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ArtikelChinese Philosophy: A Philosophical Essay on the "State-of-the-Art"  
Oleh: Tongqi, Lin ; Rosemont, Henry ; Ames, Roger T.
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: The Journal of Asian Studies vol. 54 no. 03 (Aug. 1995), page 727-758.
Topik: Discourse in China; the New Discourse; Criteria of Truth; The Subjectivity Trend; A revitalized Confucian; Natural Scientific Methodology; Culture;
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    • Nomor Panggil: J3
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Isi artikelIn a state-of-the-art essay sponsored by the China and Inner Asia Council of the Association, LIN TONGQI, HENRY ROSEMONT, and ROGER AMES investigate the contemporary status of Chinese philosophy. Beginning with an examination of the difficulties of defining philosophy and particularly Chinese philosophy in Western terms, they survey the "New Intellectual Discourse" that emerged in the post-Cultural Revolution era. Although different voices make up this discourse, the `new' philosophers share in common a "humanist quest" focusing on issues of self and culture generated by China's modernization drive. One important trend that the authors concentrate on is the revival of interest in Confucianism, a reemergence partly enhanced by the New Confucians (xinrujia), many of whom are Chinese-Americans. A final section, which shifts the attention to the Western academy, returns to earlier discussions by elaborating on the problematics of defining and translating Chinese philosophy in Western terms and by considering the conceptual constraints that flow out of the cultural encounter between different philosophical traditions. Philosophy, the authors argue, occupies a different role in Chinese public life than it does in the West.
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