2022/07/17

Living from the Soul: The 7 Spiritual Principles of Ralph Waldo Emerson : Torode, Sam

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The Keys to an Inspired Life

Living from the Soul distills the essence of Ralph Waldo Emerson's philosophy in concise, contemporary language. It illuminates the seven principles that led Emerson through in his darkest days, and to which he held for the rest of his life:

1. Trust Yourself
All that you need for growth and guidance in life is already present inside you.

2. As You Sow, You Will Reap
Your thoughts and actions shape your character, and your character determines your destiny.

3. Nothing Outside You Can Harm You
Circumstances and events don’t matter as much as what you do with them.

4. The Universe Is Inside You
The world around you is a reflection of the world within you.

5. Identify with the Infinite
Center your identity on the soul and your life’s purpose will unfold.

6. Live in the Present
The present moment is your point of power. Eternity is now.

7. Seek God Within
The highest revelation is the divinity of the soul.

Living from the Soul is also available in comic book format from PhilosoComics (ISBN B089CSJC8S).

A sequel is also available: Secrets of the Mind: Ralph Waldo Emerson's Keys to Expansive Mental Powers (ISBN B08H4WQXW3).
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1 January 2020
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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published (1 January 2020)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 100 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1671283708
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1671283701
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.34 x 0.64 x 20.32 cmBest Sellers Rank: 118,562 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)438 in Metaphysics (Books)
1,164 in Personal Transformation (Books)
9,900 in New Age Religion & Spirituality (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.7 out of 5 stars 474 ratings





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mark devan

5.0 out of 5 stars Great gem of human wisdomReviewed in Australia on 23 January 2020
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This book beautifully summarises the wisdom discovered by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Each principle is universal and offers practical guidance to the modern seeker.

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Simon Peart
5.0 out of 5 stars It’s a great book!Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 January 2020
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I’ve not completely finished readin the book yet, but I’m really enjoying it. Thanks

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D E Brazier
5.0 out of 5 stars A work of real love.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 April 2020
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This is a delightful volume. Really useful at this challenging time. Sam Torode has put love and understanding into this publication. Emerson’s Philosophy os just what we need, a real tonic. I highly recommend.
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C. Conley
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Wisdom in a Nutshell!!Reviewed in the United States on 8 January 2020
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Sam Torode is a master writer who does not waste words or time. He focuses on the important and does not write "to hear his head rattle." I have been a student of Emerson for over 50 years and this book codifies Emerson's works. I will be reading it again and again. Thank you to Mr. Torode for honoring his soul and sharing his genius and talent with us all.

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BTO#1
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully done.Reviewed in the United States on 29 April 2020
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I write this during the covid crisis. Many things have been said by many people. I needed to take a time out. Get away from the noise. Find peace. And stillness. Within. The book may be small but every word means something. There is no fluff. Only words of inspiration and beautiful truth. Thank you to the author.

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MeriBrite
5.0 out of 5 stars Refreshingly Simple Self KnowledgeReviewed in the United States on 22 March 2020
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Going backwards into historical classics this book is truly reflecting my inner being bringing to light the most important aspects of self knowledge; Emerson’s philosophies are told in many ways as if new discoveries but in fact written in the early 1800’s...!

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Emerson and International Cultureby Dartmouth College Press - Ebook | Scribd

A Power to Translate the World by Dartmouth College Press - Ebook | Scribd

A Power to Translate the World: New Essays on Emerson and International Culture

A Power to Translate the World: New Essays on Emerson and International Culture

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Description

This thought-provoking collection gathers a roster of seasoned Emerson scholars to address anew the way non-American writers and texts influenced Emerson, while also discussing the manner in which Emerson’s writings influenced a diverse array of non-American authors. This volume includes new, original, and engaging research on crucial topics that have for the most part been absent from recent critical literature. While the motivations for this project will be familiar to scholars of literary studies and the history of philosophy, its topics, themes, and texts are distinctly novel. A Power to Translate the World provides a touchstone for a new generation of scholars trying to orient themselves to Emerson’s ongoing relevance to global literature and philosophy.
Philosophy
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A Power to Translate the World
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ISBN: 9781611688290
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A Power to Translate the World
New Essays on Emerson and International Culture

Edited by David LaRocca and Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso


This thought-provoking collection gathers a roster of seasoned Emerson scholars to address anew the way non-American writers and texts influenced Emerson, while also discussing the manner in which Emerson’s writings influenced a diverse array of non-American authors. This volume includes new, original, and engaging research on crucial topics that have for the most part been absent from recent critical literature. While the motivations for this project will be familiar to scholars of literary studies and the history of philosophy, its topics, themes, and texts are distinctly novel. A Power to Translate the World provides a touchstone for a new generation of scholars trying to orient themselves to Emerson’s ongoing relevance to global literature and philosophy.
READ LESSABOUT A POWER TO TRANSLATE THE WORLD
368 pages | 6 1/4 x 9 1/4


Literature and Literary Criticism: GENERAL CRITICISM AND CRITICAL THEORY


View all books from Dartmouth College Press


REVIEWS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction: Thinking Through International Influence—David LaRocca and Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso 

EMERSON BEYOND BORDERS IN HIS TIME 

• The Anti-Slave from Emerson to Obama—Donald E. Pease 
• Emerson, the Indian Brahmo Samaj, and the American Reception of Gandhi—David M. Robinson 
• Transcendentalist Triangulations: The American Goethe and His Female Disciples—Monika M. Elbert 
• Emerson, Great Britain, and the International Struggle for the Rights of the Workingman—Len Gougeon 
• An “Extempore Adventurer” in Italy: Emerson as International Tourist, 1832–1833—Robert D. Habich 

EMERSON AND GLOBAL MODERNITY 

• “Eternal Allusion”: Maeterlinck’s Readings of Emerson’s Somatic Semiotics—David LaRocca
 • Emerson in Germany, 1850–1933: Appreciation and Appropriation—Herwig Friedl 
• Transcendental Modernism: Vicente Huidobro’s Emersonian Poetics—Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso 
• Rilke and Emerson: The Case against Influence as Such—Richard Deming 
• Emerson; or, The Critic—The Arnoldian Ideal—K. L. Evans 
• The “Whole” Conduct of Life: Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry James—Daniel Rosenberg Nutters 

 EMERSON AND THE FAR EAST 

• Emerson and Japan: Finding a Way of Cultural Criticism—Naoko Saito 
• Emerson and China—Neal Dolan and Laura Jane Wey 
• Confucius and Emerson on the Virtue of Self-Reliance—Mathew A. Foust 

EMERSON AND THE NEAR EAST 

• Emerson and Some Jewish Questions—Kenneth S. Sacks 
• Emerson and Jewish Readers—David Mikics 
• Middle Eastern–American Literature: A Contemporary Turn in Emerson Studies—Roger Sedarat 

• Acknowledgments • Abbreviations • Contributors • Index





Emerson and Quakerism. By Yukio Irie.Review by Robert E. Spille,

Review

Quaker History, 57, January, 1968
Emerson and Quakerism. By Yukio Irie. Tokyo, Japan: Kenkyusha. 1967.
150 pages. Copies can be obtained from Pendle Hill, Wallingford, Pa.


 Dr. Yukio Irie of Tokyo and of Pendle Hill has done a very great service
 both to Friends and to Emersonians by this study of the common ground of
 these two forms of religious experience. The advantage of his analysis over those
 of some other Quaker-Emersonian scholars lies in his thorough study of the
 unpublished manuscripts of many of the early sermons, in addition to the better
 known lecture on George Fox and the known facts of his reading of Quaker books
 and his friendships with New Bedford Quakers.
 Dr. Irie's main point is unassailable: that both Transcendentalism and
 Quakerism rest finally on the capacity of each human soul to enter into immediate
 communication with the Divine soul by calling upon the aid of the "Inner Light."
 This is a primary similarity, and it is not surprising that Emerson thought himThis 
 self "more of a Quaker than anything else." But, as Dr. Irie also points out,
 Emerson could not be "anything else" (that is, commit himself exclusively to
 any sect) because with him this is an experience of the individual and can only
 be achieved in "solitude," whereas the Quaker thinks of it as a group experience
 which is intensified by being shared and which incites to group rather than
 individual action.
 Dr. Irie traces the growth of this common emphasis on a self-reliance which
 is in effect a God-reliance from Emerson's earliest days at Harvard to the point
 of his purest transcendentalism, 1836-1838, and then argues that his position
 was very little if any changed between then and 1860 when he wrote his more
 complex and often apparently skeptical essays and lectures. He aims his attack
 mainly at Whicher, Carpenter, and others who have argued for a fundamental
 psychological and theological change in Emerson's position and personality during
 a major crisis between 1838 and 1844. Particularly telling are his point that
 Emerson experienced periods of acute self-distrust and despair at various times
 throughout his life and his argument that, whatever alternatives Emerson offered,
 he always returned finally to a monistic faith in the one moral law. But even
 when these arguments are admitted, Emerson's shift to a more dialectic and
 pragmatic method of presenting his ideas during these years, whatever the reasons,
 as argued and documented by Rusk, Lindeman, and many other Emerson
 students, remains to be explained. Dr. Irie does not undertake this much more
 complex task, but he need not fear to do so because practicality and pragmatism
 are also shared by Emerson with the Quakers.

 University of Pennsylvania Robert E. Spille r

Emerson and Neo-Confucianism: Crossing Paths over the Pacific (공)저: Y. Takanashi

bbm:978-1-137-39507-8/1.pdf





Emerson and Neo-Confucianism: Crossing Paths over the Pacific Paperback – 20 February 2014
by Lawrence Buell (Foreword), Y. Takanashi (Author)
Edition: 1st ed. 2014
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Foreword by Lawrence Buell 
1. Neo-Confucianism, Japan, and 'Nature is Principle': Foundations for a Comparison of Emerson and Zhu Xi 
2. The Fundamental Principle and the Generation of the Universe 
3. Cosmic Law and Human Ethics??? ?? 
4. Realization of the Self???
Conclusion



Edition
1st ed. 2014
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan

Product description

Review
“Takanashi’s comparative work is detailed and thought-provoking, and the book stands as a welcome contribution toward addressing the importance of neo-Confucian influences on the reception of Asian philosophy in America.” (Leah Kalmanson, Religious Studies Review, Vol. 44 (01), March, 2018)


Review
"Yoshio Takanashi's excellent comparative study of Emerson and Zhu Xi, the central philosopher of Neo-Confucianism, illuminates the relationship between American Transcendentalism and Asian philosophical traditions. 

Emerson's influence in Japan arose from the neo-Confucian attributes of his work, which share much with Zhu Xi's concepts of moral sincerity and self-development.

 Takanashi cogently explains their shared recognition of the interplay of 'cosmic law and human ethics,' and substantiates the growing appreciation of Emerson as an ethical and social philosopher." 

-- David M. Robinson, Distinguished Professor of American Literature, Oregon State University, USA and author of Emerson and the Conduct of Life and Natural Life: Thoreau's Worldly Transcendentalism

"Emerson has long been known for his assimilation of the Hindu and Confucian traditions of spiritual wisdom. But Yoshio Takanashi offers new insight with this in-depth study of Emerson's affinity with Neo-Confucian Zhu Xi, discovering their kindred readings of the ethical self as well as natural universe across time and culture. It is exciting to see contemporary scholars catching up with writers of the past in tracing such paths across the Pacific." - Phyllis Cole, Past President of Ralph Waldo Emerson Society and Professor of English, Women's Studies, and American Studies, Penn State Brandywine, USA

About the Author
Author Yoshio Takanashi: Yoshio Takanashi is Professor of English and American Language and Literature at Nagano Prefectural College, Japan. Foreword by Lawrence Buell: Lawrence Buell is Powell M. Cabot Research Professor Emeritus of American Literature at Harvard University, USA.

====
Luke rated it liked it
Shelves: philosophy, history
Detail-oriented comparison of Emerson's writings and Zhu Xi's 12C commentaries on Confucianism, along with historical reception and setting of these ideas in Japan in Emerson's time. So, narrower than most will be looking for. (less)




===
Introduction

 1 . Learning to Be a Sage: Selections from the Conversations of Master Chu,
Arranged Topically by Chu Hsi, trans. with a commentary by Daniel K.
Gardner (Berkley: Univ. of California Press, 1990), 9:8a, 125.
 2 . Ibid., 12:6b, 168.
 3 . Joseph-Marie de G é rando, Histoire comparée des systémes de philosophie
(Paris: Henrichs, 1804). See JMN , 3:362–63 (October 27, 1830): The
rule “Do as you would be done” is found in the “Invariable Medium”
of the Chinese . . . So the Inv. Med. begins with these promising definitions. “The order established by heaven is called Nature . What is
conformed to nature is called law. The establishment of law is called
instruction .”
4 . The Works of Confucius; Containing the Original Texts, trans. Joshua
Marshman (Serampore: Mission Press, 1809), vol. 1. According to
JMN , 5: 120, n. 372, Emerson borrowed Marshman’s Confucius from
the Boston Athenaeum from February 16 to March 1, 1836. He copied many sentences from this into his journal (Ibid., 120–22, March
3, 1836), which shows that he was much impressed with Confucius’
teachings. See also Frederic I. Carpenter, Emerson and Asia (Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 1930), 233; Arthur Christy, The Orient in
American Transcendentalism: A Study of Emerson, Thoreau, and Alcott
(New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1932), 123–27, 317–18; and Arthur
Versluis, American Transcendentalism and Asian Religions (Oxford and
New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1993), 70–71.
 Joshua Marshman (1768–1837) was an English Baptist missionary
and Orientalist in Serampore in India.
5 . The Chinese Classical Work Commonly Called the Four Books, trans.
and illust. with notes by David Collie (Malacca: Mission Press,
1828). See L , 3:179 (June 7, 1843); JMN , 9:7–8 (August 25, 1843),

32–35 (September 13, 1843); Christy, The Orient in American
Transcendentalism, 318–19; and Carpenter, Emerson and Asia, 234.
 David Collie (?–1828) was an English Christian missionary belonging to the London Missionary Society, and principal of the AngloChinese College in Malacca.
 6 . The Dial: A Magazine for Literature, Philosophy, and Religion (New York:
Russel & Russel, 1961), vol. 4, “Ethnical Scriptures,” 205–10 (October
1843). The Dial, a quarterly journal published between July 1840 and
April 1844, served as the chief publication of the Transcendentalists.
Margaret Fuller continued the editorship until March 1842, when
Emerson took her place.
7 . The Chinese Classics , trans. James Legge, 2 vols. (London: Truber,
1861). Emerson copied many sentences from Legge’s translation of the
Doctrine of the Mean into his journal ( JMN, 15:367–72, October 7,
1863). See also Christy, The Orient in American Transcendentalism,
321, and Carpenter, Emerson and Asia, 242.
James Legge (1815–97) was a Scottis h sinologist and representative
of the London Missionary Society in Malacca and Hong Kong (1840–
73), and first professor of Chinese at Oxford University (1876–97).
Convinced of the need for missionaries to be able to comprehend the
ideas and culture of the Chinese, he began in 1841 a translation in
many volumes of the Chinese classics. The first volume was Confucius:
Confucian Analects, the Great Learning, and the Doctrine of the Mean
(1861) and the second The Works of Mencius (1861).
In addition, concerning the translation of the Four Books recently
published, see Daniel K. Gardner, trans. with introduction and commentary, The Four Books: The Basic Teachings of the Later Confucian
Tradition (Indianapolis and Cambridge: Hackett, 2007).

8 . Zhu Xi first attracted attention in Europe as early as the seventeenth
century, and such philosophers and scholars as Leibniz, Malebranche,
de Harlez, Le Gall, J. P. Bruce, and Joseph Needham have studied
his philosophy. The translations of the writings of Zhu Xi to date are
“Notices of Chinese Cosmogony: Formation of the Universe, Heaven,
Earth, Man, Beasts, etc.,” trans. Elijah C. Bridgman [Bridgman (1801–
61) was the first American Protestant missionary to China and laid the
foundations of American sinology], Chinese Repository 18 (1849), 342–
70; The Philosophy of Human Nature by Chu Hsi, trans. J. Percy Bruce
(London: Probsthain, 1922); and Reflections on Things at Hand: The
Neo-Confucian Anthology , trans. Wing-tsit Chan (New York: Columbia
Univ. Press, 1967). See also Shushigaku nyūmon [An introduction 
==
to the philosophy of the Zhu Xi school], vol. 1 of Shushigaku taikei
[The complete writings of the Zhu Xi school], ed. Morohashi Tetsuji,
Yasuoka Masahiro et al. (Tokyo: Meitoku-shuppansha, 1974–83),
491–98. Some Western scholars have made comparative studies of
Zhu Xi and such philosophers as Aristotle, Aquinas, Spinoza, Leibniz,
Bergson, and Whitehead; see Shushigaku nyūmon, 514–17.
 In contrast, studies of Wang Yangming in Europe and America
have been far fewer than those of Zhu Xi. In the twentieth century,
scholars including F. G. Henke, Wing-tsit Chan, Carsun Chang, and
Tu Wei-ming have studied the philosophy of Wang Yangming. The
translations of Wang’s writings to date are The Philosophy of Wang
Yang-ming , trans. Frederick G. Henke (Chicago: Open Court, 1916);
and Instructions for Practical Living and Other Neo-Confucian writings
by Wang Yang-ming, translated with notes by Wing-tsit Chan (New
York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1963). See also Yōmeigaku nyūmon [An
introduction to the philosophy of the Wang Yangming school], vol. 1
of Yōmeigaku taikei [The complete writings of the Wang Yangming
school], ed. Uno Tetsuto, Yasuoka Masahiro et al. (Tokyo: Meitokushuppansha, 1971–74), 385–405.
9 . Confucius: Confucian Analects, the Great Learning, and the Doctrine
of the Mean , trans. James Legge (New York: Dover, 1971), vi. James
Legge wrote, “He[Legge] had seen it objected to his translations that
they were modeled on the views of the great critic and philosopher of
the Song dynasty, the well-known Zhu Xi. . . . He soon became aware,
however, of the beauty and strength of Zhu’s style, the correctness of
his analysis, and comprehension and depth of his thought.”
 10 . Concerning the influence of Hinduism on Emerson, see Shanta
Acharya, The Influence of Indian Thought on Ralph Waldo Emerson
(Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press, 2001); Phyllis Cole, Mary Moody
Emerson and the Origins of Transcendentalism: A Family History(Oxford
and New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1998), 169–70, 177–78; Ralph L.
Rusk, The Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson (New York: Columbia Univ.
Press, 1949), 93; Christy, The Orient in American Transcendentalism,
86–112; and Carpenter, Emerson and Asia , 103–60.
 11 . For the study of Emerson and Buddhism, especially Zen Buddhism,
see John G. Rudy, Emerson and Zen Buddhism (Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin
Mellen Press, 2001); Sh ō ei And ō , Zen and American Transcendentalism:
An Investigation of One’s Self (Tokyo: Hokuseido, 1970), 136–46; and
Van Meter Ames, Zen and American Thought (Honolulu: Univ. of
Hawaii Press, 1962)
===
to the philosophy of the Zhu Xi school], vol. 1 of Shushigaku taikei [The complete writings of the Zhu Xi school], ed. Morohashi Tetsuji, Yasuoka Masahiro et al. (Tokyo: Meitoku-shuppansha, 1974–83), 491–98. Some Western scholars have made comparative studies of Zhu Xi and such philosophers as Aristotle, Aquinas, Spinoza, Leibniz, Bergson, and Whitehead; see Shushigaku nyūmon, 514–17. In contrast, studies of Wang Yangming in Europe and America have been far fewer than those of Zhu Xi. In the twentieth century, scholars including F. G. Henke, Wing-tsit Chan, Carsun Chang, and Tu Wei-ming have studied the philosophy of Wang Yangming. The translations of Wang’s writings to date are The Philosophy of Wang Yang-ming , trans. Frederick G. Henke (Chicago: Open Court, 1916); and Instructions for Practical Living and Other Neo-Confucian writings by Wang Yang-ming, translated with notes by Wing-tsit Chan (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1963). See also Yōmeigaku nyūmon [An introduction to the philosophy of the Wang Yangming school], vol. 1 of Yōmeigaku taikei [The complete writings of the Wang Yangming school], ed. Uno Tetsuto, Yasuoka Masahiro et al. (Tokyo: Meitokushuppansha, 1971–74), 385–405. 9 . Confucius: Confucian Analects, the Great Learning, and the Doctrine of the Mean , trans. James Legge (New York: Dover, 1971), vi. James Legge wrote, “He[Legge] had seen it objected to his translations that they were modeled on the views of the great critic and philosopher of the Song dynasty, the well-known Zhu Xi. . . . He soon became aware, however, of the beauty and strength of Zhu’s style, the correctness of his analysis, and comprehension and depth of his thought.” 10 . Concerning the influence of Hinduism on Emerson, see Shanta Acharya, The Influence of Indian Thought on Ralph Waldo Emerson (Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press, 2001); Phyllis Cole, Mary Moody Emerson and the Origins of Transcendentalism: A Family History(Oxford and New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1998), 169–70, 177–78; Ralph L. Rusk, The Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1949), 93; Christy, The Orient in American Transcendentalism, 86–112; and Carpenter, Emerson and Asia , 103–60. 11 . For the study of Emerson and Buddhism, especially Zen Buddhism, see John G. Rudy, Emerson and Zen Buddhism (Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press, 2001); Sh ō ei And ō , Zen and American Transcendentalism: An Investigation of One’s Self (Tokyo: Hokuseido, 1970), 136–46; and Van Meter Ames, Zen and American Thought (Honolulu: Univ. of Hawaii Press, 1962).
==
 12 . Suzuki played a prominent role in introducing Zen Buddhism to the
Western world during the first half of the twentieth century through
his translations of the Mahā y ā na Buddhist scriptures into English, his
extensive English writings, and his lectures at European and American
universities. In 1868 Suzuki published “Emason no zengaku-ron”
[Emerson’s view of Zen Buddhism] in Zen shū [The Zen sect], no. 14.
Japanese and Chinese names follow the order of family name first
and given name second.
 13 . Suzuki Daisetz T., Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton: Princeton
Univ. Press, 1959), 343–44. For the influence of Emerson on Suzuki,
see Lawrence Buell, Emerson (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of
Harvard Univ. Press, 2003), 196–97.
 14 . For the concept of emptiness of Indian Mah ā y ā na Buddhism, see
Nakamura Hajime, Ryūju [N ā g ā rjuna, ca.150–ca.250] (Tokyo:
Kodansha, 2002); and concerning the influence of the Daoist concept
of “non-being” on Chinese and Japanese Zen and J ō do Buddhism,
see Mori Mikisabur ō , Rōshi Sōshi [Lao Tzu and Chuang Tzu] (Tokyo:
Kodansha, 1994), 375–442.
 15 . Suzuki Daisetzu T., Essays in Zen Buddhism: First Series, ed. Christmas
Humphreys (London: Rider, 1970), 233.
 16 . For Neo-Confucianism, see Zhang Dainian, Key Concepts in Chinese
Philosophy, trans. and ed. Edmund Ryden (New Haven: Yale Univ.
Press, 2002); Tu Wei-ming, Centrality and Commonality: An Essay on
Chung-yung (Honolulu: Univ. Press of Hawaii, 1976); Classics in Chinese
Philosophy, ed. Wade Baskin (New York: Philosophical Library, 1972);
Shimada Kenji, Shushigaku to Yōmeigaku [The philosophies of Zhu Xi
and Wang Yangming] (Tokyo: Iwanami-shoten, 1967); Carsun Chang,
The Development of Neo-Confucian Thought (New York: Bookman
Associates, 1957); and Fun Yu-lan, The Spirit of Chinese Philosophy, trans.
E. R. Hughes (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Truber, 1947), 175–201.
17 . See Carpenter, Emerson and Asia ; Christy, The Orient in American
Transcendentalism; Carl T. Jackson, The Oriental Religions and
American Thought: Nineteenth-Century Explorations (Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood Press, 1981), 45–62; and Arthur Versluis, American
Transcendentalism and Asian Religions, 51–79.
 18 . For a comparative examination between Emerson and Yi Hwang’s
(a Korean Neo-Confucian scholar, 1501–70) poetry, see Shin YeonWoo,
“From Nature to Morality in Emerson and Yi Hwang’s Literature,”
Review of Korean Studies, vol. 11, no. 2 (2008), 75–95.
19 . Carpenter, Emerson and Asia, 247. 

==
20 . Joseph Needham, History of Scientific Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1956), vol. 2 of Science and Civilisation in China,
291–293, 496–505. See also Wing-tsit Chang, “Ōbei no shushigaku”
[The studies of the Zhu Xi school in Europe and America], Shushigaku
nyūmon , 491–529; Chung-Ying Cheng, “Ultimate Origin, Ultimate
Reality, and the Human Condition: Leibniz, Whitehead, and Zhu
Xi,” Journal of Chinese Philosophy, vol. 29, no. 1 (2002), 93–118; and
Albert Ribas, “Leibniz’s Discourse on the Natural Theology of the
Chinese and the Leibniz-Clarke Theology Controversy,” Philosophy
East & West , vol. 53, no. 1 (2003), 68–86.
 21 . Yoshio Takanashi, “Emerson, Japan, and Neo-Confucianism,” ESQ:
A Journal of the American Renaissance, vol. 48, nos. 1–2 (Pullman:
Washington State Univ. Press, 2002), 41–69; and “Emerson and Zhu
Xi: The Role of the ‘Scholar’ in Pursuing ‘Peace,’” Japanese Journal of
American Studies , no. 20 (2009), 113–30. 

--


EMERSON AND QUAKERISM. By YuKIO IRIE. revew by HOWARD H. BRINTON

HC12-50424.pdf 1968

HOWARD H. BRINTON 

Book Reviews EMERSON AND QUAKERISM. By YuKIO IRIE. Kenkyusha, Tokyo. 150 pages (in English). $5.50 from Pendle Hill, Wallingford, Pa. 

This is an important and remarkable book from which both Quakers and Emersonians have something to learn. Dr. Yukio lrie, professor of English at Tokyo University of Education, has a profopnd understanding of Quakerism, as was shown in his lecture on "The Centre of Quakerism" to the Friends World Committee at its meeting in Ireland in 1964; he also has a wide knowledge of Emerson, gained through years of intensive research in America and England in Emerson's published and unpublished letters, essays, sermons, and lectures. He finds that Emerson accepts the fundamental Quaker doctrine of the "universal and saving light" and its social implications. This comes out most clearly in Emerson's lecture on George Fox, whom he considers a great and revolutionary religious genius. But Emerson does not understand the silent meeting for worship. This is not surprising, since in his time the majority of New England Yearly Meeting was beginning to revert to a narrow pre-Quaker evangelicalism. Fortunately Emerson was well read in Quaker literature and was acquainted with some outstanding contemporary Friends, among them Mary Roche and Edward Stabler. Yukio Irie records and answers Emerson's criticism of Quakerism and cites his agreements. Bradford Smith, in his Meditation, the Inward Art, says that 

Walt Whitman was half a Quaker and that 
Emerson said he was more a Quaker than anything else. 

We now need a book on the Quaker half of Whitman. Emerson was the first important person to discover Whitman, possibly because they both shared this kernel of Quakerism. 

Yukio Irie, Emerson and Quakerism, Book Rev고이즈미 이치로

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Yukio Irie, Emerson and Quakerism, 연구회사, 1982년, \1,800(비평 소개)



カ と して は 取 る に 足 らぬ 存 在 だ っ た が 、 ア メ リ カ で は 、 Williarn Penn を指 導者 と し て 開拓 し た Pennsylvaniaを 中 心 と し て New Jersey, Delaware な どの 中部 諸州 で 、 一つ の 強 い 社 会 的 勢 力 を 形 成す る こ とが で きた よ うに 思 わ れ る 。 そ の よ うな 社会 的背 景か ら、Penn , Paine , Woolman , Brockden Brown , Cooper, Whitman , Emerson , Whitder な ど、 ク ェ ー カ リズ ム の 影 響 を強 く示 して い る 作家た ちが 現 わ れ た 。 Henry SeidelCandy の C 痂 ∬ ’‘ Aneericans(lg31 ) は 、 お そ ら く、 こ の 事 実 に 最も早 く注 目 し た 書物 で あ る が 、比 較 的 系統 的 に こ の 閥題 を扱 っ た もの と して は 、 Howard W .Hintz の The 2uaikerlny70sencein AneericanLitera− lure (lg40 )が あ っ た 。 が、 と くに エ マ ソ ン に 対 す る ク エ ー カ リズ ム の 影響 を論 じた も の と して は、 こ の 書 の な か で 著者 が しば し ば 言 及 して い る 、 Frederick B .Tolles の ‘‘ Emefson and Quakerism’ (ig38 ) と Mafy C .Turpie の “ A Quakersource fof Emerson ’s Sermon on the Lord ’s Supper” (i944 )とい う二 つ の 論文 が あ る だ け で あ る。 著 者 は こ の 書 の なか で 、 上 の 二 つ の 論 
文 を踏 ま え な が ら、 そ れ らをは る か に 凌 駕 す る 、 精緻 で 説 得力 の あ る論述 を展 開 して い る 。 Eveer∫on and 2uakeri∫ne と い う書 名か ら、 読者は こ の 書 を エ マ ソ ン の 思想 の きわ め て 限 られた一 面 を扱 っ た 特殊 研究 で あ る か の よ うに 誤 解す るか も知れ ない 。 しか し、 本 書 の 第 三 章 以 下 の 四 章 は 、 そ れ ぞ れ 、 “ Emerson ’s Religious Philosophy ” , { cEmerson , s Practice of Religion,「 , “Emerson as a Poet ,, , tc Emetson as a Monist ” と題 して 、 エ マ ソ ン に お け る 包 括 的 な諸 問題 を論 じて い る こ とか ら も判 る よ うに、 エ マ ソ ン の 全 体 の 像 に 迫 ろ うと志 して い る の は 明 らか で あ る 。 もち ろ ん 著 者 の 基本 的立 場 は 、 第… 章 の “The Quake: Influeflceupon Emerson ” と第 2 章 の “ Emerson ’s ctiticismof Qual〈 erism ’ の な か で 明確に 述べ られ て お り、 こ の 基 本的 な 立 場 と角度 か らエ マ ソ ン の 思 想 全体 を裁 断 して 見 せ た も の で あ る が 、 そ の 裁 断 面 は 、 ‘L Ernersonianism ” と い わ れ て い る も の の 最 も本 質的 な 部分 を明 らか に す る こ と に 成 功 して い る 。 著 者 が 述 べ て い る よ う に 、 ‘‘Self−Reliance ’”や ‘‘The Ovcr −Soul ” な どに 見 られ る 、 人 聞 と神 に 関 す る エ マ ソ ン の 基本 的 な思 想 は 、 ク エ ー カ リズ ム に お け る ‘eSeed of God ” や ‘‘Inner Light’ ” の 理 念 と共 通 す る も の が非常 に 多 く、 両 者 の 一 方 を 明 らか に す る こ と は 同時 に 他方 を 明 らか に す る こ とに な る 場合 が 多 い か らで あ る 。 著 者 は 、 エ マ ソ ン が 聖餐式 に 関す る 最後 の 説 教 を行 な っ て ボ ス トン 第二 教 会の 聖 職 を辞 した r832 年 とい う、 彼 の 精 神史 に お け る 重 要な 時 点 を中心 と して 、 そ れ ま で の 彼 の 多 くの 説教 の 内容 を精 密に辿 り、 こ の 前 後 に 彼 が耽 読 した ク エ ー カ ー関係 の 文 献 や、 彼 が親 し く交わ っ て 深 い 精神 的影 響を 受 けた ニ ュ ー ・ベ ッ ドフ ォ ー ドの ク エ ー カ 

一の 女 性 Mary Rotch や Whittierな ど、 ク エ ー カ ー との 人 間 的接 触 を、 そ の 細部 に い た る ま で 実 証 的 に跡づ けて い て 、 た い へ ん興 味 深 い 。 しか し、 著者 が 、 エ マ ソ ン と ク エ ー カ リズ ム との 、 以 上 の よ うな 具体 的 な接 触 の 事 実を跡づ け る こ とか らさ らに 一 歩 を進 め て 、 エ マ ソ ン の 超 絶主義 の 思想 的 源 流 に ま で さか の ぼ り、 ま た ク エ ー カ リ ズ ム の キ リ ス ト教 的神 秘主 義 を、 エ ッ ク ハ ル トや ヤ コ ブ ・べ 一 メな ど、そ の ヨ ー n ッ パ に お け る源 流に ま で さか の ぼ っ て 、 両者 を 比 較検 討 した な らば、 こ の 書 は さ らに 深 さ と厚 み を加 えた に 違 い な い と思 わ れ る。 最 後 の “ Emerson as a Monist ” と題 す る 章 は 、 エ マ ソ ン の 二 元 論 的 傾 向を 強 調 す る 従 来 の 多 くの ア メ リ カ の 学 者 た ち の 立 場 に 対 して 、 一 元論者 と して の エ マ ソ ン を 論 証 し よ うとこ こ ろみ た 、 い ろ ん な 意味 で 著 者そ の 人 の 個性 の に じ みで た 、 カ の こ も っ た 重 要 な 章 で あ るが 、 多分 多 くの 論議 を呼 ぶ で あ ろ う。 す で に エ マ ソ ン の 存命 中に 、 JamcsRussell Lowell は 、A Fav’le for Critics (1848 )に お V ・ て 、 “ A Greek head on right Yankee shoulders , whose range f Has Olympus for one pQle,for t ’ othet the Exchange ; 1APIotinus−Montaigne, where the Egyptian ’ s gold mist !And the Gascon’s shrewd wit cheek −by−jowl coexist ; ” と書 い て 、 エ マ ソ ン の 二 元 論 的 傾 向 を指摘 し、 エ マ ソ ン 自身 も、 1835 年 5 月 5 日の 日記 の な か で 、 “1 am the practi− cal Idealist.” と:書い て 自分 の 二 元 的傾向 を 承 認 して い る 。 対 立 す る もの の 中間 に 立 つ て 平 衡 感覚 をた の しん で い る か の よ うな 或 る た くま しさ こ そ 、 エ マ ソ ン の 思想 全体 を つ ら ぬ くとこ ろ の 無視 し得な い 特質 で あ っ て 、 これ な くして エ マ ソ ン は 、 ア メ リ カ 思 想 の 源 流 の 一 つ とな る 栄誉 は に な い 得 なか っ た に 違 い ない の で あ る 。 一一 小 泉 一 郎