Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/4652
Title: A Confucian conception of the self: A Nagelian reconstruction
Author(s): Lee, Roger King Hang 
Issue Date: 2011
Conference: 當代新儒家與西方哲學:第九屆當代新儒學國際學術會議 
Abstract: 
It has become a commonsensical platitude that one of the central claims of Confucianism is that human nature is good. Yet, there has never been any commonly agreed sense of the saying, and more controversial still is how it can be justified at all. Instead of engaging in a historical-textual analysis of the Confucian classics aiming at digging up the “real” doctrines upheld by the various Confucian masters throughout the history, I will, in this paper, provide a philosophical reconstruction of a Confucian conception of human self, which incorporates the core and valuable Confucian elements, in terms of Thomas Nagel's notion of the subjective-objective structure as the fundamental feature of human subjects. I want to show how my Nagelian conception of Confucian self can make good sense of the complicated nature of and the intricate relations among the rational, the emotional, the communal and the ethical dimensions of the Confucian self, and how a plausible understanding of the claim that human nature is good can be achieved in light of it.
URI: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/4652
CIHE Affiliated Publication: No
Appears in Collections:HL Publication

SFX Query Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.