Atman in Advaita Vedanta: Variations on a theme from the Principal Upanishads”


YUSA, Michiko (Western Washington University)



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YUSA, Michiko (Western Washington University)
"Topological Existence: Panikkar & Nishida"
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ZHANG, Peter (Grand Valley State University)
Beijing Hot, Beijing Cool”

This article uses McLuhan’s notions of hot and cool as heuristics to advance a critique of the city of Beijing as a living and lived material-symbolic complex. It both extends the applicability of these notions and draws attention to their paradoxical coexistence when the analysis becomes specific. The article ends by calling for a cooler Beijing, a society to come.



The main function of the city as a node is the production of subjectivity.

Félix Guattari (1985, p. 460)


ZHANG, Xi-Wen Verena (Tunghai University, Taiwan)
Space, Architecture, and Meanings in the Italian Renaissance and the Chinese Song Dynasty”
Immanuel Kant in his Critique of the Power of Judgment addresses that “taste can be called sensus communis with greater justice than can the healthy understanding, an that the aesthetic power of judgment rather than the intellectual can bear the name of communal sense.” In the sense, when we gaze the ceremonial space, the Saladei Baroni of the “Castello Aragonese”, why its beautiful star vault astonish us so much? The vault was constructed “about the 85-foot (26-meter)-square space to a height of nearly 92 feet (28 meters).” Its Spanish architect Guillermo Sagrera “transformed the square space into an octagon by constructing squinches in its corners.” He set eight primary ribs springing out of the wall and converging toward a central oculus. In this way, the vault was divided into several harmonious parts in which present a combination of Gothic and ancient styles. It reminds us one of the masterpieces of Renaissance architecture, the Dome of the Cathedral in Florence (1418-1436) which was constructed about 100-foot high (30.5 m), 459-foot diameter (140 m), and

“the diameter of the octagonal crossing meausres nearly 140 feet (43 m), almost as great as the Pantheon in Rome.” The octagonal form of the Dome deviated from the classical hemispherical; Brunelleschi used eight visible ribs and sixteen concealed one—“in a manner similar to the construction of Gothic vaults.” Another kind of transformation of Chinese pagoda from square to octagon is from the Period of Simplicity (ca. 500-900) to the Period of Elaboration (ca. 1000-1300); in the former period, there the square form of one-storied, multi-storied, multi-eaved pagodas prevailed in China. After the end of Tang dynasty, one-storied pagoda disappeared; “the octagonal form became the norm and the square plan the exception.” “The octagonal pagoda which first appeared in the Tomb Pagoda of Ching-tsang in 746...” The term of pagoda may be a kind of southern pronunciation of Chinese “pa-chiao-t’a”—“pa-ko-t’a” meaning “eight-cornered pagoda”. Chinese architect, Liang Ssu-ch’eng in his A Pictorial History of Chinese Architecture mentions: The word “pagoda” instead of “t’a” is deliberately used in this book because it is accepted in all the European languages as the name for such a monument. The very fact that the word finds its way into almost every European dictionary as the name for the Chinese t’a may reflect the popularity of the octagonal plan at the opening of Western contact. It’s hard to say that the Italian Gothic, eight-corner form have any genetic relation to Chinese pagoda. However, we may ask why this form had been prevailing in Europe (France, Spain, Italy...) and in Asia (e.g. India and China). What communal sense this form aroused in human beings? What is the meaning transmitted by this form? What functions of architecture with this form serve for? What’s the relation between space and architecture with this form in the Italian Renaissance Renaissance and in Chinese Song dynasty?


Firstly, this paper aims to answer the above questions and besides, it relates to some theoretical questions proposed by Robert David Sack in his Conceptions of Space in Social Thought: A Geographical Perspective and explores them when connecting with the above questions. Secondly, The meaning of relation between space and architecture may refer to the problem of subjective and objective meaning raised by Immaneul Kant in his Critique of the Power of Judgment on philosophical, aesthetic level. Thirdly, it also relates Talcott Parsons’s theory of social system, especially the relation between political subsystem and society as a whole. In conclusion, this paper tries to compare space, architecture, and meanings in the Italian Renaissance to that in the Chinese Song dynasty through philosophical, geographical, historical and sociological dimensions.
ZHANG, Yue (University of Exeter, UK)
The Scholars’ Garden: A Place of Confucian Rituals and Freedom”
[Subthemes: The Place of the Personal; Place and Culture; Place and the Political]
This paper argues that the Chinese scholars’ garden is a place for developing Confucian personhood and achieving Confucian freedom through ritualistic practices of the arts. Building upon the arguments of Hahm (2001), Li (2010) and Zhuang (2013), the paper challenges conventional understanding of scholars’ gardens as places embodying the Daoist concept of individual, escapist freedom.

The Confucian emphasis on ritual propriety and self-discipline is often considered as the antithesis of the Daoist individual freedom. Hahm (2001) using a Foucaultian perspective, argues that the Confucian practices of self-discipline do not inhibit individual freedom—but rather such practices are indispensable for the proper practice of freedom, which Hahm identifies not with individual freedom, but rather with the creation of a free or better society.


Hahm’s view may be complemented by Li Zehou’s (2010) discussion of the Confucian ideology of ‘rites-music mutuality’ (li yue fu he). Li demonstrates that the Confucian view of self-discipline or ritual propriety is not merely about using external forces (e.g. rites, laws, moral codes) to restrict the body (behaviours), but more importantly, using the means of music (yue) or art – inner forces—to cultivate the body, i.e. to affect one’s inner psyche (emotions, understanding, imagination and ideas) which one’s actions reveal. Music or art, therefore, are not excluded from Confucian rituals, but complement to rites, a quintessential form of Confucian ritual practice. Rites, together with music or art both mould or temper the individual’s psyche and similarly shaped the social order, thus allowing Confucian freedom.

A Chinese scholar’s garden, as I suggest elsewhere (2012, 2015), is a place for practising the arts (e.g. poetry, calligraphy, music) through which Confucian personhood is developed. Reading both Confucian classical texts and scholars’ garden essays, I argue, in light of the above, that a scholars’ garden emerged through the sustained Confucian ritual practices of the arts. Instead of being a place to pursue Daoist individual freedom, the scholars’ garden is a place where the scholar harmonizes both his (rarely her) self and socio-political relations, thus practising freedom in a Confucian or Foucaultian sense—to create a better society.


ZHENG, Dongping, Yang LIU, Daniel HOLDEN, Jared TOMEI (University of Hawai’i)
A Relational Space for Language Learners’ Mobility between Built and Natural Environments”
Language learning in classrooms can imply the reinforcement of abstract rule-learning first and language use in its aftermath. “Place” is a secondary phenomenon, rather than a lived and functional space that is relationally and temporally meaningful.

This paper aims to rethink the function of classrooms, a conventional learning space, to expand the ecology of language learning to natural and sociocultural places where learning while doing on the fly is of a normative practice. In place-based learning, learning materials are used as resources. Learners are brought out of the safe haven as protected by well-defined textbook boundaries, teacher expectations and classroom norms. Learners are forced to encounter strangers, odd things, and texts not written for language learners. The same place offers different features to natives vs. non-native speakers. Perception of place results from cultural experiences, which gives rise to different action potentiality (Chemero, 2009). Being in places extends language to things, signs, actions, and a sense of normativity (dialogical third parties in Linell’s sense (2009). Taking action in places cultivates and attunes learners’ affectivity to care for the world and themselves.


We use examples of language learners’ play of a mobile game, Guardian of Mo‘o locating Hawaiian culture within UH campus diversity and cultural artifacts along the East-West Road. The game was designed using concepts of place, and never-ending perception and action cycles with the affordances of virtual and real world spaces for action taking; and therefore to demonstrate the technologically enabled meshed spaces for language learners’ wayfinding.
ZHENG, Yujian (Lingnan University, Hong Kong)
The Place of the Second Nature in the Diachronic First Nature”
This paper aims at revealing a paramountly important feature of the place of rational beings in the universe, a feature inextricably embedded in natural evolution or cosmological contingent processes that, with no supernatural design, ultimately have produced creatures who can legitimately and inevitably assume the ‘design stance’ to understand almost everything in their environments as well as cosmological history.
To facilitate this aim, I argue for a special notion of modality, i.e., retrospective necessity, that distinguishes itself both from causal/nomological necessity and from conceptual/apriori necessity. It is, in one sense, akin to Kripkean style aposteriori necessity but, in at least two important aspects, irreducibly unique: firstly, it is associated with the ex post facto perspective of an end-product of some multistep lottery-like (natural) games, regardless of the epistemic status of the product; secondly, the objectively attributable retrospective necessity (in a weak sense) to the product’s upstream causal chain would only gain its full logical status when the endogenous product, or surviving species, become epistemic rational beings, beings capable not only of self-legislation in the space of reasons but simultaneously also of normative retrospective endowment/ascription of content to their evolutionary predecessors.
I will conclude the argument with an illuminating comparison of this generic notion of retrospective necessity with the (weak version of) Anthropic Principle in cosmology, with an eye to showing the latter’s special significance in re-enchanting nature as well as our unique place in it.
ZHU, Fengqing (Harbin Institute of Technology, China)
Five Trends in Confucian Studies”

For over a decade, Confucian studies has gone through several evolutions and developments. From 2010 to today,this area has delivered a number of the fine scholars.In this paper, I will analyze and compare five current trends in Confucian studies:


1. Global-Contextualism. Generally ,contextualism means that any system of claims, value, and activities cannot be understood outside of the real cultural context in which they occur. For many scholars, to understand the philosophical background of contextualism is very helpful in exploring the real meanings of these crucial concepts in Confucianism. A modern practice of classical Confucianism requires a contextualist interpretation of the world. As virtue, consequential or normative ethics, Confucianism should be contextualized, globalized, and developed as the moderm way of thinking emphasizing rationality and practice over traditional considerations. For this reason, there has been a dramatic shift toward a more contextualist methodology. Some of these methodologies attempt to reinterpret Confucian thought through the contextualism of globalized sinology.
2. Asian-Modernism. Some scholars disclose in meticulous detail the relevance of Confucianism to the contemporary world. It is popular to divide Confucianism into traditionalist and modernist forms. “New Confucianism” (different from Neo-Confucianism) can be regarded as modernist Confucianism that incorporates modern interpretations and practices for nowadays needs.There have been significant discussion of the intercourse and interaction between Confucian developmentalism and Western models.
3. Asian-Americanism. Asian American have quite recently emerged as an increasingly important force in American politics. Asian American voices have been prominent in policy debates over such matters as education, race relations, and immigration reform.
4. Multi-Comparativism. More and more scholars have tried to construct an effective paradigm for a critical comparativism and multi-comparativism in the field of Confucian studies through Western philosophical hermeneutics. Some of them have provided applicable approaches to study Confucian through new or contemporary comparativism. We may reveal the development and main tendencies of new type of comparativism.
5. Classical-Textualism. Some scholars lean to “classical textualism.” “Classical textualism” demands rigid adherence to the Confucian text, and stresses that Confucianism can be understood only by interpreting the original words of the Confucian classics. Conservative scholars advocate an historical understanding of words, and the liberal ones prefer a more modern understanding of words. More and more scholars attempt to adopt the “classical textualism” or integral, complete and comprehensive textualism to overcome the fragmented textualism they believe is distoring original Confucian teachings.
I will offer an overview of these five trends revealing how each of them comprise a significant movement in Confucian studies. In addressing each, I will provide certain theoretical critiques and the responses to those critiques. The main thrust of this issue is to examine the simlarities and differences among those scholarly inquiries as well as to justify those research programs that are debatable, controversial, and even confusing.

In each movement I have in effect discussed certain types of challenges against “orthodox prejudice,” and also compared and contrasted them through a philosophical perspective. The significance of those trends is two-fold: it argues for a new stage in the development of contemporary Confucian studies, and it extends the Confucius thought to Western scholars and people.








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