Japanese Confucian Philosophy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/entries////japanese-confucian/
by earlier Confucian philosophers. For example, Buddhists often affirmed that metaphysically all things are empty of self-substantial being. Along similar lines, Buddhists offered
Yijing Dao - Annotated links to other Yijing sites, and journal articleshttps://www.biroco.com/yijing/links.htm
'Fortune-Tellers & Philosophers: Divination in Traditional Chinese Society', which is focused on the Qing dynasty, and in 2008 had a new book on Yijing history published: Fath
Yijing Dao - Calling Crane in the Shade: A website dedicated to reviews of books on the Yijing or I Ching, the ancient Chinese oracle known as the Book of Changes, but also contain
Mengzi 孟子 (www.chinaknowledge.de)http://www.chinaknowledge.de/Literature/Classics/mengzi.html
Statecraft Masters and Philosophers Belles-Lettres and Collections Literature Confucian Classics Mengzi Jul 24, 2010 © Ulrich Theobald Mengzi 孟子 "Master Meng" is a collection
Mengzi 孟子 is a collection of stories of the Confucian philosopher Meng Ke 孟軻 (385–304 or 372–289 BCE) and his discussions with rulers, disciples and adversaries. It is
Mengzihttp://facultysites.vassar.edu/brvannor/mengzi.html
rulers and other philosophers. For other translations of this work, and suggestions for further reading, see my " Essential Readings on Chinese Philosophy " and my " Comments and
World Peace Newsletter - inner peace, external peace, world peace, global peace.https://worldpeacenewsletter.com/
of China, as well as of philosophers like Tan Sitong or Liang Qichao. Another term used in the text, "qin-min" which James Legge, following Zhu Xi, amends to "xin-min" and transla
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