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Lun heng: [30 juan]

Shanghai: Shanghai ren min chu ban she (1974)

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  1. The body and its image in classical chinese aesthetics.Chengji Liu - 2008 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 3 (4):577-594.
    Richard Shusterman’s Pragmatist Aesthetics : Living Beauty, Rethinking Art was published in China in 2002. In the preface of the Chinese edition, the author claimed that his tentative idea of soma esthetics was encouraged by Chinese philosophy and other ancient Asian philosophy. Shusterman’s background in pragmatist philosophy greatly constrains his understanding of the body in classical Chinese aesthetics in that he only pays attention to the technical aspects of physical training while neglecting the philosophical basis of this training. In Chinese (...)
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  • The source of the idea of equality in Confucian thought.Ruiquan Gao - 2010 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 5 (4):486-505.
    Although the traditional society in China was not necessarily a society of equality, and the classical Confucianism did not speak much about the principle of universal equality, in modern times, in the midst of a transformation of value systems, people still find correlating sources within the Confucian tradition that is connected to the modern idea of equality. This essay makes a detailed study on this correlation and points out that ancient Chinese society and the western feudal society are different in (...)
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  • Fiduciary society and confucian theory of Xin - on tu Wei-Ming's fiduciarity proposal.Zhaolu Lu - 2001 - Asian Philosophy 11 (2):85 – 101.
    This paper evaluates Tu Wei-ming's proposal that the Confucian ideal model of human society should be viewed as a fiduciary community. To do the evaluation, I provide a systematic elaboration of Tu's proposal, which is essentially absent in Tu's writings, and a systematic explication of the Confucian theory of fiduciarity, which is supposed to be the theoretical foundation of Tu's proposal but is completely absent in the studies of Confucianism, including Tu's own. On the basis of these studies, I conclude (...)
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  • The ontologicalization of the Confucian concept of Xin Xing: Zhou Lianxi’s founding contribution to the Song-Ming Neo-Confucianism. [REVIEW]Jinglin Li - 2006 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 1 (2):204-221.
    The Confucian concept of "cheng" (integrity) emphasizes logical priority of value realization over "zhen shi' (reality or truth). Through value realization and the completion of being, zhenshi can be achieved. Cheng demonstrates the original unity of value and reality. Taking the concept of cheng as the core, Zhou Lianxi's philosophy interpreted yi Dao (the Dao of change), and integrated Yi Jing (The Book of Changes) and Zhong Yong (The Doctrine of the Mean). On the one hand, it ontologicalized the Confucian (...)
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  • Three Sources of Wisdom of Chinese Traditional Virtue and a Contemporary Examination.Chenggui Li, Liuqin Xi & Hua Peng - 2006 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 1 (3):341-365.
    There are three explanations of the sources of virtue in the history of Chinese traditional ethical thoughts. The first source is tian Dao, the second is xing Dao, and the third is ren Dao. These explanations not only demonstrate the unique wisdom of ancient Chinese thinkers in constructing morality, but also have special revelations for us to comprehend more accurately the Chinese traditional morality, to clear up the wrong ideas about morality that have formed since modern times, to make virtue (...)
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  • Mencius and the tradition of articulating human nature in terms of growth.Tao Liang - 2009 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 4 (2):180-197.
    This article analyses the tradition of “articulating xing in terms of sheng ” and related other expressions, and also examines the debate between Mencius and Gaozi concerning “ xing is known by sheng .” It claims that while Mencius’ “human nature is good” discourse is influenced by the interpretive tradition of “articulating xing in terms of sheng ”, Mencius also transcends and develops this tradition. Therefore it is only when Mencius’ views about the goodness of human nature are understood in (...)
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  • The fate of independent thought in traditional china.Harry White - 1991 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 18 (1):53-72.
    China, like a huge dragon, gobbles all in its path. Like a huge vat, dyes all the same color. Sun Jingxuan, A Spector Prowls Our Land (1980).
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