Cheng-Zhu Confucianism in the Early Qing: Li Guangdi (1642-1718) and Qing Learning (SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture)

by On-cho Ng

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This first book-length study of the Cheng-Zhu School of Confucianism in the early Qing period explores the thought of Li Guangdi, a powerful official in the court of the Kangxi emperor. On-cho Ng undertakes close readings of Li's ideas of ultimate truths and first principles, while situating them in the context of the intellectual concerns of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century China. Addressing philosophical issues neglected in scholarship on early Qing learning, the author offers a new angle from which to view the Ming-Qing intellectual transition and the formation of early Qing thought. He argues that Cheng-Zhu learning, far from being out of step with the epochal climate of thought because of its putative preoccupation with the ultimate and the transcendent, was actually a dated reflection of, and active contributor to, early Qing thought. By tracing the contour and development of Li Guangdi's thought formulated within the bounds of inherited Cheng-Zhu teachings, this book reveals how philosophic discourses in traditional China were often dynamic, hermeneutic endeavors of reinterpreting and renewing received tradition.
  • ISBN10 0791448819
  • ISBN13 9780791448816
  • Publish Date 1 March 2001 (first published 22 February 2001)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 1 September 2016
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint State University of New York Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 268
  • Language English