- VernacularTitle:5. 日本の医のプロフェッショナリズム
 - Author:
	        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Hideki Nomura
			        		
			        		
		        		
		        		
		        		
 - Publication Type:Journal Article
 - Keywords: Medical Professionalism; Bushido; Invetion of Tradition
 - From:Medical Education 2015;46(2):136-141
 - CountryJapan
 - Language:Japanese
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		        	Abstract:
			       	
			       		
				        
				        	
Bushido is the so-called identity of the people of Japan, which was "invented" during the "official nationalism" movement in the Meiji era when the state of Japan pursued a policy of increasing wealth and military power. After the defeat of the second world war, nationalistic Bushido almost disappeared, while Nitobe's Bushido has been revived after a long absence. However, Nitobe's Bushido was originally described in English to explain peculiar conduct by samurai worriers, such as hara-kiri (self-immolation by disembowelment) and kataki-uchi (redress) .
Descriptions of Bushido were written mostly in the Meiji Era as a professional code for the worrier class of samurai. Nitobe's Bushido is one of them, in which he focused heavily on Care/harm, Fairness/cheating, Loyalty/betrayal, and Authority/subversion among the moral intuitions of human beings. On the other hand, Care/harm, Fairness/cheating, and Liberty/oppression are the moral intuitions expected of physicians. This difference is large enough to potentially lead to serious ethical misconduct if physicians act the under Bushido code of professional ethics.
 
            
