Book contents
- Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives
- Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Peer reviewers
- Editor’s note
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Environmental keystones: Remembering Dr Mostafa Kamal Tolba
- Remembering Dr Mostafa Kamal Tolba
- Remembering Dr Mostafa Kamal Tolba
- Acronyms and abbreviations
- SI prefixes
- Unit abbreviations
- Chemical formulae
- Part I Sustainable Development: Theories and Practices
- 1 Asian identities
- 2 On sustainable development
- 3 Sustainability: A scientific dilemma
- 4 Respect and reward: Ecology from the Analects of Confucius
- 5 Sustainable development from an East-West integrative perspective: Eastern culture meets Western complexity theory
- 6 Sustainable urbanism: Measuring long-term architectural merit
- 7 Sustaining wooden architectural heritage
- 8 Green development in China
- 9 Bhutan’s sustainable development initiatives and Gross National Happiness
- 10 A different form of sustainable development in Thailand and Bhutan: Implementation of a sufficiency approach
- 11 The sustainability of food production in Papua New Guinea
- 12 Education for sustainable development: An overview of Asia-Pacific perspectives
- 13 A placemaking framework for the social sustainability of master-planned communities: A case study from Australia
- 14 Poverty, inequity, and environmental degradation: The key issues confronting the environment and sustainable development in Asia
- 15 The challenge of global climate change for international law: An overview
- 16 Sustainable development and climate change negotiations: Perspectives of developing countries
- Part II Sustainable Development: Challenges and Opportunities
- Index
- Endmatter
- References
4 - Respect and reward: Ecology from the Analects of Confucius
from Part I - Sustainable Development: Theories and Practices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2021
- Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives
- Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Peer reviewers
- Editor’s note
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Foreword
- Environmental keystones: Remembering Dr Mostafa Kamal Tolba
- Remembering Dr Mostafa Kamal Tolba
- Remembering Dr Mostafa Kamal Tolba
- Acronyms and abbreviations
- SI prefixes
- Unit abbreviations
- Chemical formulae
- Part I Sustainable Development: Theories and Practices
- 1 Asian identities
- 2 On sustainable development
- 3 Sustainability: A scientific dilemma
- 4 Respect and reward: Ecology from the Analects of Confucius
- 5 Sustainable development from an East-West integrative perspective: Eastern culture meets Western complexity theory
- 6 Sustainable urbanism: Measuring long-term architectural merit
- 7 Sustaining wooden architectural heritage
- 8 Green development in China
- 9 Bhutan’s sustainable development initiatives and Gross National Happiness
- 10 A different form of sustainable development in Thailand and Bhutan: Implementation of a sufficiency approach
- 11 The sustainability of food production in Papua New Guinea
- 12 Education for sustainable development: An overview of Asia-Pacific perspectives
- 13 A placemaking framework for the social sustainability of master-planned communities: A case study from Australia
- 14 Poverty, inequity, and environmental degradation: The key issues confronting the environment and sustainable development in Asia
- 15 The challenge of global climate change for international law: An overview
- 16 Sustainable development and climate change negotiations: Perspectives of developing countries
- Part II Sustainable Development: Challenges and Opportunities
- Index
- Endmatter
- References
Summary
Today’s ecological crises are scientifically well understood. Their dire consequences follow predictions with relentless accuracy. What is astounding is how little we can bring ourselves to do about them. Granted, powerful economic interests invest heavily in maintaining the status quo of consumption. But there is another side to this problem, a curious unwillingness, an inability to take personal responsibility. The reasons for this failure to respond are questions for philosophy.
The original sayings of Confucius are collected in a slim book, the Analects. Throughout, we find an emphasis on the nurture of ethical values that are derived from reciprocal forbearance, trustworthiness, and loyalty. In Confucian philosophy, the concept Lǐ 禮, generally translated as ‘ritual propriety’, expresses how a sincere respect for nature and society can manifest the self and how self-cultivation is a way to transform the private self into an open, transparent self that is in balance with the dynamics of one’s environment. From this Confucian perspective, the self and its context, whether other individuals, society in general, ‘nature’, or the cosmos, exist in a constant, innate, gap-less encounter and dialogue, based upon meaningful differentiation rather than antagonistic struggle. The awareness of this immanent relationship is not based upon a set of imposed social rules, but an intuitive sensibility towards propriety, an ‘enabling restraint’, a procedure of propagation, derived from life’s inner growth.
Grounded within an embodied self here and now, this attitude of sincere respect, independent of expectations of utility and reward, envisions behaviour in accordance with ecological needs and sustainable principles as an effortless response, fed by an aesthetic sensibility towards an environment that is constitutive of and cultivated within the self. Therefore, the key to ecological responsibility is an education through which we understand that responsible behaviour can be pursued because it is an expression of who we are as human beings, and for which economic gain, social status, and humanitarian responsibility are natural consequences. Such a personal yet not private response to our current challenges, day to day, and in every moment, is the ultimate win-win proposition.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Sustainable Development: Asia-Pacific Perspectives , pp. 25 - 35Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
References
- 1
- Cited by