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136Happiness in Classical Confucianism: XúnzǐPhilosophical Topics 41 (1): 53-79. 2013.This essay contributes to comparative inquiry concerning happiness through a case study of Xúnzǐ, a major Confucian thinker. Xúnzǐ’s ethical theory presents values and norms that fill the role of happiness indirectly, through the ideal figure of the gentleman. However, his working conception of psychological happiness and individual well-being turns on aesthetic values that go beyond the universal prudential values to which his ethical theory appeals. Hence I argue that his implicit conception o…Read more
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129Two roads to wisdom? Chinese and analytic philosophical traditions (review)Journal of Chinese Philosophy 32 (2). 2005.
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264Skepticism and Value in the ZhuāngziInternational Philosophical Quarterly 49 (4): 439-457. 2009.The ethics of the Zhuāngzi is distinctive for its valorization of psychological qualities such as open-mindedness, adaptability, and tolerance. The paper discusses how these qualities and their consequences for morality and politics relate to the text’s views onskepticism and value. Chad Hansen has argued that Zhuangist ethical views are motivated by skepticism about our ability to know a privileged scheme of action-guiding distinctions, which in turn is grounded in a form of relativism about su…Read more
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76Xunzi Versus Zhuangzi: Two Approaches to Death in Classical Chinese ThoughtFrontiers of Philosophy in China 8 (3): 410-427. 2013.
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218The Limitations of Ritual Propriety: Ritual and Language in Xúnzǐ and ZhuāngzǐSophia 51 (2): 257-282. 2012.This essay examines the theory of ritual propriety presented in the Xúnzǐ and criticisms of Xunzi-like views found in the classical Daoist anthology Zhuāngzǐ. To highlight the respects in which the Zhuāngzǐ can be read as posing a critical response to a Xunzian view of ritual propriety, the essay juxtaposes the two texts' views of language, since Xunzi's theory of ritual propriety is intertwined with his theory of language. I argue that a Zhuangist critique of the presuppositions of Xunzi's stan…Read more
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354On Wu-wei as a Unifying MetaphorPhilosophy East and West 57 (1): 97-106. 2007.This provocative work is the most ambitious general study of pre-Qin thought to appear in more than a decade. It deals with what is increasingly recognized as one of the period's key themes, the ethical ideal of perfected action and the processes of cultivation, or uncultivation, by which it might be achieved. The book has two specific aims, one substantive, one methodological (p. vii). The substantive aim is to show that the notion of wu-wei, which Slingerland renders as "effortless action," fu…Read more
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1Is Mozi 17 a Fragment of Mozi 26?Warring States Papers. 2010., originally was not an independent chapter in the Fei Gong (Condemning Aggression) series, but rather part of the ending of Mozi 26, the first of the Tian Zhi ¤Ñ§Ó (Heaven’s Intention) chapters. I will argue that we have no reason to..
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125This essay applies John Searle’s account of weakness of will to explore the classical Chinese problem of weak-willed action. Searle’s discussion focuses on the shortcomings of the Western classical model of rationality in explaining weakness of will, so he naturally says little about the practical ethical problem of overcoming weak-willed action, the focus of the relevant Chinese texts. Yet his theory of action, specifically his notion of the Background, suggests a compelling approach to the pra…Read more
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102School of namesStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.The “School of Names” ming jia ) is the traditional Chinese label for a diverse group of Warring States (479-221 B.C.) thinkers who shared an interest in language, disputation, and metaphysics. They were notorious for logic-chopping, purportedly idle conceptual puzzles, and paradoxes such as “Today go to Yue but arrive yesterday” and “A white horse is not a horse.” Because reflection on language in ancient China centered on “names”.
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266Moism and self-interestJournal of Chinese Philosophy 35 (3): 437-454. 2008.The aim of this article is to clarify the role of self-interest in Moist thought and by doing so to refute the Self-Interest Thesis. Toward these ends, I will examine passages from the Mozi bearing on the role of self-interest in Moist ethics and psychology and show that, in each case, an alternative interpretation explains them better than the Self-Interest Thesis does. I will argue that the Moists recognize the obvious truth that self-interest figures among people’s basic motives, but they bel…Read more
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307Distinctions, Judgment, and Reasoning in Classical Chinese ThoughtHistory and Philosophy of Logic 34 (1): 1-24. 2013.The article proposes an account of the prevailing classical Chinese conception of reasoning and argumentation that grounds it in a semantic theory and epistemology centered on drawing distinctions (biàn ) between the similar and dissimilar kinds of things that do or do not fall within the extension of ‘names’ (míng ). The article presents two novel interpretive hypotheses. First, for pre-Hàn Chinese thinkers, the functional role associated with the logical copula is filled by a general notion of…Read more
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307Zhuangzi, Xunzi, and the paradoxical nature of educationJournal of Chinese Philosophy 33 (4). 2006.
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393Psychological Emptiness in the ZhuāngzǐAsian Philosophy 18 (2): 123-147. 2008.Three views of psychological emptiness, or xū, can be found in the Zhuāngzĭ. The instrumental view values xū primarily as a means of efficacious action. The moderate view assigns it intrinsic value as an element of one Zhuangist vision of the good life. The radical view also takes it to be an element of the ideal life, but in this case the form of life advocated is that of the Daoist sage, who transcends mundane human concerns to merge with nature or the Dào. The instrumental and moderate views …Read more
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301Knowledge and Error in Early Chinese ThoughtDao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 10 (2): 127-148. 2011.Drawing primarily on the Mòzǐ and Xúnzǐ, the article proposes an account of how knowledge and error are understood in classical Chinese epistemology and applies it to explain the absence of a skeptical argument from illusion in early Chinese thought. Arguments from illusion are associated with a representational conception of mind and knowledge, which allows the possibility of a comprehensive or persistent gap between appearance and reality. By contrast, early Chinese thinkers understand mind an…Read more
Pokfulam, Hong Kong
Areas of Specialization
| Asian Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
1 more
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Action |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Asian Philosophy |