Status | 已發表Published |
Mozi as a Daoist Sage: An Intertextual Analysis of the “Gongshu” Anecdote | |
Lee, T. M. | |
2017-09-01 | |
Source Publication | Between History and Philosophy: Anecdotes in Early China |
Publisher | SUNY Press |
Pages | 93-112 |
Abstract | This paper first describes the discontinuity between the body and the ending of the “Gongshu” anecdote, and highlights the “un-Mohist” concepts and perspectives in the anecdotal ending. In the second step I trace the “un-Mohist” elements in the Shizi, Lüshi chunqiu, and Huainanzi discourses, in an attempt to explain the rupture between the body and the ending of the “Gongshu” anecdote, interpret the “un-Mohist” message conveyed by the “Gongshu” ending, and indicate the Daoist tinges surrounding these discourses. |
Keyword | Mohism Daoism Chinese philosophy |
Language | 英語English |
ISBN | 9781438466118 |
The Source to Article | PB_Publication |
PUB ID | 45185 |
Document Type | Book chapter |
Collection | DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES Faculty of Arts and Humanities |
Recommended Citation GB/T 7714 | Lee, T. M.. Mozi as a Daoist Sage: An Intertextual Analysis of the “Gongshu” Anecdote[M]. Between History and Philosophy: Anecdotes in Early China:SUNY Press, 2017, 93-112. |
APA | Lee, T. M..(2017). Mozi as a Daoist Sage: An Intertextual Analysis of the “Gongshu” Anecdote. Between History and Philosophy: Anecdotes in Early China, 93-112. |
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