The article analyses the cultural and scientific relations of Japan, illustrating how the reception of new knowledge can undermine an existing scientific paradigm and urge a response to the resultant crisis. In the case of Japan, the reaction to this situation of crisis would have a positive outcome: the sense of national identity and the economic rationality of Japanese culture enabled the country to undertake innovative scientific-technological development. Such issues are here analyzed through the role of medicine, influenced initially by an age-old Chinese culture and then by western scientific methods
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a number of Japanese physicians began to consider na...
This article traces the historical evolution of the images of Europe in Japan. While the length of J...
Japanese scientific tradition has taken a multifaceted approach. It constitutes a carefully directed...
The article analyses the cultural and scientific relations of Japan, illustrating how the reception ...
Paper presented at the Tenth International Conference on the History of Science in East Asia. Jiao-T...
This article argues thatChinese state intellectual approaches to medicine significantly influenced t...
There have been two major paradigmatic shifts in the history of Japanese medicine, one in the 6th ce...
In the late Nineteenth-century, the Japanese embarked on a program of westernization in the hope of ...
The impressive cultural aura of China blocks the view of its neighbouring countries far too easily. ...
With the arrival of English and Dutch ships, European culture began to flow in Japan from the first ...
This article offers a case study in the nature of uses of the European past in East Asia at a time w...
Hoi-eun Kim. Doctors of Empire: Medical and Cultural Encounters between Imperial Germany and Meiji J...
This paper, divided in three parts, presents the history of German- Japanese medical relations from ...
odernisation of Japan began in the Meiji era (1868-1912) after learning from Western countries about...
This article aims at exploring Japan and its cultural and symbolic representation in the Republic of...
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a number of Japanese physicians began to consider na...
This article traces the historical evolution of the images of Europe in Japan. While the length of J...
Japanese scientific tradition has taken a multifaceted approach. It constitutes a carefully directed...
The article analyses the cultural and scientific relations of Japan, illustrating how the reception ...
Paper presented at the Tenth International Conference on the History of Science in East Asia. Jiao-T...
This article argues thatChinese state intellectual approaches to medicine significantly influenced t...
There have been two major paradigmatic shifts in the history of Japanese medicine, one in the 6th ce...
In the late Nineteenth-century, the Japanese embarked on a program of westernization in the hope of ...
The impressive cultural aura of China blocks the view of its neighbouring countries far too easily. ...
With the arrival of English and Dutch ships, European culture began to flow in Japan from the first ...
This article offers a case study in the nature of uses of the European past in East Asia at a time w...
Hoi-eun Kim. Doctors of Empire: Medical and Cultural Encounters between Imperial Germany and Meiji J...
This paper, divided in three parts, presents the history of German- Japanese medical relations from ...
odernisation of Japan began in the Meiji era (1868-1912) after learning from Western countries about...
This article aims at exploring Japan and its cultural and symbolic representation in the Republic of...
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a number of Japanese physicians began to consider na...
This article traces the historical evolution of the images of Europe in Japan. While the length of J...
Japanese scientific tradition has taken a multifaceted approach. It constitutes a carefully directed...