Preface to Volumes 85–86

IF 1.1 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Ihor Pidhainy
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Abstract

Welcome to a double issue (volumes 85 and 86) of the Journal of Ming Studies. I hope that you and yours have managed to escape the clutches of COVID, and likely, like ourselves at Ming Studies, have begun to participate in in-person conferences while still finding the technology imposed on us (Zoom, Skype etc.) as quite fruitful in our continued scholarly endeavors. This volume contains three articles, an interview and our regular feature Ming News. Although not intended as thematic, this double issue brings together three papers on late imperial philosophy. Each paper brings with it an interest in the historical period of Ming philosophers, but also reaches across to a wider context of Chinese philosophy in general as well as interests in Western and contemporary thought. This volume indubitably grows out of the recent resurgence in late imperial Chinese philosophy, with one of the subjects, Li Zhi (李贄, Zhuowu卓吾, 1527– 1602), experiencing a love-fest ofWestern scholarship. A second philosopher, Wang Tingxiang (王廷相, 1474–1544) is the subject of the second paper, while the philosophical contentions over the Great Rites Controversy of the 1521–1527 at the start of the Jiajing reign (嘉靖, 1521–1566) make up the topic of the third paper. In each paper, though, we also see a stretching of the topic to get at what is both Ming and relevant today. Dr. Yiming Ha’s article “Public Discourse and Private Sentiment: Ritual Controversies, Ritual Authority, and Political Succession in Ming and Chosŏn” places in comparative framework two ritual crises, one in mid-Ming China, during the early years of the Jiajing reign and the other in Chosŏn, during the reign of King Injo (仁祖, 1623–1649). Dr. Ha discusses the comparative framework of the two debates – and though the Chosŏn was directly reliant on the Jiajing debate, it also witnessed a very different framing of the matter. Ritual authority was at the center of the conflict between the monarch and his opposition, the civil bureaucracy. In both cases, the ruler was able to rely on a contingent of the bureaucracy (both in and out of office) to support and indeed make his case. Dr. Kanghun Ahn’s article “Humanity may Triumph over Heaven: Wang Tingxiang’s Natural Philosophy in its Historical Context” posits a different context for its main question: Did Chinese philosophers understand climate as a larger question in their philosophical musings? His answer focuses to a great degree on what may be seen as unique work of Wang Tingxiang in grappling with natural phenomena. Dr. Ahn argues how Wang could be distinguished in his rejection of Ming Studies, 85–86, 1–3, May–October 2022
第85-86卷序言
欢迎光临《明学学刊》第85卷和第86卷两期。我希望你和你的朋友们已经设法摆脱了COVID的魔爪,并且可能像我们在明研究的人一样,已经开始参加面对面的会议,同时仍然发现强加给我们的技术(Zoom, Skype等)在我们继续的学术努力中相当富有成效。本卷包括三篇文章、一篇访谈和我们的定期专题《明报》。虽然不打算作为主题,这双刊汇集了三篇论文晚期帝国哲学。每篇论文都带来了对明朝哲学家历史时期的兴趣,但也触及了更广泛的中国哲学背景,以及对西方和当代思想的兴趣。这本书无疑是源于最近中国帝国晚期哲学的复兴,其中一个主题是李贽(1527 - 1602),经历了对西方学术的热爱。第二个哲学家王庭祥(1474-1544)是第二篇论文的主题,而关于嘉靖初1521-1527年大礼之争的哲学争论构成了第三篇论文的主题。然而,在每篇论文中,我们也看到了对主题的延伸,以获得与明代和今天相关的内容。哈一明博士的文章《公共话语与私人情感:明代与Chosŏn的礼制争议、礼制权威与政治继承》将两次礼制危机置于比较框架中,一次发生在明朝中期嘉靖初年,另一次发生在Chosŏn仁祖年间(1623-1649)。哈博士讨论了两场辩论的比较框架,尽管Chosŏn直接依赖于嘉靖辩论,但它也见证了一个非常不同的问题框架。仪式权威是君主和他的对手——文官官僚之间冲突的中心。在这两种情况下,统治者都能够依靠一支官僚队伍(包括办公室内外)来支持并确实为他辩护。安康勋博士的文章《人性可能战胜天:王庭祥的历史哲学》为其主要问题设定了一个不同的背景:中国哲学家是否在他们的哲学思考中把气候理解为一个更大的问题?他的回答在很大程度上集中在王庭祥在处理自然现象方面的独特作品上。安博士认为,王在拒绝《明研究》(Ming Studies)(85-86, 1-3, 2022年5月- 10月)中是如何脱颖而出的
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来源期刊
Ming Studies
Ming Studies ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
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