(classified according to topics)
Classes 1 and 2: Introduction
Topics Taught: Actual decision making process; Influences by culture, custom, religion, language
among others; Different approaches towards decision makings between Westerners and Japanese.
1 The Western way of Thinking
1.1 The Westerner’s Consciousness towards Time
Topics Taught: Greek culture and philosophy; Monotheism (Judaism, Christianity); Time concept as a rule of eternity; General concept looking for future, ideal, general and conceptual things
1.2 Western Attitude towards Words
Topics Taught: The way of expression with words (story, poem, logic); God’s eternal rule;Tradition of logos; The privilege status of human given by the God; Tradition to follow the reason; Human dignity found in joining words; Behavior with words versus cooperative work; Impossibility to separate the generality of words and the publicness of words
Classes 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7: How does the Westerner Think?
1 The Framework of Thinking
Topics Taught: Westerner’s typical way of thinking; Setting a purpose in the far future; Consensus and logical persuasion; Rational preference relations; People’s free wills and equal
treatment; Fairness of decision making procedure
2 Arrow’s Framework
2.1 Collective Choice Rule and the Imposed Conditions
Topics Taught: Arrow’s framework; Individual freedom; Minimum equality; Decisive condition;
Consistent process of choice
2.2 Arrow’s Result and the Conflict of the Western Way of Thinking
Topics Taught: Arrow’s framework versus Western way of thinking in a democratic society; Impossibility result; Impossibility of democracy; No fixed universal value in any human thought; Importance of the mind of reconciliation/trade-off; Hsuntze’s thought ‘Human nature is evil’; Inevitable nature of ideas/policies: successful in the short run but hazardous in the long run; Impossibility of ethics, morals, and philosophies to be logically consistent with a single concept of rationality
2.3 Summary of the Western Way of Thinking
Topics Taught: Thinking in the long term with reasoning; Comprehensive way of thinking; Exclusive concentration on the main problem with a tendency neglecting minor- looking problems; Too strong logical consistency, Repetition of daily decisionmakings to reach the final purpose
Classes 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12: The Japanese Way of Thinking
1 Japanese Consciousness towards Time
Topics Taught: Two types of time; Time belonging to gods; Repeating time by the change of
Seasons; Time consciousness independently held by clans; Time as a concrete Experience; Individual clan’s time starting from only one time event such as a marriage tale of a princess with a god; Japanese concept of time: concrete and empirical but neither universal nor objective; Ambiguity between the present time and the future time; The Japanese culture respecting present, realistic, individual and concrete matters and issues; The Japanese society and people not setting their purpose
2 The Japanese Attitude towards Words
Topics Taught: Rich in poetic expression; Almost no logical expression; Influence of Confucianism, Buddhism and Western tradition; Individual mind wishing to stay in the sensual and empirical place as long as possible
3 The Culture of Mind
Topics Taught: Spirit of poem; Tense relation with words; Transcendent experience; Divine occasion
3.1 Japanese Attitude towards gods
Topics Taught: Gods as invisible existences without body and individuality; Shinto as an invisible Polytheism; No definition of gods; Difficulty to recognize the relation between gods and humans; Japanese religious mind easily attracted by the actual profits; Gods in everywhere; Even an individual to be a god; Religion as an ambiguous object of consciousness; Indifferent, irresponsible, optimistic and realistic attitude towards gods; Atheist,
3.2 The Doctrine of Zen and Mind
Topics Taught: Difficult concept of mind; Influence of Zen Buddhism; Reform of Buddhism; Eternal unchanged existence; Heartlessness; Simple and strong way of life; Culture to live as simple as possible; Absolute vanity
3.3 The Doctrine of Zen and the Spirit of Poem
Topics Taught: Strong suspicion on intellectual, technical and indirect view; Simple Straight-
forwardness of ancient Japanese; Zen meditation pursuing one’s mind and body to unite into one; Spirit of poem not necessary need words; Haiku, the world shortest poem representing imbalanced human mind between a coming up urge wishing to express the surprise in words and the mind wishing to stay as an element in the surrounding environment; Zen doctrine requiring to conceal the feeling of the subject; Japanese culture to try to avoid the expression with words
3.4 Summary of the Japanese Way of Thinking
Topics Taught: Japanese culture having a long tradition of not clearly making rational preference Relations; Restricted number of alternatives for rational choice; Simply formal preference relations without any serious meaning; Successful life without setting a purpose of life in the far future; Doing one’s best to manage an issue just in front of it and the meaning of one’s death
Classes 13 and 14: The Japanese Culture versus the Western Culture
Topics Taught: In the following, the Japanese culture and the Western culture are compared in this order. Time consciousness: concrete and empirical versus eternal law ruled by the absolute God; Present and future: non-separable versus always in the tense relation; Words: poetic, sensuous and empirical versus story plus logic; word=truth=reason, abstractive, general and public; Religious mind: belief of undefined gods, pragmatic, simple and optimistic versus concrete belief in the absolute sole God, the existence beyond human reach and strict; Cultural feature: culture not depending on words, not accepting dialogue with others (sensuous and emotional), respect for realistic, personal and concrete issues, and not fixed but formal purpose
versus dialogue relation between an individual and the public words (mind of dialogue, theoretical and conceptual), future looking, idealistic, general, abstract mind, and purpose set in the long distance
Classes 15, 16, 17 and 18: How to divide the Set of Alternatives
1 Arrow’s Way
Topics Taught: Arrow’s impossibility Theorem (explanation of the framework, notation and
definitions, the proof, the actual meaning of the result)
2 Japanese Way
2.1 Set of Alternatives
Topics Taught: Framework for choice in line with Zen meditation; Classification of the set of all
alternatives in Arrow’s sense into three subsets, the set of long-term alternatives, the set of short-term alternatives and the set of alternatives for the present choice problem; Bounded rationality; Dynamic choice
2.2 Relations among Sets of Alternatives
Topics Taught: Dynamic choice; Parallel computing; Time sharing system; Correspondences
between this framework and Arrow’s framework
2.3 Collective Choice
Topics Taught: Application of Arrow’s approach; Impossibility result and plausible conclusions in Reality; Applicability of the pure theory to actual decision making issue
Classes 19, 20, 21 and 22: An Example of Dynamic Individual Preferences
Topics Taught: An example how to use our choice model introduced in the above section 5
1 The Life of Heinrich Schliemann
Topics Taught: Two interpretations of the life of Heinrich Schliemann: Western way and Japanese way
2 Schliemann’s Life-long Choice: Case 1
Topics Taught: Dynamic framework of choices; Explanation of choice of Schliemann at each step of his life; The case of Western interpretation
3 Schliemann’s Life-long Choice: Case 2
Topics Taught: The case of Japanese interpretation
Classes 23 and 24: Conclusions
Topics Taught: A narrow mind of the present approach of Economics based on the Western way of Thinking; Introduction of a different way of thinking, the Japanese way in this Case; Expansion of the scope of economic theory; Analysis towards the direction of realistic application; Effective and realistic economic theory requiring wide range of knowledge; Recent achievements in various academic fields from individual history, culture, language and religion to natural sciences like physics and biology and engineering like computer science among others.
Basic Texts referred in the class:
Arrow, K. J., Social Choice and Individual Values, New York: Wiley, 1951; 2nd ed., 1963; 3rd ed., 2012
Gusdorf, G., Les Sciences Humaines et la Pansée Occidentale Ⅱ, Les Origines des Sciences Humaines, Paris: Payot, 1967
Matsumoto, Y., “Seeking a Realistic Way of Individual Decision Making,” Global Business and Economics Review, vol. 9, pp. 126-150, 2007
Nakamura, T., The Postwar Japanese Economy, 2nd ed., University of Tokyo Press, 1995
Paulos, J., Beyond Numeracy, Knopf, 1991
Rawls, J., A Theory of Justice, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971
Rohlen, T. P., Japan’s High Schools, London: University of California Press, 1983
Sen, A. K., Collective Choice and Social welfare, San Francisco: Holden-Day, 1970
-----, On Economic Inequality, 1st ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1973 (Expanded edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997)
Recommended Texts to Read:
Buchanan, J. M., “Social choice, democracy, and free markets”, Journal of Political Economy, 62, pp. 114-123, 1954
Daly, M. and Wilson, M., Homicide, Aldine de Gruyter, 1988
Dawkins, R., The Selfish Gene, Oxford University Press, 1976
-----, The Blind Watchmaker, W.W. Norton & Company, 1987
-----, A Devil's Chaplain, Brockman, 2004
Hart, D. and R. W. Sussman, Man The Hunted: Primates, Predators, and Human Evolution, Westview Press, 2005
Hrdy, S. B., Mother Nature: A History of Mothers, Infants, and Natural Selection, Pantheon, 1999
Kevles, D.J. and Hood, L., The Code of Codes, Harvard University Press, 1992
Knoll, A.H., Life on a Young Planet, Princeton University Press, 2003
Leroi, A. M., Mutants: On Genetic Vatiety and the Human Body, Viking Penguin, 2003
Marcus, G., The Birth of the Mind, Basic Books, 2004
Matsumoto, Y., “On the actual standard and logic of individual preference behaviors,” Global Business and Economics Anthology, vol. 2, pp. 296-307, 2006a
Max, D. T., The Family That Couldn’t Sleep: A Medical Mysyery, Random House, 2006
Singh, S., Fermat’s Last Theorem, Fourth Estate, 1997
Sykes, B., The Seven Daughters of Eve, W.W. Norton & Company, 2002
Japanese Bibliography
The following are excellent texts in Japanese, which are recommended for students who are good at Japanese. Some of them are for experts on Japanese and Chinese classical literatures.
石田一良『日本人の時間意識』学士会会報 vol. 781 1988
稲田献一『新しい経済学』日本経済新聞社 1970
井村喜代子『現代日本経済論[新版]』有斐閣 2000
内山俊彦『荀子』講談社文庫 1999
黄文雄・呉善花・石平『帰化日本人』李白社 2008
岡本哲治『天と人と国』芸立出版 1986
加藤秀治郎『日本の選挙 何を変えれば政治が変わるのか』中公新書 2003
金谷治訳『荀子』岩波文庫 1961