Part 2
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IMAGES OF INOCHI
AMONG CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE
— from published materials
—
In libraries, bookstores, newspapers, and magazines, we can easily find
a number of books and articles which deal with inochi and/or matters
concerning inochi. I have called these ‘inochi publications’.
They include books or articles concerning, for example, death, euthanasia,
abortion, handicapped people, education, sex, religion, ecology, the global
environmental crisis, and the anti-nuclear power movement. They also include
pamphlets and word-processor leaflets handed out at meetings. It must be
stressed that much literature, and many poms, songs, and advertisements
are also to be counted as inochi publications.
I have classified these publications into two categories: primary inochi
publications and secondary inochi publications. The former are publications
which contain the word inochi as a key concept in the title, the
table of contents or the text. The latter are publications that deal with
subjects and events which could be described by using the word inochi
as a key word, but actually use another word for it. In this section we
examine some of the primary inochi publications, and leave the secondary
materials to future investigations. [98/99]
To begin with, let us examine some leaflets from citizens'4 movements.
First, there is a typical understanding of inochi in the leaflet
entitled "A view of qi, No. 2" (1990), issued by a qi-gong
(41) group, the Green and Healing Circle. In this leaflet, the anonymous
secretariat write as follows:
Properties of inochi
The first property is irreplaceability (42). Only one inochi
is given to each living thing, and it cannot be replaced by any other inochi.
Once we lose our inochi, we never get it again. It is stressed that
every inochi, including those of humans and other creatures, is
equally irreplaceable, a belief that is expressed by the stock phrase in
contemporary Japanese, ‘irreplaceable inochi’.
The second property is the process of being born, growing, aging, and
dying, which applies equally to humans, animals, and plants. This understanding
is the most basic way of grasping inochi. [100/101]
The third property defines inochi as being beyond the power of
humans. Inochi being neither come into existence of their own
will nor do they keep on living of their own will. The writers stress that
the existence of inochi beings is founded in something which is
beyond the power of humans. They seem to be implying a relationship between
inochi
and some religious transcendent being.
Living together in mutual support constitutes the fourth property.
Inochi
beings cannot live without the mutual support networks of
inochi
which spread all over the earth. These networks mean, on the one hand,
synchronic mutual support such as human relationships in the family and
food chains in the ecosystem. On the other hand, they mean diachronic mutual
support found in the passing of generations from parents to their children.
From a synchronic point of view, the concepts of ‘living together’ and
‘symbiosis’ are stressed. From a diachronic point of view, the concepts
of ‘succession’ and ‘taking over’ of inochi are stressed.
The fifth property is personality. Every inochi being has
its own personality because there is no creature with completely the same
figure and appearance as another. Therefore, the writers conclude, every
inochi
is irreplaceable.
The sixth property is warmth and breath. The authors of these texts
insist that the Japanese have a strong sympathy for warm breathing beings,
and refer to the relationship of the concept of breath to the ancient meaning
of inochi.
Norms of inochi
There are three norms of inochi.
The first norm is to treasure inochi (43). We should treasure all
inochi
on the earth as well as our own inochi because each of them is irreplaceable
and valuable. Our attitude of treasuring inochi will then change
into a spirit of respect for inochi, and in the end will lead us
toward reverence for the great existence that supports
inochi and
nature. This norm is similar to references such as ‘respect for life’ or
‘dignity of life’ we encounter in materials on bioethics.
The second norm is to support each other (44). As inochi
beings, we should support and help each other in the community and in the
ecosystem because we can live only in the midst of the web of all living
things. The authors of the two school texts say that one’s inochi
not only belongs to him/herself but also belongs to the family and society,
and therefore that it is important to live for others (45). They also insist
that we should recognize the significance of living together with animals
and plants in the wilderness.
The third norm is to do the utmost in one’s power (46). Our inochi
is finite. Inochi beings must die sooner or later, and hence we
should do our best at every moment of our life. The following sentences
show a sophisticated example of this norm. [101/102]
TWO REQUIREMENTS FOR THE CONCEPT OF INOCHI
We have discovered various concepts of inochi in contemporary Japan,
some of which contradict each other. I think it impossible and dangerous
to attempt to summarize this vast set of images and classify them in patterns
at this stage, because it may lead us to discard a number of subtle features
which may also prove valuable.
Instead, I present in this section some philosophical interpretations of
the concept of inochi. These interpretations are based on the conceptual
understanding I have acquired through my research on the images of inochi.
However, it may be helpful here to briefly summarize some of the main characteristics
noted so far. First, there are many people who think that inochi
equally given to humans, animals, plants —to all creatures— and that inochi
beings live by both supporting and killing each other. Inochi is
energy which keeps creatures alive, and at the same time it means the state
of being alive itself. Images of inochi have close relationships
to birth, growth, aging, and death. One’s inochi is irreplaceable,
important, and beyond our power. It is finite, but at the same time it
is connected to others in space and time forever.
Let us turn to some philosophical examinations. Two requirements must be
fulfilled for something to be called inochi. First, inochi
must be a ‘phase’, not an object nor an entity. Inochi is not an
object such as a book, a flower, or a rabbit, but a phase which a flower
and a rabbit enjoy. In the responses to my questionnaire, most respondents
use the word ‘inochi being’, rather than ‘inochi’, when they
explicitly indicate an object that has inochi. This suggests that
inochi
is considered to be a kind of phase or aspect which inochi beings
must possess. Then, we have to go on to ask, in turn, what are ‘inochi
beings’?
‘Inochi being’ is a concept which includes humans and other creatures
as its core, and also includes the sea, air, the ecosystem, the earth and
the universe at its fringe. What features stand out prominently when we
put humans and other creatures at the core, and others at the fringe? The
most moderate answer would be: a phase in which they are born, grow, give
birth, age, and die. Of course, even the earth and stars are born, age,
and die, but we can grasp this phase more vividly in humans and other creatures
than we can in the stars. Hence, the first requirement is: inochi must
be a phase in which things are born, grow, give birth, age, and die.
Inochi
beings are those [103/104] things in the universe that are viewed
in this phase (49). For example, if we regard a rabbit jumping in front
of us as an animal in a growing stage, we have grasped it as an inochi
being. Similarly, if we regard a star as a being which was born a long
time ago, grows, gives birth to planets, ages to become a neutron star,
and dies, we have grasped it as an inochi being. If you believe
that all creatures were born through intercourse between the North Pole
liquid and the South Pole liquid of the earth, as Fourier did (50), then
you regard the earth as an inochi being.
This means that an inochi being is not necessarily equal to a creature
as perceived by most people. A creature can be a non-inochi being
when we do not regard it as being part of this phase. For example, even
a living rabbit can be a non-inochi being to a biochemist in a laboratory,
who regards it only as an aggregate of biochemical substances. We should
pay attention to the phrase ‘to a biochemist’, because the concept of ‘inochi
being’ is an observer-relative concept. A thing becomes an inochi
being for the observer only if it is viewed within the phase of inochi.
Hence, a thing can be an inochi being for one person, but not for
another. If inochi being is an observer-relative concept, the extent
of inochi beings cannot be defined objectively and unanimously,
independently of the observer. Therefore we have the case where some think
of all living things as inochi beings, while others restrict the
extent to humans. Both are correct. No contradiction exists in this usage.
The second requirement is that inochi must possess the characteristics
of both finiteness and infiniteness. Finiteness means the discontinuity
and limitation of the individual inochi being. Infiniteness means
the succession of and inter-relationships between the many networks of
inochi
beings. Throughout the responses to the questionnaires and the publications
cited, the co-existence of these two characteristics is repeatedly emphasized.
Let us consider the finiteness of inochi first. Inochi is
finite in time in that all inochi beings must die sooner or later.
In the linguistic examination of inochi, we came acrosss one connotation
of the state of being alive, during the period between birth and death.
This was reinforced by many responses which stated the same. Inochi
is finite in space as well. In this sense, a rabbit’s inochi is
not the same as mine or yours. You may die while I still live. Our inochis
are divided in space, and in this regard we are alone (51).
On the other hand, inochi is also infinite. First, it is infinite
in time. In the responses and publications it is evident that inochi
is seen as being handed down from one generation to another, with the succession
of inochi going on forever. This succession consists of physical
inheritance, the succession of power and energy, spiritual influence, a
way of life, reminders, culture, and so on. Inochi is infinite in
space too. A web of inochi spreads to include all individual inochi
beings in the form of food [104/105] chains and exchanges of chemical
substances. The extension of this web can be considered to spread over
the whole universe.
For something to be recognized as inochi, it should have both these
characteristics at once. Recall the assertion of the qi-gong group,
that "all inochis are connected and formed into one while each individual
inochi
is voluntary and independent", and the words of one of the respondents:
"Inochi is, on the one hand, each individual being, unique and irreplaceable.
On the other hand, however, it is one large inochi of the whole
human race". These sentences clearly illustrate the second requirement
for the concept of inochi, the dialectic of finiteness and infiniteness.
Hence, we can propose the two requirements for the concept of inochi
as follows.
(1) Inochi must be a phase in which things are born, grow, give
birth, age, and die.
(2) Inochi must possess the characteristics of both finiteness and
infiniteness.
All things in the universe which satisfy both these requirements should
then be identified as inochi beings. This formula can thus be understood
as a proposed definition of inochi. However, it should be noted
that this concept or definition of inochi does not cover all usages
of the word ‘inochi’ to be found in the questionnaire responses
and publications. It is impossible to discover a simple set of formulae
which covers all usages of inochi. Rather I suggest that this proposed
definition be regarded as a basic guideline for the use of the term in
research and discussions on the topic (52). Since this definition is open
to free criticism, it may be altered in the future.
We should keep in mind that this formula, determined by the above requirements,
stands for only the necessary conditions of the concept of inochi.
Hence I will now turn to the topic of the essence of the concept
of inochi.
METAPHYSICAL INTERPRETATIONS OF THE CONCEPT OF INOCHI
In this section I interpret the dialectic of finiteness and infiniteness
of the concept of inochi metaphysically, and elucidate its inner
structure.
Inochi must possess the characteristics of both finiteness and infiniteness.
This seems to suggest that A is B and not B. Hence the necessity of making
clear the logical relationship between ‘finiteness’ and ‘infiniteness’
in relation to the concept of inochi. [105/106]
Let us take the example of a flower. There is a flower before me. The word
‘a flower’ suggests that I should understand it as an individual inochi
being. This flower will shrivel and die someday. When it dies, nothing
else will be able to die for it. The flower must die its own death, only
once, and never live again the same existence in this world. This means
that the whole life and death of this flower is irreplaceable. This suggests
further that every moment of its life is irreplaceable because no other
flower will be able to live again the same course of life as this flower.
Inevitable death makes every moment of life irreplaceable for an inochi
being. Therefore, irreplaceability, derived from the finiteness of time
and space, must be considered to be one of the most basic features of inochi.
This was, in fact, supported by many of the questionnaire responses and
found often in the publications.
Now let us regard this flower from another angle. This flower is living
now because a part of its life was passed down from its ancestors in the
form of a seed. Without its ancestors and their seeds, this flower would
not exist at all. This flower will also distribute its own seeds before
dying, and some of them will grow to be flowers somewhere on this earth.
Even if it doesn’t distribute seeds, the influences of its photosynthesis
and metabolic functions will have irreversible effects on the environment,
and these effects will cause other small effects in succession, forever,
throughout the universe. Moreover, in order to live, this flower has to
exchange air, minerals, and other chemical matters with the environment
and other creatures. Without the web of inochi beings surrounding
it this flower cannot live. We consider interrelatedness of this kind,
derived from the infiniteness of time and space, to be another most basic
feature of inochi.
All inochi beings are on the one hand irreplaceable, and on the
other hand interrelated. Expressions such as ‘the period between birth
and death’ and ‘the most essential part of an object’ are corollaries of,
or ideas related to, ‘irreplaceability’. Expressions such as ’mysterious
power or energy’ and ‘eternal life’ are corollaries of, or ideas related
to, ‘interrelatedness’. Also recall the properties of inochi found
in the books issued by the Ministry of Education. They expressly state
the ‘irreplaceability’ of inochi. The properties of ‘beyond the
power of humans’ and ‘personality’ are also directly related to this idea,
and ‘living together in mutual support expresses interrelatedness (53).
To regard an inochi being from the viewpoints of irreplaceability
and interrelatedness is to consider it always against the background of
the universe. This leads us to a metaphysical or religious view of inochi,
because it makes us realize the position inochi possesses in the
universe.
The inochi of the flower is irreplaceable in that it lives and dies
only once in this universe. Its inochi is interrelated in that it
cannot exist without its ancestors, and it cannot live without an environment
full of water, air, light, and other inochi beings such as microbes;
and in that even after its death its inochi allows other inochi
beings, [106/107] such as animals or microbes, to live. A flower
appears and disappears only at a particular place in the universe. And
it can only exist by being interwoven in the infinite web of inochi
that spreads throughout the universe.
Take another case, that of a terminally ill patient in a hospital. He is
conscious but his days are short. His inochi is irreplaceable
because he has lived a life full of ups and downs, is dying here at the
hospital alone, and after his death he will never live again the same life
in this world. He is sometimes seized with a strong fear of death, and
attempts to give some meaning to his whole life in order to reconcile himself
to it. His inochi is interrelated in that he remains alive
with the help of medical equipment and the medical staff, and in the sense
that his spirit is healed by the smile of a nurse, or that his condition
makes his family happy or sad. He will die an irreplaceable and interrelated
death.
To live and die is to lead one’s own life only once in space and time.
To live and die is to lead one’s own life in the midst of infinite networks
of inochi in the universe.
Here arise the following metaphysical questions. What is it that makes
inochi
irreplaceable? What is it that makes inochi interrelated?
Inochi becomes irreplaceable when an inochi being is interrelated
to others; that is to say, it is interwoven in the infinite networks of
inochi
in space and time, supporting and killing each other. Inochi becomes
interrelated when an inochi being is irreplaceable; that is to say,
it lives and dies its own life only once in the universe, not as parts
which can be replaced with another being. In other words, the irreplaceability
of inochi comes into existence because all inochi beings
are interrelated in the universe. The interrelatedness of inochi
comes into existence because each individual inochi being is irreplaceable.
What these sentences suggest is that the two basic properties of inochi
are metaphysically grounded in each other, and that there is no other factor
upon which these properties are transcendentally grounded. Inochi
is irreplaceable because it is interrelated. Inochi is interrelated
because it is irreplaceable. This is a circular argument. However the ultimate
metaphysical grounds of a conceptual framework should be either transcendent
a
priori or circulative. The metaphysical interpretation I select is
the latter. I shall consider these propositions to be the metaphysical
structure of inochi. The definition of this structure is as follows.
A PERSPECTIVE OF THE STUDY OF LIFE
Before closing, I would like to describe here a brief outline of ‘the study
of life’ which I have advocated since 1988, and which provides the framework
for this paper.
The study of life does not deal with restricted academic subjects that
belong to any one traditional discipline. Instead, it deals with all subjects
concerning ‘life’ comprehensively, from various points of view, with the
help of knowledge from each academic discipline. Hence the study of life
is open to various methods of research, such as philosophical analysis,
religious contemplation, social fieldwork and clarification through scientific
investigation. The study of life will deal with difficult [110/111]
problems
concerning bioethics, environmental issues, terminal care, health policy,
the sociology of science, genetic engineering, the psychology of the environment
(65), medical anthropology, the history of life, war an peace, violence,
and many other subjects.
Today’s problems concerning life share a number of closely connected factors.
Therefore we can neither solve nor even grasp these problems if we persist
in just one academic specialty and restrict our attention to the subjects
that are supposed to belong to it. Only a comprehensive approach will yield
rewarding results (66).
In order to research such problems comprehensively, I have proposed that
a number of researchers who are interested in this approach (this should
include such people as academicians, journalists, specialists, and lay
persons) form research networks and then exchange arguments and information.
I have also proposed that these networks should work as non-governmental
organizations, and not constitute a fixed academy or discipline.
I have defined the study of life as a study which researches the present
relationship between humans and life, and also the types of relationship
we should form in the future, in the context of modern civilization with
science and technology (1988a). In order to do this, we need to study the
history of the relationships between humans and life (inochi beings)
and clarify the historical meanings of these relationships. For example,
we should study the history of agriculture, medicine, religion, and war
from the viewpoint of the study of life. We also need to study present
issues concerning life, by investigating gene technology, bioethics, global
environmental problems, our attitudes toward nuclear weapons and nuclear
energy plants, and so on. Then we should go on to propose what relationship
we should form with life, scientific technology and civilization in the
future. At the same time, there is also a need to study images and concepts
of life from the past to the present. We can study the present images and
ideas of life through sociological and ethical investigations from around
the world. We should also examine the world history of ideas involving
the concepts or understandings of life. Moreover, we are always faces with
the subject of how to live and die on this limited earth in finite space
and time. To address this we must reexamine our lifestyles in modern society
as well as our ways of dying.
This paper falls under the study of images and ideas of life. In it I have
attempted to analyze this subject cultural-anthropologically, philosophically,
and religiously. This is the kind of investigation that should be representative
in the study of life.
The problems of life in a global age concern almost all subjects, and have
considerable diversity. They contain micro-level problems such as the existence
[111/112]
of
certain molecules in a DNA sequence, and macro-level problems such as the
maintenance of the biosphere of the earth. They also contain such bioethical
problems as the withdrawing of life support systems from a severely handicapped
newborn; and such environmental problems as toxic and radioactive substances
which will condense and settle in the biosphere at a slow pace.
These problems have two features. We can, on the one hand, grasp them by
paying attention to facts and situations in our daily life, because all
these problems have some relationship to everyday life. For example by
paying attention to the situation of everyday water and food, we can discover
environmental pollution in the local areas. Japan is also beginning to
encounter more and more the problem of senile or terminally ill patients
who must be cared for in the home.
On the other hand, it is only possible for us to grasp most of these problems
in our imagination. For example we cannot look a the defects of genes of
an embryo directly. Most of us have not directly seen a brain-dead person
in an Intensive Care Unit, nor have we seen the actual destruction of a
rain forest. We know of these things only through books, articles, and
TVprograms. Through discussions we are continuously constructing these
images in our imaginations. In a sense, global environmental issues and
the problems of advanced medicine exist only in our imaginations, as we
have no real experience of them.
This suggests that we should pay attention to our everyday life, with all
the power of our imagination, in order to grasp the shape of problems in
their entirety. This means further that we will then come to an era in
which we discover and solve a problem with the help of a combination of
a variety of imaginative perceptions. In this sense the study of life should
prove to be an intellectual activity in the era of imagination.
I have stated that the study of life must be a study by which all inochi
beings can live a better life and die a better death (1988b). I believe
this sentiment expresses the ultimate aim of the study of life. This paper
is only a first step toward achieving such an aim.
Acknowledgements
An earlier version of this paper was read at a meeting of the Nichibunken’s
joint research unit on the "Stratification of Intellectual Ideas in Japan"
(March 29, 1990). I would like to express my gratitude to Professor Yamaori
Tetsuo, the organizer, and to the other members for their helpful comments
and criticisms.
I would also like to express my gratitude to Dr. Darryl Macer for his valuable
advice on biotechnology and bioethics; and to Pauline Kent for her helpful
academic comments and advice.
1 ‘The
study of life’ is a translation from the Japanese seimeigaku. These
words were first introduced when I published Seimei Gaku eno
Shotai (An Invitation to the Study of Life), in 1988.
2
B. Commoner expresses this as "everything must go somewhere". (Commoner,
1971)
3
There are no objective statistics that show the Japanese view of the universe.
Through interviews and quesitonnaires, I formed the impression that most
Japanese have an organic or holistic view of the universe and the life-world.
4
Some bioethicists who maintain the ‘person argument’ answer in the negative
to this question.
5
This question shares some important points with that of abortion. Some
bioethicists support abortion as a woman’s right. See Thomson (1971).
6
We can easily find the same conflict in recent controversies on brain death
and organ transplants in Japan. Throughout the 1980’s there were nation-wide
debates on whether we should resume heart transplantation from a brain-dead
person, which was performed at Sapporo Medical University in 1968 and has
long been a taboo in our society because of a dubious determination of
brain death and the failure of the transplantation in the Sapporo case
(Nakajima, 1985). One of the main points in the brain death debates in
Japan in the 1980’s was whether the dignity of a brain-dead person and
his/her family’s rights are protected during the process in the intensive
care unit and operating room. We should regard this as collision between
respect for life and advanced medical technology, because a national survey
shows nearly half of the Japanese people hesitate to think of a brain-dead
person as being dead. See also Morioka (1989).
7
Among traditional religions, Christianity has played the most important
role in modern medical ethics, in particular, in the problems of abortion
and euthanasia. During the last few decades the Catholic position has played
an initial stimulating role in medical ethics.
8
Here I do not intend to suggest that religious approaches are meaningless
nor that religion itself is meaningless. I believe life is a religious
matter. What I want to condemn is the attitude of some religious groups
which persist in one traditional interpretation of holy principles and
exclude the possibility of another religion, or who close their eyes to
contemporary ethical and social issues.
9
In Japanese, there are three ways of writing the word inochi: first,
using the hiragana syllabic alphabet, second, with the katakana
syllabic alphabet, and third, using Chinese characters. The fist and third
are popular. The second is rare today.
10 We
write the word seimei by using only the Chinese characters. These
Chinese characters are the same as those for inochi. This means
that these characters can be read either as seimei or as inochi.
The writer can designate the way of reading by furigana (hiragana
printed at the side of the Chinese characters to indicate the reading).
When there is no furigana, the reader should select the reading of the
Chinese characters for himself/herself.
11 [Chinese
character is shown in the original bilingual text.]
12 This
phrase is to be found in the Analects of Confucius, ch. Zi-han.
13 [Chinese
characters are shown in the original bilingual text.]
14 (In
Japanese) inochi no sentaku.
15 (In
Japanese) inochi no sakari.
16 (In
Japanese) inochi ga moe tsukiru.
17 (In
Japanese) inochi ga owaru, inochi wo ushinau, inochi wo otosu.
18 (In
Japanese) inochi ga chijimu.
19 (In
Japanese) inochi ga mijikai.
20 (In
Japanese) inochi wo azukeru.
21 (In
Japanese) inochi biroi.
22 (In
Japanese) inochi tori.
23 (In
Japanese) ningyo no inochi; ningyo wa kao ga inochi.
24 It
is strange that there is no example of the last meaning even in the most
influential Japanese dictionaries, Iwanami’s Kojien and Shogakukan’s
Japanese dictionary. In this usage, the concept of eternity also exists
in the word inochi itself.
25 This
research is ongoing. I intend to continue until the turn of the century.
The questionnarie, a white paper 36.3 cm high and 25.5 wide, has only one
question at the top and a check list of attributes at the bottom. Hence
a respondent can freely express his/her images of inochi in words,
in sentences, and even in the form of cartoons and pictures. Names and
complete addresses are not required. I have already collected several hundreds
replies, and the age/sex/occupation/religion of the respondents are diverse.
Because this is a preliminary report of this research, I have, as yet,
no conclusions. I plan to publish all the important replies with the objective
statistics after the research is completed. I also plan to carry out the
same research overseas in the future. I conducted an inochi image
survey similar to this one when I was a researcher of the Kihara Memorial
Foundation in 1986. A part of the results was published in Morioka (1987a).
26 (In
Japanese) ‘Inochi’ to iu kotoba wo kiite kokoro ni ukabu imeiji
ya, ‘inochi’ ni tsuite fudan kangaete iru koto nadowo, bunsho ya e de,
jiyu ni kaite kudasai.
27 The
sign ‘—‘ indicates no answer.
28 For
example, the title of an anti-nuclear power plant newsletter issued by
women in Ishikawa prefecture is: No Nuclear Power Plants for Future
Inochi!
29 Blaise
Pascal, Pensées. Lafuma (1963), ch. 174-177.
30 (In
Japanese) hakanai.
31 For
example, the holistic thoughts of Leibniz and the Upanishad.
32 This
expression can be found, for example, in the text of Okuchi (1984: 40)
and in Ueda (1989: 93, 144): and in the title of Yanase (1988).
33 The
word ‘-san’ is a polite suffix used when addressing someone in Japanese.
34 With
the drawing of a large ‘?’ at the center.
35 The
respondent herself uses these parentheses here.
36 Nakamura
(1987: 212-266)
37 Some
Japanese stress this concept in the context of bioethics. See Morioka (1988a:
ch.6).
38 I,
myself, try to think of these as matters of inochi in the study
of life.
39 In
ancient Japanese there is the word tama which means on the one hand
‘a ball’, and on the other hand ‘soul’. Inochi has a close relationship
to tama in Japanese.
40 Lovelock
(1979).
41 Qi-gong
(Japanese pronunciation: ki-ko) is a kind of group therapy whose roots
go back to ancient traditional Chinese medicine. Participants in qi-gong,
usually in a group, move their bodies slowly in a mountain setting or a
garden, and feel nature’s energy and stream (=qi). The concept of
qi
has a close relationship to that of inochi.
42 (In
Japanese) kakegae no nasa.
43 (In
Japanese) inochi wo taisetu ni suru.
44 (In
Japanese) sasae au.
45 This
insistence seems to imply a collectivism that might lead to the repression
of the basic freedoms of the individual.
46 (In
Japanese) seiippai ni naru.
47 The
Ministry of Education (1988b: 25)
48 Wittgenstein
(1969), ch.275.
49 In
the previous sections I have not strictly differentiated ‘inochi’
and ‘inochi being’, because the respondents and the writers themselves
have not strictly differentiated these concepts.
50 Fourier
(1846).
51 This
point is closely connected to the I-thou problem in philosophy. See Morioka
(1988a) ch. 9; Morioka (1987b).
52 There
may be some people who regard inochi only as the state of being
alive, and do not accept in it any kind of infiniteness at all. On the
contrary, there may be those who regard inochi only as a large stream,
and completely deny its finiteness. These usages should be considered wrong
because they do not follow our guidelines on the usage of the word inochi.
Of course there are a number of responses that refer only to either finiteness
or infiniteness, but I believe this does not necessarily mean that the
respondent denies the opposite. I suppose they simply stress one side of
its character.
53 The
other properties , ‘birth, growth, aging, and death’ and ‘warmth and breath’,
belong to the first requirement.
54 This
structure reminds me of the well-known passage "Matter is empty. Empty
is matter," from the Prajna Pramita Hrdaya Sutra. However, these
two ideas have different contexts, and therefore cannot be identified easily.
55 For
example, Singer (1974).
56 For
example, Leopold (1949) and Callicott (1989). As for ‘anthropocentric’
and ‘biocentric’, see Taylor (1986). Naess (1973) and Goodpaster (1979)
use the terms ‘shallow’ and ‘deep’.
57 Morioka
(1988b). In this book I used the term ‘the principle of others’ and ‘the
principle of biosphere’, corresponding to individuality and sphere respectively.
We can find a good example of the solution to this conflict in Taylor (1986).
58 This
does not mean that this particle is an entity, because inochi is
a phase, an observer-relative concept. This means that this particle is
made up of a phase, not of an entity.
59 The
image of the stream of inochi appeared clearly in the texts of Zhu
Zi (12c.) in China, and some texts of Confucianists (17-18c.) in the
Edo period in Japan, as the stream of qi. I plan to make clear the
relationship between the concept of inochi and qi in the
context of Confucianism. Callicott and Ames (1989) present important material
for investigating this subject.
60 These
explanations are very similar to the metaphysics of Zhu Zi, who
reinterpreted traditional Chinese thought. He says that when formless qi
settles it forms a human being. According to Ohama (1983: 73), Zhu Zi’s
qi
is a formless movement flowing through all time, filling all space. Traditional
understandings of qi in China have obviously influenced our images
of inochi.
61 This
dialectic of particle and stream reminds me of the so-called Copenhagen
School’s interpretation of the quantum theory that the ultimate existence
of matter is a particle from one angle, and a wave from the other angle.
62 We
should note that phenomenology had to reappraise the importance of ‘tangible’
feelings when examining the concept of body. See Merleau-Ponty (1945).
63 These
contentions appear extremely strange from the viewpoint of orthodox philosophy.
However, it is also true that in some of my interviews some nurses reported
experiences with patients such as described here in the text. This topic
has a close relation to the theory of nursing and the philosophy of caring.
I am in the process of preparing a paper which deals with this topic.
64 It
is interesting that J. Locke, one of the founders of the modern cognitive
theory, stresses the ‘power’ in an object which produces ideas in the observer’s
mind. This concept of Locke’s can be understood in a vitalistic way as
has been made apparent in this paper. See Nidditch (1975), ch. 8, sec.
8.
65 For
example, J. E. Mack’s draft, ‘Inventing a Psychology of the Environment’,
read at the Center for Psychological Studies in the Nuclear Age (May 3,
1990, at Harvard University), refers to this subject.
66 In
this connection, I was very impressed at the first Council of the Europe
Symposium on Bioethics, in 1989, when a participant insisted from the floor
that we should also deal with ecological issues, and the chairman rejected
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