Between the early seventeenth and the mid-nineteenth century, the field
of natural history in Japan separated itself from the discipline of
medicine, produced knowledge that questioned the traditional religious
and philosophical understandings of the world, developed into a system
(called honzogaku) that rivaled Western science in complexity--and
then seemingly disappeared. Or did it? In The Knowledge of Nature and
the Nature of Knowledge in Early Modern Japan, Federico Marcon recounts
how Japanese scholars developed a sophisticated discipline of natural
history analogous to Europe's but created independently, without direct
influence, and argues convincingly that Japanese natural history
succumbed to Western science not because of suppression and
substitution, as scholars traditionally have contended, but by
adaptation and transformation.
The first book-length English-language study devoted to the important
field of honzogaku, The Knowledge of Nature and the Nature of Knowledge
in Early Modern Japan will be an essential text for historians of
Japanese and East Asian science, and a fascinating read for anyone
interested in the development of science in the early modern era.