Abstract

The Two Japans

Lamont, Thomas W. | February 2, 1921 issue

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There are two schools of thought in Japan and the cleavage is a deep one. In general the men of affairs--manufacturers, great merchants, and bankers--are liberal in their ideas. They believe, as we do here in America, that a nation's development, to be sound and sure, must be along lines of peaceful trade and the cultivation of goodwill. The other party in Japan, the militarists, have a somewhat different philosophy.

See Also:

THOUGHT & thinking; SOCIAL conflict; SOCIAL psychology; LIBERALISM; NATIONALISM; JAPAN
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