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http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/543
DC Field | Value | Language |
---|---|---|
dc.contributor.author | Yijie Tang | - |
dc.date.accessioned | 2018-12-16T11:21:48Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2018-12-16T11:21:48Z | - |
dc.date.issued | 2015 | - |
dc.identifier.issn | 2195-1853 | - |
dc.identifier.uri | http://tnt.ussh.edu.vn:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/543 | - |
dc.description.abstract | Confucianism and Constructive Postmodernism ; What Kind of Age Are We in Now? ; The Rise of Two Trends of Thought in China in the 1990s; In the New Historical Period of Chinese Revival and in the Context of Globalization, Traditional Chinese Culture May Well Make an Epochal Contribution to Human Society; “Man and Nature as a Closely Related Living Community” and “Unity of Man and Heaven”; Constructive Postmodernism, a Second Enlightenment and Confucian Renxue (Learning of Goodness); Defining “Human” and Examining “Human Rights” from the Standpoint of Li: A Traditional Chinese Concept ; The Contemporary Significance of Confucianism ; Why Addressing the Topic “The Contemporary Significance of Confucianism”? ; Various Points of View About the “Learning of the Chinese Classics,” Especially Confucianism, in Academic and Cultural Circles ; What are the Main Issues in Contemporary Human Society? ; The Relationship Between Man and Nature ; The Relationship Between Man and Man ; The Relationship Between Body and Mind ; References ; Toward a Chinese Hermeneutics ; Is there a Subject Called “Hermeneutics” in Ancient China? ; Is it Possible to Find Out General Patterns of Interpretation in the Study of Chinese Classics?; Zuo Chuan’s Interpretation of Chun Qiu ; Ji Ci’s Interpretation of I Ching ; Han Fei Tzu’s Interpretation of Lao Tzu ; Glossary ; References ; Emotion in Pre-Qin Ruist Moral Theory: An Explanation of “Dao Begins in Qing”; On “Dao Begins in Qing” ; The Basis for the Pre-Qin Ruist Emphasis on Qing ; On “Qing Arises from Xing” 情生于性 ; Distinguishing Qing and Desire ; Some Reflections on New Confucianism in Chinese Mainland Culture of the 0s ; The Problem of Harmonious Communities in Ancient China ; An Inquiry into the Possibility of a Third-Phase Development of Confucianism ; Immanence and Transcendence in Chinese Chan Buddhism; Chinese Chan Buddhism Neither Valued Scriptures nor Established in Words, but Claimed Everything Should Listen to the Essential Mind ; Chinese Chan Buddhism Broke Outmoded Conventions and Abolished Sitting in Meditation, but Only Valued Seeing the Nature and Accomplishing the Buddhahood ; Chinese Chan Buddhism Did Not Worship Images, Rather Abused the Buddhas and Berated the Masters, but Claimed “One Who Is Enlightened in One Thought Is a Buddha” ; The Introduction of Indian Buddhism into China: A Perspective on the Meaning of Studies in Comparative Philosophy and Comparative Religion ; The Introduction of Indian Buddhism into China and the Popularization of the School of Prajna Teachings [bo-re xue] in the Wei and Jin Periods ; The Beginnings of Buddhism in China ; The An Shigao of Hinayana School ; The Zhi-lou-jia-qian of Mahayana School ; The Interaction Between the Imported Ideological Culture—Buddhism—And the Previously Existing Ideological Culture of China ; Adaptation to Tradition ; The Enrichment and Intensification of Tradition ; Relative Excellence and Real Contribution ; The Comparative Study of Philosophies and Regions ; The Search for Common Laws ; Attention to the Specific Characteristics of a Culture ; The Isolation of Old Topics and New Issues ; Relationships Between Traditional and Imported Thought and Culture in China: The Importation of Buddhism ; Vocabulary ; On the Dao De Jing (Tao Te Ching) ; The Origin and Characteristics of Daoism ; General Background ; The Development of Daoism ; Characteristics of Daoism ; Vocabulary ; The Daoist Religion of China ; The Attempt of Matteo Ricci to Link Chinese and Western Cultures ; Modes of Relating Oriental and Occidental Cultures ; Linking Catholicism with Confucianism (Heru) ; Complementing Confucianism (Buru) ; Transcending Confucianism (Chaoru) ; Concordance with Confucianism (Furu) ; “Body and Use” and the Correlation of Chinese and Western Harmony ; The Possible Orientations of Chinese Culture in the Context of Globalization ; Prospects for the Study of the History of Chinese Philosophy and the Issue of the True, the Good, and the Beautiful in China’s Traditional Philosophy ; Chinese Philosophy as a Threefold Integration ; Integration of Heaven with Man: The True ; Integration of Knowledge with Practice: The Good ; Integration of Feeling with Scenery: The Beautiful ; The Study of Chinese Philosophy and the Reason for Being Human ; Questions Concerning the Categorical System of Traditional Chinese Philosophy ; The Significance of Studying the Categorical System of Traditional Chinese Philosophy ; How to Study the Concepts and Categories of Traditional Chinese Philosophy ; Analysis of the Meaning of Concepts and Categories ; Analysis of the Development of the Meanings of Concepts and Categories ; Analysis of the Systems of Concepts and Categories of Philosophers (or Philosophical Schools) ; Analysis of the Similarities and Differences Between the Concepts and Categories of Chinese and Foreign Philosophies ; A Tentative Theory of the Categorical System of Traditional Chinese Philosophy ; Discussion ; New Progress in the Study of the History of Chinese Philosophy ; The History of Chinese Philosophy as the History of Knowledge of the Chinese Nation ; The Concept and Category of Traditional Chinese ; The Comparison and Analysis of Traditional Chinese and Foreign Philosophies ; The Method Employed by Traditional Chinese Philosophy in Establishing a System ; A Reconsideration of the Question of “The True, the Good, and the Beautiful” in Traditional Chinese Philosophy ; Confucius’ Demands of the Realm of Life ; Laozi’s Quest in the Realm of Life ; Zhuangzi’s Quest in the Realm of Life ; Brief Conclusion ; Chinese Character ; Chinese Traditional Cultures and Corporate Management ; A Study of the Question of China’s Cultural Development ; The Enlightenment and Its Difficult Journey in China ; The Eighteenth-Century European “Enlightenment Movement” and China’s Sixteenth-Century Late Ming “Enlightenment Trend of Thought” ; The Mid-Nineteenth-Century Chinese Society Amid the “Enlightenment” of the West and Its Struggle to Advance Through Manifold Obstacles ; China’s Own Enlightenment and Its Slogan of “Science and Democracy”: Have They Come to Fruition? ; Whither Enlightenment in Chinese Society? ; The Coexistence of Cultural Diversity: Sources of the Value of Harmony in Diversity ; Introduction ; Harmony in Diversity ; Commonalities Across Cultural Traditions ; Regional Diversity and the Bidirectional Nature of Cultural Selection ; Conclusion ; On the Clash and Coexistence of Human Civilizations ; “The Clash of Civilizations” and the “New Empire” Theory ; “Coexistence of Civilizations” and New Axial Age ; Can Chinese Culture Make Contributions to the Coexistence of Civilizations? ; The Confucian Doctrine of Ren (仁, Benevolence, Virtue) Is a Resource of Thinking with a Positive Meaning for the “Coexistence of Civilizations” ; The Taoist Doctrine of the Way (tao) Can Provide Significant Resources of Thinking to Prevent “The Clash of Civilizations” ; Constructing “Chinese Philosophy” in Sino-European Cultural Exchange ; Western Philosophy and Chinese Philosophy as an Independent Discipline ; Paradigms and Frameworks of Western Philosophy and Potential Problems in Chinese Philosophy ; Future Developments in Chinese Philosophy ; Chinese Glossary; | en_US |
dc.description.tableofcontents | 1 Confucianism and Constructive Postmodernism 1 1.1 What Kind of Age Are We in Now? 1 1.2 The Rise of Two Trends of Thought in China in the 1990s 3 1.3 In the New Historical Period of Chinese Revival and in the Context of Globalization, Traditional Chinese Culture May Well Make an Epochal Contribution to Human Society 5 1.3.1 “Man and Nature as a Closely Related Living Community” and “Unity of Man and Heaven” 5 1.3.2 Constructive Postmodernism, a Second Enlightenment and Confucian Renxue (Learning of Goodness) 7 1.3.3 Defining “Human” and Examining “Human Rights” from the Standpoint of Li: A Traditional Chinese Concept 8 2 The Contemporary Significance of Confucianism 11 2.1 Why Addressing the Topic “The Contemporary Significance of Confucianism”? 11 2.2 Various Points of View About the “Learning of the Chinese Classics,” Especially Confucianism, in Academic and Cultural Circles 12 2.3 What are the Main Issues in Contemporary Human Society? 16 2.4 The Relationship Between Man and Nature 17 2.5 The Relationship Between Man and Man 23 2.6 The Relationship Between Body and Mind 28 References 31 3 Toward a Chinese Hermeneutics 33 3.1 Is there a Subject Called “Hermeneutics” in Ancient China? 33 3.2 Is it Possible to Find Out General Patterns of Interpretation in the Study of Chinese Classics? 37 3.2.1 Zuo Chuan’s Interpretation of Chun Qiu 39 3.2.2 Ji Ci’s Interpretation of I Ching 41 3.2.3 Han Fei Tzu’s Interpretation of Lao Tzu 46 Glossary 52 References 53 4 Emotion in Pre-Qin Ruist Moral Theory: An Explanation of “Dao Begins in Qing” 55 4.1 On “Dao Begins in Qing” 55 4.2 The Basis for the Pre-Qin Ruist Emphasis on Qing 57 4.3 On “Qing Arises from Xing” 情生于性 59 4.4 Distinguishing Qing and Desire 61 5 Some Reflections on New Confucianism in Chinese Mainland Culture of the 1990s 67 6 The Problem of Harmonious Communities in Ancient China 79 7 An Inquiry into the Possibility of a Third-Phase Development of Confucianism 83 8 Immanence and Transcendence in Chinese Chan Buddhism 87 8.1 Chinese Chan Buddhism Neither Valued Scriptures nor Established in Words, but Claimed Everything Should Listen to the Essential Mind 88 8.2 Chinese Chan Buddhism Broke Outmoded Conventions and Abolished Sitting in Meditation, but Only Valued Seeing the Nature and Accomplishing the Buddhahood 90 8.3 Chinese Chan Buddhism Did Not Worship Images, Rather Abused the Buddhas and Berated the Masters, but Claimed “One Who Is Enlightened in One Thought Is a Buddha” 93 9 The Introduction of Indian Buddhism into China: A Perspective on the Meaning of Studies in Comparative Philosophy and Comparative Religion 101 9.1 The Introduction of Indian Buddhism into China and the Popularization of the School of Prajna Teachings [bo-re xue] in the Wei and Jin Periods 101 9.1.1 The Beginnings of Buddhism in China 101 9.1.2 The An Shigao of Hinayana School 105 9.1.3 The Zhi-lou-jia-qian of Mahayana School 107 9.2 The Interaction Between the Imported Ideological Culture—Buddhism—And the Previously Existing Ideological Culture of China 122 9.2.1 Adaptation to Tradition 123 9.2.2 The Enrichment and Intensification of Tradition 128 9.2.3 Relative Excellence and Real Contribution 130 9.3 The Comparative Study of Philosophies and Regions 133 9.3.1 The Search for Common Laws 134 9.3.2 Attention to the Specific Characteristics of a Culture 136 9.4 The Isolation of Old Topics and New Issues 141 10 Relationships Between Traditional and Imported Thought and Culture in China: The Importation of Buddhism 145 Vocabulary 151 11 On the Dao De Jing (Tao Te Ching) 153 12 The Origin and Characteristics of Daoism 159 12.1 General Background 160 12.2 The Development of Daoism 164 12.3 Characteristics of Daoism 167 Vocabulary 170 13 The Daoist Religion of China 173 14 The Attempt of Matteo Ricci to Link Chinese and Western Cultures 179 14.1 Modes of Relating Oriental and Occidental Cultures 181 14.1.1 Linking Catholicism with Confucianism (Heru) 181 14.1.2 Complementing Confucianism (Buru). 182 14.1.3 Transcending Confucianism (Chaoru) 184 14.1.4 Concordance with Confucianism (Furu) 185 14.2 “Body and Use” and the Correlation of Chinese and Western Harmony 187 15 The Possible Orientations of Chinese Culture in the Context of Globalization 191 16 Prospects for the Study of the History of Chinese Philosophy and the Issue of the True, the Good, and the Beautiful in China’s Traditional Philosophy 197 16.1 Chinese Philosophy as a Threefold Integration 198 16.1.1 Integration of Heaven with Man: The True 198 16.1.2 Integration of Knowledge with Practice: The Good 200 16.1.3 Integration of Feeling with Scenery: The Beautiful 203 16.2 The Study of Chinese Philosophy and the Reason for Being Human 205 17 Questions Concerning the Categorical System of Traditional Chinese Philosophy 209 17.1 The Significance of Studying the Categorical System of Traditional Chinese Philosophy 209 17.2 How to Study the Concepts and Categories of Traditional Chinese Philosophy 212 17.2.1 Analysis of the Meaning of Concepts and Categories 213 17.2.2 Analysis of the Development of the Meanings of Concepts and Categories 214 17.2.3 Analysis of the Systems of Concepts and Categories of Philosophers (or Philosophical Schools) 216 17.2.4 Analysis of the Similarities and Differences Between the Concepts and Categories of Chinese and Foreign Philosophies 219 17.3 A Tentative Theory of the Categorical System of Traditional Chinese Philosophy 220 17.4 Discussion 226 18 New Progress in the Study of the History of Chinese Philosophy 229 18.1 The History of Chinese Philosophy as the History of Knowledge of the Chinese Nation 229 18.2 The Concept and Category of Traditional Chinese 231 18.3 The Comparison and Analysis of Traditional Chinese and Foreign Philosophies 233 18.4 The Method Employed by Traditional Chinese Philosophy in Establishing a System 235 19 A Reconsideration of the Question of “The True, the Good, and the Beautiful” in Traditional Chinese Philosophy 239 19.1 Confucius’ Demands of the Realm of Life 240 19.2 Laozi’s Quest in the Realm of Life 245 19.3 Zhuangzi’s Quest in the Realm of Life 250 19.4 Brief Conclusion 255 Chinese Character 257 20 Chinese Traditional Cultures and Corporate Management 261 21 A Study of the Question of China’s Cultural Development 265 22 The Enlightenment and Its Difficult Journey in China 279 22.1 The Eighteenth-Century European “Enlightenment Movement” and China’s Sixteenth-Century Late Ming “Enlightenment Trend of Thought” 279 22.2 The Mid-Nineteenth-Century Chinese Society Amid the “Enlightenment” of the West and Its Struggle to Advance Through Manifold Obstacles 280 22.3 China’s Own Enlightenment and Its Slogan of “Science and Democracy”: Have They Come to Fruition? 281 22.4 Whither Enlightenment in Chinese Society? 282 23 The Coexistence of Cultural Diversity: Sources of the Value of Harmony in Diversity 285 23.1 Introduction 285 23.2 Harmony in Diversity 286 23.3 Commonalities Across Cultural Traditions 288 23.4 Regional Diversity and the Bidirectional Nature of Cultural Selection 288 23.5 Conclusion 290 24 On the Clash and Coexistence of Human Civilizations 291 24.1 “The Clash of Civilizations” and the “New Empire” Theory 291 24.2 “Coexistence of Civilizations” and New Axial Age 294 24.3 Can Chinese Culture Make Contributions to the Coexistence of Civilizations? 298 24.3.1 The Confucian Doctrine of Ren (仁, Benevolence, Virtue) Is a Resource of Thinking with a Positive Meaning for the “Coexistence of Civilizations” 299 24.3.2 The Taoist Doctrine of the Way (tao) Can Provide Significant Resources of Thinking to Prevent “The Clash of Civilizations” 304 25 Constructing “Chinese Philosophy” in Sino-European Cultural Exchange 309 25.1 Western Philosophy and Chinese Philosophy as an Independent Discipline 311 25.2 Paradigms and Frameworks of Western Philosophy and Potential Problems in Chinese Philosophy 313 25.3 Future Developments in Chinese Philosophy 315 Chinese Glossary 316 | en_US |
dc.language.iso | en | en_US |
dc.publisher | Department of Philosophy Peking University Beijing, China | en_US |
dc.subject | Kinh điển và triết học phật giáo | en_US |
dc.subject | Phật giáo nhập thế và các vấn đề xã hội đương đại | en_US |
dc.subject | Lịch sử và văn hóa phật giáo | en_US |
dc.title | Confucianism, Buddhism, Daoism, Christianity and Chinese Culture | en_US |
dc.type | Book | en_US |
Appears in Collections: | CSDL Phật giáo |
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Yijie Tang (2015) Confucianism, Buddhism, Daoism, Christianity and Chinese Culture.pdf ???org.dspace.app.webui.jsptag.ItemTag.accessRestricted??? | 4.11 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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