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Results for 'Fu Tsʻao'

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  1. Shih yung chu i chiao yü ssü hsiang pʻi pʻan.FuTsʻao -1956
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  2. Tu-wei pʻi pʻan yin lun.FuTsʻao -1951
     
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  3. Han Fei fa zhi lun.ChʻienTsʻao -1948
     
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  4.  52
    (2 other versions)Ai ssu-ch'I's philosophy.Ignatius J. H. Ts'ao -1972 -Studies in East European Thought 12 (3):231-244.
    In Ai Ssu-ch'i is exemplified and substantiated the Soviet influence on the official definition of philosophy in the history of Communist Party of China, i.e., the assertion about and the method for knowledge of the world. Such a philosophical knowledge has as its formal object the most fundamental laws of the universe.In order to acquire such a genuine philosophical knowledge, one needs a desire to change the world and a proletarian point of view. For only by aiming at changing the (...) world is inevitability reflected; only in the proletarian viewpoint are the objective laws reflected. In order to substantiate these assertions, one has to point out that, first, man's thinking is determined by his social relations and, secondly, social relations are determined by practice. Since the proletariat is in the right kind of practice, it is both in the proper locus of social relations and, therefore, it perceives both inevitability and objectivity. Yet, due to man's subjective dynamism, it is possible for other classes to adopt the standpoint of the proletariat. (shrink)
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  5.  51
    Confucius in the middle of the new cultural revolution today.Ignatius J. H. Ts'Ao -1975 -Studies in Soviet Thought 15 (1):1-33.
    There is some ground for saying that the real Confucius cannot be the object of recent critiques in the PRC. Both the critiques and critics are of questionable authenticity and they seem to be ‘pulling their punches’. What is clear is that these ideological pursuits mask some very serious political events over the recent past in the PRC.
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  6. Ju fa tou cheng shih hua.Ssu-FengTsʻao -1975
     
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  7.  39
    (1 other version)Remoulding world outlook and the 'red flag'.Ignatius J. H. Ts'ao -1971 -Studies in East European Thought 11 (2):113-117.
  8. Shih yeh yü chʻin fen.Hsien-wenTsʻao -1980 - [s.n.,:
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  9. Yü tung hsüan ching.ShengTsʻao -1973
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  10.  39
    (1 other version)Study notes of marxist 'classics' and thered flag 1971–1972.Ignatius J. H. Ts'ao -1973 -Studies in East European Thought 13 (3-4):279-310.
  11.  68
    Ai ssu-ch'I: The Apostle of chinese communism.Ignatius J. H. Ts'ao -1972 -Studies in East European Thought 12 (1):2-36.
    Ai Ssu-ch'i is a little known but very important figure in the introduction of Marxism-Leninism into China. This first article provides a brief biography of Ai Ssu-ch'i as well as a detailed account of his activities as teacher, author and propagandist. Among his other services to the cause of Marxism-Leninism in China, one has to stress Ai Ssu-ch'i's systematic opposition to Yeh Ch'ing and to the non-Communist interpretation of Dr. Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles of the People. (cf.SST 10 (1970), 138–166.).
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  12. Reviews. [REVIEW]K. J. &Ignatius J. H. Ts'ao -1970 -Studies in East European Thought 10 (3).
     
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  13.  22
    Peking Man.Madeline K. Spring,Cao Yu Ts'ao Yü,Leslie Nan-Kwai Lo,Don Cohn,Michelle Vosper &Cao Yu Ts'ao Yu -1987 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 107 (3):503.
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  14.  29
    The "Gang of Four" are Executioners Who Kill People with the Pen.Ho Ling-Hsiu &Ts'ao Kuei-lin -1978 -Chinese Studies in History 11 (4):34-41.
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  15. Li hsiang, chʻingtsʻao, ching shen sheng huo.Chu Tʻao -1979
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  16. Li hsiang, chʻingtsʻao, ching shên shêng huo.Chu Tʻao -1962
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  17.  34
    The Present State of Affairs and The Tasks of the World Democratic Women's Movement.Ts'ai Ch'ang &Madame Li Fu-ch'un -1972 -Chinese Studies in History 5 (4):212-222.
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  18. Kuo fu ssŭ hsiang chih chê hsüeh tʻi hsi.Tsai-Yang Tsʻui -1965
     
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  19.  31
    Ts'ao Yin and the K'ang-hsi Emperor, Bondservant and Master.E.-tu Zen Sun &Jonathan D. Spence -1970 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 90 (2):381.
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  20. Hsien tai mei shu ssŭ chʻao tao lun.Tsʻui-fêng Shih -1968
     
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  21. Hsiangtsʻao hsü chiao shu.Chʻang Yü -1963
     
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  22. Ts Ung Hsi Fang Che Hsüeh Tao Ch an Fo Chiao.Charles Wei-Hsun Fu -1986 - Tung Ta T U Shu Kung Ssu Tsung Ching Hsiao San Min Shu Chü.
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  23. Ju Chia Ssu Hsiang Hsin Lun Ch Uang Tsao Hsing Chuan Huan Ti Tzu Wo.Wei-Ming Tu,Wen-Chang Chou,Ting Shan &Yu-hua Ts ao -1996
  24. Lo chi tʻan tʻao.Fu-Tseng Liu -1976
     
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  25. (1 other version)Tsʻao mu tzu.Tzu-chʻi Yeh -1975
     
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  26. Hsien tai mei shu ssŭ chʻao tao lun.Tsʻui-fêng Shih -1961
     
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  27.  31
    Seven Rhapsodies of Ts'ao Chih.Paul W. Kroll -2000 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (1):1-12.
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  28. Kʻung tsʻung-tzu.Fu Kʻung -1959 - Edited by Jung Chʻêng.
     
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  29. Chʻao jen che hsüeh chʻien shuo.Shih-tsʻen Li -1974
     
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  30.  46
    Nan-fang ts'ao-mu chuang: A Fourth Century Flora of Southeast Asia. Chi Han, Hui-Lin Li.Elling Eide -1981 -Isis 72 (2):318-318.
  31. Jen hsing tan tʻao.Jung-tsʻun Chou -1974 - Tʻai-pei : Yün tʻien chʻu pan she,:
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  32. Tsʻun tsai chu i chê hsüeh.Tsai-fu Liu -1969
     
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  33. Jen sheng tsʻung tʻan.Tsai-fu Liu (ed.) -1976
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  34.  37
    Yü-chih pen-ts’ao p’in-hui ching-yao. A Sixteenth-Century Chinese Pharmacopoeia. [REVIEW]Werner Eichhorn -1975 -Philosophy and History 8 (2):300-301.
  35.  36
    Worlds of Dust and Jade: 47 Poems and Ballads of the Third Century Chinese Poet Ts'ao Chih.Hans H. Frankel &George W. Kent -1970 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 90 (4):610.
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  36.  28
    When Does Teacher Support Reduce Depression in Students? The Moderating Role of Students' Status as Left-Behind Children.Wei Li,Wen Yang Gao &Wei Dong Fu -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Teacher support makes students feel loved and cared for because they believe that their teachers will provide them with opportunities to make choices, support them in independent problem solving, and understand their inner feelings. High TS levels reduce depression and anxiety, thereby improving students' mental well-being. This cross-sectional study involved 3,573 students from 29 schools in 16 counties/cities of six provinces, namely, Guizhou, Hubei, Jiangxi, Shanxi, Sichuan, and Yunnan. The aim was to examine the impact of TS on students' level (...) of depression. The results indicated that for children in elementary schools, their status as left-behind children played a moderating role between TS and depression. The level of depression in non-LBC children decreased significantly with increases in TS, but the reduction for LBC children was not significant. For children in middle/junior high schools, their LBC status did not play a moderating role between TS and depression. TS was negatively correlated with the children's level of depression, but there was a significant positive relationship between their LBC status and depression. The theoretical and practical significance of the research findings were further discussed. (shrink)
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  37.  31
    Life Sciences Li Hui-Lin, Nan-fang ts'ao-mu chuang: a fourth century flora of Southeast Asia. Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press, 1979. Pp. x + 168. £9.00. [REVIEW]Hans Agren -1983 -British Journal for the History of Science 16 (2):212-213.
  38. Tsʻung kuo fu ssu hsiang kʻan Tu-wei ti chih shih lun.Chʻang-Ching Li -1980 - Chung Yang Yen Chiu Yüan San Min Chu I Yen Chiu So.
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  39. Tsʻun tsai ti ao mi.Sheng-chʻung Cheng -1975
     
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  40. Kʻung-Tsʻung-tzu: A Study and Translation of Chapters 15-23, with a Reconstruction of the Hsiao Erh-ya Dictionary.Yoav Ariel -1996
    "The K'ung-ts'ung-tzu (The K'ung Family Masters Anthology) is a collection of writings, most of them discourses, that narrate the lives and scholarly activities of one lineage of Confucius' family, beginning with the Warring States period, and continuing with the establishment of the Ch'in dynasty and the succeeding Han dynasty. The book is divided into three parts. The first, introductory part deals with the Confucian character and literary mood of the K'ung-ts'ung-tzu. It embeds the philosophical position of the text within the (...) Confucian tradition; it discusses the varied content of the text as a whole, and characterizes the gloomy mood that prevails in it. The second part consists of an annotated translation of chapters 15-23 of the text. The third part is a computational reconstruction of the K'ung-ts'ung-tzu's eleventh chapter, a concise dictionary entitled Hsiao Erh-ya."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved. (shrink)
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  41. Pien chêng lo chi tsʻan kʻao tzŭ liao. Chʻieh, Ta-yu &[From Old Catalog] -1959
     
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  42.  35
    K'ung-Ts'ung-Tzu: The K'ung Family Masters' Anthology.Yoav Ariel -1989 - Princeton University Press.
    In analyzing evidence indicating that K'ung-ts'ung-tzu was a forgery, Yoav Ariel questions current views of the Confucian school in the time between the Sage's death in the fifth century B.C. and the emergence in the eleventh century of Neo-Confucianism. The text, traditionally ascribed to a descendant of Confucius, K'ung Fu, provides a setting for a series of philosophical debates between K'ung family members and representatives of such non-Confucian schools as Legalism, Mohism, and the School of Names. However, finding that this (...) text was probably fabricated by the controversial Confucian master, Wang Su, Ariel explains how it sheds light on the third-century philosophical milieu: Confucianism then is seen to have been not only Taoistically metaphysical, individualistic, and escapist, but also aggressive in advocating early Confucian values. The first part of Ariel's book deals with the general characteristics, history, dating, authenticity, and authorship of the text. The second part is a fully annotated and analyzed translation of the first of the two traditional volumes that constitute the K'ung-ts'ung-tzu. Originally published in 1989. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905. (shrink)
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  43. Ren shi lun zhi yue: ling fu liang pian: Ao mi, Se yu kong.Xinjian Cai -1987 - Taibei Shi: Yin he wen hua shi ye gong si. Edited by Xinjian Cai.
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  44.  66
    K'ung-ts'ung-tzu, the K'ung Family Masters' Anthology: A Study and Translation of Chapters 1-10, 12-14.A. C. Graham -1990 -Philosophy East and West 40 (4):571-573.
  45.  30
    Technology and Security Analysis of Cryptocurrency Based on Blockchain.Chao Yu,Wenke Yang,Feiyu Xie &Jianmin He -2022 -Complexity 2022:1-15.
    Blockchain technology applied to cryptocurrencies is the dominant factor in maintaining the security of cryptocurrencies. This article reviews the technological implementation of cryptocurrency and the security and stability of cryptocurrency and analyzes the security support from blockchain technology and its platforms based on empirical case studies. Our results show that the security support from blockchain technology platforms is significantly insufficient and immature. In addition, we further Zyskind and Nathan and Choi and find that the top ten platforms play critical roles (...) in security support and have significant advantages in terms of funds, duration, and human resources. Moreover, these platforms provide computational resources and benefits to the consensus algorithm selection for blockchain practitioners. Second, encryption ensures the security of cryptocurrencies. On the one hand, the digital signatures identify the identity of the signatory and the transaction. However, the principle of the hash algorithm confirms ownership. Meanwhile, SHA256 is infeasible to compute in the reverse direction and is difficult to attack. Furthermore, the records in the blockchain can be queried by every participant, making the system information transparent and open reliable. Third, compared to the study of Fu and Fang 2016, we find that the blockchain structure is composed of security components and basic components of six layers that are independent and cannot be extended completely and have a certain coupling among them. Fourth, the underlying ledger structures of Bitcoin and DAG are highly correlated to their security. Specifically, we follow Sompolinsky et al. and detect that the structure of SPECTRE ensures network security and robustness from its block production, conflict resolution, and generated trusted transaction sets. Meanwhile, the voting algorithm of SPECTRE makes resolving conflicting transactions by calculating votes and ensuring the transaction information that is virtually unable to be tampered with possible. In particular, the security calculation power of SPECTRE can reach 51% and resist “double-spend attacks” and “censorship attacks” effectively. In addition, the RDL framework of SPECTRE achieves security confirmation of transferring funds. Moreover, PHANTOM identifies evil blocks by employing block connectivity analysis and ensures its security. Eventually, we also expand the studies of and compare the basic characteristics of the protocols of Bitcoin, SPECTRE, and PHANTOM and find that protocols play imperative roles throughout the implementation process of cryptocurrency. In addition, the underlying ledger structure and consensus mechanism make up a blockchain while the confirmation time, throughput limit, and ordering are prerequisites for smart contracts. (shrink)
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  46. A discussão em torno da "Parte II" das Investigações Filosóficas de Wittgenstein.Filicio Mulinari -2019 -Sofia 8 (1):171-186.
    O artigo tem dois propósitos centrais: primeiramente, expor a discussão sobre a inclusão do TS 234 nas Investigações Filosóficas de Wittgenstein. Para atingir esse primeiro objetivo, iremos analisar as justificativas de inclusão dadas por Anscombe e Rhees na primeira edição do livro, as críticas feitas por von Wright e, por fim, os motivos que levaram Hacker e Schulte, editores da quarta edição do livro, a considerar o TS 234 como parte de um trabalho distinto das Investigações Filosóficas. O segundo objetivo (...) do artigo é mostrar uma leitura particular sobre os escritos pós-1945, a qual afirma que tais anotações não representam 'partidas para novas direções', como von Wright, Hacker e Moyal-Sharrock alegam, mas são uma continuação das questões iniciadas ainda nas Investigações Filosóficas. Para este segundo objetivo, tomaremos como base a leitura exposta por Nuno Venturinha em seu artigo “Against a third Wittgenstein” e iremos nos fundamentar em menções do próprio Wittgenstein que indicam que as Investigações Filosóficas ainda estavam no horizonte de pensamento do filósofo em seus escritos pós-1945. Ao fim, concluiremos que tanto a leitura proposta por Venturinha — de “uma continuidade” dos escritos — quanto as leituras que apregoam que os escritos sobre filosofia da psicologia são “partidas para novas direções” possuem limitações e problemas graves, o que mostra que a questão em torno do locus da Parte II das Investigações e dos problemas ali inseridos continua sendo ainda hoje um capítulo polêmico das leituras Wittgensteinianas. (shrink)
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  47.  20
    Concepção de produção de presença em Gumbrecht.Wellington Amâncio da Silva -2017 -Cadernos Do Pet Filosofia 8 (16):44-54.
    Este trabalho pretende apresentar alguns pontos do pensamento filosófico de Gumbrecht sobre a presença, especialmente, com relação às possibilidades da linguagem. A partir desse logos propõe-se uma crítica introdutória aos conceitos de coisa, de sujeito/objeto, de visão cartesiana do mundo, demonstrando, a partir do autor analisado, as possibilidades de tangibilidade por meio da linguagem e o que isso representa em face dos paradigmas vigentes das ciências instituídas. Através de pesquisa bibliográfica, viu-se que a teoria da linguagem de Gumbrecht é subsídio (...) importante para a reflexão transdisciplinar, etnometodológica e etnoecológica; pode contribuir para um aprofundamento conceitual da “visão dionisíaca de mundo” de Nietzsche e Maffesoli; da “Geografia Humana” e do etnoconceito de “lugar” de Yi-Fu Tuan; dos conceitos de “abertura”, “lida”, “práxis”, “linguagem”, “Dasein”, “Ser-no-mundo” de Heidegger; de “adaptabilidade” de Moran e de “autopoiesis” e da fenomenologia biológica de Maturana. (shrink)
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  48.  10
    Resson'ncias e ontologias outras: pensando com o pensar Bantu-Kongo.Tiganá Santana Neves Santos -2022 -Trans/Form/Ação 45 (spe):149-168.
    Resumo: À luz de aspectos fundamentais do pensar bantu-kongo e em consonância com pensadores contemporâneos, tais como Bunseki Fu-Kiau e Zamenga B., este artigo aspira a refletir acerca de ontologias distintas daquelas hegemônicas euro-ocidentais. Tais ontologias são vivenciadas em parte do continente africano e foram deslocadas para territórios afrodiaspóricos, como o Brasil, ainda que com adaptações, por meio de práticas cosmológicas que situam a ancestralidade em lugar central. As ideias de “mesmo pluriontológico”, opacidade, estágios do cosmograma kongo, vazio, transmutação, inclinação (...) à outridade, ciência do feitiço, sistema, entes ecológicos, inter-ações propõem possibilidades complexas de ser-viver, em relação, as quais se distanciam, radicalmente, de metafísicas e éticas desenvolvidas no seio do pensamento ocidental, assim como podem com elas dialogar, o que faz com que, ao pensar do lado da margem afrodiaspórica do Atlântico, consideremos as tensões entre esses distintos modos de pensar que ocupam espaços assimétricos nos construtos históricos.: In light of fundamental aspects of Bantu-Kongo thinking and in line with contemporary thinkers, such as Bunseki Fu-Kiau and Zamenga B., this article aims to reflect on ontologies distinct from those of Euro-Western hegemony. Such ontologies are experienced in part of the African continent and have been moved to Afrodiasporic territories, such as Brazil, although with adaptations, through cosmological practices that situate ancestry in a central place. The ideas of “pluriontological sameness”, opacity, stages of the Kongo cosmogram, emptiness, transmutation, inclination towards otherness, science of sorcery, system, ecological entities, inter-actions propose complex possibilities of being-living, in relation, which are radically far from metaphysics and ethics developed in the heart of Western thinking, as well as can dialogue with them, which makes us, by thinking on the side of the Afrodiasporic margin of the Atlantic, consider the tensions between these different ways of thinking that occupy asymmetric spaces in historical constructs. (shrink)
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  49.  5
    Der Bilderfex: Im imaginären Museum Theodor Fontanes.Christoph Wegmann -2019 - Berlin: Quintus.
    Theodor Fontane war von Kindheit an ein Bildernarr. Und so sind auch seine Romane grosszügig mit Bildern ausgestattet, und zwar wortwörtlich: in Sprache übertragen und in Literatur verwandelt. Manchmal ist es nur eine Anspielung, zuweilen bloss ein Werktitel oder Künstlername, dann wiederum werden mit wenigen Sätzen Gemälde gleichsam reproduziert. Von Sternbildern bis Briefmarken, von Meissner Nippes bis zu Deckengemälden reichen die Bildbeispiele, die in den Romanen genannt, vom Erzähler und seinen Figuren erinnert, diskutiert, gekauft, vererbt, geschaffen und zerstört werden. Alle (...) wichtigen Geschehnisse und Themen spiegeln sich in Bildern, mit Bildern lernen sich Figuren kennen und lieben, wegen Bildern zerstreiten und trennen sie sich. Fontane hat in seinen Romanen an über 1 500 Textstellen Bildmotive eingearbeitet: Porträts, Wappen, Orden, Ornamente, Denkmäler oder Heiligenbilder schimmern wie Wasserzeichen durch seine Texte hindurch. Viele dieser Bilder sind jedoch für heutige Leserinnen und Leser?verblasst?, ihr ikonografischer Gehalt ist kaum noch gegenwärtig. Die Erkundungen des Lese- und Bilderbuches führen insofern oftmals durch Terra incognita. Dabei ist es nicht nötig, Fontanes Werke zu kennen, um der Tour durch sein Musée imaginaire folgen zu können. Diese navigiert durch den gesamten Raum seiner Geschichten wie durch einen einzigen Riesenroman und geht den Motivlinien und Mustern nach, die der Autor gesetzt hat, etwa den Bildern der Liebe, der Macht und des Todes, den Bildern des Wissens und den neuen Bildmedien des 19. Jahrhunderts. (shrink)
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  50.  48
    Meeting of Minds: Intellectual and Religious Interaction in East Asian Traditions of Thought (review). [REVIEW]Deborah Sommer -2001 -Philosophy East and West 51 (2):318-320.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Meeting of Minds: Intellectual and Religious Interaction in East Asian Traditions of ThoughtDeborah SommerMeeting of Minds: Intellectual and Religious Interaction in East Asian Traditions of Thought. Edited by Irene Bloom and Joshua A. Fogel. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997. Pp. 391.Meeting of Minds: Intellectual and Religious Interaction in East Asian Traditions of Thought, a volume of eleven essays written in honor of Wing-tsit Chan and William Theodore (...) de Bary, proposes to explore how Confucian and Neo-Confucian traditions have responded to and have influenced other traditions (Buddhist, Taoist, folk, Japanese nativist, and so on) in China and Japan. The essays are arranged first geographically (seven articles on China precede four on Japan) and then roughly chronologically. All essays, save one, describe Sung or post-Sung developments. A few sentences per essay must suffice in this review.Irene Bloom's "Three Visions of Jen" is the only essay on the classical period. Informed especially by Wing-tsit Chan's work on jen and shaped by Sung and later notions of the transmission of the way, the essay examines the notion of jen in the Analects, the Mencius, and Chu Hsi's "Jen shuo" (Discussion of jen), succinctly [End Page 318] emphasizing the significant differences of perspective therein. Nodding to the book's larger intent of examining intellectual interactions with other traditions, some attention is given in the conclusion to comparisons with the Mohist, Yangist, and Ch'an traditions. Rodney Taylor's "Chu Hsi on Meditation" is also deeply indebted to Wing-tsit Chan and starts by resurveying much terrain already explored in Chan's 1989 "Chu Hsi and Quiet-Sitting" (in Chu Hsi: New Studies, published by University of Hawai'i Press). Taylor enlarges upon Chan's work especially in his discussion of Chu Hsi's practices of breath-control techniques to improve health. In keeping with the larger direction of the book, Taylor contrasts Chu's emphasis on quiet sitting as a support for study with the different spiritual goals of Ch'an Buddhism.Patricia Ebrey's "Sung Neo-Confucian Views on Geomancy" examines a topic that is seldom encountered in American scholarship: the attitudes of such figures as Ssu-ma Kuang, Ch'eng I, Chu Hsi, and Ts'ai Yan-ting toward popular practices governing the placement of graves. Ebrey outlines the views of those who, as it were, are "for" or "against" geomancy (Chu and Ts'ai took geomancy seriously, although Ssu-ma and Ch'eng viewed it with apprehension) but also provides textual evidence that allows one to see the grayer areas between support for, and condemnation of, feng shui and other arts. Julia Ching's "Chu Hsi and Taoism" considers Chu's interpretations of such classical texts as the I ching, Lao Tzu, Chuang Tzu, and Ch'u tzu and also assays his commentaries on such later texts as the Ts'an-t'ung-ch'i (an alchemical text Chu commented on with the assistance of Ts'ai Yan-ting) and the Yin-fu-ching (a commentary that Ching concludes is most likely not Chu's work). She also explores in some detail the specifics of Chu's regimen of breathing practices.Moving from specific thinkers of the Sung to general developments in the Ming and Ch'ing dynasties, Chn-fang Y's "The Cult of Kuan-yin in Ming-Ch'ing China: A Case of Confucianization of Buddhism?" describes how the cult of Kuan-yin served the aims of Confucian family values and facilitated the realization of women's domestic expectations of filiality and fertility. Y explores the little-studied practice of ke-ku, or the cutting off of one's flesh to feed another, and relates Kuan-yin's role as a protector of those who engage in such filial excisions.Koichi Shinohara's "Ta-hui's Instructions to Tseng K'ai: Buddhist 'Freedom' in the Neo-Confucian Context" returns to the Sung but continues the focus on Buddhism, finding an example of Buddhist-Confucian interaction in the religious instruction given by the monk Ta-hui to a vice minister of rites. But what is particularly Confucian about minister Tseng K'ai's interest in Buddhism? The... (shrink)
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