Chapter Encounter with «Moral science» in Late Nineteenth-Century Japan
Abstract
The term «moral science» was used in universities and academies prior to the emergence of the expression «humanities and social sciences». However, its connection with the modern eastern Asian context has not yet been sufficiently investigated. This paper tries to fill the gap with a case study on its import and appropriation by late nineteenth-century Japan to its socio-cultural sphere, having lacked the framework of classifying the sciences into «moral» and «physical» ones. The study achieves this by examining the activities of Meirokusha, a learned society created in 1773 to promote Western studies, and the writings of one of its leading members, Yukichi Fukuzawa, who tried to understand Francis Wayland’s Elements of Moral Science (1835), a famous American textbook in his time.
Keywords
Moral Science; Meirokusha; Francis Wayland; Yukichi Fukuzawa; Shigeki Nishimura; TextbookDOI
10.36253/979-12-215-0242-8.10ISBN
9791221502428, 9791221502428Publisher
Firenze University PressPublisher website
https://www.fupress.com/Publication date and place
Florence, 2023Series
Connessioni. Studies in Transcultural History, 2Classification
History