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319A reexamination of the structure and content of confucius' version of the golden rulePhilosophy East and West 54 (2): 218-248. 2004.: For the purposes of interpretation and constructive engagement, the structure and content of Confucius' version of the Golden Rule (CGR) is examined by elaborating its three dimensions as suggested in the Analects. It is argued that the CGR, which consists of two intertwined central ideas in Confucius' ethics, shu and zhong, involves three interdependent and complementary dimensions: (1) the methodological (i.e., the methodological aspect of shu), which consists of the principles of reversibil…Read more
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99An analysis of the ideographic nature and structure of the hexagram in yijing: From the perspective of philosophy of languageJournal of Chinese Philosophy 25 (3): 305-320. 1998.
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71Vol 1 no 2 cover pageComparative Philosophy 1 (2). 2010.This page provides the journal cover design, which can be used as the cover page of a hard copy of the whole or partial set of the contents of the current issue (vol 1, no 2) of the journal
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189The structure of the chinese language and ontological insights: A collective-noun hypothesisPhilosophy East and West 49 (1): 45-62. 1999.Through a comparative case analysis regarding the Chinese language, it is discussed how the structure and functions of a natural language would bear upon the ways in which some philosophical problems are posed and some ontological insights shaped. Disagreeing with Chad Hansen's mass-noun hypothesis, a collective-noun hypothesis is argued for: (1) the denotational semantics and relevant grammatical features of Chinese nouns are like those of collective nouns; (2) their implicit ontology is a mere…Read more
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136Moral rules and moral experience: A comparative analysis of Dewey and laozi on moralityAsian Philosophy 11 (3). 2001.In this article, through a comparative analysis of Dewey's and Laozi's relevant accounts, I examine a pragmatic insight concerning moral rules and moral experience to the effect that (i) fixed and formulated moral rules should not be taken as the final absolute moral authority, and (ii) attention needs to be paid to the moral agent's own moral experience that responds to the felt demands in concrete situations. The purpose of this paper is to enhance understanding the crucial points of the pragm…Read more
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106Vol 1 no 2_contents pageComparative Philosophy 1 (2). 2010.This page provides the table of contents of the current issue
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138In this paper, I suggest an approach to the alleged problem with the Tarskian formal definition of truth: its enumerative character seems to make it unable to capture our pretheoretic general understanding of truth. For this purpose, after spelling out two requirements for extending an enumerative definition to new cases, I examine to what extent Tarski's Convention T provides what are needed for extending the Tarski's enumerative definition. I conclude that, though not explicitly providing what…Read more
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113Whole set of volume 1 no 1 (2010) of comparative philosophyComparative Philosophy 1 (1). 2010.Whole Set of Contents of Current Issue (for cross-reference reading and hard-copy preservation of the whole issue)
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90A Subject-Comment Account of PredicationProceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 39 167-191. 2008.This paper is concerned with the issue of how predication is possible, as a significant common concern in the philosophy of language, metaphysics and semantics. A ‘subject-comment’ account is suggested in view of its constructive engagement with two relevant competing approaches, i.e., the traditional ‘subject-categorization’ account and the ‘topic-comment’ account. The suggested account views predication as a unifying two-level predication: the primary level of predication is made through recog…Read more
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53Vol 1 no 1_cover pageComparative Philosophy 1 (1). 2010.This page provides the journal cover design, which can be used as the cover page of a hard copy of the whole or partial set of the contents of the current issue (vol 1, no 1) of the journal
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113Ultimate concern and language engagement: A reexamination of the opening message of the dao-de-JingJournal of Chinese Philosophy 27 (4). 2000.
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On becoming-being complementarity: From the point of view of the Yin-Yan metaphysical vision of the Yi-jing's metaphysicsFilozofia 59 (2): 88-99. 2004.
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68Vol 1 no 1_contents pageComparative Philosophy 1 (1). 2010.This page provides the table of contents of the current issue
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207Three Orientation and Four 'Sins' in Comparative StudiesThe Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 7 141-147. 2002.In this paper, I give a metaphilosophical examination of three major orientations in comparative studies (i.e., historical one, interpretation-concerned one, and philosophical-issue-concerned one) and four 'sins' that are oft-cited in critically evaluating a comparative study, namely over-simplification, over-use of external resources, exaggerated distinction, and blurring assimilation. I argue that the appropriateness of these 'sins' depends on orientations, purposes and methodological approach…Read more
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103History of Chinese Philosophy (edited book)Routledge. 2008.The History of Chinese Philosophy is a comprehensive and authoritative examination of the movements and thinkers that have shaped Chinese philosophy over the last three thousand years. An outstanding team of international contributors provide seventeen accessible entries organised into five clear parts: Identity of Chinese Philosophy Classical Chinese Philosophy : Pre-Han Period Classical Chinese Philosophy : From Han Through Tang Classical Chinese Philosophy : From Song Through Early Qing Moder…Read more
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