|
Books > Philosophy > Non-Western philosophy > Oriental & Indian philosophy
How should we evaluate the success of each person's life?
Countering the prevalent philosophical perspective on the subject,
Steven M. Cahn and Christine Vitrano defend the view that our
well-being is dependent not on particular activities,
accomplishments, or awards but on finding personal satisfaction
while treating others with due concern. The authors suggest that
moral behavior is not necessary for happiness and does not ensure
it. Yet they also argue that morality and happiness are needed for
living well, and together suffice to achieve that goal. Cahn and
Vitrano link their position to elements within both the Hellenistic
and Hebraic traditions, in particular the views of Epicurus and
lessons found in the Book of Ecclesiastes. Written in an accessible
style and illustrated with incisive vignettes drawn from history,
literature, films, and everyday life, Happiness and Goodness is a
compelling work of philosophy for anyone who seeks to understand
the nature of a good life.
This book introduces traditional and modern aesthetics and arts,
comparing the similarities and differences between traditional and
modern Chinese aesthetics. It also explores the aesthetic
implications of traditional Chinese paintings, and discusses the
development of aesthetics throughout history, as well as the
changes and improvements in Chinese aesthetics in the context of
globalization.
Skill and Mastery: Philosophical Stories from the Zhuangzi presents
an illuminating analysis of skill stories from the Zhuangzi, a 4th
century BCE Daoist text. In this intriguing text that subverts
conventional norms and pursuits, ordinary activities such as
swimming, cicada-catching and wheelmaking are executed with such
remarkable efficacy and spontaneity that they seem like magical
feats. An international team of scholars explores these stories in
their philosophical, historical and political contexts. Their
analyses' highlight the stories'underlying conceptions of agency,
character and cultivation; and relevance to contemporary debates on
human action and experience. The result is a valuable collection,
opening up new lines of inquiry in comparative East-West
philosophical debates on skill, cultivation and mastery, as well as
cross-disciplinary debates in psychology, cognitive science and
philosophy.
Hsieh Liang-tso (c.1050-c.1120, known as master Shang-ts'ai) was one of the leading direct disciples of Ch'eng Hao and Ch'eng I, the two brothers who were the early leaders of the Confucian revival known as Neo-Confucianism in Northern Sung China. This book presents a focused analysis of the core value of Confucian thought, namely the jen (humanity or co-humanity), through an investigation of Hsieh Liang-tso's analysis of the Analects of Confucius. Selover argues that Hsieh's handling of key issues in interpreting and applying the Confucian Analects, his experiental reasoning as well as his deference to scriptural classics and earlier tradition, bear important similarities to the practice of theology in Western religious traditions. The volume also contains a translation of Hsieh's commentary on the Analects, and a foreword by the renowned scholar of Confucianism, Tu Wei-ming.
This book critically examines the Confucian political imagination
and its influence on the contemporary Chinese dream of a powerful
China. It views Confucianism as the ideological supplement to a
powerful state that is challenging Western hegemony, and not as a
political philosophy that need not concern us. Eske Mollgaard shows
that Confucians, despite their traditionalist ways, have the will
to transform the existing socio-ethical order. The volume discusses
the central features of the Confucian political imaginary, the
nature of Confucian discourse, Confucian revivals, Confucian
humanism and civility, and the political ideal of the Great Unity.
It concludes by considering if Confucianism can be universalized as
an ideology in competition with liberal democracy.
Questions about difference are at the heart of many debates within
contemporary feminism in the United States. In Transcultural
Feminist Philosophy: Rethinking Difference and Solidarity Through
Chinese-American Encounters, Yuanfang Dai critically assesses
various approaches to the feminist difference critique, arguing
that the fact that women experience gender oppression in different
forms due to different social and cultural locations does not lead
to the conclusion that it is impossible to generalize women's
experiences. She thus proposes that we can construct a category of
women that captures and respects differences among women and the
possibility and the dynamics of what women can be in the future. To
challenge the troubling ideology of multiculturalism and its
institutionalization, Dai advances the claims of multicultural
feminism and the postcolonial feminist critique by arguing that we
need to reconceptualize not only culture, but also need to rethink
multiculturalism as a framework. Examining Chinese feminist
scholarship in transcultural settings, she then proposes a shift to
transculturalism and argues that a transcultural approach is
mediates assumed tensions between cultural diversity and gender
equality. The transcultural approach promises to be a very useful
framework by which feminists can explore the conditions of women's
collective struggles.
This affordable, definitive edition of the Gheranda Samhita
contains a new introduction, the original Sanskrit, a new English
translation, and thirty-nine full-page photographs. The first
edition of this classic Yoga text to meet high academic, literary,
and production standards, it's for people who practice Yoga or have
an interest in health and fitness, philosophy, religion,
spirituality, mysticism, or meditation.
This second edition of An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy
presents a comprehensive introduction to key ideas and arguments in
early Chinese philosophy. Written in clear, accessible language, it
explores philosophical traditions including Confucianism, Daoism,
Mohism, Legalism and Chinese Buddhism, and how they have shaped
Chinese thought. Drawing on the key classical texts as well as
up-to-date scholarship, the discussions range across ethics,
metaphysics and epistemology, while also bringing out distinctive
elements in Chinese philosophy that fall between the gaps in these
disciplinary divisions, hence challenging some prevailing
assumptions of Western philosophy. Topics include human nature,
selfhood and agency; emotions and behaviour; the place of language
in the world; knowledge and action; and social and political
responsibility. This second edition incorporates new ideas and
approaches from some recently excavated texts that change the
landscape of Chinese intellectual history.
This second edition of An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy
presents a comprehensive introduction to key ideas and arguments in
early Chinese philosophy. Written in clear, accessible language, it
explores philosophical traditions including Confucianism, Daoism,
Mohism, Legalism and Chinese Buddhism, and how they have shaped
Chinese thought. Drawing on the key classical texts as well as
up-to-date scholarship, the discussions range across ethics,
metaphysics and epistemology, while also bringing out distinctive
elements in Chinese philosophy that fall between the gaps in these
disciplinary divisions, hence challenging some prevailing
assumptions of Western philosophy. Topics include human nature,
selfhood and agency; emotions and behaviour; the place of language
in the world; knowledge and action; and social and political
responsibility. This second edition incorporates new ideas and
approaches from some recently excavated texts that change the
landscape of Chinese intellectual history.
A beautiful look at the Ancient Chinese philosophy of Ren and how
it can help us with our hectic modern lives. The Chinese character
for Ren combines the word for 'person' and the number 'two' ,
representing human connection. And in the teachings of ancient
philosopher Confucius, Ren is the study of our relationship with
those around us. In this accessible and beautiful book, Yen Ooi
explains the various facets of Ren and explores how this philosophy
applies to everything from our relationship with ourselves and the
people in our lives, to how we relate to society and the wider
world. She shows us how, using the basic principles of Ren and
through simple changes to our lives, we can connect better with
friends, family and colleagues, become helpful members of society
and find fulfilment in ideas of community, justice, morality and
compassion.
This book develops the term 'Sustainable Innovations' and defines
it on the basis of plant variety innovations that, by their very
nature, (i) permit the in situ conservation of agrobiodiversity and
genetic variability in diverse geographic and climatic conditions,
(ii) do not exclude any potential innovators from the process of
innovation, and thereby (iii) ensure that both formal and informal
innovations can continue to take place in the generations to come
(in both the developed and developing world). The book studies the
Indian Plant Variety Protection Act, the UPOV Acts and associated
agricultural policies from a legal, philosophical, historical and
economic perspective with the aim of determining the means of
promoting sustainable innovations in plant varieties and
identifying laws, policies and practices that are currently acting
as impediments to promoting the same.
This book argues that a general understanding of traditional
Chinese philosophy can be achieved by a concise elaboration of its
truth, goodness and beauty; that goodness and beauty in Chinese
philosophy, combined with the integration of man and heaven,
knowledge and practice, scenery and feeling, reflect a pursuit of
an ideal goal in traditional Chinese philosophy characterized by
the thought mode uniting man and nature.This book also discusses
the anti-traditionalism of the May Fourth Movement, explaining that
the true value of "sagacity theory" in traditional Chinese
philosophy, especially in Neo-Confucianism in the Song and Ming
dynasties, lies in its insights into universal life. In addition,
existing ideas, issues, terminologies, concepts, and logic of
Chinese philosophical thought were actually shaped by Western
philosophy. It is necessary to be alienated from traditional status
for the creation of a viable "Chinese philosophy." "Modern Chinese
philosophy" in the 1930s and 1940s was comprised of scholarly work
that characteristically continued rather than followed the
traditional discourse of Chinese philosophy. That is to say, in the
process of studying and adapting Western philosophy, Chinese
philosophers transformed Chinese philosophy from traditional to
modern.In the end of the book, the author puts forward the idea of
a "New Axial Age." He emphasizes that the rejuvenation of Chinese
culture we endeavor to pursue has to be deeply rooted in our
mainstream culture with universal values incorporating cultures of
other nations, especially the cultural essence of the West.
The Norton Critical Edition aims to situate the historical
figure of Kongzi, the legendary figure of Confucius, and the
Analects (or Lunyu), the single most influential book ascribed to
the Master's circle of disciples, within their evolving ethical,
cultural, and political contexts. Simon Leys s acclaimed
translation and notes are accompanied by Michael Nylan s insightful
introduction.
Eleven essays by leading experts in the field of Chinese studies
discuss a broad range of issues relating to the Analects, from the
origins of the classicists (Ru) and the formation of the Analects
text to the use (and abuse) of the Master s iconic image in
twentieth- and twenty-first-century Asian, diasporic, and Western
settings. Collectively, these readings suggest that the Confucius
we thought we knew is not the Kongzi of record and that this Kongzi
is a protean figure given to rapid change and continual
reevaluation. Contributors include Henry Rosemont Jr., Nicolas
Zufferey, Robert Eno, Thomas Wilson, Sebastien Billioud and Vincent
Goossaert, Julia K. Murray, Mark Csikszentmihalyi and Tae Hyun Kim,
Eric L. Hutton, Luke Habberstad, He Yuming, and Sam Ho."
This book explores Neo-Confucianism and its relationship to
politics by examining the life and work of the two iconic figures
of the Joseon dynasty Yi Hwang (1501-1570, Toegye) and Yi I
(1536-1584, Yulgok). Neo-Confucianism became state orthodoxy in
1392, and remained in place for over five centuries until the end
of the dynasty in 1910, thereby shaping the Korea of today. Toegye
and Yulgok founded the two main schools of Josean Neo-Confucianism,
which became the most dominant schools of thought in Korean
history. In shedding new light on the important relationship
between these two iconic figures, Hyoungchan Kim offers an
important new examination of Korea today, which will be essential
to those interested in the philosophy and history of Korea.
For the first time in one volume, The Analects illustrated by
bestselling cartoonist C. C. Tsai C. C. Tsai is one of Asia's most
popular cartoonists, and his editions of the Chinese classics have
sold more than 40 million copies in over twenty languages. This
volume presents Tsai's delightful graphic adaptation of The
Analects, one of the most influential books of all time and a work
that continues to inspire countless readers today. Tsai's
expressive drawings bring Confucius and his students to life as no
other edition of the Analects does. See Confucius engage his
students over the question of how to become a leader worth
following in a society of high culture, upward mobility, and
vicious warfare. Which virtues should be cultivated, what makes for
a harmonious society, and what are the important things in life?
Unconcerned with religious belief but a staunch advocate of
tradition, Confucius emphasizes the power of society to create
sensitive, respectful, and moral individuals. In many ways,
Confucius speaks directly to modern concerns--about how we can
value those around us, educate the next generation, and create a
world in which people are motivated to do the right thing. A
marvelous introduction to a timeless classic, this book also
features an illuminating foreword by Michael Puett, coauthor of The
Path: What Chinese Philosophers Can Teach Us about the Good Life.
In addition, Confucius's original Chinese text is artfully
presented in narrow sidebars on each page, enriching the books for
readers and students of Chinese without distracting from the
self-contained English-language cartoons. The text is skillfully
translated by Brian Bruya, who also provides an introduction.
|
You may like...
Ikigai
Hector Garcia, Francesc Miralles
Hardcover
(3)
R420
R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
|