The rise of modern Chinese thought /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Wang, Hui, 1959- author.
Uniform title:Xian dai Zhongguo si xiang de xing qi. Shang juan. English
Imprint:Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : Harvard University Press, 2023.
©2023
Description:xxviii, 1059 pages ; 25 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13149378
Related Items:Translation of: Xian dai Zhongguo si xiang de xing qi. Shang juan.
Abridgement of (work): Xian dai Zhongguo si xiang de xing qi.
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Hill, Michael (Michael Gibbs), editor.
ISBN:9780674046764
0674046765
9780674293021
Notes:Translation of an abridged version of a work originally published in Chinese as Xian dai Zhongguo si xiang de xing qi in 2004. This translation focuses on Part One (volumes 1-2) of the original text.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:"Wang Hui asks what it means for China to be modern and for modernity to be Chinese. Is there a rupture between tradition and modernity in China? How has Confucian thought evolved? Did China become modern in the Middle Ages? A deep intellectual history, The Rise of Modern Chinese Thought revises our senses of both modernity and Chinese philosophy"--
Other form:ebook version : 9780674293021
Description
Summary:

"Brilliantly reveals a China that has always been lively and pluralist in its political thought...His analysis has immense relevance for China today."
-Rana Mitter, Foreign Affairs

The definitive history of China's philosophical confrontation with modernity, available for the first time in English.

What does it mean for China to be modern, or for modernity to be Chinese? How is the notion of historical rupture--a fundamental distinction between tradition and modernity--compatible or not with the history of Chinese thought?

These questions animate The Rise of Modern Chinese Thought , a sprawling intellectual history considered one of the most significant achievements of modern Chinese scholarship, available here in English for the first time. Wang Hui traces the seventh-century origins of three key ideas--"principle" ( li ), "things" ( wu ), and "propensity" ( shi )--and analyzes their continual evolution up to the beginning of the twentieth century. Confucian scholars grappled with the problem of linking transcendental law to the material world, thought to action--a goal that Wang argues became outdated as China's socioeconomic conditions were radically transformed during the Song Dynasty. Wang shows how the epistemic shifts of that time period produced a new intellectual framework that has proven both durable and malleable, influencing generations of philosophers and even China's transformation from empire to nation-state in the early twentieth century. In a new preface, Wang also reflects on responses to his book since its original publication in Chinese.

With theoretical rigor and uncommon insight into the roots of contemporary political commitments, Wang delivers a masterpiece of scholarship that is overdue in translation. Through deep readings of key figures and classical texts, The Rise of Modern Chinese Thought provides an account of Chinese philosophy and history that will transform our understanding of the modern not only in China but around the world.

Item Description:Translation of an abridged version of a work originally published in Chinese as Xian dai Zhongguo si xiang de xing qi in 2004. This translation focuses on Part One (volumes 1-2) of the original text.
Physical Description:xxviii, 1059 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780674046764
0674046765
9780674293021