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Neo-Confucianism

2014
“Neo-Confucianism” refers to the broad revival of Confucian thinking that emerged in the early Song dynasty (960–1279 ce). At the core of this revival was the movement known to its adherents as the “Learning of the Way” (daoxue), but the new directions in which Confucians took their shared tradition are not limited to the texts and terminology of the ...
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Neo-Confucian philosophy

2018
Chinese neo-Confucian philosophy, or ‘neo-Confucianism’, is a term which refers to a wide variety of substantially different Chinese thinkers from the Song dynasty (960–1279) through the Qing dynasty (1644–1911). In at least one respect the term is misleading, for unlike Neoplatonists, most neo-Confucians saw themselves as reviving, not revising, the ...
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Neo-Confucianism in History

2008
* Introduction: Neo-Confucianism in History * The World of the Eleventh Century: 750 and 1050 Compared * Searching for a New Foundation in the Eleventh Century * The Neo-Confucians * Politics * Learning * Belief * Society * Afterword: China's History and Neo-Confucianism * Notes * Bibliography * Character List ...
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Late Imperial Neo-Confucianism

2023
Abstract This chapter introduces late imperial Neo-Confucianism from the Yuan (1260–1368) through the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1912) periods. The study examines select significant themes including self-cultivation 修身, desire 情, classics 經, and family 家, and focuses on particular diachronic and synchronic intellectual conversations
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Korean Neo-Confucian Thought

2019
This paper reviews the history of Korean Neo-Confucian thought from its introduction in the late fourteenth century until the end of the Joseon dynasty in the early twentieth century. With the founding of Joseon in 1392 the Neo-Confucian synthesis that had swept China was adopted in Korea, replacing the Buddhist establishment of the previous dynasty ...
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Neo-Confucianism and Universalism

Dialogue and Universalism, 1998
I explore the features of universalist thinking in the work of Zhu X i (Chu Hsi: 1130-1200), examining the following: (1) the importance of li (principle) in Zhu Xi's cosmology and ethics; (2) the course of moral development of a Confucian sage and the spheres of expanding identity and responsibility; (3) the ideal of impartiality in achieving a ...
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Japanese Neo-Confucian Philosophy

2015
This study explores Neo-Confucianism as a set of philosophical teachings that developed in distinctive ways in Japan. The study suggests that virtually all expressions of Confucian philosophy from Song times forward, in the wake of centuries of Buddhist domination of China and most of East Asia, were expressions of Neo-Confucianism.
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Essentials of Neo-Confucianism

1999
Huang's book analyzes the major Neo-Confucian philosophers from the eleventh to the sixteenth centuries. Focusing on metaphysical, epistemological, and ethical philosophical issues, this study presents the historical development of the Neo-Confucian school, an outgrowth of ancient Confucianism, and characterizes its thought, background, and influence ...
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