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Zhu Xi and the Instrumental Value of Nature

Issue: Vol 10 No. 1 (2016) Contested Space and Value in Confucian Environmental Ethics

Journal: Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture

Subject Areas: Religious Studies

DOI: 10.1558/jsrnc.v10i1.11474

Abstract:

The dominant approach to Confucian environmental ethics advances an ontology of interrelatedness as the necessary basis upon which a Confucian environmental ethic can be built. Proponents of this approach base their arguments on the value of a transformation of consciousness that follows from a perception of the unity between the self and things in the universe, a view common within the Neo-Confucianism of the Lu-Wang school. Tu Weiming and Mary Evelyn Tucker, for example, turn to the metaphysics and cosmology of Wang Yangming to illustrate this uniļ¬ed vision. This assertion, though, is predicated on the realization of sagehood. This approach fails to account for how the ordinary human being can possibly attain such a vision of the interrelatedness of ‘the myriad things’. The philosophy of Zhu Xi contributes a more practical and effective basis for the development of a Confucian environmental ethic that both resonates with new approaches to Western environmental ethics and can aid in the development of a values-based program of environmental education for the Chinese cultural sphere.

Author: Seth D. Clippard

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