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Index
Cover
Half title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Ekken’s Life and Thought
The Text in the Context of East Asian Confucianism
Material Force (Qi)
Zhang Zai’s Development of the Concept of Material Force
The Influence of the Monism of Qi of Luo Qinshun
Affirmation and Dissent: The Significance of the Record of Great Doubts
The Text in the Context of Tokugawa Japan
The Spread of Confucian Ideas and Values
Tradition and the Individual: The Importance of Dissent and the Centrality of Learning
Philosophical Debates Regarding Principle and Material Force
Reappropriating Tradition: Practical Learning and the Philosophy of Qi
Interpretations of Ekken’s Philosophy of Qi
Confucian Cosmology: Organic Holism and Dynamic Vitalism
Confucian Cultivation: Harmonizing with Change and Assisting Transformation
The Significance of Qi as an Ecological Cosmology
Taigiroku: The Record of Great Doubts
Preface
Part I
On the Transmission of Confucian Thought
On Human Nature
On Bias, Discernment, and Selection
On Learning from What Is Close at Hand
The Indivisibility of the Nature of Heaven and Earth and One’s Physical Nature
Acknowledging Differences with the Song Confucians
Part II
Partiality in the Learning of the Song Confucians
Reverence Within and Rightness Without
Influences from Buddhism and Daoism
A Discussion of the Metaphysical and the Physical
The Supreme Ultimate
The Way and Concrete Things
Returning the World to Humaneness
Reverence and Sincerity
Reverence as the Master of the Mind
The Inseparability of Principle and Material Force
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Series List
Editorial Board
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