Chikao fujisawa biography of william

  • Chikao Fujisawa was a Japanese philosopher and historian, and he lectured on the topics at Nihon University.
  • Contemporary Religions in Japan.
  • Zen and Shinto: A History of Japanese Philosophy.
  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    From the Editorial Board, From the Editor

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    The Religious World in Japan

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of Japan National Commission for UNESCO, Japan: Its Land, People, and Culture

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of Fujisawa Chikao, Concrete Universality of Japanese Way of Thinking

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of Donald Keene, Living Japan

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of Robert E. Hume, The World's Living Religions

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of Frank Cary, History of Christianity in Japan 1859-1908 [82]

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of R.P. Dore, City Life in Japan: Life in a Tokyo Ward

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Questions and Problems

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of John Clark Archer, Faith Men Live By

  • Contemporary Religions in Japan

    Review of Charles S. Braden, The World's Religions

  • Zen and Shinto: A History of Japanese Philosophy

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    By Chikao Fujisawa

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    About this ebook

    This history of Japanese philosophical traditions underscores the importance of Zen and Shinto to the development of Japanese culture.

    How do the Japanese talk about their native philosophy, Shinto, so many years after the Western Allies abolished it as a state religion? What fryst vatten its relationship to Buddhism, and particularly to Zen? How modern can this very ancient creed ever be? These are some of the questions considered in this analytic work by Dr. Chikao Fujisawa, who specializes in the study of traditional Japanese philosophy and its effect on modern society.

    Fujisawa’s work fryst vatten not only a survey of Zen and Shinto, but also an impassioned plea to restore Shinto as the very substans of Japanese life and thought. At the same time,

  • chikao fujisawa biography of william
  • Juji Nakada

    Jūji Nakada

    Nakada in middle age

    Born(1870-10-29)29 October 1870

    Tokyo, Japan

    Died24 September 1939(1939-09-24) (aged 68)
    OccupationHolinessevangelist

    Juji Nakada (中田 重治, Nakada Jūji, 1870–1939) was a Japanese holinessevangelist, known as "the Dwight Moody of Japan" (Stark 28-29), who was the first bishop of the Japan Holiness Church[1] and one of the co-founders of the Oriental Missionary Society (now One Mission Society).[2]

    Biography

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    Personal history

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    Juji Nakada was born on 27 October 1870 in the northern town of Hirosaki in what is now Aomori prefecture, the son of Heisaku, "a samurai of the lowest rank in the Tsugaru domain."(Goodman 48) His father died when Nakada was four leaving his family impoverished. He was raised in the Methodist church. After studying in the Methodist Too college (Daimyo School), in 1888 he enrolled in Tokyo Eiwa Gakko, the forerunner of today's Aoyama Gakuin