians.
+The Spaniard is despised and condemned for his prolonged inhumanities
+in Cuba and the Philippines, and the American is approved in warring
+for humanity and justified in interfering with Spain's sovereignty.
+The conscience of the world is beginning to discover that no nation,
+though sovereign, has an absolute right over its people. Right is only
+measured by righteousness. International righteousness, duty and
+rights, regardless of military power, are coming to the forefront of
+the thinking of advanced nations.
+
+Looked at closely, and studied in its implications, what is this but a
+developing form of communal religion? No nation is conceived as
+existing apart; each exists as but one fraction of the world-wide
+community; in its relations it has both rights and duties. Does this
+not mean that appeal has been made from the communal sanctions of
+might to the supra-communal sanctions of right? We do not simply ask
+what do other nations think of this or that national act, but what is
+right, in view of the whole order of the nature which has brought man
+into being and set him in families and nations. In other words,
+national rights and duties are felt to flow from the supra-mundane
+source, God the Creator of heaven and earth and all that in them is.
+The sanctions for national rights and duties are religious sanctions
+and rest on a religious world-view.
+
+Now the point, of interest for us is the fact that Japan has entered
+into this universal community and is feeling the sanctions of this
+universal communal religion. The international rights and duties of
+Japan are a theme of frequent discourse and conversation. Japan
+stoutly maintained that the war with China was a "gi-sen," a righteous
+war, waged primarily for the sake of Korea. Many a Japanese waxes
+indignant over the cruelty of the Turk, the savage barbarity of the
+Spaniard, and the impotence and supineness of England and Europe. I
+have already spoken of the young man who became so indignant at
+England's compelling China to take Indian opium, that he proposed to
+go to England to preach an anti-opium crusade. Japan is beginning to
+enter into the larger communal life of the world, although, of course,
+she has as yet little perception of its varied implications.
+
+Many a student of New Japan perceives that she is abandoning her old
+religious conceptions, and that many moral and social evils are
+entering the land, who yet does not see that the wide acceptance of
+some new religion by the people is important for the maintenance of
+the nation. Some earnest Japanese thinkers are beginning to realize
+that religion is, indeed, needful to steady the national life, but
+they fail to see that Christianity alone fulfills the condition. Many
+are saying that a religion scientifically constructed must be
+manufactured especially for Japan.
+
+The reason why individualistic religion takes such an important part
+in the higher evolution of man is, in a word, because the religious
+sanctions are so much more powerful than all others, either legal or
+social. For the legal sanctions are chiefly negative; they are also
+partial and uncertain, and easily evaded by the selfish individual.
+The social sanctions, too, are often far from just or impartial or
+wise. Furthermore, the rise of individualism in the social order
+secures privacy for the individual, and so far forth removes him from
+the restraints and stimuli of the social sanctions. It is the
+religious sanctions alone that follow the man in every waking moment.
+Not one of all his acts escapes the eye of the religious judgment. He
+is his own judge, and he cannot escape bearing witness against
+himself.
+
+Now, it is manifest that where superior beings and man's relation to
+these and the corresponding religious sanctions are defectively
+conceived, as, for instance, quite apart either from the individual or
+the communal life, they are valueless to the higher evolution of man
+and have little interest for the student of social evolution. In
+proportion, however, as man advances in intellectual grasp of
+religious truths and in susceptibility to the moral ideas and
+religious sanctions they provide, conceiving of morality and religion
+as inseparable parts of the same system, the more powerfully does
+religion enter into and promote man's higher evolution. An
+individualistic social order demands the religious sanctions more
+imperatively than a communal social order; for, in proportion as it is
+individualistic, the social order is weak in compelling, through the
+legal and social sanctions alone, the communal or altruistic activity
+of the individual. Altruistic spirit and action, however, are
+essential to the maintenance even of that individualistic order. The
+more highly society develops, therefore, the more religious must each
+member of the society become.
+
+The same truth may be stated from another standpoint. The higher man
+develops, the more impatient he becomes with illogical reasonings and
+defective conceptions; he thus becomes increasingly skeptical in
+regard to current traditional religions with their crude, primitive
+ideas; he is accordingly increasingly freed from the restraints they
+impose. But unless he finds some new religious sanctions for the
+communal life, for social conduct, and for the individual
+life,--ideals and sanctions that command his assent and direct his
+life,--he will drop back into a thoroughgoing atomic, individualistic,
+selfish life, which can be only a hindrance to the higher development
+both of society and of the individual. In order that men advancing in
+intellectual ability may remain useful members of society, they must
+remain subject to those ideals and sanctions which will actually
+secure social conduct. While disregarding the chaff of primitive
+religious superstitions and ceremonials man must retain the wheat; he
+must feel the force of the religious spirit in a deeper and
+profounder, because more personal way than did his ancestors.
+Increasing intellectual power and knowledge must be balanced by
+increasing individual experience of the religious motives and spirit.
+This is the reason why each advancing age should study afresh the
+whole religious problem, and state in the terms of its own experience
+the prominent and permanent religious truths of all the ages and the
+sanctions that flow from them. Hence it is that a religion only
+traditional and ceremonial is quite unfitted for a developing life.
+
+Japan is no exception to the general laws of human evolution. As her
+intellectual abilities increase, the forms of her old religious life
+will become increasingly unacceptable to the people at large. If, in
+rejecting the obsolete forms of religious thought, she rejects
+religion and its sanctions altogether, atomistic individualism can be
+the only result, and with it wide moral corruption will eat out the
+vitality of the national life.
+
+That Christianity alone, of all the religions of the world, fulfills
+the conditions will not need many words to prove. As a matter of fact
+Christianity alone has succeeded in surviving the criticism of the
+nineteenth century. In Christendom, all religions but Christianity
+have perished. This is a mere matter of fact. As for the reason,
+Christianity alone gives complete intellectually satisfactory
+sanctions for both the communal and the individualistic principles of
+social progress. Christianity, as we have sufficiently shown, has both
+principles not unrelated to each other, but vitally interrelated. For
+these reasons it is safe to maintain not only that Japan needs to find
+a new religion, but that the religion must be Christianity in
+substance, whatever be the name given it.
+
+The Japanese have been described as essentially irreligious in nature.
+We have seen how defective such a description is. But have we not now
+traced one root of this seeming characteristic of New Japan? The old
+religious conceptions have been largely outgrown by the educated. They
+have come to the conclusion that the old religious forms constitute
+the whole of religion, and that consequently they are unworthy of
+attention. The spirit of New Japan is indifferent to religion; but
+this is not due to an inherently non-religious or irreligious nature,
+but to the empty externalism and shallow puerilities of the only
+religions they know. How can they be zealous for them or recognize any
+authority in them? Those few Japanese who have come within the
+influence of the larger conception of religion brought to Japan by
+Christianity are showing a religious zeal and power supporting the
+contention that the generally asserted lack of a religious nature is
+only apparent and temporary. Preaching the right set of ideas, those
+which appeal to the national sense of communal needs, by supplying the
+demand for sanctions for the social order; ideas which appeal to
+intellects molded by modern thought, by supplying such an intellectual
+understanding of the universe as justifies the various supra-communal
+sanctions; and ideas which appeal to the heart, by supplying the
+personal demand of each individual for a larger life, for intercourse
+with the Father of all Spirits and for strength for the prolonged
+battle of life--preach these and kindred ideas, and the Japanese will
+again become as conspicuously a religious people as they were when
+Buddhism came to Japan a thousand years ago.[DG]
+
+But if the real nature of a full and perfect religion is to save not
+only the individual, providing sanctions for his conduct, but also to
+justify the social order, and to provide sanctions that shall secure
+its maintenance, any religion which fails to have both characteristics
+can hardly claim the name universal. We have seen that Buddhism lacks
+one of these elements. In my judgment it is not properly universal. So
+long as it exists in or goes to a land already provided with other
+religions securing the social order, it may continue to thrive. But,
+on the one hand, it can never become the exclusive religion of any
+land for it cannot do without and therefore it cannot depose the other
+religions; and, on the other hand, it must give way before the
+stronger religion which has both the individual and communal elements
+combined. Buddhism, therefore, lacks a vital characteristic of a
+universal religion. It may better be called a non-local, or an
+international religion. We now see another reason why Buddhism,
+although found in many Oriental lands, has never annihilated any of
+the pre-existing religions, but has only added one more to the many
+varieties already existing. It is so in Thibet, in China, in Burmah,
+and in Japan. And in India, its home, it has utterly died out.
+
+Many of the efforts made by students of comparative religion to
+classify the various religions, seem to the writer defective through
+lack of the perception that social and religious evolution are vitally
+connected. From this point of view, the classification of religions as
+communal, individual, and communo-individual, would seem to be the
+best.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT?
+
+We have now passed in rather detailed review the emotional, aesthetic,
+intellectual, moral, and religious characteristics of the Japanese
+race. We have, furthermore, given considerable attention to the
+problem of personality. We have tried to understand the relation of
+each characteristic to the Japanese feudal system and social order.
+
+The reader will perhaps feel some dissatisfaction with the results of
+this study. "Are there, then," he may say, "no distinctive Japanese
+psychical characteristics by which this Eastern race is radically
+differentiated from those of the Occident?" "Are there no peculiar
+features of an Oriental, mental and moral, which infallibly and always
+distinguish him from an Occidental?" The reply to this question given
+in the preceding chapters of this work is negative. For the sake,
+however, of the reader who may not yet be thoroughly satisfied, it may
+be well to examine this problem a little further, analyzing some of
+the current characterizations of the Orient.
+
+That Oriental and Occidental peoples are each possessed of certain
+unique psychic characteristics, sharply and completely differentiating
+them from each other, is the opinion of scientific sociologists as
+well as of more popular writers. An Occidental entering the Orient is
+well-nigh overwhelmed with amusement and surprise at the antipodal
+characteristics of the two civilizations. Every visible expression of
+Oriental civilization, every mode of thought, art, architecture;
+conceptions of God, man, and nature; pronunciation and structure of
+the language--all seem utterly different from their corresponding
+elements in the West. Furthermore, as he visits one Oriental country
+after another, although he discovers differences between Japanese,
+Koreans, Chinese, and Hindus, yet he is impressed with a strange, a
+baffling similarity.
+
+The tourist naturally concludes that the unity characterizing the
+Orient is fundamental; that Oriental civilization is due to Oriental
+race brain, and Occidental civilization is due to Occidental race
+brain.
+
+This impression and this conclusion of the tourist are not, however,
+limited to him. The "old resident" in the East becomes increasingly
+convinced with every added year that an Oriental is a different kind
+of human being from a Westerner. As he becomes accustomed to the
+externals of the Oriental civilization, he forgets its comical
+aspects, he even comes to appreciate many of its conveniences. But in
+proportion as he becomes familiar with its languages, its modes of
+thought and feeling, its business methods, its politics, its
+literature, its amusements, does he increasingly realize the gulf set
+between an Oriental and an Occidental. The inner life of the spirit of
+an Oriental would be utterly inane, spiritless to the average
+Occidental. The "old resident" accordingly knows from long experience
+what the tourist only guesses from a hasty glance, that the
+characteristic differences distinguishing the peoples of the East and
+the West are racial and ineradicable. An Oriental is an Oriental, and
+that is the ultimate, only thoroughgoing explanation of his nature.
+
+The conception of the tourist and the "old resident" crops up in
+nearly every article and book touching on Far Eastern peoples.
+Whatever the point of remark or criticism, if it strikes the writer as
+different from the custom of Occidentals, it is laid to the account of
+Orientalism.
+
+This conception, however, of distinguishing Oriental characteristics,
+is not confined to popular writers and unscientific persons. Even
+professed and eminent sociologists advocate it. Prof. Le Bon, in his
+sophistic volume on the "Psychology of Peoples," advocates it
+strenuously. A few quotations from this interesting work may not be
+out of place.
+
+"The object of this work is to describe the psychological
+characteristics which constitute the soul of races, and to show how
+the history of a people and its civilization is determined by these
+characteristics."[DH] "The point that has remained most clearly fixed
+in mind, after long journeys through the most varied countries, is
+that each people possesses a mental constitution as unaltering as its
+anatomical characteristics, a constitution which is the source of its
+sentiments, thoughts, institutions, beliefs, and arts."[DI]
+
+"The life of a people, its institutions, beliefs, and arts, are but
+the visible expression of its invisible soul. For a people to
+transform its institutions, beliefs, and arts it must first transform
+its soul."[DJ]
+
+"Each race possesses a constitution as unvarying as its anatomical
+constitution. There seems to be no doubt that the former corresponds
+to a certain special structure of the brain."[DK]
+
+"A negro or a Japanese may easily take a university degree or become a
+lawyer; the sort of varnish he thus acquires is, however, quite
+superficial and has no influence on his mental constitution. What no
+education can give him, because they are created by heredity alone,
+are the forms of thought, the logic, and above all the character of
+the Western man."[DL]
+
+"Cross-breeding constitutes the only infallible means at our disposal
+of transforming in a fundamental manner the character of a people,
+heredity being the only force powerful enough to contend with
+heredity. Cross-breeding allows of the creation of a new race,
+possessing new physical and psychological characteristics."[DM]
+
+Such, then, being the opinion of travelers, residents, and
+professional sociologists, it is not to be lightly rejected. Nor has
+it been lightly rejected by the writer. For years he agreed with this
+view, but repeated study of the problem has convinced him of the
+fallacy of both the conception and the argument, and has brought him
+to the position maintained in this work.
+
+The characteristics differentiating Occidental and
+
+Oriental peoples and civilizations are undoubtedly great. But they
+are differences of social evolution and rest on social, not on
+biological heredity. Anatomical differences are natal, racial, and
+necessary. Not so with social characteristics and differences. These
+are acquired by each individual chiefly after birth, and depend on
+social environment which determines the education from infancy upward.
+Furthermore, an entire nation or race, if subjected to the right
+social environment, may profoundly transform its institutions,
+beliefs, and arts, which in turn transform what Prof. Le Bon and
+kindred writers call the invisible "race soul." Racial activity
+produces race character, for "Function produces organism." I cannot
+agree with these writers in the view that the race soul is a given
+fixed entity. Social psychogenesis is a present and a progressive
+process. Japan is a capital illustration of it. In the development of
+races and civilizations involution is as continuous a process as
+evolution. Evolution is, indeed, only one-half of the process. Without
+involution, evolution is incomprehensible. And involution is the more
+interesting half, as it is the more significant. In modern discussion
+much that passes by the name of evolution is, in reality, a discussion
+of involution.
+
+The attentive reader will have discovered that the real point of the
+discussion of Japanese characteristics given in the preceding chapters
+has been on the point of involution. How have these characteristics
+arisen? has been our ever-recurring question. The answer has
+invariably tried to show their relation to the social order. In this
+way we have traversed a large number of leading characteristics of the
+Japanese. We have seen how they arose, and also how they are now being
+transformed by the new Occidentalized social order. We have seen that
+not one of the characteristics examined is inherent, that is, due to
+brain structure, to biological heredity. We have concluded, therefore,
+that the psychical characteristics which differentiate races are all
+but wholly social.
+
+It is incumbent on advocates of the biological view to point out in
+detail the distinguishing inherent traits of the Orient. Let them also
+catalogue the essential psychic characteristics of Occidentals. Such
+an attempt is seldom made. And when it is made it is singularly
+unconvincing. Although Prof. Le Bon states that the mental
+constitution of races is as distinctive and unaltering as their
+anatomical characteristics, he fails to tell us what they are. This is
+a vital omission. If the differences are as distinct as he asserts, it
+would seem to be an easy matter to describe them. Whatever the
+clothing adopted, it is an easy matter for one to distinguish a
+European from an Asiatic, an Englishman from an Italian, a Japanese
+from a Korean, a Chinaman from a Hindu. The anatomical characteristics
+of races are clear and easily described. If the psychic
+characteristics are equally distinct, why do not they who assert this
+distinctness describe and catalogue these differences?
+
+Occasionally a popular writer makes something of an attempt in this
+direction, but with astonishingly slight results. A recent writer in
+the London _Daily Mail_ has illustrated afresh the futility of all
+attempts to catalogue the distinguishing characteristics of the
+Oriental. He names the inferior position assigned to women, the
+licentiousness of men, licensed prostitution, lack of the play
+instinct among Oriental boys, scorn of Occidental civilization, and
+the rude treatment of foreigners. Many of his statements of facts are
+sadly at fault. But supposing them to be true, are they the
+differentiating characteristics of the Orient? Consider for a moment
+what was the position of woman in ancient times in the Occident, and
+what was the moral character of Occidental men? Is not prostitution
+licensed to-day in the leading cities of Europe? And is there not an
+unblushing prostitution in the larger cities of England and America
+which would put to shame the licensed prostitution of Japan? Are
+Orientals and their civilization universally esteemed and
+considerately treated in the Occident? Surely none of these are
+uniquely Oriental characteristics, distinguishing them from Occidental
+peoples as clearly as the anatomical characteristics of oblique eyes
+and yellow skin.
+
+Mr. Percival Lowell has made a careful philosophical effort to
+discover the essential psychic nature of the Orient. He describes it,
+as we have seen, as "Impersonality." The failure of his effort we
+have sufficiently considered.
+
+There remain a few other characterizations of the Orient that we may
+well examine briefly.
+
+It has been stated that the characteristic psychic trait
+distinguishing the East from the West is that the former is intuitive,
+while the latter is logical. In olden times Oriental instruction
+relied on the intuitions of the student. No reliance was placed on the
+logical process. Religion, so far as it was not ceremony and magic,
+was intuitional, "Satori," "Enlightenment," was the keyword. Each man
+attains enlightenment by himself--through a flash of intuition. Moral
+instruction likewise was intuitional. Dogmatic statements were made
+whose truth the learner was to discover for himself; no effort was
+made to explain them. Teaching aimed to go direct to the point, not
+stopping to explain the way thither.
+
+That this was and is a characteristic of the Orient cannot be
+disputed. The facts are abundant and clear. But the question is
+whether this is a racial psychic characteristic, such that it
+inevitably controls the entire thinking of an Oriental, whatever his
+education, and also whether the Occident is conspicuously deficient in
+this psychic characteristic. Thus stated, the question almost answers
+itself.
+
+Orientals educated in Western methods of thought acquire logical
+methods of reasoning and teaching. The old educational methods of
+Japan are now obsolete. On the other hand, intuitionalism is not
+unknown in the West. Mystics in religion are all conspicuously
+intuitional. So too are Christian scientists, faith-healers, and
+spiritualists. Great preachers and poets are intuitionalists rather
+than logicians.
+
+Furthermore, if we look to ancient times, we shall see that even
+Occidentals were dominated by intuitionalism. All primitive knowledge
+was dominated by intuitions, and was as absurd as many still prevalent
+Oriental conceptions of nature. The bane of ancient science and
+philosophy was its reliance on a priori considerations; that is, on
+intuition. Inductive, carefully logical methods of thought, of
+science, of philosophy, and even of religion, are relatively modern
+developments of the Occidental mind. We have learned to doubt
+intuitions unverified by investigation and experimental evidence. The
+wide adoption of the inductive method is a recent characteristic of
+the West.
+
+Modern progress has consisted in no slight degree in the development
+of logical powers, and particularly in the power of doubting and
+examining intuitions. To say that the East is conspicuously
+intuitional and the West is conspicuously logical is fairly true, but
+this misses the real difference. The West is intuitional plus logical.
+It uses the intuitional method in every department of life, but it
+does not stop with it. An intuition is not accepted as truth until it
+has been subjected by the reason to the most thorough criticism
+possible. The West distrusts the unverified and unguided intuitive
+judgment. On the other hand, the East is not inherently deficient in
+logical power. When brought into contact with Occidental life, and
+especially when educated in Occidental methods of thought, the
+Oriental is not conspicuously deficient in logical ability.
+
+This line of thought leads to the conclusion that the psychic
+characteristics distinguishing the East from the West, profound though
+they are, are sociological rather than biological. They are the
+characteristics of the civilization rather than of essential race
+nature.
+
+A fact remarked by many thoughtful Occidentals is the astonishing
+difficulty--indeed the impossibility--of becoming genuinely and
+intimately acquainted with the Japanese. Said a professor of Harvard
+University to the writer some years ago: "Do you in Japan find it
+difficult to become truly acquainted with the Japanese? We see many
+students here, but we are unable to gain more than a superficial
+acquaintance. They seem to be incrusted in a shell that we are unable
+to pierce." The editor of the _Japan Mail_, speaking of the difficulty
+of securing "genuinely intimate intercourse with the Japanese people,"
+says: "The language also is needed. Yet even when the language is
+added, something still remains to be achieved, and what that something
+is we have never been able to discover, though we have been
+considering the subject for thirty-three years. No foreigner has ever
+yet succeeded in being admitted into the inner circle of Japanese
+intercourse."
+
+Is this a fact? If not, why is it so widespread a belief? If it is a
+fact, what is the interpretation? Like most generalizations it
+expresses both a truth and an error. As the statement of a general
+experience, I believe it to be true. As an assertion of universal
+application I believe it to be false. As a truth, how is it to be
+explained? Is it due to difference of race soul, and thus to racial
+antipathy, as some maintain? If so, it must be a universal fact. This,
+however, is an error, as we shall see. The explanation is not so hard
+to find as at first appears.
+
+The difficulty under consideration is due to two classes of facts. The
+first is that the people have long been taught that Occidentals desire
+to seize and possess their land. Although the more enlightened have
+long since abandoned this fear and suspicion, the people still suspect
+the stranger; they do not propose to admit foreigners to any leading
+position in the political life of the land. They do not implicitly
+trust the foreigners, even when taken into their employ. That
+foreigners should not be admitted to the inner circle of Japanese
+political life, therefore, is not strange. Nor is it unique to Japan.
+It is not done in any land except the United States. Secondly, the
+diverse methods of social intercourse characterizing the East and the
+West make a deep chasm between individuals of these civilizations on
+coming into social relations. The Oriental bows low, utters
+conventional "aisatsu" salutations, listens respectfully, withholds
+his own opinion, agrees with his vis-a-vis, weighs every word uttered
+with a view to inferring the real meaning, for the genius of the
+language requires him to assume that the real meaning is not on the
+surface, and chooses his own language with the same circumspection.
+The Occidental extends his hand for a hearty shake--if he wishes to be
+friendly--looks his visitor straight in the eye, speaks directly from
+his heart, without suspicion or fear of being misunderstood, expresses
+his own opinions unreservedly. The Occidental, accustomed to this
+direct and open manner, spontaneously doubts the man who lacks it. It
+is impossible for the Occidental to feel genuinely acquainted with an
+Oriental who does not respond in Occidental style of frank open
+intercourse. Furthermore, it is not Japanese custom to open one's
+heart, to make friends with everyone who comes along. The
+hail-fellow-well-met characteristic of the Occident is a feature of
+its individualism, that could not come into being in a feudal
+civilization in which every respectable man carried two swords with
+which to take instant vengeance on whoever should malign or doubt him.
+Universal secretiveness and conventionality, polite forms and veiled
+expressions, were the necessary shields of a military feudalism. Both
+the social order and the language were fitted to develop to a high
+degree the power of attention to minutest details of manner and speech
+and of inferring important matters from slight indications. The whole
+social order served to develop the intuitional method in human
+relations. Reliance was placed more on what was not said than on what
+was clearly expressed. A doubting state of mind was the necessary
+psychological prerequisite for such an inferential system. And doubt
+was directly taught. "Hito wo mireba dorobo to omoye," "when you see a
+man, count him a robber," may be an exaggeration, but this ancient
+proverb throws much light on the Japanese chronic state of mind.
+Mutual suspicion--and especially suspicion of strangers--was the rule
+in Old Japan. Among themselves the Japanese make relatively few
+intimate friends. They remark on Occidental skill in making friends.
+
+That the foreigner is not admitted to the inner social life of the
+Japanese is likewise not difficult of explanation, if we bear in mind
+the nature of that social life. Is it possible for one who keeps
+concubines, who takes pleasure in geisha, and who visits houses of
+prostitution, to converse freely and confidentially with those who
+condemn these practices? Can he who stands for a high-grade morality,
+who criticises in unsparing measure the current morality of Japanese
+society, expect to be admitted to its inner social circles?
+Impossible. However friendly the relations of Japanese and foreigners
+may be in business and in the diplomatic corps, the moral chasm
+separating the social life of the Occident from that of the Orient
+effectually prevents a foreigner from being admitted to its inner
+social life.
+
+It might be thought that immoral Occidentals would be so admitted. Not
+so. The Japanese distinguish between Occidentals. They know well that
+immoral Occidentals are not worthy of trust. Although for a season
+they may hobnob together, the intimacy is shallow and short-lived; it
+rests on lust and not on profound sympathies of head and heart.
+
+And this suggests the secret of genuine acquaintance. Men become
+profoundly acquainted in proportion as they hold in common serious
+views of life, and labor together for the achievement of great moral
+ends. Now a gulf separates the ordinary Japanese, even though
+educated, from the serious-minded Occidental. Their views of life are
+well-nigh antipodal. If their social intercourse is due only to the
+accident of business or of social functions, what true intimacy can
+possibly arise? The acquaintance can only be superficial. Nothing
+binds the two together beyond the temporary and accidental. Let them,
+however, become possessed of a common and a serious view of life; let
+them strive for the attainment of some great moral reform, which they
+feel of vital importance to the welfare of the nation and the age, and
+immediately a bond of connection and intercourse will be established
+which will ripen into real intimacy.
+
+I dispute the correctness of the generalization above quoted, however,
+not only on theoretical considerations, but also as a matter of
+experience. Among Christians, the conditions are fulfilled for
+intimate relations between Occidentals and Orientals which result, as
+a matter of fact, in genuine and intimate friendship. The relations
+existing between many missionaries and the native Christians and
+pastors refute the assertion of the editor of the _Japan Mail_ that,
+"no foreigner has ever yet succeeded in being admitted into the inner
+circle of Japanese intercourse." This assertion is doubtless true in
+regard to the relation of foreigners to non-Christian society. The
+reason, for the fact, however, is not because one is Occidental and
+the other Oriental in psychic nature, but solely because of diverse
+moral views, aims, and conduct.
+
+It is not the contention of these pages, however, that intimate
+friendships between Occidental and Oriental Christians are as easily
+formed as between members of two Occidental nations. Although common
+views of life, and common moral aims and conduct may provide the
+requisite foundations for such intimate friendships, the diverse
+methods of thought and of social intercourse may still serve to hinder
+their formation. It is probably a fact that missionaries experience
+greater difficulty in making genuine intimate friendships with
+Japanese Christians than with any other race on the face of the globe.
+The reasons for this fact are manifold. The Japanese racial ambition
+manifests itself not only in the sphere of political life; it does not
+take kindly to foreign control in any line. The churches manifest this
+characteristic. It is a cause of suspicion of the foreign missionary
+and separation from him; it has broken up many a friendship. Intimacy
+between missionaries and leading native pastors and evangelists was
+more common in the earlier days of Christian work than more recently,
+because the Japanese church organization has recently developed a
+self-consciousness and an ambition for organic independence which have
+led to mutual criticisms.
+
+Furthermore, Japanese Christians are still Japanese. Their methods of
+social intercourse are Oriental; they bow profoundly, they repeat
+formal salutations, they refrain from free expression of personal
+opinion and preference. The crust of polite etiquette remains. The
+foreigner must learn to appreciate it before he can penetrate to the
+kindly, sincere, earnest heart. This the foreigner does not easily do,
+much to the detriment of his work.
+
+And on the other hand, before the Oriental can penetrate to the
+kindly, sincere, and earnest heart of the Occidental, he must abandon
+the inferential method; he must not judge the foreigner by what is
+left unsaid nor by slight turns of that which is said, but by the
+whole thought as fully expressed. In other words, as the Occidental
+must learn and must trust to Oriental methods of social intercourse,
+so the Oriental must learn and must trust to the corresponding
+Occidental methods. The difficulty is great in either case, though of
+an opposite nature. Which has the greater difficulty is a question I
+do not attempt to solve.
+
+Another generalization as to the essential difference marking Oriental
+and Occidental psychic natures is that the former is meditative and
+appreciative, and the latter is active. This too is a characterization
+of no little truth. The easy-going, time-forgetting, dreaming
+characteristics of the Orient are in marked contrast to the rush,
+bustle, and hurry of the Occident. One of the first and most forcible
+impressions made on the Oriental visiting the West is the tremendous
+energy displayed even in the ordinary everyday business. In the home
+there is haste; on the streets men, women, and children are "always on
+the run." It must seem to be literally so, when the walk of the
+Occidental is compared with the slow, crawling rate at which the
+Oriental moves. Horse cars, electric cars, steam cars, run at high
+speed through crowded streets. Conversation is short and hurried.
+Visits are curtailed--hardly more than glimpses. Everyone is so
+nervously busy as to have no time for calm, undisturbed thought. So
+does the Orient criticise and characterize the Occident.
+
+In the Orient, on the contrary, time is nothing. Walking is slow,
+business is deliberate, visiting is a fine art of bows and
+conventional phrases preliminary to the real purpose of the call;
+amusements even are long-drawn-out, theatrical performances requiring
+an entire day. In the home there is no hurry, on the street there is
+no rush. To the Occidental, the Oriental seems so absorbed in a dream
+life that the actual life is to him but a dream.
+
+If the characterization we are considering is meant to signify that
+the Orient possesses a power of appreciation not possessed by the
+West, then it seems to me an error. The Occident is not deficient in
+appreciation. A better statement of the difference suggested by the
+above characterization is that Western civilization is an expression
+of Will, whereas Eastern civilization is an expression of
+subordination to the superior--to Fate. This feature of Oriental
+character is due to the fact that the Orient is still as a whole
+communal in its social order, whereas the Occident is individualistic.
+In the West each man makes his own fortune; his position in society
+rests on his own individual energy. He is free to exert it at will.
+Society praises him in proportion as he manifests energy, grit,
+independence, and persistence. The social order selects such men and
+advances them in political, in business, in social, and in academic
+life. The energetic, active characteristics of the West are due, then,
+to the high development of individualism. The entire Occidental
+civilization is an expression of free will.
+
+The communal nature of the Orient has not systematically given room
+for individual progress. The independent, driving man has been
+condemned socially. Submission, absolute and perpetual, to parents, to
+lord, to ancestors, to Fate, has been the ruling idea of each man's
+life. Controlled by such ideas, the easy-going, time-ignoring,
+dreaming, contemplative life--if you so choose to call it--of the
+Orient is a necessary consequence.
+
+But has this characteristic become congenital, or is it still only
+social? Is dreamy appreciation now an inborn racial characteristic of
+Oriental mind, while active driving energy is the corresponding
+essential trait of Occidental mind? Or may these characteristics
+change with the social order? I have no hesitancy whatever in
+advocating the latter position. The way in which Young Japan, clad in
+European clothing, using watches and running on "railroad time," has
+dropped the slow-going style of Old Japan and has acquired habits of
+rapid walking, direct clear-cut conversation, and punctuality in
+business and travel (comparatively speaking) proves conclusively the
+correctness of my contention. New Japan is entering into the hurry and
+bustle of Occidental life, because, in contact with the West, she has
+adopted in a large measure, though not yet completely, the
+individualism of the West.
+
+As time goes on, Japanese civilization will increasingly manifest the
+phenomena of will, and will proportionally become assimilated to the
+civilization of the West. But the ultimate cause of this
+transformation in civilization will be the increasing introduction of
+individualism into the social order. And this is possible only because
+the so-called racial characteristics are sociological, and not
+biological. The transformation of "race soul" therefore does not
+depend on the intermarriage of diverse races, but only on the adoption
+of new ideas and practices through social intercourse.
+
+We conclude, then, that the only thoroughgoing interpretation of the
+differences characterizing Eastern and Western psychic nature is a
+social one, and that social differences can be adequately expressed
+only by contrasting the fundamental ideas ruling their respective
+social orders, namely, communalism for the East and individualism for
+the West.
+
+The unity that pervades the Orient, if it is not due to the
+inheritance of a common psychic nature, to what is it due? Surely to
+the possession of a common civilization and social order. It would be
+hard to prove that Japanese, Koreans, Chinese, Siamese, Burmese,
+Hindus (and how many distinct races does the ethnologist find in
+India), Persians, and Turks are all descendants from a common ancestry
+and are possessed therefore by physical heredity of a common racial
+psychic nature. Yet such is the requirement of the theory we are
+opposing. That the races inhabiting the Asiatic continent have had
+from ancient times mutual social intercourse, whereby the
+civilization, mental, moral, and spiritual, of the most developed has
+passed to the other nations, so that China has dominated Eastern Asia,
+and India has profoundly influenced all the races inhabiting Asia, is
+an indisputable fact. The psychic unity of the Orient is a
+civilizational, a social unity, as is also the psychic unity of the
+Occident. The reason why the Occident is so distinct from the Orient
+in social, in psychic, and in civilizational characteristics is
+because these two great branches of the human race have undergone
+isolated evolution. Isolated biological evolution has produced the
+diverse races. These are now fixed physical types, which can be
+modified only by intermarriage. But although isolated social evolution
+has produced diverse social and psychic characteristics these are not
+fixed and unalterable. To transform psychic and social
+characteristics, intimate social intercourse, under special
+conditions, is needful alone.
+
+If the characteristics differentiating the Eastern from the Western
+peoples are only social, it might be supposed that the results of
+association would be mutual, the East influencing the West as much as
+the West influences the East, both at last finding a common level.
+Such a result, however, is impossible, from the laws regulating
+psychic and social intercourse. The less developed psychic nature can
+have no appreciable effect on the more highly developed, just as
+undeveloped art cannot influence highly developed art, nor crude
+science and philosophy highly developed science and philosophy. The
+law governing the relations of diverse civilizations when brought into
+contact is not like the law of hydrostatics, whereby two bodies of
+water of different levels, brought into free communication, finally
+find a common level, determined by the difference in level and their
+respective masses. In social intercourse the higher civilization is
+unaffected by the lower, in any important way, while the lower is
+mightily modified, and in sufficient time is lifted to the grade of
+the higher in all important respects. This is a law of great
+significance. The Orient is becoming Occidentalized to a degree and at
+a rate little realized by travelers and not fully appreciated by the
+Orientals themselves. They know that mighty changes have taken place,
+and are now taking place, but they do not fully recognize their
+nature, and the multitudes do not know the source of these changes. In
+so far as the East has surpassed the West in any important direction
+will the East influence the West.
+
+In saying, then, as we did in our first chapter, that the Japanese
+have already formed an Occidento-Oriental civilization, we meant that
+Japan has introduced not only the external and mechanical elements of
+Western civilization into her new social order, but also its inner and
+determinative principle--individualism. In saying that, as the
+Ethiopian cannot change his skin nor the leopard his spots, so Japan
+will never become thoroughly Occidentalized, we did not intend to say
+that she was so Oriental in her physiological nature, in her "race
+soul," that she could make no fundamental social transformation; but
+merely that she has a social heredity that will always and inevitably
+modify every Occidental custom and conception that may be brought to
+this land. Although in time Japan may completely individualize her
+social order, it will never be identical with that of the West. It
+will always bear the marks of her Oriental social heredity in
+innumerable details. The Occidental traveler will always be impressed
+with the Orientalisms of her civilization. Although the Oriental
+familiar with the details of the pre-Meiji social order will be
+impressed with what seems to him the complete Occidentalization of her
+new civilization and social order, although to-day communalism and
+individualism are the distinguishing characteristics respectively of
+the East and the West, they are not necessary characteristics due to
+inherent race nature. The Orient is sure to become increasingly
+individualistic. The future evolution of the great races of the earth
+is to be increasingly convergent in all the essentials of individual
+and racial prosperity, but in countless non-essential details the
+customs of the past will remain, to give each race and nation
+distinctive psychic and social characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+GENERAL CONCLUSIONS
+
+
+The aim of the present work has been to gain insight into the real
+nature of both Japanese character and its modern transformation.
+
+In doing this we have necessarily entered the domain of social
+science, where we have been compelled to take issue with many, to us,
+defective conceptions. Our discussions of social principles have,
+however, been narrowly limited. We have confined our attention to the
+interpretation of those social and psychic characteristics
+differentiating the Japanese from other races. Our chief contention
+has been that these characteristics are due to the nature of the
+social order that has prevailed among them, and not to the inherent
+nature of the people; and that the evolution of the psychic
+characteristics of all races is due to social more than to biological
+evolution.
+
+This position and the discussions offered to prove it imply more than
+has been explicitly stated. In this closing chapter it seems desirable
+to state concisely, and therefore with technical terminology, some of
+the more fundamental principles of social philosophy assumed or
+implied in this work. Brevity requires that this statement take the
+form of dogmatic propositions and unillustrated abstractions. The
+average reader will find little to interest him, and is accordingly
+advised to omit it entirely.
+
+Let us first clearly see that we have made no effort to account for
+the origin or inherent nature of psychic life. That association or the
+social order is the original producing cause of psychic life is by no
+means our contention. Given the psychic nature as we find it in man,
+the problem is to account for its diverse manifestation in the
+different races and civilizations. This, and this alone, has been our
+problem.
+
+Psychic nature is the sole and final cause of social life. Without
+psychic nature there could be no association. Personalized psychic
+nature is the sole and final cause of human social life. Numberless
+conditions determine by stimulation or imitation the manifestation of
+psychic life. These conditions differ for different lands, peoples,
+ages, and political relations, producing diverse social orders for
+each separated group. These diverse social orders determine the
+psychic characteristics differentiating the various groups. Social
+life and social order are objective expressions of a reality of which
+psychic nature is the subjective and therefore deeper reality. The two
+cannot be ruthlessly torn apart and remain complete, nor can they be
+understood, or completely interpreted, apart from each other. They are
+correlative and complementary expressions for the same reality.
+
+Similarly physical and psychical life are to be conceived as
+profoundly interrelated, being respectively objective and subjective
+expressions of a reality incapable of separate interpretation. Yet
+each has markedly distinct characteristics and is the subject of
+distinct laws of activity and development.
+
+Heredity is of two kinds, biological heredity, transmitting innate
+characters, and social heredity, transmitting acquired habits and
+their physiological results.
+
+The innate characters transmitted by biological heredity are either
+physiological, anatomical, or psychical.
+
+The acquired habits transmitted by social heredity are essentially
+psychical: but they may result in acquired physiological, or even
+anatomical, characters. Here belong the physiological effects of diet,
+housing, clothing, occupation, education, etc., which have not yet
+been taken up and incorporated into the innate physiological
+constitution by biological heredity. The physiological effects of
+social heredity are through the daily physical life and activity of
+each individual, in accordance with the requirements of the social
+order in which he is reared; and these are reached through its
+influence on the acquired psychical habits, which are transmitted
+through association, imitation, and the control of activities by
+language and education. In biological heredity the transmission is
+exclusively prior to birth, while in social heredity it is chiefly, if
+not entirely, after birth.
+
+In social heredity the transmission is not determined by
+consanguinity, and therefore extends to members of alien races when
+they are incorporated in the social organization.
+
+While the transmission of biological inheritance to each offspring is
+inevitable and complete, that of social inheritance is largely
+voluntary. It is also more or less complete, according to the
+knowledge, purpose, and effort of the individuals concerned. The
+transmission of acquired social and psychic characteristics even from
+parents to offspring depends on their association, and the imposition
+on their offspring by parents of their own modes of life. Sharing with
+parents their bodily activities, their language and their environment,
+both social and psychical, the offspring necessarily develop psychic
+and social characteristics similar to those of the parents.
+
+Evolution takes place through the transformation of inheritance. The
+evolution of _innate_ physiological, anatomical, and psychical
+characters takes place through the transformation of biological
+inheritance; and the evolution of society and of _acquired_ characters
+chiefly through the transformation of social inheritance.
+
+Nearly all biologists admit that change in the form of natural
+selection is one of the principles transforming biological
+inheritance; but whether the _acquired_ characters of parents are even
+in the least degree inherited by the offspring, thus becoming _innate_
+characters, is one of the important biological problems of recent
+years. Into this problem we have not entered, though we recognize that
+it must have important bearings on sociological science. Briefly
+stated, it is this: Do social and psychic characteristics, acquired by
+individuals or by groups of individuals, affect the intrinsic
+inherited and transmissible psychic nature in such ways that
+offspring, by the mere fact of being offspring, necessarily manifest
+those characteristics, regardless of the particular social environment
+in which they may be reared? Into this problem, thus broadly stated,
+we do not enter. Limiting our view to those advanced races which
+manifest practically equal physiological development, we ask whether
+or not their differentiating psychic characteristics are due to
+modifications of their inherited and intrinsic psychic nature, such
+that those characteristics are necessarily transmitted to offspring
+through intrinsic biological heredity. Current popular and scientific
+sociology seems to give an affirmative answer to this question. The
+reply of this work emphasizes the negative. Although it is not
+maintained that there is absolutely no difference whatever in the
+psychic nature of the different races, or that the psychic differences
+distinguishing the races are entirely transmitted by social heredity,
+it is maintained that this is very largely the case--far more largely
+than is usually perceived or admitted. Such inherent differences, if
+they exist, are so vague and intangible as practically to defy
+discovery and clear statement, and may be practically ignored.
+
+The only adequate disproof of the position here maintained would be
+about as follows. Let a Japanese infant be reared in an American home
+from infancy, not only fed and clothed as an American, but loved as a
+member of the family and trained as carefully and affectionately as
+one's own child. The full conditions require that not only the child
+himself, but everyone else, be ignorant of his parentage and race in
+order that he be thought to be, and be treated as though he were, a
+genuine member of his adopting home and people. What would be the
+psychic characteristics of that child when grown to manhood? If he
+should manifest psychic traits like those of his Japanese parents, if
+he should think in the Japanese order, if he should have a tendency to
+use prepositions as postpositions, if he should drop pronouns and
+should use honorific words in their place, if he should be markedly
+suspicious and inferential, if he should bow in making his salutations
+rather than shake hands, if he should show marked preference for
+sitting on the floor rather than on chairs, and for chopsticks to
+knives and forks, and if developing powers as an artist he should
+naturally paint Japanese pictures, Japanese landscapes, and Japanese
+faces, finding himself unable to draw according to the canons of
+Western art, if on developing poetic tastes he should find special
+pleasure in seventeen syllable or thirty-one syllable exclamatory
+poems, finding little interest in Longfellow or Shakespeare, if, in
+short, he should develop a predilection for any distinctive Japanese
+custom, habit of thought, method of speech, emotion or volition, it
+would evidently be due to his intrinsic heredity. If in all these
+matters, however, he should prove to be like an American, acquiring an
+American education like any American boy, and if on being brought to
+Japan, at, say, thirty years of age, still supposing himself to be an
+American, he should have equal difficulty with any American in
+mastering the language and adapting himself to and understanding the
+Japanese people, then it would follow that his psychic characteristics
+have been inherited socially and he is what he is, nationally, because
+of his social heritage. Such a result would show that the psychic
+traits differentiating races are social and not intrinsic.
+
+We have limited our discussion to the advanced races because the
+problem is then relatively simple, the material abundant, and the
+issue clear. Much discussion in theology, psychology, and sociology is
+futile because it concerns that practically mythical being, the
+aboriginal man, about whose social and psychic life no one knows
+anything, and any theorizer can say what he chooses without fear of
+shipwreck on incontrovertible facts. Whether the lowest races known
+to-day are differentiated from the highest only by acquired social and
+psychic characteristics, or also by differences of psychic nature, may
+perhaps be an open question. However this may be, the case is fairly
+clear in regard to the higher races inhabiting the earth. Their
+differentiating psychic characteristics are, for the most part, not
+due to diverse psychic nature, but to diverse social orders, while the
+transmission of these characteristics takes place, as a matter of
+observation, through social heredity.
+
+The discussions of this work are exclusively concerned with the
+evolution of society and of psychic characteristics. But even in this
+limited field we have not attempted to cover the whole ground. We have
+given our chief attention to the interdependence of social phenomena
+and psychic characteristics. The causes of evolution in the social
+order have not been the main subject under discussion.
+
+Segregation is the essential condition on which divergent evolution is
+dependent. Many forms of segregation may be specified, under each of
+which evolution proceeds on a different principle. In brief, it may be
+said that biological segregation prevents the swamping of incipient
+organic divergences, by preventing the intermarriage of those
+possessing such divergences, while social segregation prevents the
+swamping of incipient social divergences and their corresponding
+incipient psychic characteristics by preventing the inter-association
+of those having such tendencies.
+
+Biologically segregated groups undergo divergent biological evolution
+through segregated marriage, producing distinct physiological unities
+or racial types. These racial types are now relatively fixed and can
+be appreciably modified only by the intermarriage of different races.
+
+Socially segregated groups undergo divergent social evolution through
+the segregated social intercourse of the members of each group,
+producing distinct civilizational and psychic unities. The differences
+between these social or psychic groups are relatively plastic and are
+the subject of constant variation. The modification of the social and
+psychic characteristics of a group takes place through a change in the
+physical or social environment of the group, or through the rise of
+strong personalities within the group.
+
+Biologically distinct groups may thus be unified biologically only by
+intermarriage, while socially physically distinct groups may be
+unified socially and psychically without intermarriage, but
+exclusively through association.
+
+The psychic defects of the offspring of interracial marriages may be
+largely due to the defective social heredity transmitted by the
+parents, rather than to mixed intrinsic inheritance.
+
+The term "race soul" is a convenient, though delusive, because highly
+figurative, expression for the psychic unity of a social group. The
+unity is due entirely to the more or less complete possession by the
+individual members of the group, of common ideas, ideals, methods of
+thought, emotions, volitions, customs, institutions, arts, and
+beliefs.
+
+Each individual is molded psychically to the type of the social group
+in which he is reared. The "race soul" is thus imposed on the
+individual by conscious and unconscious education.
+
+The psychic evolution of social groups is divergent so long as
+isolation is fairly complete, but becomes convergent in proportion to
+association. Perfect association produces complete psychic unity,
+though it should be noted that perfect association of geographically
+separated social groups is practically unattainable.
+
+The essential elements constituting national unity are psychic and
+social, not biological. Racial unity is biological. The same race may
+accordingly separate into different social and psychic groups. And
+members of different races may belong to the same social psychic
+group.
+
+The so-called "race soul" of many sociologists is, therefore, a
+fiction and indicates mental confusion. The term refers not to the
+racial unity of inherent psychic nature, but only to the social unity
+of socially inherited psychic characteristics. Groups thus socially
+unified may or may not be racially homogeneous. In point of fact no
+race is strictly homogeneous biologically, nor is any social group
+completely unified psychically.
+
+In sociology as in biology function produces organism, that is to say,
+activity produces the organ or faculty fitted to perform the
+activity.[2] The psychic characteristics differentiating social groups
+are chiefly, and perhaps exclusively, due to diverse social
+activities. These activities are determined by innumerable causes,
+geographical, climatic, economic, political, intellectual, emotional,
+and personal.
+
+The plasticity of a psychic group is due to the plasticity of the
+infant mind and brain, which is wonderfully capable of acquiring the
+language, thought forms, and differentiating characteristics of any
+group in which it may be reared. To what extent this plasticity
+extends only carefully conducted experiments can show. In the higher
+Asiatic and European races we find it to be much greater than is
+generally supposed to be the case, but it is not improbable that the
+lowest races possess it in a much lower degree.
+
+The relative fixity of a psychic group is due to the fact that in
+full-grown adults, who form the majority of every group, function has
+produced structure. Body, brain, and mind have "set" or crystallized
+in the mold provided by the social order. Influences sufficiently
+powerful to transform the young have little effect on the adult. The
+relative fixity of a psychic group is also due to the
+difficulty--well-nigh impossibility--of bringing new psychic
+influences to bear on all members of the group simultaneously. The
+majority, being oblivious to the new psychic forces, maintain the old
+psychic regime. The difficulty of reform, of transforming a social
+order, is principally due to these two causes.
+
+The "character" of a people (psychic group) consists of its more or
+less unconscious, because structuralized or incarnate, ideas,
+emotions, and volitions. Chief among them are those concerning the
+character of God, the nature and value of man and woman, the necessary
+relation of character to destiny, the nature and meaning of life and
+death, and the nature and the authority of moral law. In proportion as
+the social order incorporates high or low views on these vital
+subjects, is the character of the people elevated and strong, or
+debased and weak.
+
+The destiny of a people, and the role it plays in history, are
+determined not by chance nor yet by environment, but in the last
+analysis by its own character. Yet this character is not something
+given it complete at the start, an intrinsic psychical inheritance,
+nor is it dependent for transmission on biological heredity, passing
+only from parents to offspring. Character belongs to the sphere of
+social psychic life and is the subject of social heredity. Through
+social intercourse the moral character dominating a psychic group may
+be transmitted to members of an alien psychic group. This usually
+takes place through missionary activity. The moral character of a
+psychic group may in this way be fundamentally transformed, and with
+character, destiny.
+
+Floating ideas, not yet woven into the warp and woof of life, not yet
+incarnate in the individual or in the social order, have little
+influence on the character of the individual or the group, however
+beautiful, true, or elevating such ideas may be in themselves. The
+character of a people is to be judged, therefore, not by the beauty or
+elevation of every idea that may be found in its literature, but only
+by those ideas that have been assimilated, that have become
+incorporated into the social order. These determine a people's
+character and destiny. According as these ideas persist in the social
+order, is its character permanent.
+
+Progress consists of expanding life, communal and individual,
+extensive and intensive, physical and psychical. True progress is
+balanced. High communal development, that is, highly organized
+society, is impossible without the wide attainment of highly developed
+individuals. Progressive mastery of nature likewise is impossible
+apart from growing psychic development in all its branches, emotional,
+intellectual and volitional, communal and individual.
+
+Historically, communalism is the first principle to emerge in
+consciousness. To succeed, however, it must be accompanied by at least
+a certain degree of individualism, even though it be quite implicit.
+The full development of the communal principle is impossible apart
+from the correspondingly full development of the individual principle.
+These are complementary principles of progress. Each alone is
+impossible. In proportion as either is emphasized at the expense of
+the other, is progress impeded. Arrested civilizations are due to the
+disproportionate and excessive development of one or the other of
+these principles.
+
+Personality, expressing and realizing itself in communal and
+individual life, in objective and subjective forms, is at once the
+cause and the goal of progress. Social and psychic evolution are,
+therefore, in the last analysis, personal processes. The irreducible
+and final factor in social evolution and in social science is
+personality; for personality is the determinative factor of a human
+being.
+
+Progress in personal development consists of increasing extent and
+accuracy of knowledge, refinement and elevation of emotions, and
+nobility and reliability of volitions. Progress in personal
+development requires the individual to pass from objective
+heterocratic to subjective autocratic or self-regulative ethical life.
+He must pass from the traditional to the enlightened, from the
+communal to the individualistic stage in ethics and religion. He must
+feel with increasing force the binding nature of the supra-communal
+sanctions for communal and individual life, accepting the highest
+dictates of the enlightened moral consciousness as the laws of the
+universe. But this means that the individual must secure increasing
+insight into the immutable and eternal laws of spiritual being and
+must identify his personal interests, his very self with those laws,
+with the Heart of the. Universe, with God himself. Only so will he
+become completely autonomous, self-regulative. Only thus will the
+individual become and remain an altruistic communo-individual, fitted
+to meet and survive the relaxation of the historic communal and
+supra-communal sanctions for communal and individual life, a
+relaxation induced by growing political liberty and growing
+intellectual rejection of primitive or defective religious beliefs.
+
+Progress in personality is thus at bottom an ethico-religious process.
+The wide attainment of developed personality permits the formation of
+enlarging highly organized psychic groups, accompanied by increasing
+specialization of its individual members. This communal expansion,
+ramifying organization and individual specialization, secures
+increasing extensive and intensive intellectual understanding of the
+universe, and this in turn active mastery of nature, with all the
+consequences of growing ease and richness of life.
+
+Ethico-religious, autonomous personality is thus the tap-root of
+highly developed and permanently progressive civilizations.
+Personality is, therefore, the criterion of progress. Mere ease of
+physical life, freedom from anxiety, light-hearted, care-free
+happiness, mastery of nature, material civilization, highly developed
+art, literature, and music, or even refined culture, are partial and
+inadequate, if not positively false, criteria.
+
+Personality, as a nature, is an inherent psychic heritage shared by
+all human beings. It is transmitted only from parents to offspring,
+and its transmission depends only on that relation. Personality, as a
+varying psychic characteristic, is a matter of social inheritance, and
+is profoundly dependent, therefore, on the nature of the social order
+and the social evolution.
+
+Religion, as incorporated in life, is the most important single factor
+determining the personality and character of its adherents, either
+hindering or promoting their progress.
+
+Japanese social and psychic evolution have in no respects violated the
+universal laws of evolution. Japanese personal and other psychic
+characteristics are the product not of essential, but of social
+inheritance and social evolution. Japan has recently entered into a
+new social inheritance from which she is joyfully accepting new
+conceptions and principles of communal and individual life. These she
+is working into her social organism.
+
+Already these are producing profound, and we may believe permanent,
+transformations in her social order and correspondingly profound and
+permanent transformations of her character and destiny.
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+"Abdication": in church work, 84;
+ due to past social conditions, 86;
+ explains prominence of young men, 86, 161
+
+AEsthetic characteristics: development unbalanced, 174;
+ speech and conduct, 178;
+ development of masses, 180;
+ development, social not racial, 188
+
+Adoption; family maintained, 215
+
+Affection: post-marital, 102;
+ its expression, 105
+
+Agnosticism, old not new, 247
+
+Alcock, Sir Rutherford: quotation misleading, 172;
+ on untruthfulness, 255
+
+Altruism, social or racial? 365
+
+Ambition, 137
+
+Ancestral worship and the importance of sons, 98
+
+Apotheosis, 147;
+ "Divine right of kings," 151;
+ in Japan expresses unity, 152
+
+Architectural development and social heredity, 188
+
+Arisaka, Colonel, inventions, 207
+
+Arnold, Sir Edwin, 16, 17
+
+Art; simplicity its characteristic, 173;
+ lacking the nude, 175-177;
+ its ideal in representing gods and men, 174;
+ defects, 184;
+ original or imitative? 203;
+ not "impersonal," 351
+
+Artistic and inartistic contrasts, 184
+
+Aston, Mr. W.G.: on poetic form, 187;
+ intellectual inferiority of Japanese claimed, 218;
+ "Japanese Literature," 228
+
+Baelz, Dr. E., measurements of skull, 191
+
+"Bakufu," "curtain government," 214
+
+Bargaining, a personal experience, 212
+
+Baths, public, 274;
+ cleanliness, 316
+
+Birthday festivals, 349;
+ method of reckoning age, 350
+
+Brain weights, comparative figures, 190
+
+Brown, Rev. S.R., 90
+
+Buckley, Prof. E., Phallic worship, 325
+
+Buddhism: relation to the family, 112;
+ suppression of emotion, 166;
+ modified in Japan, 197;
+ early influence, 204;
+ teachings about woman, 259;
+ lack of moral teachings, 269;
+ religious ecstasy, 297;
+ nature and history, 306, 307;
+ terms "ingwa" and "mei," 319;
+ "impersonal"? 377-388;
+ introspection, 378;
+ salvation through self, 379;
+ consciousness of self, highly developed, 379-380;
+ attributes no worth to self, 380;
+ failure of its influence, 381;
+ mercy to animals and shallow reasoning, 381;
+ thought of self an intellectual abstraction, 383;
+ not impersonal, but abstract, 384;
+ doctrine of illusion, 384;
+ failure of social order, 385;
+ popular acceptance not philosophical, 386;
+ not logically
+ carried out, 389-390.
+ appeal to personal activity, 390.
+ conversion of a priest to Christianity, 394.
+ conception of God, 398.
+ the universe characterized, 400.
+ Nirvana, 400.
+ supplementary to Shintoism, 407.
+ popularity explained, 408.
+ individualism defective, 408.
+ not exclusive in any land, 421.
+
+Buddhistic doctrines and sociological consequences, 388.
+
+
+
+Caricature in art: its prominence, 177.
+
+Cary's, Rev. Otis, "Japan and Its Regeneration," 10.
+
+Chamberlain, Prof. B.H., 17, 55, 159.
+ quotation on imitation,--over-emphasis, 196.
+ people irreligious, 287.
+
+Character and destiny, 445.
+ how judged, 446
+
+Children: their festivals, 96.
+ love for the young in Occident and Orient compared, 97.
+ infanticide, 100.
+
+Chinese characters and the common schools, 192.
+
+Chinese philosophy not accepted without question, 200.
+
+Christianity: relation to the family, 111-114.
+ the support of new ideals, 112.
+ fluctuating interest in, 162, 163.
+ influence on woman, 168.
+ criticised by a Japanese, 231.
+ relation to new social order, 282.
+ its growth in Japan, 308.
+ monotheism, its attraction, 311.
+ its view of the universe, 399.
+ involving communalism and individualism, 415.
+
+Civilization: two types in conflict, 13.
+ social not racial, 28.
+ its rapid modernization, 30.
+
+Clark, Pres., 90
+
+Cleanliness: exaggerated reputation, 315, 316.
+
+Cocks of Tosa: the abnormal, 178.
+
+Communalism: and human progress, 332, 333.
+ defined, 361.
+ its altruism, 367.
+ throws light on religious history, 404.
+ difficulty of combining it with individualistic religious elements, 414.
+ Japan appreciates its spirit, 417
+
+Comte, 22.
+
+Conceit, 139.
+ not the only conceited nation, 142.
+
+Concubinage: children of the Emperor, 151.
+ Buddhistic and Confucian teaching, 259.
+ its sociological interpretation, 260.
+ increase of, 278.
+ statistics of, 279.
+
+Confidence and suspicion, 120.
+ feudal explanation, 121.
+
+Confucian ethics: leave gods alone, 286, 287.
+ antidote to Buddhism, 390.
+
+Confucianism: its relation to the family, 112.
+ modified in Japan, 197.
+ metaphysical foundation of, 228.
+ its relation to morality, 269.
+ nature and history of, 307, 308.
+ its doctrines restored, 409.
+ its limitations, 410.
+ not a religion, 411.
+ cause of failure, 412.
+
+Confucius and Lao-tse about returning good for evil, 128.
+ influence opposed to progress, 204.
+
+Constitution, authority from Emperor, 149.
+
+Conversation: realistic baldness, 179.
+
+Courtesy: conventional not racial, 182.
+ phrases of, 211.
+ not proof of "impersonality," 362, 363.
+
+Culture: more apparent than real, 181.
+
+Curiosity: real though concealed,--illustration, 166.
+
+"Curtain government," its significance, 214.
+
+
+
+Daimyo, a figurehead, 214.
+
+Darwin, 22
+
+Decoration of rooms, 171
+
+Dening, Mr, Walter, lack of idealism, 233
+
+De Quatrefages, African brains, 191
+
+Deity: conception of, 310;
+ monotheistic terms, 311;
+ common people, 391
+
+Disposition: apparently cheerful, 115;
+ pessimists out of sight, 116
+
+Divorce: grounds for, 56;
+ frequency of, 99;
+ Civil Code of 1898, 265;
+ statistics, 267;
+ divorce and "impersonality," 352, 355
+
+Doshisha, endangered, 123, 124;
+ American benefactors of, 281
+
+Drama and novel: weakness explained, 187
+
+Drummond, 22
+
+Dwarfed plants,--delight in the abnormal, 177
+
+
+
+Eastern and Western civilizations blending, 30-32
+
+Educational Department and Imperial Edict, 328
+
+Emotional nature, 82-84;
+ due to social order, 169
+
+Emperor: concubines and children of, 151
+
+English study and methods of thinking, 212
+
+Ethics: pivotal points, 283
+
+Etiquette: superficial not radical requirements, 183;
+ its collapse explained, 183;
+ relation to imagination, 235
+
+Evolution: real explanation of progress, 24-27, 33-34;
+ national, 332-343;
+ intellectual, 419;
+ Involution one half the process, 425;
+ defined, 440
+
+Express train, "nominal" destination, 216
+
+
+
+Fairbanks, Prof., 20
+
+"Falling in love" not recognized, 102
+
+Family life: false registration checks affection, 107
+
+_Far East_: quotation from, adaptation of foreign systems, 208
+
+Farmer, higher rank than merchant, 257 (note)
+
+Fate: "Ingwa," in development of personality, 386
+
+Feudal times: moderation, 118;
+ courage cultivated, 153, 154;
+ trade, 284
+
+Fickleness: its manifestation, 159;
+ a modern trait, 160;
+ shown chiefly in methods, 160;
+ among Christians, apparent not real, 161
+
+Filial obedience: extreme application, 263;
+ piety, moral ideal, 249;
+ piety and religion, 322
+
+Fiske, 22
+
+Flexibility of mental constitution, 77-78
+
+Flowering trees, 171
+
+Forty-seven Ronin, 89, 250
+
+Freedom: relation of belief to the fact, 387
+
+Fukuzawa, Mr., on monogamy, 109, 112;
+ condemning concubinage, 279;
+ on religion, 287
+
+Furniture; recent introduction, 181
+
+Future life: Shinto, Confucian, 318;
+ Buddhistic, 319
+
+
+
+"Geisha," dancing girl, vivacity, 168
+
+Generalization, capacity for, 220;
+ use of philosophical terms, 221
+
+Giddings, Prof., 19, 22
+
+"Go-between," illustrations, 210;
+ advantages, 211
+
+God: Greek, Buddhist, Christian, 399;
+ conceptions compared, 400
+
+Governmental initiative: explains rapid reforms, 201
+
+Gratitude: religious sentiment, 323;
+ ingratitude shown 324
+
+Greek universe characterized, 400
+
+Green, T.H., 397 (note)
+
+Greene, Dr. D.C., teaching of Shinto sect, 269
+
+Griffis, W.E., on suicide, 155;
+ on religions, 315
+
+Gubbins, introduction to translation of New Civil Code of Japan, 86;
+ on woman's position, 268
+
+
+
+Harris, Townsend, quoted, 132;
+ regulation by authority, 204;
+ as to untruthfulness, 256
+
+Hawaii, musical development, 185
+
+Head, size of, 190
+
+Hearn, Mr. Lafcadio, 16, 17, 68;
+ mistaken contention, 263;
+ privacy, 275;
+ gratitude, 323
+
+Hegel, 345; "Nothing" and Universal Soul of Buddhism, 383 (note)
+
+Heredity: social and physiological contrasted, 21;
+ defined and analyzed, 439
+
+Heroes and hero-worship, 89-95;
+ "The forty-seven Ronin" as heroes, 89;
+ craving for modern heroes, 90-92;
+ Omi Sajin, 93;
+ Dr. Neesima, 375
+
+Hirase, Mr., scientist, 207
+
+History, research suppressed, 205;
+ its claims, 206;
+ apparent credulity of scholars due to social system, 207
+
+"Holy towels," physical disease, 314
+
+Honesty: decline of, 280;
+ explanation, 282
+
+"Honorifics," shades of courtesy, 179;
+ indefiniteness of speech, 211
+
+Houses, privacy impossible, 273
+
+Housewife, simple requirements, 181
+
+
+
+Idealizing tendency, 94, 236
+
+Idols, imported feature of Japanese religion, 174
+
+Ikeno, Mr., scientific discovery, 207
+
+Illusion, 398
+
+Imagination: is it lacking? 233;
+ shown in etiquette, political life, ambition, self-conceit, etc., 235;
+ seen in optimism, 240;
+ related to fancy,--caricature, 241;
+ not disproved by imitation, 242;
+ sociological explanation, 243;
+ constructive, 246;
+ suppression of, 246
+
+Imitation in Japanese progress, 78-81;
+ creditable characteristic, 196
+
+Immorality, increase of, 261
+
+Impassiveness, "putty-face," 164
+
+Imperial and popular sovereignty, conflict between, 152-153
+
+Imperial Edict, 328
+
+Imperialists during the Shogunate, 146
+
+Imperial succession of Oriental type, 150
+
+"Impersonality": Hegel, 345:
+ definitions contradictory, 347, 348;
+ related, to art, 351;
+ family life, 352;
+ divorce, 352;
+ "falling in love," 354;
+ definition, 359, 360;
+ outcome of social order, 361;
+ not proved by courtesy of people, 362, 363,
+ nor by lack of personal pronouns, 368;
+ arguments against, 377;
+ diverse elements analyzed, 381;
+ objection to term, 385
+
+"Impersonality" and altruism, 365
+
+Impractical idealism: claimed by Japanese, 236;
+ illustrations, 237, 238
+
+"In," and "Yo," significance of, 221
+
+India and Japan contrasted, 32-34
+
+Indirectness, 210
+
+Individual, small value, 258
+
+Individualism: expressed, 245, 246;
+ changing social order and honesty, 282;
+ importance of, 334;
+ how possible, 335;
+ defined, 361;
+ easy acceptance explained, 413
+
+Individualistic religion as a sociological factor in higher, human
+ evolution, 418
+
+Infanticide, 100-101
+
+"Ingwa," fate, 386
+
+Inouye, Dr. T., Japonicized Christianity, 39;
+ claims for Japanese, 205;
+ philosophical writer, 229
+
+Intellectual characteristics, social, 244
+
+Inventions: originality, 207
+
+Irreligious phenomena explained, 302, 303
+
+Ishii, Mr., father of orphan asylums in Japan, 94, 131, 145
+
+Isolation of nations impossible, 71
+
+Ito, Marquis, on religion, 288
+
+Iyeyasu: his testament, 253;
+ use of Confucian doctrines, 409
+
+
+
+Japanese people: international responsibility, 13;
+ need of understanding them, 15-20;
+ change of opinion regarding, 23-25;
+ defects, conscious of, 143;
+ acquaintance with, 428;
+ reasons for difficulty in, acquaintance with, 429, 430;
+ secret of acquaintance, 431
+
+_Japan Mail_: quotation, 130;
+ originality of Japanese art, 203:
+ on wealth, 277;
+ on honesty, 280;
+ on acquaintance, 428
+
+Jealousy and women, 127-128
+
+
+
+Kato, Mr. H., 229;
+ on religion, 288;
+ patriotism is loyalty to throne, 373
+
+"Ki," defined, 221
+
+Kidd, 22
+
+Kissing unknown, 105
+
+Kitazato, Dr., scientific research, 207
+
+Knapp, Mr. A.M., 16
+
+Knox, Dr. G.W., quotation, 199;
+ "A Japanese Philosopher," 228;
+ translator of Muro Kyuso, 249
+
+
+
+Ladd, Prof. G.T., 94;
+ sentimentality of Japanese, 234
+
+Language: its acquirement and Japanese students, 194;
+ diversities of, not due to diversities in brain type, 195
+
+Lao-tse, on doing good in return for evil, 128
+
+Le Bon's physiological theory of character inadequate, 13-20;
+ quotation, 51;
+ dissent from opinion, 168;
+ quotation, 424
+
+Le Conte, 22
+
+Literature, ancient, its impurity, 253
+
+Lowell, Mr. Percival, "The Soul of the Far East," 103, 344;
+ Japanese unimaginative, 234;
+ opinion criticised, 241;
+ "sense and incense," 286;
+ pilgrimages, 291;
+ "impersonality," 359, 363, 374;
+ teaching of philosophic Buddhism, 378
+
+Loyalty and religion, 322;
+ sentimental, 148, 149
+
+Lunatics and lepers, cruel treatment, 130
+
+
+
+Magic formulae, 320
+
+Man and nature: differing artistic treatment of, 175
+
+Manners; influenced by Western ways, 182
+
+Marriage, Civil Code of 1898, 265
+
+Marsh, Prof., size of Japanese brain, 190
+
+"Matter-of-factness" explained, 245
+
+Memorizing: mechanical, 222;
+ defective method, 223;
+ as related to higher mental powers, 223
+
+Memory; power overrated, 192;
+ in daily affairs not exceedng
+
+Occidental, 193;
+ characteristics sociological, not biological, 194
+
+Mnemonic power and social selection, 193
+
+Mencius, teaching, the "Way" of Heaven and Earth, 250
+
+Mental faculties: are the Japanese deficient? 218;
+ power of generalization, 221
+
+Metaphysical tendencies, 227:
+ denial of ability unjustifiable, 227
+
+Metaphysics and ethics, 228
+
+Monotheism, why attractive, 312
+
+Morality: courage in persecucution, 156;
+ illustration, 158;
+ discrimination developed, 249;
+ parents, children, patriots, 249;
+ ideals communal, 255;
+ standards differing for men and women, 263;
+ teaching focused on rulers, 270;
+ Imperial Edict, 271;
+ standards of, and individualism, 275, 276;
+ social, not racial, 283;
+ on authority, 284;
+ morality and Old Japan, 261, 264
+
+Motora, Prof. Y., 229
+
+Mueller, Prof. Max, statement about Vedas, 193
+
+Murata rifle, invention of, 207
+
+Muro Kyuso, philosopher, 249;
+ ancient books condemned, 252;
+ on immorality, 286;
+ teachings, 299, 300
+
+Music, Japanese deficiency, 185
+
+
+
+Nakashima, Prof. Rikizo, 229
+
+Nash, Prof. H.S., on Apotheosis in Rome, 153
+
+
+National life, stimulus from the West, 43-48
+
+Natural scenery in art, 173
+
+Neesima, Dr., founder of the Doshisha, 94;
+ monotheism, 311;
+ his character, 375
+
+"Netsuke," comical carvings, 241
+
+New aeon, characterized, 14;
+ the consequences, 15
+
+Newton's, Rev. J.C.E., "Japan: Country, Court, and People" 10, 46
+
+"Nichiren," a sect, 198
+
+Nirvana characterized, 400
+
+Nitobe's, Prof. J., "Bushido: The Soul of Japan," 10
+
+"Nominal": Pedigree, 215;
+ church contributions, 216;
+ express train, 216
+
+"Nominality": illustrated in history, 213;
+ in family life, 214;
+ in Christian work, 216;
+ explained by old order, 217;
+ giving way under Western influence, 217
+
+Norman, Mr. Henry, 17;
+ his "Real Japan," 46
+
+Nude in art: its lack, 175-177
+
+
+
+Obsequiousness, 140
+
+Occident and Orient: conflict not unending, 13;
+ social intercourse and mutual influence, 436
+
+Occidental civilization; a defect in, 71
+
+Ohashi, Junzo, opposed to Western thought, 254
+
+Old Japan, 35-37;
+ its oppression, 53, 54;
+ emptiness of common life, 54;
+ condition of woman, 54, 56;
+ divorce, 56, 57;
+ moral and legal maxims, 252, 253;
+ its morality, 244, 261
+
+"Omi Sajin," Sage of Omi, 93
+
+Oriental characteristics: are they distinctive? 422;
+ general opinion of, 423;
+ view of author, 425;
+ social, not racial, 425, 434
+
+Originality in art, 203;
+ judicious imitation, 209
+
+Orphan asylums, 131
+
+Oyomei, 228
+
+
+
+Patriotism, 48-51;
+ relation to apotheosis, 144, 158;
+ to war, 145;
+ Christian orphans, 145
+
+Peasants, stolidity, 165
+
+Pedigree, "nominal" not actual ancestry, 215
+
+Peery, Dr., Japanese philosophical incompetence, 225
+
+Personality: 21-22;
+ importance of, 342;
+ defined, 356-357;
+ characteristics of, 358;
+ "strong" and "weak," 374, 375;
+ Confucian ethics, 390;
+ Supreme Being, 391;
+ gods of popular Buddhism, 391;
+ idea grasped by Japanese, 393;
+ sketch of development, 394;
+ racial or social inheritance, 395;
+ progress in ethico-religious process, 447;
+ the criterion of progress, 447
+
+Personality in conception of nationality, 373
+
+Personal pronouns, their lack possible proof of personality, 369;
+ "honorific" particles, 368;
+ substitutes, 370, 371
+
+Pfleiderer, Prof., religious deficiency of Japanese, 286
+
+Phallicism: its suppression, 325;
+ Western influence, 326
+
+Philosophy: Occidental ignorance of its history in Japan, 200;
+ terms used, 221;
+ Japanese students of, 229;
+ individuals interested, 229
+
+Philosophical ability, 225-232;
+ Japanese claims, 225;
+ constructive power, 226;
+ writers mentioned, 229;
+ East and West compared, 231
+
+Pilgrimages: statistics, 290-291;
+ immorality, 326
+
+Poetry characterized, 186
+
+Powder, smokeless, invention of, 207
+
+Pride, sociological explanation, 19, 21
+
+Progress, modern characteristic, 52-60;
+ defined, 57;
+ light-heartedness no proof of, 59;
+ its method, 61-71;
+ recognition of individual worth, 63-67;
+ knowledge of implements and methods, 67-70;
+ imitation, 78-81;
+ passion for it, 143
+
+Psychic nature and social life, 439
+
+Psychic evolution, 444
+
+Psychic function and psychic organism, 445
+
+Psychological similarities, Japanese and Anglo-Saxon, 189
+
+Public speaking, fluency, 219
+
+"Putty-face," 164
+
+
+
+"Race-soul," 444
+
+Ransome, Mr. Stanford, quoted, 51;
+ "Japan in Transition," 46
+
+Reforms, governmental initiative, 201
+
+Religion: its characteristics social, not racial, 309;
+ loyalty and filial piety, 322;
+ liberty in belief, 327;
+ the Imperial Edict, 328;
+ forms determined by history, 329;
+ the problem of to-day, 414;
+ Religions classified, 421
+
+Religious or not? appearances explained, 286;
+ judged by phenomena, 288;
+ prayer, shrines, charms, 292;
+ Buddha-shelves, God-shelves, 293;
+ emotion and social training, 296;
+ emotion shown in abstraction, 297
+
+Religious life, 404, 421;
+ communal, 404;
+ present difficulty in Japan, 420
+
+Renaissance of Japan, 29-30
+
+Revenge: the ancient law, 128;
+ teachings of Confucius and Lao-tse, 128-129
+
+Reverence, apparent lack of, 304
+
+"Ri" defined, 221
+
+Roman alphabet: adoption recommended by many, 192
+
+"Roundaboutness": characteristic of speech and action, 211;
+ recent improvement, 212
+
+
+
+Sadness and isolation of many, 116
+
+Sage of Omi, _see_ "Omi Sajin."
+
+Salvation and sin, 314;
+ Buddhist and Christian, 379
+
+Samurai: high mental power,
+ social leaders, impractical,
+ 244; their relation to trade,
+ 252; new ideals, 256; revolt
+ from religious forms, 298
+
+Segregation and divergent evolution, 443
+
+Self-confidence not without
+ grounds, 141, 143; reorganization
+ by young men, 141-142
+
+Self-control: moral teaching,
+ 250; Kujuro, the self-controlled, 251
+
+Sensitiveness to environment,
+ 72, 81; illustrated by students
+ abroad, 73, by life in Japan, 73-77
+
+Shimose, Mr., invention, smokeless powder, 207
+
+"Shinshu," "Reformed" Buddhism, 198
+
+Shinto: nature and history,
+ 305, 306; personal gods, 391;
+ communal, 405; no longer a
+ religion, 405; world view,
+ 406; religious sanction for
+ social order, 407; revived, 412
+
+Sin, terminology, 313; consciousness
+ of, 317; instance of conversion, 318
+
+Shusi, 228
+
+Social evil, the, 261 (note)
+
+Social segregation and social divergence, 21
+
+Social and racial unity distinguished, 443
+
+Social evolution convergent,
+ 14; principle revealed, 15;
+ personal process, 446
+
+Social heredity, transmitting results of toil, 71
+
+Social intercourse of Occident and Orient, 436
+
+Social order from the West,
+ 413; the parting of the ways, 414
+
+Sociological theory of: character,
+ 14, 446; pride, 30; fear
+ of ridicule, 73; cruelty, 135;
+ kindness, 136; stolidity, 163;
+ power of generalization, 222;
+ philosophical development,
+ 231; apparent deficiency in
+ imagination, 236; differences
+ characterizing Eastern and
+ Western psychic nature, 247,
+ 435; untruthfulness, 256; concubinage,
+ 260; religious characteristics,
+ 309, 321; the suppression
+ of Phallicism, 327;
+ religious tolerance, 329; divorce
+ and "falling in love,"
+ 355; courtesy, 363, 364; the
+ personal pronoun, 372; the
+ failure of Buddhism, 385;
+ the conception of Fate, 387
+
+Sociology and individual religion, 405;
+ and Shintoism, 407
+
+Southerland, 23
+
+"Soul of Japan," the, 144
+
+"Soul of the Far East," quotation, 234
+
+Spencer, 22
+
+Stolidity: easily distinguished
+ from stoicism, 164, 165; the
+ peasants, 165; social, not
+ racial, 167; cultivated, 168
+
+Students: testimony of foreign
+ teachers, 218; at home and abroad, 219
+
+Suicide, a matter of honor, 154-156
+
+Sutra, translation of, 402
+
+Suspiciousness and military feudalism, 125-126
+
+
+
+Taguchi, Dr., brain statistics, 190
+
+Tai-ku Reform, epoch-making period, 201
+
+Takahashi, Mr. G., 229; the
+ monks and consciousness of sin, 317
+
+Taste and lack of taste in woman's dress, 182
+
+Temples, statistics, 296
+
+Tokugawa Shogunate, 38-40;
+ how overthrown, 40-43; prohibitive
+ of progress, 204; last
+ of "Curtain governments," 214
+
+Torture, in Japan, 132; in Europe, 133
+
+Toys and toy-stores, 96
+
+Trade estimates, 256; Old Japan,
+ the Greeks, the Jews
+ compared, 257, note; trade
+ and the feudal order, 284
+
+Transmigration, 319; theory
+ illogical, but helpful, 389
+
+Truthfulness, undeveloped, 255
+
+Tyranny and Western wives 106
+
+
+
+Unaesthetic phenomena, 179
+
+
+
+Verbeck, Dr. G.F., 91
+
+Visionary tendency, 236, 237
+
+Vivacity, Geisha girl, 168
+
+
+Wallace, 22
+
+Ward, 22
+
+"Way," _see_ Muro Kyuso, 250;
+ reference to, 287
+
+Wealth increasing, 277
+
+Wedding, Prince Imperial, 268;
+ Imperial silver wedding, 268
+
+Woman: obedience, 55, 56;
+ estimates of East and West
+ contrasted, 102-103; Western
+ estimates, recent growth,
+ 111, 113 (note); Buddhist and
+ Confucian teaching, 112, 259;
+ jealousy, 127; her position,
+ 258; influenced by Hindu
+ philosophy, 258; improvement, 268
+
+Writing, a fine art, 173
+
+
+
+Xavier, Francis, 308
+
+
+
+Yamaguchi, Mr., quotation, 149;
+ the Imperial throne, 373
+
+"Yamato Damashii," _see_ "The Soul of Japan."
+
+"Yumei-mujitsu," _see_ "Nominality."
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote A: "Things Japanese," p. 156.]
+
+[Footnote B: Let not the reader gather from the very brief glance at
+the attainments of New Japan, that she has overtaken the nations of
+Christendom in all important respects; for such is far from the case.
+He needs to be on his guard not to overestimate what has been
+accomplished.]
+
+[Footnote C: Prof. B.H. Chamberlain.]
+
+[Footnote D: Only since the coming of the new period has it become
+possible for a woman to gain a divorce from her husband.]
+
+[Footnote E: Chapter xxix. Some may care to read this chapter at this
+point.]
+
+[Footnote F: _Cf._ chapter ii.]
+
+[Footnote G: "Kokoro," by L. Hearn, p. 31.]
+
+[Footnote H: _Japan Mail_, September 30, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote I: Part II. p. xxxii.]
+
+[Footnote J: _Japan Mail_, June 4, 1898, p. 586.]
+
+[Footnote K: If all that has been said above as to the relative lack
+of affection between husband and wife is true, it will help to make
+more credible, because more intelligible, the preceding chapter as to
+the relative lack of love for children. Where the relation between
+husband and wife is what we have depicted it, where the children are
+systematically taught to feel for their father respect rather than
+love, the relation between the father and the children, or the mother
+and the children, cannot be the same as in lands where all these
+customs are reversed.]
+
+[Footnote L: The effect of Christian missions cannot be measured by
+the numbers of those who are to be counted on the church rolls; almost
+unconsciously the nation is absorbing Christian ideals from the
+hundreds of Christian missionaries and tens of thousands of Christian
+natives. The necessities of the new social order make their teachings
+intelligible and acceptable as the older social order did not and
+could not. This accounts for the astonishing change in the
+anti-Christian spirit of the Japanese. This spirit did not cease at
+once on the introduction of the new social order, nor indeed is it now
+entirely gone. But the change from the Japan of thirty years ago to
+the Japan of to-day, in its attitude toward Christianity, is more
+marked than that of any great nation in history. A similar change in
+the Roman Empire took place, but it required three hundred years. This
+change in Japan may accordingly be called truly miraculous, not in the
+sense, however, of a result without a cause, for the causes are well
+understood.
+
+Among the Christians, especially, the old order is rapidly giving way
+to the new. Christianity has brought a new conception of woman and her
+place in the home and her relation to her husband. Japanese Christian
+girls, and recently non-Christian girls, are seeking an education
+which shall fit them for their enlarging life. Many of the more
+Christian young men do not want heathen wives, with their low estimate
+of themselves and their duties, and they are increasingly unwilling to
+marry those of whom they know nothing and for whom they care not at
+all. Already the idea that love is the only safe foundation for the
+home is beginning to take root in Japan. This changing ideal is
+bringing marked social changes. In some churches an introduction
+committee is appointed whose special function is to introduce
+marriageable persons and to hold social meetings where the young
+people may become acquainted. Here an important evolution in the
+social order is taking place before our eyes, but not a few of the
+world's wise men are too exalted to see it. Love and demonstrative
+affection between husband and wife will doubtless become as
+characteristic of Japan in the future as their absence has been
+characteristic in the past. To recapitulate: these distinctive
+characteristics of the emotional life of the Japanese might at first
+seem to be so deep-rooted as to be inherent, yet they are really due
+to the ideas and customs of the social order, and are liable to change
+with any new system of ideas and customs that may arise. The higher
+development of the emotional life of the Japanese waits now on the
+reorganization of the family life; this rests on a new idea as to the
+place and value of woman as such and as a human being; this in turn
+rests on the wide acceptance of Christian ideals as to God and their
+mutual relations. It involves, likewise, new ideals as to man's final
+destiny. In Japan's need of these Christian ideals we find one main
+ground and justification, if justification be needed, for missionary
+enterprise among this Eastern people.]
+
+[Footnote M: Chapter v. p. 82.]
+
+[Footnote N: P. 133]
+
+[Footnote O: "Resume Statistique l'Empire du Japan," published by the
+Imperial Cabinet, 1897.]
+
+[Footnote P: As illustrating the point under discussion see portions
+of addresses reported in "The World's Parliament of Religions," vol.
+ii. pp. 1014, 1283.]
+
+[Footnote Q: _Japan Mail_, December 10, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote R: I have found it difficult to secure exact information on
+the subject of the Imperial concubines (who, by the way, have a
+special name of honor), partly for the reason that this is not a
+matter of general information, and partly because of the unwillingness
+to impart information to a foreigner which is felt to tarnish the
+luster of the Imperial glory. A librarian of a public library refused
+to lend a book containing the desired facts, saying that foreigners
+might be freely informed of that which reveals the good, the true, and
+the beautiful of Japanese history, customs, and character, but nothing
+else. By the educated and more earnest members of the nation much
+sensitiveness is felt, especially in the presence of the Occidental,
+on the subject of the Imperial concubinage. It is felt to be a blot on
+Japan's fair name, a relic of her less civilized days, and is,
+accordingly, kept in the background as much as possible. The
+statements given in the text in regard to the number of the concubines
+and children are correct so far as they go. A full statement might
+require an increase in the figures given.]
+
+[Footnote S: P. 59.]
+
+[Footnote T: P. 119.]
+
+[Footnote U: Aston's "Japanese Literature," p. 29.]
+
+[Footnote V: "Japanese Literature," p. 24.]
+
+[Footnote W: _Cf._ chapter xxxiii.]
+
+[Footnote X: Gustave Le Bon maintains, in his brilliant, but
+sophistical, work on "The Psychology of Peoples," that the "soul of a
+race" unalterably determines even its art. He states that a Hindu
+artist, in copying an European model several times, gradually
+eliminates the European characteristics, so that, "the second or third
+copy ... will have become exclusively Hindu." His entire argument is
+of this nature; I must confess that I do not in the least feel its
+force. The reason the Hindu artist transforms a Western picture in
+copying it is because he has been trained in Hindu art, not because he
+is a Hindu physiologically. If that same Hindu artist, taken in
+infancy to Europe and raised as a European and trained in European
+art, should still persist in replacing European by Hindu art
+characteristics, then the argument would have some force, and his
+contention that the "soul of races" can be modified only by
+intermarriage of races would seem more reasonable.]
+
+[Footnote Y: "The Human Species," p. 283.]
+
+[Footnote Z: _Ibid._, p. 282.]
+
+[Footnote AA: _Ibid._, p. 384.]
+
+[Footnote AB: The manuscript of this work was largely prepared in 1897
+and 1898. Since writing the above lines, a vigorous discussion has
+been carried on in the Japanese press as to the advantages and
+disadvantages of the present system of writing. Many have advocated
+boldly the entire abandonment of the Chinese character and the
+exclusive use of the Roman alphabet. The difficulties of such a step
+are enormous and cannot be appreciated by anyone not familiar with the
+written language of Japan. One or the strongest arguments for such a
+course, however, has been the obstacle placed by the Chinese in the
+way of popular education, due to the time required for its mastery and
+the mechanical nature of the mind it tends to produce. In August of
+1900 the Educational Department enacted some regulations that have
+great significance in this connection. Perhaps the most important is
+the requirement that not more than one thousand two hundred Chinese
+characters are to be taught to the common-school children, and the
+form of the character is not to be taught independently of the
+meaning. The remarks in the text above are directed chiefly to the
+ancient methods of education.]
+
+[Footnote AC: Griffis' "Religions of Japan," p. 272.]
+
+[Footnote AD: P. 24.]
+
+[Footnote AE: _Far East_ for January, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote AF: January 20, 1900.]
+
+[Footnote AG: _Japan Mail_, November 12, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote AH: P. 17.]
+
+[Footnote AI: P. 18.]
+
+[Footnote AJ: P. 18.]
+
+[Footnote AK: "History of the Empire of Japan," compiled and
+translated for the Imperial Japanese Commission of the World's
+Columbian Exposition.]
+
+[Footnote AL: "Japanese Literature," p. 4.]
+
+[Footnote AM: _Cf._ chapter xvi. p. 199.]
+
+[Footnote AN: _Cf._ chapter xvii.]
+
+[Footnote AO: Quotations from "A Japanese Philosopher" will be found
+in chapters xxiv. and xxvi.]
+
+[Footnote AP: "Things Japanese," p. 133.]
+
+[Footnote AQ: P. 213.]
+
+[Footnote AR: P. 30.]
+
+[Footnote AS: _Cf._ chapter vii.]
+
+[Footnote AT: _Cf._ chapter xv. pp. 186, 187.]
+
+[Footnote AU: _Cf._ chapters xvi. and xvii.]
+
+[Footnote AV: Chapter xv.]
+
+[Footnote AW: Chapters xix. and xx.]
+
+[Footnote AX: P. 39.]
+
+[Footnote AY: P. 36.]
+
+[Footnote AZ: Pp. 42, 43.]
+
+[Footnote BA: P. 45.]
+
+[Footnote BB: P. 61.]
+
+[Footnote BC: P. 120.]
+
+[Footnote BD: P. 129.]
+
+[Footnote BE: P. 130.]
+
+[Footnote BF: Dickenson's "Japan," chapter vii.]
+
+[Footnote BG: _Cf._ chapter xxi.]
+
+[Footnote BH: P. 163.]
+
+[Footnote BI: P. 169.]
+
+[Footnote BJ: It is interesting to observe that the contempt of Old
+Japan for trade, and the feeling that interest and profit by commerce
+were in their nature immoral, are in close accord with the old Greek
+and Jewish ideas regarding property profits and interest. Aristotle
+held, for instance, that only the gains of agriculture, of fishing,
+and of hunting are natural gains. Plato, in the Laws, forbids the
+taking of interest. Cato says that lending money on interest is
+dishonorable, is as bad as murder. The Old Testament, likewise,
+forbids the taking of interest from a Jew. The reason for this
+universal feeling of antiquity, both Oriental and Occidental, lies in
+the fact that trade and money were not yet essential parts of the
+social order. Positive production, such as hunting and farming, seemed
+the natural method of making a living, while trade seemed
+unnatural--living upon the labor of others. That Japan ranked the
+farmer higher in the social scale than the merchant is, thus, natural.
+In moral character, too, it is altogether probable that they were much
+higher.]
+
+[Footnote BK: _Cf_. chapter ix. p. 103.]
+
+[Footnote BL: Chapter vi.]
+
+[Footnote BM: Chapter xxix. p. 339.]
+
+[Footnote BN: An anonymous writer, in a pamphlet entitled "How the
+Social Evil is Regulated in Japan," gives some valuable facts on this
+subject. He describes the early history of the "Social Evil," and the
+various classes of prostitutes. He distinguishes between the "jigoku"
+(unlicensed prostitutes), the "shogi" (licensed prostitutes), and the
+"geisha" (singing and dancing girls). He gives translations of the
+various documents in actual use at present, and finally attempts to
+estimate the number of women engaged in the business. The method of
+reaching his conclusions does not commend itself to the present writer
+and his results seem absurdly wide of the mark, when compared with
+more carefully gathered figures. They are hardly worth quoting, yet
+they serve to show what exaggerated views are held by some in regard
+to the numbers of prostitutes in Japan. He tells us that a moderate
+estimate for licensed prostitutes and for geisha is 500,000 each,
+while the unlicensed number at least a million, making a total of
+2,000,000 or 10 per cent. of the total female population of Japan! A
+careful statistical inquiry on this subject has been recently made by
+Rev. U.G. Murphy. His figures were chiefly secured from provincial
+officers. According to these returns the number of licensed
+prostitutes is 50,553 and of dancing girls is 30,386. Mr. Murphy's
+figures cannot be far astray, and furnish us something of a basis for
+comparison with European countries. Statistics regarding unlicensed
+prostitutes are naturally not to be had.]
+
+[Footnote BO: P. 148.]
+
+[Footnote BP: June 25, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote BQ: The last line of figures, those for 1897, is taken from
+Rev. U.G. Murphy's statistical pamphlet on "The Social Evil in
+Japan."]
+
+[Footnote BR: It is stated that Mill's work on "Representative
+Government," which, translated, fills a volume of five hundred pages
+in Japanese, has reached its third edition.]
+
+[Footnote BS: The _Japan Mail_ for February 5, 1896; quoting from the
+_Jiji Shimpo_.]
+
+[Footnote BT: The best summary of this discussion which I have seen in
+English is found in the _Japan Mail_ for February 4, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote BU: _Japan Mail, _January 14, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote BV: _Japan Mail, _June 24, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote BW: The constituency of the Doshisha consists principally of
+Kumiai Christians.]
+
+[Footnote BX: "Occult Japan," p. 23.]
+
+[Footnote BY: _Cf._ chapter xxiv.]
+
+[Footnote BZ: "A Japanese Philosopher," p. 120.]
+
+[Footnote CA: In immediate connection with this oft-quoted statement,
+however, I would put the following, as much more recent, and probably
+representing more correctly the Marquis's matured opinion. Mr. Kakehi,
+for some time one of the editors of the Osaka _Mainichi Shinbun_
+(Daily News), after an interview with the illustrious statesman in
+which many matters of national importance were discussed, was asked by
+the Marquis where he had been educated. On learning that he was a
+graduate of the Doshisha, the Marquis remarked: "The only true
+civilization is that which rests on Christian principles, and that
+consequently, as Japan must attain her civilization on these
+principles, those young men who receive Christian education will be
+the main factors in the development of future Japan."]
+
+[Footnote CB: Chamberlain's "Things Japanese," p. 358.]
+
+[Footnote CC: "Things Japanese," p. 70, and Murray's "Hand-book for
+Japan," p. 37.]
+
+[Footnote CD: "Things Japanese," p. 93.]
+
+[Footnote CE: P. 85.]
+
+[Footnote CF: _Cf._ chapter xxiii. p. 271.]
+
+[Footnote CG: By the term "centralization" I mean personal
+centralization. Political centralization is the gathering of all the
+lines of governmental authority to a single head or point. Personal
+centralization, on the contrary, is the development in the individual
+of enlarging and joyous consciousness of his relations with his
+fellow-countrymen, and the bringing of the individual into
+increasingly immediate relations of interdependence with
+ever-increasing numbers of his fellow-men, economically,
+intellectually, and spiritually. These enlarging relations and the
+consciousness of them must be loyally and joyfully accepted. They
+should arouse enthusiasm. The real unity of society, true national
+centralization, includes both the political and the personal phase.
+The more conscious the process and the relation, the more real is the
+unity. By this process each individual becomes of more importance to
+the entire body, as well as more dependent upon it. While each
+individual becomes with increasing industrial development more
+specialized in economic function, if his personal development has been
+properly carried on, he also becomes in mind and in character a
+micro-community, summing up in his individual person the national
+unity with all its main interests, knowledge, and character.]
+
+[Footnote CGa: P. 14.]
+
+[Footnote CH: P. 15.]
+
+[Footnote CI: Pp. 88, 89.]
+
+[Footnote CJ: Pp. 203, 204.]
+
+[Footnote CK: _Cf._ chapter viii.]
+
+[Footnote CL: See the _Rikugo Zasshi_ for March, 1898.]
+
+[Footnote CM: _Cf._ chapter xv.]
+
+[Footnote CN: Buddhism is largely responsible for the wide practice of
+"joshi," through its doctrine that lovers whom fate does not permit to
+be married in this world may be united in the next because of the
+strength of their love.]
+
+[Footnote CO: P. 88.]
+
+[Footnote CP: P. 12.]
+
+[Footnote CQ: P. 14.]
+
+[Footnote CR: P. 15.]
+
+[Footnote CS: In their relations with foreigners, the people, but
+especially the Christians, are exceedingly lenient, forgiving and
+overlooking our egregious blunders both of speech and of manner,
+particularly if they feel that we have a kindly heart. Yet it is the
+uniform experience of the missionary that he frequently hurts unawares
+the feelings of his Japanese fellow-workers. Few thoughts more
+frequently enter the mind of the missionary, as he deals with
+Christian workers, than how to say this needful truth and do that
+needful deed so as not to hurt the feelings of those whom he would
+help. The individual who feels slighted or insulted will probably give
+no active sign of his wound. He is too polite or too politic for that.
+He will merely close like a clam and cease to have further cordial
+feelings and relations with the person who has hurt him.]
+
+[Footnote CT: _Cf._ chapter xiii.]
+
+[Footnote CU: See chapter xxix.]
+
+[Footnote CV: P. 201.]
+
+[Footnote CW: _Cf._ chapter vii.]
+
+[Footnote CX: It seems desirable to guard against an inference that
+might be made from what I have said about Hegel's "Nothing." Hegel saw
+clearly that his "Nothing" was only the farthest limit of abstraction,
+and that it was consequently absolutely empty and worthless. It was
+only his starting point of thought, not his end, as in the case of
+Brahmanism and of Buddhism. Only after Hegel had passed the "Nothing"
+through all the successive stages of thesis, antithesis, and
+synthesis, and thus clothed it with the fullness of being and
+character, did he conceive it to be the concrete, actual Absolute.
+There is, therefore, the farthest possible difference between Hegel's
+Absolute Being and Buddha's Absolute. Hegel sought to understand and
+state in rational form the real nature of the Christian's conception
+of God. Whether he did so or not, this is not the place to say.]
+
+[Footnote CY: I remark, in passing, that Western non-Christian thought
+has experienced, and still experiences, no little difficulty in
+conceiving the ultimate nature of being, and thus in solving the
+problem, into which, as a cavernous tomb, the speculative religions of
+the Orient have fallen. Western non-Christian systems, whether
+materialism, consistent agnosticism, impersonal pantheism, or other
+systems which reject the Christian conception of God as perfect
+personality endowed with all the fullness of being and character,
+equally with philosophic Buddhism, fail to provide any theoretic
+foundation for the doctrine of the value of man as man, and
+consequently fail to provide any guarantee for individualism in the
+social order and the wide development of personality among the
+masses.]
+
+[Footnote CZ: _Cf._ chapter vi.]
+
+[Footnote DA: Foot of chapter xxix.]
+
+[Footnote DB: Chapter xxxiii. p. 498.]
+
+[Footnote DC: It seems desirable to append a brief additional
+statement on the doctrine of the "personality of God," and its
+acceptability to the Japanese. I wish to make it clear, in the first
+place, that the difficulties felt by the Japanese in adopting this
+doctrine are not due primarily to the deficiency either of the
+Japanese language or to the essential nature of the Japanese mind,
+that is to say, because of its asserted structural "impersonality." We
+have seen how the entire thought of the people, and even the direct
+moral teachings, imply both the fact of personality in man, and also
+its knowledge. The religious teachings, likewise, imply the
+personality even of "Heaven."
+
+That there are philosophical or, more correctly speaking, metaphysical
+difficulties attending this doctrine, I am well aware; and that they
+are felt by some few Japanese, I also know. But I maintain that these
+difficulties have been imported from the West. The difficulties raised
+by a sensational philosophy which results in denying the reality even
+of man's psychic nature, no less than the difficulties due to a
+thoroughgoing idealism, have both been introduced among educated
+Japanese and have found no little response. I am persuaded that the
+real causes of the doubt entertained by a few of the Christians in
+Japan as to the personality of God are of foreign origin. These doubts
+are to be answered in exactly the same way as the same difficulties
+are answered in other lands. It must be shown that the sensational and
+"positive" philosophies, ending in agnosticism as to all the great
+problems of life and of reality, are essentially at fault in not
+recognizing the nature of the mind that knows. The searching criticism
+of these assumptions and methods made by T.H. Green and other careful
+thinkers, and to which no answer has been made by the sensational and
+agnostic schools of thought, needs to be presented in intelligible
+Japanese for the fairly educated Japanese student and layman. So, too,
+the discussions of such writers and philosophical thinkers as Seth,
+and Illingworth, and especially Lotze, whose discussions of
+"personality" are unsurpassed, should be presented to Japanese
+thinkers in native garb. But, again I repeat, it seems to me that the
+difficulty felt in Japan on these subjects is due not to the
+"impersonality" of the language or the native mind, or to the hitherto
+prevalent religions, but wholly to the imported philosophies and
+sciences. The individuals who feel or at least express any sense of
+difficulty on these topics--so far at least as my knowledge of the
+subject goes--are not those who know nothing but their own language
+and their own native religions, but rather those who have had
+exceptional advantages in foreign study, many of them having spent
+years abroad in Western universities. They furnish a fresh revelation
+of the quickness with which the Japanese take up with new ideas. They
+did not evolve these difficulties for themselves, but gathered them
+from their reading of Western literature and by their mingling with
+men of unevangelical temper and thought in the West.]
+
+[Footnote DD: "Sacred Books of the East," vol. xlix, part ii. p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote DE: _Cf._ chapters xiii. and xxxi.]
+
+[Footnote DF: It is not strange that in all the centers of this new
+learning Confucius was deified and worshiped. In connection with many
+schools established for the study of his works, temples were built to
+his honor, in which his statue alone was placed, before which a
+stately religious service was performed at regular intervals. Thus did
+Confucianism become a living and vitalizing, although, as we shall
+soon see, an incomplete religion.]
+
+[Footnote DG: Writers on the history and philosophy of religion have
+much to say about the differences between national and universal
+religions. The three religions which they pronounce universal are
+Mahomedanism, Buddhism, and Christianity. The ground for this
+statement is the fact that each of these religions has developed
+strong individualistic characteristics. They are concerned with
+individual salvation. The importance of this element none will deny,
+least of all the writer. But I question the correctness of the
+descriptive adjective. Because of their individualistic character they
+are fitted to leap territorial boundaries and can find acceptance in
+every community; for this they are not dependent on the territorial
+expansion of the communities in which they arose.]
+
+[Footnote DH: P. xvii.]
+
+[Footnote DI: P. xviii.]
+
+[Footnote DJ: P. 19.]
+
+[Footnote DK: P. 6.]
+
+[Footnote DL: P. 37.]
+
+[Footnote DM: P. 83.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Whether or not the activity modifies the transmissible
+nature is the problem as to the inheritance of acquired
+characteristics. The dictum that function produces organism does not
+say whether that organism is transmissible or not, either in biology
+or sociology.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And
+Psychic, by Sidney L. Gulick
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