期刊文献+
共找到1篇文章
< 1 >
每页显示 20 50 100
Xun Zi's Image across the Qin-Han Period: Three Types of Discourse on a “Great Confucian” and Their Significance in Intellectual History
1
作者 伍振勋 Hsu Nai-Yi 《Social Sciences in China》 2014年第1期163-189,共27页
This article scrutinizes three texts about Xun Zi written during the Qin-Han period: the final part of "The Questions of Yao" in the Xunzi, a rebuttal by one of Xun Zi's disciples of the idea that Xun Zi was infer... This article scrutinizes three texts about Xun Zi written during the Qin-Han period: the final part of "The Questions of Yao" in the Xunzi, a rebuttal by one of Xun Zi's disciples of the idea that Xun Zi was inferior to Confucius; "Mencius and Xun Zi" by Sima Qian in his Records of the Grand Historian; and the Annotated Book of the Xunzi by Liu Xiang. We explore the images of Xun Zi as a great Confucian (大儒) that emerge from these texts, as well as their authors' motives for writing. These texts are understood within three contexts: first, the self-identification of a Confucian; second, the dispute between Confucianism and Daoism; and lastly, the distinction between the classics and the annals and biographies. Due to their different discourse environments, Xun Zi's great Confucian image project a different significance in each: in one, he is a model of action who can act in accordance with perfected morality; in another, he is a model of "private words," who can counter the philosophers of his day and become the teacher of kings; and finally, he is a model of "official learning," able to use his knowledge of the classics in practical statecraft and elucidate the kingly Way. Overall, these three texts represent three types of discourse on a great Confucian. At thesame time, they also exhibit their writers' consciousness of their times and their views of the genealogy of daotong, or transmission of the Way; hence their significance for intellectual history. 展开更多
关键词 image ofXun Zi discourse on a great Confucian Xun Zi Sima Qian Liu Xiang
原文传递
上一页 1 下一页 到第
使用帮助 返回顶部