6,573 results on '"Chinese philosophy"'
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152. The State of the Field Report X: Contemporary Chinese Studies of Tianxia (All-Under-Heaven).
- Author
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Tang, Yun
- Subjects
CHINESE philosophy ,PLAUSIBILITY (Logic) ,UTOPIAS ,HEAVEN ,NORMATIVE theory (Communication) - Abstract
This article offers a critical overview of a set of normative theories, namely Tianxia 天下 (all-under-heaven), whose purpose is to provide a renewed conceptual framework for the improvement of the world system. First, the article introduces the origins, main features, and differences within Tianxia, before discussing two major criticisms leveled against it. The article then argues that the most powerful parts of these criticisms come from the challenges posed against Tianxia's legitimacy. The article elaborates on this and introduces two additional challenges of the same kind which were not discussed before. While the article leaves open the question of whether Tianxia is a realistic utopia, it insists that meaningful discussion of Tianxia must take legitimacy challenges seriously. It ends with a discussion concerning whether China can be understood as a civilization-state and how this understanding affects Tianxia's reception as a realistic utopia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. Dao as a Unified Composition or Plurality: A Nihilism Perspective.
- Author
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Banka, Rafal
- Subjects
NIHILISM (Philosophy) ,CHINESE philosophy ,TAOISM ,WHOLE & parts (Philosophy) ,PLURALISM - Abstract
This article departs from a mereological conceptualization of the Daoist metaphysical system in the Daodejing 道德經. I discuss what parthood status applies to dao 道. Whereas it is quite intuitive that you 有—the region of concrete objects—has parthood relationships and compositions (entities made from parts), the other, undifferentiated region, dao, poses a considerable problem. This problem can be characterized in the following way: (a) dao cannot be characterized as a particular composition, which entails that it does not include parts. However, (b) dao underpins compositions in you, which entails that it contains compositions or at least parts that make compositions in you. This generates a problem of how compositions are possible with an undifferentiated ontological foundation. I focus on one possible approach to this problem––mereological nihilism, according to which no composition is possible. Assuming nihilism entails dao composed of mereological simples––fundamental entities, which are not parts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Navigating Comparative Space: Longobardo's Reading of Shao Yong and the "Ten Thousand Things – One Body" Axiom.
- Author
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Janik, Mateusz and O'Neill, Rory
- Subjects
CHINESE philosophy ,CHRISTIAN missionaries ,CHINESE history ,JESUIT missions - Abstract
This essay focuses on A Brief Response on the Controversies over Shangdi, Tianshen and Linghun by Niccolò Longobardo (1559–1654), a text that played a crucial role in the formation of European understanding of Chinese philosophy. Taken historically, the text is an important vehicle for the transmission of Chinese concepts into early modern European philosophy as well as a key intervention in the debate shaping the ideological premises of the Jesuit mission in China. It contains one of the first systematic accounts of Chinese philosophy written by a European author. More importantly, it presents a narrative that links Mediterranean and Chinese intellectual history into a single historical current. In this way Longobardo plays a role analogous to the mapmaker who distorts three-dimensional spaces in order to project them together onto a two-dimensional plane. We present some of the peculiar shifts and emphases made by Longobardo in his reading of what seems to him a transhistorical current linking the Chinese and ancient Mediterranean philosophical milieus. In particular, we examine (1) the relationship between Longobardo's attempt to situate Chinese thought in a global context and the choice to place special emphasis on the philosophy of Shao Yong 邵雍, treating him as a figure of primary importance among Song 宋 Neo-Confucian authors, and (2) the focus on the monist and cosmogonic aspects of Chinese thought, summarized by the "ten thousand things forming one body" (wanwuyiti 萬物一體) "axiom." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Wuwei in the Lüshi Chunqiu.
- Author
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Chai, David
- Subjects
WU wei (Chinese philosophy) ,LEGALISM (Chinese philosophy) ,TAOISM ,NOTHING (Philosophy) ,CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
Given wuwei 無為 describes the life praxis of the sage and statecraft of the enlightened ruler while also denoting the comportment of the Dao 道—an alternating state of quiet dormancy and creative activity—are the standard translations of wuwei as "nonaction" or "effortless action" up to the task? They are not, it will be argued, in that they fail to convey the true profundity of wuwei. The objective of this essay is twofold: to show that wuwei is better understood as "abiding harmony" than nonaction, and to demonstrate this via a close reading of the Lüshi Chunqiu 呂氏春秋 (Master Lü's Spring and Autumn Annals) which makes wuwei the epicenter of its doctrine of "the Dao of the ruler." Indeed, the Lüshi Chunqiu's unique application of wuwei lies not only in its borrowing of Daoist and Legalist norms, but in having the ruler meet the following prerequisites: be without knowledge, keep the senses and heart-mind pure, be reliant on others, follow Yin 陰 and Yang 陽, and study the course of heaven and earth to know the ways of humanity. There is, therefore, more to wuwei than meets the eye. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
156. Kill Stories: A Critical Narrative Genre in the Zhuangzi.
- Author
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Moeller, Hans-Georg
- Subjects
TAOISM ,CHINESE philosophy ,CONFUCIANISM ,RITES & ceremonies - Abstract
This essay suggests that a narrative genre of "kill stories" has a prominent philosophical function in the Zhuangzi 莊子. Kill stories depict the domestication and disciplining of "wild" living beings eventually resulting in their death. They typically show an incongruity between the moral attitude of the perpetrators and their destructive deeds. Thereby, they illustrate a critique of a broader sociopolitical "master narrative" associated with the Confucian tradition that had a strong impact on ideology and ethical values in early China. In the diagnosis of the kill stories, ritual practice and civilizational ordering inevitably produce discontent and unease. A second narrative genre that I call "survival stories" corresponds to the kill stories and connects with the medicinal orientation of the Daoist tradition. As therapeutic allegories, the survival stories reflect strategies for maintaining sanity and ease within society. Rather than advocating escapism or a return to a primitivist state, they promote the cultivation of immunity against consumption by social demands and pressures based on an insight into the inescapability and contingency of social roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. Language in Flight: Home and Elsewhere.
- Author
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Brandel, Andrew, Das, Veena, and Puett, Michael
- Abstract
How is meaning conceptualized within a language in terms of capacities and potentials of words and sentences? Analyzing words within the sentence as event-makers in Sanskrit and as creating new possibilities and of divining events in Chinese, this paper argues that writing commentaries, making translations, reciting texts and transcribing them, belong to a family of activities that we normally do with language. Thus, movement of every element of language from one place to another whether within a word, a character, a sentence, a text or between two languages is not something added from the outside, it is internal to the experience of language. We ask what bearing might such an insight have on dominant theories of translation and the untranslatable in contemporary theorizing that has been framed primarily in terms of the history of Europe's understanding of itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. Zhuangzi and collaboration in animals: a critical conceptual analysis of shared intentionality.
- Author
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Papadopoulos, Dennis
- Subjects
HOMINIDS ,CRITICAL analysis ,ACT (Philosophy) ,INTENTIONALITY (Philosophy) ,CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
Shared intentionality is a specific form of shared agency where a group can be understood to have an intention. It has been conjectured that humans are better equipped for collaboration than other animals because humans but not other great apes share intentions. However, exporting shared intentionality from a debate about the ontology of mental state attributions like intentions to groups does not seamlessly lend itself to evolutionary science. To explore and de-center the implicit assumptions of Western conceptions of cooperation, I look at Zhuangzi’s philosophy of (in)action. This philosophy treats the actions of individuals as always a form of co-action alongside other agencies to whom one must adapt. Thinking of collaboration as a product of skillful co-action, not shared intention, sidesteps asking about cooperation in “kinds” or levels. Instead, it directs attention to the know-how and behavioral flexibility needed to make our constant coordination adaptive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
159. Chinese Philosophy as the Pursuit of the Dao: An Inquiry into the Common Quest of Philosophical Thinking in Both Chinese and Greco-European Traditions.
- Author
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Liang, Zhen
- Subjects
- *
CHINESE philosophy , *POPULAR literature , *INTERPRETATION (Philosophy) , *CONFUCIANISM , *TAOISM - Abstract
This paper argues for an interpretation of Chinese philosophy as the pursuit of the Dao rather than the popular reading of it as a kind of wisdom literature. I examine the shared pursuit of two major Chinese schools of thought: Daoism and Confucianism—Dao, and compare it to the task of philosophy represented in the works of two major western thinkers—Hegel and Heidegger. By investigating the Dao comparatively with Hegel's Concept and Heidegger's philosophia, I reveal the common quest of philosophical thinking in both traditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. Against Renaissance Perspective: The Soaring Gaze.
- Author
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Min'an, Wang
- Subjects
- *
RENAISSANCE , *ONTOLOGY , *CHINESE philosophy , *PAINTING , *HELPLESSNESS (Psychology) - Abstract
This essay explores whether ontology is internal to traditional Chinese culture from the perspective of the view from above. Ancient Chinese philosophy, poetry, and art abound with all kinds of descriptions of viewing from above. Such views from on high, as illustrated by famous works discussed in this essay, usually admit of no fixed focus; that is, there is no ontic being, concealed or disclosed, controlling the perceiving eyes. The gaze from above, which is either fluid or decentered, in some cases does not even focus on any real object. It merely reveals an abstract historical review or an attitudinal stance. As such, the fushi gaze, devoid of any concrete object of perception or any central point of reference, always points to the absence of ontology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
161. Austerity in Mohist ethics.
- Author
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Kim, Bradford Jean-Hyuk
- Subjects
- *
MOISM , *ETHICS , *UTILITARIANISM , *CHINESE philosophy , *CONFUCIANISM - Abstract
Fraser highlights an unattractive feature of Mohist ethics: the Mohists, while criticizing their Confucian contemporaries, restrict one's pursuits to the most basic sorts of goods. Fraser suggests that the Mohists assume the perpetuity of scarce resources, which leads to a commitment to austerity, which in turn leads them to deny a plausible third way between austerity and excess. In their defence, I argue that the Mohists do not assume perpetuity of scarce resources but rather the hedonic treadmill. And instead of begging the question by assuming austerity and then denying a moderate alternative to excess, the Mohists take the hedonic treadmill to preclude a principled stopgap between austerity and excess, leaving austerity as the only acceptable option. Finally, these dynamics illuminate a feature that should make us wary of parallels to Millian utilitarianism: the maximization principle of the latter is absent from Mohism, and this goes hand-in-hand with austerity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
162. The evolution of Li Dazhao's Chinese nationalism.
- Author
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Lu, Xiufen
- Subjects
- *
CONFUCIAN philosophy , *CONFUCIAN ethics , *NATIONALISM , *CHINESE philosophy , *WORLDVIEW , *MODERN history , *MARXIST philosophy - Abstract
Studies on Chinese nationalism in Western academia have been influenced by a popular theory called 'the culturalism-to-nationalism thesis', a loosely formulated interpretive paradigm which emerged in late 1960s. The literature on this topic, however, reveals an inadequate understanding of traditional Chinese thinking and its influence on Chinese thought in modern history. An examination of the work of Li Dazhao (1889–1927) and his philosophical heritage not only will open up a valuable source for us to rethink about this thesis and its defects, but also will shed light on the complicated background and perspective that give rise to modern Chinese nationalism. Given the interest in Chinese nationalism in contemporary world, an understanding of its historical roots is particularly timely, since in order to understand China's current and future actions one must understand the origins of Chinese nationalist thinking and its transformations in time. This paper makes a contribution to that historical understanding. I argue that traditional Chinese philosophy, especially the Daoist world view and Confucian ethics played a significant role in shaping Li's patriotic and nationalist stance. It also predisposed him intellectually to accept the internationalist characteristic of Marxism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
163. Translating Philosophy from and into Chinese in the Light of Humboldt's Comparativism.
- Author
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Zhang, Yijing
- Subjects
- *
COMPARATIVE linguistics , *ANCIENT philosophy , *CHINESE language , *CHINESE philosophy , *COMPARATIVE philosophy - Abstract
This article re-examines Humboldt's comparative linguistics by analyzing two cases: the reception of Chinese philosophy in France and the translation of Greek philosophy in China. Humboldt's legacy is treated in opposite ways which result in two translation methods. I argue that Humboldt's statement about the inferiority of Chinese should not be taken in a literal sense. It highlights the grammatical differences between Greek and Chinese, and can lead to questioning some basic assumptions about the concept of being. Humboldtian comparativism, understood as the recognition of differences and the respect for the foreign, can shed light on transcultural understanding in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
164. Lexical Field Theory and the Translation of Philosophical Works into Chinese.
- Author
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Kwan, Tze-wan
- Subjects
- *
CHINESE language , *TRANSLATING & interpreting , *READABILITY (Literary style) , *LINGUISTICS , *CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
The translation of philosophical works is a topic that merits our attention both in respect of philosophical understanding and linguistic structure, although it is the former rather than the latter that prevails in discussions in Chinese academia. By drawing upon that branch of modern linguistics known as the lexical field theory, this paper attempts to analyze a host of related problems, including the following: readability as a basic requirement of translation, difficulties in translation caused by the syntactic-typological distance of source and target languages, consistency of translated terms in general, consistency of semantically related terms in translation, consistency of translated terms regarding the syntagmatic axis and the paradigmatic axis, the use of monosyllabic, disyllabic, or polysyllabic Chinese terms in translation, translation of long or rare terms into Chinese, the middle way between 'under-translation' and 'over-translation,' identification of lexical fields for the systematic treatment of translated terms, and finally the in-depth understanding of original texts in their source languages as a prerequisite of any serious attempt of translation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
165. The Philosophy of Translation, the Translation of Philosophy, and Chinese.
- Author
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Forster, Michael N., Kreis, Guido, and Kwan, Tze-wan
- Subjects
- *
CHINESE language , *PHILOSOPHY of language , *CHINESE philosophy , *TRANSLATING & interpreting , *PERIODICAL publishing - Abstract
This article, published in the Journal of Chinese Philosophy, examines the challenges and approaches to translating philosophy between Western languages and Chinese. It discusses the historical development and philosophy of translation, as well as different approaches like domesticating and foreignizing. The article also explores the translation of philosophy and the unique challenges it presents, particularly when translating Chinese philosophy into Western languages and vice versa. It includes case studies on translating philosophical and mathematical terms, debates on specific translations, and insights into the complexities of translating philosophical texts into Chinese. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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166. Holistic listening to nature through the concept of the heart-mind in environmental education.
- Author
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Tan, Shihua
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL education , *LISTENING , *HOLISTIC education , *EAR , *EDUCATORS , *CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
As a Chinese Canadian environmental educator and musician, I explore how the concepts of the heart-mind and holistic listening from guqin music could be applied to environmental education (EE) as a non-western perspective on the ecological crisis and the problematic separation between humans and nature. The early Chinese concept of the heart-mind (psyche) is exhibited in guqin culture. A cultivated and enhanced heart-mind is free from individual self-interest and competition– mindset of the capitalist system that has produced massive destruction of our planet. Holistic listening to nature engages the heart-mind and whole body, highlighting human connections with nature within a correlative cosmology. Holistic listening and the heart-mind can be used in EE as an environmental ethic that promotes simplicity, holistic learning, and harmony with nature as the good life, engaging learners' cultural and environmental consciousness and ability to connect to the environment ethically and spiritually. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. The Tripartite Dimensions of "Ren 人" (Human Beings) in Pre-Qin Confucianism in Terms of "Li 礼" (Ritual).
- Author
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Feng, Li
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN beings , *RITES & ceremonies , *RITUAL , *CONFUCIANISM , *CHINESE philosophy , *PHILOSOPHERS ,CHINESE history - Abstract
This study delves into the Pre-Qin Confucian understanding of "ren 人" (human beings), focusing on the tripartite dimensions of "shen 身" (body), "qing 情" (sentiment), and "xin 心" (mind) as viewed through the lens of "li 礼" (ritual). By analyzing the works of Confucius, Mencius, Xunzi, and other significant early texts, we unravel how these early Confucian philosophers reconceptualized human beings within the framework of "li 礼" (ritual). In doing so, they presented a novel perspective on the human experience that emphasized the interconnectedness of these three dimensions, transforming the way people thought about themselves and their place in the world. This research illuminates the unique contributions of Pre-Qin Confucianism to the understanding of human beings and provides valuable insights into the philosophical breakthroughs of this period in Chinese thought. Furthermore, this understanding of human beings persisted throughout the subsequent imperial history of China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. Guo Xiang's Metaphysics of Being and Action: On the Importance of Xing 性.
- Author
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D'Ambrosio, Paul Joseph
- Subjects
- *
METAPHYSICS , *CHINESE philosophy , *GLUE ,CHINESE history - Abstract
Guo Xiang 郭象 (d. 312) holds a unique place in the history of Chinese thought. The only Zhuangzi we have access to is the version heavily edited, likely changed, and perhaps even rewritten by Guo Xiang. However, his commentary on this Daoist classic is not simply an explanation of what the Zhuangzi says, and in many ways, it is not even a development of the thought found within this text—though at times it is indeed both. Reading Guo's work reveals a complex philosophical system that critically reimagines some of the key terminologies in early Chinese thought, as well as core assumptions about what things are (being) and how they interact (action). This paper seeks to provide a sketch of Guo Xiang's metaphysical appreciation of being and action by investigating his unique understanding of the relevant terms and their interrelation. Most scholars see ziran 自然 "self-so" as the conceptual glue that holds Guo's complex system together. In this paper, I will argue that xing 性, which may be translated as "nature" or "natural dispositions" is more fundamental. In other words, without properly appreciating how Guo conceives of xing, interpretations of Guo's philosophy can easily go awry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
169. A Biocultural Dialogue between Thoreau and Taoist Thought: Rethinking Environmental Ethics, Nature, Spirituality and Place.
- Author
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Thompson, Michael and Xu, Li
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL ethics , *CHINESE philosophy , *TRANSCENDENTALISM (Philosophy) , *AMERICAN transcendentalism , *ANCIENT philosophy , *SPIRITUALITY , *CROSS-cultural studies - Abstract
A fundamental question of the 21st century centers around the role and place of humans in their environment. Given the great acceleration of consumptive practices engaged in the 20th century, humans stand on the brink of a 6th extinction event. In order to determine our place and role in our global environment, we need to reflect on where we are and what the future will be—we need to focus on the habits of our "co-inhabitation" of the planet. Given the positive and negative impacts of international and global activities, intercultural dialogues are necessary for the care of the ecology of the planet, and one of the most prescient dialogues is between Eastern and Western world views. While much comparative research has been conducted regarding the connection between American Transcendentalism and Chinese ancient philosophy, relatively little philosophical work has been conducted to demonstrate the connectivity between Henry David Thoreau and Taoism. Yet there are, in fact, profound similarities between the American naturalist and Chinese philosophy, in particular Taoism. This paper aimed to discover and manifest the connection and similarities between the philosophy of Thoreau and the ancient worldview of Taoism. Through this comparative study and intercultural dialogue, we seek to trace historical precedents and intercultural dialogue between American Transcendentalism and ancient Chinese philosophy in order to explore the groundwork for a new vision of environmental awareness in order to promote a better future with a community of co-inhabitants and emphasis on the well-being of all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. The Concept of Zhonghua in Modern Chinese Philosophy and its Cosmological Implications.
- Author
-
Rudenko, Sergii
- Subjects
CHINESE philosophy ,MODERN philosophy ,MARXIST philosophy ,PHYSICAL cosmology ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology - Abstract
This article presents the results of a study of both Western and Far Eastern narratives of philosophical cosmology. The task of the study was to analyse the essential characteristics of philosophical cosmology in both Western and Far Eastern paradigms. This was made possible by clarifying the distinction between astronomy and cosmology, on the one hand, and philosophy and philosophical cosmology, on the other. The Greek word "κόσμος" is both etymologically and semantically different from the concept of "space." If space has only one characteristic, it is an extension, and then the cosmos, being a phenomenon that is not static but dynamic, has internal forces and a movement towards selforganisation and harmonisation. A person does not live in space, but in the world; such is the point of view of philosophical cosmology, which means that different cultures may have their own cosmology, which will need to be different. It is in this difference of philosophical cosmologies that the richness of philosophy is seen; by studying other cosmological worldviews, one can better understand one's own. Scholars, including Weimin Sun, Robert Cummings Neville, and others, agree on the need to intensify interest in Chinese cosmology and its basic concepts. One such concept is Zhonghua. Modern Chinese philosophy is a combination of Marxist philosophy, traditional Chinese philosophy, and Western philosophy. One of the tasks of a modern researcher in China is to find possible points of contact, and common features in order to demonstrate the possible well-functioning cooperation of these currents. In addition, common features are found primarily in cosmology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
171. Contempt, Withdrawal and Equanimity in the Zhuangzi.
- Author
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Lai, Karyn
- Abstract
The Zhuangzi, a 4
th century BCE Daoist text, is sceptical about the political culture of its time. Those who debated conceptions of a good life were hostile to the views of others. They were intolerant and at times contemptuous of others who did not embody their values. In contrast to such negativity, the Zhuangzi promotes equanimity. The equanimity of the sagely person is grounded in a balance she maintains between engagement and withdrawal. Engaging critically, she problematises the lack of diversity in their options for a good life. By withdrawing, she refuses to be party to the squabbles that perpetuate intolerance. The paper aims to show how equanimity is possible, thereby articulating a new angle on emotions in the Zhuangzi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
172. Virtuous Contempt and the Ritual Community in Confucius and Xúnzǐ.
- Author
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Virág, Curie
- Abstract
Both Confucius and Xúnzǐ take for granted that contempt, in certain situations, is an appropriate and justified response for a person of virtuous character. But Xúnzǐ departs from his predecessor in his insistence on drawing clear boundaries around contempt so as to diminish its destructive and destabilizing potential. This article argues that Xúnzǐ's efforts to circumscribe contempt reflect a shift in the vision of the ritual community from one based on affective ties to one based on an impersonal, universalist state. It also traces the implications of this connection for how we might confront the problem of toxic contempt that has pervaded our political landscape today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
173. LAW IN IMPERIAL CHINA AS PRESENTED IN THE RESEARCH OF FATHER PROFESSOR ANTONI KOŚĆ SVD.
- Author
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BUCZEK, LECH
- Subjects
CHINESE philosophy ,SOCIAL hierarchies ,STATE taxation ,RELIGIOUS schools ,SOCIAL structure ,CONFUCIANISM ,MODERN philosophy - Abstract
Copyright of Gdansk Journal of East Asian Studies / Gdanskie Studia Azji Wschodniej is the property of Jagiellonian University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
174. The Concept of Zhonghua in Modern Chinese Philosophy and its Cosmological Implications
- Author
-
Sergii Rudenko
- Subjects
the concept of zhonghua ,chinese philosophy ,chinese cosmology ,chinese marxism ,cosmos ,world ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 - Abstract
This article presents the results of a study of both Western and Far Eastern narratives of philosophical cosmology. The task of the study was to analyse the essential characteristics of philosophical cosmology in both Western and Far Eastern paradigms. This was made possible by clarifying the distinction between astronomy and cosmology, on the one hand, and philosophy and philosophical cosmology, on the other. The Greek word “??sµ??” is both etymologically and semantically different from the concept of “space.” If space has only one characteristic, it is an extension, and then the cosmos, being a phenomenon that is not static but dynamic, has internal forces and a movement towards selforganisation and harmonisation. A person does not live in space, but in the world; such is the point of view of philosophical cosmology, which means that different cultures may have their own cosmology, which will need to be different. It is in this difference of philosophical cosmologies that the richness of philosophy is seen; by studying other cosmological worldviews, one can better understand one’s own. Scholars, including Weimin Sun, Robert Cummings Neville, and others, agree on the need to intensify interest in Chinese cosmology and its basic concepts. One such concept is Zhonghua. Modern Chinese philosophy is a combination of Marxist philosophy, traditional Chinese philosophy, and Western philosophy. One of the tasks of a modern researcher in China is to find possible points of contact, and common features in order to demonstrate the possible well-functioning cooperation of these currents. In addition, common features are found primarily in cosmology.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
175. Arturo Oropeza: Confucio y el Estado moral chino.
- Author
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Palencia, Paulina and Uriegas, David F.
- Subjects
CHINESE philosophy ,CONFUCIAN philosophy ,CONFUCIANISM ,CHINA-United States relations ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,RULE of law - Abstract
Copyright of Abogacía is the property of Base Legal, SA de CV and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
176. Marxian Ecology, East and West: Joseph Needham and a Non-Eurocentric View of the Origins of China's Ecological Civilization.
- Author
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FOSTER, JOHN BELLAMY
- Subjects
- *
CONFUCIANISM , *CHINESE philosophy , *CIVILIZATION , *PHILOSOPHY of nature , *PRAXIS (Process) , *ANCIENT philosophy , *BIOLOGICAL evolution - Abstract
The article presents the Needham convergence thesis wherein Marxist materialist dialectics had an affinity with Chinese organic naturalism as represented especially by Daoism, similar to ancient Epicureanism that lay at the foundations of Karl Marx' own materialist conception of nature. Cited are the concept of ecological civilization introduced by Needham, and the reliance of the Needham thesis on a classical Epicurean Marxist interpretation of the origins of historical materialism.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. Confucius and the Chinese culture: address to the Young Experts Symposium (YES 2022)
- Author
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Ronghua, Wang
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
178. Confucianism and Ethics in Management
- Author
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Niedenführ, Matthias, Hennig, Alicia, Neesham, Cristina, Section editor, Macklin, Rob, Section editor, Neesham, Cristina, editor, Reihlen, Markus, editor, and Schoeneborn, Dennis, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
179. Daoism and Ethics in Management
- Author
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Hennig, Alicia, Niedenführ, Matthias, Neesham, Cristina, Section editor, Macklin, Rob, Section editor, Neesham, Cristina, editor, Reihlen, Markus, editor, and Schoeneborn, Dennis, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
180. What Is 'Ancient Chinese Logic' ?
- Author
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Zhenzhen, Guo, Andréka, Hajnal, Editorial Board Member, Béziau, Jean-Yves, Series Editor, Burgin, Mark, Editorial Board Member, Diaconescu, Răzvan, Editorial Board Member, Herzig, Andreas, Editorial Board Member, Koslow, Arnold, Editorial Board Member, Lee, Jui-Lin, Editorial Board Member, Maksimova, Larissa, Editorial Board Member, Malinowski, Grzegorz, Editorial Board Member, Paoli, Francesco, Editorial Board Member, Sarenac, Darko, Editorial Board Member, Schröder-Heister, Peter, Editorial Board Member, Vasyukov, Vladimir, Editorial Board Member, Desclés, Jean-Pierre, editor, Moktefi, Amirouche, editor, and Pascu, Anca Christine, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
181. Holism and the Theory of Autopoiesis
- Author
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Gordon, Susan and Gordon, Susan
- Published
- 2022
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182. Striving for the 'Original' Meaning: A Historical Survey of Yijing’s English Translations
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Li, Weirong, Li, Defeng, Series Editor, Qi, Lintao, editor, and Tobias, Shani, editor
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- 2022
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183. The Vienna Circle in China: The Story of Tscha Hung
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Jiang, Yi, Kusch, Martin, Series Editor, Ramharter, Esther, Series Editor, Carrier, Martin, Advisory Editor, Stadler, Friedrich, Series Editor, Cartwright, Nancy, Advisory Editor, Creath, Richard, Advisory Editor, Ferrari, Massimo, Advisory Editor, Friedman, Michael, Advisory Editor, Galavotti, Maria Carla, Advisory Editor, Galison, Peter, Advisory Editor, Hacohen, Malachi, Advisory Editor, Hegselmann, Rainer, Advisory Editor, Heidelberger, Michael, Advisory Editor, Howard, Don, Advisory Editor, Hoyningen-Huene, Paul, Advisory Editor, Jabloner, Clemens, Advisory Editor, Kox, Anne J., Advisory Editor, Lennox, James G., Advisory Editor, Mormann, Thomas, Advisory Editor, Morscher, Edgar, Advisory Editor, Mulligan, Kevin, Advisory Editor, Nemeth, Elisabeth, Advisory Editor, Nida-Rümelin, Julian, Advisory Editor, Niiniluoto, Ilkka, Advisory Editor, Pfersmann, Otto, Advisory Editor, Rédei, Miklós, Advisory Editor, Richardson, Alan, Advisory Editor, Schurz, Gerhard, Advisory Editor, Sluga, Hans, Advisory Editor, Sober, Elliott, Advisory Editor, Soulez, Antonia, Advisory Editor, Spohn, Wolfgang, Advisory Editor, Stöltzner, Michael, Advisory Editor, Uebel, Thomas E., Advisory Editor, Wagner, Pierre, Advisory Editor, Waters, C. Kenneth, Advisory Editor, Wolters, Gereon, Advisory Editor, Zeilinger, Anton, Advisory Editor, Essler, Wilhelm K., Advisory Editor, Holton, Gerald, Advisory Editor, Janik, Allan S., Advisory Editor, Kamlah, Andreas, Advisory Editor, Köhler, Eckehart, Advisory Editor, Manninen, Juha, Advisory Editor, Oeser, Erhard, Advisory Editor, Schuster, Peter, Advisory Editor, Šebestík, Jan, Advisory Editor, Sigmund, Karl, Advisory Editor, Thiel, Christian, Advisory Editor, Weingartner, Paul, Advisory Editor, Woleński, Jan, Advisory Editor, Stoppelkamp, Bastian, Advisory Editor, Kaller, Robert, Advisory Editor, Pircher, Josef, Advisory Editor, and Weiss, Zarah, Advisory Editor
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- 2022
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184. Advancing Psychology of China: A Call for Paradigm Shift
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Duan, Changming, Li, Fenglan, and Hua, Shiping, editor
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- 2022
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185. 'The Soft Overcomes the Hard': Inspirations for Leadership in the Twenty-First Century from Daoism
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Hennig, Alicia, Schiller, Lena, Dhiman, Satinder, Series Editor, and Marques, Joan, Series Editor
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- 2022
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186. Strengthening Friendship Between China and Europe, Expanding Talent Cooperation and Exchange.
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DU ZHANYUAN
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OPENING ceremonies , *COOPERATION , *YOUNG adults , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
The article focuses on the importance of strengthening talent exchange and cooperation between China and Europe. Topics include enhancing collaboration in science and technology for global progress, strengthening economic and trade relations to support sustainable development, and deepening mutual learning among civilizations through cultural and educational exchanges.
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- 2024
187. Cross-cultural leadership development in China
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Petersen, Daniel Martin Agerbech, Vermunt, Jan, and Goodall, Keith
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658.4 ,Leadership ,Leadership development ,Culture ,Cross-cultural management ,Management ,China ,Cross-cultural leadership ,Organisation ,Chinese philosophy ,Fortune 500 ,Chinese culture ,Organisational behaviour ,Education ,Chinese Education ,Training & Developement ,Leadership development programmes ,Strategy ,Organisational strategy - Abstract
This dissertation focuses on Western cross-cultural leadership development initiatives in China. The aim of the study is to understand and improve the practice of Western enterprises conducting business in the Chinese market. The research approach adopted included a qualitative exploratory interview investigation with 5 companies in the following industries: oil and gas; shipping and logistics; retail; fast-moving consumer goods; and banking. In total, 24 Chinese high-potential employees and 7 representatives for the companies' global leadership development strategy were interviewed. The dissertation sets the stage with a historical overview of 6 prevailing leadership paradigms in modern management. This is followed by the central philosophies of Chinese leadership. Finally, relevant literature on leadership development in China and the West is reviewed. Throughout the literature review, gaps in the research are identified and discussed which inform the methodological framework of the study. Through a phenomenographic analysis, the data of this study are grouped into categories of descriptions containing different views on effective leadership and leadership development. The findings from this research provide evidence that the conceptualisations of leadership and leadership development amongst the interviewees are multifaceted and the interviewees occasionally step in and out of different views, and thus they adhere to multiple conceptions. The main conclusions related to leadership conceptions drawn by this study are as follows: (i) Chinese managers in Western companies conceptualise leadership with reference to 'Western' and 'Chinese' leadership styles; (ii) Chinese managers tending to agree with all 6 paradigms connect to the principles of Daoism; (iii) Chinese managers' holistic manner of conceptualising leadership is considered unfocused and vague by Western headquarters; (iv) the lack of alignment in conceptualisations of leadership causes Western headquarters to hesitate in promoting Chinese managers to senior management positions; and (v) Chinese managers report the importance of 'care' and 'guanxi' in Chinese companies. The Chinese managers described Chinese leaders as caring, warm, and paternal; by contrast, care in Western companies was associated purely with professional support. The main conclusions related to leadership development drawn by this study are as follows: (i) Chinese managers and headquarters perceive leadership development as both formal classroom teaching as well as social interaction in daily work; (ii) whilst some companies practice a globally centralised approach to leadership development, others modify their programmes to a Chinese context; (iii) Chinese managers perceive pedagogical approaches to leadership development tailored to a Chinese culture as successful; in particular, initiatives such as rotation schemes, exposure to senior management, rigorous individual development plans, mentoring, and group work structures outbalancing power differences are perceived positively; and (iv) among the unsuccessful approaches mentioned is a lack of investment in tailoring pedagogical initiatives to a Chinese context. Such approaches created a lack of purpose and unclear criteria. This study concludes that enhancing alignment is particularly crucial, as is the mutual understanding of leadership and leadership development conceptions when developing leaders cross-culturally in China.
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- 2019
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188. Perspectives on the pharmacology of Pinellia Ternata and the theory of medicinal properties of Chinese materia medica based on the materia medica literature.
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YANG Yiwen and YANG Baican
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MATERIA medica , *CHINESE medicine , *PHARMACOLOGY , *CHINESE literature , *CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
The understanding of Pinellia Ternata is reflected in various aspects of the theoretical system of the medicinal properties of Chinese materia medica, including the medicinal source, properties, efficacy, medicinal use and pharmacology. Through an analysis of the pharmacology of Pinellia Ternata, it was shown that the pharmacology of Chinese materia medica is guided by ancient Chinese philosophy, which is based on the external appearance of the medicine combined with traditional Chinese medicine theory and clinical practice, to explain and analyze the laws and principles of the medicinal action. This integrates various aspects of the traditional Chinese culture and the sources, properties, and efficacy of the medicine. Therefore, the understanding and application of Chinese materia medica must attach importance to the records of ancient Chinese herbal literature, which must be analyzed systematically to effectively guide clinical medication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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189. An integrative framework of information as both objective and subjective.
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Jarrahi, Mohammad Hossein, Ma, Yuanye, and Goray, Cami
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INFORMATION modeling , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *CHINESE philosophy , *INFORMATION theory , *YIN-yang , *INFORMATION science - Abstract
We present a model of information that integrates two competing perspectives of information by emulating the Chinese philosophy of yin-yang. The model embraces the two key dimensions of information that exist harmoniously: information as (1) objective and veridical representations in the world (information as object) and (2) socially constructed interpretations that are a result of contextual influences (information as subject). We argue that these two facets of information cocreate information as a unified system and complement one another through two processes, which we denote as forming and informing. While the information literature has historically treated these objective and subjective identities of information as incompatible, we argue that they are mutually relevant and that our understanding of one actually enhances our understanding of the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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190. Alfonso Vagnone's Tongyou Jiaoyu (On the Education of Children, c. 1632): The Earliest Encounter Between Chinese and European Pedagogy.
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Siyu Lei
- Subjects
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CHINESE language , *CONFUCIANISM , *TEXTBOOKS , *RESISTANCE to government , *PUBLISHING , *CHINESE philosophy ,MING dynasty, China, 1368-1644 - Published
- 2023
191. From "Aphasia" to "Chinese Discourse": The Variation Theory of Chinese Comparative Literature.
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Du Ping and Franco, Bernard
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COMPARATIVE literature ,CHINESE literature ,CHINESE people ,STRUCTURALISM ,COMMUNITIES ,CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
Copyright of Interdisciplinary Studies of Literature is the property of Interdisciplinary Studies of Literature Editorial Office and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
192. The Inheritance and Development of Chinese Narrative Medicine Practice to the Philosophical Wisdom of Traditional Chinese Medicine.
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YANG Xiaolin
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CHINESE medicine ,NARRATIVE medicine ,CLINICAL medical education ,CHINESE philosophy ,CHINESE people ,DYSLEXIA - Abstract
Starting from the inheritance and promotion of Chinese life philosophy and traditional Chinese medicine wisdom by Chinese narrative medicine practice, this paper discusses the inheritance and echo relationship between the "close textual reading ability" in Chinese narrative medicine practice and the "four diagnoses" in traditional Chinese medicine wisdom, narrative mediation and the "mind-body holistic philosophy" in traditional Chinese medicine, and narrative wisdom and Dao Sheng in Chinese life philosophy. Meanwhile, by analyzing the stories of contemporary doctors' practice of narrative intelligence, this paper expounds that Chinese narrative medicine is a new model of medical education and clinical practice based on the absorption of Chinese traditional life wisdom and the essence of traditional Chinese medicine culture, and the integration of western narrative medicine concepts. It also advocates Chinese scholars to actively build the discipline of "narrative traditional Chinese medicine," constantly translate the academic achievements to foreign countries, and create a good narrative ecology of traditional Chinese medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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193. Time and Change in Chinese Buddhist Philosophy: From Sengzhao to Chan Buddhism.
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Liu, JeeLoo
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ZEN Buddhism ,CHINESE philosophy ,DHARMA in Buddhism ,MING dynasty, China, 1368-1644 ,PHILOSOPHY of time ,CONFUCIANISM ,BUDDHIST philosophy - Abstract
The philosophy of time and change in Chinese Buddhism originated in a short treatise written by an early Chinese monk, Sengzhao (c. 384‐414 CE). In this treatise, "On the Immutability of Things (wubuqianlun)," Sengzhao proposed a revolutionary theory of time and change that opposed the traditional Chinese notion of change established by Confucianism and Daoism. His thesis of the immutability of things also seemingly defies a fundamental Buddhist teaching about the impermanence of things. More than a thousand years after Sengzhao, a monk in the Ming dynasty, Kongyin Zhencheng (1546–1617) published the "Logical Investigation of the Thesis of No‐Motion of Things (Wubuqian zhengliang lun) to refute Sengzhao's theory of the immutability of things. Because of Sengzhao's esteemed status as one of the early founders of Chinese Buddhism, Zhencheng's critique of Sengzhao caused an uproar among his contemporaries. The ensuing exchange constituted one of the major debates in the history of Chinese Buddhism (Lin 2018; Liu et al., 2020; Fang 1998; Zhu 2012) and was considered a significant event in the "rise of Buddhist scholasticism" (Liu et al., 2020: 7). This entry will carefully analyze Sengzhao's treatise on time and the immutability of things, highlighting the philosophical disagreements between him and Zhencheng. It will also place Sengzhao in his philosophical lineage to examine how he derived insights from Kumarajiva and Nāgārjuna, and how he might have influenced Chan Buddhism's conception of time. This entry will present the uniqueness of Sengzhao's conception of time that marks his departure from the Chinese tradition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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194. The Search for Subjectivity: Chinese Philosophical Studies in the Last Hundred Years and Its Contemporary Orientation.
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DING Sixin
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- 2023
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195. A Reconstruction of Chinese Philosophy, from Ancient Philosophy to a "New Tradition".
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YAO Yurui and WANG Zhongjiang
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- 2023
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196. Philosophy Illustrated: Forty-Two Thought Experiments to Broaden Your Mind.
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Méndez Pinto, Emilio
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- *
THOUGHT experiments , *CHALLENGED books , *BIBLIOGRAPHY , *INTUITION , *CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
The book "Philosophy Illustrated: Forty-Two Thought Experiments to Broaden Your Mind", edited by Helen de Cruz, presents forty-two classic thought experiments in the history of Western and Eastern philosophy. Each chapter includes a brief exposition of the experiment, reflections from recognized philosophers, challenging questions, and additional bibliography. The book challenges the reader's philosophical intuitions and establishes connections between thought experiments and empirical experimentation in philosophy. Additionally, it analyzes relevant philosophical problems for both Western and ancient Chinese traditions, and points out the limitations of the presented thought experiments. It also highlights the relationship between some thought experiments and the findings of contemporary science. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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197. Han Fei and conceptions of universal and Chinese human rights.
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Krumbein, Frédéric
- Subjects
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SOCIAL & economic rights , *HUMAN rights , *STATE power , *LEGAL authorities - Abstract
Han Fei (around 280 to 233 B.C.) advocates a strong and orderly state based on the absolute authority of the state and the law. Han Fei is usually not associated with human rights. His philosophy is difficult to reconcile with civil and political human rights, even if some of his political concepts support the realization of certain human rights. However, Han Fei's ideas help us to gain a better understanding of the People's Republic of China's official human rights narrative. The PRC emphasizes collective social and economic human rights, views the authority of the Communist Party as a prerequisite for the realization of human rights, and advocates rule by law, i.e. using the law as a tool of governance. This largely conforms to Han Fei's views on the role of the authority of the state and the law, and the relationship between the government and its citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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198. PHILOSOPHICAL FRAMEWORK OF THE ECONOMIC PRACTICE IN ANCIENT CHINA.
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SHOUYI ZHANG
- Subjects
- *
SUBSISTENCE economy , *AGRICULTURE , *ETHICS , *LOGIC , *FARMERS , *CHINESE philosophy - Abstract
Subsistence smallholder economy known as the inherent production mode in ancient China hides a lot of mysteries. What is the philosophical framework behind it? How did it come about and last for two millenniums? Why did it lead China to a great prosperity in agricultural era but did not evolute furthermore? This paper offers as a tentative explanation a line of logic, where pan-humanist philosophy evolves a humanity basis and morality standard in economic practice along with Legalist approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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199. Chinese Thought and Transcendentalism: Ecology, Place and Conservative Radicalism.
- Author
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Crippen, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
TRANSCENDENTALISM (Philosophy) , *CONFUCIAN philosophy , *CHINESE philosophy , *AMERICAN transcendentalism , *ZEN Buddhism , *RADICALISM , *POLITICAL philosophy - Abstract
My central claim is that resonances between Transcendentalist and Chinese philosophies are so strong that the former cannot be adequately appreciated without the latter. I give attention to the Analects, the Mengzi and the Tiantai Lotus Sutra, which Transcendentalists read. Because there was conceptual sharing across Chinese traditions, plus evidence suggesting Transcendentalists explored other texts, my analysis includes discussions of Daoism and Weishi, Huayan and Chan Buddhism. To name just some similarities between the targeted outlooks, Transcendentalists adopt something close to wu-wei or effortless action; though hostile to hierarchy, they echo the Confucian stress on rituals or habits; Thoreau's individualistic libertarianism is moderated by a radical causal holism found in many Chinese philosophies; and variants of Chinese Buddhism get close to Transcendentalist metaphysics and epistemologies, which anticipate radical embodied cognitive science. A specific argument is that Transcendentalists followed some of their Chinese counterparts by conserving the past and converting it into radicalism. A meta-argument is that ideas were exchanged via trade from Europe through North Africa to Western Asia and India into the Far East, and contact with Indigenous Americans led to the same. This involved degrees of misrepresentation, but it nonetheless calls upon scholars to adopt more global approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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200. 从“ 观” 到“ 体系” : 马克思« 资本论» “ 体系观” 的出场逻辑.
- Author
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任 平 and 周 欢
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of science ,HISTORICAL materialism ,EPISTEMIC logic ,OVERPRESSURE (Education) ,REVOLUTIONS ,CHINESE philosophy ,PROGRESS ,MARXIST philosophy - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Soochow University Philosophy & Social Sciences Edition is the property of Soochow University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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