Henry Bugbee, Wilderness, and the Omnirelevance of the Ten‐Thousand Things

Journal of Chinese Philosophy 43 (3-4):295-312 (2016)
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Abstract

In his philosophical journal The Inward Morning, Henry Bugbee appeals to the Daodejing to derive principles, particularly that of ziran, of “self-soing,” by which one is guided in thinking heedfully. In this way, one is called reflexively into responsibility for and by things in what Bugbee terms their “density” and “omnirelevance.” Through Bugbee’s unique notion of wilderness as “emergent togetherness,” the periodicity and fluency cultivated in ecological contemplation refines the practice of natural history, such that it is attuned to the manner in which one is called to be at home and so ecologically responsive among the ten-thousand things.

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