The I Ching in Tokugawa Thought and CultureThis study uses the I Ching (Book of Changes) to investigate the role of Chinese learning in the development of thought and culture in Tokugawa Japan (1603-1868). I Ching scholarship reached its apex during the Tokugawa. |
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According agricultural ancient Ansai Arai Ashikaga Ashikaga School astronomy bakufu became Book of Changes Buddhist monks ch'i China Chinese Ching divination Ching scholarship Ching studies Chou Chu Hsi Chuan Confucian classics Confucianism and Shinto culture daimyo Dazai doctrine early Tokugawa period emperor explain famous five agents Fu Hsi gawa goseiha gunbai gunbai shiso Hayashi Razan heaven and earth heiho hexagram Hirata hohoha hokugaku Hsi Tz'u Hsi's Ibid ideas ikebana important influence Iwanami shoten Japanese joruri kenkyu Kinsei Kumazawa Banzan Kyoto late Tokugawa medicine metaphysical neo-Confucian Nihon shiso taikei Nihon shoki Nogyo Onmyodo oracles original philosophy popular Princeton punctuated quoted reads relationship reprinted role ruler sages Saigusa Shinto shiso shobo shogun Shueki teachings textual tion Toku Tokugawa Confucians Tokugawa intellectuals Tokugawa Japan Tokugawa period Tokugawa political Tokyo tradition trigrams University Press Western science writings wrote Yamaga Yamazaki Yamazaki Ansai yin and yang zenshu
Popular passages
Page xii - Hunt, general editor of the series of which this book is a part, were invaluable in guiding us through some of the more difficult stages in the writing.