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Confucianism

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International audienceChosŏn Confucianism is commonly understood as the dominant, uniform ideology that affected and potentially explains all aspects of politics, society, and culture in early modern Korea.
Sancho, Isabelle
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Confucianism and Comprehensive Confucian Perfectionism

2020
This section offers a very brief introduction to the most fundamental elements of Confucianism and its key phases of historical development. Although this short chapter can by no means do justice to the scope and depth of Confucianism, it serves to prepare readers who are unfamiliar with Confucianism for the discussions of contemporary and political ...
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The Confucian School and Confucian Religion

Contemporary Chinese Thought, 2010
(2010). The Confucian School and Confucian Religion. Contemporary Chinese Thought: Vol. 41, No. 4, pp. 47-60.
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Confucianism and Education

2017
Issues related to the aim of education, curriculum, teaching, and learning are perennial concerns in Confucianism. Within the Confucian canon, two texts, Analects (Lunyu) and Xueji (Record of Learning), are particularly instructive in illuminating the principles and practices of education for early Confucianism.
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Modernizing Confucianism and ‘new Confucianism’

2008
For some people, Confucianism, a philosophy that looks to a mythical past as an ideal for inspiration, has become obsolete as societies historically under Confucian influence modernize. However, reports of the death of Confucianism are premature. While it has been eclipsed by Western thought and practice for significant periods, Confucianism has ...
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Why Confucianism? Which Confucianism?

2019
This chapter argues that early Confucians were revolutionaries with a conservative facade. According to this “progressive” reading, they tried to solve issues of modernity not by rejecting modernity but by embracing it, although some of their locutions seem to resonate with those widely used in the “good old days,” and they were not as resolute as ...
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From Mind Confucianism to Political Confucianism

2011
The 20th century has seen a decline in Confucian morality in mainland China due to the denigration of traditional Chinese culture. Neo-Confucian scholars in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the United States, reacting to mainstream scholarship and dominate ideologies, have attempted to carry the burden of preserving and reviving this endangered Chinese tradition.
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Introduction: what Confucianism is and what Confucianism is not

2014
Confucianism is China's oldest and most revered philosophy. In imperial times, Confucius's standing was so great that the few writers who questioned his teachings became notorious for that reason alone. But in his own day, Confucius was taken as a wise but iconoclastic and potentially dangerous teacher of young men, and for many generations after his ...
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Evolution of Confucianism: Construction of Confucian Pacifism and Confucian Autocracy in Chinese History

2020
This chapter examines and deconstructs a well-known institution in China: Confucianism. China is often presumed to be different from Europe: While the Western world was simultaneously cursed by a Hobbesian state of war and blessed by a deeply ingrained tradition of constitutionalism, the East was supposed to be endowed with peace but burdened with ...
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Confucian political philosophy for Non-Confucians

2015
Contemporary proponents of Confucian political philosophy often ignore the fact that any sizeable future Confucian political order will have to accommodate many “non-Confucians.” The guiding question of this paper is therefore the following: how could a Confucian political philosophy, if it can at all, adequately take into account a plurality of ...
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