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Warp, Weft, and Way

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Title of Warp, Weft, and Way: "Warp, Weft, and Way – Chinese and Comparative Philosophy 中國哲學與比較哲學"

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In this episode, we continue our exploration of Mohist impartial caring (jian’ai 兼愛) by examining two of Mencius’s most influential objections: (1) the “Without a Father” Argument (Mencius 3B9) and (2) the “Two Roots” Argument (Mencius 3A5). Along the way, we take up some important questions: Should moral values be impartial even between family members and total strangers?...

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The article Towards a deep epistemology: knowing in historical and cross-cultural context by Michael Beaney and Karyn Lai has been published recently as the lead article in the special issue Knowing in Historical and Cross-Cultural Context of British Journal for the History of Philosophy. This article makes the case for a deep epistemology, an epistemology rooted […]

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Jeremy Tanner’s review of Douglas Cairns and Curie Virág, eds., In the Mind, in the Body, in the World: Emotions in Early China and Ancient Greece (Oxford 2024) has been published in Classical Philology; see here.

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Zhichao TONG’s article “Defensible Democratic Meritocracy: A Competition-Based Account” has been published in the British Journal of Political Science; see here. The abstract follows. ABSTRACT: The article offers a new defense of democratic meritocracy. Existing defenses of the hybrid regime have centered on ordinary citizens’ lack of sophisticated political kn...

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ToC: Dao 24:4

Dao 24:4 has been published; see here and below for the Table of Contents.What Do the Ghosts Want? Or, Why Did Mozi Think that Belief in Ghosts Would Lead to Societal Order? Michael Reynolds To Love Surprise Like a Butterfly: A Zhuangzian Life of Playing Shih-Han Huang A Defense of Resilience from a Zhuangism-Inspired Perspective […]

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