Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Introduction to Daoist Thought: Action, Language, and Ethics in Zhuangzi [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(University of Rhode Island, US)
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This is the first work available in English which addresses Zhuangzi’s thought as a whole. It presents an interpretation of the Zhuangzi, a book in thirty-three chapters that is the most important collection of Daoist texts in early China.

The author introduces a complex reading that shows the unity of Zhuangzi’s thought, in particular in his views of action, language, and ethics. By addressing methodological questions that arise in reading Zhuangzi, a hermeneutics is developed which makes understanding Zhuangzi’s religious thought possible.

A theoretical contribution to comparative philosophy and the cross-cultural study of religious traditions, the book serves as an introduction to Daoism for graduate students in religion, philosophy, and East Asian Studies.

Acknowledgements ix
1 On reading Zhuangzi 1
Can we understand Zhuangzi?
1
What bothers the other?
3
Is Daoist thought philosophy?
5
The religious
9
The figure of Zhuangzi
11
2 Zhuangzi's fundamental figures of thought 14
The view of the world
14
Life against completion
15
Human life
17
The life of Heaven
20
The Way
22
Two kinds of transcendence
24
Non-understanding
27
3 The drive towards completion 30
Technique negates the Way
30
The Confucian view of technical action
32
Totalitarianism and strategic thinking
36
The metaphysics of action
39
Form (eidos) and completion (cheng)
43
4 Unraveling the drive towards completion 47
Care for life
47
From potentiality to actuality
52
In-between Heaven and man
57
The occurrence of the ordinary
61
5 Saying the unsayable 67
Indicative and logical discourses
67
Saying and disputation
70
The double-question
71
Shifting signifiers
72
The intended meaning
74
Language in itself
76
Impromptu words
80
6 Bungled discourse 85
Suddenly there is nothing
85
Just now something is born
89
Accept "this" for what it is
94
Is Zhuangzi a Sophist?
97
Zhuangzi and Socrates
101
7 Ethics 105
Confucian concern
105
Mutilation
109
Beyond the will to power
113
The moral law
117
The ethical subject
120
On Zhuangzi's supposed naturalism
124
8 Spiritual exercise 126
Loss of self
126
Emotions are like music from empty spaces
130
Techniques of inner training
132
Completion without lament
137
To see the unique
138
Glossary 142
References 149
Index 156


Eske Møllgaard received his PhD in East Asian Languages and Civilizations from Harvard University. He currently is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at University of Rhode Island. His teaching interests include Asian philosophy, comparative philosophy and continental philosophy. He is particularly interested in the ways East Asian traditions of thought make us reconsider and rediscover salient features of Western philosophical traditions.