The Routledge International Handbook of Morality, Cognition, and Emotion in China
Herausgeber: Nichols, Ryan
The Routledge International Handbook of Morality, Cognition, and Emotion in China
Herausgeber: Nichols, Ryan
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This ground-breaking handbook provides multi-disciplinary insight into Chinese morality, cognition and emotion by collecting in one place a comprehensive collection of essays focused on Chinese morality by world-leading experts from more than a dozen different academic fields of study.
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This ground-breaking handbook provides multi-disciplinary insight into Chinese morality, cognition and emotion by collecting in one place a comprehensive collection of essays focused on Chinese morality by world-leading experts from more than a dozen different academic fields of study.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 310
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 172mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 546g
- ISBN-13: 9781032316512
- ISBN-10: 1032316519
- Artikelnr.: 69923727
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 310
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 172mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 546g
- ISBN-13: 9781032316512
- ISBN-10: 1032316519
- Artikelnr.: 69923727
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Ryan Nichols is a Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Fullerton. He studies China, cultural evolution, and the cultural evolution of China and Chinese thought.
Introduction Part 1: Models 1: The cultural evolution of Chinese morality,
and the essential value of multi-disciplinary research in understanding it
2: Doing right and not doing wrong: A social psychological model for the
situated morality of the Chinese and other cultural groups Part 2: Distal
and Subpersonal Factors 3: An Ecological Analysis of Chinese Morality:
Latitude, Pathogens, Agriculture and Modernization 4: Genetic contributions
to East Asian morality 5: Cultural neuroscience perspectives on moral
judgment with a focus on East Asia Part 3: Cultural and Historical Factors
6: Cognitive Science and Early Confucian Virtue Ethics: In Defense of Habit
7: Language and Morality in Chinese Culture 8: Chinese Moral Psychology as
Framed by China?s Legal Tradition: Historical illustrations of how the
friction between formal and informal species of law defines the "legal
soul" of China Part 4: Developmental and Psychological Factors 9:
Understanding Morality in China from a Perspective of Developmental
Psychology 10: "The Moral Child": Anthropological Perspectives on Moral
Development in China 11: Social Psychology and the Meaning of Morality in
Chinese and China: Misconceptions, Conceptions, and Possibilities Part 5:
Factors of Moral Change 12: Trajectories of Moral Transformation in
Contemporary China 13: Well-being and Morality in Chinese Culture 14:
Protest and Chinese Morality: A Hong Kong Case Study 15: Understanding the
Cultural Diversity of Chinese Morality
and the essential value of multi-disciplinary research in understanding it
2: Doing right and not doing wrong: A social psychological model for the
situated morality of the Chinese and other cultural groups Part 2: Distal
and Subpersonal Factors 3: An Ecological Analysis of Chinese Morality:
Latitude, Pathogens, Agriculture and Modernization 4: Genetic contributions
to East Asian morality 5: Cultural neuroscience perspectives on moral
judgment with a focus on East Asia Part 3: Cultural and Historical Factors
6: Cognitive Science and Early Confucian Virtue Ethics: In Defense of Habit
7: Language and Morality in Chinese Culture 8: Chinese Moral Psychology as
Framed by China?s Legal Tradition: Historical illustrations of how the
friction between formal and informal species of law defines the "legal
soul" of China Part 4: Developmental and Psychological Factors 9:
Understanding Morality in China from a Perspective of Developmental
Psychology 10: "The Moral Child": Anthropological Perspectives on Moral
Development in China 11: Social Psychology and the Meaning of Morality in
Chinese and China: Misconceptions, Conceptions, and Possibilities Part 5:
Factors of Moral Change 12: Trajectories of Moral Transformation in
Contemporary China 13: Well-being and Morality in Chinese Culture 14:
Protest and Chinese Morality: A Hong Kong Case Study 15: Understanding the
Cultural Diversity of Chinese Morality
Introduction Part 1: Models 1: The cultural evolution of Chinese morality,
and the essential value of multi-disciplinary research in understanding it
2: Doing right and not doing wrong: A social psychological model for the
situated morality of the Chinese and other cultural groups Part 2: Distal
and Subpersonal Factors 3: An Ecological Analysis of Chinese Morality:
Latitude, Pathogens, Agriculture and Modernization 4: Genetic contributions
to East Asian morality 5: Cultural neuroscience perspectives on moral
judgment with a focus on East Asia Part 3: Cultural and Historical Factors
6: Cognitive Science and Early Confucian Virtue Ethics: In Defense of Habit
7: Language and Morality in Chinese Culture 8: Chinese Moral Psychology as
Framed by China?s Legal Tradition: Historical illustrations of how the
friction between formal and informal species of law defines the "legal
soul" of China Part 4: Developmental and Psychological Factors 9:
Understanding Morality in China from a Perspective of Developmental
Psychology 10: "The Moral Child": Anthropological Perspectives on Moral
Development in China 11: Social Psychology and the Meaning of Morality in
Chinese and China: Misconceptions, Conceptions, and Possibilities Part 5:
Factors of Moral Change 12: Trajectories of Moral Transformation in
Contemporary China 13: Well-being and Morality in Chinese Culture 14:
Protest and Chinese Morality: A Hong Kong Case Study 15: Understanding the
Cultural Diversity of Chinese Morality
and the essential value of multi-disciplinary research in understanding it
2: Doing right and not doing wrong: A social psychological model for the
situated morality of the Chinese and other cultural groups Part 2: Distal
and Subpersonal Factors 3: An Ecological Analysis of Chinese Morality:
Latitude, Pathogens, Agriculture and Modernization 4: Genetic contributions
to East Asian morality 5: Cultural neuroscience perspectives on moral
judgment with a focus on East Asia Part 3: Cultural and Historical Factors
6: Cognitive Science and Early Confucian Virtue Ethics: In Defense of Habit
7: Language and Morality in Chinese Culture 8: Chinese Moral Psychology as
Framed by China?s Legal Tradition: Historical illustrations of how the
friction between formal and informal species of law defines the "legal
soul" of China Part 4: Developmental and Psychological Factors 9:
Understanding Morality in China from a Perspective of Developmental
Psychology 10: "The Moral Child": Anthropological Perspectives on Moral
Development in China 11: Social Psychology and the Meaning of Morality in
Chinese and China: Misconceptions, Conceptions, and Possibilities Part 5:
Factors of Moral Change 12: Trajectories of Moral Transformation in
Contemporary China 13: Well-being and Morality in Chinese Culture 14:
Protest and Chinese Morality: A Hong Kong Case Study 15: Understanding the
Cultural Diversity of Chinese Morality