Disputers of the Tao: Philosophical Argument in Ancient China"A history of Chinese philosophy in the so-called Axial Period (the period of classical Greek and Indian philosophy), during which time China evolved the characteristic ways of thought that sustained both its empire and its culture for over 2000 years. It is comprehensive, lucid, almost simple in its presentation, yet backed up with incomparable authority amid a well-honed discretion that unerringly picks out the core of any theme. Garlanded with tributes even before publication, it has redrawn the map of its subject and will be the one essential guide for any future exploration. For anyone interested in the affinities between ancient Chinese and modern Western philosophy, there is no better introduction." --Contemporary Review |
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內容
Introduction | 1 |
THE BREAKDOWN OF THE WORLD ORDER | 9 |
The centrality of Confucianism in Chinese | 31 |
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常見字詞
accepted according already answer argumentation asked become benefit benevolence called Canons century ceremony ch'i chapters China Chinese Chou Chuang-tzu classical common concept concern Confucian Confucius correlative course definitions depends desires direction distinction distinguished doctrines Emperor Empire example Explanation Five follow four give heart Heaven heaven and earth horse Hsing Hsün-tzu issue judge kind kings knowledge language Lao-tzu live logical lord man's Master means Mencius minister Mo-tzu Mohist moral myriad things nature never object one's pattern person philosophical position possible practice present principle punishment question reason reference relation ruler sage schools seems seen sense sentence shape Shen Shih side social spontaneous standard Taoist things thinking thought tradition translated treat universal verb Western white horse whole