Internalizing Morals and the Active Intervention of a Moral System: Zhu Xi and Yi Hwang's Theories of kyongmul and mulgyok
- Authors
- Hyoungchan, Kim
- Issue Date
- 10월-2015
- Publisher
- INST STUDY RELIGION, SOGANG UNIV
- Keywords
- Neo-Confucianism; Korean Confucianism; Choson Confucianism; Zhu Xi; T' oegye; Yi Hwang; kyongmul ch' iji; lijado; extended mind; active externalism
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF KOREAN RELIGIONS, v.6, no.2, pp.5 - 26
- Indexed
- AHCI
SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- JOURNAL OF KOREAN RELIGIONS
- Volume
- 6
- Number
- 2
- Start Page
- 5
- End Page
- 26
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/92306
- DOI
- 10.1353/jkr.2015.0020
- ISSN
- 2093-7288
- Abstract
- In the Choson dynasty, intellectuals made conscious efforts to attain the ethics and ethical standards promoted by Neo-Confucianism. This was recognized as a requirement for a scholar to gain a position as a leader in society. Zhu Xi's theory of kyongmul ch'iji (the investigation of things and the perfection of knowledge) suggested a method of internalizing morals through conscious effort, while Yi Hwang's theory of lijado (ii approaches by itself) elaborately explained the moment of mastery. These theories also offer guidelines for distinguishing the moments prior to and immediately after mastery. The experience of internalizing ethics means the moment when the division between the mind and moral norms the boundary between inside and outside of the body is removed, and the mind of the individual extends beyond the body and experiences unity with universal ethics. Li in Neo-Confucianism is what a person acquires and intemalizes as universal nouns and principles. One who has internalized li as their own set of ethics establishes Neo-Confucian ethics as a guideline for their behavioral decisions. Interpretations of ethics by political groups or schools of theory in which a person is involved function as a mirror reference point for assessing behavioral decisions. Accepting a theoretical school or political group's perspective on ethics represents high reliance on and active acceptance and continuous consultation of the ethical standards and system created, diagnosed, and reconstructed by the school or group. In this case, it means that the individual's mind extends to universal norms and principles through the interpretations of scholarly and political groups.
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