Henrique Schneider argues that understanding the three Early Confucian thinkers-Confucius, Mencius, and Xunzi-as virtue-ethicists, political philosophers, or social conservatives proves too narrow. Championing a broader and more philosophical reading,The Early Confucian Philosophy of Agency: Virtuous Conductsheds new light on a well-established topic. Virtuous conduct-aligning actions and motivations with virtues, social roles, and rituals-is the philosophy of agency of Early Confucianism. Confucius, Mencius, and Xunzi share a common philosophy of agency, which does more than describe agents and acts: it also represents a progressive social and political program. Schneider characterizes Early Confucianism as a progressive philosophy due to its human-centered program for social reform, its process view of self-cultivation, and its development. Agents who cultivate themselves can produce virtuous conduct, flourish, and become Junzi. This lets them lead each other in self-cultivation, social environment, and polity. As such, virtuous conduct integrates ethics, social and political philosophy in a theory of action.
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The Early Confucian Philosophy of Agency: Virtuous Conduct
While many recent treatments of early Confucianism have focused on the differences between Kongzi, Mengzi, and Xunzi, Henrique Schneider uncovers a significant overlap of commonality between these thinkers. Schneider sees an underlying family resemblance in the thinking of the early Confucians that unifies their normative outlooks on virtues, roles, and rituals. A popular and active approach in contemporary philosophy investigates agency, action, and normativity, and Schneider looks to these aspects to find the overlapping features of thought in Kongzi, Mengzi, and Xunzi. By concentrating on the common outlook of human agency, Schneider persuades his readers to join him in seeing the complementary, triangular relationship of virtue, roles, and rituals that constitute virtuous conduct in early Confucian thought. In doing so, Schneider offers an innovative contribution to studies of early Confucianism that pertains to both moral philosophy and social-political philosophy.
Published date: Feb 02, 2024
Language: English
No. of Pages: 188
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN: 9781666928372
Dimensions:
6.26" W x
0.79" L x
9.31" H
Henrique Schneideris associate of the Center for Chinese Studies in Switzerland and of the Geopolitical Information Services in Liechtenstein.
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