A Popular Dictionary of Shinto

HAYASHI, RAZAN

(1583-1657)
A Confucian government adviser, one of the Hayashi line who became in effect hereditary philosophers to the shogunate with the result thatshushi-gakuremained overwhelmingly influential in Japanese intellectual thought, officially up to the nineteenth century and under the guise of state Shinto beyond theMeijirestoration. He was the tutor in shushi thought toYamaga, Sokoand engaged in a debate on the nature of the world with the Japanese Jesuit (and subsequent appstate) Fabian in 1606. He was the firstTokugawaConfucian to write on Shinto. His first major Shinto work (ca.1640) was a historical survey of major shrines and figures. In a later theoretical work, the Shinto denju of 1644-48 he developed the idea of 'Shinto where principle (ri) corresponds to mind', assimilating Shinto to shushi philosophy by equating the central Confucian notion of 'principle' with the divine power of the Japanese kami, in particular equatingKuni-toko-tachiwith the Confucian 'great ultimate', taikyoku. LikeYamazaki, Ansaihe sought to develop Shinto thought within a Neo-confucian political structure, emphasising the role of worship of the deities in supporting human society.