Chronology of Chinese States and Dynasties |
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vii | |
Abbreviations Used in Footnotes and Bibliography |
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ix | |
Note on Translation |
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xi | |
Author and Translators |
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xv | |
Series Editors' Foreword |
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xvi | |
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7 Tang Dynasty Thought I: From Unity to Intellectual Crisis (ca. Mid-7th to Mid-10th Centuries CE) |
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1 | (51) |
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Prologue: Power, Education and the Intellectual World |
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1 | (3) |
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1 Mediocrity in a Flourishing Age: Knowledge and Thought in the First Half of the 8th Century |
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4 | (16) |
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2 The 8th- to 10th-Century Transformation of Buddhism 1: The Decline of Theoretical Interest |
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20 | (15) |
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3 The 8th- to 10th-Century Transformation of Buddhism 11: The Victory of Chan Buddhism and the Defeat of Buddhism |
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35 | (17) |
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8 Tang Dynasty Thought 11: From Unity to Intellectual Crisis (ca. Mid-7th to Mid-10th Centuries CE) |
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52 | (44) |
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1 The 8th- to 10th-Century Transformation of Buddhism 111: Language and Meaning |
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52 | (10) |
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2 Re-establishing National Authority and Intellectual Order: A New Understanding of Intellectual History Between the 8th and 9th Centuries |
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62 | (22) |
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3 Anti-Buddhist Persecution of the 840s and 9th-Century Daoist Religion |
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84 | (12) |
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9 From Song to Ming: The Establishment of a New Tradition 1 (Mid-10th Century to the End of the 16th Century) |
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96 | (53) |
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Prologue: China Before the Birth of the Neo-Confucian School of Principle |
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96 | (8) |
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1 Luoyang and Kaifeng (Bianliang): Separation of the Political and Cultural Centers |
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104 | (21) |
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2 Continuation of Neo-Confucianism: The Zhu Xi-Lu Xiangshan Debates and Their Surroundings |
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125 | (24) |
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10 From Song to Ming: Establishing a New Tradition II |
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149 | (52) |
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1 State and Scholars Support the Expansion of Culture and Establish the Uniformity of Ethics in Everyday Life in the Song Dynasty |
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149 | (17) |
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2 From Yuan to Ming: The General Condition of the World of Knowledge, Thought and Belief |
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166 | (12) |
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3 Making Waves Again: The Rise and Significance of the Learning of Wang Yangming |
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178 | (23) |
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11 From Ming to Qing I: From Tianxia, "All under Heaven," to the "Ten Thousand States" (End of the 16th to the End of the 19th Centuries) |
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201 | (46) |
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Prologue: From "All under Heaven" to an "Age of Ten Thousand States": Background to the Reinterpretation of Ming and Qing Intellectual History |
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201 | (4) |
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1 Collapse of Heaven and Earth I: The Ancient Chinese Cosmic Order Encounters Western Astronomy |
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205 | (11) |
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2 Collapse of Heaven and Earth II: "All under Heaven," "China," and the "Four Barbarians" as Depicted in Ancient Chinese Maps of the World |
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216 | (11) |
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3 The Rise of Textual Criticism and Evidential Research and the Chinese Intellectual World from the Mid-17th to the Late 18th Centuries |
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227 | (20) |
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12 From Ming to Qing 11: Chinese Intellectual World in the 18th and 19th Centuries |
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247 | (58) |
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1 Attempting to Rebuild the Intellectual World: The Turn of the 18th- and 19th-century Evidential Research |
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247 | (20) |
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2 Influx of New Western Knowledge and Changes in the Chinese Intellectual World in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century |
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267 | (16) |
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3 The Late Qing Rediscovery and Reinterpretation of Traditional Chinese Resources: Classical Learning, Study of the Ancient Schools of Philosophers and Buddhism |
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283 | (22) |
Epilogue: China in 1895: The Symbolic Significance of Intellectual History |
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305 | (18) |
Bibliography |
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323 | (13) |
Index |
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336 | |