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Results for 'Aiping Pang'

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  1.  18
    Robust H∞ Control for the Spacecraft with Flexible Appendages.AipingPang,Hui Zhu,Junjie Zhou,Zhen He &Jing Yang -2020 -Complexity 2020:1-8.
    Aiming at the oscillation suppression of spacecraft with large flexible appendages, we propose a control strategy using H∞ control. The weighting functions are designed for the specific flexible modes of the spacecraft and the frequency of harmonic interference in its operating environment. Taking into account the structural uncertainty of systematic modeling and the comprehensive performance requirements of system bandwidth constraint and attitude stability, the H∞ comprehensive performance matrix is constructed. A space telescope with a large flexible solar array is presented (...) as an illustrative example, and a control design that meets the requirement for pointing accuracy is proposed. The simulation results show that the designed controller satisfies the requirements of attitude stability and high pointing accuracy and has effectively suppressed the disturbance of endemic frequency. The design scheme and selection method of the weight function shown in this paper can be a reference for the controller design for oscillation suppression of this type of spacecraft with flexible structures. (shrink)
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  2.  55
    H∞ Optimal Performance Design of an Unstable Plant under Bode Integral Constraint.Fanwei Meng,AipingPang,Xuefei Dong,Chang Han &Xiaopeng Sha -2018 -Complexity 2018:1-10.
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  3.  10
    Pang Pu juan.PuPang -1999 - Hefei Shi: Jing xiao xin hua shu dian.
  4.  11
    San sheng wan wu:Pang Pu zi xuan ji.PuPang -2011 - Beijing: Shou du shi fan da xue chu ban she.
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  5. Pang Pu xue shu wen hua sui bi.PuPang -1996 - Beijing: Xin hua shu dian jing xiao.
     
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  6.  230
    Protective truthfulness: the Chinese way of safeguarding patients in informed treatment decisions.M. C.Pang -1999 -Journal of Medical Ethics 25 (3):247-253.
    The first part of this paper examines the practice of informed treatment decisions in the protective medical system in China today. The second part examines how health care professionals in China perceive and carry out their responsibilities when relaying information to vulnerable patients, based on the findings of an empirical study that I had undertaken to examine the moral experience of nurses in practice situations. In the Chinese medical ethics tradition, refinement [jing] in skills and sincerity [cheng] in relating to (...) patients are two cardinal virtues that health care professionals are required to possess. This notion of absolute sincerity carries a strong sense of parental protectiveness. The empirical findings reveal that most nurses are ambivalent about telling the truth to patients. Truth-telling would become an insincere act if a patient were to lose hope and confidence in life after learning of his or her disease. In this system of protective medical care, it is arguable as to whose interests are being protected: the patient, the family or the hospital. I would suggest that the interests of the hospital and the family members who legitimately represent the patient's interests are being honoured, but at the expense of the patient's right to know. (shrink)
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  7.  13
    Kyoyuk kwa Han'guk Pulgyo.Pang-Nyong Kim (ed.) -2017 - Sŏul T'ŭkpyŏlsi: Humanit'asŭ.
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  8.  53
    Introduction: Rereading the Canon.Ann A.Pang-White -2016 - InBloomsbury Research Handbook of Chinese Philosophy and Gender. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 1-21.
    The Introductory chapter explains the purpose of the book. To this aim, the chapter contains four subsections: (1)Bring the Past Into the Present, (2)Multiculturalism and Liberal Feminism: Is the Rift Between Them Necessary?, (3)Development of Gender Discourse in Chinese Culture and Thought, (4)Purpose of This Volume and Its Four Main Parts, and (5) What's Next? A Way Forward. Excerpt: "Chinese philosophy, broadly construed, in its varied roots and forms has approximately three thousand years of history, and it continues to exert (...) immense influence on the lives of Chinese people as well as on the world community. Nonetheless, if traditions are not simply to remain as antiquated ideas, they must be able to converse with contemporary readers and address their deepest concerns and longings (Pang-White, 2009b, 2009c, 2011). Premised on the undeniable facts that (1) all persons are embodied and cultural beings and that (2) traditions constitute an essential element of individual identity, it would be a mistake to attempt to eradicate traditions altogether, as certain types of liberal feminists have recommended. Instead, it would be more meaningful to ask: Can we, and how do we, re-read, re-imagine, and reconstruct canonical texts so as to find their new significance in the contemporary world? It is generally agreed that Chinese traditions have had a troubled history in dealing with gender relations—well-known examples include concubinage, foot binding,female infanticide, and so on. For various reasons, Chinese traditions and societies have generally been less enthusiastic in confronting, dialoguing about, and resolving problems of gender disparity. Even though gender studies and feminist theories have populated academic discourse in the West since the 1960s, these topics remain relatively marginalized, often as an afterthought, in Chinese philosophical and cultural discourse. Furthermore, as the growing body of research and our deepened knowledge informs and expands our conception of gender, informed persons must ask themselves how Chinese philosophical traditions would and should engage the LGBT community and their concerns. Gender studies is not and should not be perceived simply as a subject in vogue. Rather, for humanity to flourish in this incredibly interdependent network of reality, it is imperative that we have a better understanding of all members of the human community so as to relate to one another in more inclusive, caring, and just ways. Surely, many of our contemporary concerns and vocabularies are anachronistic in the historical settings of classical texts. However, even within the framework of Western traditions, phrases such as “feminism,” “gender,” and “homosexual” were not part of the existing apparatus of vocabulary until the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries (Jenainati and Groves, 2010). Moreover, with the advancement of . . . ". (shrink)
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  9.  19
    Medical technology, end-of-life care and nursing ethics.SmPang -2003 -Nursing Ethics 10 (3):236-237.
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  10.  23
    The Contributions of Language Skills and Comprehension Monitoring to Chinese Reading Comprehension: A Longitudinal Investigation.Aiping Zhao,Ying Guo,Shuyan Sun,Mark H. C. Lai,Allison Breit &Miao Li -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12:625555.
    This study examined how vocabulary, syntactic knowledge, and orthographic knowledge are related to comprehension monitoring and whether comprehension monitoring mediates the relations between these language skills and reading comprehension. Eighty-nine Chinese children were assessed on their vocabulary, syntactic knowledge, orthographic knowledge, and comprehension monitoring in Grade 1. Their reading comprehension skills were assessed in Grade 1 and Grade 3. Results showed that in Grade 1, comprehension monitoring mediated the relations between vocabulary and syntactic knowledge and reading comprehension. For Grade 3 (...) reading comprehension, syntactic knowledge in Grade 1 was the only significant predictor. These findings indicate that multiple language skills make direct and indirect contributionsviacomprehension monitoring to Chinese reading comprehension, and the relations would change as children’s reading skills develop. (shrink)
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  11.  21
    Struggling with exactitude in a fragmented state: Intelligence testing in early twentieth-century China.Pang-Yen Chang -2025 -History of Science 63 (1):73-100.
    This article examines the rise and decline of the enthusiasm for intelligence testing in early twentieth-century China, focusing on the appeal, the challenges, and the critiques revolving around this psychological instrument. The introduction of intelligence testing reflected not only China’s urgent needs in modernizing its merit system, but also Chinese psychologists’ aspirations for pursuing exactitude and redefining the racial characteristics of their compatriots against foreign interpretations. But despite psychologists’ endeavors, the political and geographical fragmentation of Republican China troubled the epistemic (...) imperative of uniformity demanded by Euro-American psychometrics and therefore undermined the validity of measurement. Subsequently, the legitimacy of intelligence testing began to be questioned by several influential Chinese psychologists in the late 1920s and 30s. The difficulties in standardization and the hostility within the psychology community formed a vicious cycle, impeding the progress of nationwide testing. Through this history, the article demonstrates not only the elevation of measurement to epistemic authority in modern China, but also how its promise was challenged by a diverse and rapidly changing society. (shrink)
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  12.  190
    Reconstructing modern ethics: Confucian care ethics.Ann A.Pang-White -2009 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 36 (2):210-227.
    Modern mainstream ethical theories with its overemphasis on autonomy and non-interference have failed to adequately respond to contemporary social problems. A new ethical perspective is very much needed. Thanks to Carol Gilligan's 1982 groundbreaking work, 'In a Different Voice' , we now not only have virtue and communitarian ethicists, but also a group of feminist philosophers, charting a new direction for ethics that tempers modern ethics' obsession with autonomy, contractual rights, and abstract rules. Nel Noddings, in her 'Caring: A Feminine (...) Approach to Ethics and Moral Education', further contributed to this important discussion. In this work, Noddings proposes a new kind of moral ideal. She calls it "caring." Noddings defines "caring," as a direct, felt concern and action from the one-caring toward the well-being of the cared-for. In other words, care is a state of mental engrossment and motivational displacement that impels caring actions for the happiness of the cared-for and it transcends any rule-bound moral judgment. A caring attitude is best manifest in the spontaneous emotive bond of love between a mother and a child. This human relation of unscrutinized maternal love and care should be the model of ethics. Noddings's theory evokes a vigorous debate concerning whether or not the model can withstand rigorous philosophical scrutiny as a stand-alone ethical theory. This paper first discusses the strengths and weaknesses of a pure care ethics. Secondly, it demonstrates why both the Kantian and the Aristotelian attempts are unsatisfactory, and it offers a Confucian solution to the problems of care ethics. It argues that notwithstanding gender-oppressive practices that are at times associated with Confucianism, Confucian ethics of 'ren' (humaneness) is both more compatible with care ethics and is better equipped with conceptual resources than Kantian liberalism or Aristotelian virtue ethics to handle the moral predicament of the postmodern world. The paper demonstrates that care is an inherent element of Confucian 'ren' but that 'ren' is more than Noddings's care. It examines three essential principles that can be extracted from philosophical classical Confucianism: (1) an affectionate and particularistic approach to persons, (2) the mutual conditioning of the two prominent Confucian virtues -- humaneness (ren) and ritual propriety (li), and (3) the inseparability of the familial and the political self. The last section of the paper applies Confucian care ethics to concrete cases such as the geriatric care crisis and the problem of poverty. (shrink)
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  13. Hanʼguk ŭi pyŏnhyŏk undong kwa sasang nonjaeng: Marŭkʻŭsijŭm, chuchʻe sasang, NL, PD kŭrigo nyu raitʻŭ kkaji.In-hyŏkPang -2009 - Sŏul-si: Sonamu.
  14.  15
    Ru jia bian zheng fa yan jiu.PuPang -1984 - Beijing: Xin hua shu dian Beijing fa xing suo fa xing.
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  15.  6
    Wan zheng xing jiao yu di tan suo.XueguangPang -1994 - Chongqing: Chongqing chu ban she.
  16.  79
    TheDoctrine of the Mean (Zhongyong) and Division into Three.Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):10-23.
  17. Bo shu wu xing pian yan jiu.PuPang -1980 - Qi lu shu she.
     
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  18.  25
    Uncovering" Shikigami": The Search for the Spirit Servant of Onmyōdō.CarolynPang -forthcoming -Japanese Journal of Religious Studies.
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  19. Yi fen wei san lun.PuPang -2003 - Shanghai: Xin hua shu dian Shanghai fa xing suo fa xing jing xiao.
     
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  20.  52
    An Accommodation of Anxiety and Joy: The Humanistic Spirit of China.Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):83-112.
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  21.  46
    Some Conjectures Concerning the Character ren.Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):59-66.
  22.  22
    Cultivating a Moral Sense of Nursing Through Model Emulation.M.-C. SamanthaPang -1998 -Nursing Ethics 5 (5):424-440.
  23. Global health research: changing the agenda.Pang TikKi,S. Benatar &G. Brock -2011 - In Solomon Benatar & Gillian Brock,Global Health and Global Health Ethics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 285--292.
  24.  46
    Phonology of Old Mandarin.Pang-Hsin Ting &F. S. Hsueh -1980 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 100 (1):94.
  25.  65
    China’s Post-Socialist Governmentality and the Garlic Chives Meme: Economic Sovereignty and Biopolitical Subjects.Pang Laikwan -2022 -Theory, Culture and Society 39 (1):81-100.
    This article analyzes a popular meme that has spread rapidly among Chinese internet users in the last few years, ‘garlic chives’ ( jiucai), as a self-mockery of the bio-economic subject in contemporary China. This metaphor refers to those ordinary Chinese people who are constantly lured to participate in all kinds of economic activities, but whose investments are destined to be consumed by the establishment. Through a close study of this popular meme and the social conditions from which it arises, this (...) article demonstrates two main features of the Chinese economic subject that supports the state’s economic sovereignty: the thriving of self-sufficient and rule-abiding individuals, and the quality of these individuals as hard working and capable of producing wealth on their own. This article offers a critique of PRC’s post-socialist governmentality, and it provides insights about the relation between the biological and the political in our complicated world order. (shrink)
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  26.  38
    "Bing Wu (丙午) in the Fifth Month" and "Ding Hai (丁亥) in the First Month".Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):30-40.
  27.  51
    Eating Cold Food, Changing Old Fire for New, and Celebrating Easter.Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):24-29.
  28.  49
    New Information from an Old Tomb: Reading the Guodian Bamboo Slips.Pang Pu -2000 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 32 (1):43-49.
    In October 1993, a cache of bamboo slips written in the Chu script was excavated from a Warring States period tomb in the village of Guodian in the city of Jingmen in the province of Hubei. After separation and arrangement by experts, the photo plates of the Chu slips and their annotations were published this May by Wenwu Press in the book called Guodian Chu mu zhujian.
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  29.  52
    The Threefold Doctrine of Ethics.Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):41-58.
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  30.  132
    (1 other version)The Fall of Humanity: Weakness of the Will and Moral Responsibility in the Later Augustine.Ann A.Pang-White -2000 -Medieval Philosophy and Theology 9 (1):51-67.
    Augustine of Hippo is often regarded as the champion of the doctrine of weakness of the will. John M. Rist in his 1994 'Augustine: Ancient Thought Baptized' draws an interesting analogy between Aristotle's 'akrasia' and Augustine's 'concupiscentia'. However, such an analogy without further qualification is defective and misleading because it implies that Augustine commits himself to the notion that since everyone is perpetually akratic and, thus, always morally blameworthy. I argue that, for Augustine, weakness of the will has equivocal meanings (...) and is manifested in four kinds of case--their scope goes far beyond Aristotle's discussion of 'akrasia' in Book Seven of the 'Nicomachean Ethics'. There are, therefore, considerable differences between Aristotle's and Augustine's account of weakness of the will. Consequently, for Augustine, moral responsibility for the moral agent also varies in each of the four cases. (shrink)
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  31.  23
    Information Processing: The Language and Analytical Tools for Cognitive Psychology in the Information Age.Aiping Xiong &Robert W. Proctor -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9:362645.
    The information age can be dated to the work of Norbert Wiener and Claude Shannon in the 1940s. Their work on cybernetics and information theory, and many subsequent developments, had a profound influence on reshaping the field of psychology from what it was prior to the 1950s. Contemporaneously, advances also occurred in experimental design and inferential statistical testing stemming from the work of Ronald Fisher, Jerzy Neyman, and Egon Pearson. These interdisciplinary advances from outside of psychology provided the conceptual and (...) methodological tools for what is often called the cognitive revolution but is more accurately described as the information-processing revolution. Cybernetics set the stage with the idea that everything ranging from neurophysiological mechanisms to societal activities can be modeled as structured control systems with feedforward and feedback loops. Information theory offered a way to quantify entropy and information, and promoted theorizing in terms of information flow. Statistical theory provided means for making scientific inferences from the results of controlled experiments and for conceptualizing human decision making. With those three pillars, a cognitive psychology adapted to the information age evolved. The growth of technology in the information age has resulted in human lives being increasingly interweaved with the cyber environment, making cognitive psychology an essential part of interdisciplinary research on such interweaving. Continued engagement in interdisciplinary research at the forefront of technology development provides a chance for psychologists not only to refine their theories but also to play a major role in the advent of a new age of science. (shrink)
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  32.  25
    A Fast and Reliable Corner Detector for Non-Uniform Illumination Mineshaft Images.Aiping Xu,Jianhui Zhao,Dengyi Zhang &Yuanxiu Xing -2013 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 22 (4):453-470.
    We propose a fast and reliable corner detector that can detect corners under non-uniform illumination and fuzzy mineshaft images effectively. First, we presented an inner mask that used only four pixels to determine the flat and corner regions of an image, which could eliminate unnecessary computation of flat regions, thus reducing computing cost. Second, we separated the corner regions into background and foreground and computed the separate corner threshold to settle non-uniform illumination. Third, we proposed a fast corner-detection algorithm to (...) compute the nucleus continuous contributive segment based on the corner state. Finally, we proposed two effective methods to remove the false corners. Experimental results showed that our approach has a better detection quality and is less time consuming than three other algorithms on an artificial image, a noisy image, and non-uniform images and could meet the real-time requirement of mineshaft applications. (shrink)
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  33.  49
    A Discussion of the Character wu.Pang Pu -2008 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 40 (4):67-82.
  34.  56
    Identity Politics and Democracy in Hong Kong's Social Unrest.Pang Laikwan -2020 -Feminist Studies 46 (1):206-215.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:206 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc.Pang Laikwan Identity Politics and Democracy in Hong Kong’s Social Unrest Hong Kong’s anti-Extradition Law Amendment Bill (anti-ELAB) movement began with legislation proposed in February 2019 to allow the transfer of fugitives to jurisdictions with which the city lacks formal extradition treaties. The law quickly attracted a tremendous amount of criticism and generated enormous anxiety because (...) mainland China was one of those jurisdictions.1 In fact, many believe that this bill was proposed to allow the government of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to transfer wanted persons of any nationality from Hong Kong to China, subject to a legal process that many view as highly dubious. A large-scale anti-government movement exploded in June 2019 when pro-establishment legislators in Hong Kong insisted on passing it, and millions of people took to the streets. The government waited three months to withdraw the bill, only doing so after some of the most violent confrontations between civilians and the police in Hong Kong’s history. With Beijing’s 1. The law was originally proposed after a Hong Kong man, who killed his pregnant girlfriend in Taiwan, could not be extradited back to Taiwan to stand trial for the murder due to the lack of formal extradition laws. The proposed law, which would be applied to Hong Kong citizens, foreign residents, and even people passing through on business or as tourists, is being opposed due to the fear that it would be used to extradite Hong Kong political/civil rights activists and dissidents to China, where they would be harshly punished.Pang Laikwan 207 support, the Hong Kong government has doggedly resisted negotiating with the protestors over other demands, such as setting up an independent inquiry into police misconduct. As people have become completely disillusioned with the government and their own futures, tensions have increased. Collapsing many of the city’s socioeconomic problems into one cause, the anti-ELAB movement is primarily an anti-authoritarian impulse motivated by the unifying power of the term “Hongkongers.” As the movement unfolds, one of the most popular slogans, “Add Oil, Hongkongers!” (meaning “Keep going, Hongkongers!”) gradually transformed into “Rebel, Hongkongers!” and “Revenge, Hongkongers!” showing the protestors ’ anger about unrestrained police violence and the Beijing regime behind it. The militarization associated with these protests is both worrisome and symptomatic. This short essay analyzes this movement and uses it as a vehicle to disentangle social and political identity. My concern is about how a large-scale political movement can realign identities to generate power from the bottom. I use an Arendtian approach to ground my theoretical orientation, asking: How can political actions be understood as the pursuit of freedom to transcend one’s biological and social identity? From an intersectional feminist angle, if we are aware that social discrimination operates within a complex network of simultaneous discriminations, real social change can only be envisioned using a broad political canvas. Hong Kong’s anti-Extradition Law Amendment Bill movement provides such a setting. Division and Inclusion “The people” might be the emptiest, but also the most powerful, phrase in the modern political lexicon. It can be used by politicians to justify groundless proposals or criticisms, but it is also the foundation and source of legitimacy for all modern political institutions. Indeed, the most basic meaning of democracy is “rule of the people,” which is impossible to avoid in any democratic imagination. As has been widely seen throughout the world, however, “the people” is often attached to various degrees of xenophobia—hatred of outsiders in the name of in-group solidarity. While the Hong Kong protestors’ courageous demands for the PRC to honor its promise to grant the city a high degree of autonomy have gained widespread international sympathy, thorny social divisions persist within the movement. 208Pang Laikwan While Hong Kong has never been a united society, the anti-ELAB protests—like most social movements—have been highly divisive, splitting Hong Kong people apart. Most obviously, “the people” are divided by their political identifications, forming a primary antagonism between those who support the protests and those who do not, usually described... (shrink)
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  35.  41
    Nursing ethics in modern China: conflicting values and competing role requirements.Samantha Mei-chePang -2003 - New York: Rodopi.
    One INTRODUCTION: IN SEARCH OF THE VOICES OF NURSES IN CHINA Two motives launched this study to search for the voices of nurses in China. ...
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  36.  85
    Nature, interthing intersubjectivity, and the environment: A comparative analysis of Kant and daoism.Ann A.Pang-White -2009 -Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 8 (1):61-78.
    The Kantian philosophy, for many, largely represents the Modern West’s anthropocentric dominance of nature in its instrumental-rationalist orientation. Recently, some scholars have argued that Kant’s aesthetics offers significant resources for environmental ethics, while others believe that Kant’s flawed dualistic views in the second Critique severely undermine any environmental promise that aesthetic judgments may hold in Kant’s third Critique . This article first examines the meanings of nature in Kant’s three Critique s. It concludes that Kant’s aesthetic view toward sensible nature (...) is indeed inconsistent. The article, however, also suggests that the “I” as “transcendental apperception” discussed in the paralogisms of the first Critique holds some promise of “interthing intersubjective” thinking. The second half of the article demonstrates that Daoism with a dialectic concern similar to Kant’s has something insightful to offer in its idea of interthingness based on a phenomenal account of nature. The article investigates important Daoist ideas of interthing analogical experience, qi , spiritual exercise, and wuwei in its dialect relation to zizan . By bringing Daoism and Kant into dialogue, the author hopes to bring forth a synthetic approach that is better suited to today’s environmental concerns. (shrink)
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  37.  38
    A Comparison of the Bamboo Slip and the Silk Manuscript Wu Xing.Pang Pu -2000 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 32 (1):50-57.
    Among the many silk manuscripts excavated from Changsha Mawangdui Tomb 3 in Hunan province in the winter of 1973, one text was named Wu xing [by contemporary scholars]. Twenty years later, in the winter of 1993, there was a text [of itself] titled Wu xing among the many bamboo slip texts excavated from Jingmen Guodian Tomb 1 in Hubei.
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  38.  23
    Recollecting Professor Feng’s 1957 Lectures in the Spring.PuPang -1994 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 21 (3-4):399-405.
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  39.  7
    东西均注釋.PuPang &Yizhi Fang -2001 - Beijing: Zhonghua shu ju. Edited by Yizhi Fang.
    《东西均》是明清之际哲学家方以智的著作,在本书中他提出并论证了“公因反因”这一重要学说。作者详加注释并阐明了书中抉发的哲学奥理,对研究和认识方以智的哲学思想和哲学地位,均有极高的参考价值。.
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  40. Gongsun Longzi jin yi.PuPang -1990 - Chengdu: Sichuan sheng xin hua shu dian jing xiao. Edited by Long Gongsun.
     
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  41.  8
    Heigeer "jing shen xian xiang xue" zhi dao de zhe xue yan jiu =.JunlaiPang -2013 - Beijing: Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she.
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  42. New information from an old tomb-Reading the Guodian bamboo slips.P.Pang -2000 -Contemporary Chinese Thought 32 (1):43-49.
     
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  43. Xian Qin ru jia yan jiu.PuPang,Yong Ma &Yiqun Liu (eds.) -2003 - Wuhan Shi: Hubei jiao yu chu ban she.
     
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  44. Yi fen wei san: Zhongguo chuan tong si xiang kao shi.PuPang -1995 - Shenzhen: Hai tian chu ban she.
     
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  45. Han Feizi de zhe xue.Pang-Hsiung Wang -1977
     
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  46.  141
    Neo-Confucians and Zhu Xi on Family and Woman: Challenges and Potentials.Ann A.Pang-White -2016 - InBloomsbury Research Handbook of Chinese Philosophy and Gender. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 69-88.
    In Chinese philosophy’s encounter with modernity and feminist discourse, Neo-Confucianism often suffered the most brutal attacks and criticisms. In “Neo-Confucians and Zhu Xi on Family and Woman: Challenges and Potentials,” Ann A.Pang-White investigates Song Neo-Confucians’ views (in particular, that of Zhu Xi) on women by examining the Classifi ed Conversations of Zhu Xi (Zhuzi Yulei), the Reflections on Things at Hand (Jinsi Lu), Further Reflections on Things at Hand (Xu Jinsi Lu), and other texts.Pang-White also takes (...) a close look at the Song law regarding women’s property rights and the Song educational system. Surprisingly,Zhu exhibited a level of flexibility, though still limited, on these subjects. He was particularly adamant about the importance of women’s education. In addition, even though he opposed the social practice and women’s ownership of dowry (seeing it as a form of commercializing marriage), he did not absolutely oppose women’s property rights. However, his normative and philosophical view on the male/yang and female/yin relationship was less satisfactory. At one place, he used it to illustrate gender equity; at another place, he defended female subordination. Zhu’s social-political teaching on women’s role could benefit from a more consistent development of his metaphysics of li-qi and yin-yang, which can bring new insight to the contemporary feminist “essentialist versus non-essentialist” debate on sex and gender. (shrink)
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  47. Ssŭ-ta-lin kuan yü ko ming pien chêng fa ti li lun.Pang-I. Hsü -1953
     
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  48. Augustine on Divine Foreknowledge and Human Free Will.Ann A.Pang-White -1994 -Revue Des Études Augustiniennes 40:417-431.
  49.  13
    A proposed bill on assisted dying in the UK.S. M.Pang -2006 -Nursing Ethics 13 (2):103.
  50.  18
    Bian hua she hui zhong de zheng zhi guan nian: zheng zhi xue li lun qian yan jiang yan lu = Political ideas in a changing society: lectures on frontiers of political theory.JinyouPang (ed.) -2014 - Beijing Shi: She hui ke xue wen xian chu ban she.
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