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In Japanese names here, surname is first. "Baien" was a pen-name, "plum garden". was a physician,
natural philosopher Natural philosophy or philosophy of nature (from Latin ''philosophia naturalis'') is the philosophical study of physics, that is, nature and the physical universe, while ignoring any supernatural influence. It was dominant before the developme ...
and scholar in mid-
Edo Period The , also known as the , is the period between 1600 or 1603 and 1868 in the history of Japan, when the country was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and some 300 regional ''daimyo'', or feudal lords. Emerging from the chaos of the Sengok ...
Japan. He is known as one of the "Three Wise Men of Bungo", along with Banri Hoashi and
Hirose Tansō 270px, South Residence of Hirose Tanso in Mamedamachi Area 3.jpg was a neo-Confucian scholar, teacher and writer in late Edo Period Japan. Biography Hirose was born as the eldest son of Hakataya Saburoemon a wealthy merchant in Uomachi, Mamed ...
.


Biography

Miura Baien was born into the family of a village physician in
Bungo Province was a province of Japan in the area of eastern Kyūshū, corresponding to most of modern Ōita Prefecture, except what is now the cities of Nakatsu and Usa. Bungo bordered on Hyūga to the south, Higo and Chikugo to the west, and Chikuze ...
on the island of
Kyūshū is the third-largest island of Japan's four main islands and the most southerly of the four largest islands (i.e. excluding Okinawa and the other Ryukyu (''Nansei'') Islands). In the past, it has been known as , and . The historical regio ...
, in what is now the Aki neighborhood of the city of
Kunisaki is a small coastal city located in Ōita Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 25,721 in 13082 households, and a population density of 81 persons per km². The total area of the city is . Geography Kunisaki co ...
,
Ōita Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Kyūshū. Ōita Prefecture has a population of 1,081,646 (1 February 2025) and has a geographic area of 6,340 km2 (2,448 sq mi). Ōita Prefecture borders Fukuoka Prefecture to the northwest, K ...
. He trained to become a doctor from the age of 16, and went to study medicine at
Nagasaki , officially , is the capital and the largest Cities of Japan, city of Nagasaki Prefecture on the island of Kyushu in Japan. Founded by the Portuguese, the port of Portuguese_Nagasaki, Nagasaki became the sole Nanban trade, port used for tr ...
at the age of 23. When he was 28, he made a pilgrimage to the
Ise Grand Shrine The , located in Ise, Mie Prefecture of Japan, is a Shinto shrine dedicated to the solar goddess Amaterasu Ōmikami and the grain goddess Toyouke-hime (Toyouke Omikami). Also known simply as , Ise Shrine is a shrine complex composed of many Shi ...
, and after returning to Nagasaki for a period, settled back in his home town of Kunisaki. He refused repeated invitations to take office in the service of various local ''
daimyō were powerful Japanese magnates, feudal lords who, from the 10th century to the early Meiji era, Meiji period in the middle 19th century, ruled most of Japan from their vast hereditary land holdings. They were subordinate to the shogun and no ...
'', preferring to develop his own school of philosophy and academic system, writing on a wide variety of topics ranging from medicine, poetics, social and economic history and critical theory. His writing drew on many sources as well, ranging from the
Chinese classics The Chinese classics or canonical texts are the works of Chinese literature authored prior to the establishment of the imperial Qin dynasty in 221 BC. Prominent examples include the Four Books and Five Classics in the Neo-Confucian traditi ...
to Western astronomical theory,
Japanese Neo-Confucianism Edo Neo-Confucianism, known in Japanese as , refers to the schools of Neo-Confucian philosophy that developed in Japan during the Edo period. Neo-Confucianism reached Japan during the Kamakura period. The philosophy can be characterized as humanis ...
,
Daoism Taoism or Daoism (, ) is a diverse philosophical and religious tradition indigenous to China, emphasizing harmony with the Tao ( zh, p=dào, w=tao4). With a range of meaning in Chinese philosophy, translations of Tao include 'way', 'road', ...
, Buddhist texts and other works such as the writings of
Tao Hongjing Tao Hongjing (456–536), courtesy name Tongming, was a Chinese alchemist, astronomer, calligrapher, military general, musician, physician, and pharmacologist during the Northern and Southern dynasties period. A polymathic individual of many tal ...
. Complex and enigmatic, his philosophical work fell into obscurity after his death until the two volumes of ''Baien Zenshū'' were published in 1912. They received little attention apart from the 1953 publication of Saegusa Hiroto's ''Miura Baien Shū.'' In 1975 the Baien Gakkai was established under the Chairmanship of Ogawa Haruhisa (小川 晴久) of Tokyo University, editor of the annual journal of the Baien Gakkai. Since then conferences have been held annually.


Miura Baien former residence

270px, Miura Baien former residence The former residence of Miura Baien has been preserved as a National Historic Site since 1959. This house was designed and built by Miura Baien himself in 1775, and he lived there for the last ten years of his life. The house is located on the right bank of a river flowing south, facing east on a gentle slope. The building is a one-story thatched house with a narrow garden, room with an earth floor on the right, a parlor living room on the left, and an entrance. Adjacent to this south is a rectangular flat area that is one step higher and extends from north to south. This is the ruins of his academy school, with a low stone wall, stone floor, and well. Further south of the academy ruins is the family cemetery on a small hill, where his grave is located. Approximately 189 square meters in area, the house is now maintained as the "Miura Baien Museum", and contains an observatory, a plum garden, etc., as well as a large collection of handwritten manuscripts. Items in storage include a world map drawn in the Mercator projection (in Miura Baien's own handwriting), and star maps of the southern and northern hemispheres.


Works

Baien wrote in many fields. His major work was ''Gengo'' ("Abstruse Talk", or "Deep Words"), one of his three "''Go''", namely: ''Gengo'', ''Kango'' (Daring Words) and ''Zeigo'' (Random Words). ''Gengo'' was constantly revised and rewritten over a period of 23 years. It is a systemic study of nature. He used the term "''jōri''" with a unique meaning for the principle by which nature is organised. He laid out his system using a lexicon of over 200 new terms. These were created by an ingenious method of pairing ''kanji'' (Chinese characters) so that they take their meaning from each other while retaining an element of their ordinary language meanings. The text is accompanied by numerous diagrams''.''


References in English

De Bary, ed. ''Sources of Japanese Tradition'', Vol. 1, 1958, pp. 489–496. De Bary et al., eds. ''Sources of Japanese Tradition'', Vol. 2, 2005, pp. 424–431. Heisig, Kasulis and Mraldo, eds. ''Japanese Philosophy: a Sourcebook'', Honolulu, 2011, pp. 441–6. Mercer, Rosemary, ''Deep Words'', Leiden, 1991. Mercer, Rosemary: Picturing the Universe, in ''Philosophy East and West'', Vol 48, 3, 1998. Mercer, Rosemary: ''Miura Baien Reader'', eBook, 2016.


English translations

''Genkiron, 1753:'' in ''Deep Words.'' ''Letter to Asada Gōryū'', 1763 in Mercer: Before Our Very Eyes, PhD thesis, 1994, and ''Miura Baien Reader''. ''Kagen'', (Origin of Price), 1773: in ''Miura Baien Reader.'' ''Gengo Honsō,'' ''(''Core text) 1775: in ''Deep Words'' and ''Miura Baien Reader''. ''Gengo Reiji'' (Remarks) 1775: in Before Our Very Eyes and ''Miura Baien Reader.'' ''Letter to Yumisaki Yoshitada'', 1776: in Before Our Very Eyes and ''Miura Baien Reader''. ''Letter to Kō Takaoki'', 1776: in Before Our Very Eyes and ''Miura Baien Reader''. ''Reply to Taga Bokkei'', 1777: in ''Deep Words''. ''Samidaresho'', "Musings in the Summer Rain", 1784: in Hurvitz, Leon, ''Monumenta Nipponica'', 8 and 9. ''Letter to Asada Gōryū'', 1785: in Before Our Very Eyes and ''Miura Baien Reader''.


Key sources in Japanese

Iwami Teruhiko (岩見輝彦著): ''Miura Baien no Seishū no Gaku'', Kyūkoshoin, 1990. Ogawa Haruhisa: ''Miura Baien no Sekai'', Kodensha, 1989. Shimada Kenji and Taguchi Masaharu (島田虔次, 田口正治): "Miura Baien", ''Nihon Shisō Taikei'' 41, Iwanami 1982. (Complete ''Gengo'' text, both in the original ''kanbun'' and a ''wabun'' version). Takahashi Masayasu (高橋正和): ''Miura Baien no Shisō'', Perikansha, 1981. Yanagisawa Minami (柳沢南), ''Miura Baien to Nihon Bunka'' Yanagisawa, Maebashi, 2012


Illustrative quotations

1. From ''Reiji'', “Remarks” 例旨(also translated as “Preface”, or “Exemplification”), Section 8:
“When I use the word “''ki''”, there are the kinds ''ki'' and object, ''ki'' and body, ''ki'' and shape, ''ki'' and matter, ''ki'' and image, heaven and ''ki'', mind and ''ki'', ''ki'' and colour, and so on. When I use “spirit” there are the kinds heaven and spirit, essence and spirit, spirit and object, spirit and soul, phantom and spirit, spirit and man, sagacity and spirit, and so on. When I use “heaven”, there are the kinds heaven and earth, heaven and spirit, heaven and object, heaven and man, heaven and destiny, and so on.   Words are names, subjects are realities. Subjects are heaven, words are man.”
A ''jōri'' term changes its meaning precisely according to the term it is paired with. One key ''jōri'' term is ''ki'' ( 気), to which Baien assigns unique meanings. 2. From ''Honsō'', “Core text”:
“As an illustration, take a piece of brocade. The raw side consists of warp threads and woof threads, scarlet threads and green threads, but on the finished side are flowers, grass, and fabulous birds. The spirit of these comes from the imagination of a clever woman. And so one piece of brocade has a nature that is endowed with two bodies, the raw side and the finished side, a clever seamstress brings spirit to it, objects are fixed to it by silk threads, and an incomprehensible human art attains the mystery of heaven's creation....”
In the first pages of ''Honsō'' the metaphor of the robe illustrates his view of the universe. Phoenixes and dragons may be mythical creatures but here they represent objects such as trees, stars and everyday things. It is as though one side of the universe consists of such things, and this is the real world. But there is another side of the universe that is quite different, for some it may consist of constantly moving atomic particles, for example, and this side too is the real world.   The fact that the two sides are quite different, but inseparable, provides a good example of his terminology. In the two ''jōri'' pairs “whole and side” and “whole and part”, “whole” changes meaning according to whether or not it is paired with “side” or with “part”. “Side” here corresponds to the right side or the wrong side of a fabric, two sides of a whole, one thing. “Part” is a piece of the whole, as the sleeve of a garment is. (The physicist Yukawa Hideki has commented on the applicability of Baien's ''jōri'' system to Böhr's theory of the complementarity of the wave and particle theories of light. ukawa Hideki: ''Baien kenkyū'', 1, 1970. 3. From ''Letter to Yunisaki Yoshitada:'' (Baien writes the characters for
yin and yang Originating in Chinese philosophy, yin and yang (, ), also yinyang or yin-yang, is the concept of opposite cosmic principles or forces that interact, interconnect, and perpetuate each other. Yin and yang can be thought of as complementary an ...
without the left hand radical.)
“The items "yin" and "yang" are first seen in I Ching. However, their sense there was sometimes the Way, sometimes the Forms, and sometimes the Lines. Although I Ching is an account of divination, to look at heaven and earth through that text is like scratching an itching foot without taking off one's sandal. ”
Baien's dualism is his own: it is neither the Chinese yin and yang nor European
dialectic Dialectic (; ), also known as the dialectical method, refers originally to dialogue between people holding different points of view about a subject but wishing to arrive at the truth through reasoned argument. Dialectic resembles debate, but the ...
. Although Baien was well versed in the corpus of Chinese and Japanese scholarship he breaks with tradition. He is not easily described as a member of any school of thought. His individuality makes heavy demands on readers of ''Gengo'', Eastern and Western alike. It might be said that this individuality makes the thought of Miura Baien universally accessible. 4. From ''Letter to Asada Gōryū'', 1763:
“At the beginning of this spring, I reread several of the passages you recommended. I spent several days unrolling volumes. At last I understood your meaning and became overjoyed. . . . Hundreds of scholars have studied calendrical science, but none has reached your level. How fortunate I am to be living here at the same time, and to hear your words. With an instrument you made yourself you discovered black spots moving on the surface of the sun. You discovered the intricate details of the jagged surface of the moon. You learned about the phases of Venus, the movements of the satellites of Saturn and Jupiter, and the orbits of the planets around the sun. You have observed lunar eclipses . . . . Although I cannot understand all your methods you have given me a great notebook for the study of ''jōri.''”
Asada Gōryū was the son of Baien's teacher in the village of Kitsuki. Asada independently discovered Kepler's 3rd law of planetary motion when Japan was closed to the West apart from the Dutch visitors to Nagasaki. Asada studied at the
Kaitokudō The Kaitokudō (Japanese:懐徳堂) was a merchant academy located in Osaka, Japan, during the Edo period, Tokugawa period. Although it opened its doors in 1724, it was founded officially in 1726 by Nakai Shūan. It remained a public institution un ...
, a merchant academy in Osaka. ee Najita Tetsuo: ''Visions of Virtue in Tokugawa Japan''.Information about European texts and ideas was could be brought overland from Nagasaki to Kitsuki and by sea to the Kaitokudō, stimulating scientific study there. Baien himself strove to develop a philosophical unifying theory of everything in the universe rather than a specific science. 5. From ''Reiji'' 例旨, Section 3:
“Oh, I may draw a flower with consummate skill, but it will not bear seeds. I may carve a faithful copy of a bird, but it will never be as beautiful as the original. The craft of heaven borrows nothing from man, and the craft of man can never imitate heaven.”
Baien drew numerous diagrams illustrating parts of his theory but acknowledged that diagrams alone were inadequate to represent the vast and complex ''jōri'' system. 6.  From ''Reiji'' 例旨, Section 2
“Thus, those who desire to read this book can read freely, upstream against the current, following the current downwards, taking something from the left, something from the right, pulling this from the centre, or that from the margin. It is just as one can turn a wheel from any point the hand touches it. ”
After the introductory "Remarks", ''Gengo'' is ordered by the two chapters of ''Honsō'' ("Core Text"), followed by three volumes, each  of which is divided into two sections, the ''Volume of Heaven,'' the ''Volume of Earth'', and the ''Volume of the Small''. These texts elaborate and develop the themes of ''Honsō''. 7. From “Reply to Taga Bokkei”
“Because I do not have an accurate grasp of heaven and earth, my habits of thought must have led me to numerous errors. Therefore in my three books with their many thousands of words, those words that agree with heaven and earth should be attributed to heaven and earth, and those that do not agree with heaven and earth should be imputed to me. One must not trust my words blindly, but verify them by heaven and earth, and accept only those things that heaven and earth show to be correct.”


References


External links


Oita Cultural Heritage
{{DEFAULTSORT:Miura Baien 18th-century Japanese philosophers 1723 births 1789 deaths