Tricks of Transference: Oka Asajirō (1868–1944) on Laissez-faire Capitalism

Science in Context 23 (3):367-391 (2010)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

ArgumentContrary to common portrayals of social Darwinism as a transference of laissez-faire values, the widely read evolutionism of Japan's foremost Darwinist of the early twentieth-century, Oka Asajirō (1868–1944), reflects a statist outlook that regards capitalism as the beginning of the nation's degeneration. The evolutionary theory of orthogenesis that Oka employed in his 1910 essay, “The Future of Humankind,” links him to a pre-Darwinian idealist tradition that depicted the state as an organism that develops through life-cycle stages. For Oka, laissez-faire capitalism marked the moment when the state began to decline toward extinction due to the orthogenetic overdevelopment of hitherto subordinate individual egos. Because conservative bureaucrat-intellectuals had been drawing upon this same organicist-developmental tradition since the 1880s in an attempt to forestall the social ills of industrialism, Oka's call for statist measures, including eugenics, to lessen and delay the atomizing, enervating, and corrupting influence of capitalism articulated the political vision of officialdom. Statist evolutionism, not social Darwinism, might be the term that best describes Oka's approach.

Other Versions

No versions found

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 100,063

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

After libertarianism: Rejoinder to Narveson, McCloskey, Flew, and Machan.Jeffrey Friedman - 1992 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 6 (1):113-152.
In Defense of Liberty: Social Order & The Role of Government.Dylan J. Conrad - 2022 - University of Pennsylvania Scholarly Commons - Philosophy, Politics, and Economics Honors Theses.
Sismondi's forgotten ethical critique of early capitalism.Ross E. Stewart - 1984 - Journal of Business Ethics 3 (3):227 - 234.
Democratic capitalism and respect for the value of freedom.Waheed Hussain - 2006 - International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics 2 (s 3-4):280-293.

Analytics

Added to PP
2014-01-27

Downloads
28 (#788,995)

6 months
10 (#379,980)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

The poverty of historicism.Karl Raimund Popper - 1960 - London,: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Ontogeny and Phylogeny.Stephen Jay Gould - 1978 - Philosophy of Science 45 (4):652-653.
The Poverty of Historicism.Karl R. Popper - 1957 - Philosophy 35 (135):357-358.
Evolution: The History of an Idea.Peter J. Bowler - 1985 - Journal of the History of Biology 18 (1):155-157.

View all 25 references / Add more references