Eugen Herrigel

Eugen Herrigel

Eugen Herrigel (20 March 1884 – 18 April 1955) was a German philosopher who taught philosophy at Tohoku Imperial University in Sendai, Japan, from 1924 to 1929 and introduced Zen to large parts of Europe through his writings.

While living in Japan from 1924 to 1929, he was taught kyūdō, traditional Japanese archery, by Awa Kenzō (阿波研造:1880-1939), a master of archery and founder of his own religion known as "The Great Doctrine of the Way of Shooting". Herrigel allegedly learned archery in the hope of better understanding Zen. Although Herrigel claimed to have studied archery for six years, he was only in Japan for slightly more five years and probably only studied archery for three of those years.[1] During July 1929 he returned to Germany and was given a professorship in philosophy at the University of Erlangen. In a letter to the magazine Encounter, Gershom Scholem writes: "Herrigel joined the Nazi Party after the outbreak of the war and some of his former friends in Frankfurt, who broke with him over this issue, told me about his career as a convinced Nazi, when I enquired about him in 1946. He was known to have stuck it out to the bitter end. This was not mentioned in some biographical notes on Herrigel published by his widow, who built up his image as one concerned with the higher spiritual sphere only."[2] He also states in the same letter that he thinks this fact is evidence for the claim made by Arthur Koestler in the same magazine that Zen can be used to justify the politics of the Nazi party.[3]

Eugen Herrigel was an active member of the Nazi organization Militant League for German Culture.[4]

  1. ^ Yamada, Shōji (2009). Shots in the Dark: Japan, Zen, and the West. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 70. ISBN 9780226947655.
  2. ^ Scholem, Gershom (1961). "Zen-Nazism?". Encounter. 16: 96.
  3. ^ Koestler, Arthur (1960). "A Stink of Zen". Encounter. 12: 31.
  4. ^ Kapferer, Norbert (2002). Die Nazifizierung der Philosophie an der Universität Breslau 1933-1945. Münster: LIT Verlag. ISBN 3825854515.