Speaking up for Superstition: A Note on the Ethics of Chinese Popular Belief

Journal of Chinese Philosophy 41 (S1):709-722 (2014)
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Abstract

Most Chinese religious practice and belief in times past, and even throughout much of the Chinese world today, falls into the still current category of superstition. Assessing the ethical notions that tend to obtain within this vast area of religious life is not easy, but it needs to be done for practical reasons, not least because the legal consequences of moral actions arising from the body of beliefs concerned are starting to come before courts outside China itself. Once the assumptions of a very different worldview affirming the existence of an unseen spirit world are taken into account, the deeds of believers in this worldview can be discussed from the point of view of ethics. Philosophers might do well to pay more attention to this topic.

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reprint Barrett, Timothy H. (2014) "Speaking up for Superstition: A Note on The Ethics of Chinese Popular Belief". Journal of Chinese Philosophy 41(5):709-722

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Conceptions of Supreme Deity.Graham Oppy - 2024 - Sophia 63 (3):389-399.

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