
Podcast
History of Philosophy in India
252
32
Peter Adamson teams up with Jonardon Ganeri, Chike Jeffers, and Karyn Lai to represent the philosophical traditions of ancient India, Africa and the African diaspora, and classical China. Website: www.historyofphilosophy.net.
Peter Adamson teams up with Jonardon Ganeri, Chike Jeffers, and Karyn Lai to represent the philosophical traditions of ancient India, Africa and the African diaspora, and classical China. Website: www.historyofphilosophy.net.
HPC 53. A Worm Riding Clouds: Standards, Strategy and Power in the Han Feizi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The Han Feizi and its “three pillars” of Legalist philosophy: fa (standards), shu (strategy), and shi (positional power).
22:51
HPC 52. The Empire State: the Qin Dynasty
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
Was the short-lived Qin empire, which unified China to put an end to the Warring States period, Legalism in action?
18:07
HPC 51. Standard Bearers: What is “Legalism"?
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The “fa-thinkers” Shang Yang and Han Feizi encourage the rigorous application of “standards,” including law, reward, and punishment.
21:11
HPC 50. Bryan Van Norden on Warring States Philosophy
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
To celebrate reaching 50 episodes in this series, Karyn and Peter both chat to a leading scholar of Warring States philosophy.
59:14
HPC 49. Hans-Georg Moeller on the Zhuangzi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
An interview on humor and amoral ethics in a Daoist classic, the Zhuangzi - and its relation to Confucianism and Legalism.
28:30
HPC 48. Off the Beaten Path: Wandering in the Zhuangzi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
How is it possible to walk two roads simultaneously? And where does wandering lead us?
16:24
HPC 47. Live and Let Die: the Zhuangzi on Death
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
Why does the Zhuangzi tell us that death is nothing to fear, to the point that it recommends celebrating the death of loved ones?
18:21
HPC 46. Turning the Tables: Confucius in the Zhuangzi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
How are we to make sense of the different images of Kongzi (Confucius) in the Zhuangzi?
18:23
HPC 45. Practice Makes Perfect: Skill Stories in the Zhuangzi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
In addition to sages who show us the way, the Zhuangzi features people taking on daily activities such as woodworking and butchering: we discuss how these figures serve as counterpoints to officials in the Zhuangzi’s time.
20:43
HPC 44. Like a Fish Out of Water: Animal Stories in the Zhuangzi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The many stories about animals in the Zhuangzi encourage us to adopt a perspective that goes beyond the human point of view.
18:38
HPC 43 Chiu Wai-Wai on the Zhuangzi and Mohism
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
An interview on debates over language and reasoning between the Mohists and the Daoist classic, the Zhuangzi.
32:40
HPC 42. A Black and White World: the Zhuangzi on Shi-Fei Dogmatism
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The Zhuangzi’s critique of dogmatic approaches to argumentation and governing the state.
18:56
HPC 41. To Speak or Not to Speak: Skepticism in the Zhuangzi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
We introduce the second great classic of Warring States Daoism, the Zhuangzi, and ask whether it adopts a position of radical skepticism.
23:26
HPC 40. Antiheroes: Sunzi’s Art of War
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
Are the methods of warfare proposed in the famous Art of War an example of “applied Daoism”?
18:42
HPC 39. Robin Wang on Yin-Yang Thinking
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
An interview on the pervasive use of the yin-yang relational pair in classical Chinese thought generally, and in Daoism in particular.
42:27
HPC 38. Easy Does It: Non-Action in the Laozi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The concept of wuwei or “non-action”: does it mean that the perfect sage or political ruler simply never does anything?
23:38
HPC 37. She Stoops to Conquer: Femininity in the Laozi
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
How the Laozi (Daodejing) applies the lessons of complementarity to the contrast between male and female.
16:45
HPC 36. Fishing for Complements: Polarities in Daoism
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The significance of the Laozi’s use of opposing pairs, which are treated as complementary rather as exclusive dichotomies.
17:48
HPC 35. Way Better than Greenwashing: Daoism on Nature
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
How the Laozi (Daodejing) applies the lessons of complementarity to the contrast between male and female.
21:30
HPC 34. You Don’t Say! the Dao That Cannot Be Told
Episode in
History of Philosophy in India
The first rule of dao is: don’t talk about dao. We do so nonetheless, focusing on its role in metaphysics and language.
23:31
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