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The development of the Zhu Xi School in the Early Qing periodChan, Chi-ming, 陳志明 January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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The Confucian theme in contemporary Chinese social thought: a study in New Confucianism.January 1980 (has links)
by Chan Hoi-man. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1980. / Bibliography: leaves B1-4.
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The thought of Gao Panlong (1562-1626) and its relationship with the Wang Yangming School of philosophy in late Ming陳劍鍠, Chen, Chien-huang. January 1994 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Bei Song Zhou Zhang er Cheng si xiang zhi fen xiDai, Jingxian. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Guo li Taiwan da xue. / Text in Chinese, with an English summary entitled: Analysis on the thoughts of four major thinkers in North Song period. Earlier ed. issued in 1976 under title: Bei Song li xue Zhou Zhang er Cheng zong he yan jiu. 880-05 Includes bibliographical references (p. 155-161).
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當代新儒家探索: 二十世紀中國文化保守主義硏究之一例. / Dang dai xin Ru jia tan suo: er shi shi ji Zhongguo wen hua bao shou zhu yi yan jiu zhi yi li.January 1989 (has links)
鄭宗義. / 手稿本, 複本據稿本複印. / Thesis (M.A.)--香港中文大學歷史學部, 1989. / Shou gao ben, fu ben ju gao ben fu yin. / Includes bibliographical references: leaves 314-339. / Zheng Zongyi. / Thesis (M.A.)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue li shi xue bu, 1989. / 序論 / Chapter 第一章: --- 近現代中國的文化保守主義 / Chapter 第一節: --- 從花果飄零到靈根自植 / Chapter 第二節: --- 文化保守主義研究的回顧 / Chapter 第三節: --- 文化保守主義發展的鳥瞰 / Chapter 第四節: --- 文化保守主義的特質 / Chapter 第二章: --- 當代新儒家探索 / Chapter 第一節: --- 儒學第三期發展說 / Chapter 第二節: --- 當代新儒家出現的思想史背景 / Chapter 第三節: --- 為中國文化敬告世界人士宣言 / Chapter 第三章: --- 當代新儒家的文化保守性格 / Chapter 第一節: --- 梁漱溟´إ文化三期的歷史¯إ¡學 / Chapter 第二節: --- 張君勱´إ「精神自由」的文化哲學 / Chapter 第三節: --- 唐君毅´إ中國文化精神之宏揚 / 小結 / 參考書目
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Wan Qing li xue yan jiu /Shi, Gexin. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Beijing shi fan da xue, 1992. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [208]-214).
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Confucians, the shih class, and the Ming imperium uses of canonical and dynastic authority in Kuan Chih-tao's (1536-1608) "Proposals for following the men of former times to safeguard customs" (Ts'ung-hsien wei-su i) /Weisfogel, Jaret Wayne. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Columbia University, 2002. / Adviser: Robert Hymes. Includes bibliographical references.
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Territory of the Sages: Neo-Confucian Discourse of Wuyi Nine Bends JingjieHan, Hee Yeon Christina 30 August 2011 (has links)
This dissertation examines the effects of jingjie 境界 discourse on the development of Neo-Confucianism in 12th-18th century China and Korea. Jingjie, a multilayered term whose meanings include “territory,” “spiritual realm,” and “poetic landscape,” has largely been studied as a philosophical idea and aesthetic trope. These investigations, however, often overlook the connection between jingjie’s diverse meanings and the term’s role in the production of territorial knowledge.
Using the method of discourse analysis, this study explores jingjie as a discourse of territoriality that constructed and represented forms of space, power, and identity through the process of horizontal and vertical territorialization, traversing geopolitics, philosophy, and poetry.
The development of Neo-Confucianism can be traced through the intricate interplay of the multiple discourses of jingjie, particularly in the conception of sagely learning and living. The “jingjie of the sages,” proposed by Neo-Confucians as a new subject of inquiry and goal of learning, was conceived as a moral and spiritual territory to be claimed and reached, a poetic territory to be experienced, and a geopolitical territory to be restored.
The most pronounced expression of Neo-Confucian jingjie discourse is found in the discursive development of Wuyi Mountains and its Nine Bends Stream (Wuyi Jiuqu 武夷九曲). Well-known because of its association with Zhu Xi 朱熹 (1130-1200 AD), Wuyi Nine Bends jingjie as a geopolitical territory developed into both the physical and symbolic centre of Cheng-Zhu learning, and was recreated throughout China and Korea as a sign of legitimate orthodoxy and as a base for factional expansion.
As a poetic territory, Wuyi emerged as an important site of shared cultural memory, forging bonds between Neo-Confucians across generations. The discussion of Wuyi as a philosophical jingjie revolved around the interpretation of Zhu Xi’s poem “The Boat Song of Wuyi’s Nine Bends 武夷九曲櫂歌,” which became the source of hermeneutic debate that lasted for several centuries and contributed to an important philosophical literature.
On the whole, by examining the development of Neo-Confucianism in light of the traditional discursive context of jingjie, this study reveals how the philosophical, political, and cultural movement was conceived and understood by the Neo-Confucians themselves as the joining together of different modes of territoriality, thus providing a richer, more nuanced and complex picture of the development of Neo-Confucianism in China and Korea from 12th-18th centuries.
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Territory of the Sages: Neo-Confucian Discourse of Wuyi Nine Bends JingjieHan, Hee Yeon Christina 30 August 2011 (has links)
This dissertation examines the effects of jingjie 境界 discourse on the development of Neo-Confucianism in 12th-18th century China and Korea. Jingjie, a multilayered term whose meanings include “territory,” “spiritual realm,” and “poetic landscape,” has largely been studied as a philosophical idea and aesthetic trope. These investigations, however, often overlook the connection between jingjie’s diverse meanings and the term’s role in the production of territorial knowledge.
Using the method of discourse analysis, this study explores jingjie as a discourse of territoriality that constructed and represented forms of space, power, and identity through the process of horizontal and vertical territorialization, traversing geopolitics, philosophy, and poetry.
The development of Neo-Confucianism can be traced through the intricate interplay of the multiple discourses of jingjie, particularly in the conception of sagely learning and living. The “jingjie of the sages,” proposed by Neo-Confucians as a new subject of inquiry and goal of learning, was conceived as a moral and spiritual territory to be claimed and reached, a poetic territory to be experienced, and a geopolitical territory to be restored.
The most pronounced expression of Neo-Confucian jingjie discourse is found in the discursive development of Wuyi Mountains and its Nine Bends Stream (Wuyi Jiuqu 武夷九曲). Well-known because of its association with Zhu Xi 朱熹 (1130-1200 AD), Wuyi Nine Bends jingjie as a geopolitical territory developed into both the physical and symbolic centre of Cheng-Zhu learning, and was recreated throughout China and Korea as a sign of legitimate orthodoxy and as a base for factional expansion.
As a poetic territory, Wuyi emerged as an important site of shared cultural memory, forging bonds between Neo-Confucians across generations. The discussion of Wuyi as a philosophical jingjie revolved around the interpretation of Zhu Xi’s poem “The Boat Song of Wuyi’s Nine Bends 武夷九曲櫂歌,” which became the source of hermeneutic debate that lasted for several centuries and contributed to an important philosophical literature.
On the whole, by examining the development of Neo-Confucianism in light of the traditional discursive context of jingjie, this study reveals how the philosophical, political, and cultural movement was conceived and understood by the Neo-Confucians themselves as the joining together of different modes of territoriality, thus providing a richer, more nuanced and complex picture of the development of Neo-Confucianism in China and Korea from 12th-18th centuries.
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A study of Zhou Bida (1126-1204) =Chau, Lin-tai., 周蓮弟. January 2001 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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