Series Editors' Foreword | vii | ||
Translator's Preface | ix | ||
Introduction: The Humanist View | 1 | ||
Chapter One: Retrospect and Prospect for Contemporary Chinese Thought | 17 | ||
Chapter Two: Resolving the Tension between Tradition and Modernity: Reflections on the May Fourth Cultural Tide | 41 | ||
Chapter Three: The May Fourth Tide and Modernity | 79 | ||
Chapter Four: Radicalism in the Cultural Movement of the Twentieth Century | 89 | ||
Chapter Five: Modern Chinese Culture and the Difficulties of Confucian Learning | 109 | ||
Chapter Six: Liang Shuming's Early View of Oriental and Western Culture | 127 | ||
Chapter Seven: The Establishment and Development of Feng Youlan's View of Culture | 163 | ||
Chapter Eight: A Reflection on the New School of Principle and Thoughts on Modernity | 203 | ||
Chapter Nine: Confucian Thought and the World of Modern East Asia | 221 | ||
Chapter Ten: Confucian Ethics and China's Modernisation | 233 | ||
Chapter Eleven: East Asian Tradition according to Modernisation Theory | 255 | ||
Chapter Twelve: A Sense of Predicament and Inter-Dependency | 271 | ||
Chapter Thirteen: Liang Shuming and Max Weber on Chinese Culture | 285 | ||
Chapter Fourteen: Values, Authority, Tradition and Chinese Philosophy | 315 | ||
Chapter Fifteen: The Difficulty of Undertaking National Studies Research in the Nineties: The Problem of the National Studies Fever and Research into Traditional Culture | 331 | ||
Chapter Sixteen: The Value and Status of Traditional Chinese Culture | 349 | ||
Postscript: Talking of Tradition at the Turn of the Century | 355 | ||
Postface to the Revised Edition | 361 | ||
Bibliography | 369 | ||
Index | 381 |