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Shirak(Practical Learning)


The large scale Japanese invasion of l592 and the subsequent Ching raid in 1636 caused great social confusion in the late Choson Dynasty, creating economic hardships for the people. Neo-Confucianism, submerged as it was in debates on theory and justice, did not have the capacity to solve these problems. Thus, in response the demands of the period, a new form of scholarship-Shirak or Practical Learning - appeared.

Exposed to the new learning of the west, Ching (China) had developed a brand of positivistic and empirically based scholarship. Influenced by this, Choson scholarship produced a new trend of investigation which sought truth from concrete reality. This we today call Shirak.

Shirak scholars endeavored to research practical matters, dispel poverty, and reaffirm social order.

They also proposed to improve the livelihood of farmers by reforming the land and tax systems while constructing a strong and wealthy nation by stimulating commerce and manufacturing as well as improving technology. Moreover, in order to preserve our nation's self-reliance they strived to properly understand the nation through research of the nation's history and geography as well as the drawing of maps.

One representative scholar. Chong Yak-yong (pen-name : Tasan) in contrast to the Neo-Confucianists, believed that human nature is fundamentally good [n. b. this sentence is historically inaccurate. Neo-Confucians such as Chu-t'zu believed in the goodness of humanity's primal nature !]. He placed more emphasis on the will to practice and act.