Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/67103
Type: Thesis
Title: The thought of Mou Zongsan.
Author: Chan, Nganying Serina
Issue Date: 2010
School/Discipline: School of Social Sciences
Abstract: This study introduces and examines the thought of Mou Zongsan 牟宗三 (1909-1995), generally recognised as the most creative and systematic Xin Rujia 新儒家 (New Confucian) thinker. Because very little about his thought has been written in English, this study contributes to the understanding and interpretation of Chinese thought by filling a gap in Western scholarship on a key twentieth-century Ru thinker. The study accomplishes four objectives. The first objective is to examine the making of Mou’s thought by tracing the various influences that shaped his philosophical thinking. Mou’s thought is multi-faceted and complex. It reflects the historical time he lived in, the person he was, and the many ideological and intellectual influences that shaped his thinking. Scholars usually regard Mou’s thought as a contemporary moral metaphysical reading of Ru thought based on the Lu-Wang Learning of the Mind, the stream of Song-Ming Ruxue (Neo-Confucianism) associated with Lu Xiangshan 陸象山 (1139-1193) and Wang Yangming 王陽明 (1472-1529). Yet, as this thesis shows, Mou’s thought is also cultural nationalist, anti-Communist, moral idealistic, Hegelian, and Kantian. The second objective of this thesis is to introduce Mou’s thought as a contemporary reading of Ruxue—in the form of a moral metaphysics based on the Lu-Wang Learning of the Mind. Mou’s moral metaphysics reflects his understanding of the human mind as informed by the teachings of Mengzi 孟子 (Mencius) (ca 372-289 B.C.), the Lu-Wang Learning of the Mind, and the writings of Song-Ming Ru thinkers besides Lu and Wang. It seeks to elucidate the metaphysics of the Lu-Wang Learning of the Mind using Mahāyāna Fo (Buddhist) paradigms and Kantian terminology. The third objective is to reveal the strong Han cultural nationalism that drove Mou’s philosophical career. While most scholars recognise that a major, if not the most significant, contribution of Mou is in the metaphysical development of Ru thought, much of his writings can be seen as a relentless attempt to provide a systematic and theoretical grounding for his proposal for China’s cultural reconstruction, a proposal known as the santong 三統 (three-unities) proposal. My aim is to show that Mou’s moral metaphysics and cultural nationalist discourse are entwined. I examine his conception of Chinese culture and Ruxue and his notion of the third epoch of Ruxue. I also study his santong proposal, his new daotong 新道統discourse (new genealogical account of the transmission of the way), which is based on his revisionist assessment of Song-Ming Ruxue, and the key role he played in the Xin Rujia movement. The last objective is to examine critically the scholarly reception of Mou’s thought and discuss how the legacy of Mou’s Xin Rujia thought has lived on. Mou’s system of thought is rigorously logical and coherent when assessed in terms of its internal philosophical premises and paradigms. Supporters embrace and acclaim it. Distracters, however, find fault with it, sometimes harshly. I highlight the major merits and deficiencies of Mou’s thought as perceived by his critics.
Advisor: Makeham, John Thomas
Song, Xianlin
Dissertation Note: Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Social Sciences, 2010
Keywords: Mou Zongsan; new Confucianism; Xin Rujia; contemporary Confucianism; contemporary Chinese thought
Provenance: Copyright material removed from digital thesis. See print copy in University of Adelaide Library for full text.
Appears in Collections:Research Theses

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