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  1. Relationship between Chinese Confucianism and modern Japanese language: taking I am a cat as an example.Meng Gong & Yang Wang - 2024 - Trans/Form/Ação 47 (6):e02400297.
    Confucian thought provides guidance on social structure and political governance. It was introduced to Japan as early as the fourth century AD (Anno Domini) and has been deeply imprinted in Japan’s history and culture for thousands of years. This article takes I am a cat as a specific example to analyze the specific Confucian ideas reflected in Japanese relational language. I am a cat is a classic work by the famous modern Japanese satirist Soseki Natsume. From the specific reflection of (...)
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  • Taijiquan as a Way of Life: The Philosophy of Cheng Man-ch’ing.Andrew J. Dell’Olio - 2021 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 16 (4):461-475.
    Cheng Man-ch’ing (1901–1975) is as responsible as anyone for the wide popularity of taijiquan in the West. While his stature as a master and teacher of taijiquan is legendary, he is less well-known as a philosopher. Yet Cheng wrote a number of philosophical commentaries on Chinese classics that shed light on his understanding of taijiquan. In this paper I propose that a consideration of Cheng’s philosophical reflections shows him to be a twentieth century Neo-Confucian who saw taijiquan as a key (...)
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  • Spontaneous movement: an exploration of the concept.Qian Wang & Irena Martínková - 2024 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 51 (3):439-459.
    This paper explores what is understood by the phrase ‘spontaneous movement’. We discern five different understandings of spontaneity in the usage of the phrase: 1) spontaneous movement as automatic machine-like mechanistic, 2) spontaneous movement as free, 3) spontaneous movement as primal animateness of the body, 4) spontaneous movement as embodied responsive dealing in the world, 5) spontaneous movement as a force of nature. The first two understandings are rooted in a dualistic view, with the dichotomies of voluntary/involuntary and mind/body in (...)
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