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This critical biography presents Confucius through the lens of Chinese scholarship, offering perspectives often overlooked in Western academic discourse. Published through a collaboration between Penn State University Press and Nanjing University Press, this volume provides direct access to scholarly analysis from Chinese academics examining one of history's most influential philosophers.
The text appears in both Chinese and English, making this volume accessible to bilingual readers and scholars studying Chinese philosophy in its original linguistic context. This dual-language presentation preserves the nuance of Chinese philosophical terminology while providing English translation for broader accessibility.
Western academic inquiry into Chinese philosophy has traditionally dominated scholarly conversation, often bypassing critical work produced by Chinese scholars themselves. This volume addresses that gap by presenting Chinese academic analysis of Confucius's philosophical contributions, intellectual development, and historical significance. The scholarship offers fresh assessments grounded in Chinese intellectual traditions and contemporary Chinese academic methodology.
This biography belongs to the Collection of Critical Biographies of Chinese Thinkers, a series examining prominent figures in Chinese philosophy including Laozi, Mozi, and Chen Liang. Each volume in this series provides unique access to Chinese scholarly work on essential Chinese philosophical figures, bridging the gap between Eastern and Western academic discourse.
Authored by Zhou Qun and published by Nanjing University Press in partnership with Penn State University Press, this paperback serves as a scholarly resource for students, researchers, and readers interested in Chinese philosophy, Eastern philosophy, and biographical studies of historical philosophers. The critical approach examines Confucius's thinking within its historical context while engaging with contemporary philosophical analysis.
Throughout history, the thinking of Western Europe and America has often dominated scholarly conversation, even on objects of study outside of those cultures. Thus Western academic inquiry into Chinese philosophy, for example, from Confucius and Laozi to Mozi and Chen Liang, has rarely engaged with scholarly work from China itself. This has been the West's great loss. Penn State University Press is pleased to have entered into an agreement with Nanjing University Press to allow greater access to the critical work of Chinese scholars concerning prominent Chinese thinkers. These volumes, all displaying the text in both Chinese and English, offer unique, fresh, and provocative assessments of these essential Chinese philosophical and intellectual figures.