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  1.  55
    (1 other version)Confucianism and Human Rights.Wm Theodore de Bary & Tu Weiming (eds.) - 1999 - Columbia University Press.
    Is the Confucian tradition compatible with the Western understanding of human rights? Are there fundamental human values, regardless of cultural differences, common to all peoples of all nations? At this critical point in Communist China's history, eighteen distinguished scholars address the role of Confucianism in dealing with questions of universal human rights.
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  2.  19
    Chinese Philosophy: A Synoptic View.Tu Weiming - 1991 - In Eliot Deutsch & Ronald Bontekoe, A Companion to World Philosophies. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 1–23.
    The ideal Chinese thinker is a scholar‐official who is informed by a profound historical consciousness, well seasoned in the fine arts of poetry, lute and calligraphy, and deeply immersed in the daily routine of government. If philosophy is loosely defined as disciplined reflection on insights, Chinese philosophy is distinguished in its commitment to and observation of the human condition. It is a disciplined engaged reflection with insights derived primarily from practical living. The Chinese thinker, unlike the Greek philosopher, the Hebrew (...)
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  3. A Spiritual Turn in Philosophy.Tu Weiming - 2012 - Journal of Philosophical Research 37 (9999):389-401.
    An exposition of the core Confucian text, the Analects, is a rich resource for thinking philosophically about aesthetics, ethics, and religion. Indeed, the Analects is an inspiration for doing philosophy as a dialogical, rather than a dialectic, dialogue and an edifying conversation. The four integrated dimensions of Confucian humanism as embodied in Confucius’ “anthropocosmic” philosophy encompass the sacredness of earth, body, family, community, and the world. Specifically, it envisions that the full realization of the way of learning to be human (...)
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  4. Beyond the "enlightenment mentality" : an anthropocosmic perspective.Tu Weiming - 2014 - In Fred Reinhard Dallmayr, M. Akif Kayapınar & İsmail Yaylacı, Civilizations and world order: geopolitics and cultural difference. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
     
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  5.  62
    Special Topic: Creativity in Christianity and Confucianism: Creativity: A Confucian View.Tu Weiming - 2007 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 6 (2):115-124.
    By focusing on the Confucian ideal of forming one body with Heaven, Earth, and myriad things, I argue that the distinctive feature of Chinese cosmology is not the absence of cosmogonist concerns, but faith in the interconnectedness of all modalities of being as the result of the continuous creativity of the cosmic process.
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