Hermeneutical Thinking in Chinese Philosophy (Book Supplement Series to the Journal of Chinese Philosphy)
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About This Book
"This volume is devoted to studying the emergence and flourishing of new humanistically informed developments in philosophical hermeneutics within contemporary Chinese philosophy. By means of some articles published previously in the Journal of Chinese Philosophy in the 1970s and 1980s, questions about the nature of philosophical understanding and the diversity of hermeneutic options in Chinese indigenous teachings - including Ruist ("Confucian"), Daoist, and Chinese Buddhist realms of exploration - are reintroduced. These include a discussion of a "dialectics of harmonization" that gives structure to Ruist and Daoist philosophies and forms of life by Chung-ying Cheng as well as an essay on hermeneutics in the Zhuangzi by Kuang-ming Wu. Following these essays, a number of new pieces written by philosophers and sinologists active in evaluating basic orientations toward philosophical understanding in China are presented. Some offer new insights into the confluence of Gadamarian and Ruist approaches to philosophy, while others employ more critical methods to indicate why serious hermeneutic inquiries into these indigenous traditions and their most representative texts reveal challenges for any reader. The focus of this volume centers on issues arising in early Ruist and Daoist texts - the Yijing or Book of Changes, the Analects, the Daodejing and the Zhuangzi - and then moves to examine hermeneutic claims asserted in the synthetic philosophical efforts of Zhu Xi (1130-1200)."--Jacket.
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