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First published online March 21, 2013

Creating Modern Chinese Metaphysics: Feng Youlan and New Realism

Abstract

Feng Youlan (1895–1990), a preeminent philosopher of twentieth-century China, tried to build a modern Chinese metaphysics that was at once universal and based on a structure of traditional Chinese concepts such as li/principles and qi/vital energy. His intellectual borrowings included New Realism, an early twentieth-century school of philosophy that attempted to provide a scientific basis for metaphysics. New Realism’s affirmation of the objectivity of a priori logical relationships in the universe enabled Feng to construct a metaphysical structure of philosophy in China without becoming bogged down in the debate of the priority of practice over principle in Chinese history. While most published work has treated Feng’s famous “negative method” as the “more Chinese” part of his work in contrast to his writings influenced by New Realism, this article argues that Feng’s logical/metaphysical construct of philosophy in China sought to build a metaphysical discourse of experience by employing both a logical/analytical and a “negative” nonverbal method resembling Chan Buddhist practices.

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Biographies

Xiaoqing Diana Lin is an associate professor of history at Indiana University Northwest. She is completing an intellectual biography of Feng Youlan.

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Published In

Article first published online: March 21, 2013
Issue published: January 2014

Keywords

  1. Feng Youlan
  2. Chinese metaphysics
  3. consciousness
  4. experience
  5. New Realism

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Xiaoqing Diana Lin
Indiana University Northwest, Gary, IN, USA

Notes

Xiaoqing Diana Lin, Department of History, Indiana University Northwest, 3400 Broadway, Gary, IN 46408, USA. Email: [email protected]

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