Reviews
"This is a coherent, erudite, undogmatic, thoughtful account of a vast and complex subject by a distinguished andwidely read senior professor of history at Fudan, one of China's premier universities."C. Schirokauer, Columbia University, Choice (September 2014)"Professor Ge's wide-ranging study is a rare effort, standing alongside earlier landmarks of Chinese intellectual history such as Fung Youlan 's History of Chinese Philosophy and Kung-chuan Hsiao 's History of Chinese Political Thought...the book is an accomplished translation into English of Ge's original Chinese text, with all its citations and complexities of language, among them the use of various philosophical and religious terms whose rendition into English has to be both consistent and readable."Peter Harris, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies (June 2017)"While discussing the complex dynamics of interaction among the intellectual thought of elite scholar...it also illuminates the significance of key issues such as the formation of the Chinese world order and its underlying value system, the origins of Chinese cultural identity and foreign influences." worldtrade.com, "This is a coherent, erudite, undogmatic, thoughtful account of a vast and complex subject by a distinguished andwidely read senior professor of history at Fudan, one of China's premier universities."C. Schirokauer, Columbia University, Choice, "This is a coherent, erudite, undogmatic, thoughtful account of a vast and complex subject by a distinguished andwidely read senior professor of history at Fudan, one of China's premier universities."C. Schirokauer, Columbia University, Choice (September 2014)
Table of Content
Introduction: Chinese Intellectual History Writing Brief Prologue: The History of Chinese Intellectual History ItselfPart One: The History of General Knowledge, Thought and BeliefPart Two: Between the History of Knowledge and the History of ThoughtPart Three: the Foundational Presupposition of Chinese Thought: "Dao" or the "Way of Heaven"Part Four: The Continuity of Intellectual History EmergesPart Five: Historical Memory, Intellectual Resources and ReinterpretationPart Six: Pictures Where There Are No Pictures: How to Deal With Empty Spaces in Intellectual HistoryPart Seven: Addition and Subtraction Methods in Intellectual History ResearchPart Eight: What Can Be A Resource Material for Intellectual History? Chapter One: Tracing the Origins of Chinese Intellectual History in the Three Dynasties (Ancient Times to ca. 6th Century BCE) Brief Prologue: Remote AntiquityPart One: Reconstructing the World of Ancient Thought: Traditional Written Documents, Modern Theory, and Archeological DiscoveriesPart Two: The Shang Conceptual System as Recorded in the Oracle Bone InscriptionsPart Three: Evolution of Thought as Recorded in the Written Documents and Bronze Inscriptions of the Western ZhouPart Four: Chinese Script and Chinese Intellectual HistoryPart Five: Ceremonies, Symbols and A Numerological World Order as the Background of Later Intellectual History Chapter Two: Hundred Schools of the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods, I (ca. 6th to 3rd Century BCE) Brief Prologue: China's "Axial Age"Part One: General Knowledge and Thought in the Spring and Autumn PeriodPart Two: Continuation and Renewal of the Intellectual Tradition I: Ru or the ConfuciansPart Three: Continuation and Renewal of the Intellectual Tradition II: Mo or the MoistsPart Four: Continuation and Renewal of the Intellectual Tradition III: Dao or the DaoistsPart Five: Elite Thought and General Knowledge: Implications of Mantic and Medical Arts in Intellectual History Chapter Three: Hundred Schools of the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods, II (ca. 6th to 3rd Century BCE) Part One: Warring States Hundred Schools Contend, I: Cosmic Space and TimePart Two: Warring States Hundred Schools Contend, II: Social OrderPart Three: Warring States Hundred Schools Contend, III: Life of the IndividualPart Four: Language and Reality: the Warring States Period Disputations on Names Chapter Four: Intellectual Convergence in the Qin and Han Dynasties, from ca. the 3rd Century BCE to ca. the Mid-2nd Century CE Prologue: Coda to the "Hundred Schools of Thought Contending"Part One: General Knowledge Background and Intellectual Achievement in the Qin and Han dynastiesPart Two: Toward A Synthesis of Knowledge and Philosophy: from the Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals to the HuainanziPart Three: Establishment of A State Ideology: from the Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals to the Discourses in the White Tiger HallPart Four: Classics and Apocrypha: the Consequences of Mutual Interaction between General Knowledge and Elite Thought Chapter Five: Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism from the End of the Eastern Han to the Early Tang Dynasty, I (ca. Mid-2nd to Mid-7th Centuries) Prologue: Foreign Influence Enters ChinaPart One: Evolution of Autochthonous Chinese Thought and Learning from Han to JinPart Two: The Mysterious and Profound: A Turning Point of Intellectual History in the Third Century CEPart Three: Purification of Daoist Teachings: the Religionization of Daoist Thought, Knowledge and Techniques Chapter Six: Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism from the Eastern Han to the Tang Dynasty II Part One: the Transmission of Buddhism to China and Its Significance in Intellectual History, IPart Two: the Transmission of Buddhism to China and Its Significance in Intellectual History, IIPart Three: Buddhist Conquest of China?Part Four: Basic Outline of the Mainstream World of Knowledge and Thought in the Seventh CenturyBibliography