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Table of Contents
Preface; Contents; 1 The Philosophical Foundations of Chinese Civilization; 1.1 Correlative Cosmology; 1.2 The One Continuous Qi; 1.3 Yin-Yang Complementation; 1.4 Continuously Generative Transformation; 1.5 Natural Heavenly Patterns; 1.6 Unification of Humans and Heaven; 2 The Values and Worldview of Chinese Civilization; 2.1 The Ethical Spirit of Early Chinese Civilization; 2.2 The Fundamental Values of Axial Age Chinese Civilization; 2.3 The Ancient Confucian System of Moral Concepts; 2.4 The Preferences and Characteristics of the Values of Chinese Civilization
2.5 The Divergence Between the Value Preferences of Chinese Civilization and Modern Values2.6 The Worldview of Chinese Civilization: Understanding and Attitude Regarding the External World; 2.7 The Universal Ideal of Chinese Civilization: Pursuit of Pluralism and Harmony; 3 A Brief Account of the Development of the Chinese Intellectual Tradition; 3.1 Chinese Script and the Early Textual Corpus; 3.2 The Formation of the Six Classics; 3.3 The One Hundred Schools; 3.4 Han Dynasty Classical Learning; 3.5 The Records of the Grand Historian, the History of the Han, and the Shuo Wen Dictionary
3.6 The Broader Literary Corpus3.7 Wei-Jin Era Neo-Daoism and Religious Daoism; 3.8 Buddhism and Literature During the Sui and the Tang; 3.9 Song-Ming Neo-confucianism and the Structure of Scholarship; 3.10 Qing Dynasty Han Learning and Large-Scale Compilation Projects; 3.11 Early Modern Chinese Learning, Western Learning, and Guoxue; 3.12 The Contemporary Guoxue Craze; 3.13 The Basic Characteristics of Chinese Civilization and Culture; 4 The Rise and Development of Modern "Guoxue"; 4.1 The Birth and Development of the Idea of Guoxue; 4.2 The Employment of the Concept of Guoxue
4.3 The Development of the Study of Guoxue4.4 The Great Figures of Guoxue; Appendices ; Appendix A:: Confucian Thought and Contemporary Society; A.1#x83;Confucian Culture; A.2#x83;The Political Thought of Confucianism; A.3#x83;Confucianism's View of Human Life; A.4#x83;The Study of Confucianism and Contemporary China; Appendix B: Modern Confucianism and Universal Values; Appendix C: The Transmission and Development of Traditional Chinese Values
2.5 The Divergence Between the Value Preferences of Chinese Civilization and Modern Values2.6 The Worldview of Chinese Civilization: Understanding and Attitude Regarding the External World; 2.7 The Universal Ideal of Chinese Civilization: Pursuit of Pluralism and Harmony; 3 A Brief Account of the Development of the Chinese Intellectual Tradition; 3.1 Chinese Script and the Early Textual Corpus; 3.2 The Formation of the Six Classics; 3.3 The One Hundred Schools; 3.4 Han Dynasty Classical Learning; 3.5 The Records of the Grand Historian, the History of the Han, and the Shuo Wen Dictionary
3.6 The Broader Literary Corpus3.7 Wei-Jin Era Neo-Daoism and Religious Daoism; 3.8 Buddhism and Literature During the Sui and the Tang; 3.9 Song-Ming Neo-confucianism and the Structure of Scholarship; 3.10 Qing Dynasty Han Learning and Large-Scale Compilation Projects; 3.11 Early Modern Chinese Learning, Western Learning, and Guoxue; 3.12 The Contemporary Guoxue Craze; 3.13 The Basic Characteristics of Chinese Civilization and Culture; 4 The Rise and Development of Modern "Guoxue"; 4.1 The Birth and Development of the Idea of Guoxue; 4.2 The Employment of the Concept of Guoxue
4.3 The Development of the Study of Guoxue4.4 The Great Figures of Guoxue; Appendices ; Appendix A:: Confucian Thought and Contemporary Society; A.1#x83;Confucian Culture; A.2#x83;The Political Thought of Confucianism; A.3#x83;Confucianism's View of Human Life; A.4#x83;The Study of Confucianism and Contemporary China; Appendix B: Modern Confucianism and Universal Values; Appendix C: The Transmission and Development of Traditional Chinese Values