The Duties that Bind Us

Constance Lee
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Abstract

This article aims to draw out some of the key continuities between Confucian and Reformed natural law traditions, the latter represented by John Calvin (1509–64). It seeks to undermine contemporary academic definitions of Confucianism and constitutionalism, which are premised on misinterpretations. The first misinterpretation occurs where Confucian moral theory is viewed overly prescriptively, as being synonymous with legalist orthodoxy. The second misinterpretation occurs where constitutionalism is defined exclusively in terms of its dominant liberal conception. These problematic definitions of the two core concepts reduce the space of convergence between Eastern and Western constitutional frameworks, giving rise to the misleading narrative that they are fundamentally incompatible. With these issues in mind, the article adopts a dialectic interpretive method to read both traditions in light of their historical context and authorial purpose, to see whether such a reading can support some form of duty-based constitutionalism. Ultimately, the article examines Eastern and Western natural law ideas to reveal deeper themes common to both and highlight the normative continuities of two prominent, albeit culturally disparate, constitutional foundations.
束缚我们的义务
本文旨在指出儒家与改革宗自然法传统之间的一些关键连续性,后者的代表人物是约翰-加尔文(John Calvin,1509-64 年)。文章试图削弱当代学术界对儒家思想和宪政主义的定义,因为这些定义是建立在误读的基础之上的。第一种误读是将儒家道德理论看得过于规范,将其视为正统法律主义的同义词。第二种误读则是将宪政主义完全定义为占主导地位的自由主义概念。对这两个核心概念的这些有问题的定义缩小了东西方宪政框架之间的交汇空间,造成了它们从根本上不相容的误导。考虑到这些问题,文章采用辩证的解释方法,从历史背景和作者目的的角度来解读这两种传统,看看这种解读能否支持某种形式的基于义务的宪政主义。最终,文章通过对东西方自然法思想的研究,揭示了两者共同的深层主题,并强调了两个著名的、尽管文化上不同的宪法基础在规范上的连续性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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