Tracing Karma in Meiji Japan: The Global Entanglement of Religion, Morality and Science

Despite its doctrinal importance, the concept of karma or karmic causality has come to occupy a complicated place in contemporary Japanese Buddhism, due to its historical connection with discrimination against outcast groups and disabled people. Furthermore, among post-war Japanese intellectuals, th...

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Autore principale: Kameyama, Mitsuhiro (Autore)
Tipo di documento: Elettronico Articolo
Lingua:Inglese
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Pubblicazione: Brill 2022
In: Journal of Religion in Japan
Anno: 2022, Volume: 11, Fascicolo: 3, Pagine: 205-235
(sequenze di) soggetti normati:B Periodo Meiji / Karma / Idea guida / Buddhismo <motivo> / Rimodernamento / Discorso
Notazioni IxTheo:AB Filosofia delle religioni
AD Sociologia delle religioni
BL Buddhismo
KBM Asia
NAB Teologia fondamentale
NBD Creazione
NBL Predestinazione
NCC Etica sociale
TJ Età moderna
Altre parole chiave:B civil morality
B Modern Japanese Buddhism
B World’s Parliament of Religions
B Karma
B Materialism
B karmic causality
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Riepilogo:Despite its doctrinal importance, the concept of karma or karmic causality has come to occupy a complicated place in contemporary Japanese Buddhism, due to its historical connection with discrimination against outcast groups and disabled people. Furthermore, among post-war Japanese intellectuals, the idea of karma has often invoked criticism in the context of modern values such as free will and human potential. Against this conventional framework, this paper demonstrates how the concept of karma was the focus of intense interest among Meiji Japanese intellectuals and a center concern in the developing global network of modern Buddhists. At the intersection of the multifaceted problems facing the Buddhist world at that time—namely, the Buddhist search for scientific religion, civil morality in the nation-building process, reformulating Buddhism for non-Japanese audiences, and the confrontation with competing forms of Western thought—lies the relatively unexamined story of karma in Meiji Japan (1868–1912).
ISSN:2211-8349
Comprende:Enthalten in: Journal of Religion in Japan
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/22118349-20221002