A Panoramic History of Traditional Chinese Ethics

Springer Singapore (2021)
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Abstract

This book traces the trajectory of traditional Chinese ethics from West Zhou Dynasty through Qing Dynasty and covers a myriad of Chinese philosophers who have expressed their ideas about the relationships between Heavenly Dao vs. Earthly Dao, Good vs. Evil, Morality vs. Legality, Knowledge vs. Behavior, Motive vs. Result, Righteousness vs. Profitability, Rationality vs. Animality. In this book, the readers can find Confucius’s discussion on Rite and Benevolence, Lao Zi’s meditation on Inaction of Great Dao, Zhuang Zi’s elaboration on “Transcendental Freedom”, Mohist utilitarian “Universal Love”, and Mencian theory of “Primordial Good Humanity”, to name just a few phenomenal figures. A compact yet elaborate, panoramic yet profound guidebook to traditional Chinese ethical thought, this book is an excellent window to showcase traditional Chinese mental and spiritual legacy. Composed, translated, and proofread by brilliant scholars, it produces a fluent and coherent English discourse of Chinese morality and ethics, nimbly spinning together the threads of Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism, and other ideological schools with brief references to the historical situation. Consequently, it provides English readers, especially those curious about Chinese psychology and rationality, with thought-provoking and horizon-expanding perspectives, and provides Chinese readers, especially those of philosophy and translation, with a great number of typical and characteristic quotes of archaic Chinese that have never been translated before. Ultimately, it is a fundamental threshold to learning about Chinese people, Chinese culture, Chinese morality, Chinese mentality, Chinese policy, and Chinese diplomacy.

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Chapters

Ethical Thought in Han Dynasty

In 207 BC, after the Qin Dynasty , the first united Chinese empire was shaken by a massive rebellion of farmers led by CHEN Sheng and WU Guang and eventually brought to its demise, LIU Bang , a lowly security officer in present-day Xu-zhou, Jiang-su Province, established the Han Dynasty . Following ... see more

The Birth of Traditional Chinese Ethics in West Zhou

Mankind has developed a primitive social morality since the time of ancient tribal society. Some myths, legends, and unearthed relics indicate that within ancient Chinese clan tribes, people adopted a simplistic morality of “Take the world as one community, and select the virtuous for public service... see more

Ethical Thought in the Song Dynasty

In 960, ZHAO Kuang-yin usurped the throne of Later Zhou Dynasty in a mutiny and established the Song Dynasty , which then witnessed the rise and prosperity of the ideology of Rationalism in philosophy and ethics.

Ethical Thought in the Ming and Qing Dynasties

In early 1368, ZHU Yuan-zhang , a farmer born in An-hui Province, led a rebellion, overthrew Yuan Dynasty and established the Ming Dynasty , which lasted about 300 years before the Qing Dynasty brought about its demise in 1644.

Ethical Thought in the Wei & Jin Period

In 184, the Yellow Scarf Uprising initiated by ZHANG Jiao , an anonymous Daoist in present-day Ning-jin, He-bei Province , inflicted a fatal blow to the East Han Dynasty, terminated its “unification” , and plunged China into a turmoil of warfare between different warlords. In 220, when CAO Pi of Wei... see more

Ethical Thought from the South & North Dynasties to Sui & Tang

As China entered the South & North Dynasties and then the Sui & Tang Period , Chinese ethics experienced momentous changes on account of the influence of alien Buddhism and native Daoism. The conflicts and compromises between Buddhism, Daoism, and Confucianism gave rise to the disputes over such bin... see more

Ethics in Chun-Qiu & Warring States Eras

The Chun-qiu Era and Warring States Era are believed to be a time of dramatic changes when ancient China transformed from a society based on slavery to one based on feudalism. On the whole, with the Chun-qiu Era as a transitional period, diverse Royal Lords began strengthening their own Vassal State... see more

The Birth of Traditional Chinese Ethics in West Zhou (1046–771 BC)

Mankind has developed a primitive social morality since the time of ancient tribal society. Some myths, legends, and unearthed relics indicate that within ancient Chinese clan tribes, people adopted a simplistic morality of “Take the world as one community, and select the virtuous for public service... see more

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