書誌事項

Yojokun : life lessons from a samurai

Kaibara Ekiken ; translation by William Scott Wilson

Kodansha International, 2008

1st ed

タイトル別名

養生訓 : 英文版

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 33

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Translation of: 養生訓

Includes bibliographical references (p. 251) and index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

ISBN 9784770030771

目次

  • 1 The Way of Nurturing Life
  • 2 Food,Drink,and Sexual Desire
  • 3 Foodstuffs
  • 4 Thoughts on Overeating and Treatment for Various Illnesses
  • 5 The Five Officials
  • 6 Disease,Your Doctor,and the Art of Medicine
  • 7 The Use of Medicine
  • 8 Sustaining Old Age

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内容説明・目次

巻冊次

ISBN 9784770030771

内容説明

The dawn of the 17th century saw peace descend on Japan. With the value of their martial skills on the decline, the samurai sought new spiritual, moral, psychological and physical moorings. Tsunetomo Yamamoto, author of the now-classic "Hagakure", combined a Confucian sense of justice with a Zen-influenced abandonment of the ego to espouse loyalty and death as paramount qualities of the samurai's calling. Kaibara Ekiken, a samurai physician with philosophical and Buddhist leanings, took the opposite tact. He sought ways for a healthier, more rewarding life.In "Yojokun: Life Lessons from a Samurai", Ekiken collected six decades of study and observation to compile one of the most remarkable commentaries of his age. He combined his knowledge of holistic health, the principles of ch'i (the material force that pervades all things) and jin ('human heartedness'), Buddhism, Confucianism and the art of living - he addressed concerns that ran from mental and physical health to spiritual matters. Yojokun offers startlingly profound and fresh insights into many of the same problems that concern most of us today.William Scott Wilson notes Ekiken's relevance for the 21st Century: 'The Yojokun, then, is not just a vestige of quaint Orientalia, but rather a living guide to a traditional Way of life and balanced health. If we do not immediately understand some of its more exotic prescripts, it may be wiser not to dismiss them outright, but to approach the work as Ekiken himself might have: with humility, curiosity, respect and imagination'. This is a companion to the best-selling "Hagakure", revealing the wisdom of a samurai's Way of Life. It does for the samurai Code of Life what "Hagakure" did for the samurai Code of Honourable Death. This is the first translation of this classic Japanese text, with a detailed foreword by renowned translator William Scott Wilson.

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