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Alexus McLeod

Indiana University, Bloomington
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    35
    • Most Recent
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    • Topics
  •  Events
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  •  News and Updates
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 More details
  • Indiana University, Bloomington
    Religious Studies
    Professor
University of Connecticut
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2009
Email (login required)
Bloomington, Indiana, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Classical Chinese Philosophy
Philosophy of the Americas
African/Africana Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Asian Philosophy
Philosophy of the Americas
Social and Political Philosophy
Indian Philosophy
Arabic and Islamic Philosophy
1 more
  • All publications (35)
  •  125
    Natural Moralities – By David Wong
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 38 (3): 491-495. 2011.
    Chinese Philosophy: Ethics
  •  75
    Replies to Brons and Mou on Wang Chong and Pluralism
    Comparative Philosophy 6 (1). 2015.
    Chinese Philosophy
  •  72
    A Reader’s Companion to the Confucian Analects by Henry Rosemont, Jr, and: Confucius: A Guide for the Perplexed by Yong Huang
    Philosophy East and West 65 (1): 360-364. 2015.
    Classical Confucianism, Misc
  •  110
    Zhou, Guidian 周桂鈿, Qin and Han Philosophy 秦漢哲學: Wuhan 武漢: Wuhan Chubanshe 武漢出版社, 2006, 246 pages
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 10 (1): 123-126. 2011.
    Post-Classical Chinese Philosophy, Misc
  •  258
    Pluralism about truth in early chinese philosophy: A reflection on Wang chong’s approach
    Comparative Philosophy 2 (1): 38. 2011.
    The debate concerning truth in Classical Chinese philosophy has for the most part avoided the possibility that pluralist theories of truth were part of the classical philosophical framework.   I argue that the Eastern Han philosopher Wang Chong (c. 25-100 CE) can be profitably read as endorsing a kind of pluralism about truth grounded in the concept of shi 實 , or “actuality”.    In my exploration of this view, I explain how it offers a different account of the truth of moral and non-moral statem…Read more
    The debate concerning truth in Classical Chinese philosophy has for the most part avoided the possibility that pluralist theories of truth were part of the classical philosophical framework.   I argue that the Eastern Han philosopher Wang Chong (c. 25-100 CE) can be profitably read as endorsing a kind of pluralism about truth grounded in the concept of shi 實 , or “actuality”.    In my exploration of this view, I explain how it offers a different account of the truth of moral and non-moral statements, while still retaining the univocality of the concept of truth (that is, that the concept amounts to more than the expression of a disjunction of various truth properties), by connecting shi with normative and descriptive facts about how humans appraise statements.   In addition to providing insight into pluralist views of truth in early China, the unique pluralist view implicit in Wang’s work can help solve problems with contemporary pluralist theories of truth. &nbsp
    Pluralism about Truth
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