Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Citizenship and the Good Life
- 2 Spaces of the Prudent Self
- 3 The Biopolitics of Sexuality and the Hypothesis of an Erotic Art: Foucault and Psychoanalysis
- 4 Elective Spaces: Creating Space to Care
- 5 Interpreting Dao (道) between ‘Way-making’ and ‘Be-wëgen’
- 6 Constructing Each Other: Contemporary Travel of Urban-Design Ideas between China and the West
- 7 A Tale of Two Courts: The Interactions of the Dutch and Chinese Political Elites with their Cities
- 8 Urban Acupuncture: Care and Ideology in the Writing of the City in Eleventh-Century China
- 9 The Value and Meaning of Temporality and its Relationship to Identity in Kunming City, China
- 10 Junzi (君子), the Confucian Concept of the ‘Gentleman’, and its Influence on South Korean Land-Use Planning
- 11 Home Within Movement: The Japanese Concept of Ma (間): Sensing Space-time Intensity in Aesthetics of Movement
- 12 The Concept of ‘Home’: The Javanese Creative Interpretation of Omah Bhetari Sri: A Dialogue between Tradition and Modernity
- Afterword
- Index
- Publications / Asian Cities
1 - Citizenship and the Good Life
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Citizenship and the Good Life
- 2 Spaces of the Prudent Self
- 3 The Biopolitics of Sexuality and the Hypothesis of an Erotic Art: Foucault and Psychoanalysis
- 4 Elective Spaces: Creating Space to Care
- 5 Interpreting Dao (道) between ‘Way-making’ and ‘Be-wëgen’
- 6 Constructing Each Other: Contemporary Travel of Urban-Design Ideas between China and the West
- 7 A Tale of Two Courts: The Interactions of the Dutch and Chinese Political Elites with their Cities
- 8 Urban Acupuncture: Care and Ideology in the Writing of the City in Eleventh-Century China
- 9 The Value and Meaning of Temporality and its Relationship to Identity in Kunming City, China
- 10 Junzi (君子), the Confucian Concept of the ‘Gentleman’, and its Influence on South Korean Land-Use Planning
- 11 Home Within Movement: The Japanese Concept of Ma (間): Sensing Space-time Intensity in Aesthetics of Movement
- 12 The Concept of ‘Home’: The Javanese Creative Interpretation of Omah Bhetari Sri: A Dialogue between Tradition and Modernity
- Afterword
- Index
- Publications / Asian Cities
Summary
Abstract
This chapter examines the concepts of citizenship and the good life as they were understood in the ancient world, both East and West. It begins with the writings of Cicero, which stress political engagement, and compares them with the non-engagement of Epicureanism, in which living lathe biosas (λάθε βιώσας, ‘the obscure life’) was seen as the surest way to achieve ataraxia (ἀταραξία, ‘tranquillity’). It then examines Plato’s and Aristotle’s writings. Plato was concerned with how to conduct the good life, but asked ‘what is good?’ He tried to answer this by positing ideals that are too unattainable. Aristotle, on the other hand, thought that humans could indeed lead a good life and sought how this could be achieved, formulating his famous ‘doctrine of the mean’. The chapter ends with a brief look at Confucius, particularly his concept of the junzi (君 子, ‘gentleman’). One thing all of these philosophers had in common was their pragmatism. They were all studying the good life from a practical standpoint, because they understand that the human being is basically a zoon politikon (ζῷον πoλιτικόν, ‘political animal’) and therefore the good life is politically engaged, active, and full of social contact. Good citizens have to cultivate this political and social engagement if they want to enjoy a fulfilled existence and lead a good life.
Keywords: philosophy, citizenship, polis (πόλις), good life, junzi (君子, ‘gentleman’)
The good citizen is politically engaged. To engage, they need to lead a good life, meaning they need to cultivate themselves to enjoy a more fulfilled existence. This concept was a common one in the ancient world, in both the East and West. This chapter explores the relationship between citizenship and the good life. It focuses primarily on the West, beginning with Cicero in ancient Rome. It then takes a look at Epicurus before moving to Plato and Aristotle in ancient Greece. The chapter ends by making a brief examination of the Chinese understanding of good citizenship as elucidated through the teachings of Confucius. While more attention is paid to the Western sources, this chapter seeks to enrich our understanding of them by examining how some of the basic concepts introduced by Eastern and Western thinkers, such as Confucius’ ‘gentleman’ or Cicero’s ‘politically engaged citizen’, resonate with one another.
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- Information
- Ancient and Modern Practices of Citizenship in Asia and the WestCare of the Self, pp. 21 - 46Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018