The trouble with Confucianism
著者
書誌事項
The trouble with Confucianism
Harvard University Press, c1991
- : alk. paper
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注記
"Some of the material in chapters 1, 3, 4, and 6 originally appeared in the Tanner lectures on human values, vol. 10"--T.p. verso
Bibliography: p. [123]-126
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
At the time of the Cultural Revolution in China, Confucius was so shadowy a figure in most people's minds that the Gang of Four had to first resurrect him before he could be pilloried and crucified. Yet, since that time, he has continued to haunt the scene. Despite this rejuvenated attention, his status is still unclear. In Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and other parts of West and Southeast Asia, as well as China, people are asking, "What does Confucianism have to offer today?" For some, Confucius is still the symbol of a reactionary and repressive past. For others he is the humanist admired by generations of scholars and thinkers, East and West. Much depends on whose Confucianism one is considering, its time and place. De Bary explains the puzzling role and ambiguous character of Confucianism as a liberal humanist teaching that is often appropriated to serve conservative regimes. He discusses the tension between the ideal of the Noble Man in Confucius and Mencius and the figure of the exemplary sage-king turned authoritarian in the Imperial dynasties.
On the basis of evidence from both early Confucian teachings and historical developments, de Bary questions the Weberian characterization of Confuciansim as a philosophy of acceptance and accommodation, lacking a critical voice or capability for self-transformation. Instead, he sees Confucianism as involving a prophetic voice, identified with the Noble Man as spokesman for the people's welfare, but assigning no responsibility to the people for acting on their own behalf. Institutionally this view became embodied in a two-class structure, a bureaucratic ruling class governing people with no power or responsibility and later the one-party state, dominated by a communist elite.
目次
- Sage-kings and prophets
- the noble man in the "Analects"
- imperial sages and Confucian noble men
- autocracy and the message in orthodox neo-Confucianism
- Fang Tung-shu, a prophetic voice in the Early Modern Age
- the prophet and the people.
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