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Book Chapter: Paradoxes in the School of Names

TitleParadoxes in the School of Names
Authors
Issue Date2020
PublisherSpringer
Citation
Paradoxes in the School of Names. In Fung, YM (Ed.), Dao Companion to Chinese Philosophy of Logic, p. 285-307. Cham, Switzerland : Springer, 2020 How to Cite?
AbstractIn the Chinese tradition, the earliest and most well-known paradoxes are ascribed to figures associated with the “School of Names” (ming jia 名家), a diverse group of Warring States thinkers who shared an interest in language, logic, and metaphysics. Their investigations led some of these thinkers to propound various puzzling, paradoxical statements that seem intended to highlight fundamental features of reality or subtleties in semantic relations between words and things. This chapter interprets and discusses paradoxes associated with Deng Xi, Yin Wen, Hui Shi, Gongsun Long, and other dialecticians as recorded in three major sources, the Xunzi, Zhuangzi, and Gongsun Longzi. Many of the paradoxes twist commonsense distinctions of sameness or difference or exploit how judgments of similarity or difference are sensitive to changes in scale or perspective. In some cases, paradoxes “separate hard from white,” or treat different, compresent features of things as separate entities, as if we were to treat the hardness and whiteness of a white stone as two distinct objects. Several paradoxes seem to follow from properties of the “dimensionless,” a pre-Han term referring to a geometric point.
DescriptionChapter 16
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/236512
ISBN
Series/Report no.Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy
Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy ; v. 12

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorFraser, CJ-
dc.date.accessioned2016-11-25T00:54:25Z-
dc.date.available2016-11-25T00:54:25Z-
dc.date.issued2020-
dc.identifier.citationParadoxes in the School of Names. In Fung, YM (Ed.), Dao Companion to Chinese Philosophy of Logic, p. 285-307. Cham, Switzerland : Springer, 2020-
dc.identifier.isbn9783030290313-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/236512-
dc.descriptionChapter 16-
dc.description.abstractIn the Chinese tradition, the earliest and most well-known paradoxes are ascribed to figures associated with the “School of Names” (ming jia 名家), a diverse group of Warring States thinkers who shared an interest in language, logic, and metaphysics. Their investigations led some of these thinkers to propound various puzzling, paradoxical statements that seem intended to highlight fundamental features of reality or subtleties in semantic relations between words and things. This chapter interprets and discusses paradoxes associated with Deng Xi, Yin Wen, Hui Shi, Gongsun Long, and other dialecticians as recorded in three major sources, the Xunzi, Zhuangzi, and Gongsun Longzi. Many of the paradoxes twist commonsense distinctions of sameness or difference or exploit how judgments of similarity or difference are sensitive to changes in scale or perspective. In some cases, paradoxes “separate hard from white,” or treat different, compresent features of things as separate entities, as if we were to treat the hardness and whiteness of a white stone as two distinct objects. Several paradoxes seem to follow from properties of the “dimensionless,” a pre-Han term referring to a geometric point.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherSpringer-
dc.relation.ispartofDao Companion to Chinese Philosophy of Logic-
dc.relation.ispartofseriesDao Companions to Chinese Philosophy-
dc.relation.ispartofseriesDao Companions to Chinese Philosophy ; v. 12-
dc.titleParadoxes in the School of Names-
dc.typeBook_Chapter-
dc.identifier.emailFraser, CJ: fraser@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.authorityFraser, CJ=rp01221-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/978-3-030-29033-7_16-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85103737180-
dc.identifier.hkuros270604-
dc.identifier.spage285-
dc.identifier.epage307-
dc.publisher.placeCham, Switzerland-

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