ToC: Dao 24:3
Briefly

ToC: Dao 24:3
"The "Uncritical" Chinese Student: A Western Colonial Narrative? Qasir Shah A Guide to Understanding Your Sage-Ruler Andrew R. Ruble Human Value in the Later Mohist Texts Bradford Jean-Hyuk Kim A Zhuangist Analysis of Transformative Agency and Adaptive Preferences Qiannan Li Confucian and Christian Models of Imitation: A Comparative Case-Study of Yang Xiong's Fayan and John Chrysostom's De laudibus sancti Pauli apostoli Paul K. Hosle When Cognition Goes Wrong: Liu Zongzhou's Moral Psychology of Evil Chi-keung Chan"
"State of the Field Report XVI: Contemporary Chinese Studies of the Principle of Xieju (Measuring Square) in the Great Learning Cheng Wang Aleni, Giulio, A Brief Introduction to the Study of Human Nature, Translated and annotated by Thierry Meynard, SJ, and Dawei Pan Shufeng Tian Jin, Yuelin, Tao, Nature, and Man Yvonne Schulz Zinda Kong, Linghong 孔令宏, The Outline of Daoist Philosophy 道教哲學綱要 Xin He"
"Makeham, John, ed., The Awakening of Faith and New Confucian Philosophy Simon Man Ho Wong Tang, Wenming 唐文明, The Leap in Being and the Art of Balancing: A Supplement to and Revisal of Eric Voegelin's Analyses of Chinese Civilization in the Light of Philosophy of Order 極高明而道中庸: 補正沃格林對中國文明的秩序哲學分析 Shuhong Zheng Wen, Haiming 溫海明, Illuminating Zhongyong and Its Intentionality 中庸明意 Peiwei Wang"
Coverage spans critical examinations of Western portrayals of Chinese students and guides to understanding sage-rulers. Analyses address human value in later Mohist thought and Zhuangist perspectives on transformative agency and adaptive preferences. Comparative work examines Confucian and Christian models of imitation using classical and patristic examples. Moral psychology receives attention through treatments of cognitive failure and moral evil. Methodological and historical studies focus on contemporary interpretations of the principle of Xieju in the Great Learning. Translations and reviews engage topics in human nature, Tao and man, Daoist philosophy, New Confucianism, civilizational philosophy, and the intentionality of the Zhongyong.
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