Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Index of Names
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 5
- Introduction 7
-
I The Importance of Perspective
- 1. Perspective, Dwelling, and Phenomenology in Early Chinese Philosophy 19
- 2. Self-Knowledge, Perspective, and the Possibility of Understanding in Zhuangzi’s Happy Fish Dispute 41
-
II Awareness, Self-Consciousness, and the Reality of Appearances
- 3. “Not Having a Heart” (wu xin 無心) or the Paradox Between Existence and Knowledge in the Philosophy of Guo Xiang 郭象 71
- 4. The Sense Organs, Awareness and Luminosity in Classical Chinese and Indian Thought 95
- 5. Selfhood and Subjectivity in Neo- Confucianism 121
- 6. On Taking Appearances Seriously : Phenomenology, New Confucianism, and the Yogācāra Theory of Consciousness 153
- 7. Self, Mind, and Consciousness: Comparative Reflections 183
-
III Self and Other: Ethical and Aesthetical Perspective
- 8. Ritual and Confucian Shame 195
- 9. Kierkegaard, Confucius, and the Intersubjective Dance 217
- 10. The Bodily Self in Ancient Chinese Arts and in Twentieth-Century Euro- American Painting 237
- Index of Names 269
- Index of Subjects 271
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 5
- Introduction 7
-
I The Importance of Perspective
- 1. Perspective, Dwelling, and Phenomenology in Early Chinese Philosophy 19
- 2. Self-Knowledge, Perspective, and the Possibility of Understanding in Zhuangzi’s Happy Fish Dispute 41
-
II Awareness, Self-Consciousness, and the Reality of Appearances
- 3. “Not Having a Heart” (wu xin 無心) or the Paradox Between Existence and Knowledge in the Philosophy of Guo Xiang 郭象 71
- 4. The Sense Organs, Awareness and Luminosity in Classical Chinese and Indian Thought 95
- 5. Selfhood and Subjectivity in Neo- Confucianism 121
- 6. On Taking Appearances Seriously : Phenomenology, New Confucianism, and the Yogācāra Theory of Consciousness 153
- 7. Self, Mind, and Consciousness: Comparative Reflections 183
-
III Self and Other: Ethical and Aesthetical Perspective
- 8. Ritual and Confucian Shame 195
- 9. Kierkegaard, Confucius, and the Intersubjective Dance 217
- 10. The Bodily Self in Ancient Chinese Arts and in Twentieth-Century Euro- American Painting 237
- Index of Names 269
- Index of Subjects 271