Civil Society and Social Science in Yoshihiko Uchida
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Singapore
Springer
2022
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Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
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Online-Zugang: | HWR01 |
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Inhaltsangabe:
- Intro
- Preface
- Intention and Narrative of the Book
- Construction of the Book
- "Civil Society" in the Japanese Connotation
- Explanatory Note
- Contents
- 1 Introduction to Yoshihiko Uchida
- 1.1 The Question of "living"
- 1.1.1 Living
- 1.1.2 Betting
- 1.1.3 Communicating
- 1.1.4 Living Again
- 1.2 Major Works by Yoshihiko Uchida
- 1.2.1 The Birth of Economic Science
- 1.2.2 The World of Capital
- 1.2.3 Intellectual Portrait of Japanese Capitalism
- 1.2.4 Steps of Social Awareness
- 1.2.5 Rambling Toward Academic Inquiry
- 1.2.6 Social Science as a Popular Work
- 1.2.7 Reading and Social Science
- 1.3 Short Biography of Yoshihiko Uchida
- References
- 2 The Origin and Development of Uchida's Social Science
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 The Debate Over Japanese Capitalism and the Kōza School Theory
- 2.2.1 The Kōza School Versus the Rōnō School
- 2.2.2 Structure and Criticism of Yamada's Theory
- 2.3 Civil Society Thought in Wartime
- 2.3.1 Ōtsuka Historiography
- 2.3.2 Taketani's Technology Theory
- 2.3.3 Ōkōchi's Theory of Social Policy
- 2.4 The Prototype of Uchida's Theory of Civil Society
- 2.5 Civil Society Theory and After
- 2.5.1 Civil Society Theory in the Birth of Economic Science
- 2.5.2 Civil Society as an Abstract Concept
- 2.6 Discourse on Academic Inquiry as a Theory of Civil Society Formation
- 2.6.1 Inquiry as Subjective Application
- 2.6.2 Inquiry as a Path from Below
- 2.6.3 Inquiry as a Link Between the Individual and the Universal
- 2.7 Conclusion
- References
- 3 Civil Society and the Metabolic Relationship Between Human Beings and Nature
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Marx's Theory of Metabolism
- 3.2.1 Humans and Nature in Early-Middle Marx
- 3.2.2 Labor as a Mediator of Metabolism
- 3.2.3 Disturbance and Reconstruction of Metabolism
- 3.3 Yoshihiko Uchida's Perspective on Metabolism
- 3.3.1 Productive Forces Perspective in Early Uchida
- 3.3.2 Social Metabolic Process
- 3.3.3 Existence and Extinction of Metabolic Viewpoint in Hajime Kawakami
- 3.4 Reconstruction of Metabolism and Civil Society
- 3.4.1 Yoshihiko Uchida's Perception of Civil Society
- 3.4.2 Civil Society as a Rational Management System for Metabolism
- 3.5 Conclusion
- References
- 4 Science and Inquiry in Hajime Kawakami
- 4.1 Problems with the Conventional Image of Kawakami
- 4.2 Kawakami the Bourgeois Rationalist
- 4.3 A Division of Labor Perspective on History
- 4.4 Economy and Ethics
- 4.5 Tragic Marxism
- 4.6 Conclusion: Kawakami the Literary Man
- References
- 5 Invisible Hand and Manipulative Hand
- 5.1 Introduction: Homo Economicus and Self-interest
- 5.2 Self-interest and Sympathy in Adam Smith
- 5.3 Equation of Self-interests and Justice
- 5.4 Markets and Morality
- 5.5 Inseparability of Incentives and Moral
- 5.6 Civilizing Effect of Incomplete Contract
- 5.7 Conclusion
- References
- 6 In Closing: How to Live in a Society Organized Around the Division of Labor
- 6.1 The Division of Labor as the Basis of Uchida's Social Science
- 6.2 Harmful Effects of the Division of Labor
- 6.3 How Can the Division of Labor Enrich Human Society?
- References