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Man and Nature in China
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
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After nearly two decades of revolutionary rule in China, the break with the past which Communist direction has seemed to represent is increasingly being seen in a wider perspective. Few scholars would attempt to argue that the Communists have not brought a genuine revolution or that their ascendancy is merely the equivalent of a new dynasty. But as the character of the new order has become clearer with time and as an analysis both more detailed and less concerned with short-term matters has become possible, many scholars have been as much impressed by continuities with the pre-Communist past as by discontinuities. To take perhaps the clearest example, the current Chinese view of their relation to the rest of the world appears to represent little change from the traditional Sinocentric image. Ideological absolutism is also not new to China with Mao Tse-tung, nor is the conception of individual subsevience to public good, the unquestioned rightness of close social limits on individual actions. And contemporary China retains, for all its professed egalitarianism, a strongly elitist and hierarchial pattern.
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References
2 There were of course a variety of views, over time and even within a given period; for an example of different views, see the story of the Foolish Old Man Who Removed the Mountains, cited below.Google Scholar
3 I am grateful to Andrew March for calling my attention to this aspect.Google Scholar
4 For a fascinating account of the changing Western attitudes and behaviour towards nature since classical Greek times, see Glacken, C. J., Traces on the Rhodian Shore, Berkeley, California, 1967.Google Scholar
5 See inter alia Derk, Bodde, ‘Harmony and Conflict in Chinese Philosophy’, in Arthur, Wright, ed., Studies in Chinese Thought, Chicago, 1953; conflict was of course recognized.Google Scholar
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7 The contrast between Chinese and modern Western ideas in these respects is noted as early as Lord Macartney's remarks at the time of his embassy to Peking in 1793–94: ‘A Nation that does not advance [i.e. as the West did] must retrograde and finally fall back to barbarism and misery’.—From Macartney's ‘Observations on China’, section entitled ‘Manners and Character’, printed in Cranmer-Byng, J. L., An Embassy to China, London, 1962, p. 276.Google Scholar
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