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Tianxia in Comparative Perspectives: Alternative Models for a Possible Planetary Order

Tianxia in Comparative Perspectives: Alternative Models for a Possible Planetary Order

University of Hawai’i Press よりTianxia in Comparative Perspectives: Alternative Models for a Possible Planetary Order』が刊行されました。

本書はにはEAA学術顧問で東洋文化研究所教授の中島隆博氏の論文「Universalizing Tianxia in an East Asian Context」が収録されています。

 

University of Hawai’i Press ウェブサイトより

TIANXIA IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES: ALTERNATIVE MODELS FOR A POSSIBLE PLANETARY ORDER

 

【内容紹介】

Tianxia—conventionally translated as “all-under-Heaven”—in everyday Chinese parlance simply means “the world.” But tianxia is also a geopolitical term found in canonical writings that has a deeper historical and philosophical significance. Although there are many understandings of tianxia in this literature, interpretations within the Chinese process cosmology generally begin with an ecological understanding of intra-national relations that acknowledge the mutuality and interdependence of all economic and political activity.

This volume contextualizes the tianxia vision of geopolitical order within a variety of strategies drawn from a broad spectrum of cultures and peoples: Buddhist, Islamic, Indian, African, Confucian, European. The conversation among the contributors is guided by several central questions: Is tianxia the only model of cosmopolitanism? Are there ideas and ideals comparable to tianxia that exist in other cultures? What alternative perspectives of global justice have inspired Western, Indian, Islamic, Buddhist, and African cultural traditions? The fundamental premise here is that in order for a planetary tianxia system to be relevant and significant for the present time and for our vision of the future, it must acknowledge the plurality of moral ideals defining the world’s cultures while at the same time seek practical ways to formulate a minimalist morality that can provide the solidarity needed to bring the world’s people together.

【著者紹介】

Roger T. Ames, Editor
Roger T. Ames is Humanities Chair Professor at Peking University, cochair of the Academic Advisory Committee at Peking University Berggruen Research Center, and professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Hawai‘i.

Sor-hoon Tan, Editor
Sor-hoon Tan is professor of philosophy at Singapore Management University.

Steven Y. H. Yang, Editor
Steven Y. H. Yang is Tianxia Project Consultant at the Berggruen China Center.

Roger T. Ames, Series Editor
Roger T. Ames is Humanities Chair Professor at Peking University, cochair of the Academic Advisory Committee at Peking University Berggruen Research Center, and professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Hawai‘i.

Peter D. Hershock, Series Editor
Peter D. Hershock is director of the Asian Studies Development Program at the East-West Center, Honolulu.

CONTRIBUTORS

Roger T. Ames
Rajeev Bhargava
Peter D. Hershock
Liam C. Kelley
Xinfeng Kong
Viren Murthy
Takahiro Nakajima
Mustapha Kamal Pasha
Qin Yaqing
Mogobe Bernard Ramose
Sor-hoon Tan
Christian Uhl
Ban Wang
Binfan Wang
Wang Qingxin
Jun-Hyeok Kwak