Freedom, Liberalism, Confucian Political Thought, and Their Respective Political Problems
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Freedom, Liberalism, Confucian Political Thought, and Their Respective Political Problems
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JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY OF JINAN (Social Science Edition)Vol. 32, Issue 5, Pages: 15-28(2022)
作者机构:
山东社会科学院,山东 济南 250002
作者简介:
基金信息:
DOI:
CLC:D0
Published:15 September 2022,
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Song ZHANG. Freedom, Liberalism, Confucian Political Thought, and Their Respective Political Problems. [J]. JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY OF JINAN (Social Science Edition) 32(5):15-28(2022)
DOI:
Song ZHANG. Freedom, Liberalism, Confucian Political Thought, and Their Respective Political Problems. [J]. JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY OF JINAN (Social Science Edition) 32(5):15-28(2022)DOI:
Freedom, Liberalism, Confucian Political Thought, and Their Respective Political Problems封面论文
quite a number of Confucian intellectuals like to link Confucianism with liberalism. But strictly speaking
these Confucian intellectuals don't even really have a solid understanding of liberalism. They have always considered liberalism from an ethical and moral point of view
but never considered that liberalism is a purely modern political idea whose core elements are the affirmation of the fundamental natural rights of the individual
and the Constitutionalism that regulates positive law and neutral purely technical judicial procedures to protect this fundamental right. As far as Confucianism is concerned
because of the special emphasis on the social ethical structure in the feudal hierarchical order
the individual in the Confucian tradition has always been understood in terms of ethical relations rather than in terms of the existence of the individual as the subject of action. In the corresponding Confucian moral concept
the individual is actually in a state of self-disintegration that looks quite noble but is actually selfless. It determines that those core elements of liberal political thought do not exist and cannot exist in the Confucian tradition. In this case
it is pointless to compare liberalism with some literal far-fetched aspects of the Confucian text to illustrate the modern meaning of Confucianism. From the liberal point of view
it is individualistic. However
this individualism stems from the essential characteristics of fundamental rights themselves and the ideological perspective that affirms them. Thus
although liberalism carries with itself many fundamentally theoretical problems
some of which are still controversial and intractable
these problems are always not ethical and moral
but political. Therefore
it is impossible to expect to use Confucian ethical and moral models to deal with these problems as modern Confucian intellectuals do.