
Mind And Body In Early China Critiques Orientalist Accounts Of Early China As The Radical, Holistic Other. The Idea That The Early Chinese Held The Strong Holist View, Seeing No Qualitative Difference Between Mind And Body, Has Long Been Contradicted By Traditional Archeological And Qualitative Textual Evidence. New Digital Humanities Methods, Along With Basic Knowledge About Human Cognition, Now Make This Position Untenable. A Large Body Of Empirical Evidence Suggests That Weak Mind-body Dualism Is A Psychological Universal, And That Human Sociality Would Be Fundamentally Impossible Without It. Edward Slingerland Argues That The Humanities Need To Move Beyond Social Constructivist Views Of Culture, And Embrace Instead A View Of Human Cognition And Culture That Integrates The Sciences And The Humanities. Our Interpretation Of Texts And Artifacts From The Past And From Other Cultures Should Be Constrained By What We Know About The Species-specific, Embodied Commonalities Shared By All Humans. This Book Also Attempts To Broaden The Scope Of Humanistic Methodologies By Employing Team-based Qualitative Coding And Computer-aided Distant Reading Of Texts, While Also Drawing Upon Our Current Best Understanding Of Human Cognition To Transform Our Basic Starting Point. It Has Implications For Anyone Interested In Comparative Religion, Early China, Cultural Studies, Digital Humanities, Or Science-humanities Integration.
This book investigates whether the early Chinese philosophical tradition truly lacked a distinction between mind and body, or if this perception is a byproduct of flawed Orientalist scholarship. Edward Slingerland, a scholar of early Chinese thought, utilizes a combination of traditional textual analysis and modern digital humanities methodologies to challenge the prevailing academic narrative of radical holism. By integrating findings from cognitive science, he argues that weak mind-body dualism is a universal psychological trait essential to human sociality, thereby necessitating a shift in how humanities scholars interpret historical artifacts and texts.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant methodological intervention that bridges the gap between cognitive science and traditional sinology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the rigorous, data-driven approach applied to long-standing philosophical questions.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190842318
ISBN-13:
9780190842314
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