
"Confucian Virtues for Democratic Leadership explores how traditional Confucian ethical principles can inform and enhance contemporary democratic governance structures and practices."
"From an Exemplary Person (junzi) to an Authentic Person (zhenren): How the Confucian and the Daoist Would Understand the Suffering of Job examines fundamental differences in how Confucian and Daoist philosophical traditions conceptualize human suffering and personal authenticity."
"Existence, Substance, and Liu Zhi's Islamic-Confucian Synthesis investigates how Liu Zhi integrated Islamic philosophical concepts with Confucian thought to create a unique intellectual framework bridging two major religious and philosophical traditions."
Dao 25:1 presents a comprehensive collection of academic articles exploring classical Chinese philosophy and contemporary applications. Topics include Confucian virtues applied to democratic leadership, the concept of bodily de and village worthiness, distinctions between exemplary and authentic persons through Confucian and Daoist perspectives, aesthetic pluralism in the Zhuangzi, narrative ethics in classical texts, and Liu Zhi's synthesis of Islamic and Confucian thought. Additional contributions address contemporary Chinese studies of political meritocracy, comparative governance frameworks between East and West, historical philosophical theories including Kang Youwei's three ages concept, and textual analysis of early Chinese cosmic designs and individual thinkers' contributions to philosophical discourse.
#confucian-philosophy #daoist-thought #east-west-dialogue #chinese-political-philosophy #classical-chinese-texts
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