Philosophical enactment and bodily cultivation in early Daoism: in the matrix of the Daodejing

In Philosophical Enactment and Bodily Cultivation in Early Daoism, Thomas Michael illuminates the formative early history of the Daodejing and the social, political, religious, and philosophical trends that indelibly marked it. This book centers on the matrix of the Daodejing that harbors a penetrat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michael, Thomas 1966- (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Published: London Bloomsbury Academic 2024
In:Year: 2024
Edition:Paperback edition
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Laozi, Dao de jing / Taoism / Reception / Physical culture / Phenomenology / History of ideas
RelBib Classification:AB Philosophy of religion; criticism of religion; atheism
BM Chinese universism; Confucianism; Taoism
Further subjects:B Asian History
B Asia / China / HISTORY
B Asiatische Geschichte
B Taoism
B Taoism (see also PHILOSOPHY / RELIGION / Taoist)
B China
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Parallel Edition:Electronic
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Summary:In Philosophical Enactment and Bodily Cultivation in Early Daoism, Thomas Michael illuminates the formative early history of the Daodejing and the social, political, religious, and philosophical trends that indelibly marked it. This book centers on the matrix of the Daodejing that harbors a penetrating phenomenology of the Dao together with a rigorous system of bodily cultivation. It traces the historical journey of the text from its earliest oral circulations to its later transcriptions seen in a growing collection of ancient Chinese excavated manuscripts. It examines the ways in which Huang-Lao thinkers from the Han Dynasty transformed the original phenomenology of the Daodejing into a metaphysics that reconfigured its original matrix, and it explores the success of the Wei-Jin Daoist Ge Hong in bringing the matrix back into its original alignment. This book is an important contribution to cross-cultural studies, bringing contemporary Chinese scholarship on Daoism into direct conversation with Western scholarship on Daoism. The book also concludes with a discussion of Martin Heidegger s recognition of the position and value of the Daodejing for the future of comparative philosophy
ISBN:1350236691