On Philosophy as Living

Author:

Ennen Timo

Abstract

This paper considers what it would mean to conceive of philosophy as living. In the first part, by way of a discussion on intercultural encounter recently taken up by Cora Diamond, I first illustrate why philosophical conflict cannot be resolved within already given modes of thought or self-contained finite philosophical traditions, but instead transcends those. In the second part, I show why this dynamic plays out not only between cultures but also between the individual and that individual’s own tradition. I do this by drawing from insights of the two major proponents of xinxue 心學 (Learning of the Heart-Mind), Lu Jiuyuan 陸九淵 and Wang Yangming 王陽明. The way xinxue deals with both orthodox and heterodox traditions illuminates how we can understand philosophy as something living. It is neither self-contained and indifferent to its own heritage or to the culturally alien, nor does it consist of the mere accumulation of diverse philosophical contents. The deepening of individuality that xinxue introduces into Chinese philosophy consists in the relation of the individual to what has already been conceived. Ultimately, by grasping this dynamic that happens through the individual, we may better grasp why philosophy is not reducible to given modes of thought nor to self-contained finite philosophical traditions, but instead is infinite.

Publisher

University of Ljubljana

Reference25 articles.

1. Anscombe, G. E. M. 1981 [1975]. “The First Person.” Reprinted in Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind: Collected Papers, vol. II, 21–36. Oxford: Blackwell.

2. Chan, Wing-Tsit, trans. and comp. 2008. A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

3. Chang, Carsun (Zhang Junmai 張君勱). 1962. Wang Yang-ming: Idealist Philosopher of Sixteenth-Century China. New York: St. John’s University Press.

4. Chang, Tzu-li. 2015. “Personal Identity, Moral Agency and Liangzhi: A Comparative Study of Korsgaard and Wang Yangming.” Comparative Philosophy 6 (1): 3–23.

5. Diamond, Cora. 2013. “Criticising from ‘Outside’.” Philosophical Investigations 36 (2): 114–32.

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