This book is a comparative study of the Anglican Bishop Joseph Butler's and Neo-Confucianist Wang Yangming's ethical enterprise. It first analyses, within their respective historical context, the two thinkers' overarching worldviews and their seminal conception of conscience / liang-chih as a person's supreme moral guide. The English bishop and the Chinese philosopher-military general are then brought into dialogue by way of a comparing and contrasting of their distinct religious-philosophical traditions. In addition, Butler and Wang will be placed in a hypothetical encounter to explore how they, and by proxy Christianity and Confucianism, would critically appraise each other's spiritual and sociopolitical endeavor. The end purpose of this study is to enhance our perception of the intriguing similarities and complex differences that exist between these two Axial Age civilizations. The author argues that dissonances notwithstanding, Butler and Wang share core values, consonances that could and should set the tone for an amiable Christian-Confucian co-existence.



Autorentext

Peter T. C. Chang is an Adjunct Research Fellow at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. His expertise is in comparative religion and philosophy, Christianity and Confucianism specifically. He is currently studying and analyzing the potential impact of revived religiosity on the continuing transformation of modern China.



Inhalt

Contents: Bishop Joseph Butler's Account of the Christian. Order and Conception of Conscience - Wang Yang-Ming's Account of the Confucian. Order and Conception of Liang-Chih - Comparing Butler's Christianity and Wang's Confucianism - Wang, Butler, and the Contemporary Challenges.

Titel
Bishop Joseph Butler and Wang Yangming
Untertitel
A Comparative Study of Their Moral Vision and View of Conscience
EAN
9783035107463
ISBN
978-3-0351-0746-3
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
14.10.2014
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
1.09 MB
Jahr
2014
Untertitel
Englisch