Abstract
Books 8-10 and sections of books 11-16 of the Zhuangzi anthology represent an important
and underappreciated contribution to Warring States ethical and political philosophy, known as
“primitivism.” This article offers a general introduction to Zhuangist primitivism. It focuses on
primitivism’s exploration and development of a normative conception of human nature,
particularly xing 性, as well as primitivism’s subsequent rejection of the elaborate moral, social,
political, and cultural artifices championed by their philosophical opponents, chiefly the Ruists
and the Mohists. After a brief introduction to Zhuangist primitivism and the limited scholarship
on them, I divide this discussion into three parts pertaining to the primitivists’ three distinct
approaches to and uses of human nature, which in turn serve as the basis for primitivist ethics
and political thought.