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In an age of relentless competition, self-branding, and growing social isolation, we face a pressing question: how can we stop seeing only ourselves and start seeing others? How can we build genuine relationships and communities without losing our sense of self?
The Art of Seeing Beyond Oneself explores these questions through the lens of Confucian humility, which offers an alternative to the pervasive culture of excessive self-centeredness found across societies.
Rather than calling for self-denial, it shows how we can begin by respecting others and in doing so, find our proper place in a shared life--it presents humility as a practice for restoring connection in a fragmented world. Doil Kim offers a philosophical reconstruction of Confucian humility, bridging classical textual analysis with insights from cultural psychology and comparative philosophy to clarify its distinctive nature and broader ethical significance. Confucian humility, conceived as a distinctive mode of self-lowering, presents a different vision: it cultivates a form of personhood that resists self-centered impulses and fosters genuine attention to others, enabling deeper connection across relationships, communities, and the broader world.
Far from being a relic of the past, Confucian humility offers a timely response to the rise of extreme individualism, egoism, and the ethos of isolated survival, shaped by relentless competition and the imperative of self-commodification in contemporary society. It is not mere self-regulation but an active art of ethical living, helping individuals resist both withdrawal into the self and the drive to dominate others, and enabling them to position themselves more appropriately within a broader relational and sociopolitical context. When appeals to reason and empathy fall short, Confucian humility may illuminate a more enduring and sustainable path toward coexistence.
List of contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction: Confucian Humility as a Virtuous Manifestation of Self-Lowering
- Chapter 2: Tracing the Origin of Humility in Early Chinese Thought
- Chapter 3: Confucian Humility in Medieval Thought та: Inner Refinement through Non-Dwelling and No-Self
- Chapter 4: Confucian Humility in Medieval Thought тб: Sociopolitical Realization through Gentle Adaptability
- Chapter 5: Unmasking Contemporary Misconceptions About Confucian Humility
- Chapter 6: Comparative Perspectives on Self-Lowering in East and West
- Chapter 7: Rearticulating Confucian Humility in Comparative Perspective
- Chapter 8: Conclusion: Humility for All in Contemporary Life
About the author
Doil Kim is Associate Professor in the Department of Confucian Studies, Eastern Philosophy, and Korean Philosophy at Sungkyunkwan University in Korea. He serves as the director of the Institute of Confucian Philosophy and Culture, the Center for the Contemporary Study of East Asian Classics and Critical Confucianism, and as editor of the
Journal of Confucian Philosophy and Culture.