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3.

Lecturer

Kaoru KITAJIMA (Professor, Graduate School of Agriculture)

Satoyama landscape in Japan as a type of traditional and sustainable agroforestry ecosystems in Asia

1 Before rice cultivation: tropical and subtropical forests within the rice cropping region in Asia

a. Biogeographical history of the primary forests of East Asia

b. Biodiversity and ecosystem processes of natural forests

2 Historical development of agroforestry systems involving rice cropping in Asia

a. Spread of agriculture and secondary forests

b. Emergence of Satoyama landscape and natural resource management

3 Challenges to the future of Satoyama landscape in Japan

a. Energy revolution, urbanization and globalization



INSTRUCTOR’S PROFILE

Tatsuhiko SHIRAIWA

(Professor, Graduate School of Agriculture)

Dr Shiraiwa had worked for Shiga Prefectural Junior College and for Kyoto University in total for 30 

years in the field of agronomy. He holds a B.A. and a Ph.D. in Agriculture from Kyoto University. He has 

been working on crop physiological mechanisms of yield variation of soybean and rice. The recent 

publication includes, “The response of soybean seed growth characteristics to increased temperature 

under near-field conditions in a temperature gradient chamber”, Field Crops Research 131, 26-31 (2012), 

“Field studies on factors causing the widening gaps in soybean yield between Japan and USA. - Field and 

crop management in USA –“, Journal of Crop Research 56, 93-98 (2011) (in Japanese), and “Estimation 

of crop radiation use efficiency”, Japanese Journal of Crop Science 80, 360-364 (2011) (in Japanese).



Yasuki MATSUMURA

(Professor, Graduate School of Agriculture)

Ph.D. (Agricultural Science, Kyoto University, 1985)

He has been working for Kyoto University since 1985 except staying at Leeds University in UK from 

1989 to 1990 as a research fellow.

He has been doing research to estimate the quality of foods and food materials using various techniques 

from multiple viewpoints.

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His recent publications are as follows:

“Destabilization of protein-based emulsions by diglycerol esters of fatty acids – The importance of chain 

length similarity between dispersed oil molecules and fatty acid residues of the emulsifier”, Food 

Hydrocolloids25, 773-780 (2011).

“Effects of amino acids and peptide on lipid oxidation in emulsion systems”, Journal of American Oil 



Chemists’ Society89, 477-484 (2012).

“Transdermal administration of lactoferrin with sophorolipid”, Biochemistry and Cell Biology90,

504-512 (2012).

Kaoru KITAJIMA

(Professor, Graduate School of Agriculture)

B.S. from University of Tokyo (Botany); M.S. and Ph.D from University of Illinois (Botany). 

Dr. Kitajima worked as Assistant, Associate, and Full Professor of Botany and Biology, University of 

Florida (1997-2013) before moving to Kyoto University. Dr. Kitajima’s research interests span from 

natural and socio-ecological forest ecosystems in tropical to warm temperate zones. She is known for her 

comparative work of functional traits of seedlings and adult trees in tropical forests, in particular, the first 

demonstration of the functional basis for growth-survival in tropical tree seedlings. Her recent 

publications as lead or coauthors include, “Thermal acclimation of leaf respiration of tropical trees and 

lianas: response to experimental canopy warming, and consequences for tropical forest carbon balance”, 



Global Change Biology 9: 2915-2926 (2014), “Leaf lifespan spectrum of tropical woody seedlings: 

effects of light and ontogeny and consequences for survival”, Annals of Botany 112: 685-699 (2013), 

“Transpiration-dependent passive silica accumulation in cucumber (Cucumis sativus) under varying soil 

silicon availability.” Botany 90: 1058-1064 (2012).



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5. CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY IN JAPAN

LECTURER

Daisuke KAIDA 

(Senior Lecturer, Graduate School of Letters)



OBJECTIVES

You probably know of J-POP, Japanese popular music. Musicians in this genre are more or less 

influenced by western music, they sing in Japanese, and their works are popular among ordinary people. I 

say that there is a parallel genre (school) in contemporary philosophy in Japan. It started with Shozo 

OMORI (1921-97) and has been developed by some of his students. Philosophers in this school are more 

or less influenced by (analytic) western philosophy, they think and write in Japanese, and their works are 

accessible to and widely read by people outside academic circles. I call this genre “J-PHIL”. In the 

lectures, I will introduce you to some of the notable achievements in J-PHIL, focusing on the works by 

Shozo OMORI, Shigeki NOYA (1954-), Hitoshi NAGAI (1951-), and others. No previous knowledge is 

required.



TOPICS

Lecture 1: Introduction —What is “J-PHIL”?

Lecture 2: A Brief History of Analytic Philosophy in English-speaking Countries and in Japan

Lectures 3-6: The Philosophy of Shozo OMORI (1921-97)

Four Problems –Perception, Theoretical Entities, Other Minds, and Past

Manifest Monism and Perception

Manifest Monism and Other Minds

Manifest Monism and Past

Lectures 7-9: The Philosophy of Shigeki NOYA (1954-)

Can we imagine other people’s pain?: Perspectivism (1)

Can we imagine other people’s pain?: Perspectivism (2)

The Non-existence of the Future

Lectures 10-12: The Philosophy of Hitoshi NAGAI (1951-)

Why do I exist?: The Uniqueness of “ I ” (1)

Why do I exist?: The Uniqueness of “ I ” (2)

Why must we not do bad things?

Lecture 13: OMORI’s Students with More Academic Bents

Lecture 14: What is the uniqueness of J-PHIL, and where is it going?

Feedback

EVALUATION

Grading Policy:

You are required to submit 1 paper at the end of the semester. Evaluation will be based on the term paper 

(75%) and total attendance record (25%).



INSTRUCTOR’S PROFILE

Daisuke KAIDA

PhD in Philosophy, University of Durham

Research Field: Metaphysics, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Science

I first studied physics at university, then completed my Masters in the philosophy of quantum mechanics, and then completed my PhD in 

metaphysics. I have long been concerned about how our minds are placed in the physical world.

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6. JAPAN IN WORLD HISTORY

LECTURER

Niels VAN STEENPAAL

(Assistant Professor, Hakubi Center, Graduate School of Letters)



COURSE OUTLINE

This course will offer an introduction to Japanese history from a global perspective. That is, we will 

approach the Japanese archipelago not as an isolated territory that seamlessly transformed into the nation 

state as we now know it, but as a geographical hub that has been shaped by centuries of “foreign” 

encounters through the centuries. We will look at how trade, war, diplomacy and ideas fostered 

international connections that have played crucial roles in deciding the trajectory of Japan’s development.



COURSE OVERVIEW

The tentative weekly topic schedule is as follows:

1. Why Global History?

2. Early State and Society

3. Heian Japan

4. Kamakura Japan 

5. Japan’s Middle Ages

6. Edo Japan I (1603-1800) 

7. Edo Japan II (1603-1800)

8. Japan in Turmoil I (1800-1867) 

9. Japan in Turmoil II (1800-1867)

10. Meiji Transformation I (1868-1900)

11. Meiji Transformation II (1868-1900)

12. Rise of Modern Japan (1900-1931)

13. War and Aftermath (1931-1964)

14. Contemporary Japan (1965 to the Present)

15. Final Exam

REFERENCE MATERIAL

This course will take Anne Walthall’s Japan: A Cultural, Social, and Political History (Boston and New 

York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2006) as its guide. Relevant chapters and supplemental readings will 

be handed out in class. 



ASSESMENT

Grading will be based on attendance, participation, short tests, and a final exam as follows:

Attendance and Participation:

20%


Short Tests:

40%


Final Exam:

40%


During the semester there will be two short tests on the material covered in the required readings up to 

that week. The course will conclude with a final exam. Both the short tests and the final exam will consist 



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of a combination of multiple-choice and essay questions. 

INSTRUCTOR’S PROFILE

Niels VAN STEENPAAL

(Assistant Professor, Hakubi Center, Graduate School of Letters)

Dr. Van Steenpaal received his master’s degree from Leiden University (2007) and his Ph.D. from Kyoto 

University (2012). After spending two years as a JSPS research fellow at The University of Tokyo he 

joined the faculty of Kyoto University in 2014. Trained as an intellectual historian, his primary research 

interest is “moral culture”, a term that he uses to describe the pathways, processes and media through 

which morality and material culture mutually influence each other. Besides his research activities he also 

works as an editor for two web-projects; Dissertation Reviews, and The New Japanese-Dutch Dictionary 



Project.

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7. Understanding Education, Human Lives and Cultures from 

Philosophical and Sociological Perspectives

LECTURERS

Hachiro Iwai (Professor, Sociology of Education, Graduate School of Education)

Naoko Saito (Associate Professor, Philosophy of Education, Graduate School of Education)

THEMES AND PURPOSE OF THE COURSE

This course is designed to improve your understanding of education, human lives and cultures from 

philosophical and sociological perspectives. There are two parts to the course. The first explores 

implications of American philosophy for education and the understanding of other cultures.    The second 

examines the meaning of changing Japanese lives for contemporary education using sociological research 

results. Taken together, you are expected to deepen your thinking of how education contributes to 

developing a global citizen.

1.

Theme

Philosophy of Education, Globalization, and the Understanding of Other Cultures 



Lecturer

Naoko SAITO

This is a course on American philosophy and its implications for education. In the age of 

globalization, education from the primary level to higher education has been absorbed into the culture of 

accountability. A global network of communication affects the way that teaching and learning are 

conceived, and this has a critical effect on the understanding of other cultures. In the context of this trend 

there is a need to reconsider what it could mean to be a global citizen and, further, what the implications 

of this for cross-cultural understanding might be.

The central figures whose texts we shall read are Emerson, Thoreau, Dewey, and Cavell. They 

share the ideas of “philosophy as education” and of education as the perfection of the self and culture –

what Cavell calls Emersonian moral perfectionism, the idea of perfection without final perfectibility. In 

reading the primary of, and secondary texts on, Emerson, Thoreau, and Dewey, as well as Cavell, we shall 

focus on this running thread of perfectionism in education in the fabric of American philosophy.[ONE 

SPACE]These are thinkers who criticize American democracy from within and address the problems of 

American’s encounter with other cultures.

Discussion will include the following themes: (1) The idea of democracy as a way of life in an age 

of globalization; (2) Alterity, the understanding of other cultures, and the exoticization of the other (with 

reference especially to America’s encounter with East Asia; (3) Global citizenship and cosmopolitanism; 

(4) Patriotism and moral education (the relationship with the native language and culture); and    (5) The 

problems and possibilities of translation as a mode of cross cultural dialogue. In the course of addressing 

these themes, we shall endeavor to find the educational implications of “perfectionist education,”



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especially for moral and citizenship education.

Requirements This is a course about education in its broadest terms. It does not set out to provide 

practical competence in teaching. It offers a challenging program of study for those who wish critically to

engage with underlying questions concerning education and the understanding of other cultures. While no 

previous study of philosophy is required, those taking the course must be ready to work with complex 

ideas and demanding texts and to engage in discussion. A good command of English is required.

2.

Theme

Changing Japanese Lives and the Implications for Contemporary Education.



Lecturer

Hachiro IWAI

This part focuses on the ways in which Japanese individual lives are shaped by the society and also 

examine

s

the ways in which the collective biographies of larger birth cohorts (social generations) affect, 



and are affected by, social changes.  Special attention will be paid to the two periods and two 

generations; the transition period from rapid economic growth in 1960s to stable development in 1970s; 

after the late 1990s, which is known as “the lost decade” in Japan; the first baby boom generation born in 

1947-49; the second baby boom generation born in 1971-74.    After introducing basic ideas about the 

Japanese family as a moral base, the course will clarify the impacts of family and life course changes on 

individualization in contemporary Japan using empirical findings from my own sociological research. 

Further discussion will focus on the roles of education in developing a global citizen under the current 

conditions.



Requirements

No requirement. It is better to have introductory knowledge about the post-war Japanese history.



GRADING POLICY

Classroom participation and two final essays.



INSTRUCTOR’S PROFILE

Hachiro IWAI

(Professor, Sociology of Education, Graduate School of Education)

Hachiro Iwai is Professor at the Graduate School of Education, Kyoto University. His areas of research 

are sociology of education, social stratification, life course studies, and quantitative research method.   

He is currently initiating the panel survey of occupational and family careers for Japanese young adults 

born from 1966 to 1980.    The part of his lecture will be based on the article, “Changing patterns of the 

course of women’s lives in Japan’s lost decade: An analysis of the work history of the second generation 

baby boomers.” Journal of Intimate and Public Spheres. Pilot Issue (2010).



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Naoko SAITO

(Associate Professor, Philosophy of Education, Graduate School of Education)

Naoko Saito is Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Education, Kyoto University. Her area of 

research is American philosophy and pragmatism and its implications for education. She is the author of 



The Gleam of Light: Moral Perfectionism and Education in Dewey and Emerson (Fordham University 

Press, 2005) and Uchinaru Hikari to Kyoiku: Pragmatism no Sai-Kochiku (Hosei University Press, 2009). 

In collaboration with Paul Standish, she has co-authored Democracy and Education from Dewey to Cavell

(Blackwell, forthcoming) and has co-edited the collections, Education and the Kyoto School of 



Philosophy (Springer, 2012) and Stanley Cavell and the Education of Grownups (Fordham University 

Press, 2012). She is the translator of The Senses of Walden (2005), the first book of Cavell’s to be 

published in Japanese, and of Paul Standish’s Beyond the Self: Wittgenstein, Heidegger, Levinas and the 

limits of language (Hosei University Press, 2012). 

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8. GLOBAL BUSINESS STORAGETY I

LECTURER

Hiroaki NAGAYAMA 

(Professor, The Organization for the Promotion of International Relations)



OBJECTIVES

The business strategy should be the guidelines which the company sets up for its long-term goals- to 

employ/utilize management resources and construct/establish a competitive domain in a changing 

environment. The aim of this course is for students to acquire basic knowledge and skills in corporate 

management, especially for global marketing and become capable of originating consistent strategic 

options.


The lectures of this course provide students with basic concepts and skills in developing business 

strategies, and global marketing strategies. Special emphasis will be placed on case studies of Japanese 

and international companies provided by Harvard Business School, IMD, and Keio Business School,

looking into their management issues to help us understand the theoretical frameworks. We will use these 

cases as teaching materials. Every case study is an actual situation. We will then explore the linkages 

between concepts and practices.

The course consists of lecture-based instruction followed by guided discussion, readings as homework, 

student presentations, and a final examination. During this course, students are expected to acquire an 

ability to create strategies and make decisions according to various situations which they may face in a 

real business environment.



EVALUATION

Grades are determined based on the following:

(a)Individual Test

(b)Group homework: case studies for each class

(c)Group case analysis reports and presentations for two cases during the term 

MAJOR REQUIREMENTS

There are no prerequisites for this course. Prior knowledge of management or business is unnecessary to 

take this course. However, Power Point (PPT) presentation will be required.

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REFERENCES

If you want to study further -- deepen your understanding of a case discussion and lecture, or comprehend 

an overview of analysis -- reviewing the following textbooks is recommended;

Kotler, and Keller (2006). Marketing Management, 12e, Pearson International Edition

Michael E. Porter (1980). Competitive Strategy. The Free Press.

Michael E. Porter (1985). Competitive Advantage. The Free Press.



INSTRUCTOR'SPROFILE

Hiroaki NAGAYAMA

(Professor, The Organization for the Promotion of International Relations)

Dr Nagayama has gained over 20 years of working experience as a management consultant and energy 

economist at Mitsubishi Research Institute, Inc.

Dr Nagayama holds a B.A. in Economics from Keio University, an MBA from Yale University, and 

a Ph.D.(Energy Science) from Kyoto University.

His academic publications include:

''Japanese Electricity Industry: Recommendations for Restructuring," Vol 24, Issue 10. 2011, The 

Electricity Journal " 

''Electric Power Sector Reform Liberalization Models and Electric Power Prices in Developing Countries, 

An Empirical Analysis Using International Panel Data" vol.31, pp. 463-472, 2009, Energy Economics.

'Political Economics of the Unbundling of Electricity Generation and Transmission', Toyokeizaishinposya, 

2012. (in Japanese)

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9.

SELF-FORMATION IN ADOLESCENCE

LECTURER

Shinichi MIZOKAMI

(Professor, Center for the Promotion of Excellence in Higher Education)



COURSE OVERVIEW

How do people know, understand, and form the self? What is the difference between self and identity? 

This course explores them focusing mainly on adolescence.

Self and identity are rather abstract concepts, so in this course, I will ask you about your experiences (ex. 

your own experience, what you have about others and the world, etc) and connect them to the concepts. 

I have to teach some technical terms regarding self/identity in the course, but this is a general education 

course. The main purpose of the course is to know what happened/is happening/will happen to you 

regarding self/identity formation through understanding self/identity concepts. Students of any majors are 

welcome.

TOPICS

Part 1. THE DEVELOPMENTAL BASES OF SELF/IDENTITY AND MORAL REASONING

1. Symbolic Interactionism and Self Psychology

2. Ego Psychology

3. Definitions in Comparative Terms

4. Synthesis of Approaches

Part 2. DEVELOPMENTAL TRAJECTORIES

1. The Development of Self-Concepts in Childhood and Adolescence

2. The Transformation of Self-Concepts into Identities in Adolescence and Early Adulthood.

3. The Synthesis of Identities in Adolescence and Early Adulthood

4. The Dialogical Self and Integrating Different Selves

Part 3. PRESENTATIONS & REFLECTIVE SUMMARY                                 

1. Selected Students Presentations

2. Making a Concept Map for Writing a Reflective Essay



ASSESSMENT

Assessment for this course will consist of three parts:

1. Active participation in the class (no late attendance, submitted worksheet, answering clicker questions, 

and group discussion) (50%)

2. Submission of PPT slides for presentation & peer ratings/selected speeches (20%)

3. Submission of concept map & a reflective essay (30%)



REFERENCE BOOK

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Reference books and articles will be announced in the class according to each topic. 

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