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  1.  14
    The Role of Second Language Learning in Practical Philosophical Education.Huiling Wang & Rory O'Neill - 2020 - Philosophical Practice and Counseling 10:35-55.
    In addition to the classical mode of classroom philosophy education that focuses on the history of philosophical thinking, methods of “doing” and “using” philosophy, including philosophical practice and philosophical drama can also form part of philosophy education. Such thinking and language exercises are introduced into activities of the academic philosophy cafe, Inner Mongolia University’s 1957 Coffee. Based on core activities of the philosophy cafe as well as the concept of “language game”, an additional language training project is being designed for (...)
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  2. Combatting Student Alienation: Community Building in the Academic Philosophy Café.Rory O'Neill & Huiling Wang - 2021 - Journal of Humanities Therapy 12 (1):7-25.
    This paper discusses how a Platform for Philosophy Education can help to alleviate issues of alienation in the lives of university students. This is done through various personal cultivation and community building activities in the Academic Philosophy Café. The activities draw from philosophical traditions, including traditions with religious or “spiritual” elements. These encourage reflection on one’s place in the world. In addition, students and teachers cooperate to ensure the smooth running of the café and activities, which strengthens the community bond. (...)
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  3. The King of the Blues: First-Hand Religious Experience at Sing Sing Prison.Rory O'Neill - forthcoming - Journal of Religion and Popular Culture.
    William James’s category of “first-hand religion” allows us to arrive at the religious from an internal and individual perspective, including in those activities and phenomena usually considered secular. B. B. King’s 1972 performance at Sing Sing Prison, documented by David Hoffman, brings both the prisoner audience and the performers to an “additional dimension” distinct from the hollowness of everyday (prison) life. In addition, the presence of this intense experience on the YouTube platform creates a fluid community of second-order observers, bound (...)
     
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  4. A Philosophy of Moderation: The ‘Center’ as an Interpretive Key to the Lao–Zhuang Texts.Rory O'Neill & Riccardo Peruzzi - 2023 - Religions 14 (10):1320.
    The “center” is a key concept in early Chinese philosophy. While readings of the Laozi 老子 and Zhuangzi 莊子 often rely on concepts of “nature” and the “natural”, this article proposes the “center” as an interpretive key that informs discussion of contemporary issues while remaining faithful to the core concerns of the texts. While both texts use the “center” to promote a philosophy of moderation, in the Laozi, “holding to the center” (shou zhong 守中) refers to a focus on one’s (...)
     
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  5. Daoist Economic Ethics.Rory O'Neill & Hans-Georg Moeller - 2024 - In Albino Barrera & Roy C. Amore (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Economic Ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 128–144.
    This chapter describes an economic ethic implicit in the Daoist tradition that envisages economic health, not as synonymous with growth, but akin to stability. The Daoist notion of health aspires to achieving longevity of body, of political rule, and, in contemporary applications, of our natural environment. Longevity is possible through alignment with patterns of nature, and by shunning anthropocentric urges to dominate. In the context of contemporary economic discussion, the Daoist maxim of ‘noncoercive action’, or wuwei, is often likened to (...)
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  6. On Roger Ames’s ‘The Confucian Concept of the Political and “Family Feeling” (xiao) as its Minimalist Morality.Rory O'Neill & Heyang Zheng - 2024 - Chinese Literature and Thought Today 54 (3–4):143–145.
    Drawing on the Confucian political philosophy of China, Roger Ames presents “family feeling” (xiao) as a candidate for a universal minimalist morality. Challenging certain conventional views in political philosophy that see family feeling as a threat to achieving an egalitarian level playing field, Ames underscores the ethical and political significance of family, advocating for the integration of familial sentiments into the political sphere. He addresses modern challenges, showing how diverse cultural expressions are allowed for within this philosophy’s pluralistic and locally (...)
     
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  7.  4
    Review of A Study in Huang-Lao Thought from Warring States to Early Han, by Gao Xinhua. [REVIEW]Rory O'Neill - 2023 - Philosophy East and West 73 (4):1-5.
    The title of Gao Xinhua's 高新華 work contains two somewhat distinct elements: "Huang-Lao thought" (huanglao sixiang 黃老思想) and "Warring States to Early Han" (zhanguo zhi Han chu 戰國至漢初). They are distinct insofar as "Huang-Lao" takes on a different meaning when described based on the works of political philosophy--the task of roughly the first half of the book--and when traced through history in the thought of the political elite, as is the focus of the second half. Of course, they are not (...)
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