Chu Hsi and the “Ta Hsueh”: Neo-Confucian Reflection on the Confucian Canon

Chu Hsi and the “Ta Hsueh”: Neo-Confucian Reflection on the Confucian Canon
Author: Daniel K. Gardner
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2020-03-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1684172543

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In 1190, Chu Hsi published an edition of the Four Books, which he ragarded as the basic curriculum for Confucian eduction. Of the four, he recommended that the Ta-hsueh be read first, calling it the "outline for learning." This is a study of the Ta-hsueh text, its history prior to the Sung dynasty, its new prominence in the Sung, and the reasons why Chu Hsi found the text so intellectualy and philosophically compelling. Includes an original annotated translation of the text.

Chu Hsi and the Ta-hsueh

Chu Hsi and the Ta-hsueh
Author: Daniel K. Gardner
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1986
Genre: History
ISBN:

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Preliminary Material -- Introduction -- From the Five Classics to the Four Books: A Schematic Overview -- The Ta-hsueh before Chu Hsi -- Chu Hsi's Work on the Ta-hsueh -- Chu Hsi's Reading of the Ta-hsueh -- Notes -- Preface to the Greater Learning in Chapters and Verses -- Chinese Text of the Ta-Hsueh Chang-Chü and the “Chi Ta-Hsueh Hou” -- Bibliography -- Glossary -- Index -- Harvard East Asian Monographs.

Ta Hsüeh and Chung Yung

Ta Hsüeh and Chung Yung
Author: Andrew H. Plaks
Publisher: Penguin UK
Total Pages: 191
Release: 2003-12-04
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0140447849

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Ta Hsueh and Chung Yung are two of the central texts of early Chinese thought, encapsulating Confucian philosophy on the Way of moral cultivation and spiritual attainment. Traditionally held to be the work of two of Confucius's closest disciples, the books were compiled in their present form late in the second or first century BCE and have occupied a central position in educational and political life for almost a thousand years throughout the East Asian cultural sphere. The text focus on the connection between internal self-cultivation and the external realisation of one's moral core in the fulfilment of the practical aims of Confucian life: the observance of ritual, the proper conduct of personal relationships, and the grand enterprise of maintaining order in the state and the world.

The Classics During the Sung

The Classics During the Sung
Author: Daniel Kip Gardner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 390
Release: 1984
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Classics During the Sung

The Classics During the Sung
Author: Daniel K. Gardner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 368
Release: 1978
Genre: Da xue
ISBN:

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Zhu Xi's Reading of the Analects

Zhu Xi's Reading of the Analects
Author: Daniel K. Gardner
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2003
Genre: Neo-Confucianism
ISBN: 9780231128643

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This text explains the significance of Zhu Xi's interpretation of the Confucian tradition and of the genre of commentary in Eastern philosophy.

Learning to Be A Sage

Learning to Be A Sage
Author: Hsi Chu
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1990-03-13
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0520909046

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Students and teachers of Chinese history and philosophy will not want to miss Daniel Gardner's accessible translation of the teachings of Chu Hsi (1130-1200)—a luminary of the Confucian tradition who dominated Chinese intellectual life for centuries. Homing in on a primary concern of our own time, Gardner focuses on Chu Hsi's passionate interest in education and its importance to individual development. For hundreds of years, every literate person in China was familiar with Chu Hsi's teachings. They informed the curricula of private academies and public schools and became the basis of the state's prestigious civil service examinations. Nor was Chu's influence limited to China. In Korea and Japan as well, his teachings defined the terms of scholarly debate and served as the foundation for state ideology. Chu Hsi was convinced that through education anyone could learn to be fully moral and thus travel the road to sagehood. Throughout his life, he struggled with the philosophical questions underlying education: What should people learn? How should they go about learning? What enables them to learn? What are the aims and the effects of learning? Part One of Learning to Be a Sage examines Chu Hsi's views on learning and how he arrived at them. Part Two presents a translation of the chapters devoted to learning in the Conversations of Master Chu.

Zhu Xi's Reading of the Analects

Zhu Xi's Reading of the Analects
Author: Daniel K. Gardner
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 239
Release: 2003-08-27
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 023150280X

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The Analects is a compendium of the sayings of Confucius (551–479 b.c.e.), transcribed and passed down by his disciples. How it came to be transformed by Zhu Xi (1130–1200) into one of the most philosophically significant texts in the Confucian tradition is the subject of this book. Scholarly attention in China had long been devoted to the Analects. By the time of Zhu Xi, a rich history of commentary had grown up around it. But Zhu, claiming that the Analects was one of the authoritative texts in the canon and should be read before all others, gave it a still more privileged status in the tradition. He spent decades preparing an extended interlinear commentary on it. Sustained by a newer, more elaborate language of metaphysics, Zhu's commentary on the Analects marked a significant shift in the philosophical orientation of Confucianism—a shift that redefined the Confucian tradition for the next eight centuries, not only in China, but in Japan and Korea well. Gardner's translations and analysis of Zhu Xi's commentary on the Analects show one of China's great thinkers in an interesting and complex act of philosophical negotiation. Through an interlinear, line-by-line "dialogue" with Confucius, Zhu effected a reconciliation of the teachings of the Master, commentary by later exegetes, and contemporary philosophical concerns of Song-dynasty scholars. By comparing Zhu's reading of the Analects with the earlier standard reading by He Yan (190–249), Gardner illuminates what is dramatically new in Zhu Xi's interpretation of the Analects. A pioneering study of Zhu Xi's reading of the Analects, this book demonstrates how commentary is both informed by a text and informs future readings, and highlights the importance of interlinear commentary as a genre in Chinese philosophy.

Classics and Interpretations

Classics and Interpretations
Author: Ching-i Tu
Publisher: Transaction Publishers
Total Pages: 508
Release:
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781412819763

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In recent years in the "West," scholars have attempted to unravel old constructs of interpretation and understanding, using the discipline of hermeneutics, or the scientific study of textual interpretation. Borrowed from students of the ever growing body of biblical interpretive literature that originated in the early Christian era, theoretical hermeneutics has given many contemporary scholars potent tools of textual interpretation. Classics and Interpretations applies this method to Chinese culture. Several essays focus on hermeneutic traditions of Neo-Confucianism. Others move outside of these traditions to attempt an understanding of the role of hermeneutics in Taoist and Buddhist textual interpretation, in Chinese poetics and painting, and in contemporary Chinese culture. This volume makes a concerted effort to remedy our ignorance of the Chinese hermeneutical tradition. Part 1, "The Great Learning and Hermeneutics," demonstrates the use of commentary to define how the individual creates his social self, and discusses differing interpretations of the Ta-hsueh text and its treatment as either canonical or heterodox. Part 2, "Canonicity and Orthodoxy," considers the philosophical touchstones employed by Neo-Confucian canonical exegetes and polemicists, and discusses the Han canonization of the scriptural Five Classics, while illuminating a double standard that existed in the hermeneutical regime of late imperial China. Part 3, "Hermeneutics as Politics," discusses the transformation of both the classics and scholars, and explores the dominant hermeneutic tradition in Chinese historiography, the scriptural tradition and reinterpretation of the Ch'un-ch'iu, and reveals the pragmatism of Chinese hermeneutics through comparison of the Sung debates over the Mencius. The concluding sections include essays on "Chu Hsi and Interpretation of Chinese Classics," "Hermeneutic Traditions in Chinese Poetics and Non-Confucian Contexts," "Reinterpretation of Confucian Texts in the Ming-Ch'ing Period," and "Contemporary Interpretations of Confucian Culture." Through these literate and brilliantly written essays the reader witnesses not merely the great breadth and depth of Chinese hermeneutics but also its continuity and evolutionary vigor. This volume will excite scholars of the Confucian, Buddhist, and Taoist systems of thought and belief as well as students of history and hermeneutics. Ching-I Tu is a professor and chairperson of the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. He is the author of Poetic Remarks in the Human World, and editor of Tradition and Creativity: Essays on East Asian Civilization, published by Transaction.