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From Being to Living : a Euro-Chinese lexicon of thought [Minkštas viršelis]

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This new English translation of François Jullien’s work is a compelling summation of his thinking on the comparison and divergences between Western and Chinese thought. Jullien argues that Western thinking is preoccupied with the question of ‘being’, whereas Chinese thought concerned itself principally with that of ‘living’.

Organised as a lexicon around some 20 concepts that juxtapose Chinese and Western thought, including propensity (vs causality), receptivity (vs freedom), maturation (vs modelisation),between (vs beyond) and resource (vs truth). Jullien explores the ways the two traditions have evolved, and how many aspects of Chinese thought developed in isolation from the West, revealing a different way of relating to the world and the fault lines of western thinking.

An important book for students and scholars throughout the social sciences.

This new English translation of François Jullien’s work is a compelling summation of his thinking on the comparison between Western and Chinese thought. The title, From Being to Living, summarises his essential point: that western thinking is obsessed by – and determined as well as limited by – the notion of Being, whereas traditional Chinese thought was always situated in Living.
Translator's Introduction vii
Acknowledgements ix
I Propensity (vs Causality)
1(6)
II Potential of Situation (vs Initiative of the Subject)
7(6)
III Receptivity (vs Freedom)
13(8)
IV Reliability (vs Sincerity)
21(7)
V Tenacity (vs Will)
28(8)
VI Obliquity (vs Frontality)
36(8)
VII Indirectness (vs Method)
44(7)
VIII Influence (vs Persuasion)
51(6)
IX Coherence (vs Meaning)
57(8)
X Connivence (vs Knowledge)
65(5)
XI Maturation (vs Modelisation)
70(6)
XII Regulation (vs Revelation)
76(8)
XIII Silent Transformation (vs Resonant Event)
84(6)
XIV Evasive (vs Assignable)
90(7)
XV Allusive (vs Allegorical)
97(7)
XVI Ambiguous (vs Equivocal)
104(10)
XVII Between (vs Beyond)
114(9)
XVIII Surge (vs Settled)
123(10)
XIX Non-Postponement (vs Delaying Knowledge)
133(9)
XX Resource (vs Truth)
142(32)
Subject/Situation: On a Branching-off of Thought Note of the Seminar 2013-2014
153(21)
Afterword: From Divergence to the Common
174(32)
To philosophise is to diverge
174(2)
The well-known unknown
176(2)
Divergence versus difference
178(4)
Defend the fertilities and not the identities of cultures
182(4)
Not to compare but to reflect
186(3)
From the anthropology of differences to a philosophy of divergence
189(3)
To philosophise from outside
192(3)
Thinking with Chinese thought
195(6)
To promote commonality from divergences
201(1)
A net of divergences: from the question of Being to the thought of living
202(4)
Bibliography 206(3)
Index 209
Michael Richardson is Lecturer in Sociology at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), London