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- Wiley
More About This Title Neo-Confucianism: Metaphysics, Mind, and Morality
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English
Solidly grounded in Chinese primary sources, Neo Confucianism: Metaphysics, Mind, and Morality engages the latest global scholarship to provide an innovative, rigorous, and clear articulation of neo-Confucianism and its application to Western philosophy.
- Contextualizes neo-Confucianism for contemporary analytic philosophy by engaging with today’s philosophical questions and debates
- Based on the most recent and influential scholarship on neo-Confucianism, and supported by primary texts in Chinese and cross-cultural secondary literature
- Presents a cohesive analysis of neo-Confucianism by investigating the metaphysical foundations of neo-Confucian perspectives on the relationship between human nature, human mind, and morality
- Offers innovative interpretations of neo-Confucian terminology and examines the ideas of eight major philosophers, from Zhou Dunyi and Cheng-Zhu to Zhang Zai and Wang Fuzhi
- Approaches neo-Confucian concepts in an penetrating yet accessible way
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JeeLoo Liu is Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Fullerton. She is the author of An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy: From Ancient Philosophy to Chinese Buddhism (Wiley-Blackwell 2006), co-editor of Consciousness and the Self (2012), and co-editor of Nothingness in Asian Philosophy (2014). She is currently the Executive Director of the International Society for Chinese Philosophy.
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English
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
Part I Neo?-Confucian Metaphysics: From Cosmology to Ontology 29
1 From Nothingness to Infinity: The Origin of Zhou Dunyi’s Cosmology 31
2 The Basic Constituent of Things: Zhang Zai’s Monist Theory of Qi 61
3 Cheng–Zhu School’s Normative Realism: The Principle of the Universe 85
4 Wang Fuzhi’s Theory of Principle Inherent in Qi 103
Part II Human Nature, Human Mind, and the Foundation of Human Morality 123
5 Zhu Xi’s Internal Moral Realism: Human Nature Is Principle 125
6 Lu Xiangshan and Wang Yangming’s Doctrine of Mind Is Principle 139
7 Wang Fuzhi’s Theory of Daily Renewal of Human Nature and His Moral Psychology 157
Part III The Cultivation of Virtue, Moral Personality, and the Construction of a Moral World 181
8 Zhang Zai on Cultivating Moral Personality 183
9 The Cheng Brothers’ Globaist Virtue Ethics and Virtue Epistemology 205
10 Zhu Xi’s Methodology for Cultivating Sagehood: Moral Cognitivism and Ethical Rationalism 227
11 Wang Yangming’s Intuitionist Model of Innate Moral Sense and Moral Reflexivism 245
12 Constructing a Moral World: Wang Fuzhi’s Social Sentimentalism 265
References 285
Index 301