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The Bloomsbury Handbook of Global Justice and East Asian Philosophy: Bloomsbury Handbooks

Editat de Dr Janusz Salamon, Hsin-Wen Lee
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 sep 2024
Breaking out of the dominance of Anglo-American scholarship, this volume centralises East Asian philosophical traditions to explore cross-cultural perspectives in the field of global justice studies. By bringing together diverse traditions of thinking about justice that contrasts East Asian and Western thinkers' traditions, it avoids the shortcomings of narrow and one-sided conceptualisations of global justice.A range of contributors from East Asia, Europe, and the US who are conversant with both Western and East Asian philosophical traditions provide a rich engagement with contemporary issues relating to global justice. The book opens with a section devoted to the methodological challenges specific to cross-cultural approaches to justice, including the universalism/particularism debate and the conditions of the possibility of cross-cultural comparisons. Part II explores how major East Asian philosophical traditions-including Confucianism, Legalism, Daoism and Buddhism-consider issues related to global justice. The essays in Part III adopt a cross-cultural and/or comparative perspective on justice, enabling the readers to appreciate similarities and differences between the East Asian and Western perspectives on justice, and to appreciate cultural variation. Key applied issues in global justice, such as epistemic injustice, human rights, women's rights, nationalism, religious pluralism, coercion, corruption and post-colonial justice, receive full consideration in the final section of this indispensable reference work for understandings of global justice in East Asia specifically and cross-culturally.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350327467
ISBN-10: 1350327468
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 169 x 244 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Handbooks

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Explores issues of global justice through core East Asian philosophical traditions of Confucianism, Legalism, Daoism and Buddhism

Notă biografică

Hsin-Wen Lee is Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Delaware, USA.Janusz Salamon is Associate Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.

Cuprins

Part I GLOBAL JUSTICE: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUESChapter 1. Considerations on the Methodology of Comparative Justice, James Babb (University of Tokyo, Japan)Chapter 2. A 'Global' Global Justice Theory Matters, Thom Brooks (Durham University, UK) Chapter 3. A Tentative Chinese Theory of Justice through Philosophical Grammatical Investigation into the "Deviation" of "Zhengyi" from "Justice", Liangjian Liu (East China Normal University, China) Chapter 4. Pragmatism and Human Rights, Jon Mandle (University at Albany, SUNY, USA)Chapter 5. Human Rights and China: A Problem of Politics, Not Culture, Heiner Roetz (University of Bochum, Germany)Part II GLOBAL JUSTICE: EAST ASIAN PERSPECTIVESChapter 6. Justice and Moral Cultivation in Early Confucianism, Erin M. Cline (Georgetown University, USA)Chapter 7. Global Justice from A Confucian Perspective, Sor-Hoon Tan (Singapore Management University, Singapore)Chapter 8. Vulnerability and Equality: a Confucian Perspective of Global Justice, Kuan-Min HUANG (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)Chapter 9. Whose Tian Xia?-Zhao Tingyang's "Tianxia System" vs. Confucian New Tian Xia Model, Tongdong Bai (Fudan University, China)Chapter 10. Benevolent Absolutism, Confucianism, and International Justice, Zhuoyao Li (St. John's University) Chapter 11. Shu, Sympathy, and Global Justice: A Critique of the Doctrine of Tianxia, Roy Tseng (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)Chapter 12. A Critique of Justice: How Dao Engages in The Social and Political World, Robin R. Wang (Loyola Marymount University, USA) and Daniel Sarafinas (East China Normal University, China)Chapter 13. Classical Chinese Legalism and Global Justice, Gordon B. Mower (Brigham Young University, USA) Part III GLOBAL JUSTICE: CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVESChapter 14. East Asian and Western Images of Communal Order and the Problematics of Global Justice, Aaron Stalnaker (Indiana University Bloomington, USA)Chapter 15. Global Justice from a Communitarian Perspective, Ranjoo Herr (Bentley University, USA)Chapter 16. A Cosmopolitan Defense of a Moderate Cosmopolitanism, Charles A. Goodman (Binghamton University, USA)Chapter 17. China and USA: One Ethics or Two? James P. Sterba (University of Notre Dame, USA)Chapter 18. No Global Justice Without Global Solidarity: Agathological Recognition and Global Value Pluralism, Janusz Salamon (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)Part IV GLOBAL JUSTICE: APPLIED ISSUESChapter 19. Global Justice and Corruption, Gillian Brock (University of Auckland, New Zealand)Chapter 20. Global Rectificatory Justice, Göran Collste (Linköping University, Sweden)Chapter 21. Cultural Nationalism-A Survey of Four Strategies, Hsin-Wen Lee (University of Delaware)Chapter 22. Labour, Leisure, and Global Gender Justice, Alison M. Jaggar (University of Colorado at Boulder, USA)Chapter 23. Coercion, Legitimacy, and Justice: A Defense of Coercion Accounts of Justice's Grounds, Nicole Hassoun (Binghamton University, USA)