@article{oai:serve.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000521, author = {稲田, 敦子}, issue = {第2号}, journal = {聖学院大学論叢, The Journal of Seigakuin University}, month = {Mar}, note = {The main objective of this paper will be to examine the aspect of “shadow” in modern civilization. From the criticism of the view of nature in the Enlightenment arose a philosophy that aims for a restoration of the organic view of nature and sees a new organic relationship between people and nature.Edward Carpenter (1844-1929) was keenly aware that nature was entering a critical state, and he questioned the one-dimensional nature of the idea of progress in the forward thrust of modernization. Sanshiro Ishikawa (1876?-1956) translated The Civilization: Its Cause and Cure(1) in which Carpenter examined problems occurring in the modern civilized society of England, where modernization first began, and where it is widely recognized that the factory system began with the Industrial Revolution. It is widely acknowledged that the Industrial Revolution's threat of mechanization and the danger of injury and death caused by mechanization destabilized the labor environment. Ishikawa and Carpenter elucidated what the basis of life should be and experimented with the idea of revolutionizing lifestyles by undertaking production activities in harmony and through intimate communion.}, pages = {55--64}, title = {近代文明批判における「蔭」認識 : 石川三四郎とエドワード・カーペンターの思想的接点をめぐって}, volume = {第24巻}, year = {2012}, yomi = {イナダ, アツコ} }