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The Moral Mind: Metaphor and Meaning in Early China

Explore metaphors' significance and philosophical meaning in early Chinese texts through an analytic and imagistic approach, shedding light on cultural perceptions and cognitive capacities in Eastern and Western thought.

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The Moral Mind: Metaphor and Meaning in Early China

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  1. The Moral Mind:Metaphor and Meaning in Early China Edward Slingerland Professor of Asian Studies Canada Research Chair in Chinese Thought and Embodied Cognition University of British Columbia

  2. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse

  3. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse analytic philosophical approach “imagistic” approach

  4. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach

  5. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach • metaphor as figure of speech, philosophically insignificant

  6. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach • metaphor as figure of speech, philosophically insignificant • reduce any metaphors noted in early Chinese texts to literal equivalents • (ideally) to a set of propositions that can be formally modeled

  7. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach • “imagistic” approach

  8. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach • “imagistic” approach • take metaphor as an irreducible bearer of philosophical meaning

  9. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach • “imagistic” approach • take metaphor as an irreducible bearer of philosophical meaning • texts can only be understood by focusing on, unpacking specific metaphors and images deployed

  10. Metaphor in early Chinese discourse • analytic philosophical approach • “imagistic” approach • take metaphor as an irreducible bearer of philosophical meaning • texts can only be understood by focusing on, unpacking specific metaphors and images deployed • Oshima, Allinson, Munro

  11. Significance of analytic vs. imagistic divide

  12. Significance of analytic vs. imagistic divide • strong view

  13. Significance of analytic vs. imagistic divide • strong view • weaker view

  14. Significance of analytic vs. imagistic divide • strong view • weaker view • weakest view

  15. Significance of analytic vs. imagistic divide • strong view • weaker view • weakest view **

  16. Strong view • divide represents fundamentally different ways of thought

  17. Strong view • divide represents fundamentally different ways of thought • logical, analytical, abstract mode is particularly “Western” mode of discourse / thought

  18. Strong view • divide represents fundamentally different ways of thought • logical, analytical, abstract mode is particularly “Western” mode of discourse / thought • metaphor, analogy, image-thinking is a unique feature of “Chinese” or “Eastern” thought

  19. Strong view • divide represents fundamentally different ways of thought • logical, analytical, abstract mode is particularly “Western” mode of discourse / thought • metaphor, analogy, image-thinking is a unique feature of “Chinese” or “Eastern” thought • Wu Kuang-ming, Roger Ames, François Jullien • Very common in secondary literature in modern East Asia

  20. Strong view • problem: absolutely wrong

  21. Strong view • problem: absolutely wrong • metaphor, analogy employed in all of the world’s known philosophical traditions

  22. Strong view • problem: absolutely wrong • metaphor, analogy employed in all of the world’s known philosophical traditions • early Chinese perfectly capable of many “Western” philosophical tricks: • distinguishing reality from appearance • engaging in logical analysis (Harbsmeier) • defining terms (e.g., Xunzi) • making “arguments” (Gentz, Loy)

  23. Strong view • bigger problem: “neo-Orientalism”

  24. Neo-Orientalism

  25. Neo-Orientalism

  26. Strong view • bigger problem: “neo-Orientalism” • reifying very complex and diverse cultural traditions into monolithic wholes

  27. Strong view • bigger problem: “neo-Orientalism” • reifying very complex and diverse cultural traditions into monolithic wholes • reiterate specific claims about “the Orient” as classic Orientalists, but with normative flip (“flipped Orientalism”) • not “slavish” or infantile, but precisely the medicine we alienated Westerners need

  28. Strong view • bigger problem: “neo-Orientalism” • reifying very complex and diverse cultural traditions into monolithic wholes • reiterate specific claims about “the Orient” as, e.g., Hegel, but with normative flip • not “slavish” or infantile, but precisely the medicine we alienated Westerners need • heirs to Voltaire, Leibniz

  29. Weaker view • Both Western and Chinese philosophers used metaphors

  30. Weaker view • Metaphor / analogy universal human cognitive capacity

  31. Weaker view • Metaphor / analogy universal human cognitive capacity • but, viewed and utilized very differently in the different traditions

  32. Weaker view • Metaphor / analogy universal human cognitive capacity • West: remains suspicious of metaphor, never takes conflation of ontological domains seriously

  33. Weaker view • Metaphor / analogy universal human cognitive capacity • West: remains suspicious of metaphor, never takes conflation of ontological domains seriously • China: embraces metaphor, sees “convergence” of ontological realms, fully “lives” in the metaphor

  34. Weaker view • Metaphor / analogy universal human cognitive capacity • West: remains suspicious of metaphor, never takes conflation of ontological domains seriously • China: embraces metaphor, sees “convergence” of ontological realms, fully “lives” in the metaphor • Sarah Allan, Jean-Paul Reding • [Pauline Yu]

  35. Weaker view • Problem

  36. Weaker view • Problem • takes Western philosophers self-conception at face value

  37. Weaker view • Problem • takes Western philosophers self-conception at face value • in fact, Western philosophers / scientists /politicians / etc. have always taken, and continue to take, their metaphors quite seriously

  38. Weaker view • Problem • takes Western philosophers self-conception at face value • in fact, Western philosophers / scientists /politicians / etc. have always taken, and continue to take, their metaphors quite seriously • Lakoff & Johnson 1999 on philosophers • Hesse 1966, Brown 2003, Dunbar 1999 & 2001 on scientists

  39. Weaker view • Problem • takes Western philosophers self-conception at face value • in fact, Western philosophers / scientists /politicians / etc. have always taken, and continue to take, their metaphors quite seriously • Lakoff & Johnson 1999 on philosophers • Hesse 1966, Brown 2003, Dunbar 1999 & 2001 on scientists • the “convergence of ontological domains” is an everpresent feature of Western intellectual life

  40. Weaker view • Problem (alternate take)

  41. Weaker view • Problem (alternate take) • accepts idea of clear distinction between literal and metaphorical

  42. Weaker view • Problem (alternate take) • accepts idea of clear distinction between literal and metaphorical • in turn, involves taking seriously the “objectivist” or “representational” model of the language / world relationship

  43. Weaker view • Problem (alternate take) • accepts idea of clear distinction between literal and metaphorical • in turn, involves taking seriously the “objectivist” or “representational” model of the language / world relationship • abstract, amodal concepts mapping on to clearly marked categories in the world

  44. Weaker view • Problem (alternate take) • accepts idea of clear distinction between literal and metaphorical • in turn, involves taking seriously the “objectivist” or “representational” model of the language / world relationship • abstract, amodal concepts mapping on to clearly marked categories in the world • reasoning involves logical, algorithmic manipulation of these concepts

  45. Weaker view • Problem (alternate take) • accepts idea of clear distinction between literal and metaphorical • in turn, involves taking seriously the “objectivist” or “representational” model of the language / world relationship • abstract, amodal concepts mapping on to clearly marked categories in the world • reasoning involves logical, algorithmic manipulation of these concepts • this model of human cognition is becoming increasingly empirically untenable

  46. Weakest (or strongest) view

  47. Weakest (or strongest) view • all humans think in images, metaphors, analogies

  48. Weakest (or strongest) view • all humans think in images, metaphors, analogies • traditional Western conceit to get completely beyond this is nothing more than a conceit

  49. Weakest (or strongest) view • all humans think in images, metaphors, analogies • traditional Western conceit to get completely beyond this is nothing more than a conceit • leads Western thought down some strange alleyways

  50. Weakest (or strongest) view • all humans think in images, metaphors, analogies • traditional Western conceit to get completely beyond this is nothing more than a conceit • leads Western thought down some strange alleyways • Chinese thought did not come to center around such a conceit

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