Name and Actuality in Early Chinese Thought

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SUNY Press, Jul 22, 1994 - Philosophy - 286 pages
This is the first Western study of the philosophy of Xu Gan (170-217), a Confucian thinker who lived at a nodal point in the history of Chinese thought, when Han scholasticism had become ossified and the creative and independent quality that characterized Wei-Jin thought was just emerging. As the theme of his study, Makeham develops an original and richly detailed account of ming shi, name and actuality, one of the key pairs of concepts in early Chinese thought. He shows how Xu Gan s understanding of the name and actuality relationship was most immediately influenced by Xu Gan s understanding of why the Han dynasty had collapsed, yet had its roots in a tradition of discourse that spanned the classical period (circa 500-150 B.C.E.).

In reconstructing the philosophical background of Xu Gan s understanding of the relationship between name and actuality, Makeham identifies two antithetical theories of naming in early Chinese thought nominalist and correlative a distinction that is as great as the Realist-Nominalist distinction of Western thought. He shows how Xu Gan s views on the name and actuality relationship were animated, on the one hand, by a rejection of nominalist theories of naming, and on the other hand, by a novel appropriation of correlative theories of naming. The study also analyzes two of the more immediate social and intellectual issues in the late Eastern Han (25-220) period that had prompted Xu Gan to discuss the name and actuality relationship: the ethos of the scholar-gentry (ming jiao) and Han approaches to classical scholarship. Makeham demonstrates how Xu Gan s critique of these matters is valuable not only as a late Han philosophical account of what had led to the demise of the 400-year-old Han dynasty, but also as a mode of conceptualizing that contributed to the new direction that philosophical thinking took in the third century C.E..
 

Contents

Xu Gans Appropriation of the Name and Actuality Polarity
3
Confucius and the Correction of Names
35
Nominalist Theories of Naming in the NeoMohist Summa and Xun Zi
51
Han Feis Xing Ming Thinking and Ming Shi
67
The Emergence of Correlative Theories of Naming in Guan Zi and Chun Qiu Fan Lu
85
Mingjiao in the Eastern Han
99
Word without a Message Classical Scholarship in the Eastern Han
113
The CosmologicalcumEthical Implications of Name and Actuality Being in Accord or Disaccord
129
Zheng Ming A Legalist Interpolation?
163
An Etymological Note on the Xing JplJ Graph
166
On the Dating of the Xin Shu Shang Xin Shu Xia and Bai Xin Pian of Guan Zi
170
The Meaning of Ming Jiao
172
An Outline of the Old Text SchoolNew Text School Rivalry in the Han Dynasty
179
Examples of Xu Gans Classical Eclecticism
184
From Names and Actualities to Names and Principles
191
Notes
195

Conclusion
145
History of the Text
153
Zhuang Zis Scepticism about Names and Naming
160
Bibliography
261
Index
283
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About the author (1994)

John Makeham is Lecturer in Chinese, Centre for Asian Studies, University of Adelaide, South Australia.

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