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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Margus OttPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic ISBN: 9781350424142ISBN 10: 1350424145 Pages: 232 Publication Date: 22 August 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments 1. Introduction 1.1. Contextualizing and Decontextualizing Thought 1.2. Roots of Embodiment Theory (ET) 1.3. Chinese Traditions and ET 1.4. Content Summary 2. Embodiment 2.1. Tenets of Disembodiment 2.2. Embodiment 2.3. Embeddedness 2.4. Enactment 2.5. Extendedness 2.6. Affectivity 2.7. Emergence 2.8. Self-relation 2.9. Other-relation 2.10. Implicitness 2.11. Guidance by Example 2.12. Singularities and Intensities 2.13. Embodied Disembodiment 2.14. Meaning of Disembodiment 2.15. Conclusion 3. Background 3.1.Greek Socio-political Background 3.2.Chinese Socio-political Background 3.3. Ritual Background 3.4. Rituals as Contextualizing 3.5. Kurankos 3.6. Hasidic Traditions 3.7. Ritual Knowledge 3.8. Conclusion 4. Embodied Foundations: Confucius ?? 4.1. Embodied 4.2. Singular and Ordinary 4.3. Embedded 4.4. Flexibility 4.5. Enacted 4.6. Extended 4.7. Other-relation 4.8. Emotive 4.9. Implicitness 4.10. Emergence 4.11. Ease and Joy 4.12. Self-cultivation 4.13. Conclusion 5. Mohist Disembodied Reaction: Mozi 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Disembodied Standards 5.3. Extension of Subjectivity: All-inclusive Care 5.4. Meritocracy 5.5. Explicitness 5.6. Conclusion 6. Legalist Disembodied Reaction: Han Feizi 6.1. Introduction 6.2. Laws 6.3. General and Explicit 6.4. Generality of Basic Preferences: Third-person View 6.5. Staying “cool” 6.6.New, Decontextualized Civic Morality 6.7. Objectivity, Quantity 6.8. Conclusion 7. A Confucian Development of Embodiment: Record of Music (Yueji) 7.1. Mencius 7.2. Xunzi 7.3. Record of Music 7.4. Emotions 7.5. Return to One’s Body: Individual Transformation of Emotions 7.6.Social Embeddedness: Collective Transformation of Emotions 7.7.Ontology of Energy and Veins 7.8.Self-cultivation According to Energy and Veins 7.9.Enacted Knowledge 7.10. Music and Rituals: integration and differentiation 7.11. Free Space 7.12. Simplicity and Ease 7.13. Cosmic Purport 7.14. Conclusion 8. A Daoist Development of Embodiment: Zhuangzi 8.1. Introduction 8.2. A “knack” 8.3. Stages of Practice 8.4. Danger of Mechanical Mind in Extended Cognition 8.5. Other-relation 8.6. Transformation 8.7. Sitting and Forgetting 8.8. Free Roaming 8.9. Knowing with Non-knowing 8.10. Zhuangzian Ideas as Reflection on a Skill 8.11. Zhuangzi and Decontextualization 8.12. Conclusion 9. Conclusion Notes References IndexReviewsMargus Ott critically examines traditional Western epistemologies, noting their abstract, decontextualizing nature, and contrasts them with Chinese philosophy. He explores how knowledge intertwines with embodied context, revealing how transcending physical forms can lead to an integrated understanding of body and mind, offering alternative ways of experiencing and being in the world. * Jana S. Rošker, Professor of Chinese Philosophy, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia * Embodiment Theory and Chinese Philosophy breathes life into the early Chinese traditions through the lens of embodiment theories. Ott’s multifaceted analysis resists a universalised account of the Chinese traditions, thereby providing rich, nuanced and novel insights. Here is Chinese philosophy, embodied. * Kayn Lai, Professor of Philosophy, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia * Margus Ott’s Embodiment Theory and Chinese Philosophy breaks new ground by showing how Chinese thought is embodied, embedded, and affective, rather than disembodied, decontextualized, and contemplative. Ott’s wide-ranging approach skillfully synthesizes not only Chinese and Western philosophy but also discoveries in anthropology and cognitive science, giving us an exciting new perspective on ancient texts and their relevance to the modern world * Bryan W. Van Norden, James Monroe Taylor Chair in Philosophy, Vassar College, USA * Margus Ott critically examines traditional Western epistemologies, noting their abstract, decontextualizing nature, and contrasts them with Chinese philosophy. He explores how knowledge intertwines with embodied context, revealing how transcending physical forms can lead to an integrated understanding of body and mind, offering alternative ways of experiencing and being in the world. * Jana S. Rošker, Professor of Chinese Philosophy, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia * Embodiment Theory and Chinese Philosophy breathes life into the early Chinese traditions through the lens of embodiment theories. Ott’s multifaceted analysis resists a universalised account of the Chinese traditions, thereby providing rich, nuanced and novel insights. Here is Chinese philosophy, embodied. * Kayn Lai, Professor of Philosophy, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia * Margus Ott critically examines traditional Western epistemologies, noting their abstract, decontextualizing nature, and contrasts them with Chinese philosophy. He explores how knowledge intertwines with embodied context, revealing how transcending physical forms can lead to an integrated understanding of body and mind, offering alternative ways of experiencing and being in the world. * Jana S. Rošker, Professor of Chinese Philosophy, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia * Author InformationMargus Ott is a researcher at Tallinn University, Estonia. He has performed previous research in Taiwan and Xiamen with the National Taiwan University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |