The Confucian Tradition  
Between Religion and Humanism
Author(s): Guoxiang Peng
Published by Bridge 21 Publications
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781626430792
Pages: 0

EBOOK (EPUB)

ISBN: 9781626430792 Price: INR 5371.99
Add to cart Buy Now
The author reviews the Confucian tradition through the two concepts, religion and humanities. Chinese scholars always adopt Zongjiao and Renwen from the ancient Chinese documents as the Chinese translation of religion and humanities. In respect of their own contexts of culture, the Chinese words and the English words share some similarities in meaning, but also have some vital differences. This book covers the major phases of the development of Confucianism, which have a wide historical span from the Pre-Qin period to the contemporary era with a focus on Confucianism in Song and Ming dynasties. Relevant ideas of modern Western disciplines such as philosophy of religion, religious studies and theology are employed by the author as references, not criteria, to illuminate key ideas in Confucian tradition and highlight the features of Confucianism as a religious or spiritual humanism. In some chapters, the author compares the eastern thinkers and theories with those western ones.
Rating
Description
The author reviews the Confucian tradition through the two concepts, religion and humanities. Chinese scholars always adopt Zongjiao and Renwen from the ancient Chinese documents as the Chinese translation of religion and humanities. In respect of their own contexts of culture, the Chinese words and the English words share some similarities in meaning, but also have some vital differences. This book covers the major phases of the development of Confucianism, which have a wide historical span from the Pre-Qin period to the contemporary era with a focus on Confucianism in Song and Ming dynasties. Relevant ideas of modern Western disciplines such as philosophy of religion, religious studies and theology are employed by the author as references, not criteria, to illuminate key ideas in Confucian tradition and highlight the features of Confucianism as a religious or spiritual humanism. In some chapters, the author compares the eastern thinkers and theories with those western ones.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgement
  • Introduction
    • 1. An Interpretation of Humanism
    • 2. An Explanation of Religion
    • 3. The Confucian Tradition: Between Humanism and Religion
    • 4. Method and Significance
  • Chapter 1: An Interpretation of “All Things Are Complete in Me”
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. An Interpretation of “I,” “Things,” and “Completeness”
    • 3. An Interpretation of “Introspecting and Seeing Sincerity” and “Compelling Oneself to Follow the Great Way of Forgiveness”
    • 4. Conclusion
  • Chapter 2: Religious Humanism Characterized by “One Body with All Things”: Focusing on The Western Inscription
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. “Men Are My Kin and Things My Kind”: Self, Others, and Nature
    • 3. “Qian Is My Father and Kun My Mother”: Self, Heaven, and Earth
    • 4. Religious Humanism and Humanistic Features of Confucianism
    • 5. Conclusion
  • Chapter 3: Spiritual and Bodily Exercise: Religious Implications and Significance of Zhu Xi’s Interpretation of Confucian Classics
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The Importance of Interpreting Classics
    • 3. Interpretation of Classics as Spiritual and Bodily Exercise
    • 4. Discussion on Spiritual and Bodily Exercise in Zhu Xi’s Interpretation of the Classics
    • 5. A Comparison between Zhu Xi’s Method of Reading and Christian Lectio Divina
    • 6. Conclusion
  • Chapter 4: Wang Ji’s Doctrine of Believing in the Innate Knowledge of the Goodness and the Religious Evolution of Confucianism in the Late Ming Dynasty: A Perspective from Comparative Religious Studies
    • 1. The Innate knowledge of the Goodness as the Object of Belief
    • 2. Features of Wang Ji’s Doctrine of The Innate knowledge of the Goodness
    • 3. The Religious Evolution of Confucianism in the Late Ming Dynasty: Directions, Forms, and Modes
  • Chapter 5: Death as the Ultimate Concern in the Neo-Confucian Tradition: Wang Yangming’s Followers as an Example
    • 1. Death: A Focus of Awareness among Wang Yangming’s Followers
    • 2. Why Pay Attention to Death, and How to Liberate Oneself from Death: The Response of Wang Yangming’s Followers
    • 3. Ontologically Different Ways of Transcending Death: Confucian Versus Buddhist
  • Chapter 6: Confucian Identity in Pluralistic Religious Participation: Wang Ji’s View of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism and His Self-Identification
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Wang Ji’s View of Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism
    • 3. The Self-Identification of Wang Ji
    • 4. Conclusion
  • Chapter 7: “One Principle with Many Manifestations” as the Confucian Pluralistic View of Religion: An Example of the View of Three Religions in the Wang Yangming School
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Wang Yangming on the Three Religions
    • 3. Wang Ji on the Three Religions
    • 4. Jiao Hong of the Three Religions
    • 5. “One Principle with Many Manifestations”: The Pluralistic View of Religion
  • Chapter 8: Agreement Between Virtue and Happiness: The Highest Good in Kant and Mou Zongsan
    • 1. Kant’s Theory of das höchste Gut
    • 2. Mou Zongsan’s Theory of the Highest Good
    • 3. A Comparison of Summum Bonum in Kant and Mou Zongsan
    • 4. An Examination on Summum Bonum in Kant and Mou Zongsan
    • 5. My Response to Summum Bonum
  • Chapter 9: A Comparison of the Supreme Status of Life in Confucianism and Christianity: An Examination of Kierkegaard’s Theory of Life Stages
    • 1. Kierkegaard’s Theory of Three Stages of Life
    • 2. The Basic Pattern Concerning Conceptions of Life in Confucianism
    • 3. An Explanation of Commonalities
    • 4. An Analysis of Differences
  • Chapter 10: Self-Cultivation as Spiritual-Bodily Exercise in Confucian Tradition and its Therapeutic Significance with Reference to Ancient Greco-Roman Philosophical Traditions
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Another Approach to Understanding Ancient Greco-Roman Philosophy
    • 3. The Bodily Dimension in Confucian Self-Cultivation
    • 4. Daily Life: Self-Cultivation as Spiritual and Bodily Exercise
    • 5. The Therapeutic Significance of Confucian Self-Cultivation as Spiritual and Bodily Exercise
  • Chapter 11: Religious Dialogue: The Core Subject of The Third-Period Confucianism
    • 1. The Reinterpretation of the Third-Period of Confucianism
    • 2. Whether Confucianism is a Kind of Religious Tradition
    • 3. The Dialogical Nature of Confucian Tradition
    • 4. The Potential Contribution to Religious Dialogue of the Confucian Tradition
  • Chapter 12: Resources in Confucianism for Resolving Religious Conflicts in the Globalization Process
    • 1. Globalization and Religious Conflict
    • 2. Understanding the Religiousness of the Confucian Tradition
    • 3. The Pluralistic Religious Outlook of Confucianism and its Practice
  • Chapter 13: The World Significance of Confucian Religiousness: Envisioning Twenty-First Century Confucianism from the New Trends in the Studies of Confucianism in the West
    • 1. New Trends in the Study of Confucian Religiousness in North America
    • 2. The Influence and Significance of Contemporary New Confucianism
    • 3. Prospects for the Worldwide Development of Religious Confucianism
  • Appendix: A Brief Discussion on the Study of Confucianism and Religion
  • Postscript
  • Citations and References
User Reviews
Rating