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Preface
Series Foreword
Introduction
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Lawrence E. Sullivan
Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim
Setting the Context
Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Berthrong
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| Chapter 1 |
The Nature of the Critique
Beyond the Enlightenment Mentality
Tu Weiming
Think Globally, Act Locally,
and the Contested Ground Between
Wm. Theodore de Bary
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| Chapter 2 |
The Context for Response
Companionship with the World: Roots and
Branches of A Confucian Ecology
Rodney L. Taylor
Early Confucianism and Environmental Ethics
Philip J. Ivanhoe
Extending the Neo-Confucian Tradition:
Questions and Reconceptualization for the Twenty-First
Century
Michael C. Kalton
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| Chapter 3 |
Conceptual Resources from China, Korea, and
Japan
The Continuity of Being: Chinese Visions
of Nature
Tu Weiming
Response and Responsibility: Chou Tun-i
and Confucian Resources for Environmental Ethics
Joseph A. Adler
The Philosophy of Environmental Correlation
in Chu His
Toshio Kuwako
Ecological Implications of Yi Yulgoks
Cosmology
Young-chan Ro
The Philosophy of Chi as an
Ecological Cosmology
Mary Evelyn Tucker
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| Chapter 4 |
Philosophical Reflections |
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The Trinity of Cosmology, Ecology, and
Ethics in the Confucian Personhood
Chung-ying Cheng
Motifs for a New Confucian Ecological Vision
John Berthrong
Orientation, Self, and Ecological Posture
Robert Cummings Neville
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| Chapter 5 |
From Principle to Practice
Confucianism and Garden Design: A Comparison
of Koishikawa Korakuen and Würlitzer Park
Seiko Goto and Julia Ching
Some Thoughts on Confucianism and Ecofeminism
Huey-li Li
From Heaven-and-Earth to Nature: Chinese
Concepts of the Environment and Their Influence
on Policy Implementation
Robert P. Weller and Peter K. Bol
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Notes on Contributors
Index
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Copyright
© 1998 Center for the Study of World Religions,
Harvard Divinity School.
Reprinted with permission. |