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A Concise History of Chinese Philosophy

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Table of Contents

Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction

1.1 The Methodology for the Study of the History of Philosophy

1.2 Characteristics of Traditional Chinese Philosophy

1.3 The Struggles Between “Past and Present” and Between “China and the West” and the Revolution in Modern Chinese Philosophy

References

Part I The Pre-Qin Period (CA. 1046-256 BCE)

Chapter 2 The Rise of Confucianism,Mohism,Daoism,and Legalism

2.1 Confucius Doctrine of the Unity of Humanity and Knowledge

2.2 Mozi and the Conflict Between Confucianism and Mohism — The Antagonism Between Empiricism and Apriorism

2.3 The Laozi: “The Movement of Dao Consists in Reversion” — The Presentation of the Dialectical Principle of Negation

2.4 Sunzi Bingfa (Sunzi’s Art of War)and the Rise of the Legalists

References

Chapter 3 The High Tide of Contention Among the “Hundred Schools of Thought”

3.1 The Guanzi: The Confluence of Legalism and Doctrines of the Huang-Lao School

3.2 The Conflict Between Confucian and Legalist Schools and Mencius Doctrine of the Goodness of Human Nature

3.3 Zhuangzi: “Where All Things Are Equal, How Can One Be Long and Another Short?” — Relativism Against Dogmatism

3.4 The Logicians Debates on “Hardness and Whiteness” and on “Similarity and Difference” — A Conflict Between Relativism and Absolutism

3.5 Later Mohist Views on the Relationship Between Names and Actualities and on Nature

References

Chapter 4 The Summing Up Stage of Pre-Qin Philosophy

4.1 Xunzi’s Summation of the Debates over “Heaven and Humankind” and over “Names and Actualities” — The Union of Naive Materialism and Naive Dialectics

4.2 Han Fei: “Incompatible Things Cannot Coexist”

4.3 The Yi Zhuan: “The Interaction of Yin and Yang Constitutes the Dao” — The Establishment of the Naive Principle of the Unity of Opposites

4.4 The Development of the Doctrine of the Yin Yang and Five Agents — The Application of the Comparative Method of Dialectical Logic to the Sciences

References

Part I A Brief Summary

Part II From the Qin Han to the Qing Dynasty

Chapter 5 The Supremacy of Confucianism and Criticisms of Confucian

Theology

5.1 Dong Zhongshu and the Huainanzi — The Antagonism Between the Teleological and Mechanistic Doctrines of Huo Shi

5.2 Wang Chong’s Materialistic Doctrine of Mo Wei in Opposition to the Doctrine of Huo Shi

References

Chapter 6 Mysterious Learning and the Coexistence of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism

6.1 Wang Bi’s Doctrine of “Valuing Non-being” and Pei Wei’s “On the Importance of Being”

6.2 Ji Kang’s Challenge to Fatalism

6.3 The Commentary on the Zhuangzi: “When There Is Being, There Is Non-being” — The Doctrine of “Self-transformation” Against Metaphysical Ontology

6.4 Ge Hong’s Daoist Philosophy and Seng Zhao’s Buddhism Expounded in Terms of Mysterious Learning

6.5 Fan Zhen’s Summing Up of the Debate over Body and Soul — The Application of the Materialist Principle of the Unity of Substance and Function

References

Chapter 7 A Tendency Towards the Confluence of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism

7.1 The Buddhist Tiantai School’s Doctrines: “The Three Levels of Truth Are in Perfect Harmony with One Another” and “Even Inanimate Things Possess the Buddha Nature”

7.2 The Buddhist Dharma Character School’s Doctrine:“Everything Is Consciousness Only” and the Buddhist Huayan School’s Doctrine: The Universal Causation of the Realm of Dharmas — The Antithesis between Idealistic Empiricism and Rationalism

7.3 The Buddhist Zen (Chan) School — The Completion of Confucianized Buddhism

7.4 Li Quan’s Religious Daoism with a Voluntarist Orientation

7.5 Liu Zongyuan and Liu Yuxi: “Heaven and Human Beings Do Not Interfere with Each Other” and “Heaven and Human Beings Are Evenly Matched”: A Materialist Summary of the Debate Concerning “Effort and Fate”

References

Chapter 8 The Prevalence of Neo-Confucianism and the Criticisms

of Neo-Confucianism

8.1 Zhou Dunyi,Shao Yong,and the Cheng Brothers:Founders of Orthodox Neo-Confucianism

8.2 Zhang Zai’s Summing Up of the Debate over “Being and Non-being (Movement and Tranquility)” — An Exposition of the Principle of the Unity of Opposites in Terms of Qi Monism

8.3 Zhu Xi’s System of Principle Monism

8.4 The “Jing Gong New Learning” and the “Utilitarian Learning” as Opposed to the Chengs and Zhu Xi’s Doctrine of Principle

8.5 Wang Shouren’s System of Mind Monism

8.6 Li Zhi’s “Heretical” Thoughts

References

Chapter 9 The Summing Up Stage of Ancient Chinese Philosophy

9.1 Wang Fuzhi’s Summary of the Debate over “Principle and Vital Force (The Dao and Concrete Things)” and “Mind and Matter/Things (Knowledge and Action)” — A System of Qi Monism Unifying Naive Materialism and Naive Dialectics

9.2 The Enlightenment Thought and Historicist Methodology of Huang Zongxi

9.3 Gu Yanwu’s “Practical Learning of Cultivating Oneself and Governing Others”

9.4 Yan Yuan’s Discussion of “Practice” and Dai Zhen’s Discussion of “Knowledge”

References

Part II A Brief Summary

Part III Modern Period

Chapter 10 The Forerunners of Modern Chinese Philosophy

10.1 Gong Zizhen: “The Dominator of the Masses Is Called the ‘Self’” — The Beginning of Modern Humanism

10.2 Wei Yuan: “Basing My Ideas on Things” and “Knowing Something after Being Involved in Something” — The Beginning of the Debate over the Relation Between Mind and Matter/Things (Knowledge and Action) in Modern Times

References

Chapter 11 The Stage of Evolutionism in the Philosophical Revolution

11.1 Kang Youwei: An Advocate of Historical Evolutionism

11.2 Tan Sitong: The “Study of Humanity” Aimed at Breaking the Chains of Bondage

11.3 Yan Fu’s “Doctrine of Natural Evolution” and Empiricism

11.4 Liang Qichao on the Freedom of the “Self” and the Evolution of the “Group”

11.5 Zhang Taiyan: “Competition Produces Intelligence and Revolution Develops People’s Knowledge” — A Rudimentary Version of the Viewpoint of Social Practice

11.6 Wang Guowei: The Believability Versus the Lovability of Philosophical Theories

11.7 Sun Yat Sen’s Evolutionism and His Doctrine of the Relation Between Knowledge and Action

References

Chapter 12 The Philosophical Revolution Enters the Stage of Materialist Dialectics

12.1 Li Dazhao and Chen Duxiu: From Evolutionism to Historical Materialism

12.2 Hu Shi’s “Experimentalism” and Liang Shuming’s Intuitionism

12.3 The Debate over Science Versus Metaphysics and Qu Qiubai’s Historical Determinism

12.4 Lu Xun on National Characteristics and His Aesthetic Ideas

References

Chapter 13 The Sinicization of Marxism and the Contributions Made by Professional Philosophers

13.1 Li Da and Ai Siqi: First Attempts to Sinicize Marxist Philosophy

13.2 Xiong Shili: New Doctrine of Consciousness Only

13.3 Zhu Guangqian: An Aesthetic Theory of Expression

13.4 Jin Yuelin: “Applying What Is Attained from Experience to Experience — Realism Based Unity of Perceptual and Rational Knowledge,and of Facts and Principles”

13.5 Feng Youlan: “The New Rational Philosophy”

13.6 Marxists Critical Investigations on Traditional Thought

13.7 Mao Zedong:The Dynamic and Revolutionary Theory of Knowledge as the Reflection of Reality — A Summation of the Debate over the Relation Between “Mind and Matter/Things” in the Philosophy of History and Epistemology

References

Part III A Brief Summary

Postscript

Glossary of Chinese Characters

Index

A Concise History of Chinese Philosophy
$39.91