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Time and the Sense of History: West and East

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

John T. Marcus
Affiliation:
Hojstra College

Extract

The natural condition of history is the paradox. The half century of upheavals which saw the devolution of colonial empires and the humbling of the West's hybris, also witnessed the culminating impact of Western culture upon non-European nations. Toynbee even suggests that this development points to the eventual evolution of a universal civilization, geared to the Westernized rhythm of an industrial society.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1961

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References

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28 Gardner, Charles S., Chinese Traditional Historiography (Cambridge, Mass., 1938), pp. 6971, 7778Google Scholar. Dubs, Homer H., “The Reliability of Chinese Histories”, The Far Eastern Quarterly, VI (1946), p. 29Google Scholar. Yu-shan, Han, Elements of Chinese Historiography (Hollywood, Cal., 1955), pp. 2425Google Scholar.

29 See for example Levenson, Joseph R., Confucian China and Its Modern Fate; The Problem of Intellectual Continuity (Berkeley, Cal., 1958), pp. 9192Google Scholar; and de Bary, W. T., “Chinese Despotism and the Confucian Ideal; A Seventeenth-Century View”, in Fairbank, John K., ed., Chinese Thought and Institutions (Chicago, 1957), pp. 168–69Google Scholar.

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31 Teng, S. Y., “Chinese Historiography in the Last Fifty Years”, The Far Eastern Quarterly, VIII (1949), pp. 131 ffCrossRefGoogle Scholar. Dubs, H. H., “The Reliability of Chinese Histories”, The Far Eastern Quarterly, VI, pp. 23, 43Google Scholar.

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35 Bodde, D., “Harmony and Conflict in Chinese Philosophy”, Studies in Chinese Thought, pp. 3034, 68, 73Google Scholar.

36 A different view, it might be noted, is presented in de Riencourt, A., The Soul of China, pp. 8283Google Scholar.

37 Yu-lan, Feng, A History of Chinese Philosophy, 2 vols., trans, by Bodde, D. (Princeton, 19521953), II, pp. 11 ff., 58–75, esp. pp. 71–75, 158–59, 474–76, 698–702Google Scholar. Yu-wei, K’ang, Ta T’ung Shu; The One-World Philosophy of K’ang Yu-wei, trans, by Thompson, Laurence G. (London, 1958), pp. 4750 ff., 241 ffGoogle Scholar.

Arthur Hummel explains that K’ang Yu-wei, seeking to fit the Western attitude of progress into a Confucian frame, was forced to deny the Chinese historian's axiom of a past Golden Age, indeed had to “explain it away” as a deliberate myth by Confucius. In doing this, Hummel notes, K’ang Yu-wei was in fact undermining the traditional foundation of Chinese historiography (Chieh-Kang, Ku, “The Autobiography of a Chinese Historian, Being the Preface to a Symposium on Ancient Chinese History [Ku Shih Pien], Translated and Annotated by Arthur W. Hummel”, Sinica Leidensia, Edidit lnstitutum Sinologicum Lugduno-Batavum, I (Leyden, 1931), pp. XIIXVIGoogle Scholar.

38 Gardner, C. S., Chinese Traditional Historiography, esp. pp. 4–6, pp. 7577Google Scholar. Teng, S. Y.. “Chinese Historiography in the Last Fifty Years”, The Far Eastern Quarterly, VIII, pp. 135 ff., 147Google Scholar. See also Han Yu-shan, op. cit., pp. 170–71.

39 Levenson, J. R. (“‘History’ and ‘Value’: The Tensions of Intellectual Choice in Modern China”, in Wright, A. F., ed., Studies in Chinese Thought)Google Scholar discusses the basic conflict between “historical” justification based on tradition, and “value”-justification based on a comparison of absolute, “universal” alternatives. He notes that a traditionalist defense of Confucianism itself denotes a critical retreat from the earlier confident assumption of the universal supremacy of Sinic values. Between these alternatives of “history” and “value”, the author sees the cultural dilemma of modern China.

As a variant of this significant analysis, the present article suggests a tension between the traditionalist Chinese approach to the past and the relativist “value”-implications of the new Western cultural-historical comparative sense.

40 The Bhagavad Gita, trans, by Nikhilananda, Swami (New York, 1944), pp. 8182, 102–22, 146–47 ff., 253–54Google Scholar. Coomaraswamy, A. K., Hinduism and Buddhism, p. 29Google Scholar. Zimmer, H., Philosophies of India, pp. 151–60, 160–61 ff., 177, 387–88, 395, 403–4, 459–60, 561, 596–98Google Scholar.

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43 In Northrop, F. S. C.'s well-known work, The Meeting of East and West; An Inquiry Concerning World Understanding (New York, 1946), pp. 366–70 ff., 391401 ff.Google Scholar, this central theme of Indian thought is transformed, perhaps with some overstatement, into a unifying Weltanschauung of the East.

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48 Keith, A. B., Buddhist Philosophy in India and Ceylon, pp. 277–80Google Scholar. The Bhagavad Gita, pp. 83, 89, 278, 347, 353. See especially Zimmer, H., Philosophies of India, pp. 231–34, 537–38Google Scholar.

49 This did not prevent the development in classical India of power-politics that in cynicism outdid the peccadilloes of Machiavelli's compatriots. The political morality of the “law of the fish” would confirm Hobbes’ estimate of the qualities of human nature. See Zimmer, H., Philosophies of India, pp. 87–127, 136–39Google Scholar.

50 A striking example of this transition can be found in the attitude of Swami Vivekananda who was intent upon preserving the Vedanta tradition against the “materialistic” encroachments of the West, yet was prepared to accept the dynamism of action and even to appeal occasionally to the enthusiasm of engagement exemplified by the Occident; see for example The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, 7 vols. (Mayavati- Almora-Himalayas, 19241931)Google Scholar, scattered, but esp. III, pp. 204–5, 213, 220, 285–304, 315–19, IV, pp. 316–18, 332–41, 399–413, 421–25.