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Chinese Philosophy I. Cosmology and worldview

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lest be bombarded with rotten tomatoes. On generalizations: Limited and often questionable ... And: 'the exception proves the rule' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chinese Philosophy I. Cosmology and worldview


1
Chinese PhilosophyI. Cosmology and world-view
  • Geir Sigurðsson
  • Icelandic Centre for Asian Studies, University of
    Akureyri
  • 11.12.2006

2
The power of cosmology
  • The cosmos may not be so distant
  • Our understanding of the world informs
  • Meaning
  • Goals
  • Values
  • Actions/responses
  • Thus, quotidian behaviour

3
...lest be bombarded with rotten tomatoes
  • On generalizations
  • Limited and often questionable
  • But inescapable
  • And the exception proves the rule
  • Philosophy schools both in China and the West are
    many and variable
  • But have common (cultural) characteristics
  • Philosophy as truth or deepest structural layer
    of culture

4
Filosofia vs. ??
  • Filo-sofia love of (theoretical) wisdom
    (Socrates)
  • Contra practical use Wisdom for the sake of
    wisdom (Aristotle)
  • Emphasis on reason distrust of
    sense-experience. (Plato, Descartes)
  • Metaphysics intelligible nature of the world,
    accessible only to philosophers (Plato)
  • ? rather indicates practical and communicable
    knowledge
  • ? mouth, ? hand, ? tool
  • The value of wisdom consists in its usefulness
    for everyday life
  • Know how rather than know what
  • Wisdom is gained here and now, in mundane life

5
Doesnt time pass by just like this, never
ceasing day or night!
  • How do we, Westerners, understand
    world-operations?
  • Chinese starting point is not cause, creation
    or cosmos, but that which exists now ??,??
  • Tang Junyi (1909-1978) ????
  • General assumption of the ceaseless movement of
    the world
  • Book of Changes (Yijing ??)

6
More on changes
  • The world is self-engendering, no prime mover
    ?? (self-so) instead of ?? (made-so) a web
    without a weaver
  • Recurring (but not identical) elements, such as
    day and night, seasons, tide Returning is the
    movement of the dao (DDJ 40) time as a spiral
  • The five phases (wu xing ??) water, fire,
    metal, wood, earth

7
Dual harmony but no dualism
  • Harmony of opposing powers/dimensions
  • yin and yang ??, in and out ??, heaven and earth
    ??
  • Tang Junyi inseparability of the one and the
    many ?????
  • Harmony of the whole rather than logical
    hierarchy
  • Rejection of dilemmas
  • Appearance is reality
  • mind (xin ?) and body (shen ?)
  • Matter and spirit qi ?
  • No reductionism
  • All things are interrelated
  • Essence of thing is constituted by relations
  • No substances nothing is in-itself

8
More characteristics
  • No determinism, but dispositions Tang Junyi
    non-fixed destiny ????
  • Focus on taking advantage of the chances opening
    up in the flow of things, ?, ??
  • Way ? instead of truth
  • Right thinking instead of the right to think
  • Strong (holy?) social awareness
  • ren ?, renjia ??, shehui ??, xiao ?, li ?

9
Some potential consequences
  • More flexibility less exactitute (e.g. Lin
    Yutang)?
  • Scientific holism negligence of natural laws?
  • Focus on circumstances rather than rules and
    principles can rules be broken if no one finds
    out?
  • Focus on the present/serenity carelessness/lack
    of responsibility?
  • Focus on skill opportunism?
  • Social holism individual sacrificed for the
    whole?
  • Family orientation corruption/lack of care for
    strangers?

10
Philosophy or religion?
  • Again rejection of dilemmas
  • The question is Confucianism a religion? is a
    question that Westerners could never answer and
    the Chinese could never ask Wilfred Cantwell
    Smith

11
Some characteristics of Chinese religion (and
philosophy?)
  • No (or vague) transcendence
  • inseparability of heaven and earth ??
  • Gods are not omnipotent shang di ??
    first/supreme?
  • Gods are not chronologically prior to world no
    creation myth, cf. Daodejing 25
  • Focus on interhuman relations rather than
    relations with gods Analects, 11.12.
  • Distant respect for gods, not love for them
    Analects, 6.22

12
Harmony of heaven (nature) and human being ????

13
Ancient philosophy schools
  • Confucianism (rujia ??) 6th c. BCE
  • Daoism (daojia ??) 6th c. BCE
  • Legalism (fajia ??) 5th c. BCE
  • Mohism (mojia ??) 5th c. BCE
  • Logicians (mingjia ??) 5th c. BCE
  • Buddhism (fojiao ??) 1st c. CE

14
Later schools
  • Neo-Confucianism (songming rujia ????) 10th-19th
    century
  • New Confucianism (xin rujia ???) 19th-21st
    century
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