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Chinese Philosophy in an Era of Globalization

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Chinese and Western thinkers consider the Chinese philosophical tradition and Chinese philosophy for the contemporary global era.This book treats Chinese philosophy today as a global project, prese...
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  • 12 April 2004
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Chinese and Western thinkers consider the Chinese philosophical tradition and Chinese philosophy for the contemporary global era.

This book treats Chinese philosophy today as a global project, presenting the work of both Chinese and Western philosophers. Providing contemporary considerations of the Chinese philosophical tradition and bringing Chinese philosophy into conversation with Western philosophy, Chinese Philosophy in an Era of Globalization provides a model for collaborative work. Topics covered include value theory, philosophy of religion, human nature, virtue ethics, epistemology, and philosophy of language.

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Price: £27.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture
Publication Date: 12 April 2004
ISBN: 9780791460061
Format: Paperback
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Acknowledgments


Foreword by Philip J. Ivanhoe


Introduction


Part One: Reflecting on Chinese Philosophical Tradition


Axiology in Pre-Modern Chinese Philosophy by Zhang Dainian
Translated by Eric L. Hutton


On the Idea of Axiology in Pre-Modern Chinese Philosophy by Kwong-loi Shun


The Chinese Path to Polytheism by Zhao Dunhua
Translated by Miranda D. Brown


Monotheism in the Philosophy of Religion: A Response to Professor Zhao, by Stephen T. Davis


The Discussion of Mind and Nature in Zhu Xi's Philosophy by Chen Lai
Translated by Robert W. Foster


What Is Living and What Is Dead in the Confucianism of Zhu Xi? by Bryan W. Van Norden


Part Two: Bringing Chinese Philosophy into the Global Discourse


Contrasting Confucian Virtue Ethics and MacIntyre's Aristotelian Virtue Theory by Wan Junren
Translated by Edward Slingerland


Once More on Confucian and Aristotelian Conceptions of the Virtues: A Response to Professor Wan by Alasdair MacIntyre


The Polished Mirror: Reflections on Natural Knowledge of the Way in Zhuangzi and Alvin Plantinga, by Kelly James Clark and Liu Zongkun


Reflections On "The Polished Mirror," by Alvin Plantinga


Heidegger's View of Language and the Lao-Zhuang View of Dao-Language by Zhang Xianglong
Translated by Stephen C. Angle


Speech from Beyond the Reach of Language: A Response to Zhang Xianglong, by Merold Westphal


Contributors


Index