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  1. Some Clarification on Confucian Paternalistic Gratitude—Responses to Stephen C. Angle and Manyul Im.Shu-Shan Lee - 2022 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 21 (4):617-626.
    My response to Stephen C. Angle focuses on his question: “Can the People (_min_ 民) ever grow up?” I conclude that the people-centered approach developed in “What Did the Emperor Ever Say?” (Lee 2020 ) does not rule out the idea of commoners becoming politically mature. With its focus on textual evidence specifically addressing the commoners and with its attentiveness to their political agency in historical China, the approach has the potential to help scholars find room for a more progressive (...)
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  • Service, reciprocity, and remedy: From Confucian meritocracy to Confucian democracy.Sungmoon Kim - 2024 - European Journal of Political Theory 23 (2):246-266.
    One of the most notable features in recent Confucian political theory is the advocacy of political meritocracy. Though Confucian meritocrats’ controversial institutional design has been subject to critical scrutiny, less attention has been paid to their underlying normative claims. This paper aims to investigate the two justificatory conditions of Confucian political meritocracy—the service condition and the reciprocity condition—in light of classical Confucianism and with special attention to moral disagreement. Finding the normative argument for Confucian political meritocracy both incomplete (in light (...)
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