The Ch'ing scholar-thinker Tai Chen (1724-1777) was a passionate explorer. He loved words, and his most important philosophical treatise, the Meng Tzu tzu-I shu-cheng (An evidential study of the meaning of terms in the Mencius), is an exhaustive search for the meaning of the words first uttered by Mencius in the fourth century B.C. This book by Ann-ping Chin and Mansfield Freeman is the first complete and annotated English translation of that treatise. Drawing on scholarship from the eighteenth century to the present, it also includes two essays that reconstruct Tai Chen's life and time and reinterpret his thought.
Unlike most of the evidential scholars of his day, Tai Chen was not satisfied merely with providing reason and proof for his reading. He was interested in the life of words as their meaning changes with the vicissitudes of time. Tai Chen felt that the terms in the Mencius, garbled by the Sung and Ming thinkers who had come under the influence of Buddhism and Taoism, would no longer have made sense to Mencius himself. Key Confucian concepts, such as "principle" and "nature," had become "blood-less" moral constructs. Tai Chen preferred their primeval meaning. Intellectual historians of this century have hailed him as a progressive thinker and a social critic, but he saw himself in a simpler role: as a reader striving to understand every word in his text.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 26 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-300-04654-0 (9780300046540)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Part 1 A critical introduction - Tai Chen's life and times; an appraisal of his thought. Part 2 A translation of the "Meng Tzu tzu-i shu-sheng" - author's preface; principle (Li) (Articles 1-15); heavenly way (T'ien-tao) (Articles 16-19); nature (Hsing) (Articles 20-28); potential (Ts'ai) (Articles 29-31); way (Tao) (Articles 32-35); Humanesness (Jen); righteousness (I), propriety (Li) and wisdom (Chih) (Articles 36-37); sincerity (Ch'eng) (Articles 38-39); weighing (Ch'uan) (Articles 40-42).