Abstract

e paper aims at discussing the ecological implications of the understanding of the human being in the Classical Chinese thought. The study consists of three main parts. In the first one, the peculiarities of the Chinese thought as a philosophy of dynamism are discussed. I argue that in contrast to the Western thought, where the main ontological question is connected with the issue of essence and the epistemological approach is based on the opposition of subject and object, the Chinese thought reveals reality in terms of dynamism, where the most important concepts are these of processes, relations and transformations. In the second part, I analyse the place of human beings in this dynamic universe in terms of three different perspectives: (i) their relations; (ii) their actions/interactions; and (iii) their value. I point out that it is the harmony that could be defined as the most privileged position in the Chinese universe. In the third part, I discuss two main kinds of ecologically wise behaviour of human beings that are in accordance with the dynamic nature of the universe: (i) the Confucian idea of the outer harmonisation of the human society with the patterns of transformation in the Universe and (ii) the Daoist idea of the inner achievement of the pivot of transformation within oneself. In the conclusion, I outline the idea that the combination of inner and outer activity of harmonisation with reality could be used as an example of wise ecological behaviour and attitude to nature. The work on the paper is part of an individual project “Perception of Eastern Teachings in Europe” funded by the European Union through the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Action, Horizon 2020, grant No. 753561.

Highlights

  • One of the main problems of our time is the ecological crisis

  • While Daoism enters the deepest levels of world transformations, to the zero point of its becoming, Confucians observes the level of manifestation and reveal the patterns according to which the flow of the universe is unfolding: "Changes follow the rules (準) of Sky and Earth

  • Combining inner and outer activity of harmonisation with reality, the Classical Chinese thought, which is most of all a guide for behaviour, prescribes such an attitude to nature that might be used as an example of wise ecological behaviour and could serve for the development of an ecological consciousness

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Summary

Introduction

One of the main problems of our time is the ecological crisis. It is regarded as a result of “certain economic, political and social factors”, and as “a moral and spiritual crisis whose resolution requires a wider philosophical and religious understanding of ourselves as natural beings embedded in cycles of life and dependent on ecosystems” The processes in it are not isolated per se, but are in mutual connections, simultaneously transforming and changing each other: “Daoists do not think in terms of essences, entities or ideas, but in terms of relations, functions, and influences”

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