「confucian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

confucian

1語右で並び替え

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  • Like other Korean Confucian academies, Dosan Seowon serves two purposes:
  • is also home to several buddhist temples and Confucian academies.
  • nal architectural layout compared with later Confucian academies.
  • When the Confucian Academy was first established, funding was e
  • represented the ongoing struggle between the Confucian and Buddhist elements in Korean society.
  • Hirata frequently expressed hostility to the Confucian and Buddhist scholars of the day, advocating
  • y to the emperor and was fiercely xenophobic Confucian anti-Buddhism was the cause for example of h
  • For those who still practice the traditional Confucian approach to ethics and social morality, the
  • Confucian art is art inspired by the writings of Confu
  • Confucian art may be distinguished between: classical
  • Korean Confucian art took strong hold with the Yi generals wh
  • Confucian art originated in China, then spread westwar
  • e emphasizing markedly Daoist ideas over his Confucian background.
  • developed a practical blending of Shinto and Confucian beliefs and practices.
  • ist, Christian,or Buddhist and still profess Confucian beliefs.
  • f Zen monasteries such ordeals as studies in Confucian canon and writings of the Song Confucian sch
  • rom the Classic of Rites, a core text of the Confucian canon.
  • ourist attraction and also preserves ancient Confucian ceremonies, which are conducted on a regular
  • curriculum was expanded from its core in the Confucian classics to include training in classical Ja
  • By age 12, Yang Shou understood the Confucian classics well, and was good at writing poetr
  • He was said to be well versed in the Confucian Classics as a child.
  • y BC was the period when new versions of the Confucian classics were discovered.
  • nd stayed there for four years, studying the Confucian classics, among other subjects, just as many
  • The work is not one of the traditional six Confucian classics, but rather the embodiment of Confu
  • He therefore, at the examinations, made the Confucian classics, histories, and qieyun references a
  • taken to supporting himself as a teacher of Confucian classics.
  • es was to decide on an interpretation of the Confucian classics.
  • ects include Japanese, Korean and Vietanmese confucian classics.
  • ilers of the Analects of Confucius and other Confucian classics.
  • ayperson, letting his hair grow and teaching Confucian classics.
  • yu and Zhuang Youke, experts on the study of Confucian classics; Zhuang Datian, leader of a peasant
  • A Confucian Confusion (1994)
  • The name of the party, qinmin, has Confucian connotations.
  • The Korean Confucian curriculum was grounded the Chinese educatio
  • nd only son of a landowner, he grew into the Confucian custom, guided by strict social order of the
  • Chinese Dart or Confucian Dart, Potanthus confucius
  • ucius, commonly known as the Chinese Dart or Confucian Dart, is a butterfly belonging to the family
  • Equipped with the traditional Confucian degree of xiucai or "accomplished scholar",
  • This writing was a reinterpretation of the Confucian doctrines.
  • m the Manchu family of Hega, Ying received a Confucian education.
  • He fused Confucian ethics and concepts from the Yijing (The Boo
  • omoting the "Great Teaching" - consisting of Confucian ethics and Shintoism - scholar Heinrich Dumo
  • Kim devoted himself to Confucian ethics, promulgating gahun (family principle
  • psychology and Chinese ethics, in particular Confucian ethics.
  • g-hsi), whom he later described as a "stern, Confucian father" with "some soft spots in his heart."
  • e of Christianity against the accusations in Confucian heterodoxy, attacking the White Lotus teachi
  • Confucian historians condemned the emperor Qin Shi Hua
  • official dynastic history broke with the old Confucian historiographical tradition, and established
  • having argued that the sadaejuui inherent in Confucian historiography served
  • influence every dynasty afterwards, and the Confucian ideal of a rule without laws was never again
  • The text attempts to synthesise native Confucian ideals with Buddhist teachings and was proba
  • Since Confucian ideals proposed the perfectibility of all hu
  • ong argued that Korea had become weakened by Confucian ideals.
  • The Reform began with land reform, based on Confucian ideas and philosophies from China, but the t
  • o mind the prophetic scriptures (chanwei) of Confucian imperial ideology and Daoist talismans studi
  • Confucian influence on western art has been limited.
  • as however, greatly appreciated later by the Confucian inspired Yuan Emperor Renzong.
  • Social reasons: Confucian intellectuals such as Han Yu railed against
  • Buddhist kingdom of Goryeo and establishing Confucian Joseon.
  • of Qin with what was to become the standard Confucian judgment of the reasons for Qin's collapse.
  • ion consisted mainly of the study of Chinese Confucian literature and derivative works such as Haga
  • er with Zhang Junmai, issued in 1958 the New Confucian Manifesto consolidating their beliefs and dr
  • "Comments of a Recluse"), which endorsed the Confucian model of government.
  • According to Confucian moral standards, loyalty to one's family, fr
  • ed this practice, and many other elements of Confucian moralist history, seeking to describe histor
  • shamans, Muslim ahongs, Buddhist monks, and Confucian moralists.
  • elements of Chinese history and the basis of Confucian morality.
  • i writes that by combining Daoist ideas with Confucian ones, Zhang's poem "heralded the metaphysica
  • orld peace from an Eastern perspective", and Confucian peace specifically.
  • ues that his songs raised in Taiwan, such as Confucian pedantry and urban emptiness.
  • cholarly work has related to the Chinese New Confucian philosopher Tang Junyi.
  • (1803) was a scathing attack on the works of Confucian philosopher Dazai Shundai (1680-1747) on Bud
  • Mou Zongsan - Chinese New Confucian philosopher.
  • ity in studies on Xunzi, one of the greatest Confucian philosophers in ancient China.
  • erience a significant shift in academics and Confucian philosophical ideologies.
  • against authorities but as an application of Confucian philosophy to society.
  • From the point of view of Confucian philosophy, one of the purposes of marriage
  • nnected Lin Biao and other ousted leaders to Confucian policies, accusing them of following his phi
  • nued to insist on his decision, favoring the Confucian principle of primogeniture; and Ieshige cont
  • e method of self-strengthening envisioned by Confucian reformers of the late nineteenth century.
  • As an advocate of Confucian reforms, attacking Xiongnu and lessening the
  • Centrality and commonality: An essay on Confucian religiousness.
  • sicians, dancers, and scholars would perform Confucian rituals, such as the Jongmyo Daeje (Royal Sh
  • He is also one of eighteen Korean Confucian sages who have been enshrined in the Korean
  • g about the Way had already been said by the Confucian Sages.
  • ning for the Chinese community, and housed a Confucian sanctuary and primary school.
  • ed to enshrine the memorial tablet of a wise Confucian scholar and to commemorate him as well as to
  • ed by other scholars in the Han Dynasty as a Confucian scholar (rujia).
  • Gi Dae-Seung (1527~1572), Confucian scholar
  • She married the Confucian scholar Rui Ru.
  • he was instrumental in the conversion of the Confucian scholar Hsi to Christianity.
  • amed after Nishiyama Sessai, an 18th-century Confucian scholar during Japan's Edo period.
  • An Hyang (1243-1306) was a leading Confucian scholar born in Yeongju in present-day South
  • Choe Chung (984-1068) was a Korean Confucian scholar and poet of the Haeju Choe clan duri
  • e was put under the protection and advice of Confucian scholar Arai Hakuseki.
  • Zhu Xi, Zhao Qi, and Qing Dynasty Confucian scholar Jiao Xun believed that Mencius wrote
  • estioned directly by Japanese politician and Confucian scholar Arai Hakuseki.
  • 1567 by Yi Do-u to enshrine Kim Jong-jik, a Confucian scholar and politician who was native to Mir
  • He was originally a Confucian scholar of high reputation, but converted to
  • Yun Jeung (1629-1714) was a Korean Confucian scholar from the Papyeong Yun clan during th
  • He was also a Confucian scholar, and was a patron of Kumazawa Banzan
  • conflicted with Kim Bu-sik, a China-oriented confucian scholar.
  • ucius as well as Choe Chiwon and Seol Chong, Confucian scholars of the Unified Silla period (668-93
  • considered to be the work of the Han Dynasty Confucian scholars and contains about 30,000 Chinese c
  • known as Haedonggongja, one of the greatest Confucian scholars and writers during the Goryeo Dynas
  • considered to be one of the most influential Confucian scholars of seventeenth century Japan, and t
  • mi Akira was a member of the Hayashi clan of Confucian scholars, each of whom were ad hoc personal
  • i Jussai was a member of the Hayashi clan of Confucian scholars, each of whom were ad hoc personal
  • He was a member of the Hayashi clan of Confucian scholars.
  • was born in Linzi prefecture to a family of Confucian scholars.
  • would become an influential force in further Confucian scholarship in Japan.
  • sm" in English referring to the Song Dynasty Confucian school ought to be termed "meso-Confucianism
  • At the same time, for the Confucian School of Thought, Interactions between Heav
  • Today, the landscape of Confucian schools, temples, places of ancestral worshi
  • Dongmyo, a Confucian shrine in Seoul.
  • In 1304 he founded the Confucian shrine Munmyo.
  • or Sung Kyun Kwan Munmyo) is Korea's primary Confucian shrine ("munmyo" is also the general Korean
  • at includes Naesam inner gate, Daeseongjeon ( Confucian shrine hall), east and west Mu.
  • al rank, and his mortuary tablet housed in a Confucian shrine as well as in the shrine of King Seon
  • er who died trying to turn Joseon into ideal Confucian society) as the embodiments of seonbi spirit
  • A single woman in a Confucian society, her works show her to be independen
  • According to the orthodox viewpoint of Confucian society, love was not supposed to be a basis
  • perhaps his greatest work was the 1230-page Confucian Statecraft and Korean Institutions: Yu Hyong
  • It is recorded that Confucian students in the year 730 were required to wr
  • were at first narrowly defined as schools of Confucian studies for the cultivation of the samurai e
  • The Confucian Temple of Changhua
  • The Temple of Confucius, is a Confucian temple in Changhua in Taiwan.
  • isciples of Confucius and their place in the Confucian temple can be found at Disciples of Confuciu
  • Shanghai Confucian Temple was first founded during the Yuan Dyn
  • itution of the county, as in ancient times a Confucian Temple was typically a combination of temple
  • ly and public Taoist and Buddhist temples, a Confucian temple, and even a Japanese Shinto Shrine.
  • The gate of Tainan's Confucian Temple.
  • Shams al-Din constructed numerous Confucian temples in Yunnan, and promoted Confucian ed
  • there are estimated to have been over 3,000 Confucian temples in existence.
  • Each year at Qufu and at many other Confucian temples a ceremony is held on September 28 t
  • u of the Ming dynasty to decree that all new Confucian temples should contain only memorial tablets
  • visiting Yasukuni Shrine to Chinese visiting Confucian temples, and claimed that the Nanking Massac
  • Sage Learning of Liu Zhi: Islamic Thought in Confucian Terms (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asi
  • For the ancient Chinese Confucian text, see I Ching.
  • The Rescript also contains a number of Confucian themes including "proper respect to superior
  • tion" (1985), his first attempt to develop a Confucian theory of ethical argumentation and moral ep
  • litical thought as a classic illustration of Confucian theory.
  • He rejected much of the Buddhist and Confucian thinking prevailing in Edo period Japan.
  • Strong elements of Confucian thought still exist in day-to-day administra
  • There were many accretions to the body of Confucian thought, both immediately and over the mille
  • , which was a central concept in traditional Confucian thought, doesn't exist independently, being
  • ced by Plato and Hegel as well as by earlier Confucian thought.
  • r-Khans (Emperors), who at the same time had Confucian titles and patronized Buddhist establishment
  • hile the memorial is designed as a classical Confucian tomb with an ancestral temple, a spirit way,
  • for Dinh's continued insurgency was that the Confucian tradition allows for a loyal official to dis
  • Korean flower arrangement is part of the Confucian tradition.
  • mous names and childhood names, arose out of Confucian tradition.
  • Ethics in the Confucian Tradition: The Thought of Mengzi and Wang Ya
  • The movement represented a resort to moral Confucian traditions as a means of arriving at fresh m
  • d resistance by appealing to the widely held Confucian value of monarchical loyalty.
  • This novel reflects Confucian values that were prominent at the time it wa
  • However, Confucian values arguably still have an immense influe
  • ficial who thought it important to implement Confucian values and principles to government administ
  • In the Confucian view, it may be interpreted on the importanc
  • Seonbis were supposed to possess Confucian virtues of filial piety and loyalty to the k
  • all person") does not grasp the value of the Confucian virtues and seeks only immediate gains.
  • (Berthrong, Transformations of the Confucian Way).
  • On the one hand, he was a traditionalist Confucian, who believed in filial piety and loyalty to
  • able elements of this art are calligraphy of Confucian writings and thoughts, often contained withi
  • Because of this, most of Ansai's Neo Confucian writings tended to be publications of Zhu Xi
  • The Confucian Xun Zi strongly criticized Shen Buhai's emph