Huai-nan Tzu: Philosophical Synthesis in Early Han Thought

封面
Hong Kong University Press, 1985年12月1日 - 268 頁
Huai-nan Tzu (139BC) was viewed, for its great diversity of subject-matter, ideas and style, by traditional Chinese scholars as a composite work of the Eclectic School. It is the author's contention, however, that one overriding concern pervades the work: the attempt to define the essential conditions for a Taoist political utopianism. The present study emphasizes Chapter Six of Huai-nan Tzu in expounding the theory of kan-ying STIMULUS-RESPONSE; RESONANCE, which postulates that all things in the universe are interrelated and influence each other according to pre-set patterns. Only in the True Man, who is 'one with Tao' and 'attuned to the cosmos', does kan-ying attain its ultimate realization, 'the Great Peace' and 'the Great Merging'. 'After all,' concludes the author, ' it is in Huai-nan Tzu that we find the statement'
 

內容

Introduction
1
Historical and Textual Studies
19
Translation and Interpretation
99
Conclusion
207
Appendix 1 Critical Chinese Text of Huainan Tzu 6
211
Traditional Chronology
216
Bibliography
217
GlossaryIndex
240
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