Chinese History and Culture: Seventeenth Century Through Twentieth Century
Published:
2016
Online ISBN:
9780231542005
Print ISBN:
9780231178600
Contents
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The First Encounter The First Encounter
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The Search for an Intellectual Base The Search for an Intellectual Base
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“The Six Classics are all History” “The Six Classics are all History”
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Zhu Xi and Lu Xiangshan: Two Intellectual Genealogies Zhu Xi and Lu Xiangshan: Two Intellectual Genealogies
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Notes Notes
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Chapter
4. Zhang Xuecheng Versus Dai Zhen: A Study in Intellectual Challenge and Response in Eighteenth-Century China
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Pages
85–112
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Published:September 2016
Cite
Yü, Ying-shih, Josephine Chiu-Duke, and Michael S. Duke, 'Zhang Xuecheng Versus Dai Zhen: A Study in Intellectual Challenge and Response in Eighteenth-Century China', Chinese History and Culture: Seventeenth Century Through Twentieth Century (New York, NY , 2016; online edn, Columbia Scholarship Online, 21 Sept. 2017), https://doi.org/10.7312/columbia/9780231178600.003.0004, accessed 19 Apr. 2024.
Abstract
This examination of the intellectual relationship between Dai Zhen and Zhang Xuecheng (1738-1801) throws light on the inner complexities as well as tensions in the academic community of eighteenth-century China. It shows that Dai’s influence on Zhang was much more profound and enduring than previously believed, that Zhang knew that Dai’s philology was seeking to understand the Confucian Dao, and that a true philosophical vision worthy of pursuit could only be built on solid philological grounds. The article also traces the origin of Zhang Xuecheng’s dictum that “the Six Classics are all history.’”
Keywords:
Dai Zhen, Zhang Xuecheng, kaozheng, philology, yili, philosophy, dao wenxue, zun dexing, wenshi, jingxue
Subject
Asian History
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