ABSTRACT

Political leaders in Japan during the period following the Meiji restoration possessed an insight into the nature and utilization of resources that en­ abled them to achieve their goals of economic and social change while maintaining political stability. Their commonsense understanding of polit­ ical resources appears to us to have been superior to that possessed by polit­ ical scientists today. Today's political scientists have failed to find a way to handle the diversity of factors of political production.