Makiguchi published Jinsei Chirigaku (The Geography of Human Life) in October 1903. He had been encouraged by some respected scholars in Tokyo who agreed to look at his manuscript. The book was well received and became a standard reference in geography. However, the success of the book did not increase his social standing (since he had not graduated from a university, he was not accepted by high level scholars) or his financial resources. He worked a number of jobs in the publishing field but he continued to suffer hardship and deprivation.
Beginning in 1910, Makiguchi served as an elementary school teacher and principal in a number of schools in the Tokyo area. His research in the are of community studies led to the publication of Kyodoka Kenkyu (Research Studies in Folk Culture) in 1912). Makiguchi was considered an effective teacher and educator but his disregard for nearly sacred aspects of Japanese culture led to conflict with authorities, teachers and parents. Such conflicts eventually led to his being forced into retirement from active school work in 1929.
In 1928, Makiguchi was transferred to Niibori Primary School. This school was scheduled to be closed in the following year, thus the transfer amounted to a dismissal with a year’s notice. During this year, Makiguchi prepared his educational ideas and methods that he had developed during his years of teaching for publication. Ably assisted by Josei Toda, he published the first of four volumes of Soka Kyoikugaku Taikei (The System of Value-Creating Pedagogy) in 1930, The work Kachiron (The Philosophy of Value), a reissue of volume two edited and enlarged by Josei Toda. was published after Makiguchi’s death. An English translation was published by the Seikyo Press in 1964.
Makiguchi held that creation of value is part and parcel of of what it means to be a human being. He wrote, “The highest and ultimate object of life is happiness, and the goal of life is none but the attainment and creation of value, which is in itself happiness…. A happy life signifies nothing but the state of existence in which one can gain and create value in full.”
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