17 chapters
6 hour read
          Selected Chapters
        17 chapters
        BERTRAND RUSSELL
            BERTRAND RUSSELL
            
                        O.M., F.K.S. London GEORGE ALLEN & UNWIN LTD RUSKIN HOUSE MUSEUM STREET FIRST PUBLISHED IN 1922 SECOND IMPRESSION 1966 PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY PHOTOLITHOGRAPHY UNWIN BROTHERS LIMITED WOKING AND LONDON The Ruler of the Southern Ocean was Shû (Heedless), the Ruler of the Northern Ocean was Hû (Sudden), and the Ruler of the Centre was Chaos. Shû and Hû were continually meeting in the land of Chaos, who treated them very well. They consulted together how they might repay his kindness, an
                    
            1 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER I
            CHAPTER I
            
                        QUESTIONS A European lately arrived in China, if he is of a receptive and reflective disposition, finds himself confronted with a number of very puzzling questions, for many of which the problems of Western Europe will not have prepared him. Russian problems, it is true, have important affinities with those of China, but they have also important differences; moreover they are decidedly less complex. Chinese problems, even if they affected no one outside China, would be of vast importance, since 
                    
            14 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER II
            CHAPTER II
            
                        CHINA BEFORE THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Where the Chinese came from is a matter of conjecture. Their early history is known only from their own annals, which throw no light upon the question. The Shu-King, one of the Confucian classics (edited, not composed, by Confucius), begins, like Livy, with legendary accounts of princes whose virtues and vices are intended to supply edification or warning to subsequent rulers. Yao and Shun were two model Emperors, whose date (if any) was somewhere in the third
                    
            42 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER III
            CHAPTER III
            
                        CHINA AND THE WESTERN POWERS In order to understand the international position of China, some facts concerning its nineteenth-century history are indispensable. China was for many ages the supreme empire of the Far East, embracing a vast and fertile area, inhabited by an industrious and civilized people. Aristocracy, in our sense of the word, came to an end before the beginning of the Christian era, and government was in the hands of officials chosen for their proficiency in writing in a dead la
                    
            22 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER IV
            CHAPTER IV
            
                        MODERN CHINA The position of China among the nations of the world is quite peculiar, because in population and potential strength China is the greatest nation in the world, while in actual strength at the moment it is one of the least. The international problems raised by this situation have been brought into the forefront of world-politics by the Washington Conference. What settlement, if any, will ultimately be arrived at, it is as yet impossible to foresee. There are, however, certain broad f
                    
            31 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER V
            CHAPTER V
            
                        JAPAN BEFORE THE RESTORATION For modern China, the most important foreign nation is Japan. In order to understand the part played by Japan, it is necessary to know something of that country, to which we must now turn our attention. In reading the history of Japan, one of the most amazing things is the persistence of the same forces and the same beliefs throughout the centuries. Japanese history practically begins with a "Restoration" by no means unlike that of 1867-8. Buddhism was introduced int
                    
            15 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER VI
            CHAPTER VI
            
                        MODERN JAPAN The modern Japanese nation is unique, not only in this age, but in the history of the world. It combines elements which most Europeans would have supposed totally incompatible, and it has realized an original plan to a degree hardly known in human affairs. The Japan which now exists is almost exactly that which was intended by the leaders of the Restoration in 1867. Many unforeseen events have happened in the world: American has risen and Russia has fallen, China has become a Republ
                    
            32 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER VII
            CHAPTER VII
            
                        JAPAN AND CHINA BEFORE 1914 Before going into the detail of Japan's policy towards China, it is necessary to put the reader on his guard against the habit of thinking of the "Yellow Races," as though China and Japan formed some kind of unity. There are, of course, reasons which, at first sight, would lead one to suppose that China and Japan could be taken in one group in comparison with the races of Europe and of Africa. To begin with, the Chinese and Japanese are both yellow, which points to et
                    
            17 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER VIII
            CHAPTER VIII
            
                        JAPAN AND CHINA DURING THE WAR The most urgent problem in China's relations with foreign powers is Japanese aggression. Originally Japan was less powerful than China, but after 1868 the Japanese rapidly learnt from us whatever we had to teach in the way of skilful homicide, and in 1894 they resolved to test their new armaments upon China, just as Bismarck tested his on Denmark. The Chinese Government preserved its traditional haughtiness, and appears to have been quite unaware of the defeat in s
                    
            26 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER IX
            CHAPTER IX
            
                        THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE The Washington Conference, and the simultaneous conference, at Washington, between the Chinese and Japanese, have somewhat modified the Far Eastern situation. The general aspects of the new situation will be dealt with in the next chapter; for the present it is the actual decisions arrived at in Washington that concern us, as well as their effect upon the Japanese position in Siberia. In the first place, the Anglo-Japanese Alliance has apparently been brought to an end,
                    
            14 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER X
            CHAPTER X
            
                        PRESENT FORCES AND TENDENCIES IN THE FAR EAST The Far Eastern situation is so complex that it is very difficult to guess what will be the ultimate outcome of the Washington Conference, and still more difficult to know what outcome we ought to desire. I will endeavour to set forth the various factors each in turn, not simplifying the issues, but rather aiming at producing a certain hesitancy which I regard as desirable in dealing with China. I shall consider successively the interests and desires
                    
            35 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER XI
            CHAPTER XI
            
                        CHINESE AND WESTERN CIVILIZATION CONTRASTED There is at present in China, as we have seen in previous chapters, a close contact between our civilization and that which is native to the Celestial Empire. It is still a doubtful question whether this contact will breed a new civilization better than either of its parents, or whether it will merely destroy the native culture and replace it by that of America. Contacts between different civilizations have often in the past proved to be landmarks in h
                    
            18 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER XII
            CHAPTER XII
            
                        THE CHINESE CHARACTER There is a theory among Occidentals that the Chinaman is inscrutable, full of secret thoughts, and impossible for us to understand. It may be that a greater experience of China would have brought me to share this opinion; but I could see nothing to support it during the time when I was working in that country. I talked to the Chinese as I should have talked to English people, and they answered me much as English people would have answered a Chinese whom they considered educ
                    
            19 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER XIII
            CHAPTER XIII
            
                        HIGHER EDUCATION IN CHINA China, like Italy and Greece, is frequently misjudged by persons of culture because they regard it as a museum. The preservation of ancient beauty is very important, but no vigorous forward-looking man is content to be a mere curator. The result is that the best people in China tend to be Philistines as regards all that is pleasing to the European tourist. The European in China, quite apart from interested motives, is apt to be ultra-conservative, because he likes every
                    
            15 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER XIV
            CHAPTER XIV
            
                        INDUSTRIALISM IN CHINA China is as yet only slightly industrialized, but the industrial possibilities of the country are very great, and it may be taken as nearly certain that there will be a rapid development throughout the next few decades. China's future depends as much upon the manner of this development as upon any other single factor; and China's difficulties are very largely connected with the present industrial situation. I will therefore first briefly describe this situation, and then c
                    
            20 minute read
            
              
            
            
          CHAPTER XV
            CHAPTER XV
            
                        THE OUTLOOK FOR CHINA In this chapter I propose to take, as far as I am able, the standpoint of a progressive and public-spirited Chinese, and consider what reforms, in what order, I should advocate in that case. To begin with, it is clear that China must be saved by her own efforts, and cannot rely upon outside help. In the international situation, China has had both good and bad fortune. The Great War was unfortunate, because it gave Japan temporarily a free hand; the collapse of Tsarist Russi
                    
            15 minute read
            
              
            
            
          APPENDIX
            APPENDIX
            
                        While the above pages were going through the Press, some important developments have taken place in China. Wu-Pei-Fu has defeated Chang-tso-lin and made himself master of Peking. Chang has retreated towards Manchuria with a broken army, and proclaimed the independence of Manchuria. This might suit the Japanese very well, but it is hardly to be supposed that the other Powers would acquiesce. It is, therefore, not unlikely that Chang may lose Manchuria also, and cease to be a factor in Chinese pol
                    
            4 minute read