Confucian Liberalism Mou Zongsan and Hegelian Liberalism.
Offers a renovated form of Confucian liberalism that forges a reconciliation between the two extremes of anti-Confucian liberalism and anti-liberal Confucianism.
Prif Awdur: | |
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Fformat: | Licensed eBooks |
Iaith: | Saesneg |
Cyhoeddwyd: |
Pittsburgh :
State University of New York Press,
2022.
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Cyfres: | SUNY Series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture Ser.
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Mynediad Ar-lein: | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=3300841 |
Tabl Cynhwysion:
- Intro
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Translations
- Introduction: Confucianism Meets Liberalism
- The Main Purposes of the Book
- Cross-Cultural Dialogue
- The Study of Mou Zongsan
- New Confucianism and Hegelian Liberalism
- The Significance of New Confucianism
- The New Outer Kingliness
- The Family of Liberalisms
- The Relevance of British Idealism
- Contemporary Confucian Political Theory
- Anti-Confucian Liberalism versus Antiliberal Confucianism
- Confucian Democracy or Confucian Meritocracy
- From Kantian to Hegelian
- The Structure of the Chapters
- The Moral Outlook of Confucianism
- In Pursuit of Civil Liberalism
- Toward Perfectionist Liberalism
- Part I: Confucian Ethics
- Chapter 1 Confucianism in Comparative Perspective
- Introduction
- The Intrinsic Character of Confucianism
- The Kantian Frame: Nature and Freedom
- Inner Morality
- A Vertical Expression of the Vertical System
- The Perfect Good
- Orthodox Confucianism
- Confucian Moral Metaphysics
- Philosophical Anthropology: Intellectual Intuition
- The Infinite Heart-Mind: The Principle of Moral Creativity
- The Ontology of Nonattachment: Noumena as a Value Concept
- The Perfect Teaching: The Unity between Morals and Nature
- Moral Metaphysics versus Metaphysics of Morals
- Confucianism as a Concrete Philosophy
- The Importance and Limitations of Hegel
- Real Subjectivity
- The Full Meaning of Reality
- Concrete Universality
- Beyond Hegel
- Chapter 2 Returning to Moral Religion
- Introduction
- Hegel: The Reconciliation of God and Humanity
- Rethinking Christianity
- The Self-Positing God
- The Realization of Self-Knowledge
- Green: The Humanistic Calling for God
- Criticisms of Catholicism
- The Eternal Consciousness
- The True Self
- Confucian Religiousness: A Hegelian Reconstruction
- What Is Wrong with Christianity?
- The Internalization of Heaven
- The Authentic Self
- The Ethics of Self-Realization
- Chapter 3 The Endless Pursuit of Self-Perfection
- Introduction
- Absolute Idealism
- Reconciliatory Dialectic
- The Unity
- Understanding Ren in the Hegelian Vein
- The Development of Moral Consciousness
- Two Criticisms of Kant
- The Postulate of Freedom
- The Post-Kantian Turn
- My Station and Its Duties
- The Social Self
- The Real Life
- The Infinite Whole
- The Limitation of Philosophy
- Ideal Morality and Religion
- Profound Wisdom
- The Turn to Politics
- Part II: Civil Liberalism
- Chapter 4 Democracy and the Politics of Innovation
- Introduction
- The Hegelian Scheme
- The Politics of Civilization
- Modernity, Radical Freedom, and Liberal Democracy
- Civilization, Objective Spirit, and Ethical Democracy
- Political Crisis:Why Did Confucianism Not Develop Democracy?
- Two Presentations of Reason
- The Paradox of Democracy
- The Lack of Subjective Freedom
- Political Transformation: How Can Confucianism Develop Democracy?
- From Morality to Politics