Showing posts with label 와카마츠 에이스케. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 와카마츠 에이스케. Show all posts

2022/05/05

Wakamatsu on Izutsu's "Consciousness" and "Essence" 와카마츠 에이스케

Wakamatsu Eisuke 와카마츠 에이스케

Toshihiko Izutsu and the Philosophy of Word: In Search of the Spiritual Orient  

【목차】 
머리말 
제1장 『신비 철학』――시인 철학자의 탄생 
제2장 이슬람과의 邂逅 
제3장 러시아, 밤의 영성 
제4장 한 동시대인과 선지자 전
제5장 카톨리시즘
제6장 말과 코토바 
제7장 천계의 번역자 
제8장 엘라노스—그분에서의 대화 
제9장 <의식과 본질>
제10징 예지의 철학


Ch 9

Wakamatsu on 

Izutsu's "Consciousness" and "Essence"


sense Izutsu's audacity in tracing back the unbroken history of Western
philosophy to its starting point and attempting to break through
"synchronically" to that point in time.

Insofar as it grapples with problems not just in the present but sub
specie deternitatis, synchronic activity is never complete. As Izutsu him-
self stated in the preface to Ishiki to honshitsu, what he had undertaken
was only a "prolegomenon"; he understood from the outset that it would
be impossible to bring it to a successful conclusion.* 

What Izutsu wrote
may only have been a prolegomenon, but, as we frequently discover in
this outstanding work, it clearly states the basic issues.

"Consciousness" and "Essence"

In "Ishiki to honshitsu," the properties of the words "consciousness"
and "essence" themselves are different from the way we normally use
them. 

According to Izutsu, "consciousness" is inherently "ecstatic," a
comment he made in reference to a statement by Sartre in "Une idée
fondamentale de la phénoménologie de Husserl: l'intentionnalite"
(1939; "A Fundamental Idea of Husserl's Philosophy: Intentionality,'
2010). Izutsu never lost sight of the dictum that "consciousness is con-
sciousness of something.
* In the inseparability of ontology and theories of consciousness, Izutsu sees the contemporaneity and traditionalism of Sartre.

Datsuji (BA), a compound of characters that literally means "out
of oneself," is a key term for understanding "Ishiki to honshitsu." 
But if a reader were to keep on reading with only a superficial grasp of what
Izutsu means by "consciousness" and "essence," s/he will completely
lose the drift of Izutsu's argument when it begins to move dynamically.

"Consciousness," he writes, citing Sartre, is un glissement hors de soi,
"a sliding outside of itself."*? 
Awaiting "consciousness" on the outside is "essence": 
"consciousness" slides "outside of itself" toward "essence.

In this essay, neither "consciousness" nor "essence" is a static concept;
they both evolve "ecstatically."

Try looking up datsuji in a Japanese dictionary, and you won't find
it there. Although the first Japanese to use this word in a translation is
unknown, Shuzö Kuki used it at a very early date. 

We saw in Chapter Five that, inspired by Heidegger's Sein und Zeit (1927; Being and Time, 1962), he took note of ekstasis, the original meaning of datsuji, at quite an early date and developed it as part of his argument in his study of
time. After Propos sur le temps came out in France in 1928, he used
the espression datsuji in his essay "Keijijogakuteki jikan" (1931; Meta-
physical time), which was based on a lecture he gave on his return to
Japan.** Datsuji also appears in the first Japanese translation of Being
and Time, which was published in 1939.* and ever since then, it has
been accepted in Japanese philosophical circles as a technical term.
The role Kuki played in the development of Japanese philosophical
terminology and technical terms is worth noting. He was also the first
to use the expression jitsuzon (Jeff) for "existential."270

Izutsu began using the term datsuji regularly from the time of
Shimpi tetsugaku in 1949. It became a key word in that work along with
shinju (H *), which literally means "being filled with God," i.e. enthou-
siasmos. 
It is not certain, however, whether Izutsu used datsuji under
the influence of Heidegger. He was already reading Sartre by this time,
and his sense of datsuji seems nearer to Sartre's usage, i.e. as an expe-
rience in which language fails, which closely resembles the world of
Nausea. Sartre frequently deals with ek-stase in Being and Nothingness,
which Izutsu read after Naused. Being and Nothingness was written as
a response to Heidegger's Being and Time, and it was Kuki who made
Sartre aware of Heidegger's existence.

My aim in alluding to etymology here is not merely out of interest
in the associations connected with this word. The fact is that the philo-
sophical term datsuji term was born of, and fleshed out by, the "ecstatic
experiences of various thinkers and would become the impetus behind
the existential experiences of those who came after them. 

The words in the following sentences are Kuki's; they seem to describe what datsuji meant to him existentially.

 "Philosophy, I believe, is a primal understanding of existence in general." 
"We ought to feel surprise at the contingent fact itself that the real world exists. The abyss of some supersensible thing opens up there."* 

As we can see from these statements, the connection between Kuki and Izutsu goes beyond mere similarity.
In Shimpi tetsugaku, datsuji is acknowledged to be a translation of
the Greek word ekstasis. It signifies an existential experience in which
271

"the human self dies completely to its selfhood; the self is thoroughly
annihilated; the self is utterly destroyed until not even a single dust
mote of it remains."* If datsuji is "the annihilation of the relative self
as a sensible life principle." then shinja, which Izutsu annotates as
enthousiasmos, is "the occasion for a spiritual awakening of the abso-
lute self as a supersensible life principle" that accompanies eestasy
and occurs "immediately" with it.** Ekstasis is an instinctive breach-
ing of the restrictions of the phenomenal world such as self, time and
space, and an aspiration for the Other, eternity, a different dimension.
Enthousiasmos is the dispensation of Being, who reacts to it. There
is no interval between ekstasis and enthousiasmos. As Izutsu savs, the
experience of elstasis and enthousiasmos occurs on the same ontologi-
cal dimension as kensho (KLM), seeing one's true nature/self-awareness
in Buddhism, or to jan kuan l'ung (B*Fin), the enlightenment expe-
rience in Confucianism known as the "sudden breakthrough." Enthou-
siasmos, however, is not a special occurrence limited to mystics. Let
us, for convenience sake, call the one who does the filling up "God."
If enthousiasmos were an experience that occurs only under narrowly
prescribed conditions, it would fall under the vulgar definition of mys-
ticism, i.e. that the One who does the filling up only truly exists in a
chosen few. But "God" is omnipresent, or, rather, the Transcendent,
which is omnipresent, is "God." The way is open to all people.
If"consciousness" is "a sliding outside," "essence" is "a filling up.

The true nature of "essence" lies in giving fully and completely of
itself. It is the same as what the medieval Christian mustic Meister Eck-
hardt speaks of when he says that if one empties oneself and becomes
nothing, God will instantly fill that person up. If it were possible to
be truly "conscious" of "essence," it would be an experience of over-
flowing- even though we are profoundly incapable of recognizing this.
Likewise, "consciousness" always causes human beings to aspire to the
exact opposite of existential isolation.

What seems extremely important when reading "Ishiki to honshitsu'
is that Izutsu firmly roots, and develops the basis for, his speculations
in a sense of realism. He detested superficial views of mysticism. What
he asks of his readers is to observe in minute detail the commonsense
worldview that we experience every day and not to disavow it. 272 Rather, 
while leading his readers to the world's depths, he urges them to relurn
once again from this innermost region to the everyday world in which
we live. The following passage truly stales his intellectual attitude.
It is precisely in order to justify the coming into being of an
essence-free, articulated world that Buddhism sets forth the theory
of profitya-somutpada. But no matter how subtle this may be in
theor, in practice it is somehow not without its deficiencies. That is
because we have certain reactions to the things that we actually deal
with in the sensible world that cannot be explained br the theory of
pratitya-samutpada alone. 4

The meaning of the Buddhist theory of pratttva-samutpada (interdepen-
dent origination) is not the issue here. Where we ought to be looking
lies elsewhere. It is Izutsu's view that our starting point must never be
from theory; it is only through our "reactions" to the sensible world
that human beings can proceed to the depths of existence. He strongly
admonishes us against forgetting ordinary "emotional understandings
over specific ideologies or dogmas. Continning the previous sentence,
he writes, "Among the many schools of Mahayana Buddhism, it is
Zen, I believe, that in practice comes to grips with this issue head-on.
• Zen demands that each and every one of us confirms in practice
for ourselves that it is not an essence-initiated articulation of a solid
substance but an essence-free, Ruid, ontological articulation." Thie
point at which "each and every one of us confirms [this) in practice
for ourselves," Izutsu believes, is the starting point and also the goal of
ontological investigations.
All things are endowed with "essence" by "Being." the transcen-
dental Universal, and become "beings." What causes a cup to appear
before someone's eyes is the working of "Being," • but it is because that
person senses the "essence" of cup that s/he recognizes a "being" as a
cup. As we saw in the discussion of Nausea, "essence" is, as it were,
the covering that is indispensable for our understanding of "Being.
Rather than concealing something, it is the basic infrastructure that
makes human life what it is. Because "essences" exist. people are able
to recognize things, interact with other people and live their everyday
lives. "Essence" is the self-evident truth that "distinguishes a thing (a 
flower, for instance) from all other things and makes it what it indisput-
ably is."* Consequently, the same number of "essences" exist as there
are beings. Mountains, rivers, plants, flowers, valleys, lakes, oceans.
people-each has its own "essence." The world is partitioned off into
countless "essences." On the other hand. *essence" conforms to the
cultural framework within which it is generated; it is complexly inter-
twined with the multilayered consciousnesses of countless men and
women and precipitated out into history. A certain thing appears in
the sensible world as the result of the existential experience of a sage, a
mystic or a poet; it takes shape as art or philosophy or religion, etc., and
is passed on to other people.273

It is this unceasing activity of the human race that Toshihiko
Izutsu attempts to bring back to life in the present time through "syn-
chronic structuralization." This attempt is nothing less than laying the
groundwork for the self-manifestation of the Idea of Oriental spiritu-
ality, which has been dispersed among countless different cultures. It
resembles restoring a single book by bringing together scattered scraps
of paper. The "essence" that Izutsu is dealing with is not limited to
things; nor is it confined to visible, material existence. The principle
behind the generation of "essence" works the same way for invisible
concepts and spiritual realities. If it did not, "how could we explain
the overwhelming sense of reality in an esoteric Buddhist mandala,
which consists of images alone? Even the images that foat up in our
consciousness, Izutsu says, are "essences.

Although there have been many psychologists who have investi-
gated the reality of images, few have called them "essences" having
the same sense of reality as a single flower. If we regard the evil spirits
of mountains and rivers depicted in a mandala as nothing more than
symbols, Izutsu's study would probably make no sense. "It is, rather, the
things of what we call the real world that are merely shadow-like beings,
the shadows of shadows." he writes, referring to Suhrawardt's theory of
images. "The true weight of existence is in the 'metaphor.'* There
have been modern philosophers who treat images as real, but has there
ever been anyone like Izutsu who perceived them as "essences." the
ground of reality? In the view that the Tathagata and Bodhisattvas in
mandala are symbols and do not really exist, but are only "symbols."

CONSCIOUSNESS AND ESSENCE

Toshihiko Izutsu sees the embrittlement of the modern mind. A "sum-
bol., rather, is the passageway by which WORD manifests itself in the
phenomenal world. A "symbol" expressly indicates that behind it exists
an invisible something. It is the "metaphor" that is the reality, says
Izutsu. How is it possible to doubt the reality of Bodhisattvas? "They
materialize before our eyes and in the inner parts of ourselves. They
appear only to those who have eyes to see them."
After mandala, Izutsu deals with "archetypes. the world of images.
as part of his treatment of the reality of "essences."

" Though it is a study of archetypes, he does not discuss specific archetypes here such as what Jung calls anima, animus, the wise old man or the Great Mother.
Instead, the context in which Izutsu treats this technical term is the !
Ching. He sees that the process by which WORD expands itself and
gives birth to meaning is graphically found in the eight divination signs
of the I Ching, and notes that myths have been imprinted into each
of them. WORD is intrinsically latent in myth and poetry. Mythopoe-
sis, he argues, is not just a distinguishing feature of WORD, but rather
its fundamental characteristic and true nature. Myths are not merely
made-up stories. They are a form of self-manifestation by the Transcen.
dent. Human beings do not fabricate myths. Transcendental phenom-
ena choose the "archetypes" known as myths.

Archetypes are mental and spiritual patterns that, independently of
the individual unconscious, determine the ontological infrastructure of
a community or a culture. We can think of archetypes as analogous in
their function to what In 'Arab described as "permanent archetypes"
or "fixed entities" (a yan thabitah), which ontologically exist midway
between the Absolute and the world of sensible things." Izutsu counts
them as a kind of "essence" and recognizes their reality. Archetypes
are deeply connected to the "cultural framework" that fundamen-
tally ordains the depth structure of a person's consciousness, and they
achieve their unique development in a community. "In other words,
it is impossible for them [archetypes] to have universality in the sense
of surmounting regional and historical differences and being com-
mon to all ethnicities or to the human race as a whole."* "There is
no such thing as an "archetype endowed with a universality shared by
the entire human race. Both individual 'archetypes' and the systems in  
which they mutually materialize differ from culture to culture."* Ger-
shom Scholem once asked, "Why don't [Buddhists] see Christ or the
Madonna in their meditative visions?" Converscly, Izutsu asks, *
"Why don't images of Tathagata or Boddhisatvas or the various deities of the
Shingon mandala ever appear in the contemplative consciousness of
Christians?"* In contrast to the unity that, as we saw earlier, drew the
attention of the Traditionalist school, Izutsu tries to find meaning in
the differences among "essences.

In order to grasp the true nature of "consciousness," Izutsu believes,
"We must push on to the point at which consciousness goes beyond
the nature of consciousness, i.e. to the point at which consciousness
ceases to be consciousness."* The same logic is applied to the pursuit
of "essence."

* "Essence must be dealt with up to the point at which it separates from essentiality and ceases to be essence. At the instant that our "consciousness" perceives "essence,* * "Such and such a thing exists in it, a mountain or a river, for instance." Izutsu writes." If we accept this statement, then, if it were not for the fact that our depth consciousness grasps a thing, not only would we have no true sense of that thing's reality, the thing itself would not even exist. There are levels of consciousness. "Essence" changes shape depending on its position on the
ladder of consciousness. Or, it would be fair to say, Being appears in
response to consciousness.

The ultimate state of consciousness that Izutsu deals with here
is not the one that comprises the consciousness we personally expe-
rience, or the unconscious that psychoanalysis regards as a category.
Izutsu created the expression WORD (a * /S, kotoba) as a technical
term that transcends language and at times even signifies the Ultimate,
but, on one occasion only in "Ishiki to honshitsu." he wrote kokoro (a
a0, mind) as another name for it. "Used in this context, 'attachment'
(ushin, 18 0) and 'no-mind' (mushin, M0) are not synonyms. There is a
MIND in which 'attachment' and *no-mind each come into being on
different dimensions."* As this indicates, it is MIND that is the reality
in which "consciousness goes beyond the nature of consciousness," but
a full-scale treatment of this idea would have to await the discussion of
shin (C), the conscious Transcendent, in what would become his final 
book, Ishiki no keijijogaku: "Daijs kishinron" no tetsugaku (1903; Meta-
physics of consciousness: The philasophy of the Awakening of Faith in
the Mahayana)." "Being is WORD, Izutsu had said, summing up his
thought; he began to deal with the possibility that Being might also be
MIND.
276

In Oriental philesophy, cognition is a complex, multilayered inter-
weaving of consciousness and existence. Thus, in the process of pur-
suing the structure of this interweaving, human beings are inevitably
forced to confront the question of the reality of "essence."
This passage is found in what is virtually the last sentence of "Ishiki
to honshitsu." It is both a conclusion and a starting point. "Existence"
here is not "existents." It is another name for the absolutely Transcen-
dent, what In *Arabi calls "Being.

Izutsu was extremely cautious about using the technical term
"unconscious." which had rapidly become popular after the birth of
psychoanalysis. Or, rather, he seems to have regarded the careless use
of this word as almost taboo. It is not that he thought lightly of Freud
and Jung; indeed, he was someone who responded sensitively to the
contributions made by the founder of psychoanalysis and his heretical
successor and to the questions each had raised. But he had absolutely
no use for the false image of the "unconscious" that is prevalent today.
*Consciousness" is deep, broad and chaotic and defies theoretical con-
trol. All that human beings are permitted to do is to seriously observe
its dynamism and hypothesize about its structure; we experience only
a part of it. There should be no doubt about the reality of "conscious-
ness." but that does not mean there is a monster called the unconscious
lurking beneath it. The determinant "unconscious" is unnecessary:
"consciousness" is strange enough as it is.

Like a bottomless swamp, human consciousness is a weird thing, a
world where musterious matters dwell. No one really knows what lies
hidden in its depths. Nor can anvone predict what will suddenly rise
up from it 84

 
"Consciousness is assumed to have a two-layered structure, superficial
and deep." Izutsu writes.* but this distinction is merely for the sake of
convenience. It is not his intention to divide consciousness into two:
his aim is to endow the field that he calls the "middle space of con-
sciousness" - the "M-realm" or "M-region" - with structural reality.
Izutsu atterpts to lead the reader to this intermediary region that con
nects the surface-level of consciousness with its depths.

Diagram 1 is a structural model of consciousness in A
*Ishiki to honshitu.*** 


A is the surface consciousness; 
M, B and C indicate the realms of depth consciousness. 
The M of the M-realm is perhaps an abbreviation for "middle.'
or, considered as the field in which meaning is born,
it could conceivably stand for "meaning." This is also the location of the mundus
B imaginalis mentioned ear.

lier that Corbin described.
C
But, above all, we perhaps ought to detect the strong influence of Leo Weisger-
ber here. As we suw earlier, for Weisgerber, language
e
Diagrams: Structural model of consciousness
Source Ishiti to honshitu. IC6 1-4.

----

itself was nothing less than something situated "between" us and reality. Language determines the structure of culture. In other words, the sprachliche Zwischerwelt is also
a geistliche Zwischenwelt. Just as there are phenomena that exist only in
the mind, there are phenomena that exist only in particular languages,
as we saw in the case of the constellation Orion. For Japanese, a crow
is associated with ill-omened events, but, in the Old Testament, crows
are the companions of the prophet Elijah. Something similar probably
holds true for other symbols of good and bad fortune in everyday life.

But that does not mean that they ought to be regarded as nothing more
than symbolism. Conversely, since it is impossible for us to be free of
language and culture, we cannot readily escape from the world structure
they impose.278

Above and beyond being merely a theoretical hypothesis, the
M-realm was an existential region for Izutsu. "The theory of Ideas has
to be preceded by the experience of Ideas» -that statement in Shimpi
tetsugaku did not just apply to the true nature of Plato's Ideas alone:
it would be fair to think that this one sentence expressed Izutstt's own
article of faith: When dealing with basic issues, existential experience
always takes precedence. Indeed, it is a characteristic of Toshihiko
Izutsu that he would only delve deeply into what he had experienced
existentially.


The Mystic Philosophy of WORD

Even the word "meaning." when Toshihiko Izutsu uses it, becomes a
uniquely personal, technical term that is not limited to the denotative
content of a word, sentence or phenomena. "Meaning" is the appear-
ance of Being as it emerges from chaos; it is the "face" of beings. It is
individual entities, no two of which are alike.
Words are bodies of energy without any fixed form. It is not the case
that "meaning" is produced when a word comes into being; "mean-
ing" seeks words, Izutsu believes. In short, "meaning" is the matrix of
words, not the other way around. Izutsu perceives WORD as articu-
lating meaning. WORD is synonymous with "primal, absolute, unar-
ticulated reality,'
. the basis of all things.** In short, Izutsu believes that
WORD gives rise to all things. Our usual understanding is that a flower
exists, and so the word "Rower" is born. But Izutsu's statement con-
fronts us with a truth that is the exact opposite of this. If we take Izutsu
at his word, a flower is born after being formed in the "mold" of the
"meaning" of flower. In a world perceived by ordinary consciousness,
i.e. surface consciousness, things appear to be generated in the order
of phenomenon & word & meaning. A phenomenon comes first; words
and meaning follow. A word is a sign denoting a thing. Over time, the 
sign becomes endowed with meaning. If a phenomenon does not exist,
279


























2022/04/19

일본인에게 기독교란 무엇인가, 엔도 수샤쿠 '깊은 강'에서 생각한다. 와카마츠 에이스케

Amazon.co.jp : 일본인에게 기독교란 무엇인가 엔도 수샤쿠 '깊은 강'에서 생각한다.



일본인에게 기독교란 무엇인가 엔도 주작 '깊은 강'에서 생각한다
by 와카마츠 에이스케  (저자)  
4.4 out of 5 stars    56 ratings
----
하나님이란 믿음이란 무엇인가? 영성과 종교는 모순되지 않는가?

비평가, 수필가, 그리고 NHK '100분 de명저'에서 최다의 지남역을 맡는 저자가 자신과 공통점도 많은 기독교 문학의 집의 작품에서 '일본인과 기독교'를 고찰하는 의욕작. 본서의 축이 되는 것은, 엔도 마지막 장편 「깊은 강」. 저자는 이 작품을 「엔도 슈사쿠 일권 전집」이라고 부르는 것으로, 엔도의 질문이 모두 응축되고 있는 중요작이라고 말한다.
 신, 신앙, 고통, 영성, 죽음에 대해… 그들 하나하나를 장 타이틀에 놓고 등장 인물의 언동을 정성껏 쫓으면서 거기에 『침묵』이나 다른 작품을 보조선으로 사용함으로써 엔도나 저자 자신은 물론 많은 일본인 기독교 자가 추구한 대 테마 '일본적 영성과 기독교의 공명'을 가능하게 한다.
----
はじめに 日本的霊性とキリスト教
第1章 神について
第2章 死について
第3章 出会いについて
第4章 信仰について
第5章 告白について
第6章 苦しみについて
第7章 愛について
おわりに 復活について
---
서문 일본적 영성과 기독교
제1장 하나님에 대해
제2장 죽음에 대해
제3장 만남에 대해
제4장 믿음에 대해 
제5 장 고백에 대해 
6장 아픔에 대하여
제7장 사랑에 대하여
끝으로 부활에 대하여

----
199 페이지, September 10, 2021
==
저자 정보
와카마츠 에이스케
비평가, 도쿄 공업 대학 교수. 1968년 니가타현 출생. 도쿄공업대학교 리버럴아츠 연구교육원 교수. 게이오 대학교 문학부 불문과 졸업. 저서에 '예수전', '지치의 시학', '우치무라 감3', '14세의 교실', '시와 만나다. 

1968년 니가타현 출생. 비평가, 수필가. 도쿄 공업 대학 리버럴 아트 교육 연구원 교수.
2007년 「에치치 호오와 그 시대 구도의 문학」에서 제14회 미타 문학 신인상 수상.
2016년 「지치의 시학 고바야시 히데오와 이통 슌히코」에서 제2회 니시와키 준사부로 학술상 수상.
2018년 시집『보이지 않는 눈물』로 제33회 시가문학관상을 수상.
2018년 『고바야시 히데오 아름다운 꽃』에서 카도카와 재단 학예상을 수상.
2019년 『코바야시 히데오 아름다운 꽃』에서 연꽃상을 수상.

저서에 『이통 슌히코 지치의 철학』(게이오 요시카쿠대학 출판회), 『사는 철학』(문춘 신서), 『영성의 철학』(카도카와 선서), 『슬픔의 비의』(나나록사), 『예수 덴」(중앙 공론 신사) '안개 그분 스가 아츠코'(슈에이샤) '말의 선물' '약점 뒤에서'(아키 서방) 등.
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4.4 out of 5 stars
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파스토~루
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars 기독교를 일본화하는 것이 아니라 우주화하고 자기를 하인으로 만든다.
Reviewed in Japan on October 8, 2021
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「일본인에게 있어서 기독교란 무엇인가」를 생각한다고는, 어떤 것일까요. 엔도 주작은 기독교는 양복으로 일본인이 입기 위해서는 일본복으로 재구성해야 한다고 말했다.

 이 책도 그런 일을 하려고 하는가? 기독교라는 보편적 진리를 일본인에게도 아는 특수 표현으로 번역하려고 하는 것일까요?

 그렇지 않다. 원래, 엔도 주작이 「기독교는 양복」, 의류 일반이 아니라 「서양의 옷」이라고 하는 것은, 기독교는 보편이 아니고 특수하다고 생각하고 있기 때문이 아닐까요.

 엔도 주작의 소설도, 와카마츠 에이스케씨의 비평도, 무언가 매우 중요한 것의 하나 특수 표현인 기독교의 여러 요소를, 일본인이 읽는 문장이라고 하는 또 다른 특수 표현으로 번역하는 것으로, 그리스도 가르침의 표면이 아니라 안쪽 안에 있는 보편적 진리를 전하고자 하는 것이 아닐까요?

 즉, 일본인에게 있어서 기독교란 무엇인가라고 생각하는 것은, 기독교를, 기독교 용어나 기독교 개념에 의지하지 않고, 인간의 마음이 느끼는 눈에 보이지 않는 근본을 찾아내려고 하는 것이 아닐까 생각합니다 . 이것은 일본화가 아닌 우주화입니다.

 그 때 기독교는 자신만이 올바른 종교임을 그만두고, 종교에 관계없이 어떤 사람의 마음에도 있는 '보이지 않는 따뜻한 것, 거룩한 것'의 한 召使하인으로 돌아갈 수 있게 되겠지요.

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아마존 방담
3.0 out of 5 stars 제목과 내용의 괴리
Reviewed in Japan on November 21, 2021
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これは、宗教哲学書としては大変面白く、興味深いものでした。しかし、読後によく考えると、「日本人にとってキリスト教とは何か」という問いに対しては十分には答えられていないことに気づきます。この著作は副題のごとく、名著「深い河」の注解書ということなのだと思います。
最も答えるべき問いの一つは「なぜ日本にはクリスチャンがかくも少ないのか」というものだと思うのです。この著作ではこの点について十分な回答はありません。つまり、「日本人信者にとって」という視点と同時に、「大多数の非キリスト教日本人にとってのキリスト教」という視点はかなり欠落しています。ここ数百年の近代化にあって、神の存在や、聖書の成立過程そのもにも疑問が差し挟まれるようになりました。最終的には、「なぜキリスト教(ないしは宗教)を信じられるのか」という問いにすら答えが必要になっています。この著作では、様々な先賢の言葉と遠藤氏の言葉が巧みに引用され議論されるのですが、上記の根本的問題にはあまり触れずに終わってしまいます。こう考えると、むしろ「ベタ」かもしれませんが、「深い河」より「沈黙」の方が、「日本人とキリスト教」を論じるにはよい材料だったのかもしれません。この流れで言えば、山本博文氏の「殉教~日本人は何を信仰したか」の方が参考になるのではと思います。
もちろん、哲学的議論を否定するつもりはありません。それは「初期教父」の時代からなされてきたものでもあり、キリスト教を論じる際には不可避な分野です。しかし、一般の信者にとってそのような「護教論」は無縁なものでした。ほとんどの信者は難しいことはわからなくても信心し、死後の祝福に希望を託したのです。現代でもこの点は変わらないのではと思います。この本は、当然「護教論」であるわけですが、厳しい言い方をすると、キリスト教の負の部分に目をつぶり(遠藤氏は決して目をつぶったわけではないけれど)「善なる」部分をいろいろな論法で「延命」している感じすら受けます。結局遠藤氏の表現する「日本人のキリスト教」は、もはやキリスト教ではないのではという気がします。(宗教多元主義にも言及はある)。私としては、未来に残された宗教の位置としては優れた考察だと思うのですが、そうなるとキリスト教の枠内に留まっている意味にも疑問符が付きます。
私は信仰は否定しませんし、個人の信仰体験も重要なことだと思います。とはいえ、哲学的な議論によって「現代に受け入れられる(いい感じの)キリスト教」を提示するのではなく、ありのままのキリスト教(これも多様でしょうけれど)を提示した上で、判断を読者に求めるような著作が今の時代必要な気がします。
浅学の身で偉そうなレビューをいたしましたが、2020年発見の「影に対して」への言及もあり、遠藤論や「深い河」読書ガイドという意味では大変興味深い1冊ではあります。


이것은 종교 철학서로서 매우 흥미롭고 흥미로운 것이었습니다. 그러나 독후에 잘 생각하면, 「일본인에게 있어서 기독교란 무엇인가」라고 하는 질문에 대해서는 충분히는 대답되어 있지 않은 것을 깨닫습니다. 이 저작은 부제와 같이, 명저 「깊은 강」의 주해서라고 하는 것이라고 생각합니다.
가장 대답해야 할 질문 중 하나는 "왜 일본에는 그리스도인이 그렇게 적은가"라는 것이라고 생각합니다. 이 저작에서는 이 점에 대한 충분한 답변이 없습니다. 즉, 「일본인 신자에게 있어서」라고 하는 시점과 동시에, 「대다수의 비기독교 일본인에 있어서의 기독교」라고 하는 시점은 꽤 없어지고 있습니다. 최근 수백 년의 근대화에서 하나님의 존재와 성경의 성립 과정도 의문이 끼어들게 되었습니다. 궁극적으로는 "왜 기독교(또는 종교)를 믿을 수 있는가?"라는 질문조차도 대답이 필요합니다. 이 저작에서는, 다양한 선현의 말과 엔도씨의 말이 교묘하게 인용되어 논의됩니다만, 상기의 근본적 문제에는 그다지 접하지 않고 끝나 버립니다. 이렇게 생각하면 오히려 '베타'일지도 모르지만 '깊은 강'보다 '침묵'이 '일본인과 기독교'를 논하기에 좋은 재료였을지도 모릅니다. 이 흐름으로 말하면, 야마모토 히로부미씨의 「순교~일본인은 무엇을 신앙했는가」가 참고가 되는 것은 아니다고 생각합니다.
물론 철학적 논쟁을 부정할 생각은 없다. 그것은 '초기교부' 시대부터 이루어진 것이며, 기독교를 논할 때는 불가피한 분야입니다. 그러나 일반 추종자들에게 그러한 '호교론'은 무연한 것이었다. 대부분의 추종자들은 어려운 일을 몰라도 믿고 죽음의 축복에 희망을 맡겼습니다. 현대에서도 이 점은 변하지 않는다고 생각합니다. 이 책은, 당연히 「호교론」인 것입니다만, 어려운 말을 하면, 기독교의 부의 부분에 눈을 망치고 여러가지 논법으로 「연명」하고 있는 느낌조차 받습니다. 결국 엔도씨가 표현하는 「일본인의 기독교」는, 더 이상 기독교가 아닌 것이라는 생각이 듭니다. (종교 다원주의에도 언급은 있다). 나로서는, 미래에 남겨진 종교의 위치로서는 뛰어난 고찰이라고 생각합니다만, 그렇게 되면 기독교의 틀 안에 머물고 있는 의미에도 물음표가 붙습니다.
나는 믿음은 부정하지 않으며 개인의 믿음 체험도 중요한 일이라고 생각합니다. 그렇다고는 해도 철학적인 논의에 의해 「현대에 받아들여지는(좋은 느낌의) 기독교」를 제시하는 것이 아니라, 그대로의 기독교(이것도 다양하겠지만)를 제시한 다음, 판단을 독자 에 요구하는 저작이 지금의 시대 필요한 것 같습니다.
얕은 몸으로 위대한 리뷰를 했습니다만, 2020년 발견의 「그림자에 대해서」에의 언급도 있어, 엔도론이나 「깊은 강」독서 가이드라고 하는 의미에서는 매우 흥미로운 1권입니다.
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9 people found this helpful
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사카시타 치에미
5.0 out of 5 stars 깊은 강은 정말 깊고 마음에 남는 1권입니다
Reviewed in Japan on November 25, 2021
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엔도 선생님에게 이 '깊은 강'은 피의 뾰족한 생각을 해서 쓰고 있습니다.
나도 이 책을 읽었을 때, 엔도씨는 이것이 쓰고 싶었다고 감동한 것을 기억했습니다.
5 people found this helpful
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도쿄 헤이와
4.0 out of 5 stars 읽고 좋았다!
Reviewed in Japan on October 21, 2021
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오랜만에 일본인에게 있어서의 기독교를 생각하게 되는 내용은 좋았습니다.
2 people found this helpful
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setsuzi
3.0 out of 5 stars 어려운 책입니다.
Reviewed in Japan on January 7, 2022
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어려운 책입니다. 일본인의 마음에 맞는 기독교, 그것을 마음에 담아 읽었습니다만, 잘 모릅니다.
2 people found this helpful
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kouchan
5.0 out of 5 stars 일본인이 길러 온 일본인의 정신성을 보는 기독교라는 종교의 본질
Reviewed in Japan on January 11, 2022
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엔도 주작은 훌륭했다. '깊은 강'을 다시 한 번 읽어보기로 했다.
One person found this helpful
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3년자자
5.0 out of 5 stars 이상한 책
Reviewed in Japan on September 19, 2021
문자로 쓰여진 말이 아니라 그 안쪽에 숨어있는 코토바에 접하는 독서가 저자의 안내로 체험된다. 자신의 마음의 안쪽을 찾는 여행에 초대된다. 이런 책은 읽은 적이 없다.
11 people found this helpful
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Giovanni
5.0 out of 5 stars "인생"에 대한 통찰의 보고
Reviewed in Japan on October 1, 2021
본서는, 「일본인에게 있어서 기독교란 무엇인가」라고 하는 관점에서 엔도 수샤쿠의 「깊은 강」이라고 하는 매력적인 작품을 정중하게 읽어내는 것과 동시에, 「깊은 강」을 단서로 현대에 있어서의 「기독교 '의 존재의의를 파헤쳐 고찰하는 것입니다.

 '생활'과 '인생'과의 구별이라는 관점을 큰 축으로 하면서 진행되는 고찰을 통해 협의의 '기독교'라는 틀을 넘어 현대에서의 종교적인 영성의 존재의의가 다양한 각도에서 부조로 되어 갑니다. "인생"을 깊게 살아가기 위한 열매에 많은 팁을 줍니다.

 엔도 수샤쿠에 관한 입문서이며 동시에 지금까지 쓰여진 많은 엔도 수샤쿠의 백미라고도 할 수 있는 저작입니다.
4 people found this helpful
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See all reviews

이치로
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars 생각되는 호의
Reviewed in Japan on December 9, 2021
나는 기독교인이 아니다.
신자의 사람을 싫어하지도 않는다.
여러가지 ‘신자’가 있을 것이지만, 고민했을 때 등
‘하나님의 생각 부름’으로 던지면서 편해지는 것은
많은 종교가 ‘포기’와 깊이 관여하고 있는 점과 같을 것이다.

이 책은 엔도 수샤쿠의 '깊은 강'을 토끼 위에 올려
엔도가 계속 탐구한 과제를 다룬다.
죽어도 망하지 않는 「생명」,
언어를 넘은 무언가로서의 「코토바」.
엔도의 이러한 생각을 마치 함께 생각해 가는 것 같다.

엔도 수샤쿠은 평생, '인생'과 '생활'이라는 주제를 고집했다.
두 가지 개념을 어떻게 <동거> 시킬까.
생각한 호의이다.
One person found this helpful
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양서 좋아
5.0 out of 5 stars 깊은 사색
Reviewed in Japan on December 29, 2021
엔도 주작의 「깊은 강」이 가지고 있는 깊은 사색을 알기 쉬운 말로 훌륭하게 돋보이게 합니다. 다른 와카마츠씨의 저작과 함께, 제대로 알기 쉬운 문장으로 문학 작품이 가지고 있는 내용을 해설하고 있어, 매우 역작이라고 생각했습니다. 다시 한번 '깊은 강'을 읽고 싶습니다.
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