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Confucian Political Philosophy for Non-Confucians

  • Ralph Weber
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  • Institute for European Global Studies, University of Basel, Gellertstrasse 27, 4020 Basel, Switzerland

Published date: 15 Dec 2015

Copyright

2014 Higher Education Press and Brill

Abstract

Contemporary proponents of Confucian political philosophy often ignore the fact that any sizeable future Confucian political order will have to accommodate many “non-Confucians.” The guiding question of this paper is therefore the following: how could a Confucian political philosophy, if it can at all, adequately take into account a plurality of comprehensive worldviews? I first turn to John Rawls and his account of these terms and of reasonable pluralism more generally. I then examine some particularly relevant developments and criticism of Rawls’ account. Finally, I offer a discussion of some recent proposals for a Confucian political philosophy, and examine to what extent each recognizes the fact of pluralism, sees it as a challenge, and deals with it in a persuasive manner. The paper concludes with a depiction of two major stumbling blocks that might stand firmly in the way of such a pluralism-accommodating political Confucianism.

Cite this article

Ralph Weber . Confucian Political Philosophy for Non-Confucians[J]. Frontiers of Philosophy in China, 2015 , 10(4) : 547 -567 . DOI: 10.3868/s030-004-015-0045-6

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