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Book Categories |
Contributors | vii | |
Introduction | 1 | |
Section I | Rights and Community | |
1 | Are Individual Rights Necessary? A Confucian Perspective | 11 |
2 | Rights and Community in Confucianism | 31 |
3 | Whose Democracy? Which Rights? A Confucian Critique of Modern Western Liberalism | 49 |
4 | The Normative Impact of Comparative Ethics: Human Rights | 72 |
Section II | Self and Self-Cultivation | |
5 | Tradition and Community in the Formation of Character and Self | 103 |
6 | A Theory of Confucian Selfhood: Self-Cultivation and Free Will in Confucian Philosophy | 124 |
7 | The Virtue of Righteousness in Mencius | 148 |
8 | Conception of the Person in Early Confucian Thought | 183 |
Section III | Comments | |
9 | Questions for Confucians: Reflections on the Essays in Comparative Study of Self, Autonomy, and Community | 203 |
Glossary of Chinese Terms | 219 | |
Index | 223 |
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Add Confucian Ethics: A Comparative Study of Self, Autonomy and Community, The Chinese ethical tradition has often been thought to oppose Western views of the self--as autonomous and possessed of individual rights--with views that emphasize the centrality of relationship and community to the self. The essays in this collection d, Confucian Ethics: A Comparative Study of Self, Autonomy and Community to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Confucian Ethics: A Comparative Study of Self, Autonomy and Community, The Chinese ethical tradition has often been thought to oppose Western views of the self--as autonomous and possessed of individual rights--with views that emphasize the centrality of relationship and community to the self. The essays in this collection d, Confucian Ethics: A Comparative Study of Self, Autonomy and Community to your collection on WonderClub |