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  1. Blunting Occam's razor: aligning medical education with studies of complexity.Alan Bleakley - 2010 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 16 (4):849-855.
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  • Dimensions of aesthetic encounters: perception, interpretation, and the signs of art.Robert E. Innis - 2022 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
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  • “Let Chinese Thinking Be Chinese, not Western”: Sine Qua Non to Globalization.Wu Kuang-Ming - 2010 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 9 (2):193-209.
    Globalization consists of global interculture strengthening local cultures as it depends on them. Globality and locality are interdependent, and “universal” must be replaced by “inter-versal” as existence inter-exists. Chinese thinking thus must be Chinese, not Western, as Western thinking must be Western, not “universal”; China must help the West be Western, as the West must help China be Chinese. As Mrs. Tu speaks English in Chinese syntax, so “sinologists” logicize in Chinese phrases. English speakers parse her to realize the distinctness (...)
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  • The Prevalence of Mind–Body Dualism in Early China.Edward Slingerland & Maciej Chudek - 2011 - Cognitive Science 35 (5):997-1007.
    We present the first large-scale, quantitative examination of mind and body concepts in a set of historical sources by measuring the predictions of folk mind–body dualism against the surviving textual corpus of pre-Qin (pre-221 BCE) China. Our textual analysis found clear patterns in the historically evolving reference of the word xin (heart/heart–mind): It alone of the organs was regularly contrasted with the physical body, and during the Warring States period it became less associated with emotions and increasingly portrayed as the (...)
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  • The Doubleness of Craft: Motifs of Technical Action in Life Praxis according to Aristotle and Zhuangzi.David Machek - 2011 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 10 (4):507-526.
    This article offers a philosophical reflection on ambivalences inherent in the notion of craft analogy in the thought of Zhuangzi and Aristotle. Does it make sense to establish the analogy between the structure of the good conduct of life and the structure of the successful performance of craft? In turn, what are the reasons for rejecting this analogy? This study shows that both philosophers had strong reasons both for their commitment to some aspects of the analogy and for its decisive (...)
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  • Examining Special Patient Rituals in a Chinese Cultural Context: A Research Report.Ryan G. Hornbeck, Justin L. Barrett & Brianna Bentley - 2015 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 15 (5):530-541.
    Is reasoning about religious ritual tethered to ordinary, nonreligious human reasoning about actions? E. Thomas Lawson and Robert N. McCauley’s ritual form hypothesis constitutes a cognitive approach to religious ritual – an explanatory theory that suggests people use ordinary human cognition to make specific predictions about ritual properties, relatively independent of cultural or religious particulars. Few studies assess the credibility ofrfhand further evidence is needed to generalize its predictions across cultures. Towards this end, we assessed culturally Chinese “special patient” rituals (...)
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  • Implicit Anthropologies in Pre-philosophical Śaivism with Particular Reference to the Netra-tantra.Gavin Flood - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 48 (4):675-701.
    While there are overt philosophies of the person in both dualistic and non-dualistic Śaivism that developed their doctrines explicitly in relation to each other and to non-Śaiva traditions, especially Buddhism, many Śaiva texts exemplify what might be called a pre-philosophical discourse. Such works contain philosophical ideas but do not present systematic arguments and are often regarded as divine revelation. It is this layer of the articulation of concepts linked to practices that the paper exposes, which the arguments of the later (...)
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  • Comparative philosophy: Chinese and western.David Wong - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Different atmospheres : of Sloterdijk, China, and site.N. J. Thrift - unknown
    This paper begins with an appreciation and critique of the remarkable work of Peter Sloterdijk which makes it possible to open up a number of issues concerning philosophy and its relation to the social sciences and humanities, most particularly concerning the role of evidence and the pervasiveness of Eurocentrism. In particular, the paper argues that it is possible to think of different ways of raising the spectre of space which are as plausible as the account provided by Sloterdijk’s spatial philosophy/philosophy (...)
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  • Chinese landscape painting and the art of living.Marcello Ghilardi - 2021 - Studi di Estetica 21.
    This article deals with the Chinese ink painting tradition, as a paradigm in which art and life are coupled and intertwined. In fact, in Chinese classical aesthetics, art and life do not produce a dramatic tension, but are inscribed in a common process of naturalness or spontaneity. The painter has to learn how the breath, or vital energy, that flows in every single image-phenomenon, can be enlivened by the brush strokes. Moreover, the paper builds a dialogue between the European and (...)
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