CAPTURING THE WORLD IN WORDS: LATER MOHIST HERMENEUTIC THEORIES ON LANGUAGE AND DISPUTATION
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Published:2020-05-13
Issue:
Volume:43
Page:93-121
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ISSN:0362-5028
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Container-title:Early China
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Early China
Author:
Brindley Erica F.
Abstract
AbstractThis essay examines some key statements in the Later Mohist treatises to gain a sense of their views on language and disputation (bian辯). I first show that the Later Mohists viewed disputation as an exercise in familiarizing oneself with patterns of language use and the verification of truth-claims in the phenomenal world. I then demonstrate that such an activity helps one attain one of the Mohists’ highest goals: the clarification of ethical imperatives about how to behave, as expressed through Heaven for all people. This claim ultimately links Early and Later Mohist ethical concerns and offers a religious explanation for Later Mohist involvement and interest in disputation. Lastly, I frame these writings from within a culture of debate about language in Early China—a culture which, for example, yielded not only Mohist views concerning the necessary correlation between language and reality, but also Confucian formulations on the rectification of names, and a Zhuangzian insistence on the emptiness of sayings.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Philosophy,Religious studies,Archaeology,History,Archaeology
Reference31 articles.
1. Mozi ‘Xiaoqu pian’ lun ‘bian bian yi;Junyi;Xinya yanjiusuo,1960
2. Mohist Canons;Fraser;Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy,2011
3. Supplement to Mohism: Texts and Authorship;Fraser;Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy,2011
Cited by
2 articles.
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