Of the many Orientalist myths about China, the idea that the ‘humanist’ early Chinese lacked anything like a Western conception of the supernatural, souls or god(s) is one of the most pernicious. Clark and Winslett’s careful debunking of this misconception is an important and useful corrective.
Edward Slingerland, Professor of Philosophy, University of British Columbia, Canada
Previous discussions of Chinese views on spirituality have tended toward one of two extremes. They either treat Chinese philosophers as atheistic materialists or they assimilate Chinese spirituality to the Abrahamic religions. <i>A Spiritual Geography of Early Chinese Thought, </i>by Kelly James Clark and Justin Winslett, is a welcome corrective to these one-sided accounts. With remarkable nuance, Clark and Winslett illustrate the diversity and complexity of Chinese views on spirits, gods, and the afterlife.
Bryan W. Van Norden, James Monroe Taylor Chair in Philosophy, Vassar College, USA
Kelly James Clark and Justin Winslett take readers on an illuminating journey through early Chinese religion, rewriting the interpretive route they call 'the naturalizing narrative' and correcting its four misleading landmarks: (1) The Chinese don't believe in God or the afterlife; (2) Belief in the High God and belief in the afterlife were common among peasants and in the <i>Mozi</i>, but not in the philosophical texts; 3) The Confucians don't believe in God or the afterlife; and (4) God and the afterlife are morally irrelevant to Confucian moral theory.
Ronnie Littlejohn, Chaney Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Belmont University, USA
Required reading for any scholar interested in meta-philosophical questions concerning Chinese thought or simply seeking to better understand the state of the fields of both sinology and Chinese philosophy today.
Journal of the American Academy of Religion
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Om bidragsyterne
Kelly James Clark is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Ibn Haldun University, Istanbul.
Justin Winslett is University Lecturer in Chinese Studies at the University of Sheffield, UK.