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Paths of Wisdom: An Introduction to Eastern Philosophy / Introduction: What Is Eastern Philosophy?

Introduction: What Is Eastern Philosophy?

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Welcome to Eastern Philosophy

The philosophical traditions of East and South Asia represent some of humanity's oldest and most profound attempts to understand the nature of reality, the self, and the good life. Spanning over three thousand years and encompassing dozens of distinct schools, these traditions offer perspectives that both complement and challenge the assumptions of Western philosophy.

What Do We Mean by "Eastern Philosophy"?

The term "Eastern philosophy" is a convenient but imperfect label. It typically encompasses:

  1. Chinese philosophy — Confucianism, Daoism, Legalism, Mohism, and Neo-Confucianism
  2. Indian philosophy — Hindu schools (Vedanta, Samkhya, Yoga), Buddhism, Jainism
  3. Japanese philosophy — Zen Buddhism, Bushido, the Kyoto School
  4. Korean, Tibetan, and Southeast Asian traditions — often extensions or creative adaptations of the above

These traditions are as diverse as Western philosophy itself. Grouping Confucius with the Buddha is no less artificial than grouping Plato with Kierkegaard. Yet there are recurring themes that distinguish many Eastern traditions from the mainstream of Western thought.

Common Themes Across Eastern Traditions

Theme Eastern Emphasis Western Contrast
Self Relational, fluid, or illusory Autonomous, fixed, essential
Knowledge Experiential, embodied, transformative Propositional, detached, theoretical
Ethics Virtue cultivation, harmony, context Rules, rights, universal principles
Nature Humans within nature, organic unity Humans over nature, mechanistic
Logic Paradox as pedagogy, complementary opposites Law of non-contradiction, binary
Goal Liberation, harmony, self-cultivation Truth, justice, autonomy

How Eastern Philosophy Differs from Western Approaches

Western philosophy, from Plato to Descartes to analytic philosophy, has tended to prioritize:

  • Argumentation as the primary method
  • Propositional truth as the goal
  • A sharp mind-body distinction
  • The individual as the unit of moral concern

Eastern traditions often take a different starting point:

"The Dao that can be spoken is not the eternal Dao." — Laozi, Dao De Jing, Chapter 1

This opening line of the Dao De Jing signals a fundamentally different attitude toward language and knowledge. Many Eastern thinkers hold that the deepest truths cannot be captured in propositions — they must be lived, practiced, and realized through direct experience.

A Note on Method

In this course, we will:

  • Read primary sources in translation, not just summaries
  • Resist the temptation to flatten Eastern thought into Western categories
  • Pay attention to the practical dimension — these are not merely academic systems but guides to living
  • Explore internal debates within traditions, not just contrasts with the West

The Arc of the Course

We begin with the great Chinese traditions — Confucianism, Daoism, Mohism, and Legalism — before crossing into Indian and Buddhist philosophy. We conclude by examining how Eastern ideas are reshaping contemporary global thought.

Let us begin with the most influential teacher in Chinese history: Confucius.

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