從修養論的角度看朱陸「心卽理」之異同Zhu Xi’s Critique on Lu Xiang-shan’s Theory of Self-Cultivation
- Other Titles
- Zhu Xi’s Critique on Lu Xiang-shan’s Theory of Self-Cultivation
- Authors
- 이승환
- Issue Date
- 2016
- Publisher
- 고려대학교 중국학연구소
- Keywords
- Zhu Xi; Lu Xiang-shan; Neo-Confucianism; self-cultivation; quiet-sitting; meditation
- Citation
- 중국학논총, no.54, pp.35 - 54
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- 중국학논총
- Number
- 54
- Start Page
- 35
- End Page
- 54
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/132558
- DOI
- 10.26585/chlab.2016..54.002
- ISSN
- 1229-3806
- Abstract
- The aim of this article is to clarify the reason why the famous Neo-confucian thinker, Zhu Xi came into conflict with another notorious Neo-Confucian scholar, Lu Xiang-shan, from the viewpoint of theory of self-cultivation. Zhu Xi's critique on Lu Xiang-shan's theory of self-cultivation includes the following three points. First of all, Xiang-shan's theory that emphasizes eliminating the whole of intentions from human mind, not only disables Confucian every day practice, such as “Choosing the Good, and holding it steadfastly” as noted in the book of Doctrine of the Mean, but also commits the error of throwing the baby out with bath water. Secondly, Lu Xiang-shan's theory of self-cultivation, which emphasizes quiet-sitting and sudden enlightenment without regard to intellectual inquiry and rational investigation, misleads the practitioners into mysterious illusion and unfounded hallucination as if these are the manifestation of T’ien-li (Heavenly Principle). Thirdly, Lu Xiang-shan's pedagogy that refuses rational debate and inter-subjective argumentation yields the absence of objective criteria by which one can distinguish right from wrong, and the good from the bad. Zhu Xi calls this kind of awkward consequence caused by Lu Xiang-shan's theory of self-cultivation, “a weighing beam without notch mark” or “a yardstick without graduations.” After all, Zhu Xi's critique on Lu Xiang-shan's theory of self-cultivation can also function as a philosophical remedy for those practitioners who mystically indulge into quiet-sitting and meditation without regard to intellectual investigation and inter-subjective dialogue.
- Files in This Item
- There are no files associated with this item.
- Appears in
Collections - College of Liberal Arts > Department of Philosophy > 1. Journal Articles
Items in ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.