Ignorance is Bliss: The Chinese Art of Not Knowing

Mieke , Matthyssen


anglais | 17-06-2022 | 408 pages

9783030739041

Livre de poche


134,81€

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Couverture / Jaquette

This book examines the popular, yet puzzling, Chinese saying Nande hutu ¿¿¿¿ to uncover how the ancient Chinese wisdom of not knowing is constructed, interpreted, practiced and valued in contemporary society.Originating in the calligraphy of Qing-dynasty scholar Zheng Banqiao, Nande hutu translates literally as: ¿hard to attain muddle-headedness¿. Mieke Matthyssen traces the historical development of this saying and related philosophies to reveal a culturally conditioned, multi-layered inclination to different forms of not knowing. In contemporary society, she argues, this inclination forms part of a living art: in some respects, a passive, evasive strategy for self-preservation; in other respects, a strategy for coping with intrapersonal, interpersonal and social complexities. Drawing on an extensive range of primary sources and original research, the analysis skillfully combines philosophical and socio-historical analysiswith theory from Chinese philosophy, philosophical psychology and the relatively new field of indigenous psychology, to provide an in-depth understanding of how Nande hutu has shaped, and continues to shape, the Chinese psyche and behaviour. This book will appeal to all readers looking for fresh insights into Chinese culture, and in particular to students and scholars of Chinese and Asian studies, cultural and social anthropology, and philosophical and indigenous psychology.

Note biographique

Mieke Matthyssen is a lecturer in the Department of Chinese Studies at Ghent University, Belgium. Her research interests focus on the intellectual history and contemporary interpretation of traditional Chinese philosophies of life, health strategies and indigenous psychology. She has published in journals such as Contemporary Chinese Thought and Journal of Asian History.

Fonctionnalité

Suggests how the art of not knowing might be an aid to increased wellbeing in an age of information overload

Examines how the ancient Chinese wisdom of not knowing is discursively constructed, interpreted, practiced and valued in contemporary society

Offers a thorough and original discussion of the philosophy of Nande hutu by tracing its socio-historical, philosophical and cultural development in China

Table des matières

1. Introduction: The Chinese Art of Not Knowing.- 2. The Daoist Sage Fool and the Confucian Learned Man.- 3. The Art of Not Knowing: A Scholar's Paradox.- 4. The Modern Wisdom of Playing Dumb.- 5. The Wisdom of Playing Dumb in Practice.- 6. The Psycho-Social Appeal of the Wisdom of Playing Dumb.- 7. The Moral Code of Playing Dumb.- 8. Conclusion: The Culture of Vagueness in Transition.- 9. Postscript: Hutu at the Crossroads of Knowledge and Information (Louise Sundararajan).



Détails

Code EAN :9783030739041
Auteur(trice): 
Editeur :Springer International Publishing-Springer International Publishing-Springer International Publishing
Date de publication :  17-06-2022
Format :Livre de poche
Langue(s) : anglais
Hauteur :210 mm
Largeur :148 mm
Epaisseur :23 mm
Poids :526 gr
Stock :Impression à la demande (POD)
Nombre de pages :408
Mots clés :  Applied Philosophy; Chinese cosmology; Chinese politics; Chinese psychology; Daoism; Folk Psychology; Indigenous Psychology; Nande hutu; Tao Yuanming; Zheng Banqiao; confucianism; su dongpo