Tags
Tag: "Chinese philosophy"
Encouraging Communication Through Imagination
Shudong Chen communicates about the importance of communication.
[Issue 89: March/April 2012: Articles]
The Importance of Living by Lin Yutang
Mark Cyzyk finds out how to be a loafing scamp.
[Issue 71: January/February 2009: Books]
The History of the World, Part 2
by Joel Marks
[Issue 48: October/November 2004: Moral Moments]
Crossing Cultures in Moral Psychology
David Wong on two ancient Chinese philosophers with very different approaches to moral reasoning.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002: Mind & Morals]
Death in Classical Daoist Thought
Bernard Down explains how two ancient Chinese philosophers explored new perspectives on matters of life and death.
[Issue 27: June/July 2000: Death]
Western Philosophy on the Defensive
Thomas Metzger suggests that contemporary Chinese philosophy, despite its weaknesses, challenges the foundations of modern, Western analytical philosophy.
[Issue 26: April/May 2000: Articles]
The Meaning of Life (II)
Roger Ames on a Chinese approach.
[Issue 24: Summer 1999: The Meaning of Life]
Interview with Tu Wei-ming
Harvard philosopher Tu Wei-ming is the most famous advocate of the Confucian tradition outside China. Anja Steinbauer talked to him in Boston.
[Issue 23: Spring 1999: Philosophy Around the World]
What’s New in… Chinese Philosophy
Anja Steinbauer on modern developments in an ancient philosophical tradition.
[Issue 23: Spring 1999: Overview]
(Chinese) Philosophy on the Internet
[Issue 15: Spring/Summer 1996: Articles]
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