- Lu-Wang
school by
people who wish to
emphasize the
influence of Lu Jiuyuan.
Xinxue was seen as a
rival to the
Lixue school sometimes called the Cheng-Zhu school...
-
contributed in
various newspapers like
Jiuguo Jiangyan Zhoubao (救國講演周報) and
Xinxue Bao (新學報) to
awaken Chinese people from old traditions.
These articles were...
-
Period (simplified Chinese: 新学伪经考;
traditional Chinese: 新學偽經考; pinyin:
Xinxue weijing kao) is a book
written by Kang
Youwei that
critiques the Confucian...
- Neo-Confucianism Wang Yangming, most
influential proponent of "state of mind." (
Xinxue [zh]) Laozi, the semi-mythical
founder of
Taoist school.
Zhuang Zhou, said...
- Lu
Jiuyuan (Chinese: 陸九淵; pinyin: Lù Jiǔyuān; 1139–1192), or Lu
Xiangshan (陸象山; Lù Xiàngshān), was a
Chinese philosopher and
writer who
founded the school...
- (see: Xunzi). This line of
thinking reached its most
extreme iteration in
xinxue, a form of Neo-Confucianism ****ociated with the Ming
Dynasty and Wang Yangming...
-
Shingaku (心学, lit. "heart learning") or Sekimon-shingaku (石門心学) is a ****anese
religious movement,
founded by
Ishida Baigan and
further developed by Teshima...
- Wei; Jiang, Yunxi; Zhou, ****min; Hu, Xun; Du, Zhimin; Wang, Xueqin; Liao,
Xinxue (February 2018). "Environment-wide ****ociation
study to
identify novel factors...
- Wang
Shouren (Chinese: 王守仁, 26
October 1472 – 9
January 1529),
courtesy name Bo'an (Chinese: 伯安), art name
Yangmingzi (traditional Chinese: 陽明子; simplified...
-
apparent in Wu's
later writings and
exerted an
influence on the
development of
xinxue [zh] 心學 (the
School of the Mind and Heart) in the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing...