2022/08/02

The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy Contents

 The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy

William Edelglass (ed.), Jay L. Garfield (ed.)

Published: 23 May 2011

Abstract

This book provides a set of introductions to each of the world's major non-European philosophical traditions. It offers the non-specialist a way into unfamiliar philosophical texts and methods and the opportunity to explore non-European philosophical terrain and to connect their work in one tradition to philosophical ideas or texts from another. Sections on Chinese philosophy, Indian philosophy, Buddhist philosophy, East Asian philosophy, African philosophy, and recent trends in global philosophy are each edited by an expert in the field. Each section includes a general introduction and a set of articles written by scholars, designed to provide a broad overview of a major topic or figure.


Keywords: philosophical traditions, Chinese philosophy, Indian philosophy, Buddhist philosophy, East Asian philosophy, African philosophy, global philosophy, Eurocentrism, academic philosophy, philosophical texts

Subject Philosophy

Series Oxford Handbooks

Contents

Contributors 

Introduction

William Edelglass and Jay L. Garfield

Part I Chinese Philosophy

Chinese PhilosophyChenyang Li

1 The Yijing: The Creative Origin of Chinese PhilosophyChung-Ying Cheng

2 Classical Confucianism I: ConfuciusPeimin Ni

3 Classical Confucianism II: Mencius and ZunziManyul Im

4 Daoism: Laozi and ZhuangziLiu Xiaogan

5 Major Rival Schools: Mohism and LegalismChris Fraser

6 Chinese Buddhist Philosophy Brook Ziporyn

7 Neo-ConfucianismJohn Berthrong

8 Contemporary Confucianism Shu‐hsien Liu

Part II Non-Buddhist Indian Philosophy

Non-Buddhist Indian PhilosophyNalini Bhushan

9 Nyāya-vaiśeṣika PhilosophyAmita Chatterjee

10 SāṃKhya-YogaGet T. S. Rukmani

11 MĪmāṃsāGet Dan Arnold

12 VedāntaGet John Taber

13 Jain PhilosophyGet Jeffery D. Long

14 Anglophone Philosophy In Colonial India Nalini Bhushan

Part III Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy

15 Indo-Tibetan Buddhist PhilosophyWilliam Edelglass and Jay L. Garfield

16 Madhyamaka in India and TibetJohn Dunne

17 YogācāraJohn Powers

18 Buddhist Epistemology (pramāṇavāda)Tom J. F. Tillemans

19 Buddhist Thought in Tibet: an Historical IntroductionMatthew T. Kapstein

20 DzogchenAnne Carolyn Klein

21 Buddhist EthicsBarbra R. Clayton

Part IV Japanese and Korean Philosophy

Japanese and Korean PhilosophyKoji Tanaka

22 Japanese EthicsRobert E. Carter

23 Japanese Aesthetics and Philosophy of ArtMara Miller

24 Natural Freedom: Human/Nature Nondualism in Japanese ThoughtBret W. Davis

25 The Philosophy of Zen Master Dōgen: Egoless PerspectivismBret W. Davis

26 Nishida Kitarō: Self, World, and the Nothingness Underlying DistinctionsJohn C. Maraldo

27 Korean Buddhist PhilosophyJin Y. Park

Part V Islamic Philosophy

ExpandReintroducing Islamic Philosophy: The Persisting Problem of “Smaller Orientalisms”Tamara Albertini

Expand28 The Hellenizing PhilosophersAndrey Smirnov

Expand29 Philosophy of IlluminationHossein Ziai

Expand30 SufismErik S. Ohlander

Expand31 Islamic TheologyEric Ormsby

Expand32 Muslim JurisprudenceRobert Gleave

Part VI Philosophy in Africa and the African Diaspora

Philosophy in Africa and the African Diaspora

Albert Mosley and Stephen C. Ferguson

Expand33 Africana Philosophy: Prospects and PossibilitiesTsenay Serequeberhan

Expand34 African PhilosophyBarry Hallen

Expand35 Afro-Caribbean PhilosophyClevis Headley

Expand36 African American Philosophy: A General Outline John H. McClendon and Stephen C. Ferguson

Expand37 Race in Contemporary PhilosophyAlbert Mosley

Expand38 Affirmative ActionRodney C. Roberts

part VII Recent Trends in Global Philosophy

Recent Trends in Global PhilosophyCynthia Townley

Expand39 Global FeminismChristine M. Koggel

Expand40 Native American PhilosophyAdam Arola

41 Indigenous Environmental PhilosophyWorkineh Kelbessa

Expand42 CosmopolitanismGillian Brock

Expand43 ReparationsJ. Angelo Corlett