CHAPTER |
|
PAGE |
I. |
DIFFICULTIES |
1 |
II. |
STRANGENESS AND CHARM |
5 |
III. |
THE ANCIENT CULT |
21 |
IV. |
THE RELIGION OF THE HOME |
33 |
V. |
THE JAPANESE FAMILY |
55 |
VI. |
THE COMMUNAL CULT |
81 |
VII. |
DEVELOPMENTS OF SHINTÔ |
107 |
VIII. |
WORSHIP AND PURIFICATION |
133 |
IX. |
THE RULE OF THE DEAD |
157 |
X. |
THE INTRODUCTION OF BUDDHISM |
183 |
XI. |
THE HIGHER BUDDHISM |
207 |
XII. |
THE SOCIAL ORGANIZATION |
229 |
XIII. |
THE RISE OF THE MILITARY POWER |
259 |
XIV. |
THE RELIGION OF LOYALTY |
283 |
XV. |
THE JESUIT PERIL |
303 |
XVI. |
FEUDAL INTEGRATION |
343 |
XVII. |
THE SHINTÔ REVIVAL |
367 |
XVIII. |
SURVIVALS |
381 |
XIX. |
MODERN RESTRAINTS |
395 |
XX. |
OFFICIAL EDUCATION |
419 |
XXI. |
INDUSTRIAL DANGER |
443 |
XXII. |
REFLECTIONS |
457 |
|
APPENDIX |
481 |
|
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES |
487 |
|
INDEX |
489 |
"Perhaps all very marked national characters can be traced back to a time of rigid and pervading discipline"--WALTER BAGEHOT.
{p. 1}