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This book investigates the various meanings of forgetting and their ethical dimension in the Daoist classic
Zhuangzi.
It responds to recent scholarship in the study of the ethics of forgetting, which has only emerged within the past two decades in the wake of the widespread memory-studies of the late 20th century. This book accomplishes two goals: First, it assimilates insights from contemporary scholarship, and specifically applies Ricoeur's three areas of ethical examinations of forgetting, to the study of the
Zhuangzi. It addresses a wide range of ethical themes related to acts of forgetting, such as the meaning of well-being and healing, the issue of personal identity and relational autonomy, the norm of spontaneity, naturalness and suitability, the capacities for being empathic, altruistic and responsive to others, and the values of accommodation, receptivity and all-inclusive friendliness. Second, it places forgetfulness in the wider context of the
Zhuangzi's ethical inquiry, and offers a novel understanding of this age-old notion and its exegetic tradition, bringing them into dialogue with Western philosophy and contributing to contemporary discourse on the ethics of forgetting.
As the first book to present a comprehensive examination on the ethical dimension and meanings of forgetting or forgetfulness in the Daoist philosophy of the
Zhuangzi, this monograph will be of interest to researchers in Asian philosophy, religion and culture, moral philosophy or ethics, the study of memory and forgetting, and comparative or cross-cultural philosophy and ethics.
List of contents
Introduction; Chapter 1. A Critical Survey of Recent Scholarship on Human Forgetting and Its Ethical Dimension; Chapter 2. Therapeutic Forgetting in the
Zhuangzi; Chapter 3. Forgetting Oneself or Personal Identity in Relation to Time and Otherness; Chapter 4. The Ethical Dimension of Forgetting at the Social-Institutional Level (I): The Conception of Responsiveness to Others in Relation to Forgetting Oneself; Chapter 5. The Ethical Dimension of Forgetting at the Social-Institutional Level (II): The Zhuangzian Capacity for Responsiveness to Others; Chapter 6. From Suitableness and the Forgetting of Invariable Norms, to Patient-Centeredness and Altruistic Elements; Chapter 7. Empathic Capacity in the
Zhuangzi and How It Works with the Forgetting of Oneself; Chapter 8. Forgetfulness and Friendship in the
Zhuangzi and in Derrida; Epilogue: Answers to Two Questions about Forgetting;
Bibliography; Index
About the author
Youru Wang is Professor in the Department of Philosophy and World Religions, Rowan University, USA. He is the author of
Linguistic Strategies in Daoist Zhuangzi and Chan Buddhism: The Other Way of Speaking (Routledge/Curzon, 2003),
Historical Dictionary of Chan Buddhism (Rowman & Litlefield 2017), the editor of
Deconstruction and the Ethical in Asian Thought (Routledge 2007) and the co-editor of
Dao Companion to Chinese Buddhist Philosophy (Springer 2019).