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Biography of Inoue Tetsujiro
Inoue Tetsujiro (1855- 1944) was born in Taizaifu, a former burial country. He is the pioneer of modern Japanese idealism philosophy and the founder of Japanese gakuen philosophy. When I was a child, I studied sinology with Tokuyama Nakamura. Later, I entered the Nagasaki Universiade and was chosen to study in Tokyo. 1875 studied at Kaesong school in Tokyo, and 1880 graduated from the philosophy department of Tokyo University (the predecessor of Imperial University of Tokyo). 188 1 founded the oriental learning art magazine with shigang Sugura and others, 1882 served as an associate professor at the university of Tokyo, teaching philosophy. At that time, together with Masaichi Waishan and Ji Liang Yabu, a new poetic style was founded. He translated Longfellow's Ode to Life and put it on a copy. He was a pioneer of the new poetry movement and devoted himself to translating western philosophical terms at that time. He is the author of philosophical vocabulary. The Chinese version of Aristotle's famous philosophical masterpiece Metaphysics was translated by Tetsuro Inoue according to Metaphysics of the Book of Changes. Although Yan Fu resisted this translation and created his own "metaphysics", it was not accepted by the public, so Chinese was translated into metaphysics. He opposes Christianity and advocates Japanese, and belongs to Japanese magazine.

1884 studied in Germany, 1890 returned to China and became a professor at the University of Tokyo, and received his doctorate the following year. 1895 was elected as a member of Tokyo Bachelor's College (later Imperial College), a lecturer of learning college, the first president of Imperial College, the president of Imperial College of Tokyo, and an assessor of Imperial College of Tokyo. 1923 was an honorary professor of Tokyo University, a professor of Toyo University, and gave lectures at Shangzhi University and Lee Chung University. He is also the president of Japanese Philosophy Society, the vice president of Sven Society, and an aristocrat. In his later years, he buried himself in studying Japanese Confucianism and died in 1944 at the age of 90.